When New York City Sneezes, the Hudson Valley Reaches for a Tissue

There’s a familiar rhythm to New York politics.

A new mayor takes office in New York City, promises transformation, and within months the budget numbers start landing with a thud. This time it’s Zohran Mamdani — the progressive standard-bearer who campaigned on taxing the wealthy, expanding services, and reshaping the city’s priorities.

Now he’s staring at a multibillion-dollar gap in a $127 billion budget.

Some commentators are already declaring collapse. Others are calling it proof that idealism can’t survive contact with spreadsheets.

But from where we sit in the Hudson Valley, the question isn’t whether Mamdani’s numbers add up.

The question is what happens to us if they don’t.

Because when New York City sneezes, the Hudson Valley doesn’t just hear it — we feel it.

We felt it during COVID when families packed up apartments in Brooklyn and Manhattan and headed north for space and sanity. We felt it in bidding wars in Beacon, in rising rents in Poughkeepsie, in once-quiet Dutchess County roads now crowded with commuter traffic. We felt it when cash offers from the five boroughs reset the price of starter homes here.

If the mayor raises property taxes in the city, landlords will respond. If services get trimmed, quality-of-life concerns will resurface. If Albany — and Kathy Hochul — refuse to plug revenue gaps the way City Hall hopes, pressure builds.

And pressure in the city has a way of rolling north.

Higher city taxes? More migration.

Housing instability? More demand up here.

Public safety anxieties? Another wave of “We’re thinking about moving to the Hudson Valley.”

That’s not a partisan observation. It’s economic physics.

Now, to be fair, every mayor inherits structural challenges. Pension obligations, debt service, long-term labor contracts — these aren’t Mamdani’s creations. They’re baked into the city’s financial DNA. Campaign slogans don’t erase decades of fiscal architecture.

But governing is different from campaigning.

It’s one thing to promise sweeping change. It’s another to close a multibillion-dollar deficit without angering homeowners, unsettling business confidence, or testing Albany’s patience.

For those of us north of the Bronx River Parkway, we should be paying attention — not because we’re rooting for failure or cheering for vindication, but because our housing market, tax base, school enrollments, and small businesses are directly affected by the stability of New York City.

A strong city stabilizes the region.

A struggling city exports its instability.

The Hudson Valley has its own identity — its own politics, its own economic drivers — but we are still part of the gravitational pull of New York City. When Wall Street wobbles, we wobble. When city taxes rise, our real estate listings spike.

So no, this isn’t about declaring Mamdani’s administration a success or a disaster six weeks in. That’s cable-news theater.

This is about recognizing that the decisions made in City Hall echo along the Metro-North line.

And if you’re a homeowner in Fishkill, a renter in Newburgh, a small-business owner in Rhinebeck, or a young family trying to buy your first house in Pleasant Valley — you have a stake in how this budget story unfolds.

Because whether we like it or not, when New York City writes its next chapter, the Hudson Valley ends up in the margins.

The Day Federal Court Changed My Daughter’s Life

When lawyers draft motions alleging “loss of the ability to enjoy life,” they usually mean something visible — a spinal injury, a brain trauma, a permanent physical limitation. The law recognizes that beyond medical bills and lost wages, there is something deeper: the diminished ability to live freely and fully.

We rarely imagine that loss beginning in a courtroom.

My daughter entered federal court believing in something simple and foundational — that whatever the outcome, the process would be fair. That a life-tenured judge, insulated from politics and pressure, would embody neutrality. That the courtroom was the one place where power was disciplined by rules.

In the courtroom of Victor Bolden, that belief began to erode.

Litigation is adversarial. Losing motions is not injustice. Judges interrupt, press counsel, and make difficult calls. None of that is improper by itself. But atmosphere matters. Tone matters. The distribution of patience and skepticism matters.

From the gallery, you notice patterns.

You notice when one side is permitted to expand while the other is cut short.

You notice when factual claims from one table are absorbed while the other’s are dissected.

You notice when a litigant begins to feel less like a participant in justice and more like an obstacle to docket efficiency.

Then came the moment that changed everything.

In a civil proceeding — not a criminal case — my daughter was ordered to turn over passwords to her personal electronic devices. When she did not comply to the court’s satisfaction, the consequence was not a fine. It was not a stern warning.

It was jail.

Federal courts possess civil contempt power. Judges must be able to enforce their lawful orders. That authority is longstanding and essential to the rule of law. But authority and proportionality are not identical.

Watching your daughter taken into custody in a civil dispute over access to personal devices is not an abstract lesson in jurisprudence. It is immediate. It is humiliating. It is destabilizing.

In that instant, federal court no longer felt like neutral ground. It felt like the full weight of government pressing down in a dispute that was not criminal in nature.

The sleepless nights intensified. The anxiety sharpened. The dread before hearings became physical. And something else quietly disappeared: the unguarded trust that the institution itself would feel level, even in defeat.

Loss of enjoyment of life is often framed in terms of recreation — the inability to ski, to travel, to play with a child. But there is another kind of loss: the erosion of institutional trust. The loss of civic ease. The altered way a young person walks into any room where authority resides.

Appeals exist. Standards of review exist. Judicial conduct mechanisms exist. The system contains safeguards.

But those remedies operate on transcripts and citations. They do not restore the internal shift that occurs when a young woman leaves federal court having experienced incarceration inside a civil case.

Judicial independence is indispensable. Courts must be free from political pressure. But independence does not mean insulation from scrutiny. Public confidence is the judiciary’s oxygen. And confidence depends not only on legal correctness, but on visible restraint and proportionality.

When enforcement feels overwhelming relative to the dispute, the human cost can outlast the litigation itself.

The law measures broken bones with charts and actuarial tables.

It has yet to find a reliable metric for broken trust.

The day my daughter was taken into custody in a civil proceeding, something fundamental changed. Not just about the case. About how she sees institutions. About how she experiences authority. About the quiet assumption that the courtroom is the place where imbalance is corrected.

If we are serious about the concept of “loss of the ability to enjoy life,” we should recognize that it is not limited to physical injury. It can begin in the very institutions designed to protect fairness.

And once that trust is shaken inside a federal courtroom, rebuilding it is far more difficult than drafting a motion.

When New York City’s Budget Becomes the Hudson Valley’s Business

New York City’s new mayor, Zohran Mamdani, is discovering that governing is far more complicated than campaigning. His first major budget proposal — a record-setting $127 billion plan — attempts to close a projected multibillion-dollar deficit while preserving an ambitious progressive agenda.

But the numbers are sobering.

To bridge the gap, the mayor has floated a stark choice: Albany agrees to higher taxes on wealthy earners and corporations — or New Yorkers could face a property tax hike approaching double digits. For a city already wrestling with affordability, that’s not a small threat. It lands squarely on homeowners, small businesses, and yes — renters.

Editorial voices nationally have questioned whether this moment represents a hard collision between vision and arithmetic. It’s one thing to promise expansive programs. It’s another to pay for them when the ledger turns red.

But here in the Hudson Valley, there’s another question quietly hovering over all of this:

Will more New York City residents move up?

We’ve seen this story before.

When taxes rise.

When public safety feels uncertain.

When the cost of living crosses from “high” into “unsustainable.”

People look north.

During COVID, we watched Brooklyn and Manhattan zip codes relocate to Beacon, Poughkeepsie, Kingston, Rhinebeck, Pleasant Valley — even further up the river. Home prices surged. Rental markets tightened. School districts adjusted. Main Streets changed.

If New York City’s response to a fiscal crisis is higher property taxes and continued spending growth, does that accelerate the migration pattern again?

And if it does — are we ready?

More residents can mean stronger local economies. It can mean vibrant downtowns and rising property values. But it also means pressure: on housing supply, on infrastructure, on traffic, on school budgets, on the very character of the towns many of us chose for their breathing room.

There’s also a state-level dimension. If Albany is asked to raise taxes to rescue the city, that doesn’t stay south of Westchester. State tax policy affects the entire map — from Wall Street to Washingtonville.

This isn’t about rooting for or against New York City. The city’s success matters to all of us. Our commuter lines, our small businesses, our job markets — they’re intertwined.

But fiscal decisions in Manhattan rarely stay in Manhattan.

So as this budget battle unfolds, the question isn’t just whether Mayor Mamdani can balance his books.

It’s whether the next chapter of New York City policy will once again reshape the Hudson Valley.

And if it does — will we be leading that change, or reacting to it?

If you’d like, I can tighten this for a 3-minute radio read with punchier transitions and a stronger closing line for Hudson Valley This Morning.

The Valley Viewpoint: The Cost of Restraint

There are moments when the marble façade of the Supreme Court of the United States feels less like a symbol of stability and more like a brake pedal pressed hard.

This week was one of those moments.

In a 6–3 decision, the Court struck down the sweeping tariffs imposed by Donald Trump under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. The majority said the president had gone too far — that Congress, and Congress alone, holds the power to levy taxes and tariffs.

On paper, it reads like a tidy constitutional lesson.

But the world outside the courtroom isn’t tidy.

We are living in an era of economic combat dressed up as commerce. Nations subsidize their industries. Supply chains are weaponized. Critical materials move across oceans controlled by competitors who do not wait for legislative calendars to clear.

Congress passed IEEPA decades ago because it understood something simple: emergencies don’t wait for debate. Presidents were given tools not for convenience, but for speed. For leverage. For the ability to respond when markets move faster than motions on the House floor.

The Court’s ruling narrows that lane.

Here in the Hudson Valley, we may not talk about statutory interpretation over morning coffee, but we understand pressure. We understand what happens when costs shift overnight. When container prices spike. When imported components suddenly carry new uncertainty.

Tariffs are blunt instruments. No one denies that. They can raise prices. They can strain supply chains. But they can also signal resolve. They can protect strategic industries. They can serve as bargaining chips in a global negotiation where hesitation is weakness.

The majority saw constitutional overreach. The dissenters saw something else — a presidency constrained at a time when global competition is anything but constrained.

And that’s where the unease settles.

If Congress wants to restrict executive authority, it has every right to amend the statute. That is how a republic functions. But when the Court narrows long-standing delegated power through interpretation, it does more than referee a dispute — it recalibrates the balance of economic power in real time.

The practical questions now loom larger than the doctrinal ones.

What happens in the next crisis?

What happens when a future president — of either party — needs immediate economic leverage?

Do we wait for 535 lawmakers to find consensus while competitors move decisively?

In theory, restraint preserves liberty. In practice, it can sometimes slow response.

This isn’t about one man. It isn’t about one policy. It’s about the tension between structure and strength — between constitutional purity and economic reality.

The Constitution is our foundation. It must endure. But a foundation alone does not win trade wars or secure supply chains.

In the Hudson Valley, we value balance. We value accountability. But we also understand that leadership requires tools.

The question the Court leaves us with is not whether the structure held.

It’s whether, in holding it so tightly, we have made it harder to act when action is needed most.

Ed Kowalski

The Valley Viewpoint

Power Protects Itself — Unless We Don’t Let It

When the Epstein scandal finally broke open, the world focused on wealth, jets, mansions, and famous names.
But the real inflection point wasn’t luxury.
It was courage.
Virginia Giuffre — known earlier as Virginia Roberts — did something that history often demands but rarely rewards: she stood up publicly against people with more power, more money, and more insulation than she had.
She knew what would follow.
Scrutiny. Doubt. Smears. Legal intimidation. Character attacks.
And she did it anyway.
That is what punctures insulation.
Because the deeper lesson of Jeffrey Epstein was not simply that evil can hide in plain sight.
It was that power survives when silence survives.
And silence survives when communities make it uncomfortable to speak.
Now bring that lens home to the Hudson Valley.
What’s unfolding around Frankie Flowers is not the same in scale. But the moral test is similar.
There are women here — local women — who have stepped forward. Who have chosen discomfort over quiet. Who have risked backlash in a region where networks are tight and relationships overlap.
That matters.
In a community like ours, standing up is not abstract. It means possibly seeing people at school events, town meetings, fundraisers. It means knowing the social ripple will be immediate and personal.
It takes something to speak anyway.
And regardless of where investigations ultimately land — whether allegations are substantiated or disproven — the act of coming forward should not automatically trigger ridicule, dismissal, or reflexive character assassination.
We learned from the Epstein era what happens when the first instinct is to defend influence rather than examine facts.
We learned what happens when the vulnerable feel alone.
So yes — due process must govern outcomes.
But courage deserves acknowledgment.
When women in the Hudson Valley stand up and say, “This is what happened to me,” or “This is what I experienced,” the appropriate first response is not tribal alignment.
It is seriousness.
It is listening.
It is allowing institutions to work without social pressure tilting the scale.
Power protects itself — unless communities decide that transparency protects them more.
The strength of a region is not measured by how fiercely it shields its familiar faces.
It is measured by whether those without insulation feel safe enough to speak.
Virginia Giuffre forced the world to confront an uncomfortable truth: influence does not equal innocence.
Here at home, women are showing similar resolve on a smaller stage.
And whatever the legal outcomes, the courage to step forward in a close-knit community is something we should not dismiss.
It is something we should recognize.
And yes — it is something we should applaud.

The Valley Viewpoint: The Cost of Restraint

There are moments when the marble façade of the Supreme Court of the United States feels less like a symbol of stability and more like a brake pedal pressed hard.

This week was one of those moments.

In a 6–3 decision, the Court struck down the sweeping tariffs imposed by Donald Trump under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. The majority said the president had gone too far — that Congress, and Congress alone, holds the power to levy taxes and tariffs.

On paper, it reads like a tidy constitutional lesson.

But the world outside the courtroom isn’t tidy.

We are living in an era of economic combat dressed up as commerce. Nations subsidize their industries. Supply chains are weaponized. Critical materials move across oceans controlled by competitors who do not wait for legislative calendars to clear.

Congress passed IEEPA decades ago because it understood something simple: emergencies don’t wait for debate. Presidents were given tools not for convenience, but for speed. For leverage. For the ability to respond when markets move faster than motions on the House floor.

The Court’s ruling narrows that lane.

Here in the Hudson Valley, we may not talk about statutory interpretation over morning coffee, but we understand pressure. We understand what happens when costs shift overnight. When container prices spike. When imported components suddenly carry new uncertainty.

Tariffs are blunt instruments. No one denies that. They can raise prices. They can strain supply chains. But they can also signal resolve. They can protect strategic industries. They can serve as bargaining chips in a global negotiation where hesitation is weakness.

The majority saw constitutional overreach. The dissenters saw something else — a presidency constrained at a time when global competition is anything but constrained.

And that’s where the unease settles.

If Congress wants to restrict executive authority, it has every right to amend the statute. That is how a republic functions. But when the Court narrows long-standing delegated power through interpretation, it does more than referee a dispute — it recalibrates the balance of economic power in real time.

The practical questions now loom larger than the doctrinal ones.

What happens in the next crisis?

What happens when a future president — of either party — needs immediate economic leverage?

Do we wait for 535 lawmakers to find consensus while competitors move decisively?

In theory, restraint preserves liberty. In practice, it can sometimes slow response.

This isn’t about one man. It isn’t about one policy. It’s about the tension between structure and strength — between constitutional purity and economic reality.

The Constitution is our foundation. It must endure. But a foundation alone does not win trade wars or secure supply chains.

In the Hudson Valley, we value balance. We value accountability. But we also understand that leadership requires tools.

The question the Court leaves us with is not whether the structure held.

It’s whether, in holding it so tightly, we have made it harder to act when action is needed most.

Ed Kowalski

The Valley Viewpoint

A Goodbye to Donut Dolly and a Thank You I’ll Never Forget

Some stories hit differently when the name on the door belongs to someone you know.
This weekend, Doughnut Dolly in Eastdale Village will close.
And for me, this one is deeply personal.
Because Jen isn’t just “the owner.”
She’s my friend.
I’ve watched her build this from scratch — not from a franchise blueprint or corporate backing — but from grit, instinct, and heart. I’ve seen the early mornings, the flour-dusted exhaustion, the pride when a batch came out just right.
People see the pink boxes and the pastry case.
They don’t see the 3 a.m. alarms.
They don’t see the cost of ingredients climbing. The labor math. The rent that never pauses. The quiet stress that small business owners carry so the rest of us can enjoy something sweet.
Jen opened Doughnut Dolly because she believed Eastdale deserved something handmade. Something joyful. Something that felt like a Saturday morning ritual in a world that moves too fast.
And it became exactly that.
But here’s where this becomes more than a business story.
A good friend of mine was going through one of the hardest chapters a family can face. Her father was in hospice. He was losing weight because he wasn’t eating. Anyone who has lived through that knows the helplessness — the way you try everything just to get a few bites into someone you love.
And somehow — Jen’s Boston Cremes did the trick.
For reasons only the soul understands, he would eat those.
In a season filled with decline and quiet sorrow, those donuts brought comfort. Calories. A small spark of pleasure in a body that was letting go.
You can’t put that on a balance sheet.
You can’t measure that in monthly revenue.
But I can measure it in gratitude.
I will always be grateful to Jen for that. Not just for the donut — but for the dignity and sweetness it carried into a very hard moment for someone I care about.
That’s what small businesses do when they’re rooted in heart.
They show up in unexpected places.
Now, the doors will close. And yes, Eastdale will move on. Spaces get filled. New signs go up. That’s the rhythm of commerce.
But for those of us who know the backstory — who know the woman behind the counter — this isn’t just turnover.
It’s the closing of a chapter written with courage.
Jen took a risk. She created something beautiful. She served this community with care. And in at least one family’s final chapter, she made a difference that mattered.
This weekend, if you stop by, don’t just grab a donut.
Tell her thank you.
Because sometimes, a Boston Creme is more than dessert.
Sometimes, it’s grace.

Are You THE Ed Kowalski?

It happened in the most ordinary way.

A folding table. A sign-in sheet. The familiar low hum of conversation before a meeting of the Dutchess County Republican Committee. The kind of room where people compare notes about school taxes, town boards, state overreach, and whose lawn signs are still up from November.

I stepped up to sign in.

The woman at the desk looked up from the clipboard, tilted her head slightly, and asked:

“Are you THE Ed Kowalski?”

Now, I admit — I was taken aback.

There was a split second where I wondered what version of myself had arrived before I did. So I answered the only way that made sense in the moment:

“No,” I said. “I’m not the owner of Lola’s Café.”

She laughed.

“No! I read your blog.”

And just like that, something small — but meaningful — happened.

Not because of ego. Not because of recognition. But because it reminded me that words travel.

You sit at a kitchen table early in the morning. Or late at night. You write about judges and budgets. About criminal justice. About town supervisors. About the Hudson Valley’s quiet strengths and loud hypocrisies. You press publish on Kowalski.blog and assume it drifts into the digital ether.

But it doesn’t.

It lands.

It lands in Pleasant Valley.

It lands in Poughkeepsie.

It lands in Beacon.

It lands in the inbox of someone sitting behind a folding table at a county committee meeting.

And apparently, sometimes it walks into the room before you do.

There was something beautifully Hudson Valley about it. Not celebrity. Not spectacle. Just recognition rooted in community. The kind that says: I’ve been reading. I’ve been paying attention. What you’re saying matters.

We talk a lot about influence in national terms. Cable news panels. Viral posts. Big platforms.

But real influence is quieter.

It’s when someone who has never emailed you, never commented, never argued in the thread, still reads every week.

It’s when civic engagement moves from abstract to personal.

It’s when someone greets you not as a caricature — not as a headline — but as a voice they’ve come to know.

And if I’m being honest, it was humbling.

Because the responsibility of being “THE” anything in your own community is heavier than it sounds.

If people are reading, you better be careful.

If people are listening, you better be honest.

If people recognize your name, you better earn it.

Politics can become cynical. Party meetings can become procedural. But moments like that remind me why I write in the first place.

Not for applause.

Not for argument.

Not for clicks.

But for conversation.

For accountability.

For shared memory.

For a Hudson Valley that deserves to be taken seriously.

So tonight, to the woman at the sign-in desk — thank you.

You startled me.

But you also reminded me that this little project of mine is no longer little.

And maybe, just maybe, that means we’re building something worthwhile.

— Ed Kowalski

Valley Viewpoint

A Slogan Is Not a Policy

When Pat Ryan stood before a Hudson Valley crowd and declared, “Do not mess with the Hudson Valley,” it made for a strong headline.

It stirred emotion.

It drew applause.

It framed him as a defender of the region.

But slogans are not policies.

The controversy centers around a proposed ICE processing facility in Chester. Ryan has been unequivocal in his opposition, calling such facilities un-American and pledging to fight their placement here. He has also rejected campaign contributions connected to ICE contractors and aligned himself with immigrant advocacy groups.

That’s clear.

What is not clear is this:

What does he propose instead for criminal illegal aliens?

Not for families seeking asylum.

Not for visa overstays with no criminal history.

But for individuals here unlawfully who have committed serious crimes.

The public record shows strong opposition to detention expansion. It shows passionate language about due process and humane treatment. It shows political resistance to federal infrastructure in the Valley.

What it does not show is a clearly articulated enforcement alternative.

Should criminal illegal aliens be detained?

If so, where?

If not locally, then where?

Should they be deported after conviction?

What crimes qualify?

What reforms does he support in statute?

These are not fringe questions. They are central to public safety.

The Hudson Valley is compassionate — but it is also practical. Veterans in Castle Point deserve safety. Families in Chester deserve transparency. Small business owners deserve clarity. When an elected official draws a line in the sand, voters deserve to know what lies behind it.

Opposing a facility is a position.

Proposing a solution is leadership.

Immigration enforcement is not binary. One can oppose abusive detention practices while still supporting the removal of violent offenders. One can demand due process while acknowledging that criminal activity forfeits certain privileges.

The Valley is not naïve. We understand complexity.

If the message is “Don’t mess with the Hudson Valley,” then the follow-up must be:

Here is how we protect it.

Because without a concrete proposal for handling criminal illegal aliens, the statement risks becoming political theater rather than public policy.

And here in the Hudson Valley, we expect more than theater.

From Surplus to Deficit: A Warning From Sacramento to the Hudson Valley

There’s something unsettling about a governor who seems more comfortable on the world stage than in his own statehouse.

The recent New York Post editorial raised concerns about Gavin Newsom — not just as California’s chief executive, but as a man increasingly operating like a national candidate. Trade missions. Climate alliances. Global speeches. Messaging calibrated far beyond Sacramento.

But let’s talk numbers — because numbers tell the story ambition can’t hide.

California once celebrated a record surplus. Billions in excess revenue. Fiscal triumph. Yet within a short span, that surplus evaporated into a massive structural deficit. Tens of billions short. Program trims. Accounting shifts. Budget gymnastics.

Surpluses built on peak-cycle revenue. Spending commitments built on temporary highs. And then reality.

Sound familiar?

Here in the Hudson Valley, we’ve had our own quiet debates about fund balances and fiscal restraint. When county leaders talk about tapping reserves, expanding recurring spending during revenue spikes, or building permanent programs on temporary federal money, the same warning lights should flash.

A surplus is not a spending invitation.

It’s a cushion.

It’s insurance.

It’s discipline rewarded.

Whether it’s Sacramento or Poughkeepsie, whether it’s a governor eyeing the White House or local officials floating fare-free bus proposals and long-term commitments, the math doesn’t change. Temporary money cannot sustain permanent promises.

The Valley Viewpoint lens is simple: fiscal responsibility is not ideological — it’s mathematical.

When leaders move quickly from surplus to deficit, voters are entitled to ask hard questions. Were we cautious enough? Were we honest about volatility? Did we protect taxpayers from the next downturn?

California’s fiscal swing isn’t just a West Coast story. It’s a cautionary tale for every county legislature, every town board, every state capital — including ours.

Ambition is fine. Vision is necessary. But stewardship comes first.

Because once the surplus is gone, the applause fades.

And taxpayers are left holding the bill.

I’ve Said It Before — The Robe Doesn’t Make You Honorable

I’ve written before — more than once — that I no longer use the phrase “Your Honor.”
Not because I don’t respect the rule of law.
But because far too many who wear the robe have forgotten what honor actually requires.
Now comes the latest example.
According to the New York Post, Rockland County Supreme Court Justice Sherri Eisenpress is stepping down after findings by the New York State Commission on Judicial Conduct. Vacations with attorneys who appeared before her. Group text threads with off-color jokes and sexually explicit images. Cases presided over without disclosure of personal relationships.
And we’re supposed to pretend this is just a lapse in judgment?
I’ve posted before about judges who intimidate, belittle, and hide behind procedure. About the quiet arrogance that can settle into a courtroom when no one dares challenge the bench. About how the symbolism of the robe has too often been misused as a shield instead of a standard.
This isn’t about one trip. Or one text thread.
It’s about culture.
When a judge is socializing in tropical destinations with lawyers who later stand before her arguing cases, the issue isn’t friendship. It’s power. It’s access. It’s the appearance — and perhaps the reality — of insiders and outsiders in a system that is supposed to be blind.
Justice isn’t supposed to look like a private club.
The Commission exists to protect the integrity of the judiciary. But the real damage is done long before a resignation letter is signed. It’s done when ordinary citizens begin to believe that the courtroom is rigged. That outcomes are influenced by relationships. That fairness is negotiable.
And once public trust erodes, it’s almost impossible to restore.
I’ve seen honor displayed in quiet courage — in people who stand up in courtrooms despite the odds. I’ve also seen its absence, when authority is used to intimidate rather than uphold the law.
The robe doesn’t confer honor.
Conduct does.
And until the judiciary understands that respect is earned — not commanded — stories like this will keep surfacing.
The system doesn’t need blind loyalty.
It needs reform.

The Business of Being in Power

There was a time when public office was described as a sacrifice — a temporary act of service undertaken at personal cost. Today, it increasingly resembles something else: a career track with remarkable financial upside.

This isn’t a partisan observation. It’s structural.

Members of Congress earn fixed salaries that are publicly disclosed. Yet year after year, financial filings reveal portfolios that place many of them firmly in the ranks of the wealthy.

Nancy Pelosi has reported a net worth widely estimated north of $100 million.

Mitch McConnell has disclosed wealth in the tens of millions.

There are explanations — spouses’ careers, investments, long tenures. None of that is illegal. But legality is not the same as legitimacy in the public mind. When lawmakers routinely accumulate wealth far beyond the median citizen they regulate, confidence erodes. The appearance of alignment between power and prosperity becomes impossible to ignore.

And Congress is only part of the equation.

In many states, judges run for office. Campaigns must be funded. Fundraisers are held. Attorneys and firms that will later appear before those same judges often contribute to those campaigns. Again, much of this is legal. But the mere fact that it is legal does not quiet the deeper concern: justice must not only be impartial — it must appear impartial.

When a lawyer can host a fundraiser for a judicial candidate and later stand before that judge arguing a case, something corrosive enters the bloodstream of the system. Even if every ruling is scrupulously fair, the public sees proximity. It sees access. It sees a circle that feels too small.

Add to this the vast regulatory state, where industries are shaped by rules written by officials who may one day work within the very sectors they oversee. The so-called “revolving door” is not a conspiracy theory; it is a documented career pathway. Regulators become consultants. Staffers become lobbyists. Former officials become strategic advisors — valued precisely for their inside knowledge of the machinery of power.

The result is subtle but profound.

Wealth increasingly flows not only from innovation or production, but from navigation. Those who master the levers of influence often prosper more reliably than those who build tangible value. Compliance departments grow larger. Lobbying expenditures rise. Political fundraising becomes permanent infrastructure.

Meanwhile, small business owners, tradesmen, and entrepreneurs spend increasing amounts of time and money not creating, but complying — seeking approvals, navigating codes, managing risk from rules written far away.

The inversion becomes clear: proximity to power can yield greater returns than excellence in craft.

This is not a moral indictment of individuals. It is a critique of incentives.

When the structure of governance allows — or appears to allow — public service to coincide with private enrichment, the public begins to doubt the motives of its leaders. When judges depend on campaign donations from those who appear before them, citizens question neutrality. When regulatory complexity advantages the well-connected over the independent, trust gives way to cynicism.

A republic does not fail in a single dramatic moment. It erodes when its citizens conclude that the system rewards access more than effort.

Ayn Rand’s warning was not about one politician or one judge. It was about inversion — the quiet reversal of values. When producing requires permission from those who produce nothing; when influence outpaces industry; when the law feels less like a shield and more like a gate — society drifts.

The most dangerous consequence is not corruption itself.

It is normalization.

When young people observe that the safest path to prosperity runs through political proximity rather than productive excellence, ambition shifts. “What can I build?” becomes “Who do I need to know?”

And when that question becomes the default, the business of being in power is no longer a side effect of governance.

It becomes the point.