The Three Whisky Happy Hour: Shots Fired—Winning Here, Losing There
This week we raise the Jolly Roger against an imitator podcast that is intruding on the 3WHH’s exclusive right of commentary on all things McDonald’s, but then we move on to our own balance sheet about the Iran War (verdict—we’re winning big, and Trump is killing it), and the saga of the SAVE Act in the Senate, where opinion divides more sharply among the three of us.
Here we land the blame squarely on GOP Senate leader John Thune, and did you know that “thune” is a slang French expression for for money, though it is often used with a modifier to indicate the lack thereof, like “sans thune.” Seems fitting for a GOP Senate that can’t figure out how to fight.
The exit music this week is an obscure callback. . . I doubt one person in 1,000 will get it.
The Three Whiskey Happy Hour
The Three Whisky Happy Hour: The Great Reset
The hosts address both Gaza and the Ukraine War in this episode of 3 Whisky Happy Hour.

The Three Whisky Happy Hour: Is Trump Re-Writing Executive Power?
Is Trump re-writing executive power? The hosts answer in this episode of 3 Whisky Happy Hour.

Politics

National Civitas Institute Poll: Americans are Anxious and Frustrated, Creating a Challenging Environment for Leaders
The poll reveals a deeply pessimistic American electorate, with a majority convinced the nation is on the wrong track.
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Liberal Democracy Reexamined: Leo Strauss on Alexis de Tocqueville
This article explores Leo Strauss’s thoughts on Alexis de Tocqueville in his 1954 “Natural Right” course transcript.
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Long Distance Migration as a Two-Step Sorting Process: The Resettlement of Californians in Texas
Here we press the question of whether the well-documented stream of migrants relocating from California to Texas has been sufficient to alter the political complexion of the destination state.
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Who's That Knocking? A Study of the Strategic Choices Facing Large-Scale Grassroots Canvassing Efforts
Although there is a consensus that personalized forms of campaign outreach are more likely to be effective at either mobilizing or even persuading voters, there remains uncertainty about how campaigns should implement get-out-the-vote (GOTV) programs, especially at a truly expansive scale.

Parliament, Country, and Friendship
James Grant’s delightful Friends Until the End also has much to tell us about the character of statesmen and the power (and limits) of rhetoric.

Why Can’t We Have a Real Filibuster?
The history of congressional reform is the history of unintended consequences.













