The Only Way to Win Is Through Education
We’ve tried persuasion at the finish line. We need formation at the starting line.
Why We’re Losing the Long Game
Every society educates its young. The only question is what it teaches and who decides.
America once taught thrift, logic, and self-control. Today it teaches fragility, envy, and feelings presented as truth. That change did not happen by accident. It began with thinkers who decided that facts were less important than experiences.
The first great shift came with John Dewey, an American philosopher often called the father of progressive education. Dewey was not a Marxist, but he shared the Marxist assumption that human nature could be reshaped by changing the environment. He believed schools should prepare children to participate in a democratic society rather than transmit a fixed body of knowledge.
At first, that sounded noble. It meant children would learn by doing, not just by memorizing. In practice, it meant the teacher stopped being an instructor and became a facilitator. Facts turned into “tools,” not foundations. Truth became whatever seemed to work.
Dewey’s influence spread through Columbia University’s Teachers College and the growing network of public schools in the early twentieth century. By the 1930s most American teachers had been trained in his methods. Schools gradually focused more on how children felt about learning and less on what they actually learned.
That shift created an opening that others quickly filled. In the 1930s the Frankfurt School left Germany and re-established in the United States. Its members carried a theory known as critical theory. It treated culture as the arena of revolution rather than the battlefield of ideas. Antonio Gramsci had called it cultural hegemony. Change the schools, the media, and the arts, and politics would follow.
By the 1960s, Herbert Marcuse, one of the Frankfurt School philosophers, became a hero of the American New Left. His students went on to teach in universities, write textbooks, and lead education departments. At the same time, Paulo Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed recast teaching as an act of political liberation. In that model the teacher was no longer a steward of knowledge but a community organizer with a gradebook.
Through the 1970s and 1980s these ideas merged into what became known as multicultural and later diversity education. By the 1990s those themes appeared in nearly every teacher-training program in the country. By the 2010s, identity frameworks derived from critical theory had reached K–12 lesson plans and professional-development sessions.

The numbers tell the result. Between 1989 and 2023 the share of college faculty identifying as liberal rose from less than half to nearly eighty percent. Among younger professors it is close to ninety. That uniformity defines which ideas are considered reasonable and which are not even mentionable. Students no longer graduate understanding both sides. They graduate believing one side is moral and the other is evil.
Conservatives responded by talking louder instead of teaching earlier. We built talk shows, podcasts, and conferences. The Left built classrooms, textbooks, and teacher colleges. You cannot out-argue a generation that was never taught to value argument in the first place.
That is why we are losing the long game. The Left did not win because its arguments were stronger. It won because it began shaping the instincts that decide arguments before we even entered the room.
If we want to reclaim the future, we must start where they started: in the classroom, where the habits of freedom are learned or lost.
Echo Chambers Are Comforting and Fatal
It feels good to be surrounded by people who agree with you.
Every human being wants confirmation that he is sane in an insane world. But comfort and progress rarely live in the same room.
Over the past two decades, conservatives have built their own media universe. Talk radio, cable news, podcasts, and social platforms gave millions of people a place to breathe. In a world where every major network leaned left, it was an act of self-preservation. Over time, self-preservation turned into self-containment.
A recent survey found that roughly eighty-five percent of consistent conservatives get their news from outlets where almost every viewer shares their political identity. The result is a feedback loop that reinforces emotion rather than understanding. It produces energy but not reach. It feels like strength while quietly shrinking the audience.
This is not unique to the Right. The Left also lives in bubbles. The difference is that their bubble sits on top of the country’s major institutions. Universities, entertainment, tech, publishing, and K–12 education hum with the same ideological frequency. They do not need to build separate spaces because they already own the public square. Their ideas arrive by default. Ours arrive by subscription.
The Left does not convert with logic. It conditions through repetition.
When a student hears the same assumptions about race, gender, and economics from teachers, actors, athletes, and algorithms, those ideas no longer appear political. They appear normal. What is repeated becomes reality.
Conservatives confuse opposition with isolation. When we were pushed out of universities and newsrooms, we built alternatives. Alternatives can harden into ghettos of agreement. People begin talking to themselves about how right they are and how wrong everyone else is. That may be emotionally satisfying, but it is strategically suicidal. No one has ever changed a mind he refuses to meet.
The purpose of truth is not to echo; it is to persuade. Yet many on the Right now equate conviction with volume. The louder we shout inside our own walls, the more those walls echo back. The Left plays the long game by embedding ideas in institutions. We play the short game by venting about institutions we abandoned.
That imbalance shows up in culture. One side trains the teachers, scripts the movies, designs the apps, and sets the tone of acceptable speech. The other side reacts to it. That is why a high-school senior today can spend twelve years in public school, four years in college, and never hear a serious argument for limited government, free markets, or objective morality. Those ideas do not exist in his ecosystem.
You cannot fight a cultural monopoly with a private complaint.
The goal is not to retreat into safer rooms. The goal is to build bridges back into the rooms that matter. The Republic cannot survive if half its citizens are informed only by outrage and the other half only by indoctrination.
Real influence requires engagement. It means teaching again, writing again, showing up again, even when the gatekeepers frown. It means replacing algorithmic validation with human conversation. It means arguing not to win applause, but to reintroduce the habit of reasoning itself.
Echo chambers keep us warm while the culture outside grows cold.
They help us cope, but they do not help us conquer.
If we want to change the direction of the country, we must leave the comfort of agreement and step back into the discomfort of persuasion.
Swing Voters and the Poverty of Short-Term Thinking
Every election cycle, political consultants talk about swing voters as if they were the golden prize of democracy. They are treated as proof that the system works, that people are open-minded and thoughtful. In reality, swing voters are a symptom of how little most people understand what they are voting for.
When a citizen changes sides every four years because gas prices rise or fall, that is not a conversion. It is a reaction. When inflation climbs, people vote right. When it eases, they drift back left. It is not persuasion. It is relief. The same person who cheers for tax cuts in good times demands more government aid in bad times. That is not hypocrisy. It is confusion about how the system works.
A national survey found that only twenty-seven percent of Americans could explain inflation in basic economic terms. Nearly sixty percent believed corporate greed was the main cause. Less than one in five adults could define compound interest, and only fourteen percent could explain opportunity cost. These are not graduate-level concepts. They are the vocabulary of everyday life, the difference between making decisions and being manipulated.

Ignorance has consequences. People who do not understand trade-offs will always fall for politicians who promise to eliminate them. They will demand price controls without realizing that shortages are the natural result. They will demand higher wages without noticing that jobs disappear when labor costs exceed value. They will blame the rich for rising prices rather than the government that printed trillions of new dollars.
The problem is not intelligence. It is education. Schools once taught economics as cause and effect. Today they teach it as morality play. Fairness replaces arithmetic. A student learns how to feel about inequality but not how to measure it. By the time he graduates, the phrase free market sounds cruel and the word profit sounds corrupt.
This is why politics now swings on emotion rather than comprehension.
When people no longer see the connection between policy and outcome, elections become mood surveys. The same pattern repeats: frustration, protest, temporary correction, and relapse. The Left knows how to manage that cycle because it owns the emotional frame. The Right tries to fight it with facts, forgetting that facts do not matter to people who have never been taught how to reason from them.
There is nothing wrong with passion in politics. The danger comes when passion becomes the only thing left. The more people vote their feelings, the less they vote their interests. The more they rely on headlines instead of understanding, the more power shifts from citizens to storytellers.
The cure is not another round of slogans about personal responsibility. It is teaching cause and effect again in classrooms, in churches, and in the home. Teach what scarcity means. Teach what incentives are. Teach why nothing is free and why government cannot give what it does not first take. A population that grasps those ideas will not need to be convinced every four years that socialism fails. It will recognize failure on sight.
Swing voters are not the prize of democracy. They are the warning sign that democracy is running on fumes.
A self-governing people cannot stay self-governing if it no longer understands what it is governing.
Schools Are the Front Line, Not a Lost Cause
Public schools shape most American children for thirteen years. That is the longest and most consistent contact the state has with the next generation. If we abandon that ground, we abandon the country.
The problem is not primarily money. Real per-pupil spending has risen dramatically since the 1970s while national reading and math scores have been largely flat. High school NAEP results show long periods of no meaningful improvement, and the most recent assessments fell after the pandemic years. Staffing grew fastest outside the classroom. Non-teaching roles expanded far more quickly than enrollment, while writing proficiency remained low and basic civics knowledge declined. That is not an argument for starving schools. It is an argument for restoring purpose.
The mission drift is visible in what students are asked to do. Large numbers of seniors report never writing a letter to an official, never participating in a formal debate, and rarely composing a sustained argument that cites evidence. Many can describe how they feel about an issue, but cannot explain what would happen if a policy were actually implemented. When you train sentiment and neglect cause and effect, you get graduates who are confident and easily misled.
Treat schools as reformable. Start with what produces citizens rather than slogans.
Teach the core disciplines that inoculate against propaganda.
Logic, rhetoric, history with sources, economics as cause and effect, basic statistics, and personal finance. A student who can follow an argument, check a claim, and build a simple budget is harder to fool. Teach the scientific method as a habit, not a poster. Insist on primary documents in civics, not summaries that reinterpret them.
Restore work and craftsmanship to the curriculum.
Shop class, coding projects, school newspapers, gardens, robotics, and entrepreneurship labs. Students who build something real learn trade-offs the way nature teaches them, which is to say without negotiation.
Reintroduce debate as a normal classroom practice.
Require students to steelman the other side before defending their own view. Grade for evidence and clarity. Young people who learn to argue fairly also learn to recognize manipulation when they see it.
Make parents part of the plan.
Send home one-page primers that mirror the units. Give families dinner-table prompts, simple exercises, and short reading lists. Homes that discuss current events weekly raise children who vote and volunteer at higher rates. The household is the multiplier that schools cannot replace.
Change what gets measured.
Do not stop at multiple-choice tests. Require short essays, oral defenses, source trails, and practical projects with budgets and logs. Reward improvement and effort. Publish a simple scoreboard that communities can understand. When expectations are clear, behavior improves.
Create footholds even where the district is hostile.
After-school clubs can teach logic and debate without waiting for permission. Libraries, churches, JROTC rooms, and homeschool co-ops can host weekend “build labs.” Charter schools and classical academies can serve as demonstration sites. Teachers who want rigor need small grants, clean lesson kits, and administrative cover. Give them all three.
Fund what works and show the receipts.
Micro-grants for teachers. Mini-debate leagues across a district. A personal finance unit with a pop-up market day at the end. A media-literacy week where every student traces a viral claim to its original source. Track results in plain numbers. How many students completed a debate. How many launched a micro-business. How many could explain inflation, interest, and opportunity cost on a short quiz. Publish the outcomes so parents can see progress with their own eyes.
Schools are not a lost cause. They are a lost focus. When classrooms return to knowledge, reasoning, and work, students begin to see the world as it is rather than as someone wishes it to be. You cannot promise them a life without trade-offs, so teach them how to make better ones. You cannot shield them from false narratives, so teach them how to test claims against evidence.
We do not need perfect districts to begin. We need determined teachers, honest metrics, and parents who will back both. Start where the door is open. Prove the gains. Expand the foothold. That is how institutions are reclaimed, one course and one cohort at a time.
Generational Turnaround Requires Patience and Strategy
Cultures do not decay in an election cycle, and they do not recover in one either. The corruption of the classroom was slow, deliberate, and generational. The recovery will be the same. Patience is not surrender. It is discipline aimed at permanence.
A society can reclaim its intellectual bearings the way it lost them, gradually, through the habits it teaches its children. When one generation learns to reason again, the next inherits both the skill and the expectation. Understanding compounds the same way ignorance does.
Think of reform as compound interest. If every ten years we reach even ten percent more students who can reason clearly, read attentively, and detect manipulation, the slope begins to reverse. Within thirty years the majority of citizens would again be capable of tracing a claim back to evidence. That is not fantasy. It is math.

The same logic applies to homes. Adults raised in households where parents discuss current events weekly are twice as likely to vote and three times as likely to volunteer. Families that talk about money produce children who understand budgets. Families that talk about responsibility produce adults who do not wait for permission to act. The home multiplies whatever the school plants.
Generational work also requires a change in what we reward.
Short-term activism draws attention. Long-term formation builds civilization. Instead of celebrating outrage, highlight persistence. Instead of measuring clicks, measure comprehension. Give the spotlight to teachers who can show growth in reasoning and to parents who keep showing up. Recognition shapes culture as much as policy does.
To sustain a fifty-year turnaround, we need visible victories along the way. A debate league that doubles its participants. A city where every high school offers a course in logic or entrepreneurship. A teacher whose students start a small business or publish a newsletter that checks local claims for accuracy. Each win proves that better habits still work. Each one recruits the next wave of builders.
Teach history as a timeline of patience. The founding generation argued over federalism for years before ratifying the Constitution. The civil rights movement trained organizers for years before passing a single law. The abolitionists built moral literacy long before they built political momentum. Durable victories began with formation, not agitation.
The Left’s cultural transformation took half a century of steady infiltration. We can match it with half a century of steady rebuilding. Restore the professions of teaching, writing, and journalism to people who believe in truth and can defend it. Build endowments that protect independent schools from political capture. Nurture a generation of parents who see education as a daily duty, not a distant service.
This is not glamorous work. It is planting trees under whose shade we may never sit. The republic survives because someone chooses to plant anyway.
A single election can change a law. A single generation can change a nation. The work of the next fifty years is to build that generation, one student, one family, and one classroom at a time.
Reframe the Struggle as an Educational Revolution
This is not primarily a fight about parties. It is a fight about how people come to know what is true. The side that trains the habits of mind will eventually win every argument that rests on those habits. That is why politics keeps repeating the same cycle. We keep treating symptoms while the cause sits in a classroom.
Reframing begins with purpose. The goal is not to outshout propaganda. The goal is to make propaganda fail on contact. A citizen who can follow cause and effect, check a source, and price a trade-off is not easy to move with slogans. That skill can be taught. We must begin by launching proof-of-concept programs; debate leagues, financial-literacy units, and media-literacy modules, across every available local foothold.
Mid term: build pipelines that survive politics.
Scale what works through charter and classical academies, community build labs, and home-centered learning. Train teachers who can replicate success and share results across regional hubs.
Long term: raise citizens who recognize manipulation before it finishes a sentence.
A student who writes monthly essays, debates fairly, balances a simple budget, and reads primary sources will not need a party to explain what freedom requires. Over a generation, that habit turns elections from mood surveys into choices made by people who know what they are trading and why.
Measure what matters so the culture can see progress.
Tell the stories so success becomes normal.
Revolutions that last do not begin with fury. They begin with formation. Teach truth as a discipline. Protect the space where it can be taught. Amplify the results until they become the new common sense. That is how a culture moves from sentiment back to judgment, and from reaction back to self-government.
Doctrine of Implementation
Ideas without structure fade. If education is going to be more than a slogan, it has to exist as a system that teaches, protects, and communicates truth. That means an organization built for continuity. Three branches, one mission.
The Foundation (501c3): Teach the Truth
The educational arm develops and distributes the substance.
It writes and tests the curricula in civics, economics, rhetoric, and media literacy. It trains teachers, runs youth clubs, and builds debate leagues. It creates open-source lesson kits so any classroom or co-op can start a logic or entrepreneurship unit next week. It offers parent primers that mirror those lessons so discussion continues at home.
It funds micro-grants that reward rigor. Teachers who want to run a debate unit or a workshop in critical thinking can apply, receive small seed money, and report results in a public dashboard. Those results; how many students learned to build an argument, trace a source, or balance a simple budget, become the data that drives expansion.
Outcome: young citizens who can reason from evidence instead of reacting to slogans.
The Shield (501c4): Protect the Truth
The advocacy arm defends the space where honest education can exist.
It supports candidates for school boards who favor curriculum transparency and parental rights. It writes and promotes model legislation that protects free inquiry, strengthens vocational education, and requires basic economics and civics for graduation. It coordinates with allied groups to challenge ideological monopolies in licensing, teacher training, and federal funding. It documents bureaucratic abuse and publishes it plainly so the public can see what is being taught with its tax dollars.
Outcome: the legal and political perimeter that keeps free thought free.
The Voice (Media Arm): Amplify the Truth
The media arm makes the work visible. It tells the stories of teachers, students, and parents who are rebuilding competence. It produces podcasts, short films, and social-media clips that show a debate, a student market day, or a teacher using logic instead of ideology. It trains young creators to verify claims, interview sources, and publish results.
It builds a cross-promotion mesh among Substacks, podcasts, and local media so each win in one city becomes encouragement for the next. It highlights measurable gains: a civics score that rose, a dropout rate that fell, a student business that paid its taxes correctly. Those are the proofs of concept that move opinion faster than any speech.
Outcome: a culture that begins to admire accuracy and effort again.
The Feedback Loop
Education builds awareness. Awareness fuels activism. Activism protects education. Protected education multiplies awareness. Each branch feeds the others until truth becomes self-sustaining.
The Timeline
Years 1–3: pilot courses, micro-grants, debate leagues, and the first media pieces showing results.
Years 4–10: regional hubs, a teacher-training institute, a parent-network conference, and a steady presence in state education hearings.
Years 10–25: partnerships with classical schools, trade programs, and community colleges; a national fellowship for educators who teach logic and civics with measurable gains.
Years 25–50: an ecosystem that no longer needs permission or protection; truth taught as a habit, not a protest.
The structure is simple on purpose. The Foundation builds, the Shield defends, and the Voice tells the story. Together they form the machinery of permanence that every serious movement requires.
The Long Game
Real change begins quietly. The Left’s transformation of education took half a century. It began with small reforms, teacher colleges, and committees that seemed harmless. A few phrases in a curriculum, a new framework for grading, a different definition of fairness. No riots, no banners, just steady work. The result was an entire generation that stopped asking for evidence and started repeating feelings as fact.
We can win the same way, in reverse. Not by destroying the system but by building a better one alongside it until the old model looks absurd by comparison.
Years 1–3: Prove the Concept.
Pilot programs are the testing ground. A logic module in one district. A debate league in another. A civics unit that uses the Federalist Papers instead of rewritten summaries. A personal-finance course that ends with a student-run market day. Measure what happens. Do students retain information longer? Do they vote, volunteer, or start small businesses after graduation? Publish the numbers and make them visible. Results speak more persuasively than slogans.
Years 4–10: Expand the Foothold.
Regional hubs grow out of early success. Teachers who show results train others. Parent groups form co-ops that share materials. Libraries, churches, and community centers host after-school programs that teach real skills and reasoning. Each region sets up an annual summit where teachers, parents, and students present their outcomes. The network begins to recruit by proof, not by ideology.
Years 10–25: Build the Institutions.
Establish a teacher-training institute devoted to rigorous methods. Create a certification that signals competence in logic, rhetoric, and civics. Partner with trade schools and classical academies to share curricula. Develop endowments that keep these institutions free from political strings. Add a research division that tracks literacy, numeracy, and civic engagement over time so progress is measured in data, not hope.
Years 25–50: Normalize the New Standard.
When enough schools, parents, and students operate this way, rigor becomes normal again. Textbooks are written from primary sources because teachers and parents demand it. Employers prefer graduates who can reason and write. Colleges recruit students from programs that prove outcomes. The market rewards clarity the same way it rewards competence in every other field. Education returns to being a tool for advancement rather than a ritual of conformity.
This is how cultural renewal looks in practice. Not a burst of noise, but the quiet accumulation of credibility. The Left built its dominance with patience and paperwork. We can rebuild freedom with the same tools, applied to truth instead of ideology.
Each successful classroom, each parent network, each well-run program is a seed. A single seed can grow into an orchard if it is planted, measured, and tended long enough. Within a generation, the phrase “critical thinking” can return to meaning the ability to reason, not the ability to repeat a doctrine. Within two generations, the public expectation of education itself will shift from feeling safe to learning reality.
The long game is not glamorous. It is necessary. The only real victory is a generation that no longer needs to be rescued from its own schooling.

Guiding Principles
Truth precedes party.
Reality is not a platform. Two and two make four whether it wins votes or not. Teach that, and much else follows.
Education is cultural defense.
Armies guard borders. Schools guard civilization. A people that cannot weigh evidence or recognize propaganda cannot stay free.
Formation comes first.
You cannot argue someone out of instincts trained since childhood. Build the instincts that make persuasion possible.
Patience compounds.
Steady instruction beats sudden outrage. Each student who learns logic and economics is a small reversal of entropy.
Reality sells itself.
Teach incentives, trade-offs, and sources. Once people see how the world works, slogans lose their grip.
These principles are the compass for the next fifty years. Our job is to teach them again until they no longer need defending.
Call to Action
This work will not be quick, and it will not be easy. But decline never is. The difference between losing a civilization and rebuilding one is not the difficulty of the task. It is the willingness to begin.
If we rebuild the classroom, we rebuild the country.
If we reclaim the minds, the votes will follow.
If we teach truth with patience and courage, propaganda dies of starvation.
Every person can take a step. We must refuse to be bystanders.
Teachers must demand rigor.
Parents must treat curiosity as a daily duty.
Citizens must fund the essential local infrastructure and run for the seats everyone else abandoned.
The Left plays for power. We play for permanence. Their goal is control. Ours is competence. They treat the citizen as a subject to be managed. We treat him as a mind to be trained. The difference decides who governs the future.
Teach truth.
Protect it.
Amplify it.
That is how a civilization repairs itself.
That is how America will.
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As a retired financial advisor I can attest to the woeful level of financial literacy in the U.S. Too few states require it as a course or module in high school, and those that do, do not place enough emphasis on attaining a minimal level of competence.
In retirement, I entered a teaching training program but dropped out after three weeks because it was nothing but "woke" indoctrination.
In my opinion, the left's modus operandi is to deny differences in individual intellectual capacity. The end result is a race to the lowest common denominator. In the context of your writing, that lowest common denominator is emotion. We all have feelings. But intellectual capacity varies by individual, and the left cannot acknowledge that fact without exploding its underlying foundation which is "identity" politics.
The sad reality is that any society that does not encourage its best and brightest will cease to flourish.
I agree with your assessment and education is a must have start.
However, what curriculum is changing teacher behavior and principals?
Those who can’t earn become teachers. Taught to feel superior in their ideologies since financial success is predetermined to allude them. ( sorry teachers).
Hillsdale and turning point are great allies in this fight. Suggest WE align at every level possible. Recognizing this will take a generation to manifest. Good news. Gen z seems to have found religion again.
We need all Christian’s to be critical thinkers and warriors. The ideological battle with Woketards and jihadists will be here for another 100 yrs. Our grandchildren are crying for us to take action now.