It is a great day😆
MAGA getting spanked
Who knew we had a Constitution that doesn’t get pushed aside based on TACO’s moods?😊
So a self-described conservative is celebrating a Supreme Court ruling because he thinks it marks the “death of MAGA.”That’s not analysis. That’s wishful thinking.
First question: what does he gain from MAGA dying off?
Influence? A return to pre-2016 conservatism where consultants, think tanks, and cable news panels dictated the agenda while voters were politely ignored? Because if MAGA disappears, the power vacuum does not magically fill itself with principle. It fills with whoever controls institutions. And historically, that has not been grassroots conservatives.
Second question: how does he plan to accomplish the “changes” he claims to want without the voters who make up MAGA?
Who exactly is going to carry those policies across the finish line? The donor class? The old guard leadership that failed to secure the border, failed to control spending, failed to confront unfair trade practices, and failed to slow the cultural drift for decades? If those were the winning pieces, we would not have needed a political disruption in the first place.
Third question: who has the numbers?
MAGA is not a think tank. It is a voting bloc. It is millions of Americans who believe in sovereignty, border enforcement, domestic industry, and constitutional limits. You do not get durable reform by alienating the largest energized segment of your own coalition.
And let’s be clear about something bigger.Cheering for the failure of a movement composed of your fellow citizens because you dislike its tone or its leader is not conservative. It is factional. Conservatives traditionally argue for persuasion, coalition building, and incremental reform. Wishing collapse on a group trying to advance policies they believe will strengthen the country is not patriotic. It is petty.
If he thinks MAGA is wrong, then make the case. Offer a better blueprint. Show the electoral math. Show the governing path. Show the legislative strategy.
But rooting for its extinction without presenting a viable alternative is not seriousness. It is surrender dressed up as sophistication.
Movements evolve. Coalitions shift. But self-sabotage is not strategy.
If you want change, you should explain who is going to deliver it, with what votes, through what institutions, and under what political reality.
Otherwise, this is not about saving conservatism.
It is about reclaiming control of it.