Not My Queen ©️

We are no longer approaching a cultural collapse—we are in the middle of it. And almost no one is willing to say it.

A segment of the African American community, once defined by its strength under pressure and its relentless will to rise, has been overtaken by a new breed of institutionalized entitlement. This isn’t the dignity of civil rights marches. It’s not the craftsmanship of Black business owners building generational wealth against all odds. It’s not the art forged in pain, discipline, and vision. This is something else—a brittle, inflated culture of grievance, grown bloated on apologies, corporate appeasement, and media worship.

The narrative has shifted. Pain now demands deference. Critique is treated as violence. Standards are optional. Accountability is oppression. The loudest voices don’t speak for the community—they drown it. The quiet builders, the serious thinkers, the disciplined few—they’re either ignored or shouted down, replaced by influencers, bureaucrats, and opportunists who’ve learned to profit from a pain they no longer even feel.

Let’s be clear: real Black progress in America has been rare and hard-won. The gains are recent, the victories fragile. Civil rights were not ancient history. Economic footholds are still soft, educational gaps still deep. And yet the culture now seems determined to squander that progress. Every demand for unearned privilege, every institutional bending of the knee, every reflexive rejection of personal responsibility undermines the very ground that was fought for.

And the situation is already critical.

We’re not at the beginning of a cultural drift. We are well into the spiral.

Major cities are crumbling. Schools are failing. Crime is rising and excused. Respect for law, merit, and even basic conduct is collapsing—not because of racism, but because of the refusal to name this moment for what it is: a culture that has internalized fragility and externalized blame.

And here’s the hard truth: The chances of turning this around are small.

Why? Because the institutions that should correct course—media, education, politics—are afraid. Afraid of being called racist. Afraid of backlash. Afraid of losing funding, reputation, or comfort. So instead of leading, they enable.

Instead of elevating the strong, they amplify the manipulative.

Entitlement, once installed at scale, becomes nearly impossible to reverse. You cannot debate with it, because it calls dissent oppression. You cannot reform it, because it views every correction as an attack. And you cannot save those who believe their ruin is righteousness.

What comes next is not progress. It is collapse—of credibility, of respect, of any remaining cultural leverage.

If this continues, the years of slow, costly Black advancement will be buried under the weight of empty slogans and emotional extortion. The nation will move on. The culture that demanded everything will be left with nothing but what it refused to build: structure, resilience, value.

The Digital Hegemon Accords ©️

In a region saturated with chaos, ideology, and centuries of failed diplomacy, clarity sometimes requires sharp lines. Israel’s continued assertion of authority over Gaza—whether through blockade, military operations, or territorial ambition—is not an act of expansionism, but of existential necessity. The Jewish state, born out of the ashes of genocide and centuries of exile, exists in a geopolitical neighborhood that has, since its inception, vowed its annihilation. Gaza, governed by Hamas—a group whose charter once called for the destruction of Israel—is not simply a neighbor in dispute. It is an enemy fortress, armed and funded by foreign actors, embedded in civilian infrastructure, and committed not to coexistence, but obliteration.

Total submission is not about conquest. It is about survival.

For decades, Israel has offered negotiation. It withdrew from Gaza in 2005. It watched as greenhouses and infrastructure were looted and destroyed. It endured rockets raining down on civilian cities. It faced intifadas, kidnappings, and suicide bombings not in occupied territories, but in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem—inside the 1967 borders. It built the Iron Dome not to dominate, but to defend. And still, the assaults came.

A state cannot function with a powder keg on its border. A nation cannot allow a hostile regime to dig tunnels into its soil, or fire missiles from schools and hospitals, or indoctrinate children with martyrdom as a virtue. For any other country, such a situation would result in war without end. And yet, Israel is asked to restrain itself endlessly, while its enemies demand erasure.

There is also the matter of historical justice. The land of Israel is not a colonial outpost; it is the ancient homeland of the Jewish people, from Hebron to Gaza, from Jerusalem to the Galilee. The Jewish presence predates Islam. It predates every modern border drawn by imperial hands. While the Nakba is a tragedy to Palestinians, it was born in part from an unwillingness to accept a Jewish homeland at all. The wars of 1948 and 1967 were not launched by Israel—they were survival responses to existential threats. Every inch gained in war was taken in defense. Every inch lost was paid in blood.

To submit Gaza is to silence the rockets. To neutralize the war drums. It is not ethnic cleansing—it is military necessity. Civilians should be protected. Aid should flow. But the regime must fall. Hamas cannot exist beside Israel. The ideology must break before peace can begin.

This may be an uncomfortable truth for the international community, but comfort is not the currency of peace. Peace comes after fire, after clarity, after will. Israel’s will to live is stronger than the world’s will to scold. In time, Gaza under Israeli control may know stability, growth, even prosperity. But it will never know these things under Hamas.

And so, submission is not subjugation—it is salvation. For Israel, for its children, and ultimately, for Gaza too.