Wednesday’s edition of Ed Henry’s new show proved why conservative media matters in a country that is losing its grip on common sense. Former CIA analyst Buck Sexton walked viewers through the same warnings he’s been pressing for weeks, arguing that a coordinated leftist project is reshaping reality via ideology and cultural engineering. Americans who still believe in truth and common decency should wake up to what he described on the program.
Sexton’s message has a paper trail: his new book, Manufacturing Delusion, lays out how propaganda, indoctrination, and weaponized language create mass compliance rather than reasoned consent. He connects historical examples of totalitarian thought-control to modern campus and media campaigns, insisting this is not harmless theory but a playbook for societal reordering. Conservatives should read the playbook so we can dismantle it before it becomes irreversible.
Central to Sexton’s warning is the way gender ideology has been elevated from private belief to an enforced public orthodoxy, one he argues functions like Marxist cultural weaponry—smearing dissenters, reshaping laws, and remaking institutions. He’s raised these points repeatedly on conservative platforms, showing how courts, schools, and big tech subtly coerce language and behavior until disagreement becomes taboo. This is not merely academic; it’s an organized effort that threatens parental rights and common-sense protections for women and children.
The rot spreads because too many institutions have abdicated their duty to truth, preferring slogans and virtue-signaling to honest debate. Sexton’s broadcasts and interviews have highlighted how public education, mainstream media, and corporate HR departments amplify the delusion instead of challenging it. If conservatives don’t push back vigorously at the local and state level, we will wake up one day to laws and customs we no longer recognize.
This is why shows like Ed Henry’s matter and why activists must stop treating culture as a side issue: winning elections is hollow if the culture that shaped those elections has been hollowed out from within. Organize at school boards, support candidates who defend liberty, and use every legal and political tool to block the bureaucrats and ideologues who traffic in manufactured realities. News outlets, talk radio, and grassroots conservatives are the last defense against a slow-motion capture of America’s institutions.
Buck Sexton’s thesis is stark but simple: once a society consents to mass delusion, freedoms evaporate and totalitarian methods gain footholds under the guise of compassion and progress. His warnings should be treated as a call to arms by every patriot who values truth, family, and the Amer ican experiment. We should be grateful conservative voices are sounding the alarm and double down on the hard, unglamorous work of restoring sanity to our schools, our courts, and our public square.

