Want to Save Social Security? Adopt the Australian Retirement Model

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Congressional Republicans need to take the lead on transitioning Social Security to a solvent retirement system—and reap the benefits with younger voters.

Social Security is insolvent. No one on either side of the political aisle disputes this, but few try to muster the political will to do anything about it.

Last month, President Donald Trump said his administration is looking “very seriously” at the Australian retirement model. Australia’s program was designed specifically for the type of demographic collapse the United States will experience this century. It is not only popular in the land down under, but wildly successful. Transitioning to this type of mandatory retirement plan would avoid payroll tax hikes, eliminate pressure to flood the U.S. with foreign workers to pay for Social Security, and ensure future Americans’ retirement is guaranteed. It’s also a good policy for a party trying to attract younger voters.

Social Security Will Not Survive the Century

The fatal flaw in the Social Security system was baked in at the start. Most Americans believe the program is essentially a personal bank account that they pay into and pull out of after reaching retirement age. Reality is much more liquid. Social Security remains solvent so long as people working now pay more into the system than is withdrawn from people retiring now. In other words, what individual retirees get out usually isn’t equivalent to what they paid in—largely because inflation has devalued threefold the dollars today’s retirees paid. 

As a result, Social Security faces imminent insolvency due to the depleting Old-Age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) Trust Fund. Exacerbating the inflation problem is the shrinking worker-to-beneficiary ratio which has dropped tremendously since Social Security’s inception—meaning there are far fewer workers paying into the system compared to 90 years ago. The Baby Boomers’ retirement is narrowing that gap further at breakneck speed. 

The last year that the OASI Trust Fund collected more than it paid out was 2021. Last year’s Social Security Trustees Report showed the fund is projected to exhaust its reserves by 2033, and by the end of the century, its projected shortfall is $25 trillion. 

For comparison, in fiscal year 2025, the federal government only collected $5.2 trillion in revenue.

If nothing changes, the grandchildren of Americans retiring right now are guaranteed to not receive sufficient Social Security money to survive after retirement. That means we’re facing the end of full benefit payments, breaking the program’s promise to future generations—unless action is taken to dramatically reform the system. 

Without those urgent reforms, Social Security won’t survive the 21st century.

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Good Riddance to MTG!

MTG’s self-serving political entrepreneurialism has run its course

In a bold move that reaffirms his unyielding commitment to crushing annoying ankle biters, President Trump has successfully sidelined Marjorie Taylor Greene, effectively running her out of Congress. On November 21, she officially resigned for Congress, announcing that January 5, 2026 will be her last day on the job her constituents elected her for.

This isn’t just a personnel change—it’s a cleansing of the Republican ranks from opportunistic pretenders who never had any business jumping into the political arena. Trump’s decisive action, leveraging his influence within the party to marginalize “MTG” marks a pivotal moment in cleansing Georgia’s Republican political delegation of a self-serving political influencer.

Although Trump is certainly no beacon of ideological consistency, he at least doesn’t pretend to be a purist or crusader for good government as Greene did. Trump is upfront about the sleaziness of government and openly admitted to paying off politicians on both sides of aisle when he ran for president in 2016. He never pretended draining the swamp was nothing more than removing the permanent bureaucracy with right-wing cronyism. Greene, on the other hand, is a businesswoman who pretended draining the swamp somehow meant restoring virtue to Congress, as if politics in any form has ever been virtuous.

This self-righteousness allowed her to build a following of naive ruralites, jealous of the politically connected and financially successful, all while she amassed eye-popping wealth after being in Congress, just like nearly every other Congressperson.

Greene represents the absolute worst of hillbilly culture—crude, confrontational, and devoid of substance. Her nastiness toward anyone she perceives as an opponent, from fellow Republicans to critics, turns political discourse into a backwoods brawl. She lashes out with venom, but it’s all bluster, amplified by her thick accent that gives a false impression of rugged conservatism. In reality, she’s not far-right in any meaningful way; her so-called radicalism is skin-deep, built on conspiracy theories that distract from real issues like trade policies harming her Georgia district. While she rode Trump’s coattails to fame, peddling wild tales for clicks and donations, she avoided tackling the economic pain caused by unchecked immigration and globalization.

Her discomfort with deporting non-violent illegal aliens is but one example of her faux right-wing radicalism. As an employer, she refused to implement E-Verify in her family business. This suggests she may have employed illegal aliens herself, prioritizing profits over protecting American jobs.

Another example is her seemingly inexplicable, diehard loyalty to moderate Kevin McCarthy during the Great 2023 Republican Speaker Battle, pitting herself against the actual diehard conservatives.

Greene had no business in Congress from the start. She should have stayed apolitical, perhaps sticking to her construction empire where her true loyalties lie—with exploitable labor and fat margins. Her conspiracy-minded rants, from QAnon flirtations to baseless claims, only embarrassed the party and alienated potential allies. Trump’s intervention, by rallying the base against her inconsistencies and pressuring party leaders, has finally shown her the door.

As we wave goodbye to this hillbilly hypocrite, America’s political landscape brightens. Under Trump’s guidance, Congress can refocus on real solutions—securing borders, boosting wages, and putting Americans first. MTG was someone who rocketed to MAGA stardom thanks to her larger-than-life personality, which she exploited for social media clicks and fundraising. But wielding political power is a marathon, not a sprint, and when Trump denied her entrance to the Senate by refusing to endorse her in the Georgia Senate race, it became obvious her head had hit the ceiling and there was nowhere else to climb on the political ladder but down. This explains her cozying up to the Left on CNN and The View.

Her exit is a win for right-wing politics, an art that demands cutthroat tribalism, not entrepreneurialism. True conservatism demands more than accents and attitude. Trump’s purge paves the way for a stronger, more unified front. The last thing his coalition needs is some loud mouth sophomore Congresswoman who thinks just because she can rile up poor souls to empty their meager bank accounts into campaign coffers it gives her a front seat at the party’s table.

America’s Blueprint for Mass Deportations

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Removing millions of illegal aliens need not be costly or dramatic. The U.S. can fix its immigration problem by looking to our own history—we’ve done this before.

The American people gave President Donald Trump a mandate to carry out the largest deportation of illegal aliens in American history. While unprecedented in 2025, that same history actually shows removing millions of law-breaking foreigners is as American as apple pie. 

The Left insists any and all deportations are un-American and racist. In fact, removing troublesome migrants is one of our nation’s great unsung traditions to rival another, more familiar pillar also from the 19th century: Assimilation. In generations past, Americans revolted against agricultural and business elites—who wanted ever more cheap labor—by demanding their government remove burdensome, dangerous, and wage-depressing immigrants.

And elected officials responded, deporting over 57 million people since 1882—more than any country in history

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Elections Matter in Who Spends Where


One of the craziest things happened during the week after the election. My local bar was empty during a Vanderbilt home game.

On face value, that may not seem so strange. After all, Vandy is known as the redheaded—shall we say, blackhaired—stepchild of the Southeastern Conference. But this year is different because the Commodores are actually good. Nashvillians—native and transplant alike—have rooted in force for the ‘Dores after that glorious victory over the hated Alabama Crimson Tide that prompted the Vandy student section to baptize one of their goalposts in the Cumberland River.

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