OF THE
TIMES

Liberal Bias Drove the Decline: The Post's record of virulent anti-Trump coverage and narrow, elitist perspective alienated a huge swath of the country, leading to plummeting paid readership and repeated rounds of layoffs (hundreds in recent years alone). Executive editor Matt Murray's own words — that the paper wrote "from one perspective" — confirm what conservatives have long argued: ideological echo chambers don't sustain journalism in a competitive landscape.
Gutting Core Coverage Reveals Irrelevance: Eliminating sports beat reporters for major teams, all Middle East correspondents (leaving zero coverage for regions including Israel, Ukraine, and beyond), and slashing local news transforms the Post into a Politico-style niche product focused on politics, business, and health — abandoning the comprehensive reporting it once claimed to champion, further eroding its claim to being an "indispensable" institution.
No Sympathy from Flyover Country: While former Post staff and liberal outlets like The Atlantic cry "murder" and "darkest days" over the cuts, much of America — especially working-class communities hit hard by economic hollowing-out — sees little reason for tears. The same media elites who ignored Rust Belt struggles now demand compassion for their own job losses, highlighting the disconnect between coastal liberal journalism and everyday Americans.
When people hear the word corruption, they usually think of money, envelopes, bribes, stolen budgets, officials living beyond their salaries. That image is convenient because it frames corruption as a moral defect, a flaw in character, a problem of bad individuals inside an otherwise normal system. And if that were true, the solution would be simple. Punish the bad people, clean the system, restore order.He draws on his experience growing up in Russia and the difficulties he had adapting to life in a Western nation — and the perspective this gave him on the nature of corruption. As he puts it, corruption is not something one enters into consciously. Rather, it is absorbed unconsciously from childhood. One learns it through trial and error — what works and what doesn't, which rules apply and which do not. This leads many to a profound disenchantment with official rules, forms, and institutions — with the surface of things in general — which are seen as fake or irrelevant. Outcomes in the real world depend on things like personal connections, timing, leverage, the mood of officials, and informal signals rather than formal processes.
But corruption survives for decades, not because people are immoral, and not because enforcement is weak. It survives because it quietly replaces something much more important than money. It replaces the relationship between a person and reality.

Protect Sensitive Locations - Prohibit funds from being used to conduct enforcement near sensitive locations, including medical facilities, schools, child-care facilities, churches, polling places, courts, etc.Polling places?
Comment: Why single out X?: "Because it's the one platform where truth slips through the cracks of mainstream control and free speech is fully embraced."
When it comes to freedoms: 'Nothing' is free.