Most ignored him. Dismissed him as “too academic,” “too old-school.” But the evidence kept stacking up—and so did the consequences.
From rising crime to vanishing merit, he saw the same pattern: decline disguised as progress. He called it “civilizational suicide”—and warned that it was happening in slow motion.
While cities burned and statues fell, he asked: who benefits when we forget the past? When you erase history, you don’t liberate people—you disarm them.
He predicted the border crisis years before it dominated headlines. Not just the influx, but the breakdown of legal and cultural assimilation.
He warned that energy policy wasn’t just about gas prices—it was national security. Dependence on unstable regimes wasn’t an accident—it was negligence.
He flagged the collapse of objective journalism before “fake news” became a buzzword. When narrative replaces facts, freedom quietly dies.