Dignity, Distraction, and the Lights Going Out

While you were doomscrolling…

This week: a bold immigration reform bill from Rep. María Elvira Salazar, another round of Epstein drama, and a grim update on the U.S. power grid. We’re mad, but are we focusing on what actually sustains a functioning country?

1. A Bipartisan Policy Worth Paying Attention To

The DIGNITY Act (H.R. 4393), introduced by Reps. Salazar (R‑Fla.) and Escobar (D‑Texas), does what few bills do: couples real border enforcement with a structured, earned path to legal status. No blank checks. No free rides. And no federal benefits while enrolled in the program. Educate yourself here if you’re interested.

Bill summary – National Immigration Forum

Full text on Congress.gov

Here’s the shiny parts of what it proposes:

  • Funds tech, barriers and manpower to keep the border secure
  • Creates a renewable 7-year “Dignity Status” requiring tax restitution, work history, background checks, and no access to federal welfare
  • Provides a long-term pathway to citizenship (only after a second “Redemption” phase)
  • Funds the program through fines and fees, not new tax dollars.

This is thoughtful, balanced legislation. Even if it doesn’t pass, it proves that serious ideas still exist, and are worth rewarding. It’s almost like adults created it.

2. The Epstein List: Accountability or Distraction?

Let’s be honest: I’m nosy. I want the names. If Trump is there, I want to know. If Schumer or the Clintons are there, I really want to know. If anyone used access and wealth to exploit children, the public has a right to see them held accountable.

But at some point, we have to ask what we’re actually doing with this story.

Right now this feels less like a pursuit of justice and more like a nationwide obsession with scandal-as-sport. We meme it. We speculate.

We’ve all got something we care more about than average. That’s fair. But when the same scandal holds our attention for years, and without movement, we start losing perspective. Especially when it crowds out the quieter crises already taking root around us.

3. The Crisis Nobody’s Watching

Meanwhile, back in the real world, our electrical grid is limping toward collapse.

A recent report from the Department of Energy warns that blackouts in the U.S. could increase 100-fold by 2030 if no action is taken (DOE source). Some locations could see over 400 hours of outages per year, just as AI data centers, crypto farms, and EV demand begin to spike (E&E News).

And for those clinging to green energy as the silver bullet, we’re just not there yet.

Solar panels don’t install themselves. Wind turbines need diesel-powered cranes. Backup battery storage isn’t scalable enough for base load. Even your electric car plug-in depends on fossil fuels somewhere in the chain. Go figure that irony, right?

Think of it this way: we’re plugging in more and more appliances (EVs, AI servers, smart homes) but we haven’t upgraded the breaker box since the ’90s. Remember what I said about upgrading phones?

With close ties to the electric co-op community, I see this crisis up close. These workers aren’t just flipping switches. They’re holding up a system that most Americans don’t think twice about…until it fails.

So while we’re squinting at Epstein court docs like it’s the Da Vinci Code, I’m over here asking “who’s planning to keep the lights on”?

Caring about Epstein’s victims isn’t optional. Neither is caring about immigration reform. But if we don’t care about infrastructure, nothing else works. You don’t get legal hearings, accountability, online outrage (or groceries) without power.

Want to go deeper?

Full DIGNITY Act bill text – Congress.gov Bill Summary – National Immigration Forum DOE Resource Adequacy Report ASCE Infrastructure Report – Energy Section (PDF)

Ceasefires, Side-Eyes, and the Big, Beautiful Bill

When last we spoke, Trump was dropping f-bombs on live TV. That was less than a week ago.
Read that again. Less than a week ago.

The mission into Iran was clearly just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to wins from the rest of the week. The good news? The ceasefire seems to be holding, and President Trump is heading into Independence Day riding a wave of victories.

With everything moving fast, here are a few headlines I think are worth commenting on:


Daddy’s Home

You knew I was going to start here. There was no way I wouldn’t.

Another line of cringeworthy awkwardness that ended up being hilarious. If you missed it (though I’m not sure how), NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte referred to Trump as “Daddy” in response to comments the president made about the squabbling between Israel and Iran.

To paraphrase: Trump said, “They’re like kids in a schoolyard. Let them fight it out and get it out of their system for a bit. Then you step in and stop it.”

Insert Rutte’s comment here.

All of our inner 12-year-olds came out in that moment—and honestly, same.


The Big, Beautiful Bill

There’s a lot to unpack here, so I’ll keep it simple for now. Congress needs to pass it. These topics could (and probably will) be expanded on later, so consider this a first pass.

  • Medicare/Medicaid cuts – Am I concerned? No. Able-bodied individuals need to work. Period. It’s not the responsibility of taxpayers to fund a program riddled with fraud and overrun by people who just don’t want to work. I’ve seen firsthand how Medicaid gets abused—and it’s infuriating. These programs should be for people who actually need help, not those trying to “stick it to the man” while draining resources.
  • Immigration – Yes, I support additional ICE funding and finishing the wall. Name one other country where you can stroll in and overstay your welcome like we’ve seen here the last few years. You can’t.
    Do I think the pathway to citizenship should be easier? Absolutely. We’ve got the best intel and technology in the world—use it to weed out the bad actors faster and help the good ones get here legally.
    Do I love the “gold card” idea? Not really. “Bring us your tired, your poor, your huddled masses,” remember that? Yeah. That. And if you’re someone who doesn’t lean right, that’s okay. You don’t have to agree with every solution to acknowledge the problem. We should be able to talk about fixing a broken system without immediately being labeled one thing or another.
  • Air-traffic control – Yes. That’s it. Just yes. We upgrade our phones every two years—why is our air traffic system still running on technology from the Cold War era? Call me crazy, but I think the skies deserve an update.

This is a 940-page beast that’s being read aloud in Congress as we speak. If you want to experience the worst storytime ever, CSPAN has you covered. Or go to congress.gov and read through it yourself. Either way, it’s worth getting ahead of the game and educating yourself.


NYC Mayoral Race

I don’t live in New York City. I can’t afford it, and frankly, I’m not sure I’d like it anyway. I’ve visited once. It’s long been seen as the place to be once you’ve “made it.” A melting pot—which is great. We like folks from all walks of life… as long as they’re here legally and pulling their weight. Aka: paying taxes. Aka: funding all these “free” programs Mamdani is pitching.

Childcare, busses, grocery stores? It’s starting to feel like a presidential campaign—and news flash, even if he’s elected, he won’t have the authority to do half of what he’s promising. One could argue this is actually a gift to the Republican party. Kinda like when the Dems ran Hillary.

To be clear, I’m not saying Democrats don’t have good ideas. I’m saying some of the loudest ones aren’t offering practical ones. If you’ve ever felt politically homeless, you’re not alone. It’s possible to want safety, fairness, and fiscal sanity all at the same time.

My point is: America is watching. Most of us may not live there, but many would like to visit—and we’d prefer to feel safe doing it. If I get mugged, I doubt a social worker will be the solution in that moment.

So here’s a free tip for the Democratic party: if you want to hand Republicans the keys for the next 50 years, keep letting people like Mamdani and AOC lead your message.
The silent (yes, I know I’m not exactly silent) majority isn’t buying it. And while nobody loves a “lesser of two evils” situation, we’ll still show up—especially if it means voting against socialism in a hoodie.