Why Government Transparency Is a Myth: The Hidden Secrets They Don't Want You to Know
We Can’t Fix Wage, Job Security, Healthcare, Climate, or Democracy Until Money, Power, and Lies, Come into the Light | Make America Grow Again Part 1
The system isn’t broken because it’s secretive. It’s secretive because it’s working exactly as designed — for everyone but you. - Rxan Smith
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The Root Rot: Democracy Dies in the PDFs You Can’t Read
By Rxan Smith | Difficulty: 4/5 | Timeline: 24 Months
← Series IndexSeries Index | Ep. 2: Healthcare Cost Control →
“You can’t vote out what you can’t see. You can’t audit what they won’t show you. And you can’t fix a machine that’s been engineered to stay broken.”
📋 What We’re Covering in This Episode
The Comfortable Lie They Sold You
Citizens United — How Secrecy Got a Legal Costume
The Corporate Capture Playbook
What Both Parties Got Wrong (Impressively)
The Ten Structural Fixes
The Uncomfortable Honest Part
Epilogue: And Finally...
The Comfortable Lie They Sold You
The most damaging lie you’ve ever been told is that the government is just inefficient. Bloated, slow, bureaucratically arthritic — sure. But incompetent? No. The U.S. government is a hyper-efficient machine. It’s engineered for one specific purpose: making it legally, logistically, and practically impossible for you to follow the money.
We were taught civics like it’s a gardening class. You plant the seed with your vote, the government waters it, and democracy blooms. But if you try to dig up the roots to see what’s actually growing down there, you hit concrete. Solid, poured-on-purpose concrete.
Decisions that gut your wages, inflate your hospital bills, and determine whose kids inherit the country — those decisions are cooked up in back rooms, laundered through fake-ass “nonprofits,” buried in filings thicker than a phone book, or stamped classified for the better part of forever. Then they drag the mess out into the public square and say, “Hey, debate the results.” Like the game wasn’t rigged before you sat down.
That’s why government transparency isn’t some procedural footnote in the 25-part Make America Grow Again project. It’s Fix #1. The whole tree feeds off it — or the whole tree starves. You want to fix healthcare? You need to see the contracts. You want to fix criminal justice? You need to see the sentencing guidelines that get rewritten in lobbying suites. You want to fix the wealth gap? You need to see whose legislation got passed and whose phone call made it happen.
Cut the roots. Everything else is just decorative foliage on a dead tree while the owners admire the leaves on television.
Citizens United — How Secrecy Got a Legal Costume
2010. Five Supreme Court justices issue a ruling in Citizens United v. FEC that unlimited money in politics is constitutionally protected speech. Their justification: transparency would keep everything clean. The theory being that if the public could see who was spending what, they’d hold donors and politicians accountable. Five of the most credentialed legal minds in the country said that with straight faces and robes on.
History has delivered its verdict on that theory.
$9.5+ billion spent on congressional elections in 2024.
The replacement rate for “representative democracy”? Somewhere north of zero.
Here’s what “transparency” actually purchased in the years since that ruling:
$1.9 billion+ in dark money — untraceable, unattributed, funneled through nonprofits with zero donor disclosure requirements (Brennan Center’s conservative estimate)
$4.5 billion in outside Super PAC spending in the 2024 cycle alone
Average cost to win a competitive House seat: $2M–$4M. Average American household income: $80,000. You don’t need a calculator to figure out whose calls get returned and whose don’t.
Candidates don’t chase voters anymore. They audition for donors. Voters get the commercials and the memes and the choreographed outrage. Donors get the private dinners, the quiet meetings, and the legislation that magically reflects their interests. Half the time, the public can’t find out who wrote the check — because the system was deliberately constructed so they couldn’t.
“Money is speech,” they said. Sure. And a megaphone pointed at your face while you’re whispering is also technically both people participating in the conversation.
🔎 Pro-Tip: The Dark Money ArchitectureThe mechanics are almost elegant in their audacity: a billionaire donates to a 501(c)(4) “social welfare” nonprofit, which carries no donor disclosure requirements. That nonprofit funds issue campaigns, runs attack ads, and launders a political agenda through the vocabulary of civic participation. The money never officially touches a candidate — so it never officially surfaces. It’s entirely legal. It was designed to be entirely legal. Which is, in some ways, more alarming than if it were a crime.
The Corporate Capture Playbook — Same Four Acts, Every Industry
Corporate capture isn’t a conspiracy theory you stumble across at 2am. It’s the daily operational structure of American governance. And it runs the same script across sectors with the tedious reliability of a franchise business model.
Act I — Fund the campaigns. Before a regulator is ever appointed, the regulated industry has already financed the politicians who appoint them. This isn’t a conflict of interest. This is the interest.
Act II — Staff the agencies. The revolving door spins both directions, perpetually. Industry lawyers become agency officials. Agency officials become industry lawyers. The same five hundred people rotate through the same buildings on either side of the K Street-to-Capitol axis, alternating between writing the rules and getting paid to circumvent them.
Act III — Bury the evidence. When inconvenient findings emerge — pharmaceutical trial data, aircraft certification memos, climate models funded with public money — the options are: classify it, litigate its release for a decade via FOIA stonewalling, or publish it in formats so inaccessible that only organizations with lawyers and researchers on retainer can use it.
Act IV — Perform outrage. Congressional hearings happen. Stern letters get sent. Someone resigns with a severance package worth more than your house. Nothing structurally changes. The cameras pack up. The cycle resets.
Boeing self-certifies its own planes → planes fall out of the sky → people die → three years of hearings → Boeing retains its defense contracts.
Big Pharma seeds the FDA with its own alumni → drug prices quadruple → “We’re looking into it.”
Oil industry whispers in the right ears → climate regulations get quietly defanged → the planet cooks → “Both sides have a point.”
Tech platforms self-regulate on data privacy → your behavioral profile gets sold seventeen times before lunch → “We take privacy very seriously.”
The industries rotate. Pharmaceuticals. Aviation. Finance. Defense. Tech. The choreography doesn’t.
🔎 Pro-Tip: The Revolving Door by the NumbersA 2023 analysis found that over 60% of senior FDA officials moved into roles at pharmaceutical companies or their affiliated law firms within two years of leaving the agency. That’s not a pipeline — that’s a conveyor belt with a signing bonus at the end. The same structural pattern holds at the EPA, the FCC, and the Pentagon acquisition office. This isn’t a broken incentive system. It’s a functioning one, optimized for the wrong people.
What Both Parties Got Wrong (Impressively)
The right’s answer to government opacity is usually some version of “less government.” Fewer agencies, fewer regulations, more market. The theory: eliminate the bureaucracy and you eliminate the secrecy inside it. What this ignores is that private power without disclosure requirements is more opaque than a defective government FOIA process, not less. Deregulation doesn’t create transparency. It creates unaccountability with better branding and no paper trail whatsoever.
The left’s version is “more oversight.” More agencies, more watchdogs, more inspector generals issuing reports that nobody reads into a void. The problem is that oversight bodies without enforcement authority are just additional layers of documentation. You can build a government so thoroughly overseen it can barely function and still achieve zero accountability — because the overseers answer to the same donors as the people they’re supposedly overseeing.
Both parties are describing different plumbing arrangements for a building with no windows. The windows are the point. Neither party is building windows right now, because the current darkness suits their respective donor bases with remarkable consistency.
If you knew what the money trail actually looked like, you wouldn’t be fighting your MAGA neighbor over it. You’d both be in the same pickup truck, furious at the same address.
🔎 Pro-Tip: The Bipartisan Donor Convergence Nobody Talks AboutIn 2024, the top twenty corporate donors gave significant money to both major parties. Not because they’re ideologically ecumenical. Because ideology is a retail product for voters. Access is the wholesale transaction. When the same financial services firm is writing checks to the Senate Banking Committee chair from each party, the “partisan divide” is a performance that keeps the public usefully occupied while the actual negotiations happen somewhere with better coffee and no C-SPAN cameras.
The Ten Structural Fixes
Not a wishlist. Not a white paper that gets cited twice and shelved. Real, mechanically plausible changes that a functioning legislature could implement — if it weren’t, as currently constituted, the primary beneficiary of the problem it would need to solve.
Fix 1: Lobbying With Receipts — Real-Time, Mandatory, Machine-Readable
Every meeting. Every call. Every substantive communication between a registered lobbyist and a federal official or staffer, logged in a public database within 48 hours, cross-referenced to the legislation it concerns. Your Amazon package is tracked more rigorously than a billion-dollar regulatory decision. That’s not a technological limitation — it’s a political choice, and it’s a choice we can unmake.
Fix 2: The Revolving Door Gets a Deadbolt
Five-year mandatory cooling-off period before any senior agency official can work for an entity they regulated. Enforced with criminal penalties — not civil fines that register as a rounding error in the severance package. Retroactive disclosure of all existing revolving-door arrangements going back ten years, published in a searchable public database. The revolving door isn’t an accident of human nature. It’s a business model. Treat it like one.
Fix 3: Federal Budget in Plain English — Contract by Contract
Every federal contract over $50,000, publicly searchable, with the promised outcomes and the actual delivered outcomes displayed side by side. If the government can’t show citizens what it did with the money, it doesn’t get more money. The Pentagon has failed its comprehensive audit every year since audits were first required. In the private sector, that’s called insolvency. In Washington, it’s called Tuesday.
Fix 4: FOIA Reform — Deadlines That Actually Mean Something
Mandatory agency response within 20 business days or automatic release. Financial penalties assessed against agencies — not against citizens — for stonewalling. Default posture is openness; agencies must affirmatively justify withholding, not the other way around. A permanent, searchable national FOIA database. The current system is an endurance contest that filters out anyone without deep pockets or a law degree. That’s its function. Replace the function.
Fix 5: Judicial Conflict Disclosure — No More Shadow Docket Sanctimony
Full financial disclosure for all federal judges, updated annually and publicly searchable. Mandatory recusal from any case with a financial nexus to disclosed holdings, enforced by an independent body — not the judge under scrutiny. The Supreme Court’s shadow docket, through which the Court issues consequential unsigned orders without written justification, requires mandatory explanation for any emergency relief granted. Courts cannot credibly demand transparency from the institutions they review while exempting themselves from the same standard.
Fix 6: “Classified” Has a New Burden of Proof
National security is a legitimate category. “Embarrassing contract overruns” and “proprietary vendor terms” are not. Agencies must demonstrate, with specificity, why a given expenditure’s disclosure would cause immediate, identifiable harm to national security. “It’s complicated” and “it might be awkward” don’t clear the bar. Automatic declassification timeline for contracts older than ten years. Annual independent audits of classified spending, with findings published in summary form. Secrecy is a tool. Right now it’s being used as a whole toolbox.
Fix 7: Open the Government’s Code
Every algorithm used by federal agencies to make decisions affecting citizens — benefits eligibility, tax audit selection, immigration processing, criminal risk scores — must be publicly auditable. The source code, the training data, the error rates, the demographic disparity analysis. If a piece of software is making decisions about your life, you have the same right to examine it that you’d have to cross-examine a human bureaucrat in an administrative proceeding. That’s not a radical position. That’s due process applied to the 21st century.
Fix 8: Emergency Powers Get an Expiration Date and an Audit
No emergency declaration renewed indefinitely by executive action alone. Ninety-day limit; congressional reauthorization required for any extension. Mandatory public audit of all contracts and authority expansions issued during the emergency period, published within sixty days of expiration. The emergency exception has become a governing philosophy. Crises are where civil liberties go to die and where contractors go to get rich. Install the circuit breaker.
Fix 9: State and Local Transparency — No More Carve-Outs
Most corruption in America isn’t happening in the Capitol. It’s the zoning board approving the development deal that goes to the mayor’s college roommate. It’s the police union contract negotiated in private that immunizes officers from oversight. It’s the school board procurement process that nobody can find on any public website. Federal funding to states and localities should be conditioned on uniform, electronic, searchable, real-time open-records standards with enforced penalties for non-compliance. Federalism doesn’t mean local officials get to operate in the dark. That’s not a constitutional principle — that’s a protection racket.
Fix 10: Media-Government Financial Entanglement — Put It on the Label
Any media organization receiving government advertising contracts, grants, or “public-private partnerships” must disclose those arrangements prominently on all related coverage, permanently and conspicuously. Access journalism — the practice of staying quiet on inconvenient stories to protect source relationships — should be disclosed the same way financial conflicts are disclosed in peer-reviewed research. The public’s ability to calibrate who is telling them what, and why, isn’t a courtesy. It’s the foundational premise of a free press having any civic value whatsoever.
🔎 Pro-Tip: The Citizen Auditor ModelWhen government data is genuinely open — machine-readable, searchable, in real time — something interesting happens: ten thousand people with spreadsheet skills and too much coffee start running it every night. A bloated contract in rural Ohio gets flagged by a programmer in Seattle within hours of signing. Corruption thrives on the assumption that nobody’s watching. Radical sunlight converts that assumption into a liability. This isn’t idealism. California’s public contracting database has been used by journalists, academics, and watchdog groups to surface waste and fraud that no inspector general found first. It works when it’s built to work.
The Uncomfortable Honest Part
I know what some of you are thinking. “This is optimistic to the point of delusion.” And that’s fair. Every entity with skin in the current game has a financial interest in this list never becoming law: mega-donors, lobbyists, bureaucrats protecting their operational territory, media organizations with government contracts, and both parties’ campaign finance infrastructure. The reform doesn’t fail because it’s technically complicated. Each of these ten fixes is, in isolation, a manageable piece of legislation. It fails because the people who would pass it are the people who benefit from its absence.
That’s not cynicism. That’s a budget line item.
The timeline on this is brutally honest: 5 to 10 years minimum, assuming sustained political pressure, a wave of genuinely reform-minded legislators, and a public angry enough to stay engaged past the next outrage cycle. There will be lawsuits. There will be “national security” objections applied to things that have nothing to do with national security. There will be a version of reform that passes that looks like reform and functions like wallpaper.
But here’s the thing about structural change: it doesn’t require unanimous consent. It requires enough. Enough people who understand that the argument against transparency is never actually about efficiency or complexity — it’s about preserving the leverage that darkness provides. When someone tells you sunlight would “slow things down,” ask them: slow down what, exactly? The part they’re describing is the part they’re protecting.
This isn’t left versus right. This is visible versus hidden. The people who benefit from opacity are distributed evenly across the ideological spectrum — they just wear different colors and speak different dialects. The rest of us, regardless of what we believe about taxes or immigration or anything else, share one interest: knowing where the money goes and who made the call. That’s not a partisan position. That’s the precondition for having any other position that matters.
And Finally...
📢 A Country That Can’t See Its Own Government Isn’t a Democracy. It’s a Hostage Situation With Better Marketing.
Look around. This isn’t left versus right. This is top versus bottom. The few who own the rules of the game versus the many who are told they still get to play it.
The comfortable lie is that this is about inefficiency. The truth is that the machine is working exactly as intended — just not for you. Every scanned PDF that can’t be searched, every FOIA request that takes four years to produce a heavily redacted non-answer, every “classified” stamp on a contractor’s billing dispute — those aren’t accidents. They’re features. And the people who installed those features are not going to voluntarily remove them.
So we don’t ask nicely. We demand the light. We build the systems that make darkness expensive. We vote for the people who will make those systems law and hold them to it when they try to water it down — because they will try to water it down, every single time, because the people paying their campaigns will ask them to.
Here’s what doesn’t get said enough: the 25 fixes in this series aren’t independent items on a wishlist. They are a single argument made twenty-five different ways. Healthcare reform, criminal justice reform, climate policy, education — every one of them runs through the same political process that opacity currently controls. You don’t get any of it without this. Not the durable version. Not the version that holds.
Transparency is Fix #1 because it’s the root. The whole tree grows from here, or it doesn’t grow at all.
Make them show their work. All of it. In real time. With consequences that actually sting.
Everything else starts here.
— Rxan Smith
Uncomfortable
←Ep. 0: Intro Post | Full Series Index | Ep. 2: Healthcare Cost Control →
📚 Every Episode In This Series
Ep. 1 — Government Transparency ← You Are Here
Ep. 24 — Debt Relief Programs (coming soon)
Ep. 25 — Systemic Poverty Areas (coming soon)
rxansmith.substack.com · YouTube: @RealRxanSmith · X: @rxannsmith
.Decisions that screw millions of us are cooked up in back rooms, laundered through fake-ass “nonprofits,” buried in filings thicker than a phone book, or stamped classified forever. Then they shove the mess in our faces and say, “Hey, debate the results!” like the game wasn’t rigged from jump.
That’s why transparency isn’t some polite suggestion in the 25 Government Fix Tree. It’s part of the roots. The whole damn tree feeds off it—or it starves, tips over, and dies while the owners keep admiring the leaves on TV.
Cut the roots, and all you’re left with is a pretty decoration that produces jack shit.
The 25 Government Fix Tree

The Big Lie That Sold Us This Shitshow
2010. Citizens United. Five robed clowns on the Supreme Court tell us unlimited money in politics is fine because transparency will keep everything clean. They said that money is a form of speech and they cannot ban free speech… what a bunch of bunk. So you're telling me that influence on who runs this country can be given in the form of unlimited donations to candidates and if you finance a candidates entire campaign because you're rich enough to do so, the rest of us are supposed to say hey that's his freedom of speech, and because of that we have to live with these certainty that there's no quid pro quo. Yeah I know plenty of billionaires that throw millions of dollars to people for no reason without any expectation of a return on their investment. U
Tell me another fairy tale. This it was something that should have caused a second American Revolution but we stayed silent.
By 2024, here’s what “transparency” bought us:
$1.9 billion in dark money (Brennan Center’s conservative count)
$4.5 billion in outside Super PAC spending
$9.5+ billion total congressional election spending
Millions required just to be “competitive” for a House seat ($2M - $4M is the average amount required to win a house race).
Candidates don’t chase voters anymore. They chase wallets. Voters get spammed with ads and showered with memes that the scream, “too far left or too far right or No Kings or Libtard. Donors get private dinners, quiet meetings, and legislation that magically works out in their favor. The people get a false sense of Happiness when their candidate is elected and way too much outrage when their candidate is not because the truth is nothing that either side will do will help them because they didn't buy in.
Half the time, we don’t even know who paid for it. That’s not a bug. That’s the design.
This isn’t democracy with flaws. It’s democracy redesigned by the owners.
“Money is speech,” they say. Sure. And bullshit is fertilizer. Except this fertilizer is killing the garden.
Why Everything Feels Like a Rigged Casino
Corporate capture isn’t a conspiracy theory. It’s the daily special.
Boeing self-certifies planes → planes fall out of the sky → people die.
Big Pharma stacks the FDA → prices explode → profits soar.
Oil barons whisper → climate rules disappear → the planet cooks.
Tech regulates itself→ AI gets no regulation → your data gets sold → privacy becomes a punchline and jobs are becoming scare.
Common thread? Nobody can see the strings.
No visibility on who wrote the rules. No transparency on who funded the politicians. No accountability for who cashes in afterward. Why don't we stop arguing left or right and admit that it doesn't matter well it's just a big cash grab for the rich that they allow the politicians to participate in because that's how the thing works. Trust me, if you knew what I knew, you would not be hating your MAGA neighbor because he'd be at your door saying let's get in the pickup truck and demand that this is put to an end and that would be true unity and call for a revolution.
What we need is a revolution that is visible and palpable. We need many revolutions. Instead of a one big violent one (or a civil war - don't make me laugh) we need 25 precision revolts, one for each of the 25 government fixes.
Instead, we get theater. Concern on camera. Checks cashed backstage.
Yes, some secrecy is legitimate. National security exists. But when “secrecy” covers donor lists and profit margins, that’s not protection. That’s legalized theft.
This is a call to participate. I don’t believe we’re a country irreversibly split between left and right. I believe we’re still a people rooted in humanity. And humanity isn’t about moral grandstanding or pretending one side owns virtue. Humanity is compassion. It’s accountability, even forgiveness. I’m asking you to subscribe, comment, share, and engage not to feed an algorithm that will never reward work like this, but to build something it can’t control. This isn’t about clicks. It’s about preserving a country and a world where the pursuit of happiness is still realistically possible for our children and for ourselves.
What Real Transparency Actually Looks Like
Not a dusty PDF nobody reads. Not a delayed disclosure after the damage is done.
Real transparency is live, brutal, and enforced.

Lobbying With Actual Teeth
Real-time logs of every meeting, call, text. Tie it straight to bills. No more “informal advisors” hiding in the shadows. Influence happens? It gets stamped, public, forever.Regulatory Capture Audits
Revolving door ain’t an accident—it’s the business model. Force public audits of industry ties, real cooling-off periods (years, not months), and name who actually wrote the regs.Budget You Can Actually Trace
If Amazon tracks your toothbrush, the government can track trillions. Contract-by-contract, plain English, outcomes measured—or funds cut.FOIA That Isn’t a Sick Joke
Deadlines with penalties. Default open unless proven dangerous. Searchable databases. Stonewalling? Fines and firings.Judicial Sunshine
Judges playing politics while pretending to be gods. Force conflict disclosures, recusal enforcement, explain the “shadow docket,” random case assignment.National Security Spending – Less Black Hole, More Spotlight
“Classified” hides too many contractor scams. Public audits, overrun explanations, revolving-door bans, declassify on schedule.Algorithmic Decisions Out in the Open
Government code deciding benefits, flags, audits? Public gets to read the damn code.Emergency Powers With Expiration Dates
Crises are where rights go to die. Auto-expire, full contract disclosure, mandatory audits after.State and Local – Where the Real Crooks Hide
Most corruption’s in your backyard. Force uniform rules: open zoning, policing budgets, school boards, local campaign cash.Media-Government Coziness Exposed
“Access” journalism, government-funded “partnerships”? Disclose it all. Sunlight doesn’t censor—it just shows who’s in bed with who.
Devil’s advocate everywhere: “Too much transparency slows things down!” Yeah, and too much honesty ruins a good con. This is doable and the elected officials can do it in their annual government shutdown spare time because it's going to be required.
The Tree Visual – Drawn Like It Really Is
Roots: All that visibility shit above.
→ Trunk: Less capture, actual trust, policies based on facts not favors.
→ Branches: Real fixes in Healthcare, job security, education, voting, justice.
→ Leaves: Cheaper lives, better wages, safer world, democracy that works.
Hide or poison the roots? Tree looks nice on TV... but it’s dead. No fruit. Just decoration for the owners.
I know… I know. Here's Rxan spewing off about idealistic systemic change like it's easy. F’ing optimism’s cute, but let’s get real.
Transparency threatens everybody with skin in the game: mega-donors, lobbyists, bureaucrats guarding their fiefdoms, media gatekeepers, both parties’ cash machines.
Timeline? Forget 12-24 months. Try 5-10 years of lawsuits, sabotage, “security” excuses, and endless delay tactics.Resistance ain’t just “partisan.” It’s the whole institution protecting its perks.
You need whistleblowers who aren’t ruined, enforcers who aren’t captured, courts that actually enforce, media that gives a damn.
Without those? Transparency laws are just wallpaper over the rot.
Devil’s advocate: “People don’t care—they’re apathetic.” Bullshit. People care when it hurts their wallet and their kids. They especially care when the side that they go to war with their neighbors to protect is absolutely useless. All of these big business interests that buy our politicians are doing it on both sides. The right openly has their heads so far up the ass of big business that they probably view the entire world as one giant colon. The left, claims to hate the big business and corporate capture yet they are meeting in some dark parking lot like a drug deal taking the money. One side tells the citizenry that big business is good and the other side claims that it's bad and they're both lying. They just think that we are all hopeless and useless. Prove ‘em wrong.
Why It Still Has to Be #1 – No Bullshit
Every other “fix” on the list dies without sunlight.
Oppose transparency? You’re not defending “efficiency” or “complexity.”
You’re defending the dark. You’re defending the leverage. You’re saying, “Let us keep the advantage.”
That’s not democracy. That’s ownership.
Uncomfortable as hell?
Good.
That’s how you know it’s the truth—and that somebody upstairs is sweating.
Final Word
Look around. This isn’t left versus right. This is top versus bottom. This is the few who own the game versus the many who are told they still get to play it.
The 25 Government Fix Tree isn’t some dreamy wishlist scribbled on a napkin after too many drinks. It’s a blueprint for taking back what was never theirs to steal in the first place: a government that answers to citizens, not bidders.
Fix #1 isn’t negotiable. It’s foundational. Without ruthless, unrelenting transparency, every other reform is just theater—pretty speeches, viral moments, and incremental crumbs that keep us distracted while the feast continues upstairs.
But here’s the uncomfortable truth we’ve all felt in our bones: the people who benefit from the dark will fight sunlight harder than they’ll ever fight each other. They’ll call it “security.” They’ll call it “complexity.” They’ll call it “bipartisan pragmatism.” What they’re really saying is: “Please don’t make us give back what we took.”
So we don’t ask nicely anymore.
We demand the light. We burn the dark down. And we start by refusing to look away.
Because a country that can’t see its own government clearly isn’t a democracy—it’s a hostage situation with better marketing.
We’re just getting started making the powerful real uncomfortable… wait til you see all 25 fixes until they beautifully build on one another in surprising ways with an end result where you can taste the freedom, true democracy, and unity; all in one.
Whats Next?
What I’ve shown you so far—the broken promises, the classified loopholes, the theater of “transparency”—is just the warm-up.
In Part 2, dropping Christmas Eve, I pull back the curtain on where the real rot hides: healthcare reform.
You think government transparency fails everywhere? Wait until you see how they’ve weaponized “reform” to control what treatments you’re allowed to know about, which ones quietly disappear, and who profits when you’re kept in the dark about your own health.
I’m naming specific policies, buried reports, and the money trail that connects politicians to the decisions made over your body—all while they smile and call it “progress.”
If Part 1 made you uncomfortable, Part 2 is going to make you angry.
Subscribe now (free or paid) so it hits your inbox the second it drops. You won’t want to hunt for it later.
The truth doesn’t wait for holidays.
See you on the 24th.
— Rxan
P.S. It’s Christmas - I welcome any tips. Click amount that you desire and the link will take you directly to PayPal for a secure one-time payment. I appreciate you and I promise I won't be panhandling for long because I know that this movement has teeth. $5 | $10 | $20 | $50
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The Complete Series — All 25 Episodes
rxansmith.substack.com · YouTube: @RealRxanSmith · X: @rxannsmith
— Rxan Smith
Uncomfortable
Making America Grow Again, One Uncomfortable Truth at a Time








YOU WERE SUPPORTIVE OF BARI WEISS
ARE YOU STILL ?