Election Day as a Day: How Drift Fractured a Once‑Unified Federal Moment
I. Introduction: The Vanishing of a Shared Civic Moment For most of American history, a federal election was a single, synchronized act. Citizens across the nation made their choices on the same day, under the same temporal boundary, and the republic…
Read MoreTwo America’s: A Restorationist Indictment of Political Violence
America has always consisted of two different peoples. There were people who believed that power is secured by fear, and the others believed that power is secured through persuasion. One group reaches for the torch, the mob, the boycott, the humiliation…
Read MoreWhen Confession Meets Code: Understanding Ted Cruz’s Warning About Symbolic Drift
In every generation, sacred language carries two burdens: the weight of its original meaning and the pressure of whatever cultural moment tries to repurpose it. The phrase “Christ is King” is one of the oldest confessions in the Christian tradition — a…
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