The Map That Couldn’t Win: A Voting Map Built on Race Cannot Stand

For decades, courts have pushed states to draw congressional districts based on race. Today, the Supreme Court drew a different line entirely. Louisiana’s racially engineered map falls. The Voting Rights Act gets a long-overdue correction. And the colorblind Constitution, however imperfectly, takes another step toward meaning what it says.

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2026 State of the Union–A Conservative Review

Tuesday’s State of the Union was energetic, combative, and at times genuinely moving — but a principled Conservative review demands more than applause. Real wins on the border, inflation, and energy share the stage with troubling silences on the national debt, Constitutional questions on executive power, and rhetoric that occasionally outpaced the policy.

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Maduro’s Capture: Defending American Interests While Honoring Constitutional Limits

Maduro’s removal is a victory for freedom, but his capture raises serious Constitutional and international law questions. Conservatives must balance supporting American interests with defending the rule of law and limited government—principles that must constrain even presidents we support.

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Conservatism Celebrated: Achievements and Challenges of 2025

In 2025, Conservatives celebrated achievements like enhanced border security and Supreme Court victories while grappling with challenges around principles, particularly regarding pardons and entitlements. Trump’s administration demonstrated successes but fell short in effective governance, revealing a need for reforms and better communication leading into the critical 2026 midterms.

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Setback and Strategy: Why Republicans Struggled on November 4th and What Must Change Before 2026

Republicans suffered significant defeats on November 4th, 2025, losing governorships in Virginia and New Jersey while watching California approve redistricting that threatens House control. The historic federal shutdown, weak candidates, and suburban voter losses exposed critical party weaknesses that must be addressed before the 2026 midterms.

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Free Speech, the Constitution, and the Consequences of Words

The Charlie Kirk assassination has sparked nationwide firings and network cancellations, revealing dangerous misconceptions about free speech rights. From Jimmy Kimmel’s show being pulled to employees losing jobs over social media posts, Americans must understand the crucial difference between constitutional protections and real-world consequences. Freedom requires responsibility.

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Born of the Soil or Bound by Allegiance? Rethinking Birthright Citizenship and the 14th Amendment

For over 150 years, America has granted automatic citizenship to anyone born here—but was that the 14th Amendment’s intent? With nearly 400,000 anchor baby births in 2024 alone, it’s time to examine whether our current practice rewards illegal immigration while undermining constitutional intent. Discover the original meaning of “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” and why most developed nations have abandoned unrestricted birthright citizenship.

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