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7 Urgent Truths Shaping America Now: Big Back Politics Live! with Denise Milsap

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Host Denise Milsap in a bold political podcast graphic with strong lighting and a blue-toned backdrop, promoting Big Back Politics Live
A sharp, fact-based political deep dive from Denise Milsap on Big Back Politics Live! Breaking down America’s urgent political and economic battles with clarity, fire, and no-nonsense insight. Stay informed and keep it locked to Urban City Podcast.
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Host Denise Milsap in a bold political podcast graphic with strong lighting and a blue-toned backdrop, promoting Big Back Politics Live

 

Major Takeaways

  • America is facing a collision of political, economic, and social crises, and the people paying the highest price are the ones with the least protection and the least political power.

  • Voting rights and democratic stability remain under direct pressure, with new laws, court decisions, and election maneuvers shaping who gets heard and who gets silenced.

  • Black communities are once again at the center of the national crossroads, forced to navigate inflation, policy rollbacks, and political division — yet still driving culture, activism, and the direction of the 2026 election cycle.

 

7 Urgent Truths Shaping America Now: Big Back Politics Live! with Denise Milsap

Good morning, good people. You’re tuned in to Big Back Politics Live! and I’m your host, Denise Milsap coming to you clear, direct, and unapologetic. You know how I get down. I’m not here to talk cute. I’m here to make sense of what’s happening in this country before it knocks on your door and acts like it owns the place.

So let’s get right into it, because the way things are shifting right now, you can’t afford to blink. You blink today, you wake up tomorrow wondering who rewrote the rules while you were sleeping.”

We’ve got a brand-new national security strategy coming out of Washington, and let me say this plainly: This is the biggest repositioning of America’s worldview in over 40 years. I don’t care what the politicians spin, the truth is simple the United States is stepping away from that long-held idea that we are the world’s babysitter.

For decades, the message was:
“If something goes wrong on the world stage, America will handle it.”

Well, that chapter just closed.
The new message is:
“You have your problems, we have ours good luck.”

This strategy tells the world not to expect the U.S. to jump into every foreign conflict, democracy crisis, or humanitarian disaster. They’re not trying to be the universal referee anymore. The policy is shifting toward a “you deal with it first” approach. Now whether you like that or not, understand what it means: Nations that used to depend on U.S. leadership are scrambling to figure out how to protect themselves.

And it raises one big question:
Does this make America safer… or just more isolated?

Time will tell but history loves to remind us that vacuums get filled. And when America steps back, someone else steps forward.

Now let’s talk about something the administration isn’t stepping away from because while the U.S. is pulling back from foreign democracy-building, it’s stepping into something else:
Direct military confrontation with drug cartels.

That’s right. We’ve moved from “drug enforcement” to “enemy combatants.”
That’s not a shift that’s a whole new universe.

We’re seeing U.S. military action against cartel operations on the water and along trafficking routes. Not police. Not DEA. The military. And before folks start cheering, I want you to slow down and listen to what I’m saying: yes, cartels destroy lives, devastate communities, and flood the country with poison. But once you start using military force against criminal networks, you shift the entire legal and constitutional framework.

When you designate someone an “unlawful combatant,” you bypass all kinds of judicial checks. That’s power real power. And power without oversight never ends well.

The government says this is necessary. Critics say it’s dangerous. I say: You better watch it closely. Because war powers don’t shrink; they expand. Once the door is cracked open, it never closes again.

Speaking of expanding power, let’s walk right into this Supreme Court situation. Folks, I don’t know if you realize it, but we are watching a constitutional rewrite in real time. The Court is reviewing whether presidents should have the power to fire leaders of independent agencies no cause needed, no justification required.

Now, for decades, presidents couldn’t just walk into the FTC or the Federal Reserve or the National Labor Relations Board and say, “Pack your bags, you’re out.” These agencies were intentionally insulated from political pressure, so a president couldn’t turn them into personal hit squads or shields.

But this Court is looking like it’s ready to say, “Go ahead, Mr. President. Fire whoever you want.”

And that, my friends, puts us on the edge of something America has never had before: A presidency with direct reach into every regulatory body in the country.

Imagine a president any president firing an agency head because they didn’t like a lawsuit against a big corporation.
Or because the agency was investigating their donors.
Or because the agency published data contradicting their policies.

Picture that.
Then tell me you’re not concerned.

When the balance shifts too far toward executive power, you don’t get accountability you get control. And once a president has that power, good luck getting it back.

Now while that’s happening, you’ve got immigration policy swinging like a wrecking ball. Expanded travel bans, paused processing, stepped-up enforcement, and operations that civil rights groups are saying outright violate the Constitution.

We’re seeing raids in communities from the West Coast to the East Coast. Judges are stepping in and saying the government can’t just grab people without warrants. But the fact that these operations were attempted says enough about the direction things are heading.

And let’s be real:
Immigration enforcement is legal.
But ignoring due process is not.

If rights only apply when the government feels polite today, then you don’t have rights you have privileges. And privileges disappear the moment they become inconvenient.

People love to say, “Well they’re undocumented, so what?”
Okay but you tell me this:
When the government gets comfortable skipping constitutional steps with one group, how long before it skips them with another?

Rights are like muscles use them or lose them.
And when the government gets in the habit of ignoring them, they stop being rights altogether.

Now let’s jump to something else the government seems to ignore: common sense. Because Washington tried to run a full-speed shutdown because politicians couldn’t agree on healthcare. Healthcare! One side wanted major cuts. The other side wanted to expand subsidies and keep Medicaid strong. And instead of hashing out a solution like grown adults, they dug their heels in like children fighting over a toy.

When the government shuts down, politicians still get paid. But let me tell you who doesn’t:
Veterans.
Federal workers.
Families receiving benefits.
Small businesses waiting on approvals.
People needing passports.
Courts handling backlogged cases.

Shutdowns don’t hurt Washington.
Shutdowns hurt you.

And every time it happens, both parties get right back on TV acting like heroes instead of the people who caused the damage.

Now speaking of damage, farmers across the country are getting a $12 billion aid package because trade policies and tariff battles have punished them for years. Let’s not sugarcoat this. This is a bailout because the system broke.

Tariffs raised equipment costs.
Import restrictions slowed supply chains.
Foreign buyers went shopping in other countries.
Farm incomes dropped.
Commodity prices froze.

And suddenly the government realized, “Oh wait… farmers are suffering,” and wrote a big check.

I’ll say this again: You don’t spend $12 billion unless something went wrong.
Checks don’t fix instability.
Bandaids don’t fix fractures.

Farmers need predictable markets, not government pity.

Now let’s hit on something that has bipartisan attention for once presidential pardons. People across the aisle are saying, “Hold up this power is too big.” And they’re right. Right now, a president can pardon almost anyone. Friends, allies, donors, even people related to investigations involving the president.

And the movement now is pushing for limits real limits.
No pardons for family.
No pardons for self.
No pardons that interfere with investigations.

Will it be easy? No.
Will it take years? Yes.
But the conversation is on the table.

Let me remind you of something Joe Madison always said:
“Power must be challenged. Power unchecked is power abused.”

This is why guardrails exist.
Without them, democracy becomes a suggestion instead of a system.

Now, I know some folks listening are thinking, “Denise, why does any of this matter to me? I’m trying to pay rent, put food on the table, keep gas in the tank, and survive.”

Well, let me break it down for you the way I break it down for my nieces and nephews when they pretend politics doesn’t affect them:

When America changes its global posture, your job market changes.
When the military takes on domestic-style missions, your civil liberties shift.
When the Supreme Court expands presidential power, your protections weaken.
When Congress can’t pass a budget, your benefits freeze.
When trade policy fumbles, your grocery prices rise.
When immigration policy becomes chaotic, your community feels the tension.
When pardons get abused, justice becomes optional.

Everything Washington does eventually lands on your doorstep.
And the folks pretending it doesn’t are either lying or asleep behind the wheel.

Now before I close, I want to hit you with this because it matters:
We are living in a time where politics is not about policy. It’s about identity. It’s about who people hate, who they blame, and who they’re told to fear.

So you better stay informed, stay alert, and stay active.
Silence is not neutral.
Silence is surrender.

“Lets end the show for now because BAAABY, I gotta hair appointment!! But yall know the deal we’re not done. We’re just getting started. This is Denise Milsap, and you’ve been listening to Big Back Politics Live! on the Urban City Podcast Network!

Stay involved, because if you don’t know, somebody else will use your ignorance against you. also keep the convo going! email me at info@urbancitypodcast.com.

And for my show and more, keep it locked to urbancitypodcast.com and download the Urban City Podcast App right now. Support the platform that supports you.
I’ll see you next time.

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