"No, we don't need to change Congress, excuse me. You know, people have a great misunderstanding about this. People in Congress are in a business, they’re trying to buy votes. They’re in the business of competing with one another to get elected. The same Congressman will vote for a different thing if he thinks it’s politically profitable. You don’t have to change Congress. People have a great misconception in this way – they think the way you solve things is by electing the right people. It's nice to elect the right people, but that isn’t the way you solve things.
The way you solve things is by making it politically profitable for the wrong people to do the right things."
Well, if you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em.
Maybe our next step is to start supporting conservative democrats. Cause a split in the party. Squad versus blue dog.
The boardroom and the classroom are probably more important to our politics than the committee room. The alliance of the corporate sector with the globalist agenda in the form of ESG commitments is more than problematical... this along with the near monopoly the globalists hold on our educational institutions is disheartening. If we don’t advance in those areas where opinions are engendered and propagated we will never win this battle.