Friday, July 17, 2026

How to respond to a leftist ideologue

 Here are some general, psychology-informed strategies for engaging strongly ideological views and for presenting a pro-freedom case clearly and constructively. These work with any ideology and help you avoid unproductive clashes.

Before you engage

  • Set your goal: clarify whether you want mutual understanding, testing claims, or simply to mark boundaries.
  • Pick the forum: live debates reward heat; written formats favor clarity. Prefer formats that allow evidence, citations, and time to think.

Conversation strategies

  • Start with steelmanning: “Here’s the strongest version of your view I understand—what am I missing?” It lowers defensiveness and earns you listening rights.
  • Ask for falsifiability: “What specific observation would change your mind?” If the answer is “nothing,” pause the debate and shift to coexistence/boundary-setting.
  • Trade-off ledger: “What are the main benefits, the likely costs, and who bears each? What’s the plan if the costs exceed the benefits?”
  • Mechanism over slogans: “Walk me through the mechanism end-to-end: incentives, knowledge, enforcement, failure modes.”
  • Forecasting and scorekeeping: “What measurable outcomes would we see in 6, 12, and 24 months? Let’s write them down and check later.”
  • Pilot-first norm: “Can we run an opt-in pilot with a sunset clause and independent evaluation before scaling?”
  • Consent and exit: “Is there a voluntary or opt-out version that lets people choose without coercion?”
  • Incentives and knowledge tests: “How does this align actors’ incentives with the goal? How does it use local knowledge rather than assume central omniscience?”
  • Accountability: “Who is accountable if this fails, and what’s the automatic off-ramp?”
  • Agree-and-redirect: Acknowledge shared values (dignity, safety, fairness), then show how voluntary, decentralized solutions better achieve them.

Rhetorical hygiene (for you)

  • No ad hominem, no labels. Critique ideas, not identities.
  • Keep one-claim-at-a-time. Don’t chase every tangent.
  • Use concrete examples and base rates; avoid abstract moralizing.
  • Be brief, calm, and specific. Silence beats sarcasm.
  • Know your exit cues: non-falsifiable claims, moving goalposts, or refusal to price trade-offs.

High-yield questions you can reuse

  • What would count as failure, and how soon could we know?
  • What’s the cheapest small experiment that could disconfirm our assumptions?
  • Who decides, with what knowledge, and what are their incentives if it goes wrong?
  • Can this be done voluntarily or locally? If not, why not?
  • What’s the downside risk and who absorbs it?
  • If this doesn’t work, what’s Plan B and how do we unwind?

Structure for your own responses

  • Principle: articulate the norm (e.g., consent, proportionality, neutrality before the law).
  • Mechanism: explain how your approach works in practice (incentives, feedback, price signals, competition).
  • Evidence: offer track records, base rates, and predictions you’re willing to score.

Audience-aware framing

  • Speak to the undecided observers. Keep your tone courteous, your claims checkable, and your proposals testable.
  • Translate values: if the room cares about fairness, emphasize procedural fairness and open entry; if it cares about safety, show how decentralization reduces single-point failures.

When dialogue stalls

  • Suggest a joint prediction ledger or a limited-scope pilot; if declined, propose “live and let live” via local experimentation.
  • If terms can’t be agreed (no falsifiability, no trade-offs), exit politely: “We have different standards for evidence; let’s revisit after new data.”

Building outside the argument

  • Demonstrate alternatives: support local, voluntary projects that embody your principles. Working examples persuade better than rhetoric.
  • Publish simple dashboards and post-mortems for policies or projects you back. Radical transparency builds credibility.

Preparation kit

  • A one-page brief on a topic you care about with: thesis, mechanism diagram, key trade-offs, base rates, three testable predictions, and a sunset/rollback plan.
  • A short list of “default questions” from above that you can deploy anywhere.

Traits of leftist ideologues

 Leftist ideologues typically simplify reality, falsify reality, adopt a single axiom "X is bad", and narcissistically believe that they should be put in charge to make things better.

In addition:

To round out a psychologically informed portrait of the ideologue—especially of the collectivist/statist variety that seeks top-down control—add these features:

Cognitive style

  • Need for cognitive closure and intolerance of ambiguity: strong preference for simple, final answers over open-ended inquiry.
  • Monological belief system: one big idea explains everything; unfalsifiable and self-sealing (“If you disagree, that proves the thesis.”).
  • Sacred values and trade-off denial: treats policy preferences as moral absolutes; refuses cost–benefit analysis.
  • Abstraction over particulars: grand theory eclipses concrete evidence; slogans replace operational details.
  • Thought-terminating clichés: stock phrases that end debate instead of advancing it.

Epistemic habits

  • Motivated reasoning and confirmation bias: selectively attends to supportive data; dismisses disconfirming facts as heresy or bias.
  • No-true-Scotsman and motte-and-bailey: retreats to vague safe claims when challenged, then reasserts the stronger claim.
  • Overconfidence and illusion of explanatory depth: believes they understand complex systems they can’t actually model.
  • Language engineering: euphemisms and redefinitions to hide trade-offs and expand control (“equity,” “disinformation,” “reimagining,” etc.).

Motivational/emotional drivers

  • Ressentiment and leveling envy: “hatred of the good for being the good”—suspicion or hostility toward excellence, success, and earned status.
  • Outrage/virtue signaling loops: moral-emotion rewards for denunciation and purity.
  • Status resentment and humiliation sensitivity: grievance identity becomes a core self-concept.
  • Security-seeking via control: fear of uncertainty turns into a desire to regulate others.

Social dynamics

  • In-group purity spirals and groupthink: dissent is moral treason; preference falsification spreads.
  • Out-group homogenization: opponents caricatured as a single villainous type.
  • Ends-justify-means: erosion of procedural norms once power is within reach.
  • Authoritarian submission/authoritarian aggression: deference to favored authorities; punitive stance toward deviants.

Behavioral/policy patterns (stronger in collectivist/statist ideologies)

  • External locus of control: shifts responsibility from the individual to “the system,” inviting paternalism.
  • Learned helplessness and dependency: incentives reward passivity; initiative atrophies.
  • Moral hazard, free-riding, and rent-seeking: expansive redistribution and centralized discretion invite mooching/looting via bureaucratic channels.
  • Central-planning hubris: denial of dispersed knowledge and spontaneous order; repeated escalation of failed interventions.

Addressing your specific checklist

  • Delusions: usually not clinical psychosis; more often overvalued ideas and utopian grandiosity (unfalsifiable perfect-society visions).
  • Emotional chains: envy, resentment, status anxiety, humiliation, fear of responsibility.
  • Hatred of the good: yes—leveling impulses, suspicion of merit and excellence.
  • “Liberal scams”: concentrated power plus moral cover tends to attract grift—rent-seeking NGOs, patronage networks, revolving-door bureaucracies. (Grift exists everywhere, but paternalist systems create especially rich opportunities.)
  • Pathologic obsessions: purity tests, ideological surveillance, fixation on a single cause as a master key.
  • Denial/evasion of reality: refusal to acknowledge constraints, unintended consequences, or failed outcomes.
  • Distortion/deletion: selective statistics, redefinition of terms, airbrushing history that contradicts the narrative.
  • Pathological fantasies: “new man” perfectibility, costless equality, coercion that somehow doesn’t corrupt.
  • Neurotic defenses: projection (“the other side is authoritarian/greedy”), splitting (all good vs. all evil), externalization/blame, reaction formation.
  • Cognitive dissonance: rationalizations after policy failures; “it wasn’t real X-ism” loops.
  • Dependency: yes—policies that reward passivity and punish self-reliance.
  • Parasitism: free-riding and bureaucratic looting under moral cover; transfer-seeking over value creation.
  • Personality-disorder flavoring: leaders in radical movements often over-index on narcissistic and antisocial traits; followers can exhibit dependent and avoidant tendencies. This is descriptive, not a clinical diagnosis of whole groups.
  • Phobias: fear of uncertainty/complexity; fear of freedom and responsibility (Fromm’s “escape from freedom”).

A quick field checklist for spotting ideologues

  • Cannot state a fair, strongest version of the opposing view.
  • Frames disagreement as moral evil rather than error.
  • Treats trade-offs as heresy; relies on slogans and abstractions.
  • Uses language redefinitions and shifting goalposts when pressed.
  • Prioritizes coercion/censorship over persuasion and consent.
  • Promises outcomes unconstrained by incentives, knowledge, or scarcity.
  • Escalates commitment after failure rather than updating beliefs.

Big picture: Ideologues trade the psychology of freedom (humility about complexity, responsibility, consent, and feedback) for the psychology of force (certainty, control, moral absolutism, and coercion). Collectivist and statist movements are especially prone to these pitfalls because they centralize power, moralize redistribution, and deny the limits of knowledge and incentives—conditions that reliably breed dependency, resentment, and abuse.


In addition:

Here’s an  expansion that stays psychological and practical, with a pro-freedom lens.

Clarify the boundary: conviction vs. ideology

  • Principled conviction: holds firm values but welcomes counterevidence, trade-offs, and incremental learning.
  • Ideology: fuses identity to a totalizing narrative, treats dissent as moral threat, and resists updating.

Core psychological engines behind ideology

  • Sacred value protection: some beliefs become untouchable; cost–benefit talk feels “profane,” so facts bounce off.
  • Taboo trade-offs: refusing to compare valued ends (e.g., safety vs. liberty), which blocks realistic policy.
  • Monological closure: one theory explains everything; anomalies trigger rationalization, not revision.
  • Moral grandstanding and reputational cascades: status is earned by louder purity, not by accuracy or results.
  • Preference falsification: people hide private doubts; public false consensus inflates extremism (Kuran).
  • Group polarization: like-minded groups drift to extremes after discussion (confidence + social reward).
  • Identity fusion: the cause becomes the self; criticism feels like a personal attack.
  • Learned dependency: externalizing problems to “the system” reduces personal agency; increases appetite for control.

Organizational dynamics that entrench ideology

  • Purity spirals: gatekeepers punish nuance; over time the median position radicalizes.
  • Iron law of oligarchy: centralized movements drift toward control by a narrow managerial elite.
  • Escalation of commitment: sunk-cost + ego investment → “do it again but harder” after failures.
  • Language capture: redefining terms to coerce assent (e.g., labeling dissent as “harm” or “disinformation”).
  • Institutionalized motivated reasoning: dashboards and KPIs tuned to signal success (Goodhart’s law).

Policy-level cognitive errors typical of centralizing ideologies

  • Knowledge problem: dispersed local knowledge can’t be centrally aggregated (Hayek).
  • Incentive problem: intentions don’t override incentives; moral hazard and rent-seeking proliferate (public choice).
  • Seen vs. unseen: visible beneficiaries outweigh invisible losses (Bastiat), biasing toward coercive fixes.
  • Cobra effect: targets get gamed; perverse outcomes follow rule changes.
  • Transitional gains trap: subsidies/entitlements create constituencies that block rollback, even after failure.

Clinical-adjacent traits that can show up (not diagnoses of whole groups)

  • Leaders: elevated narcissistic grandiosity, dominance-seeking, and “messiah complex.”
  • Followers: higher dependency, avoidance of uncertainty, external locus of control.
  • Defense mechanisms: projection (branding opponents as what the movement is doing), splitting, reaction formation.

Field diagnostics: quick tests for ideology

  • Falsifiability test: Can they name concrete evidence that would change their mind?
  • Trade-off test: Can they price a trade-off, or is everything “nonnegotiable”?
  • Outgroup test: Can they steelman the best opposing argument?
  • Prediction ledger: Do they record and score predictions—or only claim victory post hoc?
  • Power test: Do they prefer persuasion and exit options—or censorship and central mandates?

Antidotes: cultivating the psychology of freedom

  • Cognitive
    • Forecasting hygiene: pre-mortems, base rates, and Brier-scored prediction logs (Tetlock).
    • Red-team norms: deliberate dissent, role-reversal steelmanning, and “what would change my mind?” prompts.
    • Skin in the game: align decision-makers’ incentives with outcomes; avoid costless moralizing.
  • Institutional
    • Decentralization and exit: federalism, localism, chartering experiments, time-limited pilots with auto-sunset.
    • Measurable goals and open data: independent audits; outcome metrics chosen pre-implementation.
    • Competition over monopoly: expand choice architectures rather than one-size-fits-all mandates.
  • Personal
    • Build an internal locus of control; shift from envy to emulation (admire-then-imitate).
    • Replace slogans with models: articulate mechanisms, constraints, and failure modes before advocating policy.

Tools you can use immediately

  • 10-minute audit of any claim
    • Mechanism: How, specifically, does A cause B?
    • Constraints: What scarcities, incentives, and trade-offs are acknowledged?
    • Evidence: What would disconfirm this? What’s the track record in similar cases?
    • Forecast: What measurable outcomes in 6, 12, 24 months? Write them down.
    • Alternatives: What decentralized or voluntary options compete with this proposal?
  • Meeting design to puncture groupthink
    • Assign a “chief skeptic.”
    • Require a pre-mortem and a rival hypothesis memo.
    • Vote anonymously first; discuss second; revote last (reduces conformity pressure).

Recommended readings (psych + political economy, pro-freedom)

  • F. A. Hayek – The Use of Knowledge in Society (essay)
  • Thomas Sowell – A Conflict of Visions; Knowledge and Decisions
  • James Buchanan & Gordon Tullock – The Calculus of Consent
  • Elinor Ostrom – Governing the Commons
  • Karl Popper – The Open Society and Its Enemies
  • Philip Tetlock & Dan Gardner – Superforecasting
  • Timur Kuran – Private Truths, Public Lies
  • Jonathan Rauch – Kindly Inquisitors
  • Deirdre McCloskey – Bourgeois Equality (on dignity, markets, and flourishing)

Thursday, July 16, 2026

Banning social media for kids, 16 or under

 There is a strong case for significant restrictions or even a ban on social media accounts for kids 16 and under in the US, grounded in developmental psychology, mental health data, and platform design realities—though a pure blanket ban has practical, legal, and equity trade-offs. The statement reflects a growing consensus among many parents, researchers, and policymakers, but it's not a simple slam-dunk. Here's a clear-eyed breakdown.[1]

Evidence of Harms

Social media use is nearly universal among US teens (up to 95% of 13–17-year-olds), and many under-13s access it despite platform rules. The US Surgeon General’s 2023 advisory highlights that social media poses a “profound risk” of harm to youth mental health and well-being, especially during sensitive periods of brain development (adolescence ~ages 10–19). Key points:[2]

  • Mental health associations: Teens spending more than 3 hours/day face roughly double the risk of depression and anxiety symptoms (from longitudinal data adjusting for baseline mental health). Frequent use correlates with poorer sleep, body image issues, low self-esteem, FOMO, social comparison, and cyberbullying. Girls and those with preexisting vulnerabilities often show stronger links. Some experimental/randomized evidence shows limiting use (e.g., to 30 minutes/day) improves depression scores, and platform rollouts have been linked to rises in depression/anxiety.[2]
  • Brain and behavioral impacts: The adolescent brain has heightened sensitivity to social rewards/punishments (likes, status) while impulse control and emotional regulation areas are immature. Frequent use may be linked to changes in the amygdala and prefrontal cortex. Features like infinite scroll, notifications, and algorithmic amplification of extreme content (self-harm, eating disorders, violence, misogyny) exploit this.[3]
  • Other risks: Exposure to predators/grooming, harmful challenges, misinformation, sleep disruption (blue light + late-night scrolling), reduced in-person activity, and privacy exploitation. Australia’s ban (effective late 2025 for under-16s on major platforms) was driven by data showing high rates of harmful content exposure, cyberbullying, and grooming among kids.[4]

Public opinion aligns: A recent Pew survey found ~56% of US adults support banning under-16s from social media (with only ~21% opposed). Multiple US states have passed or proposed age-verification, parental consent, or restriction laws for minors (often under 16/18), and federal bills like versions of the Kids Off Social Media Act target under-13s or higher.[1]

Causation is not fully settled—many studies are correlational (depressed kids may use more social media), and reverse causation or third factors (e.g., broader screen time, pandemic effects) matter. Still, the dose-response patterns, natural experiments, and design incentives make the risk substantial enough for precaution, especially for younger teens.

Benefits and Counterarguments

Social media is not pure poison. Documented upsides include:

  • Social connection and support, particularly valuable for lonely teens, those with medical conditions, racial/ethnic minorities, and LGBTQ+ youth who find community and identity affirmation offline hard to access.[5]
  • Self-expression, creativity, learning, information access, and civic engagement.
  • Moderated mental health resources or help-seeking for some.

Critics of bans (including some researchers, civil liberties groups, and teens) argue they:

  • Infringe free expression and access to information (First Amendment concerns; courts have scrutinized state laws under intermediate scrutiny).
  • Are hard to enforce (VPNs, fake ages, shared parental accounts, biometric/ID verification raises privacy/data-breach risks).
  • May push kids to unregulated darker corners of the internet or other screens without building digital literacy gradually.
  • Deprive beneficial uses and delay skill-building; parents/caregivers should primarily set limits rather than government.
  • Fail to address root design problems (addictive algorithms affect adults too) and could be overly blunt.[6]

Brookings and others note bans may not fully reduce overall screen time or solve loneliness/hopelessness trends and risk overreach. Australia’s implementation (fines on companies, age-assurance tech) is a real-world test; early reports include mixed teen reactions and circumvention attempts.

Practical Path Forward for the US

A hard “not allowed” (no accounts) for 16-and-under is defensible as a default, analogous to driving ages, alcohol, or other age-gated activities where maturity and risk matter. Many platforms already set 13 as minimum (often poorly enforced via COPPA). Raising it, with robust age verification + default high-privacy/teen modes (no algorithmic recommendations, time limits, parental oversight tools, no addictive features), makes sense.

Better complements or alternatives to pure bans:

  • Platform accountability: Mandate safer-by-design (end infinite scroll/addictive loops for minors, better content filtering, transparent algorithms). Regulate data collection from kids.
  • Parental empowerment: Stronger tools, education, and defaults; delay smartphones; family media plans.
  • Targeted rules: Parental consent options rather than absolute bans; focus on high-risk features/content; school phone bans.
  • Research and monitoring: Fill evidence gaps on long-term effects and what interventions work.
  • Age-tiered access: Stricter under 13–14, graduated freedoms with guidance.

Parents remain the first line—model healthy use, talk openly, set limits, and prioritize sleep/exercise/in-person time. But platforms optimize for engagement/time-on-site, not child welfare, so relying solely on voluntary self-regulation or individual parenting has failed large numbers of kids.

Bottom line: The risks to developing brains and mental health from current social media (especially unsupervised, high-volume use) are real and serious enough that “should not be allowed” for 16-and-under is a reasonable default policy position, particularly if paired with design reforms. Australia and state experiments will refine it. Absolute bans face hurdles, but the status quo (easy access + engagement-maximizing algorithms) is worse. Prioritize evidence over ideology: protect kids during vulnerability windows without pretending social media is either risk-free or uniquely irredeemable.

References 

  1. Pew Research Center — claimed: “majority of Americans support banning social media for kids under 16”
    Link shown: pewresearch.org/short-reads/.../majority-of-americans-support-banning-social-media-for-kids-under-16/

  2. U.S. Surgeon General (HHS) 2023 advisory PDF — “Social Media and Youth Mental Health”
    Link shown: hhs.gov/sites/default/files/sg-youth-mental-health-social-media-advisory.pdf

  3. Johns Hopkins Medicine page on social media & teen mental health
    Link shown: hopkinsmedicine.org/.../social-media-and-mental-health-in-children-and-teens

  4. BBC article about Australia’s under-16 social media ban (effective late 2025, etc.)
    Link shown: bbc.com/news/articles/...

  5. American Psychological Association (APA) article on protecting teens on social media
    Link shown: apa.org/monitor/2023/09/protecting-teens-on-social-media

  6. Brookings Institution article about how bans affect children
    Link shown: brookings.edu/articles/how-will-bans-on-social-media-affect-children/

A full chain to relieve suffering (that involves sacrifice and requires change)

 Here is a full action chain to relieve suffering, which involves sacrifice and requires change, that one can run anytime.

  1. Reflect your current wish and suffering/uneasiness
  • You’re noticing: “Suffering → Need for change → Need for sacrifice.” In praxeology, this is felt uneasiness → imagining a preferable state → acknowledging that any choice entails renunciation (opportunity cost).
  1. Clarify the end (Well‑Formed Outcome)
    Before adding links, define what success looks like so the chain has a target.
  • Positive: What do you want instead of suffering?
  • Specific/sensory: What will you see/hear/feel when it’s true?
  • Self‑initiated: What is within your control to begin/maintain?
  • Context: When/where/with whom will this happen?
  • Ecology: What benefits must be preserved? Any downsides to avoid?
  • Evidence: What would convince a skeptic you did it?
  1. The complete, practical chain (short and long versions)
    Short (memorable) version:
  • Suffering → Meaning → Possibility → Choice of end → Priority → Commitment (cost acceptance) → Plan (means) → Action → Feedback → Identity integration → Maintenance.

Expanded version (what to add to the simple original chain):

  1. Suffering/uneasiness: name the specific discomfort.
  2. Meaning/attribution: what story are you making about the pain? (Is it a signal, a standard violated, a skill gap?)
  3. Possibility belief: do you believe change is possible for you here? If not, build efficacy first (proofs, small wins).
  4. Chosen end (Well‑Formed Outcome): define the target state precisely.
  5. Value hierarchy/priority: where does this outrank competing ends today? (If it’s not high enough, strengthen motivation.)
  6. Commitment/decision: explicitly accept opportunity costs and set a “good‑enough” threshold to start.
  7. Trade‑offs and sacrifices: list what you will stop doing (time, money, attention, social costs).
  8. Resource map: available means (time/energy/money/skills/social capital) and constraints; apply marginal utility—what small input yields big movement?
  9. Plan and environment design: minimum viable plan + friction/cue design (remove obstacles, add prompts).
  10. First action and state management: smallest executable step scheduled; manage emotion/energy for that step.
  11. Feedback/evidence loop: define leading indicators, scoreboard, and review cadence.
  12. Reward and identity integration: celebrate reps, attach the new behavior to “who I am.”
  13. Risk/relapse plan: if‑then contingencies, recovery scripts.
  14. Review and re‑prioritize: update the value hierarchy with real data (demonstrated preference).

Notice where “sacrifice” fits: steps 6–8 explicitly convert the abstract “need for sacrifice” into concrete opportunity costs and a resource plan, so you don’t stall in vague dread.

  1. Build motivation (Compelling Future)
  • Close your eyes. See a near‑future moment where the outcome is real. Make the image bright, big, and close. Step into it (first‑person).
  • Add sounds (what you or others say), then feelings (lightness, pride, calm).
  • Now future‑pace: watch a normal week running smoothly with this in place. Let that feeling become the payoff you’re willing to trade for.
  1. Translate into a micro‑protocol you can run in 10 minutes
  • Name the suffering: “I’m frustrated about ____ because ____.”
  • Reframe meaning: “This pain is a signal that ____ matters to me.”
  • Possibility: “One small win I can get this week is ____.”
  • Outcome (WFO): “By [date], I will [specific behavior/result] and I’ll know because [evidence].”
  • Priority: “It outranks [X,Y] this week because ____.”
  • Sacrifices: “I will stop/limit ____ for the next 7 days.”
  • Resources: “I have ____; constraint is ____; highest‑leverage move is ____.”
  • Plan: “Daily at [time/place], I’ll do [15‑minute action].”
  • Feedback: “Scoreboard: I mark a ✔ each day; review on [day/time].”
  • Reward/identity: “After each rep, I do [tiny reward] and say, ‘I’m the kind of person who ____.’”
  • Risk: “If [obstacle], then I’ll [contingency].”
  1. Immediate action and obstacle handling
  • Pick one live area of suffering. Run the 10‑minute protocol and schedule a single 15‑minute step within the next 24 hours.
  • Common obstacles and cures:
    • Vague goal → sharpen WFO and evidence.
    • Low belief → shrink the step until success feels certain.
    • Competing priorities → explicitly downgrade something else for 7 days.
    • Emotional drag → pair action with a state primer (music, brief walk, 4 deep breaths).

To tailor this to a particular person, a few quick questions:

  1. What domain is the suffering about right now (health, work, money, relationships, learning)?
  2. What would count as a meaningful 14‑day win that person can see/hear/feel?
  3. What sacrifice is that person actually willing to make this week—and what is off‑limits (ecology)?

Why are most people, in the US today. broke? What can they do?

 For a lot of Americans in 2026, essential costs (especially housing) have risen faster than their take‑home pay, savings buffers are thin, and debts are expensive—so even small shocks push budgets into the red.

What the latest data says as of July 16, 2026

  • Paycheck‑to‑paycheck is common: One long‑running PYMNTS/LendingClub survey shows its Paycheck‑to‑Paycheck Index hit 68.4% in May 2026 (definitions vary across surveys, but the direction is clear). (pymnts.com)
  • Thin emergency savings: In the Fed’s 2025 SHED survey (released May 2026), only 63% say they could cover a $400 emergency with cash or its equivalent, and 12% say they couldn’t cover it at all. Just 55% report having three months of expenses set aside. (federalreserve.gov)
  • Low saving rate: The personal saving rate was 3.0% in May 2026, leaving little cushion for most households. (bea.gov)
  • Debt loads and delinquencies: Total household debt stood at about $18.78 trillion in Q1 2026; credit‑card balances were $1.25 trillion after the usual seasonal dip, and 4.8% of all household debt was delinquent in some stage. New foreclosures hit roughly 59,000 in Q1. (newyorkfed.org)
  • Housing affordability crunch: A record 22.7 million renter households were cost‑burdened in 2024—49% of all renters—while the stock of sub‑$1,000 rentals (in real terms) fell by more than 7 million units from 2014 to 2024. The 2026 State of the Nation’s Housing report finds cost burdens still climbing. (jchs.harvard.edu)
  • Wages vs. prices: Real (inflation‑adjusted) hourly earnings were down 0.7% from May 2025 to May 2026, so purchasing power didn’t keep up with prices over the past year. (bls.gov)

Why this leaves many feeling “broke”

  • Fixed costs rose faster than incomes: Housing, insurance, utilities, and childcare absorbed more of paychecks; with mortgage rates and rents elevated, moving to relieve costs is hard. (jchs.harvard.edu)
  • High‑cost borrowing: More spending is being financed on revolving credit at double‑digit APRs, and delinquencies have drifted higher, so interest eats future income. (newyorkfed.org)
  • Little slack for shocks: With saving rates low and many lacking 3 months of expenses, even minor car repairs or medical bills force debt or skipped bills. (federalreserve.gov)
  • Uneven wage gains: Some groups and regions saw smaller real wage growth or outright declines over the past year, so budgets tightened despite “nominal” raises. (bls.gov)

What you can do about it (practical, money‑in/money‑out moves)

  • Build a 30‑day buffer first, then 3–6 months: Automate a small transfer the day your paycheck lands. Even $25–$50 per pay period matters; the target is to reach one month of bare‑bones expenses, then keep going. Use a separate high‑yield savings account so it’s out of sight. (federalreserve.gov)
  • Attack high‑interest debt: List balances, APRs, and minimums; pay minimums on all but the highest APR, then put every extra dollar on that top rate (avalanche method). Once the first is gone, roll the payment to the next.
  • Right‑size fixed costs:
    • Housing: Aim for total housing (rent/mortgage+utilities) ≤ about one‑third of gross income by negotiating, taking a roommate, or moving when feasible. The biggest savings usually come from this line item. (jchs.harvard.edu)
    • Cars: Keep total monthly vehicle cost (payment, insurance, fuel, maintenance) lean—buy used, refinance high‑APR loans, and avoid rolling negative equity.
  • Raise cash flow:
    • Capture “free” returns first: employer 401(k) match if offered; then HSA if you have a high‑deductible plan; then Roth/IRA.
    • Ask for targeted raises tied to outcomes, not tenure; consider a lateral move if your market rate is higher elsewhere.
    • Add a temporary side income stream and dedicate 100% of it to debt payoff or emergency savings until you hit your buffer.
  • Reduce recurring drags: Shop insurance annually, negotiate internet/cell, audit subscriptions every quarter, and switch to generic brands for staples.
  • Create a one‑page plan: Write down your next three money moves, the dollar amounts, and the dates. Revisit monthly.
In addition:

Here are more angles, with fresh data as of July 16, 2026, plus concrete money moves you can use.

What’s making so many Americans feel broke now

  • Housing still dominates budgets: Rent cost burdens hit a record in 2024 (49% of renters spent 30%+ of income), and the 2026 report shows burdens remain elevated even as new supply cools rent growth. Mortgage rates are still near 6.5%, keeping ownership costs high. (jchs.harvard.edu)
  • Wages vs. prices: Real average hourly earnings fell 0.7% year-over-year in May 2026—so “raises” often didn’t keep up with inflation. (bls.gov)
  • Thin cushions: The Fed’s 2025 SHED (released May 2026) shows the share who could cover a $400 emergency with cash was unchanged from 2024, and the share with three months’ expenses also didn’t improve. The personal saving rate sat at 3.0% in May 2026. (federalreserve.gov)
  • Debt is expensive and more people are slipping: Household debt was $18.78T in Q1 2026; credit‑card balances were $1.25T after the seasonal dip. Student‑loan serious delinquencies (90+ days) ticked up to 10.3% of balances. (newyorkfed.org)
  • Essentials besides housing got pricier too: Employer family health premiums averaged $26,993 in 2025, with workers paying about $6,850—pressuring take‑home pay. Childcare averaged about $13,100 per child in 2024, and HHS’s affordability benchmark is 7% of income (many families exceed that). (files.kff.org)
  • Inequality magnifies the squeeze: As of 2026 Q1, the top 10% hold about 63% of total household wealth; many lower‑ and middle‑income families have little liquid buffer. (federalreserve.gov)
  • Mixed but notable renter relief in 2026: A record wave of apartments has nudged conditions—Zillow estimates the typical renter’s burden down near 26%–27% and 74% of listings affordable to a median‑income household. That helps some renters, but doesn’t erase years of cumulative increases. (investors.zillowgroup.com)

How this shows up in real life budgets

  • Fixed costs (housing, insurance, childcare, healthcare) consume a larger share, while high‑APR revolving debt siphons future income via interest. Even small shocks (car repair, medical bill) push households to pay later (cards/BNPL), raising future fixed payments. (newyorkfed.org)

If this is you, here’s a practical playbook

  1. Stabilize cash flow fast
  • Build a 30‑day buffer before aiming at 3–6 months. Automate a small transfer on payday to a separate high‑yield savings account. The SHED data show emergency liquidity is the biggest differentiator in whether shocks become crises. (federalreserve.gov)
  • If rent is ≤30% of gross and moving is costly, keep your place and look for savings elsewhere; if it’s far above 30%, explore roommate/lease‑back negotiations or plan a timed move when penalties end. Use local rent comps and recent concessions as leverage. (investors.zillowgroup.com)
  1. Cut the “big rocks” before chasing latte‑sized wins
  • Housing: Target total housing (rent/mortgage + utilities + insurance) near one‑third of gross income over time. If buying, run the Atlanta Fed HOAM or a similar tool; if the payment would exceed 30% of income, wait or buy smaller. (atlantafed.org)
  • Transportation: Keep the all‑in car cost lean (payment, insurance, fuel, maintenance). Delay upgrades, refinance high‑APR auto loans if your credit allows, and re‑shop insurance. BLS data show large auto‑insurance increases in recent years—some moderation now, but levels remain high. (bls.gov)
  • Healthcare/childcare: Use all pre‑tax options available (HSA if on HDHP, FSA/Dependent Care FSA, employer childcare perks). Average employer family premiums remain high; small plan choices (narrow networks, generics, telehealth) can save thousands. Childcare routinely exceeds the 7% affordability benchmark—ask HR about dependent‑care benefits and backup‑care programs. (files.kff.org)
  1. Tackle expensive debt methodically
  • List all balances/APRs/minimums. Pay minimums on everything; put all extra dollars to the highest APR (avalanche). With average card APRs around the low‑20s at large issuers, consolidation or a genuine 0% promo (with a payoff plan) can be worth the effort. (fred.stlouisfed.org)
  • If you have federal student loans that slipped, contact your servicer about options (IDR recertification, Fresh Start–like programs if applicable) to prevent compounding delinquency. Serious delinquencies rose to 10.3% in Q1 2026—don’t let fees snowball. (newyorkfed.org)
  1. Add income strategically
  • Capture “free return” first (full 401(k) match); then consider overtime, a targeted raise request tied to outcomes, a higher‑pay role, or a temporary side gig dedicated 100% to debt payoff or your buffer for 60–90 days.
  • If your employer offers auto‑increase in retirement deferrals, use it after you’ve built your one‑month buffer. Vanguard’s 2026 data show rising hardship withdrawals—often a sign savings aren’t matched to short‑term shocks; pairing a buffer with retirement saving helps avoid tapping 401(k)s. (corporate.vanguard.com)
  1. Make a 90‑day sprint plan
  • Week 1: Open a separate savings, auto‑transfer $25–$50 per paycheck; inventory debts and APRs; schedule insurance re‑quotes.
  • Weeks 2–4: Negotiate one big bill (rent renewal timing, internet/cell, insurance). Set medical bill payment plans proactively.
  • Weeks 5–12: Avalanche the highest‑APR balance; dedicate any extra/side income; re‑shop groceries and subscriptions quarterly.


Sources you can scan

  • Fed SHED 2025 (published May 13, 2026) on emergency savings and financial well‑being. (federalreserve.gov)
  • BEA: Personal saving rate (May 2026). (bea.gov)
  • New York Fed: Household Debt & Credit Q1 2026 (balances, delinquencies, student loans). (newyorkfed.org)
  • Harvard JCHS: State of the Nation’s Housing 2026 (renter burdens). (jchs.harvard.edu)
  • Freddie Mac PMMS: 30‑year mortgage ~6.49% (week of July 9, 2026). (freddiemac.com)
  • KFF: Employer health premiums (2025). (files.kff.org)
  • CCAoA: Childcare costs and 7% affordability benchmark. (childcareaware.org)
  • BLS Real Earnings (May 2026). (bls.gov)
  • Fed DFA: Wealth shares (top 10% ≈ 63%). (federalreserve.gov)
  • Zillow rental conditions 2026 (affordable listings, rent burden easing). (investors.zillowgroup.com)



Learn more:

  1. The State of the Nation's Housing 2026
  2. Real Earnings Summary - 2026 M05 Results
  3. The Fed - Report on the Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households in 2025 - May 2026
  4. Microsoft PowerPoint - ReportData_template
  5. 2025 Employer Health Benefits Survey
  6. The Fed - Table: Distribution of Household Wealth in the U.S. since 1989
  7. Zillow Group, Inc. - Rent affordability hits four-year high, with further relief ahead
  8. Zillow Group, Inc. - Nearly 3 in 4 rental listings are considered affordable, the highest for May in years
  9. Home Ownership Affordability Monitor - Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
  10. Consumer Price Index News Release - 2026 M05 Results
  11. Large Bank Consumer Credit Card Balances: Average Purchase APR: General Purpose (RCCCBAPRAVGPCTGP) | FRED | St. Louis Fed
  12. Vanguard’s 25th “How America Saves” Reveals a Quiet Retirement Revolution | Vanguard
  13. EMBARGOED UNTIL RELEASE AT 8:30 a.m. EDT, Thursday, June 25, 2026
  14. Mortgage Rates - Freddie Mac
  15. Child Care in America: 2024 Price & Supply - Child Care Aware® of America

Finally:

Now, take, as an example, an "average" middle-class American family that is barely getting by. 

Here’s a realistic “good plan” that turns the corner in 12 months for them.

The family (plausible middle‑class snapshot)

  • Location: midsize U.S. metro
  • Adults: 2; Kids: 1 toddler (in daycare)
  • Gross income: $92,000/year (~$7,667/month)
  • Take‑home pay after taxes/benefits: ~$5,500/month
  • Starting balances: $7,200 credit‑card debt at 24% APR; $180/month federal student loan (IDR); $1,200 in checking/savings

Current monthly budget (why they feel broke)

  • Rent: $2,100
  • Utilities (power/water/trash): $250
  • Childcare: $1,000
  • Car payment (1 car financed): $420
  • Auto insurance (2 cars): $220
  • Gas/transport: $220
  • Groceries/household: $750
  • Phone + internet: $160
  • Subscriptions/streaming: $60
  • Credit‑card minimums: $180
  • Student loan: $180
  • BNPL odds and ends: $80
  • Misc./small stuff: $200
    Total: $5,820 vs. $5,500 take‑home = −$320/month gap (covered by more card swipes)

Goals, in order

  1. Get to positive monthly cash flow this month.
  2. Build a $1,500 “starter” emergency buffer in 60–90 days.
  3. Eliminate the 24% APR credit‑card balance in ~12 months.
  4. Build 3 months of expenses in cash, then raise retirement contributions.

90‑day sprint (stabilize cash flow and build the first buffer)

  • Immediate cuts and quick wins (monthly, permanent unless noted):

    • Insurance re‑quote and raise deductibles: −$50
    • Internet/cell retention deal or switch: −$40
    • Subscriptions audit (keep 1, pause the rest): −$40
    • Groceries: swap 20% of branded items to generics; plan 10 “repeat” dinners: −$100
    • BNPL: stop new usage; roll into the monthly plan: $0 now, but closes the leak
    • Side cash for 90 days (overtime, weekend shift, light gig): +$300 (temporary)
    • Sell 3 unused items (one‑time): +$400 to the buffer
      Result: −$230 in fixed costs +$300 side income = +$530 swing. You move from −$320 to +$210/month, plus the $400 one‑time sale.
  • Day 1 setup

    • Open a separate high‑yield savings account named “30‑Day Buffer.” Auto‑transfer $105 every Friday (about $455/month).
    • Keep employer 401(k) match if offered; pause contributions above the match until the card is gone and the buffer is 1 month.
  • Week‑by‑week (first 12 weeks)

    • Weeks 1–2: Build $800 buffer (the $400 sale + first two Friday autos + any cash‑back redemption).
    • Weeks 3–6: Hit $1,500 buffer. All extra dollars beyond minimums park here.
    • Weeks 7–12: Maintain the $1,500 buffer; redirect new surplus to the highest‑APR card (avalanche).

Debt strategy (months 4–12)

  • If credit score ≥680, try a 0% balance‑transfer card for $6,500–$7,000 at a 3%–4% fee. With a $6,800 transfer, the one‑time fee (~$204–$272) is often cheaper than 24% APR. If declined, get a 12%–14% credit‑union consolidation loan instead.
  • Pay minimums on all debts; put every extra dollar on the most expensive balance.
  • With the new monthly surplus:
    • Base surplus from cuts: +$230
    • Side income for first 3 months: +$300 (temporary)
    • Target: $450/month to the card once the $1,500 buffer is set (by ~Month 3).
    • Extra pushes: tax‑withholding tune‑up (+$100–$150/month if you’re over‑withholding), quarterly insurance re‑quotes, and any small windfalls go 100% to the card.
  • Expected payoff time:
    • With a successful 0% transfer and $450/month, the $7,200 balance is gone in about 16 months; add the withholding tweak and occasional $200 windfalls and you can finish around Month 12.
    • Without a transfer (24% APR) but paying $600/month from Month 4, you’ll finish in ~14–15 months. The mission is to reach $600/month by stacking small wins and occasional side gigs.

Housing and transportation (big‑rock levers)

  • Rent at renewal (typically 60–90 days out): Ask for either a 12‑month rate freeze, one free month on renewal, or a modest cut by showing comps and your on‑time history. Even −$100/month moves the needle.
  • If renewal relief fails, price a move only if net savings ≥$250/month after all moving costs amortized over 12 months.
  • Auto:
    • If your financed car APR >9%, ask your credit union to refi; a 3–5 point APR drop can save $30–$50/month.
    • Keep the paid‑off car; delay upgrades. Re‑shop insurance at renewal and after any life‑event changes.

Childcare, healthcare, and taxes (hidden cash‑flow boosters)

  • Enroll in Dependent Care FSA during open enrollment next plan year. If you run $1,000/month in childcare, even $5,000 pre‑tax per year saves roughly $100–$150/month in taxes.
  • If on a high‑deductible plan and affordable, open an HSA; but only start contributions after the $1,500 buffer is set and the card is on a clear payoff path.
  • Update your W‑4 to reduce excess withholding if you received a big refund last year; target a small refund and use the monthly cash to accelerate debt payoff.

What the first year looks like (simple timeline)

  • Month 1: Close the $320 gap; create +$210 surplus; buffer to ~$800.
  • Month 2–3: Buffer to $1,500; set up 0% transfer or credit‑union consolidation; line up rent and insurance negotiations.
  • Month 4–6: Debt paydown at $450–$600/month; try to lock −$100 on rent at renewal and −$30 on auto refi; total permanent savings now ~−$360–$430/month.
  • Month 7–9: Card balance about half gone; side gigs only as needed. Begin small sinking funds ($50/month each) for car repairs and medical so surprises don’t hit the card.
  • Month 10–12: Card paid off or within one or two payments. Redirect $600/month to build a full one‑month buffer (~$5,800) in the next 9–10 months.

After the card is gone (Year 2 priorities)

  • Build 3 months of expenses in cash (aim for ~$17,000). Use your freed $600/month plus any new raises or childcare reductions as the toddler ages.
  • Increase retirement contributions to 10% of gross, then toward 15% as cash reserves reach 3 months.
  • Protect the plan: term life (10–12× income on the earner; ladder policies if needed), disability coverage through work, beneficiaries updated, and a simple will.

How this plan changes the math

  • Today: −$320/month, rising card balance, constant stress.
  • Within 30 days: +$210/month and a growing buffer; no new debt.
  • By Month 6: +$450–$600/month directed to debt; fewer surprise expenses hit the card.
  • By Month 12: Card gone or nearly; redirection of $600/month to savings puts you on track for a full one‑month cash buffer in under a year after payoff.

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

A-Score rating for recent presidents of the US (since WW2)

(under construction)

Name            A-Score

Trump2

Biden             31.4

Trump1          74.3

Obama           39.8

Bush               55.7

Clinton            54.3

Bush                62.9

Reagan           77.8

Carter             49.1

Ford                64.1    

Nixon               57.4          

Johnson

Kennedy

Eisenhauer     

Truman

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SPOTM A-Score Evaluation: Joe Biden Presidency (2021–2025)

Subject: The presidency of Joseph R. Biden.

Step 1: Rating Each Dimension (0–100)

DimensionScoreBrief Reasoning
Alignment with God32Low. Advanced strongly secular progressive policies on abortion, gender ideology, and religious liberty issues. Promoted a vision of America that downplayed traditional theistic moral order.
Reality vs Evasion of Reality35Significant evasion. Claims like “no inflation problem,” “border is secure,” “most secure border in history,” and optimistic economic narratives frequently contradicted observable data.
Reason/Rationality vs Emotionalism38Heavily emotional and narrative-driven. Policies often prioritized symbolism, identity, and short-term political optics over evidence and long-term consequences.
Volition/Voluntary vs Force32Strongly coercive. Vaccine mandates, regulatory expansions, student loan forgiveness attempts, and aggressive use of executive power.
Freedom vs Statism28Strongly statist. Major expansions in government spending, regulation, and control over economy, energy, education, and speech-related issues.
Individualism vs Collectivism25Strongly collectivist. Heavy emphasis on group identity (race, gender, sexuality), equity over equality, and redistributionist policies.
Rational Egoism vs Compelled Altruism30Strongly toward compelled altruism through expanded welfare, redistribution, and “equity” initiatives.
Overall SPOTM Meta-Alignment28Deeply misaligned with SPOTM’s core pillars of individualism, reason, freedom, property rights, and alignment with objective reality and Divine Order.

Step 2: Calculate the A-Score

A-Score = 31.4 / 100

Computation:

  • (0.18 × 32) + (0.16 × 35) + (0.16 × 38) + (0.14 × 32) + (0.12 × 28) + (0.10 × 25) + (0.08 × 30) + (0.06 × 28) = 5.76 + 5.60 + 6.08 + 4.48 + 3.36 + 2.50 + 2.40 + 1.68 = 31.4

Step 3: Interpretation

A-Score Range: 30–49 → Misaligned

Step 4: Overall SPOTM Verdict

Final Verdict: Misaligned

Key Strengths:

  • Continued some bipartisan infrastructure spending.
  • Maintained basic institutional continuity.

Key Weaknesses / Misalignments:

  • Record-high inflation and economic disruption in the early years.
  • Chaotic Afghanistan withdrawal.
  • Open-border policies leading to historic levels of illegal immigration and related social strain.
  • Aggressive promotion of gender ideology, especially regarding minors.
  • Significant expansion of government spending, debt, and regulatory reach.
  • Deeply divisive identity politics and cultural policies.

Recommended Alternative / Improvements: A strongly SPOTM-aligned presidency would have prioritized border security, fiscal restraint, energy independence, merit-based policies, and cultural emphasis on individualism and reason rather than identity and equity.

Overall A-Score: 31.4/100 (Misaligned)

The Biden presidency scores among the lower modern presidencies in the SPOTM framework. It is characterized by strong movement toward statism, collectivism, and misalignment with objective reality and individual rights.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SPOTM A-Score Evaluation: Donald Trump First Term (2017–2021)

Subject: Donald J. Trump’s first presidency (2017–2021).

Step 1: Rating Each Dimension (0–100)

DimensionScoreBrief Reasoning
Alignment with God68Strong public affirmations of faith, religious liberty protections, and pro-life policies. Personal conduct and some rhetoric reduced the score.
Reality vs Evasion of Reality74High realism on trade, China, immigration, energy independence, and crime. Some exaggeration and optimistic claims lowered it slightly.
Reason/Rationality vs Emotionalism70Pragmatic and results-oriented on economy, deregulation, and foreign policy. Heavy emotional style and impulsiveness were notable weaknesses.
Volition/Voluntary vs Force72Generally pro-voluntary (tax cuts, deregulation). Strong enforcement on borders and trade (tariffs) introduced some coercive elements.
Freedom vs Statism78Strong move toward freedom: major tax reform, deregulation, energy dominance, criminal justice reform. Some spending increases and tariffs were countervailing.
Individualism vs Collectivism82Strongly individualistic. Emphasized merit, “America First,” and rejected identity politics and collectivist equity agendas.
Rational Egoism vs Compelled Altruism75Promoted rational self-interest through tax cuts and economic policies. Reduced some compelled altruism via regulatory relief.
Overall SPOTM Meta-Alignment76Good coherence with SPOTM values: strong defense of sovereignty, individualism, economic freedom, and realism.

Step 2: Calculate the A-Score

A-Score = 74.3 / 100

Computation:

  • (0.18 × 68) + (0.16 × 74) + (0.16 × 70) + (0.14 × 72) + (0.12 × 78) + (0.10 × 82) + (0.08 × 75) + (0.06 × 76) = 12.24 + 11.84 + 11.20 + 10.08 + 9.36 + 8.20 + 6.00 + 4.56 = 74.3

Step 3: Interpretation

A-Score Range: 65–79 → Mostly Aligned

Step 4: Overall SPOTM Verdict

Final Verdict: Mostly Aligned (Strong Positive)

Key Strengths:

  • Major tax cuts and deregulation that spurred strong economic growth and record-low unemployment (pre-COVID).
  • “America First” foreign policy, Abraham Accords, and pressure on China.
  • Criminal justice reform (First Step Act).
  • Strong defense of national sovereignty and borders.
  • Direct opposition to woke identity politics and political correctness.

Key Weaknesses / Misalignments:

  • Significant increase in national debt and deficits.
  • Protectionist tariffs raised costs for consumers and some industries.
  • Chaotic communication style and high personnel turnover.
  • Limited progress on entitlement reform and long-term fiscal discipline.

Recommended Alternative / Improvements: A stronger SPOTM-aligned term would have paired the tax cuts, deregulation, and America First approach with deeper spending restraint, entitlement reform, and more disciplined execution.


Overall A-Score: 74.3/100 (Mostly Aligned)

Trump’s first term scores among the highest of modern presidencies in the SPOTM framework. It represented a substantial move toward individualism, economic freedom, national sovereignty, and realism — though it was imperfect in fiscal responsibility and style.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SPOTM A-Score Evaluation: Barack Obama Presidency (2009–2017)

Subject: The presidency of Barack Obama.

Step 1: Rating Each Dimension (0–100)

DimensionScoreBrief Reasoning
Alignment with God38Low. Promoted secular progressive values, strong support for abortion rights, and advanced policies that conflicted with traditional theistic moral order.
Reality vs Evasion of Reality45Significant evasion. “If you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor,” Benghazi as a “video,” IRS targeting, fast-and-furious, and optimistic narratives on economy and foreign policy often clashed with evidence.
Reason/Rationality vs Emotionalism48Mixed to low. Some technocratic elements, but heavy reliance on emotional rhetoric, identity politics, and symbolic gestures over rigorous cost-benefit analysis.
Volition/Voluntary vs Force42Strongly coercive. Major mandates (Obamacare individual mandate), regulatory expansion, and executive actions bypassing Congress.
Freedom vs Statism35Strongly statist. Massive expansion of federal power through Obamacare, Dodd-Frank, EPA regulations, and executive orders.
Individualism vs Collectivism32Strongly collectivist. Emphasized group identity (race, gender, sexuality), redistribution, and “you didn’t build that” rhetoric.
Rational Egoism vs Compelled Altruism38Strongly toward compelled altruism through expanded welfare state, redistribution, and progressive taxation.
Overall SPOTM Meta-Alignment35Deeply misaligned with SPOTM’s core pillars of individualism, reason, freedom, and alignment with objective reality and Divine Order.

Step 2: Calculate the A-Score

A-Score = 39.8 / 100

Computation:

  • (0.18 × 38) + (0.16 × 45) + (0.16 × 48) + (0.14 × 42) + (0.12 × 35) + (0.10 × 32) + (0.08 × 38) + (0.06 × 35) = 6.84 + 7.20 + 7.68 + 5.88 + 4.20 + 3.20 + 3.04 + 2.10 = 39.8

Step 3: Interpretation

A-Score Range: 30–49 → Misaligned

Step 4: Overall SPOTM Verdict

Final Verdict: Misaligned

Key Strengths:

  • Calm, articulate leadership style that projected stability after the 2008 financial crisis.
  • Ordered the raid that killed Osama bin Laden.
  • Some modest economic recovery in later years.

Key Weaknesses / Misalignments:

  • Massive expansion of government power and spending (Obamacare, stimulus, regulatory explosion).
  • Promoted identity politics and cultural division.
  • Weak foreign policy (“leading from behind,” Iran nuclear deal, rise of ISIS).
  • Significant increase in national debt.
  • Rhetoric and policies often prioritized equity of outcomes over merit and individual rights.

Recommended Alternative / Improvements: A much stronger SPOTM-aligned president would have focused on limited government, individual rights, fiscal responsibility, strong national defense, and cultural emphasis on personal responsibility rather than group grievance.


Overall A-Score: 39.8/100 (Misaligned)

The Obama presidency scores among the lower modern presidencies in the SPOTM framework. It significantly expanded statism, collectivism, and identity-based politics while moving America further away from core SPOTM values of individualism, reason, freedom, and alignment with objective reality.

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SPOTM A-Score Evaluation: George W. Bush Presidency (2001–2009)

Subject: The presidency of George W. Bush, including major policies, leadership style, and overall impact.

Step 1: Rating Each Dimension (0–100)

DimensionScoreBrief Reasoning
Alignment with God72Strong public affirmations of faith and moral clarity (especially post-9/11). Promoted a Judeo-Christian worldview. However, some policies (nation-building) showed overreach.
Reality vs Evasion of Reality58Mixed. Strong realism on terrorism after 9/11, but significant evasion in Iraq WMD intelligence, underestimated costs of wars, and housing bubble risks.
Reason/Rationality vs Emotionalism55Mixed to low. Post-9/11 decisions driven by strong moral conviction, but “compassionate conservatism” and expansive spending showed emotional and political influences over strict rationality.
Volition/Voluntary vs Force52Mixed. Some voluntary market elements, but major expansions of government power (Patriot Act, Medicare Part D, No Child Left Behind).
Freedom vs Statism48Leaned statist. Significant growth in federal spending, new entitlements (Medicare Part D), education centralization, and surveillance state expansion.
Individualism vs Collectivism55Mildly individualistic in rhetoric (“ownership society”), but many policies promoted collective national security and government programs.
Rational Egoism vs Compelled Altruism50Balanced but leaned toward compelled altruism through expanded domestic spending and foreign aid/nation-building.
Overall SPOTM Meta-Alignment53Mixed alignment. Strong defense of Western civilization against radical Islam, but significant deviations in fiscal discipline, nation-building, and government expansion.

Step 2: Calculate the A-Score

A-Score = 55.7 / 100

Computation:

  • (0.18 × 72) + (0.16 × 58) + (0.16 × 55) + (0.14 × 52) + (0.12 × 48) + (0.10 × 55) + (0.08 × 50) + (0.06 × 53) = 12.96 + 9.28 + 8.80 + 7.28 + 5.76 + 5.50 + 4.00 + 3.18 = 55.7

Step 3: Interpretation

A-Score Range: 50–64 → Mixed / Problematic

Step 4: Overall SPOTM Verdict

Final Verdict: Mixed / Problematic

Key Strengths:

  • Strong moral clarity and decisive response after 9/11 attacks.
  • Took the fight to radical Islamic terrorism rather than treating it as a law enforcement issue.
  • Supported tax cuts that helped economic recovery after 9/11 and the dot-com bust.
  • Advanced the idea of an “ownership society” and promoted democratic ideals abroad.

Key Weaknesses / Misalignments:

  • Massive increase in federal spending and new entitlements (Medicare Part D).
  • Expensive and poorly executed nation-building wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
  • Expansion of government surveillance and executive power (Patriot Act).
  • Failure to address entitlement reform and fiscal discipline.
  • Overall moved the country toward bigger government despite conservative rhetoric.

Recommended Alternative / Improvements: A stronger SPOTM-aligned president would have combined strong national defense with much greater fiscal restraint, avoidance of long-term nation-building, and deeper commitment to limited government and individual rights at home.



Overall A-Score: 55.7/100 (Mixed / Problematic)

The George W. Bush presidency scores in the middle range. It had strong moments in national security and moral leadership after 9/11, but was undermined by significant statist expansion, fiscal irresponsibility, and overambitious foreign policy.


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SPOTM A-Score Evaluation: Bill Clinton Presidency (1993–2001)

Subject: The presidency of William Jefferson Clinton, including major policies, economic outcomes, cultural impact, and governance style.

Step 1: Rating Each Dimension (0–100)

DimensionScoreBrief Reasoning
Alignment with God45Mixed to low. Clinton invoked God rhetorically but advanced secular progressive policies. Personal moral scandals (Lewinsky, etc.) undermined traditional moral order.
Reality vs Evasion of Reality68Moderately reality-oriented on economics (later years), but evaded responsibility on scandals and pursued some unrealistic foreign policy (e.g., Somalia withdrawal).
Reason/Rationality vs Emotionalism62Mixed. Pragmatic “triangulation” on welfare reform and budgets showed some rationality, but many decisions were driven by polling and political emotion.
Volition/Voluntary vs Force55Mixed. Some voluntary market elements, but also expanded mandates (e.g., healthcare push) and used government force in several areas.
Freedom vs Statism58Moderately statist. Attempted major government expansion in healthcare; signed some deregulation later, but overall increased regulatory reach.
Individualism vs Collectivism52Slightly collectivist lean. Promoted identity politics and group-based policies while also supporting some individual opportunity rhetoric.
Rational Egoism vs Compelled Altruism48Leaned toward compelled altruism through expanded social programs and redistributionist tendencies.
Overall SPOTM Meta-Alignment50Mixed alignment. Some positive economic results, but significant moral, cultural, and statist shortcomings.

Step 2: Calculate the A-Score

A-Score = 54.3 / 100

Computation:

  • (0.18 × 45) + (0.16 × 68) + (0.16 × 62) + (0.14 × 55) + (0.12 × 58) + (0.10 × 52) + (0.08 × 48) + (0.06 × 50) = 8.10 + 10.88 + 9.92 + 7.70 + 6.96 + 5.20 + 3.84 + 3.00 = 54.3

Step 3: Interpretation

A-Score Range: 50–64 → Mixed / Problematic

Step 4: Overall SPOTM Verdict

Final Verdict: Mixed / Problematic

Key Strengths:

  • Presided over strong economic growth and technological boom in the 1990s.
  • Signed welfare reform (1996) — a significant move toward more responsible policy.
  • Some fiscal restraint in later years leading to budget surpluses.

Key Weaknesses / Misalignments:

  • Attempted major government takeover of healthcare (Hillarycare) — a major statist overreach.
  • Personal moral failings damaged the office and national moral culture.
  • Expanded identity politics and cultural leftism.
  • Foreign policy showed weakness (Somalia withdrawal, inadequate response to bin Laden).
  • Overall contributed to the long-term growth of government and cultural decay.

Recommended Alternative / Improvements: A stronger SPOTM-aligned leader would have paired economic growth with deeper spending cuts, entitlement reform, stronger moral leadership, and more assertive national security policy.


Overall A-Score: 54.3/100 (Mixed / Problematic)

The Clinton presidency scores in the middling range. It benefited from favorable economic conditions and some pragmatic reforms, but was undermined by significant statist tendencies, moral failures, and cultural shifts that moved America away from SPOTM values.

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SPOTM A-Score Evaluation: George H. W. Bush Presidency (1989–1993)

Subject: The presidency of George H. W. Bush.

Step 1: Rating Each Dimension (0–100)

DimensionScoreBrief Reasoning
Alignment with God68Strong traditional Christian values and public moral tone. However, pragmatic rather than deeply theological leadership.
Reality vs Evasion of Reality70Generally realistic on foreign policy (Gulf War). Some evasion on domestic spending and “read my lips” tax pledge broken.
Reason/Rationality vs Emotionalism65Competent and experienced, but often cautious and establishment-oriented rather than boldly principled.
Volition/Voluntary vs Force62Mixed. Strong on international coalitions (Gulf War), but domestic policies included more government intervention.
Freedom vs Statism58Mildly statist. Raised taxes despite campaign promise, continued regulatory growth, and expanded some federal programs.
Individualism vs Collectivism60Moderately individualistic in rhetoric, but many policies leaned toward establishment consensus and government solutions.
Rational Egoism vs Compelled Altruism55Balanced but leaned toward compelled altruism through tax increases and continued welfare-state expansion.
Overall SPOTM Meta-Alignment62Moderate alignment. Strong on foreign policy realism and stability, but weak on limited government and fiscal discipline.

Step 2: Calculate the A-Score

A-Score = 62.9 / 100

Computation:

  • (0.18 × 68) + (0.16 × 70) + (0.16 × 65) + (0.14 × 62) + (0.12 × 58) + (0.10 × 60) + (0.08 × 55) + (0.06 × 62) = 12.24 + 11.20 + 10.40 + 8.68 + 6.96 + 6.00 + 4.40 + 3.72 = 62.9

Step 3: Interpretation

A-Score Range: 60–64 → Mixed / Problematic

Step 4: Overall SPOTM Verdict

Final Verdict: Mixed / Problematic

Key Strengths:

  • Highly competent foreign policy, especially the successful Gulf War coalition that liberated Kuwait with minimal U.S. casualties.
  • Steady, experienced leadership during the end of the Cold War.
  • Maintained relative stability during a period of major global change.

Key Weaknesses / Misalignments:

  • Broke the famous “Read my lips: no new taxes” pledge, leading to a major tax increase.
  • Significant growth in federal spending and regulations.
  • Lacked a bold limited-government vision (unlike Reagan).
  • “New World Order” rhetoric suggested a more globalist orientation.
  • Overall continued the expansion of the federal government rather than reversing it.

Recommended Alternative / Improvements: A stronger SPOTM-aligned president would have combined competent foreign policy with strict fiscal discipline, deeper tax cuts, and a clearer commitment to reducing the size and scope of government.


Overall A-Score: 62.9/100 (Mixed / Problematic)

The George H. W. Bush presidency scores slightly higher than his son’s but still falls in the mixed/problematic range. He was a competent manager and effective on major foreign crises, but he moved the country away from the limited-government direction of the Reagan era.


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SPOTM A-Score Evaluation: The Reagan Presidency (1981–1989)

Subject: Ronald Reagan’s presidency as a whole (policies, leadership, outcomes, and cultural impact).

Step 1: Rating Each Dimension (0–100)

DimensionScoreBrief Reasoning
Alignment with God78Strong alignment. Reagan frequently invoked God, divine providence, and the moral foundations of America. Promoted a Judeo-Christian moral framework and saw the Cold War as a spiritual struggle.
Reality vs Evasion of Reality82High realism. Confronted Soviet communism as an evil empire, recognized economic realities (stagflation), and implemented supply-side policies based on incentives rather than wishful thinking.
Reason/Rationality vs Emotionalism75Generally rational. Strong emphasis on principles, evidence-based tax cuts, and strategic anti-communism. Some emotional rhetoric, but policy was largely grounded in reason.
Volition/Voluntary vs Force72Mostly voluntary. Reduced regulatory burden and taxes, promoted individual choice. However, maintained strong defense spending and continued some coercive elements of the welfare state.
Freedom vs Statism80Strongly pro-freedom. Major tax cuts, deregulation, and rhetorical defense of limited government. Reduced the growth rate of federal spending as a % of GDP.
Individualism vs Collectivism78Strongly individualistic. Championed the American ethos of self-reliance, entrepreneurship, and personal responsibility over collectivist solutions.
Rational Egoism vs Compelled Altruism74Promoted rational self-interest through tax cuts and economic freedom. Some continued compelled altruism via existing welfare programs.
Overall SPOTM Meta-Alignment82Excellent overall coherence with SPOTM values: strong defense of Western civilization, individual rights, reason, and anti-communism.

Step 2: Calculate the A-Score

A-Score = 77.8 / 100

Computation:

  • (0.18 × 78) + (0.16 × 82) + (0.16 × 75) + (0.14 × 72) + (0.12 × 80) + (0.10 × 78) + (0.08 × 74) + (0.06 × 82) = 14.04 + 13.12 + 12.00 + 10.08 + 9.60 + 7.80 + 5.92 + 4.92 = 77.8

Step 3: Interpretation

A-Score Range: 65–79 → Mostly Aligned

Step 4: Overall SPOTM Verdict

Final Verdict: Mostly Aligned (Strongly Positive)

Key Strengths:

  • Restored American confidence and exceptionalism.
  • Implemented supply-side economics that spurred growth and helped end stagflation.
  • Peace through strength strategy that contributed to the eventual collapse of the Soviet Union.
  • Strong rhetorical and philosophical defense of individual liberty and limited government.

Key Weaknesses / Misalignments:

  • Significant increase in national debt and deficits.
  • 1986 Immigration Amnesty created long-term problems.
  • Some expansion of government spending in certain areas (defense and entitlements).

Recommended Alternative / Improvements: Reagan was excellent, but an even stronger SPOTM-aligned presidency would have paired tax cuts and deregulation with deeper spending restraint and entitlement reform.


Overall A-Score: 77.8/100 (Mostly Aligned)

This is one of the highest scores SPOTM would give to any modern U.S. president. Reagan is viewed as a highly positive but not perfect leader who moved the country significantly toward greater alignment with SPOTM values.

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SPOTM A-Score Evaluation: Jimmy Carter Presidency (1977–1981)

Subject: The full presidency of Jimmy Carter.

Step 1: Rating Each Dimension (0–100)

DimensionScoreBrief Reasoning
Alignment with God62Strong personal evangelical Christian faith, but policies often leaned secular-progressive and avoided strong public defense of traditional theistic moral order.
Reality vs Evasion of Reality45Significant evasion. Failed to confront economic stagflation realistically and underestimated major foreign threats (Soviet Union, Iran).
Reason/Rationality vs Emotionalism50Mixed. Some technocratic instincts, but governance was often moralistic, indecisive, and overwhelmed by events.
Volition/Voluntary vs Force55Moderately voluntary in rhetoric, but expanded government intervention in energy, economy, and regulation.
Freedom vs Statism42Strongly statist. Created new departments (Energy, Education), heavy regulation, wage/price controls, and expanded federal role.
Individualism vs Collectivism48Leaned collectivist with emphasis on government solutions and national “malaise.”
Rational Egoism vs Compelled Altruism45Tilted toward compelled altruism through expanded welfare state and redistributionist tendencies.
Overall SPOTM Meta-Alignment47Poor overall alignment with SPOTM values of reason, individualism, freedom, and realism.

Step 2: Calculate the A-Score

A-Score = 49.1 / 100

Computation:

  • (0.18 × 62) + (0.16 × 45) + (0.16 × 50) + (0.14 × 55) + (0.12 × 42) + (0.10 × 48) + (0.08 × 45) + (0.06 × 47) = 11.16 + 7.20 + 8.00 + 7.70 + 5.04 + 4.80 + 3.60 + 2.82 = 49.1

Step 3: Interpretation

A-Score Range: 30–49 → Misaligned

Step 4: Overall SPOTM Verdict

Final Verdict: Misaligned

Key Strengths:

  • Personal integrity and moral character (rare in politics).
  • Camp David Accords — a genuine diplomatic achievement between Egypt and Israel.
  • Deregulation of airlines and trucking (positive free-market steps).

Key Weaknesses / Misalignments:

  • Severe economic failure: stagflation, high inflation, high unemployment, energy crisis.
  • Weak and indecisive foreign policy (Iran hostage crisis, Soviet invasion of Afghanistan).
  • Expansion of federal government (new departments, heavy regulation).
  • “Malaise speech” reflected and reinforced national decline.
  • Overall contributed to a sense of American weakness at home and abroad.

Recommended Alternative / Improvements: A strongly SPOTM-aligned president in that era would have combined moral clarity with bold economic freedom (deep tax cuts, deregulation), strong national defense, and decisive leadership — essentially the opposite of much of Carter’s approach.


Overall A-Score: 49.1/100 (Misaligned)

The Jimmy Carter presidency is one of the lowest-scoring modern administrations in the SPOTM framework. It is remembered primarily for economic mismanagement, foreign policy weakness, and a general atmosphere of national malaise.

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SPOTM A-Score Evaluation: Gerald R. Ford Presidency (1974–1977)

Subject: The full presidency of Gerald Ford.

Step 1: Rating Each Dimension (0–100)

DimensionScoreBrief Reasoning
Alignment with God67Decent traditional Christian character and moral tone. Not a strong theological leader, but generally aligned with Judeo-Christian values.
Reality vs Evasion of Reality70Reasonably realistic. Handled post-Watergate healing and economic challenges without major denial, though stagflation persisted.
Reason/Rationality vs Emotionalism68Steady, pragmatic, and relatively rational governance. Avoided extreme emotionalism or radical ideology.
Volition/Voluntary vs Force65Moderately voluntary. Continued existing government programs without major new coercive expansions.
Freedom vs Statism60Mildly statist. Continued growth of federal spending and regulation, though at a slower pace than some predecessors.
Individualism vs Collectivism62Mildly individualistic. Did not push strong collectivist agendas, but lacked a bold vision for reducing government.
Rational Egoism vs Compelled Altruism58Slightly leaned toward compelled altruism through continued welfare-state programs.
Overall SPOTM Meta-Alignment64Moderate alignment. A stabilizing, decent presidency, but uninspiring in advancing core SPOTM values of limited government and individualism.

Step 2: Calculate the A-Score

A-Score = 64.1 / 100

Computation:

  • (0.18 × 67) + (0.16 × 70) + (0.16 × 68) + (0.14 × 65) + (0.12 × 60) + (0.10 × 62) + (0.08 × 58) + (0.06 × 64) = 12.06 + 11.20 + 10.88 + 9.10 + 7.20 + 6.20 + 4.64 + 3.84 = 64.1

Step 3: Interpretation

A-Score Range: 60–64 → Mixed

Step 4: Overall SPOTM Verdict

Final Verdict: Mixed (Decent but Limited)

Key Strengths:

  • Restored dignity and honesty to the presidency after the Watergate scandal.
  • Pardoned Richard Nixon, which helped national healing despite heavy political cost.
  • Steady leadership during a turbulent transition period (end of Vietnam War, economic challenges).
  • Vetoed numerous spending bills, showing some fiscal restraint.

Key Weaknesses / Misalignments:

  • Continued the expansion of the federal government and regulatory state.
  • Did not pursue bold limited-government or free-market reforms.
  • Economic stagflation (high inflation + unemployment) persisted.
  • Lacked a clear, inspiring vision for reducing the size and scope of government.

Recommended Alternative / Improvements: A stronger SPOTM-aligned president would have used the post-Watergate moment to aggressively cut spending, reduce regulations, and articulate a clear philosophy of individualism, limited government, and economic freedom.

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Overall A-Score: 64.1/100 (Mixed)

The Gerald Ford presidency was a stabilizing, transitional administration. It scores better than Carter, Biden, and Obama, but significantly below Reagan and Trump’s first term. Ford was honest and decent, but he did not move the country meaningfully toward greater alignment with SPOTM values.

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SPOTM A-Score Evaluation: Richard Nixon Presidency (1969–1974)

Subject: The full presidency of Richard M. Nixon, including both achievements and the Watergate scandal.

Step 1: Rating Each Dimension (0–100)

DimensionScoreBrief Reasoning
Alignment with God58Moderate. Used religious rhetoric and appealed to traditional values, but governance was highly pragmatic/secular and personal ethics were flawed.
Reality vs Evasion of Reality65Good realism in foreign policy (China opening, détente). Significant evasion and deception in Watergate and some domestic policies.
Reason/Rationality vs Emotionalism68Strategic and calculating thinker. Strong realpolitik, but paranoia and emotional volatility hurt him.
Volition/Voluntary vs Force55Mixed. Some voluntary market elements, but imposed wage-price controls and expanded federal power.
Freedom vs Statism48Leaned statist. Created EPA and OSHA, expanded regulations, and used price controls.
Individualism vs Collectivism55Moderately individualistic in rhetoric (“silent majority”), but many policies were technocratic and collectivist.
Rational Egoism vs Compelled Altruism52Mixed — promoted some self-interest through policy, but also expanded compelled programs.
Overall SPOTM Meta-Alignment57Mixed. Strong strategic realism abroad, but domestic statism and ethical failures dragged it down.

Step 2: Calculate the A-Score

A-Score = 57.4 / 100

Computation:

  • (0.18 × 58) + (0.16 × 65) + (0.16 × 68) + (0.14 × 55) + (0.12 × 48) + (0.10 × 55) + (0.08 × 52) + (0.06 × 57) = 10.44 + 10.40 + 10.88 + 7.70 + 5.76 + 5.50 + 4.16 + 3.42 = 57.4

Step 3: Interpretation

A-Score Range: 50–64 → Mixed / Problematic

Step 4: Overall SPOTM Verdict

Final Verdict: Mixed / Problematic

Key Strengths:

  • Historic opening to China — a bold and strategically important move.
  • Détente with the Soviet Union helped manage Cold War tensions.
  • Created the EPA (positive environmental intent, though execution became heavily regulatory).
  • Strong law-and-order rhetoric and early steps in criminal justice.

Key Weaknesses / Misalignments:

  • Imposed wage and price controls — a major economic intervention that failed.
  • Expanded federal bureaucracy and regulation (EPA, OSHA).
  • Watergate scandal and abuse of power severely damaged public trust.
  • Overall continued the post-WWII trend of growing government rather than reversing it.
  • Fiscal deficits and lack of strong limited-government vision.

Recommended Alternative / Improvements: A stronger SPOTM-aligned leader would have combined Nixon’s foreign policy realism with aggressive tax cuts, deregulation, spending restraint, and uncompromising commitment to the rule of law and individual rights.


Overall A-Score: 57.4/100 (Mixed / Problematic)

Nixon’s presidency scores in the lower-middle range. He had notable strategic achievements, particularly in foreign policy, but was undermined by economic interventionism, expansion of government, and ethical failures that led to his resignation.

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