• Elon Musk just defended America better than every politician in Washington combined.

    Musk: “After World War 2, the US could have basically taken over the world and any country.

    Like we got nukes, nobody else got nukes. We don’t even have to lose soldiers. Which country do you want?”

    One nation on earth held a weapon nobody else had.

    Total dominance.

    Zero competition.

    No risk of retaliation.

    Every empire in history that held that kind of advantage used it.

    Rome. The Mongols. The British. The Ottomans.

    They conquered until they collapsed.

    America had a bigger advantage than all of them combined.

    And it rebuilt the countries it just defeated.

    Musk: “The United States actually helped rebuild countries. So it helped rebuild Europe, it helped rebuild Japan. This is very unusual behavior, almost unprecedented.”

    Almost unprecedented?

    It had never happened before.

    Not once in 5,000 years of recorded history.

    The Marshall Plan wasn’t foreign aid. It was the most radical act of restraint any superpower ever committed.

    America turned its enemies into allies.

    Turned rubble into economies. Turned surrender into partnership.

    Germany went from ashes to the economic engine of Europe in a generation.

    Japan went from unconditional surrender to the third largest economy on earth.

    Three years after the war, America was flying food into Berlin.

    A city in the heart of the nation that just tried to destroy it.

    That’s not policy.

    That’s a civilization deciding what it is at the exact moment it has the power to be anything.

    You’re being told a story right now.

    That America is the villain of history. You hear it everywhere. Media. Universities. Social platforms.

    Musk: “There’s always like, well America’s done bad things. Well of course America’s done bad things, but one needs to look at the whole track record.”

    Every nation on earth has dark chapters. Every single one.

    The difference is what a country does when nobody can stop it.

    And when nobody could stop America, it fed its enemies and rebuilt their cities.

    Musk: “The history of China suggests that China is not acquisitive. Meaning they’re not going to go out and invade a whole bunch of countries.”

    Probably right. China has historically built walls, not fleets.

    But the real question isn’t about borders anymore.

    We’re approaching a moment that mirrors 1945 in ways nobody has fully processed yet.

    AI is going to give a handful of people a power advantage that makes nuclear monopoly look quaint.

    If someone is going to hold that kind of power, who do you want it to be?

    The country that conquered when it could?

    Or the one that rebuilt when it didn’t have to?

    Every alliance. Every trade route. Every economy.

    Billions lifted out of poverty.

    All of it traces back to one act of restraint that had never been done before.

    And carries no guarantee of being repeated.

    The most powerful thing America ever did wasn’t building the bomb.

    It was what it didn’t do after.

    https://x.com/r0ck3t23/status/2054491938955415570?s=20

  • Growing up we had 4 apple trees on our property. Every season my old man and I would labor for days picking bushels after bushels. We throw them in the back of the little trailer connected to our John Deere riding mower, drive to the corner of the road and sell them to executives working at John Deere World Head Quarters. Each year they’d look at the apples hand selected by my pops and I and exclaim “Looks like I got the best in the bunch!” I’d develop a mischievous smile and agree with them, take the 5 dollar bill and hand to my old man who’d shoot me a smile back.

    You see every year we would pick through hundreds of apples picking some straight from the tree and some from the ground. Every season a few apples would shine through. Perfect color, perfect shape, and just felt right. Some times I’d find them hanging right in front of my face, but my favorites were the ones on the ground. Covered in a little bit of mud, laying next to bruised and broken apples. None the less perfect. I’d set those aside.

    After a week of selling our apples. My old man and I would come back to my personal picks. The best of the bunches. My old man never sold an apple he wouldn’t eat, but he let me pick the best ones because he said I had an eye for them. We’re they any better than all the other ones? Probably not. But in my eyes they were the best, and all those folks who bought those other apples had no idea what they were missing.

    Here comes the punch line. You have been through a lot. Life hasn’t been the easiest. You may have been high up in the tree hanging by a limb, only to be knocked down in the mud. You stayed strong though, you kept it together when those around you let the world break and bruise them. All I’ve had to do was come by and help wipe the dirt off with just a little reminder, that you my friends are the best of the bunch. Trust me, I’ve got an eye for them.

    Thank all of you for being the best of my bunch. Go out today and find someone that may be down in the mud, or hanging by a limb. Remind them they are the best of your bunch.