Friday, July 17, 2026

KRZYSZTOF SZCZAWINSKI: The tyrant’s problem is the citizen. The citizen has history, has roots, has pre-existing loyalties to the republic that predate the tyrant and do not depend on him. He has opinions. He remembers what things were like before. He has standing to compare. The foreigner — admitted suddenly, dependent on the system that admitted him, owing his position to the current arrangement — enters with none of that.

Two quotes, twenty-one centuries apart, describing the same mechanism. Aristotle first: “Another mark of a tyrant is that he likes foreigners better than citizens, and lives with them and invites them to his table; for the one are enemies, but the others enter into no rivalry with him.” Jefferson second: “To admit foreigners indiscriminately to the rights of citizens would be nothing less than to admit the Trojan horse into the citadel of our liberty and sovereignty.” Read them together and the argument assembles itself. The tyrant’s problem is the citizen. The citizen has history, has roots, has pre-existing loyalties to the republic that predate the tyrant and do not depend on him. He has opinions. He remembers what things were like before. He has standing to compare. The foreigner — admitted suddenly, dependent on the system that admitted him, owing his position to the current arrangement — enters with none of that. He is grateful rather than demanding. Dependent rather than sovereign. The tyrant does not prefer foreigners because he is cosmopolitan. He prefers them because they cannot yet rival him. Loyalty purchased through admission is more reliable than loyalty inherited through citizenship. Jefferson names the mechanism from the other end: indiscriminate admission is not generosity. It is the Trojan Horse – the gift that enters through the open gate precisely because the gate is open, bypassing every defense the citadel was built to maintain. The horse is welcomed in. The soldiers emerge at night. The citadel falls not to siege but to hospitality weaponized. Neither man was against foreigners. Both were against the political use of admission – the deliberate flooding of the civic space with people whose loyalties are unformed, whose dependencies are fresh, and whose gratitude can be directed. Aristotle observed it as a tyrant’s tool. Jefferson warned against it as a republic’s vulnerability. Both understood that a self-governing people requires a demos with shared history, shared stakes, and shared accountability – and that a ruler who bypasses the formation of that demos is not building a nation. He is building a tyranny.

And the Trojan Horse didn’t need to breach the walls. The citizens opened the gates. And then it was just administration. 

JOHN GUANDOLO: The GOP is the greatest threat to America. Communists/democrats act like communists. Jihadis act like jihadis. The party of Lincoln is merely holding the door for communists and jihadis instead of smashing them.

RINOs are even worse than democrats. --American Warrior for Christ

DR. JANE RUBY: THINK TWICE: Fast Food Egg Sandwich: NOT REAL FOOD

HEATHER MACDONALD: Teen takeovers are the predictable result of an elite culture that excuses public disorder and crime as a reaction to white supremacy.

They ended up closing down the whole shopping center because these kids went nuts.  But this is part of the pattern that you're writing about, isn't it? 

00:08.  Right.  I mean, for decades, the elites have been excusing black crime. I'm going to be very upfront. This is a race issue that we're talking about here in the name of fighting social injustice, systemic racism.  They've been telegraphing the message that it's okay to steal, it's okay to assault police officers because you are victims of white oppression, and the juvenile justice system has been becoming more and more lenient.  Prosecutors in more conservative jurisdictions that are in blue States just despair at the state rules that are being imposed upon them that basically make it impossible to impose any consequences on teens.  And as a result, there's a sense of being able to wreak havoc with impunity.  And then what happens after a teen takeover?  You know, this has been something that's got the media's attention, then there's a whole new set of justifications, even more preposterous than the usual ones that come up.  

Show notes state that Heather MacDonald appears at the 3:33 mark.  That's a mistake.  She doesn't come on until after 16:10, 16:33-27:20 to be exact, when Mark begins his introduction to teen takeovers.  

MacDonald has written recently on teen takeovers, titled, "The Scourge of Teen Takeovers: Why Youths Are Rampaging in Cities Across American--And How to Stop It," Heather MacDonald, July 13, 2026.

BREE SOLDSTAD: 232 years ago today, 16 humble Catholic Carmelite Nuns effectively put an end to the French Revolution’s Godless reign of terror in France.