KILLING KAKISTOCRACY
The website, Dictionary.com defines kakistocracy as “a government by the worst persons; a form of government in which the worst persons are in power.”
Other sources concur, describing it as leadership by the least competent and most unscrupulous.
It’s a head-scratcher, really—how do these individuals manage to fail their way upward and claim the most powerful seats in government?
If you’ve been keeping up with current events, it’s hard not to conclude that the United States is stumbling into a kakistocracy.
Case in point is a president, an “elderly man with a poor memory,” whose cognitive issues and frail health allowed him to dodge legal scrutiny under the guise of public sympathy.
Joe Biden was never known as the “sharpest knife in the drawer,” but his current level of performance became so glaringly destitute that he required strong “encouragement” to abandon his re-election ambitions.
And yet, the problem of obvious ineffectiveness isn’t just a “Joe thing.”
Glancing at the Cabinet and other key positions of this administration, does anyone inspire confidence or stand out as the poster child of competence? Anyone? Bueller?
History is littered with examples of kakistocracies.
My friend asked me a question. Did I think the Democrats will remove Biden if Harris loses the election? Yes.








Ever since Trump first ran for president, a central theme among Democrats and the media has been that Trump is literally Hitler, and his supporters – namely, Republicans – are literally Nazis.

Who do we blame for the terrible destruction of drug addiction?
Regarding the border invasion of America, there are waves of people passing through Mexico from even as far as South America, requiring that they traverse the treacherous Darien Gap, but their journey is not without substantial patronage from the US government, United Nations, and sinister NGOs.
