6/07/2026
THE LIGHT OF FREEDOM
Benjamin Franklin’s Join, or Die
Benjamin Franklin’s Join, or Die began as a call for colonial unity long before independence was declared. It reminds us that America was built not by perfect agreement, but by the courage to unite around liberty when it mattered most.
The Tree of Liberty
“The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants. It is its natural manure.” — Thomas Jefferson
James Madison- Federalist No. 48, February 1, 1788
6/06/2026
Milton Friedman's greatest regret, payroll withholding tax
Milton Friedman's greatest regret.
The federal government discovered the perfect crime in 1943: make employers collect taxes before workers ever see their paychecks. You think you earn $60,000 per year, but you actually earn $75,000 and hand over $15,000 to politicians without ever touching it. The psychological difference is enormous.
Before payroll withholding, Americans wrote quarterly checks directly to the Treasury. Picture yourself sitting at your kitchen table, writing a $3,750 check to the IRS every three months. The pain was immediate and visceral. Politicians faced constant pressure to justify every dollar because citizens felt the extraction in real time.
Withholding transforms this concrete loss into an abstract accounting entry. Your employer becomes an unpaid tax collector, and you never experience the actual cost of government. Worse, most people celebrate their tax refunds as government generosity rather than recognizing them as interest-free loans they provided to politicians. The Treasury collects your money throughout the year, spends it immediately, then returns your own cash and receives gratitude.
This system enables the explosion in government spending you witness today. Defense contractors billing $640 for toilet seats, agricultural subsidies for corn syrup, and congressional salaries for 535 people who rarely show up to work. When taxation feels painless, voters stop demanding accountability for how their money gets spent.
Milton Friedman helped design
withholding as a wartime emergency measure and later called it his greatest
regret. Free market economists recognized that the psychological pain of direct
taxation creates political pressure for fiscal restraint. The temporary always
becomes permanent in government hands, and the emergency justification
disappears while the extraction mechanism remains forever.
The Corruption of Central Banks
Andrew Jackson destroyed the Second Bank of the United States in 1836, delivering the single greatest blow to financial tyranny in American history. You won't hear this story told correctly in any economics textbook, because it reveals how central banking works: as a government-sponsored cartel that redistributes wealth from productive citizens to politically connected bankers.
The Second Bank held a 20-year federal charter starting in 1816. It controlled the money supply, issued currency, and held government deposits. Sound familiar? Nicholas Biddle, the bank's president, wielded more economic power than any elected official. He could trigger financial panics at will by restricting credit. He bought newspapers and bribed congressmen. When Jackson opposed recharter in 1832, Biddle deliberately crashed the economy to punish him.
Jackson called it "a hydra of corruption" and he was right. The bank created artificial booms through credit expansion, then triggered busts when politically convenient. Biddle openly bragged about manipulating markets. Free market economists and Jackson both recognized the core insight: this was legalized counterfeiting with government backing, not free market banking.
The political establishment united against Jackson. Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, and the entire Whig Party defended the bank. Biddle spent millions buying influence. The press attacked Jackson as an economic ignoramus. Every "respectable" voice supported recharter. Jackson stood alone with the American people.
After Jackson killed the bank, the country experienced the strongest economic growth in its history. From 1837 to 1862, America operated without a central bank. Industry flourished. Wages rose. Innovation exploded. This wasn't coincidence. When you stop subsidizing financial speculation and let productive capital find its natural home, prosperity follows.
Central banks don't stabilize
economies: they destabilize them for private gain.
6/04/2026
Astronomical Seasons 2026
The summer solstice marks the start of summer. In the Northern Hemisphere, the summer solstice is in June; south of the equator, it is in December.
According to the astronomical definition, the start of summer falls on the summer solstice. In the Northern Hemisphere, it’s the June solstice; south of the equator, it is the solstice in December.
Meteorologists use a different method of defining the first day of summer. And, in some countries, the beginning of the seasons is determined by average temperatures rather than fixed dates or astronomical events.
6/03/2026
Theodore Roosevelt "The Man in the Arena"
The former president of the United States Theodore
Roosevelt, slightly more than a year out of office, delivered perhaps his most
famous speech at the Sorbonne in Paris on 23 April 1910. Although its formal title is “Citizenship in
a Republic,” it is probably more widely known as “The Man in the Arena.” His statements at the Sorbonne were
part of a larger European trip that also included visits to Vienna, Budapest,
and Oslo, where on 5 May 1910, he delivered his acceptance speech for the 1906
Nobel Peace Prize, which he had won for his efforts in bringing an end to the
Russo-Japanese War. I share here the
most famous passage from “Citizenship in a Republic” — a personal favorite of
mine, for whatever that’s worth — accompanied by the important paragraph that
precedes it and some of the important lines that follow it:
Let the man of learning, the man of lettered leisure, beware of that queer and
cheap temptation to pose to himself and to others as a cynic, as the man who
has outgrown emotions and beliefs, the man to whom good and evil are as one.
The poorest way to face life is to face it with a sneer. There are many men who
feel a kind of twisted pride in cynicism; there are many who confine themselves
to criticism of the way others do what they themselves dare not even attempt.
There is no more unhealthy being, no man less worthy of respect, than he who
either really holds, or feigns to hold, an attitude of sneering disbelief
toward all that is great and lofty, whether in achievement or in that noble
effort which, even if it fails, comes second to achievement. A cynical habit of
thought and speech, a readiness to criticize work which the critic himself
never tries to perform, an intellectual aloofness which will not accept contact
with life’s realities—all these are marks, not as the possessor would fain to
think, of superiority, but of weakness. They mark the men unfit to bear their
part painfully in the stern strife of living, who seek, in the affectation of
contempt for the achievement of others, to hide from others and from themselves
their own weakness. The role is easy; there is none easier, save only the role
of the man who sneers alike at both criticism and performance.
It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man
stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit
belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust
and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and
again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does
actually strive to do the deeds; who knows the great enthusiasms, the great
devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the
end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at
least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those
cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat. Shame on the man of
cultivated taste who permits refinement to develop into fastidiousness that
unfits him for doing the rough work of a workaday world. Among the free peoples
who govern themselves there is but a small field of usefulness open for the men
of cloistered life who shrink from contact with their fellows. Still less room
is there for those who deride or slight what is done by those who actually bear
the brunt of the day; nor yet for those others who always profess that they
would like to take action, if only the conditions of life were not exactly what
they actually are. The man who does nothing cuts the same sordid figure in the
pages of history, whether he be cynic, or fop, or voluptuary. There is little
use for the being whose tepid soul knows nothing of the great and generous emotion,
of the high pride, the stern belief, the lofty enthusiasm, of the men who quell
the storm and ride the thunder. Well for these men if they succeed; well also,
though not so well, if they fail, given only that they have nobly ventured, and
have put forth all their heart and strength. It is war-worn Hotspur, spent with
hard fighting, he of the many errors and the valiant end, over whose memory we
love to linger, not over the memory of the young lord who “but for the vile
guns would have been a valiant soldier.”
6/02/2026
America 250: Boston Tea Party Led to A Nation
5/29/2026
His Third Temptation
"In his third temptation, the
devil casts away all subtlety and scripture and all deviousness and disguise.
Now he staked everything on a blunt, bold proposition. From a high mountain he
showed Jesus all the kingdoms of the world and the glory of them—the
cities, the fields, the flocks, the herds, and everything nature could offer.
Though they were not his to give, Satan offered them all to Jesus—to
him who had lived as a modest village carpenter.
With wealth, splendor, and earthly
glory spread before them, Satan said unto him, “All these things will I give
thee, if thou wilt fall down and worship me.” (Matt. 4:9.) In a final ploy
Satan was falling back on one of his false but fundamental propositions, one
which resulted in his leading one-third of the hosts from heaven and continues
to direct his miserable efforts against the children of men here on earth. It
is the proposition that everyone has a price, that material things finally
matter most, that ultimately you can buy anything in this world for money.
Jesus knew that if he were faithful to
his Father and obedient to every commandment, he would inherit “all that [the]
Father hath” (D&C 84:38)—and so would any other son or daughter
of God. The surest way to lose the blessings of time or eternity is to accept
them on Satan’s terms.
Lucifer seemed to have forgotten that this was the Man who would later preach, “For what shall it profit a man, if he
shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?”
“Or what shall a man give in exchange
for his soul?” (Mark 8:36–37.)"
Howard W. Hunter
Spiritual Success
Angelica De Dios
⚜️Spiritual Success⚜️
The greatest discovery within my heart is the
realization that one of the highest forms of success is not found in status,
wealth, recognition, or power, but in truly feeling the “Love of God” alive
within me.
I did not always understand this
truth. It was not learned through achievement or gathered through the approval
of the world.
It was revealed to me little by
little, through stillness, through breath, through surrender, through moments
where His presence became more real than anything my eyes could see. The deeper
my awareness became, the clearer I understood who truly breathes within me,
walks with me, and loves me endlessly.
The world teaches us to chase
temporary crowns.
Some seek gold, influence, admiration,
possessions, or earthly kingdoms believing these things will finally satisfy
the soul. Yet everything the world offers eventually fades. Wealth can
disappear. Beauty changes. Power shifts hands. Human applause is fragile. Even
the grandest palace built by man cannot compare to one moment of divine
communion with God.
What value is there in gaining the
whole world while remaining disconnected from the eternal love that created us?
What treasure could ever compare to
waking up and feeling the peace of God surrounding my spirit, filling my
breath, calming my mind, and reminding me that I already belong to Him?
I could possess riches beyond
imagination, sit among luxury, be served by many, and still feel empty without
His presence. But when I seek the Kingdom of God, I discover a treasure that
cannot decay, cannot be stolen, cannot be shaken by time or death. His love
becomes my true inheritance. His presence becomes my home. His Spirit becomes
my wealth.
Now I understand that true success is
spiritual awareness.
It is living conscious of God in every
breath.
It is walking through life knowing I
am eternally loved, eternally guided, eternally held.
It is realizing Heaven is not merely a
distant promise after death, but a divine reality I can experience now through
union with Him.
So, I choose differently now.
I choose to seek the Kingdom of God
above everything else.
I choose inner peace over worldly
pressure.
I choose divine presence over
temporary applause.
I choose eternal truth over temporary
illusion.
I choose the richness of Spirit over
the riches of earth.
And in this choice, I have found the
freedom my soul was always searching for.
Because the greatest blessing is not
merely to know about God, but to feel His love living within me so deeply that
nothing in this world could ever compare.
I no longer measure success by what I
own, but by how deeply I remain connected to the love of the Father.
For to feel loved by God is the soul
finally remembering where it came from, who it belongs to, and the eternal
beauty it was created to carry forever.
May you receive this experience with a
heart elevated to God. So you can experience the same.
Angelica De Dios
Where is the Love?
Christian Daniel Readmond
💔 WHERE IS THE LOVE? 💔
We must ask ourselves how bad does the
world have to get for us to start questioning what is going on?
If leaders of nations are not loving
we must ask ourselves where is it going to come from?
Could you honestly look in the mirror
and say it's going to come from me?
Because I know a Man who truly gave
Himself up for all of the world.
Let us take a moment to remember..
A covenant was made with Abraham.
Animals were ripped apart.
Blood and bones were scattered on the
ground.
Who broke the Covenant becomes as they
did.
Abraham was willing..
As he also was when he was called
To sacrifice his only son...
But then a miracle happened, Abraham
was put to sleep while standing.
And the Creator of The Heavens and
Earth
Walked both sides.. Alone.
He knew we'd fail.
But just as He sent a ram in place of
Abraham's only son unto us a Child was born..
She shall give birth to a Son, and
they shall call His Name Emmanu'ĕl... — Matthew 1:23
He became a Man who gave sight to the
blind, made the lame walk, healed the sick, raised the dead, and brought Good
News to the poor.
He loved widows, orphans, the lowly,
the afflicted.
He loved the lost, sinners, the
broken, the possessed.
He loved those who hated Him.
He loved those who would pour out His
blood
And reveal His bones..
Just imagine being so badly beaten
That you could count your own bones..
"I count all My bones;
They look, they stare at Me."
Psalm 22:17
Bloodied and beaten..
To the point of being unrecognizable..
...so the disfigurement beyond any
man's, and His form beyond the sons of men—" Isaiah 52:14
And as He was crucified, He cried out
for us.
"Father, forgive them, for they
do not know what they do."
I was lost but now I am found because
If you ask me that is where the love
is. ❤️
He is love ❤️
But in a world full of believers..
Where is that love...?
See it is written:
"A renewed command I give to you,
that you love one another, as I have loved you, that you also love one another.
By this shall all know that you are My taught ones, if you have love for one
another."
—
John 13:34–35
As I.
Have.
Loved.
You..
He showed us how to love.
He told us how to love.
He taught us how to love.
He commanded us to love.
"But I say to you, love your
enemies, bless those cursing you, do good to those hating you, and pray for
those insulting you and persecuting you"
And it is written:
Beloved ones, let us love one another,
because love is of Elohim, and everyone who loves has been born of Elohim and
knows Elohim. The one who does not love does not know Elohim, because Elohim is
love.
— 1 John 4:7–8
If you do not love just as He loves
You don't even know Him..
What does the Scripture say about
those who do not know Him?
"And then I shall declare to
them, 'I never knew you, depart from Me, you who work lawlessness!'
Matthew 7:22
It is written:
If you love Me, keep My commands.
(John 14:15)
Again, what is His command?
"This is My command, that you
love one another, as I have loved you." (John 15:12)
I have dropped down to my knees in
tears and asked of Yahuah how could I possibly love like You...?
This Scripture was spoken:
"With men this is impossible, but
with Elohim all is possible."
And He opened my eyes to the
Scriptures.
We cannot love others as He loves
us....
But He can in us.
That is the secret of the Good News.
"The secret which has been hidden
from ages and from generations, but now has been revealed to His set-apart
ones, to whom Elohim desired to make known what are the riches of the esteem of
this secret among the nations: which is Messiah in you, the expectancy of
esteem." — Colossians 1:26–27
That same Esteem that dwelt above the
Ark in the Most Set-apart Place is now made available through Messiah Yahusha,
so that we become His dwelling place.. ❤️🔥
Therefore when Messiah is dwelling in
us, it is His love that pours out through us..
And that is the Love that changes the
world. 💞
I ask again, do you have it? 🪞
Are you willing?
He said to them, "Whoever wishes
to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his stake daily, and follow
Me. For whoever wishes to save his life shall lose it, but whoever loses his
life for My sake and the Good News', he shall save it." — Mark 8:34–35
Shalom beloved
The Soul Beyond the Algorithm
5/24/2026
The Declaration’s God
The Declaration's God
As we approach the 250th anniversary of the American Founding, it’s important to point out that the Declaration of Independence does not begin with politics. Before it speaks of rights, consent, or government, it makes a claim about the structure of reality itself. The rights it asserts are not the product of historical circumstance or collective will. They are grounded in a prior truth: that human beings are created by God.
The Declaration’s appeal to “the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God” is not ornamental or rhetorical—it is the foundation on which its entire argument rests. The founders believed they were obligated to explain to mankind the reasons for their separation, and those reasons started with God and his law.
5/20/2026
Sensible Truth Ep. 34: Law and Moral Agency
The question,
“How does this proposed law align with the principles of the U.S.
Constitution?” reflects a deep respect for foundational truth, moral order, and
accountability. The Constitution was established to preserve liberty, justice,
and God-given rights through limited government and the rule of law. Wise
citizens understand that not every law proposed is automatically good or just
simply because it is legal or popular.
5/17/2026
Pete Hegseth: Americans to follow Washington’s example and pray for the nation “on bended knee”
Pete Hegseth just gave a speech that hit millions of Americans right in the heart because he reminded the country of something the modern political class desperately tries to erase: America’s story has always been tied to faith, prayer, sacrifice, and belief in God during the darkest moments of history. Standing in front of thousands of Christians, Hegseth spoke about George Washington bowing his head in prayer during the Revolutionary War, when defeat, uncertainty, and despair surrounded the colonies and nobody knew if America would even survive. Instead of surrendering to fear, Washington turned to God. That image still resonates with Americans centuries later because it represents humility, courage, and faith under pressure. What made this moment powerful was how unapologetic it sounded. Hegseth openly called on Americans to follow Washington’s example and pray for the nation “on bended knee,” invoking Jesus Christ directly and reminding people that faith was never something hidden away quietly in America’s founding story. At a time when so many institutions seem afraid to even mention Christianity publicly, speeches like this stand out because they speak to millions of Americans who still believe the country’s moral and spiritual foundation matters. You can already tell why this is spreading online so fast. People are exhausted by empty political slogans and leaders who sound robotic and disconnected from ordinary Americans. Whether someone is deeply religious or not, there’s something emotionally powerful about hearing a national figure speak openly about faith, struggle, sacrifice, and the belief that America’s strength comes from something bigger than government or politics alone. That’s why moments like this resonate far beyond one crowd or one speech.
5/16/2026
From a Democrat: I wish President Trump — you had never gone to China.
Mike Netter
From a
Democrat: “I wish President Trump — you had never gone to China. I wish none of
this had ever happened. And I wish I had never found out what I found out
today. Now, I cannot look at myself the same way. Here is what happened. When
Trump landed in Beijing — thousands of Chinese children lined the streets
cheering for him. BEIJING EMBRACES TRUMP as Chinese Driver Parks MAGA Hat on
Luxury Car to Welcome the President in the back window. Chinese citizens rushed
to the Temple of Heaven just to catch one glimpse of him — recording every
second — like they were watching the most important moment of their lives. And
I sat here, in America. The country he actually serves. The country he gave
everything up for. And I realized something that genuinely broke me. China
loves Donald Trump more than most Democrats do. A 79-year-old man who has
everything this world can offer — money, properties, comfort, and peace — chose
to fly to the other side of the world in a lame duck time in office instead, to
represent us. Carrying the US name into every room as a friend. To make sure
America was respected everywhere he went. And the people of China — who cannot
even vote for him — showed him more love than he sometimes gets at home. Where
the word “MAGA” is not a hate word. So
today I just want to say one thing. I am sorry President Trump. I am sorry for
every American who forgot to say thank you, who will slam you no matter what
you do. Your respect is America’s respect. Your dignity is our dignity. And
every country that honors you — is honoring all of us. Thank you for never
stopping. Thank you for never giving up. Thank you for always showing up. Trump
deserves more appreciation from Americans even if you don’t agree with
everything he does?
Deuteronomy 7 and the Pattern of Holiness Hidden Since Eden
Deuteronomy 7
and the Pattern of Holiness Hidden Since Eden
There is
something symbolically fascinating about the fact that Deuteronomy chapter 7
centers on holiness, covenant separation, and guarding sacred things. Of
course, the chapter divisions were added long after the Torah was written, but
the symbolism still fits remarkably well.
Throughout
scripture, the number seven becomes associated with sacred order, covenant
completion, rest, and holiness. The seventh day of creation was the very first
thing in all the Bible declared holy. Genesis says God “sanctified” the seventh
day using the Hebrew word vayqaddesh (ויקדש),
coming from the same root as qadosh (קדוש),
meaning holy, consecrated, or set apart. Before there was a holy nation or a
holy temple, there was holy time.
That same
holiness language appears directly in Deuteronomy 7 when Israel is called a
“holy people” unto the Lord. The Hebrew word is qadosh (קדוש). This does not simply mean morally good. It
means separated into sacred purpose. Eden was holy space. The Tabernacle was
holy space. The Temple was holy space. Now Israel itself is being described as
consecrated space among the nations. The issue throughout Deuteronomy is not
ethnicity or nationalism. It is covenant identity. Israel is being called to
remain distinct because sacred things in scripture are guarded from corruption.
This becomes
even more profound after Israel is explicitly called a qadosh, a holy and
consecrated people, because Deuteronomy 7 repeatedly commands them to “keep”
the covenant and commandments. The Hebrew word translated as "keep"
is shamar (שמר), meaning to
keep, guard, preserve, watch over, or protect. This is not passive obedience
language. It is priestly guardianship language. Yet throughout the Torah,
shamar is repeatedly paired with another important Hebrew verb: avad (עבד).
Avad means to
serve, labor, minister, or perform sacred service. From this same root comes
avadim (עבדים)...slaves or
servants. In Exodus, Israel is described as slaves (avadim) under Pharaoh,
forced into harsh bondage and labor (Exodus 1:13–14). Yet after the Exodus, God
declares, “For unto me the children of Israel are servants” (Leviticus 25:55).
The Hebrew literally says the children of Israel are avadim (servants) unto
Him. The reversal is profound. Israel leaves slavery to Pharaoh only to become
servants of God.
The connection
becomes astonishing when we realize these same two verbs first appear together
in Genesis 2:15, where Adam is placed into Eden to avad and shamar...to serve
and guard sacred space. Later, these exact same words become official priestly
terminology connected to the Tabernacle sanctuary, where the Levites serve and
guard holy space before the presence of God. Adam is therefore portrayed almost
like a priest within Eden itself, and Israel now inherits that same calling on
a national level. This is why Exodus 19:6 describes Israel as “a kingdom of
priests, and an holy nation.”
The symbolism
deepens even further when we remember where the covenant itself was placed. The
Ten Commandments, or in Hebrew the “Ten Words”, were placed inside the Ark of
the Covenant within the Holy of Holies. The priests physically guarded the
covenant words inside sacred space, yet Israel collectively was commanded to
"shamar" those same covenant words through covenant faithfulness. The
commandments were not merely rules to obey. They were a sacred treasure to
protect. The covenant existed both inside the sanctuary and inside the life of
the people.
And this is
where the entire biblical story begins converging into one repeated pattern.
Adam failed to guard sacred space. Israel repeatedly failed to guard covenant
holiness. Even the priesthood itself later became corrupted. The story of
scripture becomes the story of humanity failing to properly avad and shamar
what God declared holy. Deuteronomy 7 is therefore about far more than
separation from pagan nations. It is about protecting sacred space from
corruption, preserving covenant holiness, and restoring the sacred order first
established when God sanctified the seventh day itself.
5/15/2026
The Hidden Tenfold Pattern of Christ in the Tabernacle
The Hidden
Tenfold Pattern of Christ in the Tabernacle
The tabernacle
was not merely a place of worship. It was a prophetic pattern.
Ancient Jewish
tradition taught that the world was created through ten divine utterances...ten
times in Genesis 1 where creation unfolds through the phrase “And God said....”
At Sinai, Israel then received what is commonly called the “Ten Commandments,” but
in Hebrew they are actually called the “Ten Words.” Both creation and covenant
are therefore established through divine speech through the ten utterances and
the ten words. In the tabernacle, those same themes appear again through ten
sacred symbols that progressively lead humanity back into the presence of God.
The journey
begins at the gate of the courtyard. There was only one entrance into the
tabernacle, just as Christ declared, “I am the door: by me if any man enter in,
he shall be saved” (John 10:9). The moment someone entered, they immediately
encountered the altar of sacrifice, where blood was offered for sin. Hebrews
identifies Christ as the fulfillment of that altar: “But this man, after he had
offered one sacrifice for sins for ever, sat down on the right hand of God”
(Hebrews 10:12). Beyond the altar stood the bronze laver filled with cleansing
water, echoing Christ’s words: “He that believeth on me… out of his belly shall
flow rivers of living water” (John 7:38).
Inside the Holy
Place, the symbolism becomes even more striking. The menorah illuminated the
sanctuary with perpetual light, foreshadowing Christ declaring, “I am the light
of the world” (John 8:12). Across from the menorah stood the table of
showbread, representing covenant fellowship and divine sustenance, fulfilled in
Christ’s declaration: “I am the bread of life” (John 6:35). Then before the
veil stood the altar of incense, where fragrant smoke ascended upward like
prayers rising to heaven. Revelation explicitly connects incense with “the
prayers of saints” (Revelation 8:3–4), while Christ Himself offered the great
intercessory prayer on behalf of His disciples in John 17 before ascending to
the Father. Hebrews therefore declares that Christ “ever liveth to make
intercession” for His people (Hebrews 7:25). The altar of incense becomes a
powerful image of Christ as mediator, carrying the prayers of humanity into the
presence of God. Even the veil itself pointed forward to Him, because Hebrews
explicitly states that believers now enter the presence of God through “the
veil, that is to say, his flesh” (Hebrews 10:20).
Beyond the veil
was the Holy of Holies, the dwelling place of God’s presence. In the
tabernacle, this innermost sanctuary formed a perfect cube — ten cubits long,
ten cubits wide, and ten cubits high — symbolizing divine completeness and
covenant perfection. Within it rested the Ark of the Covenant containing three
sacred objects. The first were the tablets of the covenant...the Ten Words
spoken by God at Sinai. John deliberately echoes both creation and Sinai when
he writes, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the
Word was God” (John 1:1). Then, astonishingly, he declares: “And the Word was
made flesh, and dwelt among us” (John 1:14). The Greek word for “dwelt”
literally means “tabernacled.” The divine Word once written on stone had now
entered the world in living form.
Next beside the
tablets was the golden pot of manna, preserved as a witness that God had fed
Israel from heaven in the wilderness. Christ directly applies this imagery to
Himself: “Your fathers did eat manna in the wilderness, and are dead… I am the
living bread which came down from heaven” (John 6:49–51). Finally, there was
Aaron’s rod that budded...a dead staff that miraculously burst forth with
almond blossoms, buds, and fruit. In scripture, the almond tree is associated
with awakening and life emerging after death-like winter. The symbolism points
directly to resurrection. Christ declared, “I am the resurrection, and the
life” (John 11:25), and Paul calls Him “the firstfruits” of those raised from
the dead (1 Corinthians 15:20).
The symbolism
of ten now comes full circle. The world was created through ten divine
utterances: “And God said.” Israel entered covenant through the Ten Words
spoken at Sinai. The Holy of Holies itself was structured around the symbolism
of ten (10 X 10 X 10 cubits). Then in the tabernacle, the place where heaven
and earth symbolically meet, ten sacred images are ultimately resolved in Jesus
Christ through the lens of the New Testament. He becomes the Door, the
Sacrifice, the Living Water, the Light, the Bread of Life, the Intercessor, the
Veil, the Living Word, the True Manna, and the Resurrection Life.
Within the New
Testament, the entire tabernacle pattern ultimately resolves itself into
Christ. Every curtain, every furnishing, every ritual, and every covenant
symbol points toward humanity being brought back into communion with God
through Him. The symbolism of ten is therefore not accidental. In biblical
thought, ten becomes the number of divine order, covenant completeness, and
creation established through the spoken Word of God.
5/13/2026
Sensible Truth Ep. 33: Leadership and Empowerment
Leadership that seeks power for its own sake often produces fear, control, pride, and dependence. True leadership, however, lifts others rather than exalting self. When Richard Medlock taught that “Leadership is not about power; leadership is about empowerment,” the principal points to a higher form of leadership—one centered on helping others grow, succeed, and become capable themselves.
5/11/2026
Sensible Truth on The Medlock Post Ep. 32: Purpose and Destiny of the United States of America
Sensible Truth on The Medlock Post Ep. 32: Purpose and Destiny of the United States of America
Ether 2:10,12: Behold, this is a choice land, and whatsoever nation shall possess it shall be free from bondage, and from captivity, and from all other nations under heaven, if they will but serve the God of the land, who is Jesus Christ.
The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution
of the United States were inspired documents. Because the Founding Fathers were
recipients of that inspiration, they understood and believed that only a “moral
and righteous people” would uphold the principles and values the documents are
based upon.
5/06/2026
Iran’s Historic Mistake
Iran’s Historic
Mistake
Carl von
Clausewitz wrote that war is “the continuation of politics by other means.”
President Trump grasped this from the start: Operation Epic Fury exists to stop
Iran’s nuclear march and restore deterrence, not to pursue the familiar neocon
fantasy of occupation and nation-building. Epic Fury is peace through strength
in action: credible force applied decisively when adversaries mistake restraint
for weakness.
By weaponizing
the Strait of Hormuz, Iran committed a strategic blunder of historic
proportions. Tehran meant to punish America. Instead, it exposed every power
built on imported energy, vulnerable sea lanes, and the delusion that
globalization repealed geography. China is exposed. Europe is exposed. Britain
is exposed. Iran has created a world where hard resource power decides
outcomes.
Start with
China. Beijing’s industrial machine depends on imported oil and gas moving
through vulnerable maritime chokepoints, the old Malacca dilemma in modern
form. A great power reliant on long, exposed sea lines cannot be secure,
regardless of economic scale. The Hormuz shock forced China to scramble for
alternatives, proving that size is not resilience.
Europe and
Britain face the same problem. After escaping Russian dependency, they traded
one vulnerability for another, leaning on imported LNG and maritime flows
exposed to coercion. When chokepoints tighten, they absorb shocks rather than
project strength. European criticism says less about American failure than
about discomfort with a world where hard power still matters.
Iran’s mistake
is that once Hormuz becomes structurally unreliable, the world builds around
it. That means bypass corridors, revived pipeline politics, and urgent planning
for routes linking Aqaba to Mediterranean outlets near Gaza and the
long-stalled Basra-to-Aqaba pipeline. The old energy order is cracking. The
UAE’s OPEC exit signals cartel discipline giving way to national advantage
under pressure.
Trump deserves
credit, not European scolding. Operation Epic Fury struck thousands of targets,
degraded Iran’s offensive capabilities, and shattered assumptions that the West
would absorb escalation without response. The administration acted while others
lectured. It restored deterrence in the only language Tehran understands.
The larger
lesson matters more. Secure natural-resource hard power is what the Western
Hemisphere possesses in abundance. The United States, Canada, and the Americas
command hydrocarbons, LNG, farmland, freshwater, critical minerals, and
strategic depth on a scale import-dependent Europe and Asia cannot match. This
crisis clarified, not weakened, the Americas structural position.
The financial
dimension reinforces the point. Demand for Federal Reserve swap lines during
crisis proves King Dollar remains supreme. When stress hits, governments run
toward dollar liquidity, not away from it. Hard resource power and monetary
power reinforce one another, and the United States sits at the center of both.
That is Epic
Fury’s real significance. Clausewitz wrote that “the political view is the
object, war is the means.” Trump understood that. Iran tried to weaponize
geography, Trump turned the confrontation into a demonstration of who is
exposed and who is not.
The Trump
administration deserves far more praise than it has received, and history will
likely judge that Iran’s greatest miscalculation was not merely closing Hormuz,
but revealing which powers still command the real sources of strength.
James E. Thorne
Global Market
Strategist
