Try This Apple Message Yourself

Posted in Editorial | 5 Comments

The National Debt

After “training” Grok, I got the following estimate for fraud and improper payments for entitlements last year:

So, revised: fraud across all entitlements might still be $70-100 billion, but total improper payments could be $150-200 billion. Does that square better with what you’re seeing? I’ll own the fuzziness—numbers this big get slippery fast.

Let’s assume $250 billion a year. This money goes into government’s pockets, fraud on a personal level and subsidizing the collapse of the Republic with the Cloward-Piven strategy. This figure does not include funding the invasion of the country under the illegal Biden administration by siphoning money from other sources such as FEMA.

While this is a substantial figure, its impact on the national deficit of $36.5 trillion is minor. The DOGE savings as of today is $135.5 billion and the total savings realistically from DOGE is $1 trillion if Grok is correct:

Even Musk admits $1 trillion’s more realistic.

Solutions:

  1. Trump has proposed cutting the military budget by 50%: approximately $450 billion.
  2. Elimination of the Department of Education: If you kill the ED and all its programs cold turkey—no funding, no transfers—savings hit that $82-83 billion annually (from Grok).
  3. Consolidating agencies and killing redundancies might save $50-100 billion a year if modest (GAO-style fixes), or $100-200 billion if DOGE’s aggressive vision pans out (from Grok).
  4. Tariffs: The 2025 Canada/Mexico/China plan might raise $130-150 billion in 2025, scaling to $200-265 billion if fully phased in, per CRFB and Goldman. The universal 20% plus 60% China dream could hit $300-380 billion annually. Over 10 years, it’s $1.3-3.8 trillion, depending on scope and fallout. That’s real money—enough for Trump’s $395 billion taxpayer checks idea—but not the $6.9 trillion 2024 budget (from Grok).
  5. Drug testing as a requirement for government entitlements: if 2% of all 150 million entitlement recipients (a rough count, adjusting overlaps) lose benefits, and costs average $10,000 per person, that’s $30 billion saved. Testing at $30-$90 each is $4.5-13.5 billion. Net savings: $16.5-25.5 billion yearly, best case (from Grok).

The reason that we have the national deficit is two fold:

  1. Congress is corrupt. They have been paid off by drug cartels, EU/Israeli interests and lobbyists. They cannot even pass a balanced budget amendment as they have no accountability to the people.
  2. The federal government has intentionally raped the American working class. Part of this is to implement the destruction of the Republic, part is to enrich themselves and part is due to their incompetence.

If government is put back into the box as our founding fathers intended, we can tackle the debt but it will be painful. People have to decide the price of freedom: is it too high a price to offset our apathy which led to our downfall? President Trump and his team are our best hope of eliminating the evil which usurped our Republic. The only questions are whether we will fight for our Liberty to be restored and most importantly, whether we turn back to the Lord for His Divine Providence.

David DeGerolamo

Posted in Editorial | 8 Comments

The Shadow Government

Posted in Editorial | 4 Comments

Gold Hits All Time High

Posted in Editorial | 15 Comments

DEI Is Still Required for NC Employees

Posted in Editorial | 3 Comments

Catholic Bishops Sue for Refugee Settlement

Posted in Editorial | 12 Comments

Crenshaw Threatens to Kill Tucker Carlson

Posted in Editorial | 13 Comments

The Effects of the Department of Education

Posted in Editorial | 4 Comments

Tucker Carlson – Gold

Posted in Editorial | 3 Comments

Property Taxes

I agree that property taxes should be abolished. The founding fathers never intended the consequences associated with property taxes that are in place today. We have no recourse if taxes are not paid to stop our property from being sold by the “state”. We have no input on how the taxes are spent or allocated to “friends”. The mechanism to appeal property tax assessments is predetermined: your appeal is denied.

You may say that is not true: people have a say in how the taxes are spent. Not really when the covers are pulled back. When was the last time you saw your property taxes reduced or any program cut. Our schools are cesspools of propaganda with no accountability for the quality of our children’s education.

If property taxes are cut, who suffers? Schools are just slush funds: $17,000 per student vs. $1000 per student that is home schooled. From Grok concerning the literacy level of US high school graduates:

  • 19% (roughly 760,000) reflects graduates with very low literacy, per the 2015 study—think reading below 5th-grade level.
  • 37% (about 1.5 million) captures those below NAEP’s “Basic” threshold, per 2019 data—functional but not proficient.
  • Less than 5% (under 200,000) is a conservative estimate for total illiteracy, based on expert analysis.

Roads will suffer. Living in Cherokee County, NC, I cannot see how much worse roads can get: we have potholes but we also have entire sections of secondary roads that have to be removed and rebuilt.

What is the solution? There are options but the first step is to dismantle the corrupted system that is currently in place.

David DeGerolamo

Posted in Editorial | 22 Comments

Bongino

I bet most people were surprised by the announcement that Dan Bongino is the new Deputy Director of the FBI. I bet most people were thinking previously that he would become the new director of the Secret Service.

What if President Trump is going to roll up the Secret Service into the FBI? I wonder who would oversee the integration and implementation of agents who would actually protect the President instead of overseeing and covering up assassination attempts.

I personally do not feel that there is any way to save the Secret Service. No President will trust this agency after Butler, PA. I believe that there are some SS agents who are not corrupted. They can be integrated into the FBI since that agency is about to be gutted and hopefully held accountable for their criminal actions.

David DeGerolamo

Posted in Editorial | 5 Comments

Get Ready

Posted in Editorial | 6 Comments

NC universities impacted by Trump administration’s USAID layoffs

Thousands of USAID employees were laid off or placed on administrative leave, and North Carolina’s universities are feeling the effects on Monday.

USAID funds humanitarian efforts across the globe, and North Carolina organizations receive nearly $1 billion a year from USAID, according to the agency.

Among the top recipients of USAID dollars in North Carolina are the state’s universities. 

North Carolina State University received $2.2 million from the agency last fiscal year, while the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill received around $17.5 million.

More…

Posted in Editorial | 4 Comments

Apple Goes MAGA: $500 Billion Investment Plan In America, 20,000 New Jobs

The latest onshoring trend, spurred by President Donald Trump’s tariffs on Chinese imports, has led to a major announcement from Apple. The company has embraced “Make America Great Again” with plans to hire 20,000 US workers to manufacture high-tech AI servers in the Heartland and invest hundreds of billions of dollars in new factories. 

Bloomberg reports Apple plans to unleash a tsunami of investments in the US, upwards of $500 billion over the next four years, including a new AI server manufacturing plant in Houston, Texas, and a supplier academy in Michigan. 

This disclosure comes just days after President Trump announced that Apple CEO Tim Cook plans to relocate manufacturing operations from Mexico to the US

More…

Posted in Editorial | 2 Comments

Majorana 1

This week, Microsoft unveiled Majorana 1, a chip that uses a new kind of quantum computing architecture. The company has been working for decades on this technology, which has the potential to revolutionize computing by quickly being able to solve problems that would take conventional computers years. Microsoft’s researchers published their findings in Nature.

If these results hold up, this chip could help solve one of the biggest challenges in quantum computing. That problem is that the connections between “quantum bits” or qubits for short, are extremely fragile, which leads to computational errors. These errors are typically corrected on the software level, but that slows the process down significantly.

Microsoft said that its new chip is based on what it calls a topological qubit, which was first theorized in the 1990s. In theory, connections between topological qubits are stronger on the physical level, meaning they produce fewer errors to correct (the tradeoff is that it makes quantum information harder to measure, which is why it’s taken decades to build one). Microsoft said in its announcement that with this success, the company will “realize quantum computers capable of solving meaningful, industrial-scale problems in years, not decades.”

More…

Posted in Editorial | 3 Comments