Musk Takes a Stand Against Judicial Overreach

Musk Battles Biased Judge in Shocking Courtroom Drama

Delaware’s judicial overreach hit a new low when Elon Musk was forced to demand the recusal of a judge who publicly signaled her bias by endorsing social media posts mocking his legal battles—a stark reminder that even our courts aren’t immune to political theatrics.

Judge’s Social Media Activity Raises Impartiality Questions

Elon Musk filed a motion demanding recusal of a Delaware judge from his ongoing cases after she publicly endorsed a social media post mocking his legal setbacks. The judge’s decision to “like” content celebrating Musk’s courtroom defeats on LinkedIn exposed clear bias, violating fundamental expectations of judicial neutrality. Continue reading

Why Musk’s ‘America Party’ Failed to Take Off—And What That Means

Musk’s America Party Fizzles: What’s Next?

Musk’s America Party Fizzles: What’s Next?Facts Not Memes – It was a splashy headline that had media outlets buzzing a month ago: Elon Musk launching the “America Party.” Pundits speculated, Twitter lit up, and political operatives scrambled to figure out what it could mean for 2026 and beyond. But now, just weeks later, the supposed movement has gone radio silent. No rallies, no platform, no leadership team. Just a billionaire drifting back to his boardrooms, leaving behind a trail of unfulfilled hype.

Let’s be clear: Elon Musk is brilliant. He’s a visionary who built some of the most transformative companies in American history—Tesla, SpaceX, Starlink. He’s also a fierce critic of the woke left and an unapologetic advocate for free speech. In a sane world, those values would be enough to make him a political heavyweight. But political leadership is not a part-time job or a vanity side project. And that’s exactly what the America Party is starting to look like: a flash of frustration from a man who had something to say, but no real appetite to build something lasting. Continue reading

The Hypocrisy of Democrats’ Attacks on Elon Musk

“I’m Thoroughly Disgusted”: Democrats Attack Musk and Everything that They Once Believed in

The Hypocrisy of Democrats’ Attacks on Elon MuskJonathan Turley – In this “Age of Rage, it is common for people to become the very thing that they despise in others, jettisoning their most cherished values to strike out at those they hate.

Since the election, Democrats have shown that very self-destructive quality of rage in adopting anti-immigrant, anti-free speech, anti-labor, and even anti-environmental positions to get at Donald Trump or his supporters.

It consumes every part of a person. It is addictive, and it is contagious. What these rage addicts will not admit, however, is that they like it; they need it. Continue reading

European Diplomats Confronted on Censorship by JD Vance

European Diplomats Confronted on Censorship by JD VanceJonathan Turley – On Friday, Vice President JD Vance gave a historic defense of free speech at the Munich Security Conference. In front of a clearly hostile assemblage of European diplomats, Vance confronted our allies with their systemic censorship as they demanded more support to “defend democracy.”

For the free speech community, it was akin to Ronald Reagan’s call: “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!”

Vance questioned how our allies could claim to be the bastions of freedom while denying free expression to their citizens. Continue reading

From Engineers to CEOs: The Path of Problem-Solvers

From Engineers to CEOs: The Path of Problem-SolversDr. Marcus O. Durham & Rosemary Durham – Engineer. The word carries strong impressions. What words can you think of to associate or describe ‘engineer?’ I will throw out some. Smart, precocious, intelligent, socially awkward, nerd, math and science, knowledgeable, maker, affluent to wealthy, analyst, problem-solver. In my early career, it was intriguing to find that engineers made up a significant percentage of CEOs, executives, and top business leaders.

CEO Magazine titled a recent article “Why are most CEOs Engineers?” Statistics can be skewed and interpreted many ways, but the gist is engineers understand systems and can actually make excellent executives, because of their background, way of thinking, and determination. Continue reading