Comedian Adam Carolla has a routine about how the very wealthy and very poor do the same things. Some printable examples: never eat at an Outback steakhouse, take outdoor showers, have lunch with Bono, drive a make of car that no longer exists.
Annoyingly, it’s the same for politicians. They all end up doing the same things—the horseshoe theory has become reality. The left and right, progressives and MAGA, bend around and almost touch. To me, it’s more like a teething ring, going round and round in a politician’s mouth with government power constantly biting down and inflicting pain on all of us. Or an M.C. Escher drawing with everything confusingly connected. I don’t like it one bit.
Who said this? “Today I’m announcing new tariffs in key sectors of the economy that are going to ensure that our workers are not held back by unfair trade practices. They include a . . . 25% tariff on Chinese steel and aluminum products . . . a 100% tariff on electric vehicles made in China . . . a 25% tariff on electric vehicle batteries from China and a 25% tariff on the critical minerals that make those batteries.”
Donald Trump? Nope, Joe Biden in May 2024. Eleven months later, “Tariff Man” Trump declared, “Effective at midnight, we will impose a 25% tariff on all foreign-made automobiles.” Clang goes the horseshoe.
Or this: In 2024, Mr. Biden complained of “too many corporations in America ripping people off. Price gouging, junk fees, greedflation, shrinkflation.” Mr. Trump recently wrote that “Customers are being ‘gouged’ ” and that “gasoline prices better start going down a lot faster than what I’m seeing!” Same, same. A recent Journal headline nailed it: “Trump, Like Biden, Takes Aim at Big Oil.”
Sen. Bernie Sanders wants government to own 50% of artificial-intelligence companies. Get in line, Bernie. In June, Vice President JD Vance said, “The president is supportive of the United States owning these big AI companies.” OpenAI is considering giving up 5% to Washington. This on top of equity ownership in U.S. Steel, Intel, MP Materials and that piece of Nvidia’s processor sales to China. Make it stop.
Phil Magness busts the Trumpian myth that America was founded by “tariff men.” A slice:
This is essentially the tale told by Oren Cass, whom [J.D.] Vance has dubbed “one of the smartest thinkers about political economy in the country.” In Cass’ account, “the American tradition from the founding was one of aggressive protectionism and support for domestic industry.” Free trade, by contrast, “emanat[ed] from Britain as self-serving ideology” to prop up its empire at the expense of the world. After almost 175 years of economic independence, the United States finally succumbed to free trade propaganda in the wake of World War II.
If this account sounds familiar, it’s basically a Trumpian adaptation of an older protectionist mythology that has percolated for decades. In the 1990s, Pat Buchanan similarly characterized free trade as “a betrayal of the country as it was structured by Washington and Hamilton and Madison,” and traced an identical “lost” lineage from Hamilton to Clay to Lincoln and McKinley. So did the cult leader Lyndon LaRouche, who penned a paranoid tract accusing economist Milton Friedman of seducing America with free trade dogmas and thereby subverting its protectionist founding. (The LaRouche book’s co-author, David Goldman, is currently a senior adviser to Trump’s State Department and a recurring presence in the “national conservative” movement.)
A conspicuous omission complicates these and other attempts to enlist the American Founding in the cause of Trump’s tariff agenda. Amid their many historical appeals, the text of the Declaration of Independence is nowhere to be found. Specifically, they never discuss the Declaration’s indictments of the British Crown for “cutting off our Trade with all parts of the world” and “imposing Taxes on us without our Consent”—actions that bear more than a passing resemblance to Trump’s attempts to rewrite the entire U.S. tariff schedule by executive order.
As those passages hint, the White House has a key part of its history backward. Far from intending to create a Hamiltonian tariff republic, the American colonies explicitly rebelled against British restrictions on their ability to trade with the rest of the world.
Despite this decades-long reduction in inequality, it’s hard to find anyone who would say British democracy is healthier today than it was in 2000.
The country has cycled through seven prime ministers in the last ten years. In the 2024 general election, the Labour Party won 64 percent of the seats in the House of Commons with just 34 percent of the vote as the party system broke down. Seventy-nine percent of Britons say their country is on the wrong track, one of the highest rates for any country.
The year when average annual real wages in the U.K. and the U.S. were the closest was 2007. That year, the average American worker took home 12 percent more than the average British worker. In 2024, the average American worker took home 30 percent more.
The average American worker made over $12,000 more in 2024 than in 2007. The average British worker made just $875 more. That’s in 2024 dollars at purchasing power parity.
American life today is noisy. Smartphones perpetually consume our attention, bombarding us with horrifying headlines and drawing us into vitriolic social-media arguments. But in the real world, America’s civil society is enviably vibrant, and its culture is defined by friendliness and generosity. When I step outside and talk to ordinary Americans — be it in suburban Virginia, or in New York City, or in South Florida — I seldom encounter cynicism or resentment. Instead, I am continually amazed by their warmth, humor, and kindness. In the “real America,” I don’t see a nation on the verge of collapse. I see a uniquely open and prosperous country, rich with greater opportunity than anywhere else can offer, that remains the world’s great beacon of liberty and abundance.
What’s more, I see a country that offers staggering diversity. America is a land of sprawling deserts, towering mountains, verdant forests, and majestic cities. It’s a place where the opera is as easily attended as a wrestling match. Its food, weather, music, and literature are spectacular. Its culture is innovative, dynamic, and endlessly surprising. Its Constitution is the most perceptive political document ever composed, and its institutions of government endure despite new attacks.
Fleeting difficulties may threaten the American promise, but they should not deter us from championing everything that makes this country extraordinary. The wisdom of the Declaration of Independence is as true today as ever, and it has brought us to a time of extraordinary human flourishing. July 4, 2026, is a moment to reflect on all that America has provided, and all that is still to come.
Let’s celebrate.
[DBx: Yes. A country is much more than its government. And the freer the country, the greater is the difference between it and its state.]
Even before Ms. Rodríguez agreed to work with the U.S., Mr. Trump was crowing like Jed Clampett about Venezuela’s vast oil reserves. The country also has rich mineral deposits, including gold, and fabulous beaches. It’s a place where, under the right authoritarian regime, one could make a lot of money by getting in on the ground floor. Like, say, in Kazakhstan.
But Venezuelans want an election. Popular opposition leader María Corina Machado, who is in exile, wants to run. The regime has threatened her with arrest if she returns to her native land. She has hoped that the U.S. would support her desire to go back. The Trump administration has told her to wait. Stabilization and recovery, it says, must come before a transition to democracy.
Mr. Trump has lifted sanctions, cheered Chevron for pumping oil for the dictatorship, and cleared the way for Caracas to get market prices for its petroleum exports. This has Venezuelans “dancing in the streets,” according to the U.S. president.
Yet most Venezuelans are unhappy. Nearly 400 political prisoners remain behind bars. Inflation for the 12 months ending in May was over 500%. Mr. Cabello still runs the secret police, the paramilitary and a good part of the military, and he uses his power to keep a lid on dissent.
David Hart shares H.L. Mencken’s translation of the Declaration of Independence into American. A slice from Mencken’s translation:
When things get so balled up that the people of a country have to cut loose from some other country, and go it on their own hook, without asking no permission from nobody, excepting maybe God Almighty, then they ought to let everybody know why they done it, so that everybody can see they are on the level, and not trying to put nothing over on nobody.
All we got to say on this proposition is this: first, you and me is as good as anybody else, and maybe a damn sight better; second, nobody ain’t got no right to take away none of our rights; third, every man has got a right to live, to come and go as he pleases, and to have a good time however he likes, so long as he don’t interfere with nobody else. That any government that don’t give a man these rights ain’t worth a damn; also, people ought to choose the kind of goverment they want themselves, and nobody else ought to have no say in the matter. That whenever any goverment don’t do this, then the people have got a right to can it and put in one that will take care of their interests.


Trump in some key regards likes to favor crony businesses, but it is hard to avoid the suspicion that he does not really know business works, in spite of having spent his whole life in this vocation.
Slavery was “peculiar” in the United States only because human bondage was inconsistent with the principles on which this nation was founded. Historically, however, it was those principles which were peculiar, not slavery.
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
Then [Sir Edward] Coke took Parliament further. Among Parliament’s traditional rights was bringing “grievances” to the king’s attention. Coke chaired the Committee on Grievances, an odd position for a privy councilor. And he lashed out at the king’s claim that “reason of state,” i.e., the national interest and particularly national security, could justify extraordinary action.
