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 When Compassion Became Control ā and Control Forged the Chains
 They built their power on compassion⦠then sold it for control.
But the light doesnāt ask permission to shine.
It just breaks through the chains.
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People keep asking me, āMichael⦠how did we get here?
How did we become such a powerful nation while getting so many people hooked on dependency?ā
It didnāt begin with greed.
It began with compassion.
ļæ¼But remember, the road to hell is paved with good intentions.
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In this case the road to hell had three paths.
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In the depths of the Great Depression, people were starving. Families lost everything.
Government assistance wasnāt evil ā it was essential.
It stabilized the nation. It gave hope when there was none. It helped America rebuild.
Those programs were meant to be a bridge back to independence, not a permanent way of life.
But once the crisis ended ā the power stayed.
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Politicians discovered something dangerous: dependency buys loyalty.
If you can convince a man that his survival depends on you, heāll defend you even as you destroy him.
So both parties kept feeding the illusion.
Democrats called it compassion.
Republicans called it compromise.
And behind closed doors, they both called it control.
They realized it was safer to manage decline than to demand responsibility.
Hence our massive national debt ā because instead of facing the truth and making hard choices, they kept borrowing money to buy peace, pretending the bill would never come due ā at least not while they were still in office.
With their ultimate goal of managing the decline just long enough to retire, they passed the problem forward.
Then, with straight faces and polished speeches, theyād kick back and blame the next generation of leaders for ādestroyingā the falsely amazing economy they had built on debt and illusion.
They outsourced our jobs, weakened our independence, and then offered sympathy for the pain they created ā paid for with our own tax dollars.
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Once dependency took root, it became inherited.
Passed down like a family heirloom ā not of pride, but of fear.
And by the time anyone in Washington realized what had happened, it was already too late.
Even the honest ones ā the few with vision and courage ā learned quickly that you canāt reform a system that feeds the voters who keep you in power.
To fix it would mean cutting off the very hand that feeds your reelection.
And so the cycle continued⦠until a man came along who didnāt need their approval.
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Donald Trump didnāt serve the system. He challenged it.
He didnāt need their donations. He didnāt fear their threats.
He was willing to lose everything to tell the truth.
Thatās why politicians fear him ā because if he succeeds, it exposes them all.
It reveals the truth about every politician who made government a career instead of a calling.
He threatens the very existence of those who climb into power not to serve, but to stay there.
Those who are dependent on the system hate him for another reason ā the same way a spoiled child hates the parent who finally takes away the allowance for not doing the chores.
They mistake discipline for cruelty, and freedom for loss.
And the wealthy liberal elite despise him most of all ā because when youāre born with a silver spoon, you build a holier-than-thou illusion that youāre more enlightened than the people who actually built the world you live in.
Trump shatters that illusion ā he reminds them that success doesnāt make you divine, it simply reveals who you serve.
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Thatās why heās hated.
Not because he lies ā but because he tells the truth that everyone else avoids.
This isnāt about politics anymore.
Itās about breaking the spell of dependency and restoring the spirit of self-reliance and honor that once defined the American soul.
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