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Matt Walsh sounds the alarm on something millions of Americans feel in their wallets every month: you don't own anything anymore, you just subscribe to it (youtube.com). From software to cars to home appliances, the subscription economy has ballooned past $1.5 trillion globally, with companies like Adobe and John Deere locking basic features behind recurring paywalls (zuora.com). Walsh argues this isn't just a consumer annoyance. It's a philosophical assault on the foundational American ideals of ownership, independence, and self-reliance. He draws the connection explicitly, tying the episode to his ongoing Daily Wire+ series on the real history of communism, and the parallel is hard to dismiss: when corporations strip away private ownership in favor of perpetual rent-seeking, the line between Silicon Valley and collectivism starts to blur. You will own nothing isn't just a meme. It's a business model. Ben Shapiro goes full sports-talk-radio mode, dropping his personal top-five greatest-of-all-time lists across sports, music, television, and the one that really matters: politics (youtube.com). It's a lighter format from one of conservative media's sharpest voices, but the greatest politician category is where it gets interesting. Reagan? Lincoln? A Founder? The picks inevitably reveal how a leading right-of-center commentator weighs the qualities that actually make a political leader great. The episode is also a window into The Daily Wire's broader play: building a conservative media ecosystem that doesn't just compete with legacy news but challenges mainstream entertainment on its own turf. Agree or disagree, Shapiro wants the argument. Bring your receipts.
Glenn Beck isn't pulling punches. Following the reported death of Senator Lindsey Graham, Beck delivered what can only be described as a brutally honest assessment of the South Carolina Republican's decades-long career (youtube.com). Graham, first elected in 2002 and long a fixture of the GOP's interventionist old guard, was admired by the establishment but routinely scorned by grassroots conservatives for backing endless wars, amnesty-friendly immigration deals, and what many saw as serial betrayals of the America First movement. Beck's willingness to say out loud what millions on the populist right are thinking underscores a fault line that still defines the Republican Party: the war between its neoconservative past and the nationalist-populist wing that now sets the agenda. Love him or loathe him, Graham's passing marks the end of an era, and Beck clearly isn't mourning the era itself.
Tucker Carlson sits down with Jay Dyer for a no-holds-barred conversation connecting Hollywood depravity, CIA psyops, elite secret societies, and the Epstein network into a single, disturbing picture of institutional evil (youtube.com). Dyer, whose graduate research focused on psychological warfare and film, makes the case that Christianity and Orthodox Christianity in particular is being deliberately targeted by these forces precisely because it offers real spiritual resistance. The timing matters. Orthodox Christianity is surging in America, with the Assembly of Canonical Orthodox Bishops reporting significant growth in parish membership and new converts drawn to an ancient, unchanging faith in an age of civilizational rot (assemblyofbishops.org). For anyone watching legacy institutions burn through whatever credibility they had left, Dyer's argument lands with force: the darkness is real, and more Americans than ever are turning to God for answers. RIGHT SIDE FEED Fast. Unfiltered. All in one place.
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