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    Canceling the Conveyor Belt After the Invoice Prints

    ICE is “ending” the WEXMAC-style contracting approach, which is a lovely PR hobby—right up until you remember the whole point of an invoice is that it arrives whether you keep the vehicle or ditch it.

    I’m Phil McCracken, Capitol Hill corruption reporter, and I have watched this specific conga line before: use a DoD ordering vehicle to speed-run procurement, let the paperwork conveyor belt clatter forward, and then—once the problems get loud—declare the route “over” like that rewinds the receipts.

    Here’s the contradiction the public can’t unsee. ICE officials, including Mullin, say the WEXMAC approach is being ended. But GAO reported planning/acquisition problems tied to the Camp East Montana contract process, and waste connected to paying for services based on maximum capacity even when detainees weren’t present—i.e., taxpayers got charged for capacity math that didn’t match reality.

    And then the “fix” arrives the way a fire alarm arrives: after the kitchen is already featured in the news. The record described ICE terminating the initial contract and moving to a new operator. Operationally, sure. Accountability-wise? That’s not the same thing as undoing the billing logic GAO flagged.

    You can cancel the conveyor belt. You can’t cancel the meal tickets once the printing starts.

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    Help Wanted Isn’t a Path to Stability—It’s a Good-Job Shortage

    “Openings everywhere, stable life nowhere” isn’t a labor shortage—it’s a bookkeeping technique. The sign says “now hiring” like it’s a promise, but the fine print is basically: apply inside, then do math on rent, childcare, bus passes, and healthcare until your paycheck files for bankruptcy. The worker isn’t missing opportunity; they’re walking into a stability trapdoor with a name tag that reads “welcome aboard.”

    Follow the money and you find the real shortage: not people, but dependable pay, predictable schedules, and benefits that don’t require a side quest. “Good jobs” aren’t rare because workers disappeared—they’re rare because “help wanted” is being sold like a ladder when it’s actually just HR outsourcing the cost of survival. Someone should throw the whole sanitized story out the newsroom window with a Molotov made of receipts.

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    War’s Bill, Contracts’ Paycheck

    Follow the invoice and the slogan starts cracking: “war for us” becomes kids, taxes, debt, underfunded veterans’ care, and families getting squeezed—while the other half of the ledger is defense contracting, framed like unavoidable “billions guaranteed.” The pitch is shared sacrifice; the receipts are selective comfort. Somewhere, “security” turns into a subscription plan with upsells for people who don’t have to carry the weight of the consequences.

    And that’s the part I can’t stop seeing on Capitol Hill: the country pays like it’s a community project, then procurement jazz hands the payout into someone else’s bank account. People pay the price. The connected profit. So whose “we” are we talking about—ours, or theirs?

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    A Border Win Doesn’t Pay the Rent

    Sure, you got the “MOSTLY KEPT”—crossings down, enforcement up, victory lap administered in front of a podium and a chyron. But the household ledger stays “STILL BROKEN,” because politicians treat border metrics like they’re mortgage-payment math, and the rest of us live in the receipts section.

    When your “PAYCHECK” is “EARNED” but “NOT ENOUGH,” the spreadsheet doesn’t magically balance. The “GAS BILL,” “ELECTRIC BILL,” and “MEDICAL BILL” keep clocking in, and inflation pressure keeps chewing the margin. A border win doesn’t pay the rent.

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    The Cult of Denial: Stronger Than Facts, Because Denial Is a Choice

    I keep hearing that the evidence is public, which is a cute way to say, “Don’t worry, the facts are right there—just don’t touch them.” Then the room starts chanting DO NOT QUESTION and DO NOT REMEMBER like it’s a loyalty oath. The algorithm wore a trench coat again, and suddenly the corkboard isn’t for investigating, it’s for obeying.

    Because if questioning gets treated like disloyalty, the incentive flips: truth becomes optional, and belonging becomes mandatory. You don’t “fail to see” reality—you’re instructed to stop seeing it, so the group can cash out your certainty faster than your conscience can catch up. The evidence may be public, but the denial is the choice you make.

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    Not Patriotism—That’s a Business Model

    When your father starts the war and your sons back the drone company, that’s not patriotism—it’s a business model. “War for us” is the brochure; “contracts for them” is the checkout button, and somehow everyone acts surprised that the sacrifice comes with an invoice.

    Call it duty if you want, but it keeps doing the same thing: wrap profit in family-values cosplay, convert danger into procurement, and let “drones, data, dominance” sell the sky as a subscription plan. The country gets the costs. The insiders get the contracts. Same story, different flag.

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    He Doesn’t Think About Your Bills—So Believe Him

    “He told you exactly who he is.” Great. If you don’t think about Americans’ financial situation, what exactly are you thinking about—your next press stop? “Believe him” is the new “don’t ask questions,” because while the quote-card insists it’s all vibes and zero brain-cells, the rest of life keeps filing evidence under Family Bills, Food Prices Up, and Gas Prices Up, with Overwhelmed in the margins and Help Wanted but Can’t Afford to Live as the fine print.

    That’s the authoritarian cosplay trick: ignore the invoice, then demand loyalty like it’s a substitute for arithmetic. The only thing he’s clearly focused on is training you to treat “I don’t think about anybody” as leadership, and the cost keeps doing the opposite of mind-reading. The newsroom raccoon can read receipts—and it’s not buying “Believe Him” as care.

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    Pricing in the ‘I don’t think about you’ plan

    He said the quiet part out loud—(allegedly) “I don’t think about Americans’ financial situation.” Cool. The receipt gets a microphone anyway: RENT $2,100/month, GROCERIES UP AGAIN, GAS 4.89/10… KEEP CLIMBING.

    Your struggle is not his priority, apparently—until “WORK HARD. STILL FALLING BEHIND.” shows up like a recurring meeting he never attends. Billionaire logic: “not thinking” is just priority theater with autopay, and the numbers still invoice you the moment you try to live.

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    The Big Lie Needs a Big Crowd: The More Evidence Piles Up, the Louder the Chanting Gets

    I swear the whole thing works like a crime scene where the evidence table is the stage: more facts arrive, and instead of the argument shrinking, the crowd expands—REPEAT IT, DEFEND IT, louder. Not because the lie suddenly becomes truer, but because “being right” has turned into a team sport where volume counts as verification. Follow the thread, but check the knot: the knot is social incentives, not reality.

    Normal people don’t wake up wanting to join a chanting club; they just want to resolve confusion without getting socially evicted. So the system hands them a script: when the evidence piles up, you don’t update—you perform. Evidence becomes a recruitment flyer. And the big lie needs a big crowd because denial isn’t a position you hold; it’s a role you keep, right up until the next round of “proof” triggers the next round of noise.

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    Duty Over Ego: The Service-Sell Test

    “SERVICE OR SELF?” is supposed to be a moral X-ray, but it keeps doing the thing cable-news loves most: turning leadership into a storefront sign. One side offers “built for others” with “put people first” and “duty over ego” as if sincerity comes with font size. The other side rolls in “built for himself”—“trump brand over everything,” “measured success in attention,” and “donor-first politics”—then swears the difference isn’t style.

    Sure. “THE DIFFERENCE ISN’T STYLE. IT’S WHO THEY SERVE.” And the punchline is that the test is itself packaging: it’s a service sermon delivered like a personal brand pitch. If the proof is mostly slogans and vibes, then what you’re really choosing isn’t leadership—it’s who gets to feel served while everyone else pays the real bill.

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