Albany’s War on Common Sense Continues

While New Yorkers struggle to pay their property taxes, fill their gas tanks, afford groceries, and keep their families in the state, Albany has once again demonstrated just how disconnected it has become from the concerns of everyday citizens.

State lawmakers are now advancing legislation that would remove references to “mother” and “father” from sections of New York law and replace them with gender-neutral terminology. Supporters insist this is merely a technical update designed to reflect modern family structures. But many New Yorkers see it for what it is: another attempt by government to redefine reality through legislation.

No law can change the fact that every human being has a mother and a father. Biology is not a political opinion. It is not a partisan issue. It is not subject to amendment by the State Legislature.

Yet Albany continues to devote its time and energy to symbolic cultural battles while the issues that are actually driving families and businesses out of New York remain unresolved. The state leads the nation in population loss. Property taxes remain among the highest in America. Public confidence in government continues to decline. Housing affordability has become a crisis. Yet somehow lawmakers have found the time to focus on rewriting words that have been universally understood for generations.

The concern extends beyond simple terminology. Language matters. Words have meaning. Mothers and fathers are not interchangeable bureaucratic concepts. They represent unique and irreplaceable roles in the lives of children and families. When government begins removing those distinctions from law, many citizens reasonably question what comes next.

Perhaps most troubling is the arrogance behind these efforts. The overwhelming majority of New Yorkers still use the terms mother and father every day. Children understand them. Families understand them. Communities understand them. The problem exists not in society, but in the minds of policymakers who increasingly believe that longstanding traditions, institutions, and even basic language must be re-engineered to fit the latest ideological trends.

New Yorkers deserve a government focused on public safety, economic growth, infrastructure, tax relief, and educational excellence. Instead, they are getting a government increasingly preoccupied with social engineering and symbolic virtue signaling.

At some point, Albany must decide whether it wants to govern or lecture.

The people of this state are not asking lawmakers to redefine parenthood. They are asking them to make New York affordable, safe, and competitive once again.

Until that happens, bills like this will serve as yet another reminder of how far removed the political class has become from the daily realities of the citizens they were elected to serve.

The Taxpayer Train Never Stops

There was a time when public transportation systems were expected to transport people. Today, it seems their primary function is transporting money—from taxpayers’ pockets into government budgets.

The latest example comes from California, where lawmakers are considering asking Bay Area residents to pay higher taxes to support the struggling transit system known as BART. The catch? Many of the people being asked to pay may never set foot on one of its trains.

BART, like many public transit systems across the country, was built around a world that no longer exists. Before the pandemic, thousands of workers crowded trains each day on their way to offices in San Francisco and throughout the Bay Area. Those commuters purchased tickets, generating the revenue needed to keep the system running.

Then came remote work.

Five years later, many of those commuters have never returned. Ridership remains significantly below pre-pandemic levels, fare revenue has declined, and BART faces a growing financial crisis. The proposed solution from government officials is not to resize the system, rethink operations, or fundamentally reform the agency. Instead, it is the familiar answer taxpayers hear whenever a government program encounters trouble: raise taxes.

Supporters argue that public transportation benefits everyone by reducing traffic congestion, lowering emissions, and supporting economic development. There is certainly some truth to that argument.

But there is another question that deserves to be asked.

At what point does government have an obligation to adapt to reality?

Private businesses face this challenge every day. When customer demand falls, businesses reduce costs, change their operations, or develop new services. They cannot simply send a bill to people who are not using their product and demand payment anyway.

Government often operates under a different set of rules.

If a service attracts fewer customers, taxpayers are told they must contribute more. If a budget deficit appears, new revenue is required. If management decisions fail, the public is expected to make up the difference.

What makes the BART debate particularly interesting is that it serves as a preview of conversations likely coming to communities across America. Whether the issue is public transportation, higher education, government agencies, or municipal services, many institutions were built for a population and economy that have changed dramatically.

The question is not whether these services provide value.

The question is whether taxpayers should be treated as an endless source of funding whenever reality fails to match government projections.

Those of us in the Hudson Valley should pay attention.

California often serves as the nation’s testing ground for public policy. Today’s debate about transit taxes could become tomorrow’s debate about schools, local governments, or public authorities much closer to home.

The lesson is simple.

A budget problem is not automatically a taxpayer problem.

Sometimes it is a management problem.

Sometimes it is a structural problem.

And sometimes the hardest thing government must do is what every family and business eventually learns: live within its means.

Private Reprimand, Public Doubts: The Growing Question of Judicial Accountability

For more than two years, I have been writing about judicial accountability, judicial arrogance, and the often-overlooked struggles faced by citizens who find themselves at the mercy of a legal system that appears unwilling to police its own.

My interest in the subject is not academic.

It is personal.

For more than two years, judicial misconduct complaints I filed against U.S. District Judge Victor A. Bolden have remained pending within the federal judiciary’s disciplinary process. During that time, I have received no meaningful resolution, no public explanation, and no indication that the concerns raised have been subjected to the level of scrutiny that ordinary citizens would expect from a system dedicated to transparency and accountability.

It is against that backdrop that I read the recent report from The National Law Journal concerning a federal judge who engaged in an affair with a police officer and allegedly made false statements during a judicial misconduct investigation. Despite findings that have raised serious concerns among legal scholars, the judge received only a private reprimand.

The reaction from many observers was predictable.

The reaction from those of us who have spent years navigating the judicial misconduct process was something else entirely.

It was recognition.

Recognition of a system that too often appears more interested in protecting institutional reputation than confronting institutional failure.

According to legal scholar Arthur Hellman, the Judicial Conference possesses the authority under federal law to refer a judge to the House of Representatives when impeachment may be warranted. Hellman suggested that a judge who makes false statements during an official investigation presents exactly the kind of conduct that deserves serious consideration.

Yet the sanction imposed was private.

The public is left to wonder whether accountability means something different when the person accused of misconduct wears a black robe.

That question has become increasingly difficult to ignore.

My own judicial misconduct complaints arose from the proceedings involving my daughter, Jennifer Kowalski, in Prudential Insurance Company of America v. Kowalski in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut.

In those complaints, I raised concerns about what I viewed as significant due process failures, the treatment of a pro se litigant confronting a multibillion-dollar corporation, and judicial decisions that ultimately resulted in civil confinement. I questioned whether fundamental constitutional protections were afforded and whether the extraordinary powers exercised by the court were matched by the extraordinary caution such powers require.

Reasonable people may disagree with my conclusions.

But what should concern everyone is that the complaints have now been pending for more than two years.

Two years.

Imagine telling a litigant, a lawyer, or a witness that allegations of misconduct against them would remain unresolved for years without meaningful public explanation. Imagine a court allowing an ordinary citizen to place a case into indefinite limbo.

Yet that appears to be precisely what happens when the subject of scrutiny is a federal judge.

The federal judiciary rightfully demands accountability from everyone who enters its courtrooms. Witnesses are expected to tell the truth. Lawyers are expected to act ethically. Litigants are expected to comply with court orders. Failure to do so can result in sanctions, fines, contempt findings, and even imprisonment.

But accountability loses its moral force when it appears to operate in only one direction.

The judiciary’s authority ultimately depends upon public confidence. Courts possess neither armies nor police forces. Their power rests on legitimacy—the public’s belief that judges are impartial, fair, and committed to the rule of law.

That legitimacy suffers when judicial misconduct investigations disappear into years of silence.

It suffers when serious allegations are resolved through private reprimands.

And it suffers when citizens conclude that there are two systems of accountability: one for the governed and another for those who govern from the bench.

The issue is not whether judges should be perfect.

They cannot be.

The issue is whether judges should be accountable.

They must be.

For more than two years, I have waited for answers regarding the complaints I filed. The recent controversy involving another federal judge only reinforces a concern shared by many Americans: the mechanisms designed to ensure judicial accountability appear increasingly opaque, increasingly slow, and increasingly insulated from public scrutiny.

The judiciary asks the public to trust it.

Trust, however, is not maintained through secrecy. It is maintained through transparency, responsiveness, and a demonstrated willingness to hold even the most powerful officials accountable when they fall short of the standards they are sworn to uphold.

Until that happens, private reprimands and years-long delays will continue to fuel a simple and uncomfortable question:

Who judges the judges?

How to Drive More Taxpayers Out of New York

If you were intentionally trying to drive successful residents, entrepreneurs, professionals, and retirees out of New York, what would you do?

You’d raise taxes.

Again.

That appears to be the thinking behind Resolution No. 295, which will be considered by the Ulster County Legislature on June 16. The resolution seeks Albany’s permission to impose a resident income tax surcharge on higher-income Ulster County residents.

Because apparently New York’s tax burden isn’t high enough already.

Property taxes. State income taxes. Sales taxes. Utility taxes. Fees. Assessments. Surcharges. New Yorkers already carry one of the heaviest tax burdens in America. Yet whenever government needs more money, the answer is almost never spending restraint. It’s almost always another tax.

This time, the target is “high-income” residents.

That phrase is deliberately designed to make taxpayers comfortable. After all, politicians want you to believe someone else will pay the bill.

But who exactly are these people?

They are often local business owners who create jobs. Doctors who provide healthcare. Professionals who support community organizations. Investors who fund economic growth. Retirees who spent decades saving and building financial security.

In other words, the very people most communities should be encouraging to stay.

Instead, government sees them as a revenue source.

The message is simple: Work harder. Earn more. Take risks. Build a business. Create jobs.

And we’ll charge you extra for the privilege.

What makes this proposal particularly frustrating is that there has been little public discussion about controlling spending before demanding more money from taxpayers.

Have all efficiencies been explored?

Have unnecessary expenditures been eliminated?

Have elected officials exhausted every opportunity to reduce costs?

Or is raising taxes simply easier than making difficult budget decisions?

History provides a warning. States and localities that continually increase taxes eventually discover that taxpayers have options. More and more Americans are relocating to states where government understands that economic growth comes from attracting success, not punishing it.

Florida doesn’t have a state income tax.

Texas doesn’t have a state income tax.

Tennessee doesn’t have a state income tax.

New York’s answer appears to be adding another layer.

Resolution 295 is more than a tax proposal. It reflects a governing philosophy that sees prosperity not as something to encourage, but as something to tax.

Public comment will take place at 7:00 p.m. during the June 16 session of the Ulster County Legislature.

If you believe government should learn to live within its means before demanding more of yours, you may want to attend.

Because every time another tax is proposed, more New Yorkers begin asking themselves a simple question:

Why stay?

The 988 Challenge: The Most Important Number You Can Save

Every once in a while, a social media challenge comes along that is actually worth participating in.

No dangerous stunts. No vandalism. No swallowing detergent pods. No filming yourself doing something foolish for clicks and likes.

This one is called the “988 Challenge.”

The challenge is simple: save the number 988 in your phone, share it with friends and family, and make sure the people in your life know that help is available when they need it.

For those who may not know, 988 is the national Suicide & Crisis Lifeline. Anyone experiencing emotional distress, suicidal thoughts, a mental health crisis, substance abuse issues, or simply feeling overwhelmed can call or text 988 twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week.

Think about that for a moment.

A simple three-digit number can connect someone to a trained counselor during what may be the darkest moment of their life. It can provide a listening ear, guidance, resources, and perhaps most importantly, hope.

We live in a time when anxiety, depression, loneliness, addiction, and emotional distress touch nearly every family. The struggles may be hidden behind smiles, careers, social media posts, and daily routines, but they are there. Veterans struggle. Teenagers struggle. Parents struggle. Seniors struggle. Sometimes the strongest-looking person in the room is carrying the heaviest burden.

Yet many people still do not know that 988 exists.

That is where the challenge comes in.

Save 988 in your contacts.

Share it on Facebook.

Text it to your children.

Send it to your parents.

Mention it at work.

Post it on the bulletin board at your church, synagogue, mosque, community center, or school.

Because none of us knows when someone we love—or even someone we barely know—may need that number.

The beauty of the 988 Challenge is that it costs nothing. It takes less than a minute. Yet that minute could make all the difference in the world to someone facing a crisis.

In a society often divided by politics, ideology, and endless arguments, this is something we should all be able to agree on: if sharing a simple three-digit number can help save a life, it is worth doing.

So today, take the 988 Challenge.

Save the number.

Share the number.

And encourage others to do the same.

You may never know whose life it helps save—but that life could be someone’s child, someone’s parent, someone’s friend, or perhaps even your own.

Sometimes the most important thing we can give another human being is the knowledge that help is only three digits away.

Hochul’s Latest Gift to Criminals: Making ICE Agents Easier Targets

Governor Kathy Hochul’s decision to sign legislation prohibiting ICE agents from wearing masks during enforcement operations is being sold as a matter of “transparency” and “accountability.” In reality, it may be one of the most reckless public safety decisions to come out of Albany in years.

Let’s be honest about what this law does. It doesn’t make New Yorkers safer. It doesn’t reduce crime. It doesn’t lower taxes. It doesn’t improve schools. What it does is make federal law enforcement officers easier to identify, photograph, track, harass, and potentially target by criminals, gangs, cartels, and activists who oppose immigration enforcement.

Federal agents are not conducting immigration raids because it’s a popularity contest. They are enforcing federal law, often against individuals with criminal records, gang affiliations, or outstanding deportation orders. Many of these operations involve dangerous people who have every incentive to retaliate against the officers carrying them out.

The same politicians who demand anonymity for witnesses, confidentiality for informants, and privacy protections for government employees suddenly have no problem exposing federal agents to public identification.

Why?

Because this legislation isn’t really about transparency. It’s about politics.

For years, progressive politicians have sought to portray ICE not as a law enforcement agency but as a political enemy. The goal is to make immigration enforcement more difficult, more controversial, and ultimately less effective. If agents become worried that their faces will end up on social media, their families identified, or their homes targeted by extremists, that has a chilling effect on enforcement.

The hypocrisy is staggering. During periods of civil unrest, many of the same elected officials defended masked protesters. During the COVID era, masks were presented as a civic responsibility. Yet when federal officers seek to protect their identities while carrying out lawful duties, masks suddenly become unacceptable.

Supporters claim that anyone exercising government authority should be identifiable. That’s a reasonable principle in theory. But ICE agents already operate under extensive federal oversight, wear official insignia, carry credentials, and answer to supervisors, inspectors general, federal courts, and Congress. The question is not whether they are accountable. The question is whether Albany should be placing them at greater personal risk to score political points.

The larger issue is what this legislation reveals about New York’s priorities. At a time when residents are concerned about affordability, public safety, and an ongoing migrant crisis that has strained local resources, Albany has chosen to focus its attention on making life harder for federal immigration officers.

Governor Hochul may call it transparency.

Many New Yorkers will call it exactly what it is: another attempt to obstruct immigration enforcement while putting the people tasked with carrying it out in greater danger.

And that is a dangerous precedent, regardless of where you stand on immigration policy.

Inside the Federal Judiciary’s Alleged Culture of Protection and Silence

There was a time when Americans believed the federal judiciary stood apart from the dysfunction and hypocrisy that infects so many other institutions. Courts, we were told, were the guardians of fairness — places where constitutional rights mattered, where due process meant something, and where power would always be checked by principle.

But a case now headed toward the United States Supreme Court tells a far different story.

Caryn Strickland, a former assistant federal public defender, has asked the nation’s highest court to hear her lawsuit against the federal judiciary itself. Her argument is both startling and deeply unsettling: that the judiciary’s own internal system for handling workplace misconduct leaves thousands of court employees vulnerable, unprotected, and effectively trapped inside an institution that answers largely to itself.

At the heart of her petition is a simple but explosive accusation — that the very branch of government entrusted with protecting constitutional rights denied those same rights to one of its own employees.

Strickland claims the judiciary’s internal process for investigating misconduct violated her constitutional guarantees of due process and equal protection after she reported alleged sexual harassment by a supervisor while working as an assistant federal public defender in Charlotte, North Carolina.

What makes the case even more striking is who she is. This was not an inexperienced employee unfamiliar with the legal system. Strickland graduated near the top of her class at Duke Law School and later earned a prestigious Supreme Court fellowship. She knew the system. She understood the law. And yet she now argues that the judiciary itself operates as a “uniquely insulated institution” where employees lack many of the workplace protections ordinary Americans take for granted.

According to her petition, federal judiciary employees remain outside many of the safeguards provided under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Americans with Disabilities Act — laws that protect millions of workers elsewhere in the country.

Think about that for a moment.

The branch of government responsible for interpreting civil rights protections allegedly exempts itself from many of them internally.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit reportedly acknowledged flaws within its internal review process, yet still upheld the lower court’s decision against Strickland. That contradiction alone raises uncomfortable questions about accountability inside the judiciary. If flaws are acknowledged but relief is still denied, what meaningful remedy actually exists for employees inside the system?

This case is about more than one workplace dispute. It cuts directly into a growing public unease about institutions that investigate themselves, police themselves, and too often shield themselves from the standards imposed on everyone else.

For years, Americans have watched corporations, universities, police departments, religious institutions, and government agencies promise “internal reforms” after misconduct allegations surface. Again and again, the public learns that systems designed to protect institutions often fail the individuals inside them.

Now the same accusations are being leveled against the federal judiciary itself.

And perhaps that is the most uncomfortable part of all.

Because courts are not merely another institution. They are supposed to be the final refuge when every other institution fails.

The Black Robe Club

There was a time in America when the courthouse represented something almost sacred. The building itself mattered. The marble halls. The silence. The elevated bench. It was meant to send a message: here, above politics and ego and appetite, the rule of law prevails.

But every so often, the curtain slips.

This week came another reminder that the legal profession — particularly the judiciary — often protects its own with a gentleness ordinary citizens never receive.

According to reports involving a judge within the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, a married federal judge carried on a years-long sexual relationship with a police officer, including encounters inside courthouse chambers during work hours while clerks allegedly overheard intimate sounds through the walls. Think about that for a moment. Inside the very institution where Americans are lectured daily about professionalism, ethics, decorum, and accountability.

And yet the punishment amounted largely to a reprimand, some restrictions, and an apology.

No perp walk.
No public humiliation.
No dramatic moral lectures from the bench.
No life destroyed.

Imagine for a second if this had involved a court clerk, a probationary employee, or an ordinary litigant accused of misconduct inside a courthouse. Do you believe the system would have shown equal restraint and understanding? Most Americans already know the answer.

That is the real story here.

Not the affair itself. Human beings fail. Judges fail. Politicians fail. Clergy fail. We all know that.

What corrodes public confidence is the appearance that there is one standard for insiders and another for everyone else.

The legal world loves the word “ethics.” Lawyers speak of it endlessly. Judges issue stern warnings about integrity from elevated benches. Continuing legal education seminars are filled with lofty discussions about public trust and professional responsibility.

But too often the system behaves less like a search for justice and more like a private fraternity protecting its members from the consequences imposed on ordinary people.

For years now, I have written about the widening gap between how average citizens experience the legal system and how those within the system experience it themselves. To many Americans, especially those who have entered courtrooms without wealth, connections, or institutional status, the scales of justice increasingly feel weighted long before the first hearing begins.

And stories like this deepen that suspicion.

The judiciary survives on legitimacy. Judges possess neither armies nor police forces of their own. Their authority depends entirely upon the public believing the institution deserves respect.

That respect is not maintained through press releases or disciplinary memos quietly negotiated behind closed doors. It is maintained through consistency. Through transparency. Through accountability equally applied.

Otherwise the courthouse stops looking like a temple of justice and starts looking like a private club draped in black robes.

The Legal Profession’s Greatest Fiction: “Partner”

The older I get, the more I’ve come to distrust certain words in professional America — words polished so carefully they begin to lose all connection to reality.

And few words bother me more than partner.

Particularly in the legal world.

For years, I watched lawyers throw that word around with almost religious reverence. “He made partner.” “She’s up for partner.” “Our partners decided.” The way it’s spoken, you would think it describes a brotherhood of equals bound together by intellect, loyalty, and shared purpose.

But scratch beneath the mahogany conference tables, the skyline offices, the rehearsed professionalism, and you quickly discover something else entirely.

The word is often fiction.

A performance.

A carefully engineered illusion designed to make people feel included in a system that is, in reality, deeply hierarchical and brutally transactional.

I’ve dealt with enough lawyers over the years — in business, in litigation, and through painful personal experience — to see how the machine actually works. Associates destroy themselves chasing a title they’ve been conditioned to worship. They sacrifice marriages, health, sleep, time with their children, and sometimes their humanity for the possibility of one day hearing those magic words:

“You made partner.”

Then many discover the punchline.

Not all partners are equal.
Some aren’t even real owners.
Some have no meaningful power.
Some are “partners” in name only — highly compensated labor wearing a prestige label.

And the hypocrisy becomes impossible to ignore.

The legal profession — a profession obsessed with precision of language — knowingly uses one of the most misleading titles in corporate culture. They understand contracts down to the placement of a comma, but somehow the word partner can mean ten entirely different things depending on who’s making money.

That tells you everything.

What strikes me most is how disconnected the word feels from actual partnership. Real partnership requires loyalty. Shared sacrifice. Mutual protection. Honesty. It means standing with someone when circumstances become inconvenient.

But too often, the legal world rewards the opposite:
Political maneuvering.
Protecting billables.
Guarding clients like territory.
Strategic distancing when risk appears.
Disposable relationships hidden behind polished civility.

And then there are the judges.

The legal system pretends judges exist above the politics and ego of the profession, but they are still human beings wrapped in robes, titles, and institutional insulation. Some carry that responsibility with humility. Others become dangerously comfortable with the deference built into the courtroom itself.

That’s another fiction the profession rarely discusses honestly.

Courtrooms often develop their own hierarchy of worth. Large firms enter with presumed credibility. Powerful litigants receive patience and accommodation. Meanwhile, ordinary people — especially self-represented litigants — frequently enter carrying the burden of suspicion before they even open their mouths.

The robe is supposed to symbolize fairness.

Sometimes it becomes a shield against accountability.

And after watching enough of the system operate up close, I’ve realized something uncomfortable: many people do not lose faith in the justice system because they hate the law. They lose faith because they watch power protect itself while speaking the language of fairness.

Which brings me to the only part of the law I still genuinely respect.

Sometimes the only real fun of the law is stopping powerful people from pushing other people around.

That includes corporations.
That includes arrogant lawyers.
And yes, sometimes that includes judges.

Because beneath all the polished language, titles, and mythology, the legal profession is still fundamentally about power. Who has it. Who protects it. Who fears it. And who is willing to challenge it.

There is something deeply satisfying about watching someone who is accustomed to intimidation suddenly forced to answer difficult questions. About seeing institutional arrogance meet resistance. About watching someone finally say:

“No. You do not get to abuse power simply because everyone around you is afraid to challenge you.”

Those are the rare moments where the law becomes meaningful again.

Not the networking dinners.
Not the prestige.
Not the carefully curated biographies.

Just resistance.

Just accountability.

Just somebody standing in the path of people who became too comfortable pushing others around.

Maybe that’s why the word partner rings so hollow to me now.

Because real partnership requires humility.

And humility is becoming increasingly rare inside a profession obsessed with power.

1.7 Million Views Later: Why my Cuba Facebook Post Exploded Across Facebook

Over the past several days, my post regarding Cuba, Fidel Castro, Che Guevara, and the brutal legacy of political executions under that regime exploded across Facebook in a way I never anticipated. The reaction was enormous, emotional, and deeply divided.

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1BSpQxGVSx/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Some people thanked me for speaking about the suffering endured by Cuban families who fled tyranny. Others angrily challenged the historical framing of the photograph I initially shared. The debate became fierce, personal, and at times ugly — which, frankly, says a great deal about how emotionally charged these historical wounds still remain decades later.

What cannot be denied is this:

The post struck a nerve.

The numbers alone are staggering:

• 1.7 million views
• 204,723 engagements — comments, reactions, shares, and discussions

That level of visibility does not happen because people are indifferent. It happens because history still matters. Memory still matters. And the scars left behind by authoritarian governments do not simply disappear because time passes.

Yes, the controversy cost me followers. Some people were furious that I would criticize Castro or challenge the romanticized imagery that still surrounds figures like Che Guevara in certain political circles. Others demanded factual corrections regarding the specific photograph used in the original post. And where clarification was needed, clarification was made.

But here is the larger truth that many seem desperate to avoid:

Correcting the caption of a single image does not erase the documented history of political executions, prison camps, repression, censorship, fear, and suffering experienced by countless Cubans under the Castro regime. Those stories are real. Those families are real. I know this because I once devoted an entire radio program to four Cuban Americans who shared, on air, the stories of what their own families endured escaping that country.

I listened to their voices.

I heard the pain.

And I will never apologize for believing those stories deserve to be remembered.

What fascinates me most is how quickly some people become enraged when communist regimes are criticized with the same moral clarity routinely applied to right-wing dictatorships. Historical honesty should not depend on political fashion.

The reality is simple: history is complicated, revolutions are bloody, and propaganda exists on all sides. But if a Facebook post generates 1.7 million views and over 200,000 interactions simply by forcing people to confront uncomfortable history, then perhaps the discussion was one worth having.

Agree or disagree with me — that is your right.

But the conversation clearly mattered.

Valley Viewpoint: The Hudson Valley Tax Machine Never Stops

The tax machine is always hungry.

This week, Jen Metzger unveiled a proposal for an income-based surcharge on higher earners in Ulster County — a plan that would target residents making over $200,000, or couples making over $400,000. County officials say the measure could generate between $10 million and $20 million annually. (spectrumlocalnews.com)

And there it is again: the same tired formula politicians across New York use every time government wants more money.

Find a group small enough to demonize.
Call them “the wealthy.”
Tell struggling residents this new tax will only hurt “someone else.”
Then expand government even further.

The problem is that in New York, “someone else” eventually becomes everyone else.

People are already drowning here. Property taxes. School taxes. Sales taxes. Utility bills. Gas prices. Insurance costs. Fees piled on top of fees. Young families can’t afford homes. Seniors are fleeing states they spent their entire lives helping build. Businesses are quietly looking for the exits.

And the answer from government is always the same:
More taxes.

Never restraint.
Never reform.
Never asking whether government itself has become too large, too expensive, and too addicted to taxpayer money.

The Hudson Valley used to be a place where working and middle-class families could build a life. Increasingly, it feels like a region being redesigned for political activists, government expansion, and wealthy transplants who can absorb endless tax increases while lifelong residents get crushed.

And let’s stop pretending these “targeted” taxes stay targeted.

That is the oldest lie in New York politics.

Once government creates a new revenue stream, it never voluntarily gives it up. The thresholds move. The taxes spread. The bureaucracy grows. The middle class absorbs the damage.

Residents should be asking a simple question:
If nearly half a billion dollars in county spending still isn’t enough, when exactly does government believe it has enough of our money?

Because the truth is this proposal says less about “fairness” than it does about the mindset now dominating New York government:

If government has a spending problem, taxpayers must have a funding problem.

And that mentality is driving people out of this state every single day.

The Rule of Law — Unless Albany Disagrees

Albany has officially crossed another line.

This week, Governor Kathy Hochul signed legislation effectively prohibiting cooperation between local authorities and ICE. Think about that for a moment. New York State is now openly positioning itself against federal immigration enforcement.

Not against violent criminals.
Not against gangs.
Not against fentanyl.
Against cooperation with federal law enforcement itself.

And we are supposed to pretend this is somehow “normal.”

The political class in Albany loves to talk about “democracy” and “the rule of law.” They lecture taxpayers endlessly about compliance, regulations, mandates, permits, licensing, and government authority. They demand obedience from law-abiding citizens at every turn.

But when it comes to immigration law? Suddenly the message becomes optional enforcement. Suddenly cooperation is unacceptable. Suddenly federal law is treated like an inconvenience.

It’s breathtaking hypocrisy.

And here in the Hudson Valley, residents are getting tired of it.

People in Dutchess County are trying to survive crushing property taxes, soaring utility costs, unaffordable housing prices, and growing concerns about public safety. Families worry about whether their kids will even be able to afford to remain in the communities where they grew up.

But Albany’s priority? Fighting ICE.

Not fixing New York.
Not lowering taxes.
Not making neighborhoods safer.
Not helping working families.

Fighting ICE.

And let’s stop dancing around reality. Policies like this send a message far beyond New York’s borders. They tell the world that enforcement is weak, political leaders are divided, and ideology now matters more than public safety or national sovereignty.

Meanwhile, the same politicians supporting these policies will stand before microphones demanding more federal funding, more federal disaster aid, more federal infrastructure money, and more federal assistance for migrants themselves.

So let’s get this straight:
They want Washington’s money.
They want Washington’s programs.
They want Washington’s protection.

They just don’t want Washington enforcing immigration law.

Many New Yorkers are beginning to realize something uncomfortable: Albany is no longer governing for ordinary residents. It is governing for activists, political optics, and national headlines.

And every time this state moves further into ideological extremism, more working families quietly pack up and leave.

That may be the clearest vote of all.