We often think of it as the burning flame of a torch — fragile, yet enduring as it is passed from generation to generation.
But lately, I’ve begun to wonder if it is more like water — adaptable and winding its way through all the cracks of tyranny.
Over this past year, I have seen great tyranny — but I have also seen Liberty alive in every small act of disobedience: from the rise of cryptocurrency to the school choice revolution.
The more tightly tyrants close their grip around our Liberty, they more human innovation will cause those freedoms to slip through their fingers in clever and unexpected ways.
I remain an optimist.
Perhaps that sounds foolish in these dark times, but I believe a great awakening is coming.
Washington D.C. serves the 1%.
We are the 99%.
The sooner we learn that we are not enemies, but friends, the sooner we can defeat the Washington Machine.
What was so different between the Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street?
One blamed big government for the economic crisis.
The other blamed the big corporations.
They were both right — but each with half the picture.
Put it together.
Big Business and Big Government have been in bed with each other for quite some time.
The right and left flanks of America were on the verge of figuring it out — until we went to war with each other, districted with virtue signaling and identity politics.
Every time Raytheon makes a big show about diversity, don’t get distracted.
Remember: they are war profiteers using your tax dollars to fund genocide in the Middle East.
If they really care about diversity, they can stop bombing brown people.
To wrap this up, Liberty will find a way if we:
1. Continue adapting and pushing through the cracks in tyranny
2. Stop falling for the divide and conquer strategy of identity politics
3. Remember that we have more in common with each other than we do with the political class
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Sticker Shock: When @Walgreens in Texas wants to charge me $300 for a prescription that my direct primary care doctor in Maine could give me directly for $5.
When people see these exorbitant prices in healthcare, remember that government is the dam blocking choice and competition from flowing freely through the marketplace for the benefit of a privileged few corporate actors.
The reason I can’t get my prescription for $5 directly from the prescribing physician in Texas is a state law that prohibits me from doing so.
Today, I delivered testimony before the Maine Veterans and Legal Affairs Committee in favor of Representative Heidi Sampson's Defend the Guard legislation:
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Senator Luccini, Representative Ciazzo, and members of the Joint Standing Committee on Veterans and Legal Affairs, I am Eric Brakey, former Maine Senator from Androscoggin County, and I am before you today to testify in favor of LD 1285, Defend the Guard.
Do you remember where were you twenty years ago when the first Maine boots hit the ground in Afghanistan?
While I may be a younger citizen than most on this committee, I am old enough to remember the start of that war and the justification for it.
The sad reality of political discourse today is that there is little room for serious discussion in the corporate press, and only outrageous statements can gather any notice.
I learned this the hard way during my campaign for US Senate in 2018.
Despite being the GOP nominee and a two-term State Senator with significant legislative accomplishments, the press wouldn’t cover anything about my campaign that didn’t have a sensational edge.
I found that press conferences on my plans to fix healthcare and build a stronger economy went virtually unattended — but holding an AR-15 raffle would make statewide news.
Today, I delivered the following testimony before the Maine Judiciary Committee in opposition to a trojan horse "Red Flag" Gun Confiscation bill.
My testimony follows: (1/22)
The principle of gun confiscation without due process has been loudly and repeatedly opposed by Maine people and routinely rejected by bipartisan majorities of the Maine Legislature. (2/22)
As I read this legislation, it is in principle a Red Flag bill, using harassment orders as the trojan horse for gun confiscation without notice or due process. (3/22)