Monthly Archives: June 2026

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.

I love Western movies, and one of my favorites is The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.
In the spirit of this great movie, here is a script for a modern take on The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.


In the sun-baked frontier of ideas, where freedom’s dust swirls and tyranny casts long shadows, three forces clash like gunslingers at high noon. This ain’t no Hollywood fairy tale. This is the real American West—raw, unforgiving, and worth dying for.

The Good
They ride tall in the saddle: Individualism, the lone rider who answers only to his own conscience and his Maker. Beside him gallops Capitalism, the engine of creation that turns sweat into wealth and dreams into steel skyscrapers. They carry the Constitution like a sacred Colt—loaded with rights, not permissions. Their banner is the USA, that shining land, forged in rebellion against kings and collectives alike.
Zionism stands with them, the ancient grit of a people who refused to kneel, as they rebuild their homeland against all odds. Masculinity—unapologetic, protective, decisive—provides the muscle and the moral spine. Accountability keeps every man’s ledger straight: you reap what you sow. And Sustainability? Not the green cult’s version, but the real kind—generations of innovators who steward the land, build lasting wealth, and leave more than they take. These are the heroes. They don’t ask permission to thrive.

The Bad
Then come the varmints, the ones who poison the water hole. Collectivism herds people into faceless mobs, trading liberty for chains. Socialism and Communism ride shotgun, promising paradise while delivering bread lines, gulags, and secret police. They’ve failed wherever they’ve drawn iron, yet they keep slithering back like rattlesnakes.
Islamism brings the worst of the badlands—a supremacist ideology wrapped in prayer rugs, demanding submission while carving enclaves and waging demographic and cultural conquest. Entitlement whispers sweet lies: “You deserve it without earning it.” And Income Tax? The government’s favorite cattle brand forever marked free men as livestock. These forces don’t build. They loot, control, and leave scorched earth.


The Ugly
And then there’s the grotesque. Feminism, twisted from any noble root into a war on men, family, and biological reality—turning daughters into resentful foot soldiers and sons into soft targets. Woke Liberal Women, the shrill chorus in the saloon, preach tolerance while enforcing new puritanisms: cancel culture, speech codes, and guilt rituals. They champion every “oppressed” ideology except those that would actually put them in burqas.
Forced charity tops the ugly heap—the state’s gun-to-the-head redistribution that turns voluntary goodwill into mandatory plunder. It doesn’t lift the poor; it breeds dependency and resentment, while the enforcers live fat in their gated compounds.

In this dusty showdown, the choice is clear. The Good built America. The Bad and the Ugly are tearing it down, one regulation, one concession, and one guilt trip at a time.

Time to choose your side, partner. Draw fast, aim true, and never apologize for standing with what’s right. The frontier remains open—for those with the courage to defend it.

Reclaiming New York City from Islamist Conquest

Fix America First: Reclaiming Our Cities from Islamist Conquest

America’s greatest threat isn’t thousands of miles away; it’s right here in our own cities. While we are confronting Islamist regimes abroad, radical Islamists fused with socialist enablers are seizing control at home.
New York City, once the proud symbol of American strength, has surrendered to Zohran Mamdani, an Islamist Communist anti-American mayor who took office in January 2026.

Mamdani, a Democratic Socialist with a record of pro-Palestine activism, represents the toxic merger of supremacist ideology and Marxist grievance. Under his leadership, expect amplified Adhan calls to prayer dominating neighborhoods as territorial markers, demands for Sharia accommodations, eroded law and order, and policies that favor imported collectives over American taxpayers and traditions.
New York, still bearing the scars of 9/11, now stands as a warning of demographic conquest through the ballot box—fueled by open borders, zero assimilation, and elite betrayal.

This isn’t limited to NYC. Dearborn, Hamtramck, Minneapolis, and expanding enclaves across America are falling into the same pattern: parallel societies rejecting Western freedoms on women’s rights, free speech, secular governance, and individual liberty. Noise wars, no-go pressures, and cultural dominance grow bolder by the day.

Prioritize home. Fix America first. Before any foreign adventures or global lectures, secure our sovereignty. Reject Sharia courts and all parallel legal systems. Demand full assimilation or removal. Seal the borders against unvetted migration. Protect American neighborhoods, culture, and values above all.

This is civilized intolerance: unapologetic self-defense rooted in reciprocity.
Live and let live applies only to those who accept it.
The Individual Comes First—not theocracies, not socialist hordes, not foreign ideologies.

Reclaim our streets, our cities, our Republic. The stars and stripes must fly unchallenged over sovereign American soil. Hypocrisy at home guarantees decline. Clarity, resolve, and domestic priority deliver renewal. Start here, New York, Dearborn, and every threatened community, or lose the nation we pretend to defend.

Might is Right

Might Is Right: The Brutal Truth in Politics, War, and Real Life

In the arena of human affairs, few principles cut through the illusions of morality, law, and “fairness” like “Might is Right.”
This ancient idea—that power, strength, and the will to wield them ultimately decide what prevails—underpins reality more than most care to admit. It echoes through history, from Thucydides’ Melian Dialogue (“the strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must”) to modern geopolitics and everyday struggles. Deny it at your peril. Civilizations built on wishful thinking crumble when raw power confronts them.

Might in Politics: The Illusion of Consent

Politics is not a gentle debate club of ideas.
It is the organized exercise of power. “Might is Right” reveals that elections, constitutions, and parliaments often serve as velvet gloves over iron fists.
The side with superior organization, financial muscle, demographic leverage, cultural dominance, or willingness to intimidate wins.
History’s tyrants understood this instinctively.

Communist regimes exemplified it brutally: Lenin’s Bolsheviks seized Russia not by the will of the majority but by disciplined force and terror. Mao’s China consolidated power by the barrel of the gun.
Today’s softer variants persist—ideological capture of institutions, censorship disguised as “hate speech” laws, demographic engineering through mass migration, and economic coercion. In the West, elites wield regulatory power, media monopolies, and financial leverage to marginalize dissent. Islamism follows the same pattern: where it gains numbers and institutional footholds (New York City, Dearborn, Hamtramck, parts of Europe), it demands accommodations, then dominance. Adhan blasts that overwhelming neighborhoods aren’t requests; they are assertions of territorial might through noise and presence.

Individualists reject the collectivist lie that “the people,” “the ummah,” or “the proletariat” hold legitimate power. Legitimacy flows from protecting individual rights, not from mob or clerical force. Yet reality bites: a determined minority wielding might—street muscle, bureaucratic control, or voting blocs—can impose its will on a disorganized majority. The American Founders grasped this by embedding checks and balances and an armed citizenry to counterbalance raw might with structured liberty. Without vigilance, might devours rights. Civilized intolerance toward supremacist ideologies isn’t hatred—it’s the necessary assertion of Western might to preserve freedom.

Might in War: The Decider of Civilizations

War strips away pretenses.
Treaties, norms, and Geneva Conventions bind only the weak or those who fear reprisal.
Victors write history and define “justice.”

The Islamic conquests spread by the sword from Arabia across continents, subjugating cultures under Sharia.
The Ottoman Empire’s might enforced dhimmitude.
In the 20th century, Nazi Germany’s blitzkrieg and imperial Japan’s aggression showed might’s logic until greater industrial and military might crushed them.
Today’s conflicts—Ukraine, Middle East proxy wars, Islamist insurgencies—follow suit.
Hamas, Hezbollah, and their backers prioritize rockets, tunnels, and human shields over “proportionality.” They understand that survival favors the ruthless.

Even “rules-based” powers bend to might.
Nuclear deterrence works because mutual assured destruction enforces a balance of terror.
Weak nations invite predation; strong ones project power.
America’s post-WWII order succeeded through overwhelming might paired with relative restraint—not universal benevolence.
In the “Adhan Noise Wars” and cultural infiltration, the pattern repeats domestically: incremental assertions of power (loudspeakers, parallel societies, demands for blasphemy laws) test resolve. Yield, and enclaves become caliphates. Resist with superior cultural, legal, economic, and, if needed, physical might—or lose.

Might does not make moral right, but it determines who survives to argue the point.
Pacifism in the face of jihad or totalitarianism is suicide.

Might in Real Life: Daily Power Struggles

“Might is Right” applies on the personal scale, too. In business, the stronger negotiator, the better-capitalized firm, or the more persistent competitor prevails.

Socially, status, networks, physical presence, and psychological resilience determine outcomes. Bullies test boundaries; the unprepared suffer. In relationships and communities, those willing to enforce standards—through reputation, alliances, or direct confrontation—shape norms. Demographic shifts in neighborhoods demonstrate this: groups with higher birthrates, chain migration, and communal solidarity impose their culture when the host society lacks the will to assert its own.

Yet might without wisdom destroys. A thug with fists rules the street until law enforcement (greater might) intervenes. A corrupt politician dominates until exposed and replaced. Raw power, unchecked, breeds chaos; channeled through principle, it builds enduring order.

The Individualist Response: Structured Might

“Might is Right” is descriptive, not prescriptive. It reveals human nature stripped of delusion. Collectivists—Islamists and Communists—embrace it openly in pursuit of domination. Individualists must wield it defensively to preserve themselves and promote human flourishing.

The antidote isn’t pretending at equality of outcome or universal goodwill. It is cultivating personal strength (mind, body, resources), defending the rule of law that protects the sovereign individual, and asserting cultural might through truth-telling, economic boycotts, legal pushback, and demographic realism. The “Infidel Manifesto” spirit—civilized intolerance toward political Islam and collectivism—embodies this: recognize the threat, reject naive coexistence, and mobilize superior ideas backed by resolve.

Live and let live, but do not surrender to those who proclaim “convert, submit, or die.” Arm yourself with knowledge of history, the Quran, the Sira, and the Hadith. Build parallel structures that resist infiltration. Support leaders and policies that prioritize national sovereignty and individual rights over globalist or theocratic power.

In the end, might decides. The question is whether free individuals and their civilizations will summon the strength to prevail—or whimper into subjugation. History favors the bold who understand power. The rest become footnotes.

The time for illusions is over. Assert what is right—by force, if necessary.