The federal government has become a bloated, unconstitutional monster that would horrify America's founders – but President Trump's second-term agenda offers the perfect opportunity to restore power where it belongs: with the states and the people.
While the mainstream media obsesses over Trump's latest tweets, a quiet revolution is brewing in Washington. Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) isn't just cutting wasteful spending – it's exposing how far the federal bureaucracy has strayed from its constitutional limits.
The numbers are staggering. The federal government now has its fingers in education, healthcare, finance, energy, and practically every business in America. Our founders designed a system where states handled these issues, not an army of unelected bureaucrats in Washington.
The Deep State's Power Grab
How did we get here? Decades of progressive politicians expanding federal power, creating new agencies, and trampling on the Tenth Amendment. The administrative state now employs over 2 million federal workers, many making six-figure salaries while producing nothing but red tape and regulations that crush small businesses.
"The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."
That's the Tenth Amendment – remember that one? The Deep State certainly doesn't want you to.
States like Florida and Texas have proven they can handle education, healthcare, and business regulation far better than Washington bureaucrats. While federal agencies fumbled COVID responses, red states led the way in keeping America open and free.
DOGE: The Beginning, Not The End
Musk's efficiency drive is already identifying billions in wasteful spending, but true reform means returning entire departments to state control. Why should Iowa farmers answer to EPA bureaucrats who've never set foot on a farm? Why should Texas energy companies bow to climate extremists in D.C.?
Patriots, this is our moment. Trump's mandate gives us four years to dismantle the administrative state and restore constitutional government. But it won't happen without pressure from We the People.
The question isn't whether we can afford to shrink the federal government – it's whether we can afford not to. Are you ready to reclaim the republic our founders envisioned?
