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The South
Florida Conservative



Elian González: The Democrats’ Exception to the Immigration Rules
Elian González’s story is not just a historical curiosity. It is a lens through which we can see the double standard at the heart of Democratic immigration policy. When a frightened boy needed protection from a totalitarian regime, the Clinton administration sided with Fidel Castro,
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May 8, 20254 min read


THOM TILLIS HEARS HIS MASTER'S VOICE. TORPEDOING TRUMP APPOINTMENT
Senator Thom Tillis has publicly opposed Martin's nomination, citing concerns over Martin's defense of individuals involved in the January 6 Capitol riot New York Post. Tillis's opposition is significant because, as a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, his vote is crucial for advancing the nomination Axios.
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May 7, 20256 min read


Reuters’ Hegseth Story: The Pentagon Has a Leak!
If this trend continues, the Trump administration may be forced to consider sweeping purges of defense leadership — not based on political vendettas, but to reassert constitutional civilian control. After all, the President doesn’t need a Pentagon that acts like a separate branch of government.
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May 6, 20254 min read


THE EPSTEIN FILES. HOW BAD DO YOU WANT THEM? A MODEST PROPOSAL
PARTIES
Plaintiff: Jane Doe, U.S. citizen, victim of abuse occurring 2001–2004
Defendants: Described above, including unknown persons designated as John Does 1–50
CLAIMS FOR RELIEF
Count I – Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA)
Count II – Civil RICO Violations
Count III – Battery and Sexual Assault
Count IV – Negligent Supervision & Enabling
Count V – Fraudulent Concealment / Cover-Up
PRAYER FOR RELIEF
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May 6, 20259 min read


Deconstructing Rand: Senator Paul's Irrelevancy in Trump's MAGA Plan
So, while Paul despises socialism, he is equally repulsed by statism from the right. He may oppose Democrats rhetorically, but he won’t enable Republican statism either.
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May 5, 20256 min read


Reviving American Industry: Strategic Indicators for the Success or Sabotage of Trump’s Manufacturing Renaissance
However, critics and realists alike question whether U.S. corporations—having long enjoyed the benefits of globalization and financial extraction—are willing to engage in the kind of sustained capital investment and patriotic alignment seen in the 1940s. This thesis explores the strategic landscape, establishing a framework to monitor the early signs of either authentic industrial momentum or corporate sabotage.
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May 5, 20254 min read


THE INSTITUTE OF PEACE...OUT. ANOTHER SLUSHFUND FALLS TO DOGE!
This brief examines the risk and plausibility that the U.S. Institute of Peace (USIP), a congressionally funded peacebuilding organization, may have disbursed grants to non-existent or fraudulent NGOs operating in Afghanistan between 2021 and 2024
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May 1, 20255 min read


Exploring the Impact of Trump and Biden's Investment Banks on Ukraine's Economy
As Ukraine continues to endure the toll of war and attempts to rebuild its shattered infrastructure and economy, two vastly different models for international reconstruction support have emerged.
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May 1, 20253 min read


Tariffs, Turbulence, and Termination: How Trump's 125% Tariffs Threaten to Collapse China's Belt and Road Initiative
This white paper explores how these tariffs, when fully implemented, could collapse China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) by cutting off vital export revenue, weakening China's currency, triggering a domestic financial crisis, and forcing Beijing to abandon overseas infrastructure projects.
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Apr 25, 20252 min read


From the Death Chamber to the Courtroom: How Anti-Death Penalty Activism Became the Blueprint for Constitutional Lawfare
The United States today finds itself in a legal and political siege where the Constitution, once revered as the supreme law of the land, is now under sustained assault. This attack is not coming from foreign adversaries or rogue generals—it is being executed by elite legal organizations, activist judges, and ideologically motivated NGOs using a weaponized form of jurisprudence known as lawfare.
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Apr 24, 20254 min read


Weapons of Mass Obstruction: Is the EU the Major Roadblock to Trump’s Ukraine Peace Policy?
The EU is not simply playing defense. It is actively shaping the war’s duration to serve its own ends:
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Apr 23, 20253 min read


The Supreme Court’s Strategic Fumble: The April 17 Unsigned Order and the Erosion of Judicial Credibility
The order, though brief and devoid of a named author, carries sweeping implications—not just for immigration enforcement, but for the integrity and reputation of the American judiciary itself. In what may be remembered as a strategic fumble, the Court failed to show institutional courage, delivering instead a non-committal pause wrapped in procedural caution.
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Apr 22, 20254 min read


THE REVEALED BIDEN DOMESTIC TERROR STRATEGY.
his white paper explores how national security structures—especially those created in the wake of 9/11—were originally designed for foreign counterterrorism but were later repurposed for domestic control.
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Apr 17, 20255 min read


Contempt by Design: How Judicial Activism Wears the Mask of Procedure
Boasberg, operating under Rule 42 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, claimed the Trump team had violated his order and must be held accountable. But crucially, he did not demand the return of the deported migrant. Why?
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Apr 16, 20253 min read


IS THE IVY LEAGUE IMPORTING TERRORISM?
As protests erupt across elite campuses, from Harvard Yard to Columbia’s quad, the question is no longer whether ideological radicalism has taken root in American universities — but how it got there.
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Apr 16, 20254 min read


More from the Weaponized Bench: Judicial Activism, Lawfare, and the Erosion of U.S. Immigration Authority
This paper examines the case of U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani's decision to issue a stay on the Biden-era CHNV (Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, Venezuela) humanitarian parole program's termination. T
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Apr 14, 20253 min read


The “No Rogue Rulings Act”: Why Congress Must Rein in Judicial Activism
One might argue that the natural check on bad rulings lies within the judiciary itself. The Supreme Court or appellate courts could, in theory, dismiss repeat legal challenges with statements like “asked and answered” or “duplicative of prior rulings.” And while this might sound ideal, the reality is more complex.
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Apr 10, 20254 min read


CROCODILE TEARS? The Tariff Tremor: How Trump's Trade Policy Shocked the Market and Enriched Wall Street
Brokerage houses may not have protected every investor, but they protected themselves—and profited. The sharp drop in equities, the scramble
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Apr 7, 20253 min read


SIDESHOW IN THE TRADE WAR. CHINA GETS SET TO CORNER THE GREEN SHIP MARKET
The IMO’s climate agenda will reshape global shipping—but not equally. While the West embraces sweeping environmental reforms, China is exec
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Apr 4, 20253 min read


ANA LUNA PEARL HARBORS REPUBLICANS AND MAGA
Representative Anna Paulina Luna's successful coalition-building to advance the proxy voting proposal for new parents appears to have been a
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Apr 3, 20253 min read
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