PODCAST · news
Michael and Sarah Walker
by Elephant in the Ink Room
Today’s political climate feels like a war zone—and who’s to blame? All of us. It’s easy to point fingers: blame Biden, blame Trump. But the hard truth is, we’ve let this happen. A commentary from the Purple Man, Not Left, Not Right, somewhere in the middle and trying to make sense of it all.Visit us at https://elephantsinkroom.com/ or our YouTube Channel 'purple man channel' https://www.youtube.com/@PurpleMan-z8b6lThank You for your time, Michael, Sarah and Emma Walker 'The Middle Road'We strive to keep it short, others may talk about everything but what you wanted to hear. 3 to 5 minutes is all it takes to get you motivated, 20 to 30 minutes to bore and lose you. There is just to much information coming at us to fast. We hope to distill it into useful information to get you thinking, not reacting rashly.
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135
The Long View From 1964 – Maybe Just Listen – Video
So yes. You have to make mistakes to learn. You have to touch something hot to understand burns. You have to get things wrong before you understand what right costs. But the secret — the thing the scars actually teach you if you pay attention — is to get a small burn and learn your lesson. Not go down in the flames. Source
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134
A War Being Run By the Second String – Video
Yes, I was in the Army for six years. Yes, I was trained as a Pioneer Combat Engineer. Yes, I was taught to clear minefields with a bayonet, build bridges between our infantry and theirs, and duck when the bullets screamed by. Source
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133
The Ash Didn’t Disappear – Video
If you think seven years old is too young to remember something like that, you don't know a child whose memory is a video recorder without an erase feature. As I grew older I could never understand how the German people had allowed it to happen. How ordinary men and women watched it unfold and did nothing. How a civilization that produced Beethoven and Goethe looked away while the ovens ran. Source
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132
Sheep Don’t Storm Castles – Video
Sheep don't storm castles. They stand in the field and wait to be shorn. Again and again and again. Occasionally complaining to each other about the cold. Occasionally sharing a strongly worded post about the shearer's technique. Then they get turned into shepherd's pie. Source
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131
The Long View From 1964 – Superman – Video
Back to Superman, because that's what this is all about. Truth, Justice and the American Way. Straight from the 1940's comic books So I ask you — by today's standards, what is the American Way? Source
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130
Your Grandchildren Will Search Your Name – Video
You are in the room. You still have a choice that most of us don't have. We can vote, we can write, we can refuse the checkbox that no longer fits — and we will. But you can do something more immediate. Source
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129
Making America Sick — Part 4 of 4: The Fight Back
Were the signs obvious? Yes. Could this have been prevented? Yes. Did it happen purely because of politics? Yes. But we also knew who Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was before he was confirmed, and we knew he was Trump's chosen instrument for reshaping American public health. That makes all of us who watched and waited at least a little complicit in the complacency that allowed it to happen. Source
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128
Making America Sick — Part 3 of 4: Why He’s Doing It? The Broken Compass
And the children getting measles in South Carolina cannot tell the difference between a broken compass and a working one. They just get sick. Source
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127
Making America Sick — Part 2 of 4: The Damage
The consequences are not theoretical. A measles outbreak has spread to 26 states with over 960 confirmed cases centered in South Carolina. Two children have died from whooping cough. Vaccination rates have been falling since Kennedy took office. Last flu season saw 280 child deaths from influenza, the highest toll in more than a decade, and the federal government has now made the flu vaccine a matter of parental discretion rather than routine recommendation. Source
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126
The Chaos Candidate Part 2 of 2
The chaos candidate understood something about this moment that his opponents repeatedly failed to grasp: that a significant portion of the electorate had become so accustomed to dysfunction that they stopped expecting anything else. He did not create that condition. He simply recognized it and made it work for him. Source
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125
The Chaos Candidate Part 1 of 2
What I keep coming back to is this: chaos is this man’s life support system. Not metaphorically. Functionally. Remove the crisis and you remove the reason for the rally, the reason for the emergency declaration, the reason the cameras are in the room. Stability is not just boring to him. Stability is existentially threatening. Source
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124
Making America Sick — Part 1 of 4: The Man Who Knew Better
He has broken nearly all of them. Source
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123
A Text Message and FDA Approval – A COMPANION PIECE TO THE SERIES: MAKING AMERICA SICK — ROBERT F. KENNEDY JR.
Good outcomes for bad reasons are still good outcomes. But they do not absolve the bad reasons. And they do not fill the staff positions that were cut last month. Source
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122
He’s At It Again. He Never Really Stopped.
What has changed is the urgency. He said it himself at the Turning Point rally this week, almost accidentally. He knows the historical pattern, that the president's party typically loses ground in midterm elections. He said he can't figure out why. He can. He just can't say it out loud. So instead he is doing what he has always done when the ground shifts under him. He is pointing downward harder, faster, and at a younger audience that hasn't yet learned to check where the finger is actually aimed. Source
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121
Article 3 of 3 The Long Game — Power Beyond the Ballot
By now, it is clear that the 2026 midterms are unlike any we have seen in recent memory. The scale of spending, the intensity of coordination, and the precision of messaging all suggest a high-stakes contest—but the full story goes deeper than individual candidates or party control. Source
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120
Article 2 of 3 Transparency Illusions — Money in Plain Sight
Voters see the headlines—mega-donors, super PACs, and campaign cash—but few grasp the mechanics behind it, or the strategic intent that guides these flows. In essence, visibility does not equal understanding. Source
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119
Article 1 of 3 Midterms Under Siege — The Scale of Influence
Midterm elections are supposed to be smaller, quieter affairs compared to presidential contests. Yet, heading into 2026, the sums being poured into these races are unprecedented, rivaling what we normally see only in general elections. The early flood of resources, even when fully disclosed, is a stark reminder that what the public sees is rarely the full story. Source
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118
The Illusion of Control: From Vietnam to Iran
In 1953, the U.S., alongside Britain, helped remove Iran’s democratically elected leader, Mohammad Mossadegh, after he nationalized the country’s oil industry. In his place, we reinforced the rule of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi—a leader more aligned with Western interests. Source
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Why you need me!
I know you aren't going to support me, I know you aren't going to buy me a coffee, I know this is all on me, But the one thing you can do, and it's free, and it just might make a difference is share my posts if they ring true to you. Spread the word because the word needs to be spread and my message is to Think For Yourself. Source
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116
Adressing Mental Health – “A Practical Approach:”
Part of the reason is that we’ve treated it like a political problem. Something to be argued over. Something funded or defunded depending on who’s in charge. Something that shifts direction every few years without building real continuity. Source
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115
Healthcare in America vs Socialized Medicine Today- End of Series
Roughly half or more of U.S. healthcare spending already flows through government programs. We are not a pure market system. We are a complex blend. Source
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114
In America, we have No Kings. March 28 https://www.nokings.org/
In America, we have No Kings. We are showing up together again on March 28. https://www.nokings.org/ Source
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113
Thank You, Mr. Trump: How Media Consolidation Is Accidentally Saving Journalism
The lack of money is a problem without an easy answer. But it is also, in a strange way, a kind of protection. With money comes control. The moment someone else starts paying the bills, they start having opinions about the content. Source
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112
Process vs. Power: When the Courts Step Into Medicine
What we are seeing now is not simply a legal pause. It is the system doing what it was built to do when pushed too far, too fast. Slowing things down. And in a healthcare system that touches every American life, that friction—however frustrating—may be the only thing preventing something far more unstable from taking its place. Source
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111
A Pivot Opportunity on America’s Mental Health Crisis – Redirecting Priorities from Endless War
You have the platform (X), cash, and disruption cred to make this viral and bipartisan—addressing blue-city street crises and rural opioid/mental health gaps without heavy ideology. It aligns with your existing views, scales like your big missions, and could force national conversation/pressure for reallocations.Worth considering? The timing (lame-duck dynamics, midterm/economic pain building) might be right.No pressure—just an idea from a purple independent who's tired of misplaced priorities. Source
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110
Christian nationalism isn’t really about Christianity at al
The GOP has a unified voice. You can agree with it or despise it, but you always know what it is. Democrats keep waiting for permission to find theirs. That's not a messaging problem. That's a leadership problem, and until the party decides to solve it, Georgia stays an asterisk instead of becoming a blueprint. Source
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109
The GOAT Strategy
Keep the stories coming fast enough and messy enough, and the public eventually shrugs and goes back to everyday life. Work. Bills. Kids. Groceries. The ordinary things that actually matter in people’s lives. Source
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108
To The United States Congress – Thirty eight words
You took an oath. Thirty eight words. You said them out loud, probably with your hand raised and people you love watching. They weren't complicated words. They didn't leave much room for interpretation. They asked one thing of you — that you defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic. Not your party. Not your president. Not your seat. Source
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107
I Get It
That truth is this. The closest thing to actual power most of us will ever hold is a vote and a voice. That's it. That's the whole arsenal. It isn't much, until enough people pick it up at the same time. But neither of those things work if we stop using them. And they stop working in a different way when we use them without thinking. When we vote the way we're told to vote, believe what we're told to believe, and accept what we're told to accept. Source
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106
No One Best Fix, Part 3 Dark Money Continued – Montana as a Test Case, Not a Template
It tests something narrower: Whether a state can limit certain forms of outside influence Whether local accountability can be strengthened structurally Whether reducing scale changes behavior Source
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105
Dark Money for Dummies — Part 3
The conspiracy's that aren't. Far cheaper Less crowded with competing messages Less scrutinized by media More consequential per dollar spent Source
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104
Dark Money for Dummies — Part 2
Once people understand what dark money is, the next question is obvious: If this creates so many problems, why does it exist at all? The short answer is not corruption or conspiracy. Source
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103
Ballrooms and Breadlines: When Power Loses Touch With People
I can understand the conservative point of view here. I’m conservative by heart and by history. I believe in responsibility, not dependency. I’ve seen the waste, the abuse, the fraud that creeps into welfare systems. Source
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102
You Know You’ve Made It When Trump Tweets
You Know You've Made It When...Success isn't measured in Grammys or box-office hauls—it's etched in the glow of a Mar-a-Lago tablet at 2 a.m. You know you're truly winning when the President of the United States, fresh from a state dinner or a tariff tweetstorm, pauses his golf swing mid-follow-through to fire off a Truth Social screed about you. "No talent!" he types, all caps rattling like a teleprompter on the fritz. "Ratings in the toilet—worse than cable reruns!" And the kicker: "He's better looking than that has-been anyway." (Okay, maybe not the looks part verbatim, but give it time; the man's got a thesaurus for grudges.)Take Gayle King, who this summer got the full MAGA makeover: "No talent, no ratings, no strength!!!" Source
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101
The Trump Donation Loop: How Taxpayer Money Could Indirectly Fund a White House Ballroom
As you can see, he is hard at work providing healthcare and food for those gullible Republicans MAGA #SanityNow #politics #oregon #politicslover #oregonlife @OPB @KOINNews Source
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100
Pay to Be Heard by Trump
So if you’re still sending in your “urgent $25 contribution” to make sure your opinion matters, maybe ask yourself: Are you part of a movement — or just another mark in a long-running con? Because when you have to pay to be heard, I promise you, nobody is listening, they are just counting. #SanityNow #politics #oregonGOP #politicslover #oregonlife Source
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99
Guilt by Association: Your Silence on MAGA’s Shadow, You’re So Screwed
You didn’t run when you had the chance. Post-2020, when whispers of independence could’ve saved you, you drowned them out with the roar of primary fears and donor demands. You gave eulogies for the old GOP but sang MAGA’s tune. You cringed at the rallies—maybe even rolled your eyes in private—but stayed silent, betting proximity to power trumped the risk of scandal. Why break away? The base demanded devotion, and stepping out meant political suicide. Source
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98
An Open Letter to Governor Tina Kotek and Mayor Keith Wilson: Portland’s Welcome Wagon for the Uninvited Guests
Commandeer the Food Trucks: Rally a squad of our iconic mobile kitchens—Voodoo Doughnut for the sugar rush, Nong's Khao Man Gai for that Thai soul food hug, and a fleet of taco wagons from the Alberta Arts District. Park them en masse at the deployment staging areas: Southwest Third Avenue by the ICE outpost, Pioneer Courthouse Square for good measure. No barricades, no chants—just free plates heaped high, courtesy of the city and state coffers. Let the guardsmen line up like tourists at the Saturday Market, fumbling for napkins amid the steam of sizzling carnitas. Mobilize the Servers: Assemble a company of hospitality pros—bartenders from the Pearl District's craft cocktail dens, line cooks from food cart pods, and that army of baristas who treat espresso like an art form. Outfit them in "Welcome to Portland: Resistance with a Side of Fries" aprons. Their mission? Overwhelm the arrivals with waves of indulgence: bottomless pours of Stumptown Coffee (cold brew for the jet-lagged, pour-overs for the principled), world-renowned Portland pizza slices from Escape From New York or Sizzle Pie (extra za'atar for that Middle Eastern flair), and a rotating carousel of craft brews from Breakside or Deschutes to wash it down. Turn the drop zone into a pop-up block party, complete with indie playlists from KEXP—think Sleater-Kinney anthems underscoring the irony. Layer in the International Resistance: Because nothing says "global solidarity" like a bakery blitz. Source a fine selection of Danish pastries—flaky almond kringle, cheese-filled spandauer, and cinnamon-snail wisps—from our city's Danish outposts like Scandia or the Nordic bakeries in the Hawthorne district. Deliver them in care packages labeled "From Copenhagen with Love: Sweet Dreams of Actual Resistance." It's a nod to the European allies who've long eyed America's authoritarian flirtations with horror, and a reminder that true pushback pairs buttery layers with unyielding critique. Source
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97
Throwing Off the MAGA Yoke
Don't believe the ridiculous propaganda being forced down our throats, don't believe the lies and don't bend the knee. And don't take our word for it. Do some research, do some fact checking and above all be true to the Constitution and the values that created it. Burn those MAGA red caps and reject the rhetoric of the WOKE, Learn to see the big picture and make choices based upon a love of our country and for our neighbor. If you truly want to enjoy a glass of Bourbon, leave the ICE out of it. Source
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96
“Throwing Off the MAGA Yoke” — A Call to Real Republicans
The real Republican spirit has always been one of work, decency, and courage. It’s the spirit of Eisenhower, who warned against blind militarism. Of Reagan, who knew America’s greatness was found in optimism, not anger. Of countless local leaders who served their communities quietly, never asking for fame or applause. Source
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95
Why Do The Ultra Rich Make Asses Of Themselves
Why do the ultra rich, like Donald and Elon have to make such asses of themselves. they already have everything any million people could want? Source
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94
Why People Are So Angry
It’s not just one man or one party, though Trump’s barrage of falsehoods and attacks made the trend painfully visible. Washington’s insiders have grown comfortable rewriting the playbook to suit themselves. The result is a public that feels cheated and betrayed — and that’s on the leadership, not the people. Source
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93
Loyalty to Country, Not to a Man
Real loyalty isn’t to a man. Real loyalty is to our country. And a country shows its loyalty back by taking care of its people. That means intelligent solutions, not slogans. It means tackling the hard problems—healthcare, jobs, inflation, veterans’ care—with real ideas instead of scapegoats. Source
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92
Get Back to the Issues
Voters deserve more than fear and name-calling. It doesn’t matter if the attack ads come from the right or the left—they’re distractions. What matters is whether a candidate will look us in the eye and tell us what they plan to do for our families, our communities, and our future. Source
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91
Betting Against The Economy, why would Trump do that?
When leaders or high-ranking officials make financial moves that profit from economic decline, it undermines the very foundation of public trust. Reports suggest former President Trump and some government officials may have engaged in activities that allow them to benefit if the economy falters. These actions are troubling because while ordinary Americans face layoffs, inflation, and market volatility, insiders with privileged information can stand to gain. Source
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90
10% government stake in Intel – Good or Bad
Trump’s known investment profile: Public records and reporting show he has diversified holdings across multiple sectors (stocks, real estate, funds, etc.), including historical past holdings in companies like Intel. Yet, there is no indication that he or his family currently hold private Intel stock or a stake in this government-led deal. The recent Intel stake is clearly portrayed as a federal government transaction, with no intermingling of Trump's personal finances. Source
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89
Gerrymandering: Why Do Rules Exist If No One Follows Them?
So the question remains: if no one is playing by the rules, why do the rules exist? Perhaps the answer is that the rules are waiting—for us. They are waiting for citizens to demand better, for courts to enforce standards of fairness, and for leaders to rediscover the humility that comes with serving rather than ruling. The rules still exist because they are the difference between democracy and tyranny. But they will only matter if we decide to make them matter. Source
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88
Gerrymandering, The Cowards Confession / Girly Boys
Let’s be clear: this isn’t clever strategy, it’s cowardice. It’s the political equivalent of moving the goalposts because you’re afraid to lose a fair fight. Even when done in retaliation, it’s still rigging — a confession that persuasion has failed, that truth has lost, and that the only path left is manipulation. Source
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87
Gerrymandering, The Cowards Confession
Let’s be clear: this isn’t clever strategy, it’s cowardice. It’s the political equivalent of moving the goalposts because you’re afraid to lose a fair fight. Even when done in retaliation, it’s still rigging — a confession that persuasion has failed, that truth has lost, and that the only path left is manipulation. Source
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86
A Morning Note to a Friend That Isn’t Like Me
Democrats often avoid real solutions, framing these problems as the result of a failed society. The reality is many of these so-called “downtrodden” are instead lazy, addicted, or opportunistic—knowing they can live off handouts and steal without consequence. On the other hand, Trump’s “arrest them all” approach isn’t a solution either. These people still have rights. What happens after the arrests? Deport them? Ignore the Constitution? That’s where he has his head up his ass. Source
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Today’s political climate feels like a war zone—and who’s to blame? All of us. It’s easy to point fingers: blame Biden, blame Trump. But the hard truth is, we’ve let this happen. A commentary from the Purple Man, Not Left, Not Right, somewhere in the middle and trying to make sense of it all.Visit us at https://elephantsinkroom.com/ or our YouTube Channel 'purple man channel' https://www.youtube.com/@PurpleMan-z8b6lThank You for your time, Michael, Sarah and Emma Walker 'The Middle Road'We strive to keep it short, others may talk about everything but what you wanted to hear. 3 to 5 minutes is all it takes to get you motivated, 20 to 30 minutes to bore and lose you. There is just to much information coming at us to fast. We hope to distill it into useful information to get you thinking, not reacting rashly.
HOSTED BY
Elephant in the Ink Room
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