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The Redheaded libertarian @TRHLofficial - This is how I imagine a six-year-old would shop if you dropped them in a Publix with $500.  
Quote
Based Jessica @RealJessica  
Video: This is where federal food stamp money is going.   
 -32 pizzas  
 -5 giant bags of French fries  
 -7 liters of French fry  
 -14 blocks of cheese  
  And tons more.   
And now they want free healthcare too??  
https://x.com/TRHLofficial/status/2011887736538743209

The Redheaded libertarian @TRHLofficial - Our Founding Fathers designed the American experiment as a deliberate break from the world's history of centralized power and collectivism. They built a system around core principles that celebrate the individual over the state. It was brilliant, and carried with it four major components:
-Rugged individualism and self-reliance was the idea that free people should stand on their own, pursue their own paths, and bear the fruits (or failures) of their own efforts, without leaning on government as a crutch.
-Limited government was power restrained by design, because Americans knew from experience that unchecked authority leads to oppression. As Thomas Jefferson put it, a wise government leaves men "free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement" and doesn't take "from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned."
-Personal responsibility encouraged each citizen to be accountable for their own choices, with liberty tied to moral self-government and virtue, not state handouts or coercion.
-and Skepticism of centralized authority was essential, as the Founders saw government as a necessary, but a dangerous servant, created solely to secure unalienable rights like life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, not to manage lives or redistribute outcomes.
Red-blooded Americans seem to be almost naturally instilled with these traits, making them resistant to expansive welfare states or authoritarian overreach. The American Experiment runs counter to dependency cultures elsewhere and captures just why the Founders' vision was so revolutionary: they envisioned a republic where power flows from permission, not top-down control. It’s what made America exceptional, and what keeps it worth defending.
However, people who showed up here illegally, largely came from collectivist societies where people are accustomed to relying on government, foreign aid, or communal structures to support them. They're more likely to accept, or even demand, generous social programs, handouts, and subsidies. Many feel entitled to them.
Once large numbers of these anti-Americans arrive and integrate into welfare systems, the overall electorate shifts toward supporting bigger government to sustain those programs and serve these people.
Additionally, higher rates of crime or violence associated with some of these groups create fear and disorder. This pushes even formerly independent-minded Western citizens to demand stronger policing, surveillance, and even restrictions on freedoms, in a misguided effort to restore safety and order. Sadly, the end result is a more dependent, less individualistic population that is easier to control, and less resistant to globalist agendas, and overwhelmingly demoralized by Marxism.
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