In America, every voice counts — to a degree. Those more active in the political process count more. Simply being a precinct captain in your local party gives you leverage that the average voter does not have. There are other ways to magnify one’s leverage.
One way is to be a donor. It’s costly to run for office — $5 million to win some congressional districts.
Some Areas Of Distraction For President Trump
Ten months into this Trump term:
-the Epstein files are AWOL,
-anti-AIPAC Massie is being primaried,
-many deep state American criminals are walking free, including those who ran a coup on this country in the 2020 color revolution,
-patriots, innocents, and heroes still sit in jail,
-the Executive Branch is moving fast for government, but at a snail’s pace for many Americans.
While these are matters our President can fix with the right perspective and will, our President, instead of ensuring pardons for our heroes, is flying into Ben Gurion Airport, addressing the Knesset, and asking for the pardon of Benjamin Netanyahu.
This doesn’t feel like America First. This feels like the fastest moving and most transparent presidency that has ever existed, but it also feels misguided.
Was he lying the whole time?
Was he a decepticon?
Maybe.
But you know what, he also needed a lot of money to get elected.
So, What’s Your Point?
I, too, can write a spicy ideological take down of how flawed Trump is and how correct your stated values are.
I’m not doing that.
I’m writing about what is happening right now, and how you, personally, can have impact.
Why President Trump Is Predictably Distracted
Trump has repeatedly called Israel-first billionaire Sheldon Adelson generous, tough, and demanding — most recently during his October 13, 2025, visit to Jerusalem.
The Knesset, the unicameral Israeli parliament building, was built with a gift from James de Rothschild (1878-1957) of the Ashkenazi banking family. The building is located on Rothschild Street. As the US President stood before that assembly, he paid honor to Miriam Adelson and the late Sheldon Adelson, who have supported his campaigns.
Mrs. Adelson was an honored guest as Trump announced peace in Gaza through a large multinational agreement, along with a rebuilding effort.
While October 13, 2025 is not two years after October 7, 2023 in the Gregorian calendar, in the Hebrew calendar it is exactly two years. Trump specifically came on the 21st and 22nd day of Tishri 5786. He left as the holiday Simchat Torah was beginning, the two-year anniversary of the attack, which began on the 22nd day of Tishri 5784, around sunrise on October 7, 2023.
Some say Trump came to declare victory in the ethnic cleansing campaign, and to dance on the ashes, as he began to paint the public picture of Gaza as an international real estate development not populated by locals.
Some 67,000 Palestinians died in Gaza from Israeli bullets, bombs, and fire these two years. Depending on how quickly and plentifully aid enters Gaza, multiples more will likely die because of limited food, sanitation, housing, and medical infrastructure. This situation looks very distracted and very Israel-first.
I don’t care for Israel-first influence in US politics. I despise it. I am as America First as Ron Paul taught me to be long ago. Donald Trump took up that mantle, and has done a relatively good job putting America first — though I recognize the man has flaws.
I also understand that the piper plays the tune of the one who pays him, and Trump didn’t finance his own campaign.
Zionist money did. I am grateful to not have another Bushite presidency. Bush was right 3 out of 10 times. Trump is right 8 out of 10 times.
Why I Am Grateful To The Zionist Supporters Of President Trump
Trump deserves criticism. A lot. But you probably do too.
It’s easy to criticize another. It’s harder to partner with a person to build the future.
The Zionists, for all their flaws, do that. I am grateful to not have a Kamala Harris presidency. If I run into Miriam Adelson, I will thank her for that. I will also, likely, share a few other opinions. But first I will thank her for helping return Trump to the White House.
I know many well-resourced people who did not stand up for America the way Adelson did. Of course Adelson was likely more interested in what Trump would do for Israel, than what Trump would do for America. That does not change the fact that she helped give me 10 months of a president who gets it right 8 out of 10 times.
Yet, The Cheapskates And Do-Nothings Now Feel Entitled To Comment Without Shame Or Blame
In contrast to Adelson, at this late hour, a year after an election, many well-resourced cheapskates speak up. Did those of you capable, support Trump heartily last summer? No. Well, then you are part of the problem that created a vacuum for the Zionist donors, aren’t you?
Did those of you with the wherewithal to start a PAC for Trump (basically any literate American over 16), start a PAC for Trump? No. Well, then you are part of the problem that created a vacuum for the Zionist donors, aren’t you?
Did you knock on doors Scott Pressler-style? Did you become a precinct captain? Did you have conversations with your 40 closest acquaintances? Did you do anything other than vote? Because that’s not enough.
I mean, there is only so far that finger pointing can get you.
And there is only so far that air support from the White House can get America. Trump cannot do everything from the Oval Office. He can’t change 80-plus years of failed policies and lazy freedom culture. He can’t change 80-plus years of Americans being nonchalant toward freedom.
I hate how incapable of cooperation many on the political right are. I love the individualism. I love the freedom. I hate the willingness to burn friends who are not perfect. I hate the selfishness when it comes to collaboration.
Your political rival is, in contrast, lockstep unified. American businessman Robert Welch (1899-1985), when he started the John Birch Society, made clear the dedication that communists have to their cause — that they tithe both fortune and time to that cause.
It’s an aberration to see the same from someone on the political right — especially their fortune.
How many times I have met conservatives and libertarians who won’t spend a penny without great hesitation — from the offering plate to charities, from pretty good candidates to pretty good companies. Many America First people will sooner buy slop from Costco than to spend $3 more buying eggs, butter, meat or other staples from a quality farmer.
I mean, it’s hard to take some vocal freedom lovers seriously.
No, it’s hard to take many vocal freedom lovers seriously.
So, I am happy for the Zionists on the political right. They are funding campaigns that bring some benefit to the American people, and to me personally.
If we can ever force AIPAC and their bedfellows to register as foreign agents, I suspect we will notice that wealthy Zionists priced many Americans out of the political process in both parties, and created $5 million congressional races. To force AIPAC to register is going to take a lot more rising to the occasion.
As I write this, many lukewarm Trump supporters write him off, while many Zionists are busy getting friends into his administration, and writing checks for the midterms next year.
They don’t feel bad about your lukewarmness for Trump or for the process. Your lack of resolve makes it easier for them to be more dominant.
What Happens Next?
Let me save you the suspense. Given the trajectory of the grassroots, Zionists and establishment Republicans will have increasing influence over this term, since so many in the grassroots are acting like born losers, while so many Zionists are playing an effective strategy in a predictable game.
I have no appetite for those who bail one year post-election because they aren’t getting what they wanted. Open your eyes and realize freedom isn’t free. You are going to have to work for it, especially after 80-plus years of neglect.
Some Fighters I Admire
Do you know who I admire? Steve Bannon. He found partners, started a successful podcast, became a voice of a movement, was put on trial, let off, put on trial again, thrown in prison, and is still going strong.
Is he perfect? Doesn’t matter.
Do you know who I admire? Robert Kennedy. He lost in 2024, lost again in 2024, swallowed his pride, joined the Trump team when it was in its darkest hours, is pilloried in the media daily, loses 8 out of 10 battles in a department that, on paper, he controls, and keeps pushing forward with small victories.
Is he perfect? Doesn’t matter.
Do you know who I admire? Jesse Benton. He helped advance liberty through Ron Paul’s campaign, helped advance liberty through Rand Paul’s campaign, helped advance liberty even through Mitch McConnell’s campaign. For years, he has been hounded by federal prosecutors for things no Democrat, even in the reddest of states, would see jail time for.
Is he perfect? Doesn’t matter.
Do you know who I admire? Steve Stockman, a man who was an activist troublemaker in and out of Congress before becoming the Jack Smith lawfare test case for what they did to Donald Trump. Still a warrior.
Is he perfect? Doesn’t matter.
Do you know who I admire? Thomas Massie, a man who acts out of conviction to represent his district. He is arguably the most impactful member of the House, including the Speaker. Absent some significant change in the Speaker’s demeanor, no one will remember the Speaker in 20 years, but Thomas Massie will still be remembered in 200 years. Each American can be a Massie, a virtually meaningless 1 out of 435 who leverages his position bigly, or every American can be the Speaker of the House, whatever his name is, a virtually faceless person who holds one of the most important offices in the country, yet lives his days as a valueless cog in someone else’s machine. Those are our two dramatic choices in life.
Is he perfect? Doesn’t matter.
I am a Christian. That means I have high moral standards for myself and when I screw up (which I do), I repent and accept my Savior’s forgiveness. I have high moral standards for others, and I also know that people aren’t perfect. I have appreciation for idealists who believe in freedom and stay in the arena.
At the same time, I know when people around me are hardly trying, and because of that, they are losing the greatest opportunity they have to revive freedom. Kudos to those likeminded people, those who truly believe in freedom and are truly America First.
Robert Welch said decades ago that communists tithe money and time to their cause. Those people are now deep within American institutions. Communists still tithe time and money, outside of work, to their cause. The institutions, however, now support their full-time work toward their cause. They are in every institution around you from police to church, from street sweeper to health official, from hospital to the real estate, and they are promoting their communist worldview.
In response to that reality, do you really think you are going to win back your country by folding on a pretty good president after 10 months and never having given so much it hurts to that fight, let alone waking up every day and giving so much it hurts EVERY SINGLE DAY to that fight.
I give so much that it hurts, and I do it every single day.
You can do the same. We can win this. We don’t have to lose this. Don’t fall for the enticing story of the doomers, the do-nothings, and the cheapskates who proclaim freedom in empty words and who do little of consequence.
Dear cheapskate who is complaining a year after the election — you are part of the problem. Please amend your behavior. Thank you for your attention to this important matter.