This week has brought more news that contains powerful warnings about the trajectory of the country.
First, the U.S. Supreme Court decided Watson v. Republican National Committee. In Watson, the court upheld a Mississippi law that counts ballots received up to five days after Election Day as long as they were postmarked on or before that day.
Second, a Democratic primary in Colorado produced yet another socialist victory. Melat Kiros, a 29-year-old lawyer who was born in Ethiopia defeated longtime Democrat congresswoman Diana DeGette. Kiros’ positions have attracted a lot of attention. She refused to call the firebombing attack of Jews in Boulder, Colorado, last year “anti-Semitic,” and characterized both the Oct. 7, 2023, slaughter of more than 1000 people is Israel and the 9/11 terrorist attacks in the United States as “inevitable,” blaming Israel and the U.S., respectively, for both attacks.
According to the Washington Examiner, 35 candidates backed by the Democrat Socialists of America have won their primaries so far this year. Nearly a dozen of these are congressional races in safe Democrat districts, meaning that it’s highly likely Congress will have a record number of socialists next January.
Now, Republicans—and even some Democrats—are wondering how to defeat these uber-left candidates in the upcoming elections.
That’s the wrong question.
The correct question to ask is where all these so-called socialists are coming from. And the answer lies in their demographics.
For example, 44 percent of American blacks own their own homes in the United States—and many more would like to. So, the socialists’ desire to abolish private property (New York City’s socialist Mayor Zohran Mamdani is starting with rental properties) isn’t going to resonate with them. Many working-class Americans of all racial and ethnic backgrounds own their own businesses—or work for those who do. Demonizing entrepreneurs doesn’t sit well with them either. And millions of people who have immigrated to the U.S. did so because they had the dream of starting their own businesses, educating their children, buying a modest home and moving into the middle class.
But everything changes once you add a college degree.
If “compassion” is emotionally intoxicating for these fanatics, compassion plus compulsion is their ideological version of crack.
Yes, it’s important to defeat these candidates at the ballot box. But that’s not where the real battle is. It’s at the colleges and universities where they are being indoctrinated.
Higher education faculty are overwhelmingly leftist; a recent survey at Yale University revealed that Democrats outnumbered Republicans 78-to-1 across the university’s departments in the humanities and social sciences. And Yale is no outlier; surveys of dozens of other colleges and universities—including the other Ivies—show the same political biases, particularly in the departments where most young people learn about history, politics, religion and culture; the ideologies they absorb there will shape their views and their decisions—including election decisions—for years to come, if not for the rest of their lives.
The situation is made worse because so many faculty who espouse these societally corrosive ideologies are often tenured, which means they cannot be removed from their positions. Tenure is heralded as necessary to protect “academic freedom” and diversity of opinion. But as a practical matter, the process of obtaining tenure virtually ensures that the viewpoints of the tenured faculty will dominate the junior faculty they hire.
The disparity between left and right on college campuses is a gross distortion of political viewpoints nationally; outside higher ed, Americans are split almost equally between Democrats, Republicans and Independents.
What can we do to prevent America from slipping into collectivism?
1. Eliminating birthright citizenship would probably require a constitutional amendment, which is about as likely to happen as Spencer Pratt becoming the mayor of Los Angeles in November. (There’s always hope. ...) Instead, we should continue to tighten border enforcement, limit visas, and prosecute the companies and individuals who facilitate “birth tourism.”
We can either stop bailing water on the Titanic or go down with the ship.







