From Our Generation
The United States has 11 companies worth more than a trillion dollars. No other country has one. The most valuable company in Europe is worth $600 billion. Japan's is $250 billion. Something about how this country operates produces outcomes no other system has matched, and the question of what that something is runs through every political fight happening right now. The American experiment was built by self-selected risk-takers who left known lives for uncertain ones. The founders designed a system obsessed with preventing tyranny, splitting power between branches, between federal and state governments, between the impulse of the moment and the slow grind of process. For the first 150 years, non-defense federal spending was under a billion dollars. Then a series of Supreme Court decisions changed the architecture. The Commerce Clause was reinterpreted to let Congress regulate a farmer's wheat that never left his property. Chevron deference stripped courts of the ability to check agency rulemaking. Roe v. Wade federalized a moral question every state had already addressed. Sullivan made it nearly impossible for public figures to hold media accountable for false statements. Each decision shifted power upward and concentrated it further from the people the system was designed to serve. Now several of those pillars are cracking. Chevron deference has been overturned. Racial gerrymandering has been struck down, with southern states already redrawing maps that will force candidates of both parties to build broader coalitions. The Dershowitz case heading to the Supreme Court could narrow Sullivan and restore real accountability for media defamation. School choice provisions in the big beautiful bill create a $1,700 federal tax credit that funds alternatives to failing public schools, a financial mechanism designed to unleash the same competitive pressure in education that drives American enterprise everywhere else. The fraud exposure accelerates the shift. States that ignored Obamacare's own revalidation requirements for Medicaid providers are being forced to comply. SNAP recipients buying Ferraris and Lamborghinis make the case for oversight more vividly than any policy paper. Blue states that built budgets around unchecked federal transfers are watching the math change in real time. Population follows incentives. Blue states are losing residents. Over 100,000 people left Los Angeles in 12 months. SEC schools are seeing application surges while Ivy League applications drop 20%. The 2030 census will likely shift 6 to 14 House seats to red states. Couple that with the end of race-based districting, and the structural advantage Democrats built over decades is unwinding on multiple fronts simultaneously. Whether the reversal holds is an open question. But for the first time in a century, the trajectory of centralized power is bending back toward the design the founders intended. For more episodes and resources, visit f [fromourgeneration.com]romourgeneration.com [fromourgeneration.com]. Dive deeper with Giants of Political Thought at giantsofpoliticalthought.com [giantsofpoliticalthought.com].
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