Dwain Northey (Gen X)

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/naacp-travel-advisory-florida-says-state-hostile-to-black-americans/

Remember the good old days when there were only travel advisories and or ban for, what some would call, third word countries? Well now because of the vile vitriol of one Governor Ron DeSantis the state of Florida, a vacation destination, has received a travel advisory by the NAACP.

The wannabe future President has made the climate so venomous in Florida the anyone who is a part of any minority group does not feel safe in the state. Black, Brown, LGTBQ+, these are all groups that are under attack in the Sunshine State. The majority Republican legislature and their fearful leader has passed laws that make almost everything a jailable offence and the fact that the state has very loose gun laws and a stand your ground law makes it more dangerous than being a blonde female in central America.

Florida residents are able to carry concealed guns without a permit under a bill signed into law by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis. The law, which goes into effect on July 1, means that anyone who can legally own a gun in Florida can carry a concealed gun in public without any training or background check. This with their ridiculous stand your ground law, ‘Florida’s “Stand-Your-Ground” law was passed in 2005. The law allows those who feel a reasonable threat of death or bodily injury to “meet force with force” rather than retreat. Similar “Castle Doctrine” laws assert that a person does not need to retreat if their home is attacked.’ Makes it really sketchy to go there.

This in top of the don’t say gay rule and the new trans ruling that just passed.

“Florida lawmakers have no shame. This discriminatory bill is extraordinarily desperate and extreme in a year full of extreme, discriminatory legislation. It is a cruel effort to stigmatize, marginalize and erase the LGBTQ+ community, particularly transgender youth. Let me be clear: gender-affirming care saves lives. Every mainstream American medical and mental health organization – representing millions of providers in the United States – call for age-appropriate, gender-affirming care for transgender and non-binary people.

“These politicians have no place inserting themselves in conversations between doctors, parents, and transgender youth about gender-affirming care. And at the same time that Florida lawmakers crow about protecting parental rights they make an extra-constitutional attempt to strip parents of – you guessed it! – their parental rights. The Human Rights Campaign strongly condemns this bill and will continue to fight for LGBTQ+ youth and their families who deserve better from their elected leaders.”

This law makes it possible for anyone to just accuse someone of gender affirming care to have their child taken from them this would include someone traveling from out of state. This alone justifies a travel ban to the Magic Kingdom for families.

Oh, and I haven’t even mentioned DeSantis holy war with Disney, the largest employer in the state. I really hope the Mouse eats this ass holes lunch.

Well that’s enough bitching, thanks again for suffering though my rant.

  • Empty Nest

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    I always knew this day was coming. That’s the part that makes it almost ridiculous to admit how hard it hits. There was no surprise twist, no sudden disappearance—just a long, steady approach. Fifteen years of watching the horizon inch closer, pretending it wasn’t getting closer at all.

    When the divorce happened, everything collapsed inward until it was just the two of us. My world didn’t get smaller—it got sharper. Focused. Every schedule, every decision, every late-night worry, every small victory revolved around him. Soccer games, school projects, the quiet routine of dinners that were sometimes nothing special but somehow everything at the same time. It wasn’t just parenting—it was orbit. He was the center of it.

    And now… the orbit is gone.

    The room is the loudest part. That’s what I didn’t expect. I thought I’d feel it in the big moments—holidays, birthdays, milestones—but no, it’s the ordinary silence that does it. His door stays open now, not because he forgot to close it, but because there’s no reason to. The bed is made in a way that feels more like a display than a place someone lives. No shoes kicked off in the corner, no half-finished anything, no background noise of a life in motion. Just stillness.

    It’s not like he vanished. He’s out there, building a life, exactly the life you spend years hoping your kid will have. He’s married. He’s happy. He’s independent. If you wrote this down as a checklist, you’d call it success. You’d call it the goal.

    So why does it feel like loss?

    Maybe because for so long, being his parent wasn’t just something I did—it was who I was. Especially after the divorce. There wasn’t another adult in the house to balance things out, to share the weight or the identity. It was just me, filling all the roles, learning as I went, getting some things right, definitely getting some things wrong, but always moving forward because he was there. Because he needed me.

    And now he doesn’t. Not in the same way.

    That’s the part nobody really prepares you for. People talk about raising independent kids like it’s the finish line, but they don’t talk about what happens when you actually get there. When the job you poured yourself into for over a decade doesn’t disappear—but it changes so much it barely resembles what it was.

    There’s this strange echo of something else, too. Something older. I catch myself thinking about my own parents, about how distance crept in there as well. Not out of anger or neglect, just… life. Time. Priorities shifting in ways that felt natural at the time. And now I hear that old song in my head—the one about “cats in the cradle”—and it doesn’t feel like a cliché anymore. It feels like a quiet warning I didn’t fully understand until now.

    You start to wonder: is this just how it goes? You raise them, you give them everything you can, and then one day they move forward and you become part of the background of their story instead of the center of it.

    It’s not that he doesn’t care. I know he does. That’s what makes this even more complicated. There’s no anger to hold onto, no conflict to explain the distance. Just the reality that his life is full now, in ways that don’t revolve around me. And that’s exactly how it’s supposed to be.

    But “supposed to be” doesn’t make it feel any less empty.

    The house feels bigger in all the wrong ways. Time stretches differently. Even PD seems to realize that something’s different, like there’s a rhythm missing that hasn’t quite been replaced. And I find myself standing in that doorway more often than I’d like to admit, looking into a room that used to be alive and trying to reconcile the fact that it isn’t anymore.

    I saw it coming. Of course I did.

    I just didn’t realize that knowing something is coming doesn’t soften the impact when it finally arrives.

    It just means you can’t pretend you weren’t warned.

  • Administrative Holy War

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    There’s something almost admirable—if you squint hard enough and abandon all standards—about the audacity of watching a cast of political understudies, opportunists, and professional grievance merchants try to drape themselves in the robes of divine purpose. Apparently, we are now meant to believe that this collection of moral minimalists, led by Donald Trump, is not merely governing, but crusading. Not stumbling through policy, but waging a holy war.

    Yes, a holy war. Because nothing says spiritual enlightenment quite like late-night social media tirades, grift-adjacent fundraising emails, and a revolving door of scandals that would make even historically corrupt regimes blush. If this is sanctity, then perhaps irony has finally achieved sentience.

    The pitch, as best as one can decipher through the fog of contradictions, is that they are righteous warriors locked in an existential battle for the soul of the nation. This would carry more weight if their definition of “soul” didn’t seem to fluctuate depending on polling data and donor enthusiasm. One minute it’s about faith and values; the next, it’s about settling scores, relitigating personal slights, and ensuring that loyalty to the “God king” remains the highest commandment.

    And let’s talk about that framing for a moment—this near-mythical elevation of leadership into something bordering on divine right. Historically, that sort of thing hasn’t exactly ended in peaceful hymnals and moral clarity. It tends to produce… well, the exact opposite of what most religions spend their time preaching. Humility is replaced with bravado, compassion with cruelty, and truth with whatever happens to trend well in the outrage economy that day.

    Yet here we are, watching the spectacle unfold. A group that treats ethics like a loose suggestion now insists it is the last line of defense for righteousness itself. It’s a bit like watching arsonists lecture on fire safety—technically possible, but difficult to take seriously while everything is still smoldering behind them.

    In the end, the “holy war” branding says less about any genuine spiritual mission and more about the timeless political strategy of wrapping ambition in something that sounds nobler than it is. Because if you can convince people you’re chosen, you don’t have to convince them you’re competent.

    And that, perhaps, is the most revealing part of all.

  • Rhetoric

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    There’s something almost admirable about the sheer athleticism it takes to clutch pearls this hard while simultaneously setting fire to the entire jewelry store.

    On one hand, you have Donald Trump—a man who has never met a rhetorical overreach he didn’t want to strap to a rocket and launch into orbit. We’re talking about speeches where “we’ll defeat them” quietly morphs into “we’ll obliterate them,” where entire nations or cultures get discussed like they’re optional menu items. Casual talk of “annihilation” isn’t a slip; it’s practically a brand identity.

    And yet—somewhere, somehow—the true crisis emerges not from that, but from a late-night monologue.

    Enter Jimmy Kimmel, who does what late-night hosts have done since the invention of television: make jokes about politicians. In this case, a jab about Trump’s age, with a side comment about Melania Trump looking like a “glowing, expectant widow.” It’s the kind of joke that lands somewhere between mildly spicy and aggressively dad-humor-adjacent.

    But if you listened to certain corners of the political world, you’d think Kimmel had just issued a formal declaration of war.

    Suddenly, the same voices that shrug off literal threats of destruction are sounding the alarm: This is dangerous rhetoric. This is incitement. This is crossing a line.

    A line, apparently, that sits somewhere between “annihilating civilizations = fine” and “late-night joke about aging = attempted assassination.”

    And then, as if the irony hadn’t already reached critical mass, we get the resurrection of the “8647” controversy—because someone posted seashells arranged in numbers. Seashells. On a beach. A setting previously known for sunsets, not sedition.

    Here’s the part that makes the whole thing wobble under its own weight: the number “86” isn’t some shadowy code invented in a basement message board. It’s a piece of everyday slang with roots in the restaurant world. To “86” something simply means it’s out—off the menu, unavailable, done for the night. The kitchen ran out of salmon? It’s 86’d. No more fries? 86 fries. It’s not a hit list; it’s a supply issue.

    Yes, language evolves, and in some contexts “86” can be used more broadly to mean “get rid of” or “remove.” But treating it as an inherent call for violence requires a leap that would make an Olympic long jumper nervous. By that logic, every short-order cook in America has been issuing threats for decades.

    Which is fascinating, because during Joe Biden’s presidency, variations like “8646” floated around with all the urgency of a bumper sticker at a gas station. No emergency panels. No breathless headlines. No calls for legal consequences. Apparently, numerical symbolism only becomes dangerous when it’s politically inconvenient.

    So now seashells are suspect, jokes are dangerous, and late-night hosts are apparently one monologue away from toppling civilization—while actual escalations in rhetoric get waved through like they’re holding a VIP pass.

    If there’s a unifying theory here, it’s this: rhetoric isn’t judged by its intensity, its implications, or even its content. It’s judged by its direction. A joke aimed the wrong way becomes a national emergency. A number with a mundane origin becomes a sinister code. Meanwhile, language that openly flirts with destruction barely earns a shrug.

    And that’s the real punchline—one that no late-night host could improve upon.

  • Judging by Color

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    Here’s a sharper essay in the vein you’re aiming for, focused on the implications of the Court’s recent ruling in Louisiana v. Callais, which significantly narrowed how Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act can be used to challenge racially discriminatory district maps. Multiple legal analyses describe it as one of the most consequential voting-rights decisions in years because it raises the bar for proving racial vote dilution claims.  

    For decades, the basic idea was simple enough for even politicians to understand, which is saying something: if you carve up voting maps in a way that dilutes the political power of racial minorities, that’s racial gerrymandering, and the courts can stop you. It wasn’t a perfect system, but it was at least built on the radical notion that democracy works better when voters choose politicians instead of politicians choosing their voters.

    Apparently that concept has now become too complicated.

    The Supreme Court has essentially unveiled a new legal magic trick: if a predominantly Black or Latino community happens to vote heavily Democratic, then slicing that community into pieces and scattering it across districts isn’t racial discrimination — it’s just “partisan line drawing.” Because, according to this logic, race and voting patterns exist in completely separate universes, floating around independently like they’ve never met.

    That’s a pretty remarkable conclusion when the very same maps often divide communities along lines that just happen to correlate almost perfectly with race. What an astonishing coincidence. A statistical marvel, really. Future mathematicians may study how neighborhoods can be split with surgical precision to weaken minority voting strength while somehow remaining totally innocent of racial intent.

    It’s the legal equivalent of someone stealing your car, repainting it, and then arguing in court that technically they didn’t steal your car because this one is blue.

    The ruling shifts the standard toward requiring proof of intentional racial discrimination rather than discriminatory effect — which sounds neat and tidy until you remember that modern discrimination rarely comes with a signed confession and a PowerPoint titled “Our Plan to Suppress Minority Votes.” Courts historically looked at outcomes because lawmakers learned a long time ago not to put the ugly part in writing.  

    And that’s the real sleight of hand here. The Court is basically saying: unless legislators explicitly announce, “Hello, yes, we are doing racism now,” then we’ll generously assume they’re just making innocent partisan adjustments.

    Convenient.

    This creates a loophole wide enough to drive an entire state legislature through. If racial communities vote in ways that happen to threaten the party in power, lawmakers can now fracture those communities and simply shrug: “Nothing racial about it. They just vote wrong.”

    Which is a fascinating constitutional theory. By that standard, almost any racial discrimination can be repackaged as political strategy so long as you remember to workshop the press release.

    The Voting Rights Act wasn’t created because America had a few accidental paperwork issues in the 1960s. It was created because discrimination evolves. It adapts. It swaps out literacy tests for legal technicalities, fire hoses for judicial opinions, and blunt exclusion for carefully calibrated district lines.

    The tactics change. The result doesn’t.

    And once again, the burden falls on disenfranchised communities to prove what everyone can plainly see, while those drawing the maps get to stand there with straight faces insisting the whole thing is just a coincidence of geometry.

  • Crown Envy

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    There’s something almost performance-art level perfect about King Charles III visiting Washington and immediately being drafted into the world’s most awkward receiving line—one that somehow manages to revolve entirely around Donald Trump. Because of course it does. Why wouldn’t a ceremonial moment involving a literal king become a one-man show about a man who has spent years behaving like one without the inconvenience of a crown?

    Picture it: dignitaries lined up, history unfolding, cameras clicking—and right there in the middle of it all, Donald plants himself like a human traffic cone. Not quite royalty, not quite host, but absolutely determined to be the main character. It’s less “state visit” and more “impromptu campaign stop with a confused monarch in the background.”

    And then, as if the choreography wasn’t strange enough, we get the commentary. Charles, a man who has spent decades perfecting polite, dry humor, makes a light remark about the ballroom—because apparently even he can’t resist acknowledging the ongoing obsession. One can only imagine the internal monologue: I’ve waited my entire life to be king, crossed an ocean for diplomacy, and somehow we’re talking about a function hall.

    Meanwhile, Donald hears “ballroom” and treats it like a policy briefing. Suddenly it’s not just a room—it’s a vision, a legacy project, a symbol of greatness that absolutely must be discussed right now, in front of a visiting head of state. Because nothing says “strong international relations” like cornering a monarch to workshop interior design.

    But the real masterpiece comes when King Charles, King of England—actual, hereditary monarch—finds himself talking about democracy. Democracy. In America. To Americans. While standing next to a man who has never met a democratic norm he didn’t try to bend, break, or redecorate.

    You couldn’t script it better.

    Here’s Charles, representing an institution that quite literally defines unelected power, gently offering reflections on democratic values. And somehow, it lands with more credibility than the surrounding commentary. That’s the twist. The king sounds like the adult in the room, while the elected official is busy treating the moment like an episode of Extreme Makeover: West Wing Edition.

    It’s the kind of irony that would make historians blink twice. The British monarchy—once the very thing America rebelled against—is now calmly explaining democratic principles, while an American political figure is busy blocking the receiving line and pitching renovations.

    Somewhere, the ghosts of the American Revolution are just shaking their heads.

    And maybe that’s the takeaway. Not the speeches, not the optics, not even the ballroom. Just the quiet realization that in this particular moment, the king acted less like a monarch than the guy who couldn’t stop talking about drapes.

    Long live the irony.

  • Ballroom Pitch?

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    There’s a certain theatrical efficiency to the way this administration handles a crisis. Something happens—serious, unsettling, worthy of sober reflection—and within what feels like minutes, it’s been repackaged, polished, and rolled back out to the public as a sales pitch. Not for unity, not for accountability, but for… a ballroom.

    The incident around the White House Correspondents’ Dinner—thankfully contained before it became a full-scale tragedy—should have been one of those moments where the country collectively exhales and asks hard questions about security, about rhetoric, about the temperature we’ve all been living in. Instead, it pivoted almost instantly into what can only be described as an architectural infomercial. You could practically hear the narrator: “Are you tired of historic venues with charm, openness, and accessibility? Introducing: The Ballroom. Bigger! Safer! Completely insulated from the messy unpredictability of reality!”

    It’s hard not to raise an eyebrow at the timing. Before the dust even settles, we’re told—again—that the solution isn’t policy, or tone, or leadership, but construction. Always construction. As if the fundamental problem isn’t the environment being created, but the square footage in which it unfolds. The implication seems to be that danger exists because the room isn’t large or fortified enough, not because of anything deeper or more systemic.

    And here’s the uncomfortable thought that lingers: if you find yourself needing an ever-thickening barrier between you and the public, at what point do you stop and ask why? Leaders throughout history have faced threats—that’s not new—but most didn’t respond by trying to seal themselves inside progressively larger bubbles. The presidency, at least in theory, is supposed to exist in some relationship with the people, not in permanent retreat from them.

    The ballroom idea itself carries a kind of surreal logic. Yes, let’s build a massive, secure, gleaming structure—one that, by even optimistic timelines, wouldn’t be completed until well after 2028. So what exactly is the plan in the meantime? And once it’s built, what then? Is the presidency meant to become a stationary experience? A sort of gilded containment zone where events happen safely out of reach, like a museum exhibit of governance?

    Because that’s the quiet part no one says out loud: a ballroom doesn’t solve the underlying problem. It just moves it further away. It creates distance—physical, symbolic, and political. And distance might feel like safety, but it also looks a lot like isolation.

    What makes the whole situation feel “sus,” as the kids would say, isn’t just the speed of the pivot—it’s the familiarity of it. Crisis becomes narrative, narrative becomes justification, justification becomes project. Rinse, repeat. It’s not even subtle anymore. The pattern is so well-worn it practically runs on autopilot.

    Meanwhile, the rest of the country watches this unfold and can’t help but notice the contrast. Ordinary people deal with real threats in everyday spaces—schools, workplaces, public events—without the luxury of redesigning the environment to avoid them. There’s no federal ballroom coming to shield them from the world. They’re asked instead to adapt, endure, and carry on.

    So when the response to a near-tragedy at a high-profile event is essentially, “We need a bigger, safer room,” it lands differently. It doesn’t feel like leadership. It feels like branding.

    And maybe that’s the most telling part of all. Not the incident itself, not even the proposal that followed, but the instinct to turn everything—everything—into a pitch.

  • N.I.C.E.

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    Oh yes, because nothing says “serious governance” quite like solving complex, decades-old policy debates with… a vowel.

    Apparently, Donald Trump has decided that the issue with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement isn’t policy, oversight, accountability, or those inconvenient headlines—it’s branding. Just branding. A rebrand. A little linguistic makeover.

    ICE? Too cold. Too harsh. Too… on the nose.

    But NICE? Now that’s the ticket. Warm. Friendly. Reassuring. Like a customer service rep who just denied your claim but thanked you for your patience and invited you to have a wonderful day.

    And the brilliance of it all? If you rename it “National Immigration and Customs Enforcement,” suddenly the acronym becomes NICE, and the media is “forced” to say “NICE agents” all day long. Problem solved. Public perception: fixed. Decades of controversy: gone. All it took was the strategic deployment of a single consonant swap.

    That’s it. That’s the plan. Madison and Hamilton are somewhere asking if this was really the endgame.

    Because clearly, if something sounds pleasant, it is pleasant. That’s just common sense. Next up, we’ll be renaming root canals to “Happy Tooth Journeys” and hurricanes to “Aggressive Breezes.” Maybe we can call traffic jams “spontaneous parking opportunities” while we’re at it.

    And honestly, it’s not even surprising. This is entirely consistent with a worldview where reality is negotiable as long as the branding is strong enough. After all, this is the same orbit of thinking that has flirted with calling the United States Department of Defense the “Department of War”—because why settle for measured, diplomatic language when you can sound like the title card of an action movie?

    Think about that contrast for a second. One agency gets softened into something that sounds like it hands out cookies. Another gets hardened into something that sounds like it hands out ultimatums. It’s like federal agencies are just emotional support labels now—adjust the tone depending on what reaction you want that day.

    And threading through all of this is the small, almost charming detail that there’s still an apparent desire for a Nobel Peace Prize. Yes, the same mindset that thinks “Department of War” really pops is also eyeing one of the world’s highest honors for peace.

    It’s a kind of conceptual multitasking that’s hard not to admire. Why choose between sounding tough and sounding benevolent when you can just rename things until you’re somehow both?

    Of course, there’s the minor inconvenience that renaming federal agencies isn’t like updating your Wi-Fi password. It involves laws, bureaucracy, Congress—all those pesky details that don’t fit neatly into a branding exercise. But why let reality interrupt a perfectly good naming brainstorm?

    Because that’s what this really is: government by rebrand. Policy by vibes. If something feels controversial, soften the name. If something feels weak, toughen it up. If people are concerned, just give the concern a nicer label and hope it goes away.

    And the underlying assumption is almost endearing in its simplicity—that Americans are just one clever acronym away from completely rethinking complicated institutions. As if decades of debate can be undone by the linguistic equivalent of putting a smiley face sticker on it.

    At this rate, we’re not far from a full rollout:

    Deficit? “Surprise Savings Gap.”
    Recession? “Economic Nap.”
    War? “Extended Peacekeeping Opportunity.”

    Problem solved. Everything is NICE now.

  • Correspondence dinner 2026

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    There’s a certain kind of outrage that only shows up when the threat gets close enough to brush against tuxedos and evening gowns. Suddenly, everyone remembers what fear feels like. Suddenly, security lapses are intolerable. Suddenly, it’s a national scandal.

    At the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, an incident involving a shooter—who, thankfully, never even made it inside the ballroom—has sparked exactly that kind of reaction. And to be clear, it’s a good thing it didn’t escalate. No one with a functioning brain is rooting for violence. The relief is real.

    But so is the whiplash.

    Because the same voices now clutching pearls hard enough to leave fingerprints have spent years treating school shootings like inconvenient weather patterns. Tragic, yes—but also somehow inevitable, unfixable, and definitely not urgent enough to disrupt the political comfort zone. Kids run active shooter drills like they’re preparing for a pop quiz, and the national response is a shrug wrapped in “thoughts and prayers.”

    Yet let a threat drift within proximity of powerful people and well-dressed journalists, and suddenly it’s DEFCON 1 for the national conscience.

    Now, predictably, here comes Donald Trump, stepping up to the microphone to declare that security is terrible—just terrible—and that this is exactly why, obviously, we’ve needed a new, more secure ballroom for the past 150 years or so. Because nothing says “serious policy solution” like a construction project that conveniently aligns with long-standing wish lists.

    It’s almost impressive how quickly a near-miss turns into a real estate pitch.

    And that’s where it starts to feel… off. Not staged, not fake—but opportunistic in that very familiar way. A scary moment becomes a talking point. A talking point becomes justification. And justification becomes funding, contracts, headlines, and a fresh round of political theater.

    Meanwhile, back in the real world, actual children still sit in classrooms where “what do we do if someone starts shooting?” is part of the curriculum. No ballroom upgrades. No sweeping security overhauls announced with urgency. No sudden, unified outrage that demands immediate action.

    Just normalization.

    So yes, it’s good that nothing happened at the dinner. It’s good that security, flawed as it may have been, ultimately held. But the reaction—the sheer intensity of it—reveals a hierarchy of concern that’s hard to ignore.

    When danger hovers near power, it’s a crisis.
    When it stalks everyday life, it’s a statistic.

    And that contrast? That’s the part that really sticks.

  • Playing with House $$

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    At some point in the early 20th century, the United States looked around at a handful of men quietly controlling entire industries and said, “You know what? Maybe this whole ‘one company owns everything’ thing isn’t great for anyone who isn’t that one company.” That realization didn’t come from abstract theory—it came from lived experience with monopolies that didn’t just dominate markets, they rigged them.

    So along came laws like the Sherman Antitrust Act and later the Clayton Antitrust Act, and eventually high-profile trust-busting under figures like Theodore Roosevelt. The idea wasn’t complicated: markets only “work” if there’s actual competition. If one company controls everything—or if a few giant firms quietly agree not to compete—then the “free market” becomes more of a suggestion than a reality.

    That’s why Standard Oil got broken up in 1911. It wasn’t because people suddenly developed a philosophical objection to oil. It was because Standard Oil had mastered the art of eliminating competition—buying it, crushing it, or undercutting it until it disappeared. Once that happens, prices stop being a result of competition and start being whatever the dominant player says they are.

    Fast forward to today, and we hear a constant refrain: “Let the market decide.” It’s a nice slogan. Clean. Efficient. Almost comforting. The problem is that it assumes there is a market to decide anything.

    Take airlines. Over the past few decades, mergers have turned what used to be a crowded field into a tight club dominated by a few major players like Delta Air Lines, American Airlines, and United Airlines. On paper, that’s still “competition.” In practice, it often looks like a synchronized dance of pricing, fees, and shrinking seat sizes. Consumers don’t really choose between fundamentally different options—they choose between variations of the same experience at nearly the same price.

    Or consider media. A handful of conglomerates like Comcast and The Walt Disney Company control vast swaths of what people watch, read, and listen to. When ownership consolidates at that scale, diversity of viewpoints and pricing competition tend to narrow. It’s not that consumers suddenly lost interest in variety—it’s that the system stopped offering it.

    And then there’s oil, where giants like ExxonMobil and Chevron Corporation dominate production and refining. Again, technically there’s more than one company, but if a market shrinks to a small handful of massive players, the difference between “competition” and “coordination” can get uncomfortably thin.

    This is where the contradiction starts to show. You can’t champion the purity of the free market while ignoring the conditions that make a market free in the first place. Competition isn’t some natural state that magically persists on its own—it requires rules, enforcement, and sometimes intervention. That was the entire lesson of the antitrust era.

    Because here’s the uncomfortable truth: if two or three companies control an industry, consumers don’t have meaningful choice. They have the illusion of choice. And an illusion isn’t something you can “let decide” anything.

    Price fixing doesn’t even have to happen in smoke-filled rooms anymore. It can emerge through parallel behavior, algorithmic pricing, or simply the mutual understanding that aggressive competition would hurt everyone involved. When the incentives line up, companies don’t need to conspire—they just need to recognize what’s profitable.

    So when someone says, “Let the market decide,” the obvious follow-up question is: which market? The one we had in 1910 that required breaking up monopolies? Or the one we’re drifting toward now, where consolidation quietly rebuilds them under a different name?

    The early 20th century wasn’t anti-business—it was anti-unaccountable power. It recognized that capitalism without competition isn’t really capitalism. It’s something closer to a controlled system where outcomes are determined by a few dominant players.

    And that’s the irony. The same country that once aggressively dismantled monopolies in the name of protecting markets now often defends consolidation in the name of preserving them. Somewhere along the way, “free market” stopped meaning “many competitors” and started meaning “whatever large corporations happen to be doing at the moment.”

    If history had a sense of humor, it would probably point out that we already ran this experiment once. We know how it ends.

  • Just the Tip

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    I’ll admit it: I’m absolutely terrified. Not of what we’re seeing right now—no, that would be too easy—but of what we aren’t seeing yet. Because if this is the “transparent,” “nothing to hide,” totally normal version of events, then whatever’s lurking beneath the surface must look like a deleted scene from a disaster movie that was deemed too unrealistic to include.

    We’re getting these little drips of information, these carefully worded press statements, these accidental “oops” moments where something slips out that definitely wasn’t supposed to—and every single time, I find myself thinking: that’s it? That’s what they’re willing to admit out loud? Which naturally leads to the much more comforting thought: what in the world are they not admitting?

    It’s like being on the Titanic, except instead of a lookout yelling “Iceberg ahead!” we’ve got officials calmly assuring us that what we’re seeing is just a bit of floating ice, totally normal, happens all the time, nothing to worry about—while quietly locking the binoculars in a drawer labeled “classified.” And I’m standing there, watching the water get colder, thinking, I’m pretty sure icebergs don’t usually come with this many nondisclosure agreements.

    And the best part—truly, chef’s kiss—is the confidence. The absolute, unwavering confidence. The kind that says, “Trust us,” with the same energy as someone insisting the smoke in the kitchen is just “extra seasoning.” Meanwhile, the alarms are going off, the floor is tilting, and someone in the corner is still explaining that technically, according to the rules they just rewrote, everything is completely fine.

    What really keeps me up at night isn’t the corruption we can point to. It’s the scale of what must exist if this is the sanitized version. Because history has a funny way of revealing that the first layer of scandal is usually just the appetizer. The main course comes later, when the documents get unsealed, the insiders start talking, and suddenly everyone collectively pretends they’re shocked—shocked!—to discover things that were practically glowing in the dark the whole time.

    And I can already see it coming: years from now, there will be reports, investigations, maybe even a documentary series with ominous music and dramatic pauses. People will shake their heads and say, “How did no one know?” And I’ll be sitting there thinking, Oh, we knew. We just didn’t know how much.

    So yes, I’m terrified. Not in a panicked, run-for-the-hills way—more in that slow, sinking realization that we’re cruising along, full speed ahead, while the people steering insist the map is optional and the iceberg is a conspiracy theory. And maybe, just maybe, it would be nice if someone—anyone—considered tapping the brakes before we all become a very expensive lesson in hindsight.