In the sweeping, high-stakes theater of American demographics, the massive surge in recruitment of rural white men into federal immigration enforcement represents a fundamental reconfiguration of the labor force. At the macro-level, the current administration has treated the heartland as a reservoir for a vast “wartime recruitment” effort, doubling the size of ICE to over 22,000 agents. Yet, at the micro-level, this strategy is creating a specialized class of workers whose professional identity is built upon the dismantling of their own economic lifelines. Continue reading
Tag Archives: 2026 Policy
Soda Tax vs. Drug Paraphernalia Policy
In San Francisco, the legislative landscape treats a sugary 12-ounce soda and a glass bubble pipe with a striking contrast in fiscal philosophy. While the city views the “sin tax” as a righteous lever to fund community wellness—siphoning millions from the soda industry to pay for dental sealants and school gardens—the fiscal logic flips as you descend into the streets of the Tenderloin. Until very recently, the city didn’t tax the tools of drug use; it subsidized them. While a 12-pack of soda carries a mandatory surcharge to “save lives,” the glass pipes and aluminum foil used for fentanyl were distributed for free under the same “life-saving” banner, creating a surreal economic paradox where sugar is a taxable vice, but paraphernalia is a public utility.