『Private Property Rights, Luke Skywalker's Hypocrisy, and Marco Rubio's Best Speech』のカバーアート

Private Property Rights, Luke Skywalker's Hypocrisy, and Marco Rubio's Best Speech

Private Property Rights, Luke Skywalker's Hypocrisy, and Marco Rubio's Best Speech

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概要

We open with a story that cuts to the heart of what it means to be a conservative — Louisiana's carbon capture fight has evolved from an environmental policy debate into a fundamental test of whether Republican elected officials actually believe in private property rights when money is on the table. We break down Governor Landry's new position that no one can take your land for carbon storage, Senator Kennedy's declaration that private property rights are sacrosanct, and why we think the governor is dancing on a political tightrope between the industrial interests he's courted and the landowners in Livingston, Tangipahoe, and St. Helena who are fighting back. We also explain what the blue tag actually is — the carbon equivalent of papal indulgences — why there is no free market for carbon capture, and why the only reason this industry exists in Louisiana is an $80-per-ton federal government subsidy.

In our Top 3, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals vacated its own previous ruling that Louisiana's state House and Senate district maps violated the Voting Rights Act — meaning Louisiana keeps its current maps and the Republican supermajorities in both chambers remain intact. Then former Lafayette Mayor-President Josh Guillory pleaded not guilty to malfeasance in office charges stemming from his alleged unauthorized relocation of a spoil bank along the Vermilion River — and we note the unusual nature of one parish bringing criminal charges against the mayor of another. And Bossier Parish Community College is launching a new AI-powered computer programming pilot program in partnership with the Louisiana Department of Education — featuring one-to-one tutoring, adaptive exercises, and automated grading.

We also dig into Louisiana gas prices — which jumped 22 cents in a single week to $4.02 a gallon, a painful reminder that energy costs ripple through everything from grocery store shelves to diesel-powered delivery trucks to school buses. We make the comparison most people aren't making — Joe Biden drove gas to these levels without a war in Iran, so imagine where we'd be today if Trump hadn't ramped up domestic energy production first.

In our Digging Deep segment, following the murder at the Mall of Louisiana, State Senator Alan Sebaugh has proposed expanding Louisiana's capital murder statute to include three new categories — murder committed while on parole in violation of a specific court restriction, murder committed using a firearm by someone already prohibited by law from possessing one, and murder committed in a public place with knowing reckless disregard for three or more bystanders. We walk through each scenario, debate whether capital punishment is actually a deterrent, and make the case that if we're going to have the death penalty, it should at minimum mean something.

We also cover the Mexican Army soldiers who stood and watched — doing nothing — as a drug cartel opened fire on a funeral procession in front of them. We explain why this isn't just a crime problem or corruption problem anymore — it's the erosion of state authority itself, and what it looks like when a cartel outguns and outmans the national army.

Marco Rubio stepped in as White House press secretary for a day while Caroline Leavitt is on maternity leave — and was asked what his hope for America is. We play the answer in full because it may be one of the most articulate defenses of American exceptionalism delivered by any public figure since Ronald Reagan. Anyone from anywhere can achieve anything. Not get anything. Achieve anything. We unpack every line.

Then we turn to Mark Hamill — Luke Skywalker himself — who posted imagery fantasizing about President Trump living just long enough to be politically destroyed, disgraced, imprisoned, and humiliated, with an image of Trump's grave and headstone. We call it what it is — reckless, dangerous, and deeply hypocritical from the same cultural class that has spent years lecturing conservatives about their rhetoric. And we make the case using Star Wars lore — if Luke Skywalker could say there is good in Darth Vader, the most iconic film villain in history, why can't Mark Hamill find it in himself to extend even a fraction of that grace to a real human being?

And we close with the Epstein purported suicide note released by a federal judge — which has not been authenticated, may have been written by his cellmate Nicholas Tartaglione who was in prison for murder, and shares a phrase with another confirmed Epstein document. We discuss what the handwriting tells us, what it doesn't, and why no amount of documentation is going to stop the conspiracy theories either way.
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