Monday, March 30, 2026

Our Lady of Good Sucess and the Sign of Our Times

Our Lady of Good Success and the Signs of Our Times
Faith & Providence · Palm Sunday 2026

Our Lady of Good Success and the Signs of Our Times

A 17th-century prophecy, a bombed Marian church, a locked tomb — and the ancient promise that when everything seems lost, the hour of restoration is nearest

✦ ✦ ✦

On Palm Sunday 2026, the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem was turned away from the Church of the Holy Sepulchre — the very tomb of Christ — by Israeli security forces. One week earlier, Russian missiles struck a 16th-century Franciscan Marian sanctuary in Lviv, Ukraine, during Holy Week. These events, separated by a thousand miles, are connected by something older than either war: a prophecy given to a Conceptionist nun in Quito, Ecuador, more than four hundred years ago.

Our Lady of Good Success is not widely known outside traditionalist Catholic circles. It deserves to be. Between 1594 and 1634, the Virgin Mary appeared repeatedly to Mother Mariana Francisca de Jesús Torres in the Convent of the Immaculate Conception, delivering messages of warning, lamentation — and ultimately, extraordinary hope. What she described has a striking resonance with the world of 2026.

The Apparition and Its Origins

Mother Mariana was a Conceptionist nun of Spanish origin who had come to the newly founded colony of Quito. The apparitions she received spanned four decades and produced detailed prophecies about the distant future — a future she would never live to see. Our Lady asked her to commission a statue depicting her exactly as she appeared during the visions. According to tradition, the statue was miraculously completed by the Archangels Michael, Gabriel, and Raphael, and blessed on February 2, 1611 — the Feast of the Purification.

The Church took these apparitions seriously. On January 7, 1991, the shrine was elevated to an Archdiocesan Marian Sanctuary, and Mother Mariana has since been declared Venerable — the formal first step toward canonization. The prophecies themselves have attracted renewed attention precisely because so many of their specific predictions — including the dogmas of the Immaculate Conception and papal infallibility — were fulfilled exactly as described, centuries after they were recorded.

"In the end, my mercy will triumph."

— Our Lady of Good Success to Mother Mariana, Quito, 17th century

What She Foretold

The prophecies of Good Success are notable for their specificity. Our Lady warned of an era — she pointed to the late 19th century extending into the 20th and beyond — in which the customs of Christian civilization would undergo total corruption. She spoke of the sacraments losing their centrality, of people in positions of authority being used as instruments against the very institutions they were sworn to protect, and of a period in which the faithful would appear to be losing.

She described sacred spaces being threatened, the remnant of the faithful reduced to a scattered few, and wars and social upheaval spreading across nations as a consequence of the abandonment of God. None of this was presented as inevitable punishment. It was presented as the foreseeable consequence of choices — and as the necessary passage through which a promised restoration would eventually come.

  • Corruption of customs — A total unraveling of Christian civilization's moral foundations, beginning in the late 19th century and accelerating through the 20th.
  • Desecration of sacred spaces — Churches attacked, worship obstructed, the faithful denied access to their holiest sites.
  • A faithful remnant under siege — The covenant people reduced to a small, besieged community surrounded by overwhelming hostile forces.
  • Wars and the devastation of nations — Armed conflict as both symptom and consequence of civilizational collapse.
  • The darkest moment as the turning point — When everything seems lost, that is the signal that the hour of restoration is imminent.

The Franciscan Thread and Fatima

The Bernardine Order — whose Marian sanctuary in Lviv was bombed by Russia on March 24, 2026 — is a branch of the Franciscan family, named for St. Bernardine of Siena. The Franciscans have been among the deepest wellsprings of Marian devotion in Catholic history. They championed the dogma of the Immaculate Conception centuries before it was formally defined. They spread the Rosary. They kept Marian piety alive through the darkest periods of European history.

The Conceptionist Order that received the Good Success apparitions was itself Franciscan in its spiritual roots. And Fatima — the 1917 apparition that has become the most recognized Marian prophecy of the modern era — shares the same theological DNA. Both apparitions end not in catastrophe but in a promised triumph. Both name Russia as a key instrument of chastisement. Both insist that the faithful remnant, however small, carries within it the seed of restoration.

"When everything will seem lost and paralyzed, that will be the happy beginning of the complete restoration. This will mark the arrival of my hour, when I, in a marvelous way, will dethrone the proud and cursed Satan, trampling him under my feet and fettering him in the infernal abyss."

— Our Lady of Good Success

The Holy Land Christians: Lynchpin of the New Church

There is a community that sits at the theological intersection of everything the Good Success prophecy describes — and it is one of the least-discussed in mainstream Catholic conversation: the Christians of the Holy Land.

Less than two percent of Israel's population is Christian. Yet these communities — Greek Orthodox, Latin Catholic, Armenian, Coptic, Maronite, and Messianic Jewish — occupy the most sacred ground in Christendom. They are the living link between the Old Covenant rooted in the land, the New Covenant born in Jerusalem, and the future restoration promised in prophecy. St. Paul's olive tree metaphor in Romans 11 is not merely theological abstraction: the Gentile Church is grafted onto something already rooted in that soil. Holy Land Christians are that root made visible.

They have been shrinking for decades. War, emigration, economic pressure, and marginalization from multiple directions have reduced communities that once numbered in the hundreds of thousands to small, fragile remnants. The prophecy of Good Success speaks precisely of this: the faithful reduced to almost nothing, their sacred spaces under assault, their survival seemingly impossible — and their perseverance being the very mechanism through which restoration comes.

Palm Sunday 2026: Three Signs at Once

The convergence of events on and around Palm Sunday 2026 is, at minimum, symbolically extraordinary.

March 24, 2026 — Holy Week

Russian forces strike the Bernardine monastery complex in Lviv — a 16th-century Franciscan Marian sanctuary including St. Andrew's Church, part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The attack comes days before Easter. Fires break out in the monastery tower. The nearby Church of Saint Mary Magdalene sustains damage. A Marian sacred space, rooted in the Franciscan tradition that gave birth to the Good Success apparitions, is bombed during the holiest week of the Christian year.

March 29, 2026 — Palm Sunday

Israeli security forces bar Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, from entering the Church of the Holy Sepulchre to celebrate Palm Sunday Mass — the first time in living memory the Patriarch has been denied access to Christ's tomb. The basilica, often called the Mother Church of Christianity, is effectively closed on the first day of Holy Week. International condemnation follows within hours; Netanyahu reverses course by evening. But the threshold has been crossed.

Spring 2026 — The Iran War

Iran's ongoing conflict with Israel has placed Jerusalem's holy sites under direct military threat. Iranian ballistic missiles have struck within meters of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. The existential pressure on Israel — and on the tiny Christian communities within it — intensifies as the war continues. The covenant people are, in the most literal sense, surrounded.

Is This the Prophesied Moment?

The Church has always been cautious about over-applying private revelation to current events, and rightly so. The prophecies of Good Success are not canonical Scripture. They are approved private revelations — meaning the Church has judged them worthy of belief, not that belief in them is required.

With that caution noted: the framework they provide maps onto the present moment with a coherence that is difficult to dismiss. The Marian sanctuary bombed in Ukraine. The Mother Church of Christianity locked on Palm Sunday. The Holy Land's Christian remnant caught between an existential war and the slow demographic erosion of centuries. These are not metaphorical fulfillments — they are literal enactments of what the prophecy described.

What the prophecy does not allow is despair. It is emphatic on this point. The worse things appear, the closer the intervention. The remnant's apparent defeat is not the end of the story — it is the condition for the story's resolution. Those called to persevere through this moment are described not as victims but as the instruments of the coming restoration.

The Promise That Remains

Our Lady of Good Success told Mother Mariana that those called to the restoration would need "great will-power, perseverance, courage, and confidence in God." She did not promise comfort. She promised triumph — but on the far side of tribulation, not instead of it.

Fatima echoes the same note: "In the end, my Immaculate Heart will triumph." Not might. Not perhaps. Will.

On Palm Sunday 2026, with a bombed Marian church in Ukraine, a locked tomb in Jerusalem, and a war raging around the holy sites of three faiths — the faithful remnant prays outside locked doors. That image is as old as the Resurrection itself. And the Resurrection is precisely the answer the prophecy points toward.

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This reflection draws on the approved apparitions of Our Lady of Good Success (Quito, 1594–1634), the apparitions of Our Lady of Fatima (1917), and current events as of Palm Sunday, March 29–30, 2026. Private revelations, however approved, are not binding on the faithful. Readers are encouraged to discern prayerfully and in communion with the Church.

Alaska’s Trawler Fight: Candidates Align With Peltola, Break From Trump

Alaska's Trawler Fight: Candidates Align With Peltola, Break From Trump

Alaska 2026 Governor's Race · Fisheries

Alaska's Candidates Break With Trump on Trawlers — and Land Squarely in Peltola's Camp

When a conservative Republican like Shelley Hughes stands against the trawler lobby — and against her own party's president — something has shifted in Alaska politics.

Something striking happened at the 2026 Alaska Gubernatorial Candidate Forum: candidate after candidate staked out a position on trawl bycatch that looked a lot more like Mary Peltola's than Donald Trump's. In a state where commercial fishing is both an industry and a way of life, the divide over what to do about large-scale trawlers vacuuming up salmon alongside their pollock catches is becoming one of the defining fault lines of this election cycle.

At tonight's gubernatorial candidate forum, former state Sen. Shelley Hughes stood out for her forceful stance against trawler bycatch — a striking position for a Republican candidate whose party's national leadership is pulling in the opposite direction.

Hughes' position isn't new — it's rooted in a real legislative record. Back in 2021, she was one of 28 Alaska legislators who co-signed a bipartisan op-ed demanding the North Pacific Fishery Management Council dramatically reduce halibut trawl bycatch in the Bering Sea. The letter spanned the full political spectrum, from Hughes on the right to Democratic senators on the left. "We are of diverse political affiliations and worldviews," it read, "but we are united on this issue."

The frustration runs deep in Alaska, particularly in rural and western communities that depend on salmon runs that have been hammered for years. The culprit, many Alaskans argue, is the massive pollock trawl fleet operating in the Bering Sea — enormous factory ships that catch hundreds of thousands of metric tons of whitefish but also haul in vast quantities of Chinook and chum salmon as bycatch, fish that are simply discarded dead into the sea.

Peltola Made This Her Fight

Few politicians in Alaska have pushed harder on this issue than Mary Peltola, now running for Senate. She put bycatch at the center of her historic 2022 House campaign and followed through in Congress, introducing the Bottom Trawl Clarity Act and the Bycatch Reduction and Mitigation Act — legislation that would codify new limits and fund science-based reduction programs. She also claims real results: chum bycatch dropped roughly 80% in response to political pressure generated during her first campaign, a figure she wants to lock in through law rather than leave to industry goodwill.

"The North Pacific Fishery Management Council has a moat around it — it is not interested in listening to citizens."

— Mary Peltola, on why legislative action is necessary

That last point about the North Pacific Fishery Management Council (NPFMC) is crucial — and it's where the governor's race becomes directly relevant. The 11-member council that controls trawling policy is largely appointed by the governors of Alaska, Washington, and Oregon. Who sits in the governor's chair in Juneau has enormous downstream consequences for the future of the trawl industry.

Trump Is Pulling the Opposite Direction

The Trump administration has taken a starkly different approach. His April 2025 "America First Fishing" executive order directed the Commerce Department to immediately consider rolling back regulations that burden commercial fishing — music to the ears of the large trawl fleet operators. Budget proposals have targeted the National Marine Fisheries Service with a 27% cut and would eliminate the Pacific Coastal Salmon Recovery Fund entirely. Enforcement and scientific capacity — the exact tools bycatch reformers rely on — have been steadily weakened.

For coastal Alaska communities that depend on salmon, the Trump approach feels like a direct attack on their livelihoods and subsistence way of life — even as the administration frames it as supporting "fishermen."

The Scorecard: Where Everyone Stands

Issue Trump / Federal Direction Peltola + Forum Candidates
Bycatch regulation Deregulate, reduce burden on industry Codify limits, reduce salmon bycatch
NMFS / NOAA funding 27% budget cut proposed Invest in science-based management
NPFMC appointments Industry-aligned Reform-minded, conservation-leaning
Salmon recovery funds Eliminate Pacific Coastal Salmon Recovery Fund Protect and expand funding
Bottom trawl zones No new restrictions Designate and limit trawl gear areas

Even Alaska's Republican Senators Are Drifting Toward Peltola

Perhaps the most telling sign of where Alaska's political winds are blowing: Senators Dan Sullivan and Lisa Murkowski — both Republicans, both generally aligned with their party — have co-sponsored bycatch reduction legislation calling for a science-based approach to close data gaps and reduce impacts on seafloor habitat. That's a notable departure from Trump's deregulatory philosophy, and it signals that protecting Alaska's fisheries isn't a partisan issue when you actually live there.

Shelley Hughes: A Republican Breaking With Trump's Industry-First Approach

Hughes' stance is particularly notable given her party affiliation. She's a conservative Republican running in a Republican state — yet on this issue she's aligned with Peltola rather than the Trump administration's deregulatory push. That's not an accident. Polling shows 70% of Alaskans want trawling banned or restricted — a level of consensus that is extremely rare in modern politics, yet has consistently failed to move state and federal leadership. A savvy candidate running statewide ignores that number at their peril.

Hughes has also shown fluency on the mechanics of the issue. In Alaska Senate hearings, she pressed the Department of Fish and Game Commissioner on whether new sensor technology could monitor trawl gear in real time and reduce bycatch without shutting the industry down — a pragmatic, solutions-oriented line of questioning that suggests she understands both the problem and the political constraints of solving it.

What It Means for the Governor's Race

A governor who takes trawl bycatch seriously has real leverage: NPFMC appointments, state regulatory positions, and the bully pulpit to pressure the federal council. What the forum made clear is that many of the leading candidates understand this — and they're not willing to cede Alaska's fish to the federal government's increasingly industry-friendly posture.

For Alaskans who watched tonight's forum, the message was hard to miss: on this issue, the candidates who want to lead this state — including a conservative Republican like Shelley Hughes — sound a lot more like Mary Peltola than Donald Trump. And in a state where salmon is life, that may matter more than any party label.

Tags: Alaska 2026 Trawl Bycatch Mary Peltola Shelley Hughes Governor's Race Fisheries Policy NPFMC Salmon Trump vs Alaska

Alaska U.S. Senate 2026: Trend vs. Accuracy

Alaska U.S. Senate 2026: Trend vs. Accuracy
Alaska Senate 2026 · Poll Analysis

Trend vs. Track Record: What the Alaska Polls Really Tell Us

Ivan Moore's numbers favor Peltola — but his history of missing Sullivan's strength demands a closer look

Three polling firms. Seven surveys spanning three years. One striking trend: Dan Sullivan led this race by four points as recently as July 2025 — and now trails by nearly five. Before Democrats celebrate and Republicans panic, a harder question deserves an honest answer: how much should we trust these numbers, and what does the trajectory really mean?

The answer, it turns out, depends entirely on whether you're reading the polls for their absolute values or their directional trend. Those are two very different things.

The Polling Landscape

Alaska Survey Research (ASR), run by veteran pollster Ivan Moore, has conducted five waves of tracking since April 2023 — including a critical July 2025 survey showing Sullivan ahead. Public Policy Polling (PPP), commissioned by the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, weighed in in January 2026. Data for Progress, a progressive research firm, polled the race in the fall. The full record tells a more complicated story than any single poll suggests.

Pollster Date Peltola Sullivan Margin Status
Alaska Survey Research Mar 19–22, 2026 52.4%* 47.6%* Peltola +4.8 Post-announcement
Public Policy Polling Jan 16–17, 2026 ~47% ~45% Peltola +2 Pre-announcement
Alaska Survey Research Jan 8–11, 2026 48.0% 46.4% Peltola +1.6 Pre-announcement
Data for Progress Oct 17–23, 2025 ~46% ~45% Peltola +1 Hypothetical
Alaska Survey Research Oct 10–15, 2025 48.0% 46.0% Peltola +2 Hypothetical
Alaska Survey Research Jul 29–Aug 1, 2025 43.0% 47.0% Sullivan +4.0 Hypothetical
Alaska Survey Research Apr 21–25, 2023 44.0% 41.0% Peltola +3 Early hypothetical

*RCV final-round simulation. Primary numbers for March 2026: Peltola 46.4%, Sullivan 40.9%.

Notably, PPP — a national firm with no particular stake in Alaska's internal political dynamics — found a tight race. Data for Progress found it even tighter. The convergence across firms with different methodologies and funding sources is the most credible signal in the data. Moore's March survey also ran an RCV simulation — modeling how minor candidate votes redistribute — producing a final-round result of Peltola 52.4% to Sullivan 47.6%, a margin Democrats will find encouraging but which should be read with the accuracy caveats discussed below.

The Case for Skepticism: Moore's Track Record

Ivan Moore is Alaska's most prolific political pollster, and for that reason alone his surveys dominate the public record. But prolific doesn't mean infallible — and his history with Dan Sullivan specifically is a significant red flag.

⚠ The 2014 Problem

In late October 2014, Moore predicted Democrat Mark Begich would defeat Dan Sullivan by 7–8 points. One week later, Sullivan won by approximately 4 points — an 11 to 12 point miss. Moore had publicly characterized Sullivan as fundamentally unlikeable. Alaska voters disagreed.

That miss matters for 2026 in two ways. First, it suggests Moore may systematically underestimate Sullivan's ceiling with Alaska voters. Second, Sullivan himself appears to have absorbed that lesson — he has spent years building favorability that his 2014 numbers didn't reflect.

Media Bias/Fact Check rates Alaska Survey Research as left-center in its lean, with a predictive accuracy rating of roughly 67 percent. That's workable — but it means one in three elections deviates meaningfully from his projections.

"Even if Moore's absolute numbers skew Democratic, his trend lines within his own polling series remain analytically useful. The direction of movement is meaningful — regardless of the baseline."

The Case for Taking the Trend Seriously

Here is where the analysis gets more nuanced — and more interesting. Dismissing Moore's polls entirely because of past inaccuracy would be as misleading as accepting them uncritically. The reason: trends within a consistent methodology are far more reliable than the raw numbers themselves.

When the same pollster applies the same survey instrument across multiple waves, the movement between waves reflects genuine change in the electorate — even if the baseline is off. And Moore's trend lines tell a remarkable story: Sullivan led this race by four points in July 2025. By October he was behind by two. By March 2026 he trails in the RCV simulation by nearly five. That is a nine-point swing in eight months — and it happened before Peltola had even formally announced her candidacy.

Sullivan Net Favorability — ASR Trend
```
October 2025
Positive
37.5%
Negative
50.2%
January 2026
Positive
39.3%
Negative
50.6%
March 2026
Positive
40.7%
Negative
51.4%
Sullivan's positives and negatives are both rising — but negatives outpace positives each wave, driving his net favorability to -10.7.
```

Sullivan's net favorability has deteriorated consistently across all three waves. More Alaskans are forming opinions about him — but the negative opinions are accumulating faster than the positive ones. That is a structural problem, not a statistical artifact.

Peltola, meanwhile, holds a net favorability of +7.2. In a state Trump carried by double digits, that number is remarkable. It suggests she has successfully positioned herself as a candidate who transcends partisan lines — the same quality that won her Alaska's House seat in 2022, first in a special election to replace the late Don Young, then in the November general election that same year.

Peltola lost her House seat in November 2024 to Republican Nick Begich III, when the GOP field consolidated behind a single candidate — eliminating the vote-splitting dynamic that had benefited her in 2022. That loss is directly relevant to 2026: it demonstrated that Peltola is beatable when Republicans unify, and it sets the stage for the question of whether Sullivan can consolidate the Republican base while she rebuilds her coalition for a Senate run.

The Sullivan campaign will almost certainly point to 2024 as evidence that Peltola's crossover appeal has limits. Her campaign will argue the Senate race is a different electorate, a different dynamic, and that her favorability numbers prove she remains viable. Both arguments have merit — and the tension between them is what makes this race worth watching.

Public Policy Polling's January survey is worth isolating, because it comes from a national firm without Moore's Alaska-specific history — and without his alleged Democratic lean in methodology. PPP found Peltola ahead by roughly two points, consistent with a genuine but narrow lead rather than a comfortable one.

The PPP number is the most important corroborating data point in the entire polling record. It suggests the race is real, competitive, and close — not a Peltola blowout, but not a Sullivan walkover either. Two points in January, eight months before primary season even concludes, is functionally a toss-up.

The Trump Factor: Alaska Flips to Disapproval

The single most important external variable in this race may already be moving against Sullivan — and it has nothing to do with Peltola's campaign strategy.

Alaska has historically been reliably Trump country. He carried the state by 14 points in 2024. But the political environment has shifted dramatically since then. Alaska is among the latest states in which more voters now disapprove than approve of Trump's job performance — a notable threshold crossed alongside Iowa, both previously considered red-leaning. That is a significant development for a state Sullivan has counted on as a foundation of his reelection coalition.

The Iran war has accelerated the damage. Trump's net approval rating has hit a second-term low of -16.7, driven in significant part by rising gas prices since the war began. His net approval on handling the economy stands at -21.3, and on inflation at -32.7 — both near second-term lows. The share of Americans who strongly disapprove of Trump has reached a second-term high of 46.7 percent.

Trump's approval numbers have dropped below 40 percent in at least one national poll, with the Iran war cited as a key driver alongside rising inflation and fuel costs. Gas prices are acutely felt in Alaska, where residents depend heavily on fuel for heating, transportation, and subsistence living. A war-driven fuel price spike hits Alaskans harder than almost any other state in the union.

For Sullivan, this creates a structural bind. He has aligned himself closely with the Trump administration throughout his Senate tenure. If Trump's approval in Alaska continues to erode — particularly as fuel prices climb and the Iran conflict drags on — Sullivan absorbs that political cost directly. The midterm pattern of the president's party losing seats compounds the problem further.

The Variables Still in Play

The 12.7 percent undecided and minor-candidate pool remains live territory. Sullivan needs to win that group decisively. Given his net favorability of -10.7, that will be harder than the raw number implies — but not impossible if the Iran war concludes favorably or if economic conditions stabilize before November.

Alaska backed Trump by 14 points in 2024, and the structural Republican lean of the state has not evaporated. Sullivan still has incumbency advantages, a strong fundraising base, and the institutional support of the national Republican Party. The question is whether those advantages are sufficient to overcome a deteriorating presidential approval environment and Peltola's crossover appeal.

The Honest Bottom Line

Take Moore's absolute numbers with a grain of salt. His 2014 miss on Sullivan is too significant to ignore, and his documented Democratic lean means his RCV simulation showing Peltola at 52.4 percent is probably optimistic for Democrats.

But do not dismiss the trend — and do not ignore the environment. Sullivan led this race by four points in July 2025. He no longer does. Alaska has now crossed into net disapproval of Trump for the first time this term. The Iran war is driving gas prices upward in a state that feels fuel costs more acutely than almost anywhere else in the country. Five waves of ASR data, plus independent corroboration from PPP and Data for Progress, all point the same direction.

Alaska in 2026 is not a foregone conclusion. It is, however, a race where the structural indicators — polling trend, Trump's eroding approval, war-driven fuel costs, and Sullivan's underwater favorability — currently stack against the incumbent in ways that no amount of incumbency advantage fully neutralizes.


Saturday, March 28, 2026

The GOP’s Own Voters Are in the Streets: No Kings and the Age Group Problem

The GOP's Own Voters Are in the Streets: No Kings and the Age Group Problem
Political Analysis  ·  No Kings Series
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The GOP's Own Voters
Are In the Streets

The No Kings protests are drawing the exact age group the Republican Party depends on most — older white women in their 40s and 60s. The demographic collision playing out in town squares across America may be the party's most serious unforced crisis since 2008.

```
44 Median age of No Kings protesters at D.C. rally
57% Female — the GOP's most contested voter bloc
56% Trump's share of the 50–64 vote in 2024

Something remarkable is happening in the streets of America, and it has almost nothing to do with what the protesters are chanting. The No Kings movement — three rounds of mass demonstrations against the consolidation of executive power under Donald Trump — has drawn a crowd that should alarm every Republican strategist with a spreadsheet. The people showing up are not the usual suspects. They are, in demographic profile, the Republican Party's own base.

The median No Kings protester in Washington, D.C. was 44 years old, white, female, and college-educated. That profile — older, educated, suburban white women — is the precise constituency that the Republican Party has spent decades cultivating and now increasingly cannot take for granted. When your margin-makers are carrying signs in the rain on a Saturday, you have a problem that cannot be solved with a better tweet.

Who Shows Up to No Kings

The demographic data from the protests is consistent and striking. The crowds skew significantly older than most protest movements — which tend to be dominated by voters under 35. Third Act, a No Kings-affiliated organization explicitly organized around activists aged 60 and above, has been among the most visible institutional participants. Its founder, Bill McKibben, noted the gray-haired crowds with wry acknowledgment, describing them as people with "hairlines like mine — scant."

This is not your 2011 Occupy Wall Street. It is not your 2017 Women's March, which ran younger and angrier. The No Kings protests are drawing people who have mortgages paid off and grandchildren, people who vote in every election, people who are not participating in their first act of civic engagement but potentially their most consequential one.

No Kings Protest Composition by Age Estimated Share of Crowd
18–34
~18%
35–49
~28%
50–64
~34%
65+
~20%
Protest share (estimated)

What makes this age distribution politically explosive is what it means when cross-referenced with voting data. Older voters do not just protest — they vote. In every election cycle, turnout among voters 50 and above dwarfs turnout among voters under 35. The people in those crowds are not the ones who might forget to mail their ballots.

Which Age Group Votes Republican

The GOP's coalition has long rested on a simple demographic fact: the older the voter, the more likely they are to vote Republican. This has been reliable enough for decades that Republican electoral strategy has been built around it like a load-bearing wall. The 2024 election data confirms the pattern — and reveals exactly where the No Kings crowd sits within it.

2024 Presidential Vote by Age — Trump Share Trump %
18–29
40%
30–44
48%
45–64
53%
50–64 ★
56%
65+
49%
Trump majority
Near-split or Harris lead
★ GOP's strongest age cohort

The numbers tell the story plainly. The 50–64 age group was Trump's single strongest cohort in 2024, delivering 56% of its vote to him versus 43% for Harris. That is not a narrow plurality. That is a structural advantage — the kind that gets baked into electoral maps and congressional district calculations.

The 65-and-older group is more complicated and more revealing. The top-line is near-even: 49% Trump, 49% Harris. But that hides a gender fault line that cuts right through the No Kings crowd. Trump won older men by 14 percentage points. Harris won older women by 4. Strip out the men, and the 65+ female vote is already a Democratic-leaning constituency. Among voters 50–64, the same split applies — Trump's advantage in that cohort came overwhelmingly from men.

The Gender Split Inside the Age Data

Age Group Overall Trump % Men (est.) Women (est.) No Kings Presence
18–29 40% 51% 30% Light
30–44 48% 54% 42% Moderate
50–64 ★ 56% 63% 49% Heavy
65+ 49% 57% 45% Heavy

The 50–64 women column is the one that should keep Republican consultants awake. Those voters gave Trump roughly 49% of their vote in 2024 — a near-even split that Trump won only because men in the same cohort went 63% his way. Those 50–64 women are now the dominant demographic presence in the No Kings protest crowds. They are not fringe voters. They are not first-time activists. They are habitual voters who have historically split their tickets enough to give Republicans a fighting chance.

The Republican Party's structural advantage among older voters is real. But it has always depended on older women being persuadable. The No Kings crowds suggest that window may be closing — and closing loudly.

— Analysis, The GOP's Own Voters Are in the Streets

What Third Act Tells Us

The organization Third Act deserves particular attention because it is not a spontaneous crowd formation. It is a structured, funded, strategically organized mobilization effort aimed explicitly at voters over 60 — the age group with the highest turnout rates in American elections. Its founder, Bill McKibben, built it specifically because he recognized what political scientists have long known: old people vote, and they vote consistently.

Why Older Voter Mobilization Is Different

Turnout among voters 65 and older runs 20–25 percentage points higher than turnout among voters 18–29 in midterm elections. In presidential years the gap narrows, but older voters still participate at significantly higher rates.

This means that a protest movement that mobilizes voters 50 and above is not just making noise. It is activating the most electorally reliable demographic in the country. Every No Kings protester in the 50–64 cohort is almost certainly a voter who will turn out in November 2026 — the question is only which way.

In 2010, the Tea Party mobilized older white voters to the right and produced a 63-seat House wave for Republicans. The structural conditions for a mirror-image wave in 2026 are present. Whether the No Kings movement can sustain the organizing discipline the Tea Party had is the open question.

The Tea Party comparison is instructive and underappreciated. That movement was also dominated by older white voters — predominantly male in its leadership but broadly older in its composition. It was also dismissed initially as a fringe phenomenon. By November 2010, it had produced the largest midterm wave in modern American history. The organizational infrastructure it built in 18 months rewired the Republican Party for a decade.

The No Kings movement is attempting something analogous from the other direction. Whether it succeeds depends on whether the organizing structures — Third Act, local Democratic party apparatus, issue-specific groups focused on Social Security and Medicare — can channel protest energy into precinct-level voter contact before the 2026 midterms.

The 2026 Calculation

Republican strategists are not unaware of this dynamic. The internal alarm is visible in the shift in messaging from Republican members of Congress when they return to their districts — the sudden emphasis on constituent services, the careful distancing from the most aggressive DOGE cuts, the quiet conversations about Social Security and Medicare that party leaders do not want on the record.

The math is not complicated. The House Republican majority going into 2025 was built on margins of a few thousand votes in two dozen districts. Those districts are disproportionately suburban. Suburban districts are disproportionately populated by older educated women. Older educated women are disproportionately showing up at No Kings protests.

A shift of 4–5 percentage points among 50–64 women in those districts — well within the range suggested by the protest mobilization data — flips the House. It does not require a Democratic wave. It requires only that the women who barely voted for Trump in 2024 decide, by November 2026, that they barely will not.

The Political Irony

The birther movement, as we examined in the previous two installments of this series, taught the Republican Party that its base's appetite for confrontational politics could be harnessed without consequence. The energy was real. The electoral rewards seemed reliable. The costs — credibility, institutional trust, the moderate voter coalition — seemed manageable.

The No Kings protests are the bill arriving. The same older, educated, civic-minded white women who the Republican Party treated as a captive constituency — who voted Republican out of habit, economic interest, and cultural alignment — are now the most visibly activated anti-Trump demographic in the country.

They did not radicalize. The party moved. And the question for 2026 is whether the distance the party has traveled from where those voters stand is now too great to bridge with a mailer and a phone call before Election Day.

The GOP spent 15 years building a movement that told its most reliable voters their feelings trumped facts. It turns out those voters have feelings about that, too.


The Self-Inflicted Wound: How the GOP got Played by the Birther Movement

The Self-Inflicted Wound: How the GOP Got Played by the Birther Movement
Part II of Series  ·  Lamb v. Obama Revisited
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The Self-Inflicted Wound:
How the GOP Got Played
by the Birther Movement

Republican voters handed Barack Obama his most durable political shield — and they built it themselves, out of bad legal theories, manufactured outrage, and a movement that turned a potentially legitimate question into a national punchline.

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There is a word for what the birther movement did to the Republican Party: inoculation. By flooding the political and legal environment with the most extreme, least defensible version of every legitimate question about Barack Obama's background, the movement ensured that any credible challenge would be immunized against serious scrutiny. The GOP's base demanded red meat. They got poison — and they called it a feast.

To understand how this happened requires separating two things that the media, the Democratic Party, and ultimately the Republican establishment collapsed into a single story: the genuine legal questions that cases like Lamb v. Obama were actually raising, and the conspiracy fever that the birther movement had already turned into a partisan identity. By the time any coherent argument reached a courtroom, these two things were indistinguishable to everyone who mattered — judges, journalists, and Republican politicians who knew better but said nothing.

How a Fringe Theory Became a Party Platform

The birther movement did not begin inside the Republican Party. Its earliest prominent promoters were Clinton-aligned operatives during the bruising 2008 Democratic primary — an inconvenient fact that gets lost in the retrospective. But the movement found its permanent home on the right, and the Republican Party's relationship with it follows a pattern so consistent it deserves a name: tactical ambiguity.

2008 Birther claims surface during Democratic primary. Clinton campaign operatives later linked to early circulation.
2009 Orly Taitz files first wave of cases. GOP leadership stays silent. Base enthusiasm is measurable.
2010 Polling shows 45% of Republicans believe or are "not sure" Obama was born in the U.S. Tea Party absorbs the energy.
2011 Donald Trump elevates birtherism to prime time. Obama releases long-form certificate. Movement doubles down.
2012–14 Legitimate cases including Lamb v. Obama litigated — dismissed in atmosphere the fringe cases created.
2016 Trump wins the Republican nomination. Birther base becomes the party's electoral engine.

At every stage of that timeline, Republican leadership faced a choice: repudiate the movement clearly and pay a base-enthusiasm cost, or stay quiet and collect the energy while hoping the worst of it would stay contained. They chose quiet. That silence was not neutral. It was a form of endorsement, and it had consequences that compounded.

The Republican establishment thought it was using the birther movement as a turnout tool. It turned out the birther movement was using the Republican establishment as a legitimacy vehicle. One of those parties understood the transaction. The other one didn't.

— Analysis, The Self-Inflicted Wound

The Taitz Problem — And Why the GOP Owns It

Orly Taitz did not emerge from a vacuum. She was platformed, amplified, and — critically — never seriously rebuked by the party apparatus that benefited from the energy she generated. Fox News gave her airtime. Republican politicians appeared at events where her theories were treated as legitimate debate. The feedback loop was deliberate even when individual actors within it were acting in bad faith toward each other.

The legal consequences were concrete and lasting. Every Taitz filing that was dismissed with sanctions, every case that was thrown out for asserting facts no court could take seriously, added another brick to the wall of negative precedent that legitimate subsequent litigants had to scale. When Lamb v. Obama reached the Alaska Supreme Court arguing about dual citizenship acknowledgments and FERPA-compelled record production, the court's institutional memory of the preceding five years of birther litigation was sitting in the room like an uninvited co-counsel.

What the Courts Actually Saw

Between 2008 and 2013, over 200 cases challenging Obama's eligibility were filed in state and federal courts. The overwhelming majority were dismissed at the threshold — for lack of standing, failure to state a claim, or outright frivolousness. Several attorneys were sanctioned.

The precedents these dismissals generated did not distinguish between the quality of the underlying legal theories. A dismissal for lack of standing in a case asserting Kenyan birth became cited authority against a later case asserting dual citizenship documentation. The courts treated the entire category as contaminated — because it largely was.

This is the specific, measurable legal damage the birther movement inflicted on anyone trying to raise a coherent constitutional question about presidential eligibility — not just about Obama, but about any future candidate.

GOP Voters as Their Own Worst Enemy

This is the part that requires the most honesty, because it cuts against the comfortable narrative that Republican voters were simply manipulated by cynical elites. They were manipulated — but they were enthusiastic participants in their own manipulation, and the reasons why tell us something important about how populist movements consume the institutions they claim to champion.

The Satisfaction Problem

The birther theory was satisfying in a way that a nuanced dual citizenship argument was not. "He wasn't born here" is a story. "He may have held a British-Kenyan dual citizenship by descent until 1983, and FERPA's judicial exception under §1232g(b)(2)(B) may permit a court of competent jurisdiction to compel production of records that could clarify whether he voluntarily identified as a foreign national as an adult" is not a bumper sticker. The base wanted a story. The movement gave them one. The story happened to be wrong, and its wrongness destroyed the credibility of the questions underneath it.

The Story They Wanted The Legal Reality Cost to the Base
"Obama was born in Kenya" Born in Hawaii. Documented. Confirmed by Hawaiian officials across multiple administrations. Total credibility loss on any eligibility argument
"His birth certificate is forged" Hawaiian DOH officials personally confirmed the document's validity. Courts uniformly rejected forgery claims. Sanctions in multiple jurisdictions
"He's secretly a Muslim / Indonesian" Legally irrelevant to eligibility. Factually unsubstantiated. Used to signal racial and cultural anxiety, not legal argument. Racial optics that tainted every other argument
Dual citizenship question (Lamb) Genuinely documented. Obama's campaign acknowledged it. Legal implications arguable. Never reached — buried under the above
Foreign student enrollment (Lamb) Unresolved. Records never judicially compelled. Affidavit submitted but unverified. Never reached — courts immunized by prior filings

Republican voters, by demanding the most maximalist version of every claim, ensured that the most defensible versions of those claims could never get a fair hearing. This is not a failure of information. Voters who insisted Obama was born in Kenya were not poorly informed about the legal distinction between jus soli citizenship and voluntary expatriation. They were not interested in that distinction. They wanted him gone, and they wanted a simple reason. The movement supplied the reason. The reason was false. The supply chain — Fox News, talk radio, the online fever swamps — was protected by the enthusiasm of the demand.

When you build your political identity around a claim that's wrong, you don't just lose the argument. You lose the ability to make the argument you should have been making all along.

— The Self-Inflicted Wound

The Trump Pivot — and What It Revealed

Donald Trump's entry into the birther narrative in 2011 is the most clarifying moment in the entire story, because Trump did something no one else had done: he made the theory work for him personally while having no apparent belief in it whatsoever. His 2016 "retraction" — 15 seconds, no apology, credit to Hillary Clinton for starting it, no questions taken — was not the behavior of a true believer. It was the behavior of a man who had extracted maximum value from a product and was moving on to the next one.

What Trump understood, and what the Republican establishment learned too late, was that the birther movement was never really about Barack Obama. It was about a certain kind of Republican voter's need to have their feelings about the Obama presidency — the cultural displacement, the demographic anxiety, the sense of an America changing faster than they'd consented to — validated by something that sounded like a legal argument. The specifics didn't matter. The validation did.

When Trump rode that energy to the Republican nomination and then the presidency, the party's leadership discovered what they had actually built. The birther base was not a tool. It was a constituency. And constituencies have demands.

The Lasting Damage — Beyond Obama

The birther movement's most durable legacy is not what it did to Barack Obama, who served two full terms and left office with majority approval ratings. Its most durable legacy is what it did to the Republican Party's relationship with factual accountability and to the legal environment surrounding presidential eligibility questions.

On the legal side: the 200-plus dismissed cases created a body of precedent that makes any future eligibility challenge — on any grounds, against any candidate — substantially harder to litigate. The courts learned, not unreasonably, to treat this entire category of claim as presumptively frivolous. Future candidates with genuinely complex citizenship histories — and American politics will produce them — will face a legal landscape polluted by a movement that cried wolf so loudly it deafened the watchdogs.

On the political side: the GOP base's appetite for maximalist, emotionally satisfying false claims did not end with birtherism. It migrated — to election fraud claims in 2020, to a succession of simpler stories about complex realities, each one more consuming than the last, each one leaving the party less equipped to engage with the actual world it was trying to govern.

The Bottom Line

The birther movement gave Republican voters a story that felt like a weapon and turned out to be a wound. It foreclosed legitimate legal questions by surrounding them with illegitimate ones. It trained a political base to prefer satisfying fictions over arguable truths. It handed Barack Obama — and by extension the Democratic Party — a permanent "conspiracy theorist" label to attach to any Republican who raised any question about any Democratic president's background or qualifications, regardless of the actual merits.

And it did all of this with the passive cooperation of a Republican establishment that calculated, incorrectly, that it could harvest the energy without paying the bill. The bill, as it turned out, was the party's capacity for factual seriousness — the one thing a political party in a constitutional republic cannot afford to lose and cannot easily buy back.

The case that deserved to be heard — the dual citizenship question, the documentary record, the fraud theory that required only two documents to resolve — never got its day in court. Instead, it got Orly Taitz. The GOP voters who demanded the circus should understand: they built the tent. The question is whether they're willing to finally take it down.


Lamb vs Obama Revisted: When Muddied Legal Waters Drown a Legitmate Case

Lamb v. Obama Revisited: When Muddied Legal Waters Drown a Legitimate Case
Thomas Lamb · Legal Analysis · Constitutional Law · Revisited
Constitutional Law & Presidential Eligibility

Lamb v. Obama Revisited:
How Birther Chaos Drowned a Legitimate Legal Argument

A decade later, the legal frustration remains: two documents — a birth certificate and college records — could have resolved everything. Courts never let us get there.

There is a particular kind of legal frustration that has no good name. It is not the frustration of losing an argument on the merits. It is not the frustration of a bad judge or a hostile courtroom. It is the frustration of watching a legitimate legal question — one with genuine constitutional consequence — get swallowed whole by a circus it never belonged to. That is what happened to Lamb v. Obama, and it is worth revisiting with clear eyes.

Let me say plainly what this case was never about. It was never about Kenya. It was never about a forged birth certificate. It was never about whether Barack Obama was born in the United States — he was, in Hawaii, and I stated that in writing to the Hawaii Attorney General and in the brief before the Alaska Supreme Court. Anyone who lumped this litigation in with the Orly Taitz school of legal adventurism was not reading the documents.

The problem was never the argument. The problem was the atmosphere in which the argument had to be made — an atmosphere that Taitz and others had poisoned so thoroughly that no court was willing to breathe it.

— Lamb v. Obama, Revisited

What the Case Actually Was

The core of Lamb v. Obama rested on two distinct legal pillars, neither of which required the court to believe Obama was born anywhere other than Honolulu.

First: Obama's own campaign, and ultimately the DOJ in responding to litigation, acknowledged he held dual citizenship — U.S. and Kenyan — from birth until 1983, when Kenyan law terminated his inherited citizenship at age 21. That is not a conspiracy theory. It is a matter of statutory record under the Kenya Independence Act of 1963 and the British Nationality Act.

Second: The question of whether Obama, as a legal adult, enrolled at Occidental College identifying as a foreign national — and what financial aid implications that carried — is a fraud question entirely independent of where he was born. It requires only two things to answer: his enrollment records and his financial aid applications. Both are documents that exist. Neither has ever been produced in any judicial proceeding.

Key Statute FERPA §1232g(b)(2)(B) permits courts to compel release of education records via judicial order — but requires standing the courts refused to find.

The Alaska Supreme Court never reached either question on its merits. It never had to, because standing doctrine — sharpened into a weapon by a decade of frivolous birther filings — cut the case off at the procedural threshold. That is the legal frustration this revisitation is about.

The Documents That Would Have Resolved Everything

Avenue One — The Birth Certificate

In American adoption law, when a child is legally adopted, the original birth certificate is sealed by court order and an amended certificate is issued reflecting the adoptive parent as father. This is not obscure. It is standard procedure, governed in Hawaii by H.R.S. §338-20.

If Lolo Soetoro legally adopted Barack Obama — whether in Hawaii before the family's 1967 departure to Jakarta, or through Indonesian civil proceedings — that adoption would leave a documentary trail in exactly one place: the Hawaii Department of Health's sealed original records.

The long-form Certificate of Live Birth released in 2011 lists Barack Obama Sr. as father. An unamended certificate. Which means one of three things is true: no legal adoption occurred; the adoption occurred in Indonesia and never triggered Hawaii's amendment process; or the records released were themselves incomplete. The birth certificate, properly examined in its original form by a court with jurisdiction, would answer that question in an afternoon.

Avenue Two — The College Records

This is the cleaner legal avenue and the one that carries the most contemporary relevance. The fraud theory does not depend on childhood citizenship, adoption, or any contested Indonesian school record. It depends only on what a legal adult — Obama was 18 when he enrolled at Occidental in 1979 — represented about himself on federal financial aid documents.

The symmetry of the problem is elegant and damning in equal measure. Either the records exonerate him entirely — and the argument dies where it should — or they raise questions a court of law is equipped to adjudicate. The only outcome that serves no one is the outcome we have: perpetual, unresolved speculation.

How the Birther Movement Made This Impossible

Here is where I must be direct about something that has cost me credibility I did not deserve to lose. Orly Taitz, Jerome Corsi, and the broader apparatus of what became known as the birther movement did not just lose their own cases. They contaminated the legal environment for every case that followed.

Courts are human institutions. After the hundredth frivolous filing claiming a Kenyan birth certificate or a forged Social Security number, no judge was going to look charitably at the hundred-and-first plaintiff — regardless of what that plaintiff was actually arguing.

— Legal Analysis, Lamb v. Obama

Taitz's cases were not merely wrong. They were sloppily argued, factually unsupported, and in several instances sanctioned by courts for frivolous conduct. The precedents they generated became a wall of negative authority that any subsequent litigant had to scale before reaching the substance of their own argument. By the time Lamb v. Obama reached the Alaska Supreme Court, that wall was ten years high.

The DOJ exploited this environment skillfully. Rather than address the dual citizenship admission on its merits, its briefs leaned on the accumulated weight of dismissed birther cases as though they were dispositive of questions those cases never actually adjudicated. They were not. A case dismissed for lack of standing does not resolve the underlying constitutional question. It simply refuses to address it. But in a courtroom atmosphere poisoned by years of bad-faith litigation, that distinction had become invisible.

The Adoption Question — A Genuine Legal Puzzle

The adoption angle deserves more rigorous treatment than it has received from either side of this debate. The childhood citizenship argument, in isolation, is legally weak — Perkins v. Elg (1939) settled that a natural-born citizen cannot lose citizenship through parental action during minority, and nothing in the adoption theory overcomes that precedent as applied to childhood status.

Perkins v. Elg 325 U.S. 649 (1939). Held that natural-born citizenship cannot be revoked by parental action during minority. Binding Supreme Court precedent.

But the adoption question's real significance is documentary, not constitutional. If a legal adoption occurred in Hawaii, H.R.S. §338-20 requires an amended birth certificate. The absence of an amendment in the released document is either proof no Hawaiian adoption occurred, or it raises questions about what the sealed original contains. A court with jurisdiction could resolve this in a single records examination. No court was ever permitted to do so.

Indonesian law adds its own layer of complexity. The Indonesian Nationality Law in effect during the late 1960s did not permit dual citizenship. For any Indonesian naturalization to have been valid, it would have required renunciation of prior citizenships — which U.S. law prevented for a minor. The Indonesian adoption pathway is therefore legally self-defeating at the childhood level. It matters only insofar as it might explain school records and scholarships — not insofar as it affects constitutional eligibility.

What Should Have Happened

A court willing to reach the merits — free of the standing barriers erected partly in response to frivolous prior filings — would have faced a straightforward evidentiary proceeding, not a complex constitutional one. The constitutional questions were always downstream of basic, verifiable facts.

The Two-Document Resolution

Produce the original, unredacted Hawaii birth certificate for in camera judicial examination. If unamended, the adoption theory is foreclosed. If amended, proceed to questions about the legal effect of adoption on a natural-born citizen's status — a question Perkins v. Elg likely answers, but which at least deserves adjudication.

Produce the Occidental College enrollment and financial aid records for the period 1979–1981. If they show U.S. citizen status throughout, the fraud theory is dead and should remain so. If they show foreign national status, a court is equipped to determine whether that representation was truthful, fraudulent, or legally consequential under 8 U.S.C. §1481.

Neither proceeding would have required years of litigation. Neither would have required the court to make any finding about where Obama was born. Both were foreclosed not by the merits, but by standing doctrine applied with a heavy hand in a courtroom atmosphere that Taitz and her associates had made hostile to any argument that shared their vocabulary without sharing their logic.

The Legitimate Grievance, Stripped of Its Noise

A decade removed from the oral argument before the Alaska Supreme Court, the legitimate grievance at the center of Lamb v. Obama can be stated simply: two documents exist that would resolve a set of factual questions about a sitting president's background. Courts were never permitted to examine them, not because the questions were frivolous, but because the legal landscape surrounding those questions had been rendered so toxic by bad-faith litigants that courts found it easier — and procedurally justifiable — to turn away at the door.

That is not justice. It is not a vindication of Obama's eligibility. It is not a vindication of the birther movement. It is simply an instance of a legal system protecting itself from a mess it did not create, at the cost of questions it was built to answer.

The public had — and still has — a right to know. Not because of any particular suspicion about any particular person. But because in a constitutional republic, the eligibility requirements for the highest office are not suggestions, and "trust us" is not a judicial standard of proof.