The Most Important Thing Any of Us Can Do Today
Why Normalizing Lawlessness Is How Democracies Actually Die
(Me, on right, far-end, with three of my “brothers” in the Persian Gulf onboard the U.S.S. Nimitz)
Author’s Note:
I used this photo because it anchors me to a time when trust wasn’t theoretical.
A time when I knew…without hesitation…that the people standing next to me had my back. That if things went sideways…they wouldn’t flinch. That they would risk their lives for mine…just as I would for theirs.
Not because we were friends. Not because we agreed on everything. But…because we were bound by a shared mission…and a clear understanding of what failure would cost.
There was no confusion about the stakes.
No performative loyalty.
No pretending.
You did your job. You watched out for the person next to you. You held the line…because everyone understood that the line mattered.
That mindset changes you.
It teaches you that trust is built through action…not words. That unity isn’t sameness…it’s commitment to a common goal. And…that when people abandon their duty…the consequences aren’t abstract. They’re immediate. They’re real.
I chose this image because democracy doesn’t survive on vibes or slogans. It survives when enough people adopt that same internal posture: I will not abandon the person next to me. I will not normalize betrayal. I will not look away when the mission is threatened.
Going forward…democracy-defending Americans are going to need that mindset again.
Not uniformity.
Not blind loyalty.
But shared resolve.
The quiet understanding…that the stakes are real…and that we hold the line together…or we don’t hold it at all.
The Most Important Thing Any of Us Can Do Today
Why Normalizing Lawlessness Is How Democracies Actually Die
The Jack Hopkins Now Newsletter #748: Friday, January 23rd, 2026.
Let’s get one thing straight…
Yesterday’s hearing wasn’t confusing.
It wasn’t complicated.
It wasn’t even subtle.
It was a display of arrogance so naked you could practically smell it through the screen.
Republicans didn’t debate.
They didn’t defend the Constitution.
They didn’t even pretend to honor the oath they swore.
They sneered at it.
They mocked it.
They treated the rule of law the way an entitled brat treats a speed limit…something meant for other people.
And here’s the most dangerous part:
They did it confidently.
Because they believe…correctly so far…that most Americans will shrug…scroll…and move on.
Which brings us to the most important thing any of us can do today.
Refuse to normalize lawlessness.
Not loudly.
Not performatively.
Not with slogans you’ll forget tomorrow.
But internally.
Mentally.
Morally.
Because authoritarian takeovers don’t start with tanks.
They start with exhaustion.
They start when decent people say, “It’s just politics.”
When corruption becomes background noise.
When outrage is replaced by irony.
When disbelief hardens into numb acceptance.
Yesterday wasn’t “just another hearing.”
It was a line being crossed…in public.
An oath…your oath, by proxy…being treated as optional.
The Constitution reduced to a prop…useful only when it protects power…and disposable…when it restrains it.
And the scariest truth of all?
They’re not hiding anymore.
They no longer fear consequences….because they no longer believe there will be any.
Which means the fight right now…isn’t about elections.
It isn’t about parties.
It isn’t even about personalities.
It’s about what we allow ourselves to get used to.
The most important thing you can do today is this:
Stay morally awake.
Stay sharp.
Stay offended by corruption.
Stay anchored to first principles…even when they’re inconvenient…unpopular…or exhausting to defend.
Authoritarians rely on one thing above all else:
Your fatigue.
They want you tired.
Cynical.
Detached.
Laughing it off as theater.
Because once lawlessness feels normal….resistance feels extreme.
And…once that switch flips…history shows exactly what comes next.
So don’t look away.
Don’t minimize it.
Don’t let anyone gaslight you into thinking this is “how it’s always been.”
It hasn’t.
And…it doesn’t have to be.
The Constitution doesn’t die in a single blow.
It dies…one shrug at a time.
Not. On. Our. Watch.
#HoldFast
Back soon,
-Jack
Jack Hopkins
P.S. for paid readers: Tomorrow I’m publishing Part Three in the ongoing series about building a more secure, durable personal footing…the kind that holds up under pressure…uncertainty…and sudden change. If the first two helped you think differently about stability and leverage…the next one goes a level deeper.




Authoritarianism doesn’t arrive with tanks — it arrives when we shrug, numb out, and accept lawlessness as routine. Refusing to normalize abuse of power isn’t performative — it’s the core obligation of citizenship.
Most beneficial article I’ve read in a long time. Thank you, Jack.
One of your best ❤️