Today’s political activists and elected officials aren’t interested in reforming government—they’re interested in consolidating power. The rhetoric may have changed, but the goal remains the same: control the institutions, control the rules, and control the outcome.
For generations, America saw powerful political machines operate in major cities like Chicago, Philadelphia, and Detroit. But I argue that today’s political left has taken the pursuit of power to an entirely new level, using government, bureaucracy, media influence, and political pressure to advance its agenda.
This is a conversation about political power, government accountability, party politics, election systems, public trust, and the future of representative government in America.
If you want to understand how political movements gain influence, maintain power, and shape public policy, this is a discussion you won’t want to miss.







