-
October 2023
-
Issues of Today
- Free Speech Has Always Been a Game of Life or Death – Lesson
- Immigration Reform and DACA – Lesson
- Today’s Protesters Should Learn From MLK – Lesson
- Has the Media Made America More Divided? – Lesson
- Evil and The Political Divide – Lesson
- A Matter of Perspectives on the McCarthy Ouster – Lesson
- A Matter of Perspectives on the McCarthy Ouster – Quiz
- Biological Women Defend Female Athletes at Congress – Lesson
- Biological Women Defend Female Athletes at Congress – Quiz
- The Energy Behind the White House’s Hatred of Coal – Lesson
- The Energy Behind the White House’s Hatred of Coal – Quiz
- Democracy and the Changing Tides of Popular Opinion – Lesson
- Democracy and the Changing Tides of Popular Opinion – Quiz
- Election 2024: AI, Deepfakes, and Scams – Lesson
- Election 2024: AI, Deepfakes, and Scams – Quiz
- Survey Says: It’s Time to Leave New York – Lesson
- Survey Says: It’s Time to Leave New York – Quiz
- In the Aftermath of COVID, Were School Closures Worth It? – Lesson
- In the Aftermath of COVID, Were School Closures Worth It? – Quiz
- A Visit From the FBI Over Your Social Media Post? It Could Happen – Lesson
- A Visit From the FBI Over Your Social Media Post? It Could Happen – Quiz
- More Americans Want to Leave the Country – Lesson
- More Americans Want to Leave the Country – Quiz
- Will Celebrity Endorsements Impact the 2024 Election? – Lesson
- Will Celebrity Endorsements Impact the 2024 Election? – Quiz
- The Census – Where Citizens and Illegal Aliens Collide – Lesson
- The Census – Where Citizens and Illegal Aliens Collide – Quiz
- The Risks and Rewards of the Presidential Debate – Lesson
- The Risks and Rewards of the Presidential Debate – Quiz
- Trump and Biden Supporters Disagree Strongly on Family Values – Lesson
- Trump and Biden Supporters Disagree Strongly on Family Values – Quiz
- Courting the Young American – Campaigns Blitz Tik Tok – Lesson
- Courting the Young American – Campaigns Blitz Tik Tok – Quiz
-
Politics - How it Works
-
Political Parties
- Political Parties: Do We Really Need Them? – Lesson
- The Federalists: America’s First Political Party – Lesson
- The Federalists: America’s First Political Party – Quiz
- Democratic-Republican Party: Champions of Republicanism – Lesson
- The Democratic Party: Origins, Policies, and People – Lesson
- The Republican Party: The Grand Old Party – Lesson
- Independent Voters and the 2024 Election – Lesson
- Independent Voters and the 2024 Election – Quiz
-
Political Ideas and Ideologies
Today’s Protesters Should Learn From MLK – Lesson
The civil rights leader of the past pushed for peace, not violence.
We’ve had a lot of protests lately, and in many of them, the cry has been “no justice, no peace.” Simply put, it means the protesters promise to continue their aggressive dissent until their demands are heard and action is taken. But what if the opposite is true? What if justice in a free nation cannot be achieved without peace?
President Richard Nixon proved with his victory in 1968 – and a follow-up landslide in 1972 – what is still true today: People want safety more than anything, and will vote for a candidate who promises to deliver it. Nixon, like Trump today, responded to the growing violence in the anti-Vietnam War movement with a platform of pure law and order, overriding many other issues of the time.
If people don’t feel safe leaving their homes, little else matters.
In any democratic form of government, those who offer radical change must make their case before the voters. Our republic was designed by the Framers of the Constitution to achieve systemic reform only when widespread support is achieved among the American people. We have been blessed with a system of governance specifically designed to cool the passions of the day through shared and balanced power granted to the president, Congress, and the courts.
It was not designed to produce change by the barrel of a gun.
To the extent Martin Luther King Jr. succeeded in changing the hearts and minds of average Americans, it was by pushing his followers to seek peace, not violence. He recognized that if there is a righteous message accompanied by violent mobs, people will remember the mobs and forget the message.
If those with a true interest in racial justice wish to succeed, they must separate themselves from the insurrectionists acting in their name who have caused only fear and destruction. Otherwise, their efforts will amount to nothing.
After the riots that decimated Kenosha, Wisconsin, one woman voter captured the sentiment: “I’m not going to remember them for anything they said,” she said of the protesters. “I’m going to remember them for what they did to their own city.”