America’s Got Governance

  • 2032 Social Security Cliff: Congress Plays Chicken With Your Check

    The grill at The Red Hat Saloon is popping like a July fireworks stand, and right when I bite into brisket so honest it should be tax-deductible, Washington reminds every working American that your retirement is being run like a broke lawnmower. It coughs, it sputters, and then it blames you for standing too close.

    The 2032 problem: the OASI trust fund hits empty

    Fox Business flagged a fresh warning tied to the Congressional Budget Office’s 10-year budget and economic outlook: the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) trust fund, the main pot paying Social Security retirement and survivor benefits, is projected to be depleted in 2032.

    And no, the law does not let the government keep paying scheduled benefits like it’s tossing Mardi Gras beads off a float. If that trust fund balance hits zero, benefits would have to drop to whatever payroll taxes bring in, unless Congress changes the law.

    The numbers that smell like burning grease

    • CBO projects OASI spending rises from $1.5 trillion this fiscal year to more than $2.5 trillion in 2036.
    • Even after tax receipts and interest income, the trust fund’s annual deficit grows from $207 billion this year to $525 billion in 2032 (the depletion year).
    • That annual deficit keeps climbing to $691 billion in 2036, assuming full benefits are paid.

    That is not a paper cut. That is a tailgate full of cinder blocks rolling downhill.

    What “automatic cuts” could look like

    CBO ran an illustrative scenario that Fox Business pointed to: benefits would be cut 7% in 2032, then cut by an average of 28% per year from 2033 through 2036. That is not trimming fat. That is taking a carving knife to the whole brisket and telling grandma to enjoy the aroma.

    And here’s the kicker: the mechanics of how to cut benefits are not spelled out in federal law, meaning the exact way reductions would be applied is not clearly laid out. So when the money runs short, it’s not just cuts. It’s bureaucratic improv night with your rent money on the table.

    Debt, chaos, and national muscle

    This is wrapped into the bigger trajectory: deficits, debt, interest, and mandatory spending pressure. CRFB’s write-up of the same CBO outlook frames high and rising debt as carrying national security risks. A country that cannot manage its basic promises gets weaker over time, like a pickup with bald tires trying to tow a boat uphill.

    My bar-stool demand

    The fact pattern is simple: CBO projects depletion in 2032, and absent congressional action, benefits get cut to match incoming payroll taxes. The calendar is louder than cable news. 2032 is a date with teeth. Live free, grill hard, and make Congress do the math before the math does you.

  • Cheerios vs. The Rent Beast: When Breakfast Starts Doing Your Budget Math

    The Red Hat Saloon smelled like hickory smoke and burnt coffee, which is America’s unofficial perfume when the bills come due. I’m on my bar stool watching the fryer pop like a firecracker, and I’m reading a headline that should make every suit in Washington choke on a cucumber slice: the Cheerios people are saying the cost of living and housing are changing how folks spend.

    General Mills just admitted the squeeze is real

    On February 17, 2026, General Mills (owner of Cheerios) updated its full-year fiscal 2026 outlook ahead of its presentation at the Consumer Analyst Group of New York conference. They pointed to weak consumer sentiment and broader uncertainty affecting what people buy and how quickly the company can win back volume. Translation: wallets are getting grilled, and not in the fun backyard way.

    • Organic net sales: now expected to be down 1.5% to 2% for fiscal 2026 (previously down 1% to up 1%).
    • Adjusted operating profit and adjusted diluted EPS: now expected to be down 16% to 20% in constant currency (previously 10% to 15%).
    • Free cash flow conversion: still expected at at least 95% of adjusted after-tax earnings.

    When rent eats first, the cereal aisle loses

    CEO Jeff Harmening talked at that conference about cost-of-living and housing pressures reshaping spending patterns, with “value” becoming the main language shoppers speak now. That is not a trend. That is survival math. When the mortgage and rent are acting feral, the grocery list becomes the offering plate.

    GLP-1 reality check and the new food tug-of-war

    General Mills also flagged movement toward healthier and lower-cost food options, and pointed to increased adoption of GLP-1 weight-loss drugs as another pressure on packaged food demand. Harmening’s view was that these medications are likely to have a lasting influence, nudging some consumers toward smaller portions and more nutrient-dense foods, especially protein- and fiber-focused choices. They also talked about competition for protein options, and yes, they have their own protein cereal line.

    The whole snack aisle is flinching

    This value war is not just cereal. PepsiCo cut prices on core brands like Lay’s and Doritos by up to 15% earlier this month after consumer backlash to earlier price hikes. Conagra, the Slim Jim maker, has held its annual sales and profit targets even after a muted second quarter. Everybody’s scrambling to keep shoppers from bolting to the cheapest thing on the shelf.

    Here’s the ugly punchline: when a company as mainstream as General Mills is cutting forecasts while talking about housing pressure, that is not lifestyle gossip. That is a national temperature reading. Live free, grill hard, and demand a country where breakfast is normal again.

  • The New Superfood Is Apparently Salmonella, and the Internet Sold It to You Overnight

    I was posted up at The Red Hat Saloon with the grill snapping like AM radio static when my phone served a headline that makes a man double-check his spice rack and his life choices. Not because I fear leafy greens. Because I fear the modern snake-oil hustle: two-day shipping, influencer vibes, and a side of bacterial roulette.

    What the feds are warning about

    Here is the factual brisket, trimmed and smoked slow. The FDA and CDC are investigating a multistate outbreak of Salmonella Newport infections linked to Rosabella-brand moringa powder capsules distributed by Ambrosia Brands LLC. An FDA update dated February 13, 2026 puts it at seven cases across seven states, with three hospitalizations and zero deaths. Illness onset dates range from November 7, 2025 to January 8, 2026. Investigators interviewed three sick people, and all three reported eating the capsules.

    This is not your average stomach bug

    The FDA warns the outbreak strain is resistant to all first-line and alternative antibiotics commonly recommended for treating Salmonella infections. The CDC describes it as an extensively drug-resistant (XDR) Salmonella Newport with an NDM-1 gene, and calls it the first documented U.S. outbreak of Salmonella with an NDM-1 gene. Translation from bar-stool to English: this germ looks at your medicine cabinet like a raccoon looks at a bungee cord on a trash can.

    The product details people actually need

    • Product: Rosabella Moringa Capsules (60-count bottles)
    • Impacted lots: listed in the FDA recall notice
    • Expiration dates: 03/2027 to 11/2027
    • Where it was sold: the company says nationwide via its direct-to-consumer website and TikTok Shop
    • Third-party sales warning: possible unauthorized sellers on sites like eBay and Shein

    The company says none of the impacted lots were sold by the company on Amazon, but urges consumers to check lot numbers anyway. Meanwhile, the CDC outbreak page includes Amazon among the places the recalled capsules were available online. Welcome to the modern bazaar, where responsibility hides behind a checkout button.

    Accountability, recalls, and the online flea market

    The FDA recommended Ambrosia Brands recall all Rosabella-brand moringa powder capsules, and the firm agreed to recall certain lots. The FDA is conducting a traceback investigation to determine the source of contamination and warns additional products may be contaminated as the advisory updates. The company says it discontinued use and purchase of raw moringa leaf powder from the supplier tied to the referenced lots.

    What to do if you bought it

    If you bought Rosabella Moringa Capsules, check the lot code on the bottom of the bottle against the FDA recall list. If it matches, do not eat it. Throw it away or return it. Live free, grill hard, and make accountability great again.

  • Zeldin and Trump rip out EPA’s 2009 climate trigger, and the bureaucracy starts squealing

    The Red Hat Saloon smelled like hickory smoke, burnt coffee, and that electrical whiff right before a cheap gadget dies. That is the Democrat climate machine in a nutshell: blinking dashboards, endless forms, and somehow your truck costs more and your freedom gets smaller.

    The big move: EPA says the 2009 Endangerment Finding is rescinded

    Here is the meat and potatoes. On February 12, 2026, President Donald Trump appeared at the White House with EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin as EPA announced a final rule rescinding the EPA’s 2009 Greenhouse Gas Endangerment Finding.

    EPA also finalized the repeal of later greenhouse gas emission standards for light-, medium-, and heavy-duty on-highway vehicles and engines that were built on that finding. EPA called it the “single largest deregulatory action in U.S. history” and put a number on it: over $1.3 trillion in savings, including an average savings of more than $2,400 per vehicle.

    Yes, that start-stop “feature” gets hit too

    EPA also said it is eliminating off-cycle credits, including credits tied to the automatic start-stop feature. EPA described start-stop as “almost universally hated” and sold the change as restoring consumer choice. If your engine has ever coughed itself off at a red light like it heard a ghost story on AM radio, you already know why that got cheers.

    The political fight: Zeldin calls it a Democrat climate weapon

    In his Fox News column, Zeldin paints the Endangerment Finding as a legal lever Democrats used for years to build a stack of climate rules that squeezed what could be built, how it could be certified, and what it would cost.

    EPA’s release says the final rule eliminates federal vehicle and engine greenhouse gas standards for model years 2012 to 2027 and beyond, and removes related compliance programs, credit provisions, and reporting obligations that supported the vehicle GHG regime.

    The legal spine: EPA points to Supreme Court limits on agency power

    EPA pointed to the Supreme Court’s posture on agency power, including Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo and West Virginia v. EPA. EPA’s argument is that Clean Air Act Section 202(a) does not give it the authority to regulate greenhouse gases from new motor vehicles the way prior administrations did, and that major policy choices belong with Congress.

    EPA also emphasized process: a 52-day comment period, four days of virtual hearings with more than 600 people testifying, and about 572,000 public comments.

    Fox gave Zeldin the megaphone, EPA put the rule on paper, and the climate priesthood is already warming up for court. But the core pitch from Washington is plain: lower costs, more choice, and lawmakers being told to do their job. Live free, grill hard, and make Congress vote.

  • Jessie James Decker’s “Water, Water, Water” Reality Check for a Country Addicted to Shortcuts

    The grill’s popping, the smoke’s rising like an AM-radio hymn, and then a headline rolls in that’s so simple it makes Washington look even dumber by comparison. Jessie James Decker, in a Fox News Digital interview published February 16, 2026, revealed the one wellness habit she never skips to look and feel her best: drinking lots of water.

    The no-skip habit: water, all day

    Decker’s advice wasn’t fancy, trendy, or sold in a plastic tub with a shiny label. It was “Water, water, water.” She said she drinks water all day, and she keeps it next to her bed and drinks it through the night. No miracle cleanse. No mystical powder. Just the boring basics done on purpose.

    The gym post that Fox tied in

    Fox also connected the hydration talk to Decker’s January 19, 2026 Instagram gym post. The video shows her squatting with a barbell and the caption reads: “2026 energy! LFG”. At the time of Fox’s reporting, the post had more than 111,000 likes.

    The video text also pushed the idea of a “marriage body” instead of a “revenge body,” basically framing the fitness motivation as showing up for your spouse, not performing for imaginary haters in your head.

    Home cooking, movement, and keeping the kids active

    In the same Fox coverage, Decker talked about living like an adult in a country that keeps trying to sell everyone a shortcut:

    • Cooking at home and making food from scratch
    • Staying active
    • Keeping the kids moving

    She said one daughter does gymnastics five days a week, and that their family plays pickleball so much they even look for courts on vacation.

    Why the simplest habit hits the loudest

    Here’s what makes this whole thing land like a firework in a faculty lounge: the villain isn’t water. The villain is the shortcut salesman, the grifter class, the professional scolders who act like the human body is a government program that needs a committee meeting.

    Decker’s “water, water, water” isn’t glamorous, and that’s exactly why it works as a cultural gut check. Do the basics. Do them consistently. Watch the noise merchants lose their grip.

    Live free, hydrate hard, and keep your common sense hotter than the grill.

  • Tom Emmer vs. the DNC ID Circus: If Democrats Check IDs for Nominee Night, They Can Check IDs for Election Day

    Tom Emmer vs. the DNC ID Circus: If Democrats Check IDs for Nominee Night, They Can Check IDs for Election Day

    The grill is hissing, the AM radio is hollering, and Washington is doing that classic routine where something is “oppression” until the second it becomes “security” for their own velvet-rope circus.

    Emmer calls out the ID double standard

    Fox News reported on February 16, 2026 that House Majority Whip Tom Emmer blasted Democrats over what he called a straight-up double standard: they oppose Republicans pushing voter ID, but require photo identification at their own Democratic National Convention. If the concept of ID is so evil, why do Democrats suddenly love it when it protects their nominee night and their TV cameras?

    Emmer pointed to the 2024 Democratic convention in Chicago. A Washington Post opinion column described delegates needing a special Secret Service photo ID to get past the perimeter and additional credentials for deeper access. That is the point Emmer is hammering: when Democrats want controlled access, IDs become normal again.

    What the SAVE America Act does

    The bill in the middle of this fight is the SAVE America Act (H.R. 7296). Congress.gov’s summary describes two key requirements for federal elections:

    • Documentary proof of U.S. citizenship when registering to vote.
    • Photo identification to vote.

    For absentee voting, the bill text requires submitting a copy of the ID with both the absentee ballot request and the returned ballot. The text also ties the ID standard to citizenship: the photo ID should indicate U.S. citizenship on the front, but an ID without that indicator can be used if presented with another document that indicates citizenship.

    Where Congress is, and why it’s a full-contact brawl

    The Associated Press reported the House passed the SAVE Act on February 11, 2026 by a 218-213 vote. Fox reported that all Republicans supported it and that one Democrat, Rep. Henry Cuellar of Texas, voted yes.

    DHS, the SAVE system, and immigration enforcement

    The bill text includes provisions about states using federal information sources, including the Department of Homeland Security’s SAVE system, to identify people who are not U.S. citizens on voter rolls. It also says DHS must investigate whether to initiate removal proceedings under the Immigration and Nationality Act if an alien is determined to be unlawfully registered to vote in federal elections.

    Public opinion and the “ID country” reality

    Gallup reported on October 24, 2024 that 84% of U.S. adults favored requiring photo ID to vote, and 83% favored proof of citizenship when registering to vote for the first time. Pew Research Center reported on August 22, 2025 that 83% favored requiring all voters to show government-issued photo ID.

    And yes, the SAVE Act’s eligible IDs explicitly include those issued by a branch of the Armed Forces. In the real world, adults show ID all the time. Emmer’s argument is that Democrats know this, practice it at the DNC, then pretend it’s tyranny when regular Americans want similar verification for federal elections.

  • Trump’s Maritime Action Plan: Build American Ships Again

    I’m at the bar stool, smelling like hickory smoke and bad decisions, watching Washington finally remember we’re a maritime nation. President Trump’s administration rolled out a Maritime Action Plan, and it reads like somebody grabbed the wheel instead of letting America’s ocean trade hitchhike under somebody else’s flag.

    The problem: America’s trade rides foreign hulls

    Fox News reported on February 16, 2026 that the administration unveiled a sweeping plan to reclaim U.S. maritime strength and reduce dependence on foreign-built, foreign-owned, and foreign-flagged vessels. Senior officials put a brutal number on it: nearly 99% of U.S. international maritime trade is moving on foreign-built, foreign-owned, and foreign-flagged ships.

    That is not “global cooperation.” That is like owning an F-150 and paying strangers to drive it because you forgot where you left the keys.

    China’s shipbuilding edge is the scoreboard

    Fox reported China produces more than half of the world’s commercial ship tonnage. The Maritime Action Plan itself says the United States builds less than 1% of new commercial ships globally. That’s the reality check, delivered cold, like AM radio at dawn.

    The plan’s core: yards, workers, and stable demand

    Published in February 2026, the plan describes a U.S. shipyard base of 66 total shipyards:

    • 8 active shipbuilding yards
    • 11 shipyards with build positions
    • 22 repair yards with drydocking
    • 25 topside repair yards

    It also admits the industrial gut punch: workforce shortages, supplier consolidation, and federal “stop-start” ordering cycles that make long-term planning harder than trying to smoke ribs while somebody keeps yanking the fuel.

    The plan leans into investment incentives, shipyard modernization, and regulatory relief. It also pushes Maritime Prosperity Zones, modeled after 2017 Opportunity Zones, to steer capital toward waterfront communities that can build, repair, and crew ships. On people, it floats a Mariner Incentive Program at MARAD to support education, recruitment, training, and retention, plus steps to strengthen pipelines through state maritime academies and other training routes.

    Taxes, trust funds, and the enforcement timeline

    The plan proposes a Land Port Maintenance Tax to address cargo routing around costs: 0.125% of merchandise value entering through land ports, funding a Land Port Maintenance Trust Fund.

    It also discusses a Maritime Security Trust Fund, including a revenue illustration that a $0.25 per kilogram fee could yield close to $1.5 trillion over 10 years.

    On China trade enforcement, the plan summarizes the USTR Section 301 investigation: initiated in 2024, public report released January 16, 2025, responsive action taken April 17, 2025. It also notes a U.S.-China economic and trade deal on October 30, 2025, with U.S. implementation of responsive actions suspended for one year starting November 10, 2025.

    Defense reality: fewer builders, bigger bottlenecks

    Fox tied this to rising Navy shipbuilding costs and a shrinking industrial base. Defense shipbuilding is concentrated: just two shipbuilders build the Navy’s nuclear aircraft carriers and submarines, Huntington Ingalls Industries’ Newport News Shipbuilding and General Dynamics’ Electric Boat. Fox also reported Secretary of the Navy John Phelan warned shipyards need to act like we’re at war, and cited the Office of Naval Intelligence assessment that China’s shipbuilding capacity is more than 200 times that of the United States, amid submarine production delays and supply-chain bottlenecks.

    Final sermon: build the ships, crew the ships

    This plan is not a magic wand. It’s a blueprint with real numbers, real vulnerabilities, and proposals that still need money, laws, and follow-through. But at least it says the quiet part out loud: maritime power is steel, workers, shipyards, and time. Live free, grill hard, and build the ships.

  • Pentagon Turns the AI Smoker Up: Anthropic Faces ‘Supply Chain Risk’ Heat After Maduro Raid Questions

    I’m parked at The Red Hat Saloon with the grill snapping like AM radio lightning, watching Silicon Valley discover a truth older than the Constitution: if you sell tools to the Pentagon, those tools are for Pentagon things. Not yoga. Not vibes. Not a “trust and safety” book club.

    Pentagon review hits Anthropic after Maduro raid questions

    Fox News reported on February 16, 2026 that the Pentagon is reviewing its relationship with Anthropic after friction over questions tied to the U.S. operation targeting Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro. The spark, according to officials: Anthropic asked whether its AI model, Claude, was used in the raid to capture Maduro. That question set off alarms inside the Pentagon.

    Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell told Fox News Digital the relationship is being reviewed, stressing that partners need to help America’s troops in any fight. That is simple warfighter logic, unless your brain has been marinating in boardroom kombucha.

    The contract is real, and the networks are classified

    Here’s the part that should make every contractor spit out their coffee: Fox reported Anthropic won a $200 million Pentagon contract in July 2025, and Claude was the first model brought into classified networks. This is not a toy chatbot. This is national security plumbing.

    “Supply chain risk” is the phrase that makes vendors sweat

    Fox reported senior Pentagon officials are floating whether Anthropic could be treated as a potential “supply chain risk.” In plain English, that can mean the Pentagon may start requiring vendors and contractors to certify they do not use Anthropic models.

    Fox also reported officials did not elaborate on exactly when Anthropic made the inquiry or to whom. Axios, which Fox noted broke aspects of the feud, described Anthropic raising the question with an executive at Palantir, its partner in Pentagon contracting. Fox said Palantir could not immediately be reached for comment.

    Anthropic disputes the characterization; Pentagon pushes “all lawful purposes”

    Anthropic disputes the idea it was policing missions. Fox reported the company said it has not discussed the use of Claude for specific operations with the Pentagon and has not discussed such matters with industry partners outside routine technical discussions.

    Anthropic pointed to limits it says it holds in policy discussions, including fully autonomous weapons and mass domestic surveillance. Fox reported Pentagon officials deny those restrictions are at the center of the dispute, and the Pentagon is pressing major AI firms to authorize tools for “all lawful purposes.”

    Fox also reported a senior Pentagon official said other leading AI firms are working with the Pentagon in good faith, naming OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Google’s Gemini, and xAI’s Grok as agreeing to this standard in unclassified systems, with one agreeing across all systems already. Fox did not specify which company agreed across all systems.

    The Maduro raid detail remains unconfirmed

    Fox reported neither Anthropic nor the Pentagon confirmed whether Claude was used in the operation. Axios similarly said it could not confirm the precise role Claude played, while also reporting that two sources said Claude was used during the active operation. Axios also reported Claude is currently the only AI model available in the military’s classified systems.

    So yes, review the relationship. Kick the tires. Check the wiring. If you’re selling a high-powered pit boss smoker to the Pentagon, do not act shocked when they plan to cook with it. Live free, grill hard, and keep the mission ready.

  • Rubio Locks In a U.S.-Hungary Civil Nuclear Deal, and the Usual Paperwork Priesthood Starts Fidgeting

    I could smell the propane before the first syllable hit the AM radio. Not literal propane, but that familiar scent of something powerful getting switched on while the bureaucrats flap around like moths headed for the bug zapper. That is what it looks like when America remembers it can actually build and sell serious energy again.

    What happened, and when

    On February 16, 2026, Secretary of State Marco Rubio signed a civil nuclear cooperation agreement with Hungary in Budapest. Fox News reports Rubio leaned hard into the Trump era closeness with Hungary, calling the relationship about as close as he can imagine, and telling Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban that “Your success is our success.”

    Rubio’s message: allies, tightened like lug nuts

    This was not a sleepy handshake tour. Fox also reports Rubio said that if Hungary ever hits financial trouble, growth roadblocks, or threats to stability, President Donald Trump would be very interested in finding ways to help. That is not diplomatic soup. That is an alliance being tightened down.

    “Civil nuclear” does not mean soft

    Public reporting still leaves key details unclear: it does not spell out the full text of the agreement, the exact timeline, or whether Hungary has made binding purchase commitments right now. What is described publicly reads like a framework opening the door for American nuclear technology, fuel, and industry to compete and cooperate.

    • AP reports the agreement includes the possible purchase of small modular reactors, plus U.S.-supplied nuclear fuel and spent fuel storage technology.
    • CBS News reports Hungary will purchase nuclear fuel from American suppliers for the first time, and Holtec International will help Hungary manage spent nuclear fuel.

    Politics and timing in Budapest

    AP notes Hungary has parliamentary elections scheduled for April 12, 2026, and that Rubio publicly embraced Orban’s bid for another term during the visit. Call it politics if you want. I call it realism: you deal with the leaders who run the place.

    The money angle: the “we still make stuff” part

    Anadolu Agency reported the State Department framed these Central Europe civil nuclear steps as advancing “mutual security interests” and said the deals represent more than $15 billion in business opportunities for U.S. vendors and thousands of American jobs. CBS notes Hungary’s nuclear sector has long been linked to Russia for technology and fuel, and this deal is described as a shift toward diversification.

    The real villain: permanent dependency salesmen

    The villain here is the anti-energy priesthood that wants the West dependent, timid, and apologizing for existing. Fox also highlighted Trump’s public praise and endorsement of Orban on Truth Social this month, framing Orban as focused on protecting his country, growing the economy, stopping illegal immigration, and ensuring law and order.

    Are there unanswered questions? Sure. But the direction is clear. Turn the radio up and watch the usual suspects squirm. Live free, grill hard, and do not apologize.

  • Fox Nation Rolls Into Prime Video Like a Lifted F-150 Crashing a Tesla Convention

    I could smell it before I saw it: that hot plastic, overworked-smart-TV aroma, like a microwave trying to resurrect yesterday’s brisket. America’s remote just got a new option, and it is not a lecture from Silicon Valley. It is a paywall with a V8 rumble.

    What launched, when, and what it costs

    Here’s the verified meat on the plate. On February 17, 2026, Fox Nation’s full library became available as a subscription through Prime Video. The price reported is $8.99 per month, or $71.88 for an annual plan. Fox News also pegged the library at more than 10,000 hours of originals, documentaries, and specials. That is not a trickle. That is a fire hydrant aimed at your couch.

    For the cord-cutter crowd, there is a bigger combo: Prime Video users can bundle Fox Nation with FOX One for $24.99 per month. FOX One is also listed at $19.99 per month on Prime Video, which tells you exactly what the bundle is doing: it is a two-lane on-ramp through the streaming traffic jam.

    Why this is a direct hit on the streaming gatekeepers

    Prime Video is a massive platform. That is the point. Fox Nation showing up there is not begging for scraps. It is tossing a brisket the size of a spare tire onto the biggest picnic table in town and saying, “You want it? Grab a plate.” No cable guy. No antique box. No 400-channel hostage situation.

    What’s inside the library

    • Exclusive content across originals, documentaries, and specials
    • Programming tied to familiar names: Kevin Costner, Kim Kardashian, Rob Lowe, 50 Cent, Matthew McConaughey, Dan Aykroyd, Kelsey Grammer, Dennis Quaid
    • Exclusive new seasons of “COPS” and true crime content
    • Next-day access to Fox News Channel primetime programming, including daily episodes from Laura Ingraham and Jesse Watters

    Faith, history, and the kind of content that makes people spill oat milk

    Fox Nation spans faith-based programming, history, true crime, live sports, and lifestyle series. Fox News highlighted “Martin Scorsese Presents: The Saints” as the platform’s most-watched program, and noted season two includes an episode directed by Francesca Scorsese about Carlo Acutis. It also said “David: King of Israel”, hosted by Zachary Levi, premieres this month.

    And for the folks who like their entertainment with elbow grease, Fox News reported Fox Nation is the exclusive streaming home for Real American Freestyle, providing the only at-home live viewing experience for that league.

    So yes, as of February 18, 2026, Fox Nation is on Prime Video. The price is clear, the bundle is real, and the streaming swamp can clutch its pearls all it wants. This is Americans choosing what to watch, where to watch it, and how to pay for it. Live free, grill hard, and do not apologize.

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