Daily Wire Feed
Daily Wire Feed

Daily Wire Feed

@dailywirefeed

The Forgotten American Sacrifice Happening Behind Every Deployment
Favicon 
www.dailywire.com

The Forgotten American Sacrifice Happening Behind Every Deployment

This article is part of Upstream, The Daily Wire’s new home for culture and lifestyle. Real human insight and human stories — from our featured writers to you. *** Debates about “trad wives” and “girlbosses” place womanhood into opposing camps: career, ambition, and independence versus family, sacrifice, and support. But for me, as a military spouse, my life doesn’t fit neatly into either category. In many ways, it requires elements of both, as if the stereotypical definitions were both thrown into a NutriBullet and blended together.  On the heels of celebrating my two-year wedding anniversary — in typical military fashion, apart from my husband — I found myself reflecting on just how much sacrifice this life demands, where uncertainty is constant and major plot twists are almost always guaranteed.  It is a reality that is often difficult to comprehend unless you have lived it yourself or loved someone who has; plans and routines shift without warning and precious time together is limited. Just when I finally get used to having my husband home and we begin settling into life as a newly married couple, life shifts again — sending me back into a season of independence, holding everything together on my own and keeping the trains moving so that when he returns, we can pick up where we left off. I have unlocked a side of myself I didn’t know existed: one shaped by resilience, adaptability, independence, sacrifice, and an unwavering love of country that few other experiences can teach. I have learned countless lessons that have made me into a stronger person, a better spouse, and a more intentional daughter, sister, and friend. I’ve learned how to spend time alone, bring joy into the darkest days, and enjoy doing things independently. I also resist the urge to fully and honestly answer questions like, “Can’t you just call your husband?” No, he’s hundreds or thousands of miles away with little to no cell service, but I will certainly be sending a detailed email later. One of the more challenging lessons has been learning how to prepare for and navigate the most dreaded word of all: deployment. Deployments are like Florida afternoon storms. Sometimes you see them coming from miles away, dark clouds slowly gathering on the horizon. Other times, they catch you off guard, and suddenly you are wrapped in sideways rain, running for cover, hoping not to get too drenched. Like storms, deployments often last longer than you think they will and have some surprise twists, but eventually they pass — making way for sunshine and the relief of finally having your spouse back in the same zip code again. But most of all, being a military spouse has changed my perspective on time. In the seasons of separation, a day feels like a week. A week feels like a month. A month feels like an eternity. Every day feels like the movie “Groundhog Day” in the sense that it is just another day waking up, and your spouse and best friend isn’t home to share the everyday moments with you. Time is so precious. Simple activities such as having dinner together, going on walks, or even going to the grocery store are times I cherish. During those long stretches of time apart, looking back on these memories makes me smile.  In navigating challenges and uncertainty, I have gained a deeper respect not only for my husband’s service but for the country and freedoms his sacrifice helps preserve. Loving someone who serves, whether you are married or related to them, inevitably changes the way you see America. Freedom is not just an abstract idea. It is something that needs to be actively defended and preserved.  For the last 250 years, America has represented a bold experiment in liberty. Generations of men and women have answered the call to serve their country, and some have made the ultimate sacrifice. Heading into Memorial Day, that reality weighs heavily, serving as a reminder of the true cost of the freedoms we are all privileged to live with today. The title “military spouse” is one I hold with pride, and I know my time in this role is finite. With every twist and turn my husband and I face together as a team, I know there are millions of military families out there navigating similar yet entirely different situations. To these families, you are a constant source of inspiration, and your service and sacrifice should not go unrecognized.  My short time as a military spouse only reflects a larger truth woven throughout our nation’s history: Military spouses have quietly upheld the home front through constant reinvention, emotional endurance, and steadfast patriotism, sustaining the promise of freedom alongside those who defend it.  Not to mention how communication has changed. As my grandmother loves to remind me, “At least you don’t have to wait for letters, like I did, and can sometimes see his face on your phone.” Looking back at old photos of my husband and me — smiling in the early days of dating or in our courthouse wedding pictures — I am reminded of just how far we have come as a team, and also how much I have changed for the better.  As I look ahead, I carry with me both gratitude and perspective. I don’t fit the mold of either the “trad wife” or the “girlboss,” but I feel more fulfilled than I have in my entire life. I have been stretched in ways I never anticipated and have gained a deeper appreciation for the moments of connection that my husband and I are given.  As we celebrate America’s 250th birthday all year long, I am reminded that while uniforms may represent service on the front lines, it is the strength of families on the home front that helps sustain the promise of freedom generation after generation — and I am honored to be a part of that history. *** Emma Miccoli is a member of Independent Women’s Network and a Florida resident.

JD Vance’s ‘Simple’ Message After Massive Medicaid Fraud Takedown
Favicon 
www.dailywire.com

JD Vance’s ‘Simple’ Message After Massive Medicaid Fraud Takedown

Vice President JD Vance said Thursday that the Trump administration would not rest until “justice is served” to those defrauding the American taxpayer through government welfare programs.  Vance’s comments came shortly after the Justice Department charged 15 people across Minnesota with stealing $90 million through various fraud schemes targeting Medicaid and social service programs. Fraud in Minnesota has received widespread attention after independent journalist Nick Shirley took a camera to questionable entities raking in taxpayer dollars and asked about their operations.  “Our message is simple: if you were committing fraud, our task force will find you. We’ll come after you, and we will not rest until justice is served,” Vance said in a video message. “Don’t defraud the American taxpayer. Don’t get rich by trying to steal from them, or we are going to come after you until justice is served. That’s our promise, and we’re going to stick to it.” Today, the task force and the DOJ announced a massive take down of two of the largest Medicaid fraud cases in Minnesota state history, as well as the largest autism fraud scheme ever charged by the federal government. Our message is simple: if you’re committing fraud, we will… pic.twitter.com/MNfkLlOY0R — JD Vance (@JDVance) May 22, 2026 Vance, heading up the Trump administration’s anti-fraud task force, said that the charges announced Thursday included two of the largest Medicaid fraud cases in Minnesota history and the largest autism fraud case ever brought by the federal government.  “With this action, we’re bringing justice to some of America’s most vulnerable citizens and justice to the American taxpayer,” he said.  Medicaid fraud has come under heavy scrutiny from Republican officials in recent weeks after Daily Wire investigative reporter Luke Rosiak published a series documenting how Ohio spent a billion dollars on home healthcare in 2024. The home healthcare services included activities such as “homemaking” and “chores” for family members.  The report found that just seven buildings in Columbus housed 288 home healthcare businesses that billed taxpayers more than $250 million. State officials appear to do little vetting for the so-called home healthcare companies. Vance has warned that states that do not combat fraud could lose their Medicaid funding.  The vice president noted that one of the cases brought Thursday involved a defendant accused of billing Medicaid for around-the-clock care for a disabled man who was later found dead after receiving no actual services. “To get rich off taxpayers, even at the cost of others’ lives, just as that fraudster had for many months before. This kind of behavior is sickening,” Vance said.  Aimee Bock, the founder of the nonprofit Feeding Our Future, was sentenced to nearly 42 years in prison on Thursday over a $250 million fraud case involving meals supposedly given to children during the COVID pandemic.

The SPLC Is Absolutely Corrupt. The Democrat Response Is: Shut Up
Favicon 
www.dailywire.com

The SPLC Is Absolutely Corrupt. The Democrat Response Is: Shut Up

While it is an honor to testify before Congress, it can also be frustrating. House members will ask you yes-or-no questions, without allowing you to elaborate. They want to prove their own points, and sometimes they prevent you from making yours. I testified before the House Judiciary Committee about the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) on Wednesday, and Rep. Hank Johnson (D-GA) asked me if I was familiar with the name Michael Donald. I knew the exact point he was going to make — that when a Ku Klux Klan group horrifically lynched Michael Donald in 1981, the SPLC represented Donald’s bereaved mother, Beulah Mae, and sued that Klan group into bankruptcy. It’s one of the SPLC’s favorite stories, and it is indeed noble — the first half, anyway. But that’s not the whole story, and when I tried to tell the full story, Hank Johnson cut me off. That’s his prerogative — he got five minutes to question me, and it is not my place as a witness to interrupt him. The story matters because the SPLC built its massive fundraising engine off the clout it earned by rightly suing chapters of America’s most notorious hate group into bankruptcy. Today, the SPLC has weaponized its reputation. It publishes a “hate map” that plots mainstream conservative and Christian nonprofits alongside Klan chapters — a map the SPLC says reveals the “infrastructure upholding white supremacy.” This “hate map” kills two birds with one stone: it demonizes conservatives who oppose the SPLC’s agenda, and it also exaggerates the amount of hate in America, which helps the SPLC fundraise off supposedly combating this “hate.” A federal grand jury indicted the SPLC on fraud charges based on the claim that the SPLC was actually propping up Klan groups by directing money to members. The SPLC did not deny the payments, but said it was paying “informants” to prevent violent threats before they happen. The indictment suggests, however, that these “informants” weren’t just tipping off the SPLC but acting on the SPLC’s direction in ways that strengthened the groups. Hank Johnson wanted to bring up the Michael Donald case to highlight the SPLC’s noble history and to suggest the indictment puts the Trump administration on the side of “hate.” THE REST OF THE STORY I’m glad Hank Johnson brought up Michael Donald. A Klan group l*nched Donald in 1981, and the SPLC rightly represented his bereaved mother in court. But that’s not the whole story… The story’s second half shows SPLC corruption.https://t.co/bpMUAIRrFi pic.twitter.com/A3v8vl8nRD — Tyler O’Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) May 21, 2026 As I wrote in my first book, “Making Hate Pay: The Corruption of the Southern Poverty Law Center” (first published in 2020 and updated this month), the Michael Donald case highlights some of the very corruption that would ultimately lead the SPLC to become a far-left smear factory. Contrary to popular belief, the SPLC wasn’t founded during the civil rights movement, but afterward. Also, contrary to popular belief, Morris Dees and Joseph Levin didn’t found the SPLC to go after the Klan or white supremacy — they founded it as a public-interest law firm to represent poor people in the South. In fact, when Dees redirected the SPLC’s efforts to focus almost entirely on opposing the Klan, the legal team quit en masse in 1985. SPLC lawyers said suing the Klan into bankruptcy wasn’t the SPLC’s original mission, that it was too easy — they compared it to “shooting fish in a barrel” — and that Dees prioritized this because he focused on fundraising more than helping the less fortunate. In 1987, a jury held the United Klans of America liable for Michael Donald’s death and ordered the group to pay $7 million in restitution to Beulah Mae Donald, in a clear victory for justice. Yet this wasn’t the 1920s Klan or the 1950s Klan. By the 1980s, anti-black racism had significantly declined, and the United Klans of America had little in the way of assets. The group owned a building and sold it for a little over $50,000. Beulah Mae Donald received that money, but what did she do with it? She gave $37,500 to the SPLC, which had given her a loan for her home. Meanwhile, the SPLC went to its donors and raked in millions. Beulah Mae Donald tried to make a documentary about her story, but Morris Dees edged her out. Don’t get me wrong: representing Beulah Mae Donald was one of the high-water marks of the SPLC’s storied career. But Dees’s focus on fundraising and his desire for the spotlight taints even this noblest of SPLC stories. I tried to sum up this story in a few words while responding to the honorable representative from Georgia, but Hank Johnson cut me off. The real truth about Beulah Mae Donald is just too inconvenient for his narrative — just like the full truth about the SPLC’s corrupt demonization of conservatives is inconvenient for Democrats beclowning themselves by trying to defend it. *** Tyler O’Neil is senior editor at The Daily Signal and the author of two books: “Making Hate Pay: The Corruption of the Southern Poverty Law Center” and “The Woketopus: The Dark Money Cabal Manipulating the Federal Government.”

The Bright Side: A Baby Monkey, A Diamond Hunt, And The Internet’s Favorite Grandma
Favicon 
www.dailywire.com

The Bright Side: A Baby Monkey, A Diamond Hunt, And The Internet’s Favorite Grandma

This article is part of Upstream, The Daily Wire’s new home for culture and lifestyle. Real human insight and human stories — from our featured writers to you. *** Welcome to the Bright Side, a weekly roundup of all the good news and ideas you might have missed from the past week. Winning advice for anyone’s next chapter I’m existing on commencement speech inspiration as we wrap up “Maycember” and head into Memorial Day weekend. Here are a few standouts for students of life. “The way you overcome a 99.7% chance of losing in the biggest moments of your life is to harness the confidence you built, and the lessons you’ve learned, from a lifetime of failing at things that you’ve cared about.” — NFL GOAT Tom Brady to Georgetown University’s graduating class of 2026  “When you’re the driver of your own thoughts, you have a belief and a conviction that you can do anything. When you work on yourself, you see the world through your own unique lens. In a world of copycats, you become an original. Your unique fingerprints come to life.” — SPANX founder Sara Blakely to Florida State University’s graduating class of 2026 “[Family] is the string that makes you feel like you’re not alone in a room. I want to warn you about something. You’re about to get busy in ways that feel important, and many are professionally ambitious … building the life you’ve been pointed toward for years. And family, because they love you with a grace you will spend most of your life trying to deserve, will rarely demand your time. They’ll tell you they understand, and they’ll mean it. Do not take them up on it.” — country music star Eric Church to the University of North Carolina’s graduating class of 2026  “The Golden Girls” makeover If guys are always thinking about the Roman Empire, I’m constantly preoccupied with how the cast of “The Golden Girls” looked so much older than grandmas today. At the start of the series, Blanche, Dorothy, and Rose were in their early-to-mid fifties, and Sophia was 79. I know exactly no one that age now who looks like the GG’s did then. The 50-year-olds I know are kicking my butt at CrossFit. Maybe they secretly wear beaded chains on bifocals at home. The Golden Girls, but with today’s hair and styling. From big 80s perms to sleek, fresh looks, Blanche is out here serving main character energy, Rose looks like your cool aunt who does Pilates, and Sophia and Dorothy still delivering one liners with the best of them. Do you… pic.twitter.com/9ClQMsYlvI — CeCe (@cecegkh) May 20, 2026 With a little A.I. magic, the Golden Girls got a makeover that took their characters into 2026, ditching the 1980s grannycore for layered bobs and flattering jackets. Would the show be as iconic today if it looked like this? Who knows. But I love the style refresh — except for Estelle Getty, who I want to believe looked exactly like Sophia the day she was born.  Canine comfort at the dentist Sign me up for a mouthful of crowns. A San Francisco dental office staffs a therapy dog (a French Bulldog named Xylo, short for the dental anesthetic Xylocaine), who greets clients when they enter and is available to lie in your lap while Mr. Thirsty and Mr. Bumpy (just trying not to trigger anyone who hates the dentist like I do) get to work on your pearly whites.   View this post on Instagram   A post shared by SFGATE | California’s largest news site (@sfgate) Xylo belongs to owner Dr. Brian Baliwas, and she can be found under “Team” on the company website, along with her stellar credentials. She’s an American Kennel Club-registered, rabies-vaccinated, snorting, fetching bundle of love. And her presence represents a growing hospitality trend in dentistry, where a patient’s comfort is just as much a priority as his or her medical care.  A garden of lilies where blooms last one day I have the opposite of a green thumb, and I wonder if plants can tell that they’ve landed on death row in my apartment. (“For my last meal, I’ll have compost, Miracle-Gro, and water for once,” my fiddle leaf fig seems to say.) I have kept a jade plant alive for years, mostly because it’s cat-level independent and needs no one and nothing. All that to say, I’m beyond impressed with a luscious garden that’s been going for 30 years.   View this post on Instagram   A post shared by Southern Living (@southernlivingmag) Judi and Paul Aucoin grow lilies galore at their Birmingham, Alabama, home. It’s been their thing ever since a neighbor bequeathed them her lily collection back in the ’90s. The gorgeous blossoms from more than 600 daylilies last less than 24 hours, but something about their fleeting beauty makes me sentimental about the meaning of life. A diamond in the rough Well, this is one smart strategy for getting people outdoors! Crater of Diamonds State Park in Murfreesboro, Arkansas, invites families to dig for natural diamonds in a field over the surface of a volcanic crater. Sound too good to be true? One woman just plucked a three-carat uncut diamond straight outta the dirt.    View this post on Instagram   A post shared by The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) Keshia Smith had just lost her 22-year-old son and her father before making the trip. “I was under a lot of pressure … Pressure makes diamonds,” she said. “I had my two angels right there with me.” As for the rock, which she named Za’Novia Liberty Diamond after her son’s two kids and America’s 250th anniversary, the value might be priceless for Smith. Still, her raw gemstone could go for $5,000 to $10,000 just as it is. Marking Punch the baby monkey as safe Have you been following Punch the monkey’s blockbuster story of survival at Japan’s Ichikawa City Zoo? He’s just nine months old, but he’s already a viral sensation. And animal lovers are breathing a sigh of relief that he’s made it this far — and that he’s doing great.   Ver esta publicación en Instagram   Una publicación compartida por The New York Times (@nytimes) I think everyone’s heart broke when we first discovered how Punch was abandoned by his mother and he struggled to integrate into his tribe of macaques. He found comfort in a stuffed monkey from IKEA that was twice his size and was cared for by zookeepers. (Scroll to the third slot in this carousel from the New York Times to see him leap onto a staffer’s leg for an adorable mealtime ride-along.) Now, he’s living his best life doing normal monkey stuff like making friends, frolicking around his habitat, and eating as many sweet potatoes and apples as he likes. Go, Punch, go! I love our Bright Side crew! Always feel free to zhuzh up the comments section (you can email me too), or share this list to brighten someone else’s day. Hope you have a wonderful weekend! —Lauren

The American Ethos And The Ghosts Of The West
Favicon 
www.dailywire.com

The American Ethos And The Ghosts Of The West

Traveling southwest on the Catalina Highway toward the heart of Tucson, twisting and descending through Coronado National Forest, where the rock-hewn vistas meet the high, bright blue of sky that swallows any fear that God does not exist. It is such a place where one would expect to be surrounded by the radiating waves of heat on a baking blacktop, as a spectator to some aged, weathered vaquero of the lost ages of the Wild West. You can see it as you fall out of the prehistoric heat-swell of the canyons and mountains, each pitched against the other as if they were remnants of a war between Greek gods, scars and fissures, and the heaving of the earth: Tucson. The oldest city in the Arizona Territory that maintains its ties to the dusty wiles of its past through old, glorified museums, sun-faded rodeos, and capital-A Americana. The gunslinger and wagon-bound settler and the Indian and the law. They converge on a place that can still barely maintain its proper sense of being, balanced with tourist thirst traps. Along that highway through God’s country back to the terra firma of the U-S-of-A and one can pass the Trail Dust Town with its mock gunfights and chintzy steak house (complete with cowbell-ringing waitresses outfitted with hip-slung blue jeans and soft drawls welcoming you, “Darlin’”), and gift shops with sterling silver baubles outlined in turquoise and fool’s gold, and Kachina dolls, and paperweights of smooth glass encasing tarantulas, scorpions, and the various genus of poisonous vermin and arachnid that scuttles about the desert floor. And the tourists ramble into the shops crammed together, peering at the oddities and treasures on equally crammed shelves with wide grins and sweaty necks and bellies full of steakhouse T-bones and smelling of baked beans and Western dressing. Ask any of the shopkeepers who run the little enclave of strung-together gift stores, hot sauce and salsa shops, jewelers, novelty stands and Western wear haberdasheries — strike up a conversation that starts with a statement, but is really a question: “I bet you’ve seen a lot of changes here,” and let a Roy Murrow or Abe Walker or Sherri Lantis ramble about the Walmart on Speedway Boulevard or the In-N-Out Burger off South Kolb Road, or the damn university kids, and one gets a sense, just by the tired, crow’s feet-lined frowns and deep, distant eyes on wizened faces that there’s something that’s lost. What once was the destination of the kid who dreamed of Roy Rogers and John Wayne’s “Stagecoach” and the Earps, whose soundtrack was the slow, rap-rap-rap tempo of boot heels on raised-plank boardwalks accompanied by the ominous jingle of well-used spurs, had been buried with the myth that brought it fame, notoriety — and crowds. Speeding south into Tucson where Catalina terminates, joining Tanque Verde — a mainline road banking east to west with a slow curve south over the Pantano Wash, past the Trail Dust Town, past the pop-up cannabis shop, Golf ‘N Stuff, a series of squat, adobe-style apartments — the two-level kind with Spanish tile roofs and centered around a courtyard overrun with thorny catclaw acacia, prickly pear, and Larrea tridentata with its tiny yellow-tinged, waxy flowers giving that decidedly rain smell after a rolling storm. Then, take a straight shot south on Pantano until you run up to the airfield. The airfield. Stretches of planes, comatose and covered, baking in the unrelenting sun, swirls of heat rising between wings and shadowed bellies of hulking P-3 Orions and E-3C AWACS. All around the gray metal beasts sit silently in formation: here, C-130s, there, A-10 Warthogs, farther down field, one can make out the sleek, streamlined lethality of a grouping of F-16s with each seam and gap meticulously wrapped and sealed as if the very desert would cause the second death of these retired warriors. Where once they hunted and evaded the enemy as rulers of the sky, now the planes were at its mercy in the arid, unceasing desert heat. This isn’t any airfield. This is Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, where 3,500 retired or stored aircraft sit, month after month, waiting for their fate either to be cannibalized or revived into former air superiority glory. The story of these planes isn’t contained between Alvernon Way and South Houghton Road. It bleeds out into the desert. It creeps out like ghosts in the night, haunting the dreams of young men — those who used to dream of gunfights and horse trails and warm whisky in dark saloons and the jingle of spurs on hollow boardwalks. Now, they dream of going Mach 5.29, burning jet fuel, puking their insides out on test flights, and pushing the boundaries of the impossible because they refuse the idea of the impossible. Before the movie Top Gun was made, it was a story in a magazine. The May 1983 issue of California magazine was sitting in a dentist’s office when film producer Don Simpson picked it up, read a few pages, and immediately, in his guts, knew: this was a film that had to be made. This was a story of speed, adventure, danger, excellence, masculinity, death-defying, gravity-breaking, pulse-pounding adventure that had to be told. And he was right. And only a man who refused to be bound by the constraints of the physically possible and psychologically normal could see and recognize the American essence in this story. Never mind that Simpson was notoriously fueled by cocaine and booze — a man who took his filmmaking and partying with equal passion and determination. He tapped into the veins of what made America’s blood pump. After all, he was altogether unfazed by the death of his drug rehab coach in his pool house, naked. The temptation to bring this story to the big screen was too strong. The article’s author, Ehud Yonay, writes in “Top Guns”: Once over the Mexican border they pick up speed, and Yogi starts jinking. He whips the stick — the steering mechanism between his legs — from side to side and the plane rolls this way and that, letting him and Possum spot anybody making for their tail. From where they sit, however, it’s not their silver rocket that’s rocking but the entire vast blue dome of sea and sky. There are no ups or downs up here, no rights or lefts, just a barely perceptible line separating one blue from another, and that line is spinning and racing like mad in the distance. Yogi was still in junior high school when he realized that flying straight and level might be okay for some people, but if you like yanking and banking — the feeling of riding inside one of those storm-in-a-bottle souvenirs — then there’s just one place for you, and that’s the cockpit of a fighter plane. Now we have willow-fingered suss-gussets picking through the bones of our Americana like vultures on a highway roadkill, stinking and bubbling in the sun, the last soul that dared venture out under the cover of night to be barreled over by a rust-colored Buick Skylark. Capital-A Americana has been worn smooth over the decades by a culture that bristles at hard things. What once was the stuff that made legends has turned into cautionary tales. “Go West” was the slogan of the intrepid and the bold; now merely a bumper sticker catch phrase for glamping outlets and secret sauce limited-time burgers at Arby’s. We’ve had the essence of Americana squeezed out of us by intellectuals and ivory-tower academics and wannabe sophisticates wholesale by industrial-grade juicers, strained through a dozen gauzy layers of cheesecloth by the strangling hands of PC-mindedness, and sent through the clinking and clamoring bureaucracy like miles of twisting, nonsensical pipes, sloshing along until our Americanness has been sterilized and ostracized and thinned out to be wholly unrecognizable. There is no toughness, no fortitude into the unknown, no unforged paths, no aspirations toward the conquest: it’s been conditioned out of us. Then those same mawing shrieks who scold the veritable past squeeze harder. Is the Americana ethos extinct? There are many who want it to be. Those who take the “boy” out of Boy Scout, who allow Top Gun its theatrical moment but snub it at awards shows. Who see Sidney Sweeney in blue jeans and believe it’s a racist dog whistle. Who hear Lana Del Rey and dismiss her as a conservative avatar. And it’s politicians who “support our troops” but trash masculinity — the very trait that makes an effective warrior who he is. They are the inevitable heirs of condescending culture gatekeepers who castigated “ticky-tacky” mid-20th-century homes that housed the heroes of WWII, right along with the values and mores that enabled them to fight and win. Even at the Olympics, we went from wearing cowboy hats to Ralph Lauren beanies. Even our astronauts talk in soothing half-tones and repeat unremarkable Urban Dictionary pop-culture catchphrases of a Girl Scout Troop dad, rather than the successors to the first-generation astronauts forged by WWII, the frozen hell of Korea, and death-defying flights piloting experimental aircraft. Walk through the boneyard and feel the men who stood there. Men at war. Men who smoked Lucky Strikes, chewed Beeman’s gum, and pushed the limits of physical and spiritual stamina. They blasted off through the bleak desert rock toward heaven itself. Young men mocking the sky gods with a smirk and boldness and squaring up to Death as if to say, “Go ahead, old man, give it your best. I dare you.” It was the embodiment of single combat: man battling his fears and self-doubt. The American Empire is an ethos. It is a conquering force against our own trepidation and despondency as much as against the foolish, pretentious legions who repeatedly count us out. When men aspire to greatness, America achieves it. People are quick to dismiss the current rise in nostalgia for an era before social media, the firehose of stimulation of the information age, and siloed experiences. But they are mistaking nostalgia for a gnawing awareness that something is missing. And it’s correct to feel this way because something is — that thing squeezed and crushed and mashed and forced through an extruder until all that remains is a shredded pulp: The American spirit.  The American, in his set-jaw determination toward freedom, who holds the map to forgotten places, who hears “Go West” as a challenge, not a joke; the dreamer, the drifter, the risk-taker. He is the protector, the warrior, and the builder. These are men who understand that when they climb on that horse or sit in that jet or board a spaceship, they might not come home. They understand that death is the price for living. That hard things done by hard men are necessary for the continuation and building of a society that only knows the frictionless world of modernity. “Man is not made for defeat. A man can be destroyed but not defeated,” wrote Ernest Hemingway, in his gruff confidence, the writer who spared no kindness for self-inflicted weakness; no mercies for guilt-ridden lamentations of the relentlessly torpid. In a man’s life, resilience defines his unyielding core — the victory of single combat — man versus his own fear. Reclaim the essence of the American spirit; it’s still out there in the midst of the boneyards and tumbleweeds, inhospitable except to the man who dares forge his path on his own terms — not for nostalgia, or wide-smiling gawkers, or to keep the bone-picking vultures away, but because his spirit demands it. ***