Carl Higbie didn’t tiptoe around the hypocrisy he sees from so-called leaders who denounce American traditions while happily enjoying the safety, prosperity, and opportunity those traditions produce for their own communities. As the host of a national show where he regularly eviscerates this kind of double standard, Higbie called out politicians who tear down the symbols and schools that bind our country while hiding behind the very benefits Americans built.
He was blunt: elites will dismantle American culture, demand apologies from patriots, and then accuse everyday Americans of being “racist” or intolerant when we resist the cultural collapse. That exact pattern — virtue-signaling from people who never sacrifice for the country while expecting everyone else to accept the rewrite of our heritage — is something Higbie has exposed repeatedly on his show.
This isn’t just rhetorical theater; it’s policy in action. When politicians champion woke curricula, open borders, or taxpayer giveaways to factions that undermine civic cohesion, they are making choices that weaken neighborhoods and schools — even as those same politicians retreat to gated communities and demand more protections for themselves. Conservatives should call that what it is: elite decoupling from the consequences of their own ideology, not moral leadership.
Americans deserve leaders who defend the flag, defend law and order, and defend parental rights without lecturing the country from a position of moral bankruptcy. It’s not anti-progress to insist on assimilation and civic pride; it’s common sense. Higbie’s point — that too many on the left live off the American dream they publicly disparage — is a challenge to voters to stop rewarding bad-faith performance art with real power.
The remedy is simple and patriotic: elect representatives who put citizens first, prioritize strong schools that teach history and civics, enforce borders, and stop funding projects that reward cultural self-destruction. Turn off the hollow lectures and start judging politicians by whether they build communities or tear them down. Carl Higbie’s commentary is a reminder that the fight is about preserving a way of life, not scoring points for coastal elites.
Hardworking Americans know the truth in their bones: you can’t keep the benefits of a nation and casually denounce the character that created it. If conservatives remain loud, organized, and principled, we will not be bullied into submission by smug rhetoric or false moral equivalence. This is our country, our culture, and our future — and we will defend it.
