Posts made in March 2026

A Reckoning at the Precipice: Have Decades of Hegemony Betrayed the American Soul?

America stands at a precipice, staring down the barrel of an escalating conflict with Iran—a war of choice initiated by our leaders that threatens to consume the Middle East and push humanity to the edge of nuclear existentialism. This moment demands a brutal reckoning: are we still the beacon of liberty promised by our founding creed, or have decades of unchecked global ambition finally betrayed the soul of our republic?                   

U.S. President Donald Trump speaks as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu waves following a meeting in the White House, in Washington, U.S., April 7, 2025. REUTERS/Kevin Mohatt/File Photo

Need to Know

The current crisis escalated dramatically on February 28, 2026, when the United States and Israel launched a large-scale offensive against Iran, dubbed “Operation Epic Fury”. President Trump asserted the operation’s goals were to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon and to eliminate imminent threats. Israeli strikes killed Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in the opening salvo.

Iran retaliated quickly, firing ballistic missiles at Israel and U.S. military facilities across the Middle East, including in Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, and the United Arab Emirates, resulting in the death of six American service members.

The path to this confrontation is decades long. The U.S.-Iran dynamic shifted drastically from that of an ally to a sworn enemy, starting with U.S. involvement as an outside interferer after World War II. A key turning point was the 1953 CIA-backed coup that overthrew Iran’s democratically elected Prime Minister, Mohammad Mosaddegh, installing the Shah, a close U.S. ally, for the next 25 years. The subsequent 1979 Iranian Revolution installed a hardline theocracy that has been adversarial ever since, labeling the U.S. the “Great Satan”. More recently, tensions intensified after the U.S. unilaterally withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal (JCPOA) in 2018 and re-imposed crippling sanctions.

Take-Aways and Implications for American Culture

The current conflict is a tragic culmination of America’s hegemonic dreams and its chronology of domination in the Middle East and globally. Our nation’s willingness to act as an “outside interferer,” as seen in the 1953 coup in Iran, demonstrates a long-standing prioritization of geopolitical control over democratic ideals, which laid the groundwork for the current adversarial relationship. This pattern of interventionism reveals how our elected leaders have historically steered the nation toward endless wars, taking focus and resources away from building the American Dream at home.

In its nearly 250 years of nationhood, America has been engaged in perpetual warfare, from the War of Independence and the Civil War, to WWI, WWII, the Korean and Vietnam wars, and now the current war with Iran. This persistent state of conflict has immediate and devastating economic blowback, pushing oil prices above $100 per barrel and causing stocks to drop, further taxing the economic stability of the American people. This continuous cycle of foreign engagement and regime change—a war of choice that some lawmakers call illegal—risks not only American lives but also further destabilizing the region toward nuclear escalation.

Realigning with the American Purpose

To be “One Nation Under God with Liberty and Justice for All,” America must reconnect its actions to its creed. The Declaration of Independence asserts the self-evident truth that “All Men are created equal,” endowed with unalienable rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Yet, when we initiate preemptive military actions and engage in illegal regime-change wars abroad, we severely undermine our legitimacy and moral authority. We have strayed far from being the beacon of freedom and humanity that inspired the millions who come to our shores seeking a chance at the American Dream for life, liberty, and success.

The leaders we elect directly impact the course of this new nation. The current administration’s decision to launch major combat operations without formal congressional authorization is a test of the Constitution’s separation of powers and risks pulling the U.S. into a deeper conflict. This reckless course, risking higher casualties and nuclear existentialism, is a betrayal of the national commitment to peace and prosperity.

We must pursue the America yet to be, one that is realigned with its true purpose: to secure justice and liberty for all, at home and by example globally.

The time for symbolic protest is over. We must demand action.

Demand your Congress members immediately vote on a War Powers Resolution to restrain the administration’s military action in Iran. Congress alone holds the constitutional power to wage war. We, the People, must demand Congress follow the Constitution to protect us from a rogue administration that is taking the world to the edge of nuclear war and the existentialism of mankind and humanity as the world knows it.

Is D.C. Still ‘Chocolate City’? Unpacking the Demographic Shift and the Cost of Cultural Change

A City’s Soul: The Enduring Value of Black Washington in a Changing America

For decades, Washington, D.C., was known to many as “Chocolate City,” a tribute to its predominantly African-American population, which peaked at 71.1 percent in 1970. Today, the District has transitioned into one of the most diverse cities in the U.S., raising a profound question: What does the fading of “Chocolate City” mean for the nation’s capital and for American culture? This transformation is a pivotal moment that compels us to look beyond statistics and recognize the bedrock of culture and history that Black Washingtonians laid.

Need To Know

D.C. is no longer a Black-majority city, having dropped below 50 percent Black population for the first time in half a century. The District now joins a small number of states without any one racial group forming a majority.

  • Demographic Shift: The Black or African American population represented less than half of the city’s total population as of July 2024, according to a WTOP analysis of census data. As of 2014, the Black population was 49 percent, while the white population had risen to 43.6 percent, narrowing the difference to 5.4 percent.
  • Causes of Change: Experts cite multiple contributing factors, including new waves of immigration, a diversifying economy, and shifting housing patterns.
  • Gentrification and Displacement: Gentrification has dramatically transformed neighborhoods like Shaw, U Street, and Petworth, which were once almost exclusively Black. The rise in property values has made D.C. one of the most expensive cities in America, forcing many long-time residents to move to more affordable suburbs in Maryland.
  • Voluntary Migration: It is important to realize that the movement is not solely displacement. According to Michael Bader, middle-class Black D.C. residents are also leaving for the suburbs like Prince George’s and Montgomery County for reasons similar to other racial groups: a search for more space and schools with better reputations.

Take-Aways

The shift in D.C.’s demographics presents complex realities about urban change and opportunity.

  • Diversity and Segregation Coexist: While D.C. has become one of the most diverse metropolitan areas in the country, a high degree of racial segregation persists. The majority of the city’s mono-racial census tracts (90% or more of a single race) are located East of the Anacostia River, an area that has remained virtually unchanged racially for 35 years.
  • The Threat to Culture: As the city transforms, there is concern that the cultural identity established by Black residents is being eroded. The once vibrant African-American cultural and business heart of Shaw is now home to new condominiums and fusion restaurants, leading some residents to lament the potential loss of D.C.’s distinct musical heartbeat, Go-Go.
  • Suburban Growth: The Black population is not necessarily declining, but rather, as demographer Hamilton Lombard notes, the city’s population growth is outpacing it. Simultaneously, the suburban regions of Maryland and Virginia have seen their Black populations rise.

Implications for American Culture

The story of D.C.’s transition underscores a crucial American tension: how to achieve progress and diversity without erasing the foundational culture and history of marginalized communities. The decline of “Chocolate City” reflects a national pattern where economic revitalization often pushes out the people who created a city’s character. Black Washingtonians, who were drawn to D.C. during the Great Migration in search of educational, economical, and political opportunities, established cultural landmarks and institutions that shaped the nation’s capital. The struggle to create stable racial diversity and address the extreme racial isolation east of the Anacostia River remain pressing challenges for D.C..

The story of Washington, D.C., is a microcosm of the American story—one indelibly shaped by the perseverance and unmatched value Black people have created in this nation. Despite the systemic brutality of chattel slavery, Jim Crow, and long-upheld oppression, Black Americans built institutions, communities, and culture that shaped our nation’s capital, from the style of its neighborhoods and the infrastructure they developed to its distinct food and the entertainment heartbeat of U Street, which gave rise to Jazz and Go-Go. In D.C., the question of belonging echoes Langston Hughes’ poignant truth in America Was Never America To Me. Yet, the ongoing demographic change is not an ending, but a new phase in the unyielding work to realize the America yet to be—one that truly lives up to its creed of being a beacon of hope for mankind, ensuring freedom and liberty for all people, and enforcing the belief that all men are created equal.