Author name: aharris47

When Ego Replaces Understanding: How Personal Grievance Becomes Foreign Policy

Section One: Why This Is Not Just a Personality Quirk There is a tendency to treat certain political behaviors as eccentricities rather than warning signs. In this case, what looks like impulsiveness is better understood as a pattern: an inability to absorb new information and revise beliefs accordingly. When someone cannot integrate correction, feedback, or […]

When Ego Replaces Understanding: How Personal Grievance Becomes Foreign Policy Read More »

Why the Secret Service Was Built to Protect Money, Not People

Section One: When a Fact Changes How You See Everything There are moments when learning a single historical fact rearranges how you understand an entire system. This is one of those moments. Most people assume the United States Secret Service was created to protect presidents, democracy, or public safety. That assumption feels natural because that

Why the Secret Service Was Built to Protect Money, Not People Read More »

You Know You’ve Found Your People When You Feel at Ease

Section One: The Quiet Signal of Belonging I think you know when you’ve found your people, not because they announce themselves, but because of how you feel around them. With the wrong people, nothing is obviously wrong in the moment. You laugh, you participate, you show up. But afterward, something lingers. You replay conversations in

You Know You’ve Found Your People When You Feel at Ease Read More »

How ICE Raids Are Quietly Raising Your Grocery Bill

Section One: Immigration Enforcement Meets Everyday Economics Most people think of immigration enforcement as a political issue, not an economic one. But the reality is that ICE actions reach far beyond border debates and courtroom headlines. They reach into your grocery store, your favorite restaurant, and your monthly budget. Our capitalist economy relies heavily on

How ICE Raids Are Quietly Raising Your Grocery Bill Read More »

Comfortable in My Own Company

Section One: Redefining What It Means to Be an Introvert Being an introvert does not mean being broken, lonely, or antisocial. It means understanding how you function best. Some people recharge through crowds, noise, and constant interaction. Others recharge through quiet, distance, and solitude. Neither is superior, but they are different. As an introvert, not

Comfortable in My Own Company Read More »

Three Words Before Sleep: A Prayer for Surrender, Trust, and Peace

Section One: Why the Last Words of the Day Matter What you carry into sleep shapes the way your body and mind rest. The final thoughts of the day often linger beneath the surface, influencing dreams, stress levels, and even how you wake up. Nighttime is when control loosens and truth surfaces, which is why

Three Words Before Sleep: A Prayer for Surrender, Trust, and Peace Read More »

Introversion Is Not Isolation—It Is Discernment

Section One: Clearing the Misunderstanding Being an introvert is often misunderstood as being antisocial, cold, or disconnected. That misunderstanding comes from a culture that equates value with visibility and noise. Introversion does not mean disliking people; it means being intentional about them. An introvert is not avoiding connection but curating it. The desire for a

Introversion Is Not Isolation—It Is Discernment Read More »

error: Content is protected !!
Scroll to Top