Suspected provocateur specifically stated, ‘We’re here to storm the capitol. I’m not kidding.’ In a new mini-documentary diving into Jan. 6, investigative journalist Lara Logan [more…]
America’s founding is an inheritance purchased with blood; we owe it our remembrance
As America approaches its 250th birthday, we face a question larger than politics, elections, parties, or personalities.
What will we do with the inheritance we have been given?
Today, powerful cultural voices often encourage Americans to focus exclusively on the nation’s flaws while ignoring its achievements.
The United States of America did not emerge from history by accident. It was purchased with courage, sacrifice, conviction, and blood. Before there was a Constitution, before there was prosperity, before there was even a nation, there were men who willingly placed everything they possessed on the altar of liberty.
Risking it all
One of those men was Charles Carroll of Carrollton.
Today, his name is not nearly as familiar as Washington, Jefferson, or Adams. Yet Carroll occupies a unique place in American history. He was the only Catholic signer of the Declaration of Independence and perhaps the wealthiest man in the colonies. Unlike many who seek political causes for personal gain, Carroll had little material reason to risk rebellion against the British crown.
He already possessed wealth, status, influence, and comfort.
Yet he signed anyway.
By placing his name on that document, he risked the loss of his fortune, his property, and his life. If the Revolution failed, the consequences would have been severe. He understood what was at stake and signed nonetheless because he believed there were principles greater than personal security.
Freedom.
Self-government.
Human dignity.
The God-given rights of man.
A human story
Those principles have been defended repeatedly throughout our nation’s history. From Lexington and Concord to Gettysburg, from Normandy to the mountains of Afghanistan, generations of Americans have worn the uniform and carried the burden of defending a nation they loved.
Many never came home.
Their sacrifice demands something of us.
The blood spilled by American soldiers is not honored merely through parades, speeches, or patriotic songs. It is honored when citizens preserve the liberties for which those men and women fought. It is honored when we tell the truth about our history, cherish the freedoms we inherited, and pass them intact to the next generation.
That conviction is one of the reasons I wrote “The Unlikely Life of Oliver Atkinson: A Novel of America’s Founding.”
Like many Americans, I became concerned that our founding story was becoming increasingly distant, especially for younger generations. History often arrives in textbooks as dates, names, and facts to memorize. Yet history is ultimately about people. It is about dreams, fears, courage, faith, and sacrifice.
The American Revolution was not merely an event.
It was a human story.
Through fiction, I hoped to help readers experience that story through the eyes of ordinary people whose lives were transformed by extraordinary times. My goal was not simply entertainment. It was remembrance.
Because nations that forget their story eventually lose it.
Enduring truths
Today, powerful cultural voices often encourage Americans to focus exclusively on the nation’s flaws while ignoring its achievements. Certainly, America has never been perfect. No nation ever has been. Yet there is a profound difference between acknowledging imperfections and rejecting the very principles that made self-correction possible in the first place.
The Declaration of Independence proclaimed that all men are created equal and endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights. The Constitution established a framework of ordered liberty that remains one of the greatest political achievements in human history.
These ideas were not perfect because the men who wrote them were perfect.
They were powerful because they reflected enduring truths about human nature, liberty, and the source of our rights.
Our task at 250
As we approach America’s 250th anniversary, perhaps the greatest challenge before us is deciding whether we still believe those truths.
Will we preserve the freedoms entrusted to us?
Will we teach our children why they matter?
Will we honor the sacrifices of those who came before us?
Or will we become the generation that squandered what others sacrificed so much to build?
The signers of the Declaration pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor. Countless soldiers pledged even more.
The question facing Americans today is far less costly, yet no less important.
Will we prove worthy of their sacrifice?
If we fail to preserve liberty, truth, faith, and the principles that gave birth to this nation, we risk wasting more than the ink used to sign our founding documents. We risk wasting the blood shed by generations of Americans who believed this republic was worth defending.
As America turns 250, let us resolve that their sacrifice was not in vain.
Lifestyle, Revolutionary war, America 250th anniversary, American founding, History
States allege this top security-cam company has Chinese military ties — it sells baby monitors too
A home security and baby monitor provider is allegedly tied to the Chinese government.
Missouri Attorney General Catherine Hanaway said in a press release on Monday that the communist government has had its “hand on our cradles” for some time.
‘These cameras watch our babies breathe.’
Hanaway announced a lawsuit against Lorex, a major retailer of WiFi cameras for indoor and outdoor security, including baby monitor cameras. The company even sells cameras attached to lightbulb fixtures as well.
In 2018, Lorex was acquired by Dahua Technology, the same year Dahua CEO Fu Liquan was reported to be the secretary of Dahua’s Communist Party Committee. In 2019, Dahua was used by the Chinese government for its surveillance program.
Dahua eventually sold Lorex to Taiwanese company Skywatch for $72 million in 2022, but according to the Missouri AG, the connection to China still exists and Lorex misled retailers about its ongoing connections.
“The hand that rocks the cradle rules the world. Missouri will not allow the CCP to put its hand on our cradles,” Hanaway said in the press release. “Parents place these cameras over cribs and in bedrooms to protect their children, not to invite a foreign adversary into their homes.”
Hanaway stated that Lorex has maintained its ties to Dahua as an ongoing supplier of components despite the then-Department of Defense previously designating Dahua as a national security threat.
RELATED: Inside China’s plan to beat the US at big tech forever
Hanaway also alleged that Lorex’s firmware routes straight to Dahua, “further evidencing CCP involvement and control over device hardware and software.”
In addition to selling products connected to China on its own website, Lorex cameras were sold through Amazon, Best Buy, Costco, Menards, Micro Center, Office Depot, and Staples all while the company “misrepresented and omitted fundamental facts” to consumers and retailers, the lawsuit claims.
“Lorex tells families its video cameras are ‘private by design’ while concealing ties to a Chinese military company,” Hanaway added. “These cameras watch our babies breathe, capture our children’s voices, and record families’ most intimate moments. When companies won’t tell the truth about their connection to hostile foreign governments, my office will step in to protect families.”
RELATED: $965 billion AI giant warns we need to hit the brakes — but will China?
Sheldon Cooper/SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty Images
Missouri is suing under the Missouri Merchandising Practices Act, seeking restitution of up to $1,000 for each Missouri customer who bought a Lorex camera in the last five years, as well as $1.8 million in damages from the company.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit in February against Lorex with similar accusations, in that the company is still tied to Dahua, uses its components, and failed to disclose this information to consumers.
Paxton said these points violated the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act.
Lorex did not respond to Blaze News’ request for comment and has not released public statements about the Missouri lawsuit.
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News, Tech, Ccp, China, Missouri
Trump showed voters the con behind the curtain
I remember telling our son that Donald Trump was going to win.
This was before the ride down the escalator 11 years ago this week — before the rallies, investigations, indictments, impeachments, and endless outrage that would dominate American political life for the next decade.
‘The first guy through the wall — he always gets bloody.’
“Washington’s not prepared,” I told him. “Americans are so angry, so frustrated, and so convinced that nobody is listening to them that they are going to send Donald Trump to Washington.”
I was not predicting policy. I was describing a mood.
Americans had spent years listening to politicians from both parties promise action on border security, Iran’s nuclear ambitions, government waste, trade deficits, and manufacturing losses. Election followed election. Promise followed promise. The problems remained.
Recently, I rewatched “Moneyball,” and one line explained more about the last decade than most political commentary ever has: “The first guy through the wall — he always gets bloody.”
The context was baseball, but the observation was about human nature.
As Red Sox owner John Henry pointed out, Billy Beane’s real offense was not merely challenging a way of doing business. He was threatening the people whose livelihoods depended on perpetuating that system. When that happens, people rarely respond with calm reflection. More often, they panic. They say things, do things, and defend things that would have seemed irrational only a few years earlier.
Henry’s colorful diagnosis involved bat guano and mental illness, but his insight still holds.
Trump did not arrive with new information. He arrived with a willingness to say publicly what millions of Americans already believed privately. Like baseball, the stats were known to everyone. Politicians from both parties had talked about border security, warned about a nuclear Iran, criticized trade arrangements, lamented government waste, and acknowledged manufacturing losses. Some made those arguments more eloquently than Trump ever did.
The information was already there. The debate was never over whether the problems existed. It was over whether anyone intended to do anything about them.
What many Americans heard from Trump was not a new diagnosis. They heard a willingness to act on one.
If the ideas were not new, why the reaction?
RELATED: The right to life cannot depend on a baby’s zip code
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images
The answer lies more in incentives than policy. America’s founders would have understood this immediately. Influenced by Scripture, the Reformation, and centuries of political conflict, they assumed that people rarely become less self-interested when they acquire power. Their confidence rested not in the virtue of those who governed but in the restraints placed upon them.
Barack Obama called those restraints “negative liberties.” The founders understood something that remains true today: Institutions, like individuals, possess a powerful instinct toward self-preservation.
Washington excels at discussing problems. Politicians campaign on them. Consultants raise money around them. Advocacy groups organize around them. Media outlets build business models around them. The issues generate donations, airtime, influence, and careers.
At some point, many Americans began to suspect that Washington had grown more comfortable managing problems than solving them. Problems generated funding, influence, elections, power, and relevance. Solutions threatened budgets, bureaucracies, consulting contracts, media narratives, and political leverage.
A solved problem is often bad for the institutions built around managing it.
That suspicion did not begin with Trump. He simply walked into it. Then he broke the fourth wall.
Like theater, politics depends on a fourth wall separating the actors from the audience. Newspapers, television networks, political parties, and pundits interpreted events, while the public sat in the seats and a relatively small number of institutions controlled the stage.
Trump ignored the arrangement. He bypassed the traditional gatekeepers and spoke directly to the audience.
He did not create that distrust. He brought it to the center of the national conversation and turned the spotlight on institutions accustomed to holding it. Once enough people concluded those institutions were protecting themselves rather than serving the public, the structure became unstable.
Millions of Americans began looking at the stage differently. They noticed the lighting, the script, and the stagehands moving the props. More important, they began questioning whether the performance was as authentic as they had been led to believe.
The reaction was immediate and fierce — not because Trump threatened a policy preference, but because he threatened a system.
RELATED: The left wants to put MAGA on the couch — then on trial
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
Ironically, many Americans concluded that the people who claimed they could not secure the nation’s border found remarkable energy when it came to securing the institutional wall Trump smashed in Washington. It was a wall of authority, protected narratives, and unquestioned assumptions.
Whether he exposed corruption, incompetence, self-interest, or simply a system disconnected from the people it served is almost secondary. Once people have seen behind the curtain, they cannot be persuaded that they never looked.
That is why the fight continues. Trump remains on the stage, but millions of Americans have already seen what was behind the scenery.
The question is what happens after Trump.
Will Americans still challenge institutions that have grown more committed to preserving themselves than fulfilling their missions? Will leaders still treat public problems as responsibilities rather than campaign themes? Will citizens still maintain a healthy suspicion of concentrated power, regardless of which party controls it?
The first guy through the wall always gets bloody.
The question now is whether America intends to keep walking through the opening — or spend the next generation rebuilding the wall.
Trump, Iran, Maga, Moneyball, Negative liberties, Americans, After trump, Opinion & analysis
‘He’s going to hell’: Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick accuses Talarico of campaigning against God
Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick (R) broached the subjects of God and damnation in his remarks on Friday to the 2026 Republican Party of Texas State Convention, characterizing Democratic Senate candidate James Talarico as a radical blasphemer in desperate need of prayer.
Preempting possible criticism by the media over his discussion of Jesus and “standing up for God,” Patrick noted that “it’s James Talarico who decided to bring the Bible into this election — and let me tell you, that’s not a Bible I’ve ever read. I’ve never seen so much blasphemy from anyone running for office.”
‘That’s the darkness.’
Democrat state Rep. James Talarico is a part-time Presbyterian seminarian who has, among other things,
attempted to use Scripture to justify abortion; preached at a leftist church that regards abortion as a “blessing”; protested the public display of the Ten Commandments;attributed the beginning of the “story of Jesus” to an “extraordinary act of feminism”;fought to keep the Bible out of schools; characterized curricula that “elevate[s] Christianity over the other major world religions” as “deeply un-Christian”; concern-mongered about traditional Christian views; voted against sparing kids from sex-rejection mutilations and claimed there are six sexes.
Talarico has desperately attempted in recent weeks to adopt a less radical, less effeminate persona. In addition to posing with meat — after having previously clutched pearls over animal welfare and the impact of meat consumption on “climate change” — he recently walked back some of his more provocative theological claims.
RELATED: Democrats can’t escape their trans problem
F. Carter Smith/Bloomberg/Getty Images
In a 2021 speech protesting legislation that prevents male athletes from playing on girls’ K-12 school sports teams, Talarico stated, “God is both masculine and feminine and everything in between; God is nonbinary.”
In an interview last month, Talarico called some of his previous religious statements “cringey comments” that were “meant to be deliberately provocative.”
Lt. Gov. Patrick evidently isn’t buying what Talarico is selling, stating on Friday, “Let me tell you what, I’m going to pray for that guy because when he loses the Senate race, if he campaigns against God as he’s been doing, he’s going to hell for sure. That’s what we’re up against. That’s the darkness.”
Talarico responded to Patrick on X, writing, “For decades, Dan Patrick has sold out the poor, the sick, and the vulnerable to enrich his donors. Love feels like blasphemy when you worship power.”
Paxton recently stated that his Democratic opponent — whom he has referred to as “Tofu Talarico” and “Low-T Talarico” — “is a threat to our values, our way of life, and the future of Texas.”
A pair of recent polls indicate that the race is unnervingly close. While Paxton was up 45%-43% in a recent Quantus Insights poll, the two candidates were dead even in a Siena University poll earlier this month.
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Ken paxton, James talarico, Texas, Dan patrick, Senate, Election, Gay, Bible, Christian, Heretic, Blasphemy, God, Jesus, Abortion, Politics
Trump signs Iran deal, blasts ‘fools’ after meltdowns by Sens. Cruz and Cassidy
President Donald Trump was originally scheduled to sign a hard copy of the U.S.-Iran memorandum of understanding in Switzerland on Friday, but evidently sealing the deal and reopening the Strait of Hormuz couldn’t wait.
Flanked by French President Emmanuel Macron and French first lady Brigitte Macron and with Secretary of State Marco Rubio looming behind him, Trump signed the deal at the Palace of Versailles on Wednesday night, stating, “This was not easy, I can tell you.”
‘Reagan is rolling over in his grave.’
Pakistani President Shehbaz Sharif, a key mediator during the peace talks, subsequently noted that the agreement is now in effect, meaning — as a first step — Iran will “instantly reopen the Strait of Hormuz and the United States of America will immediately lift the naval blockade.”
The White House hailed the agreement as a great achievement.
“Following the historic destruction of Iran’s military capabilities through the successful Operation Epic Fury, President Trump and his negotiating team have brokered an excellent, performance-based MOU that advances the interests of the United States by ending the fighting, reopening the Strait of Hormuz to significantly lower energy prices, and forcing Iran to commit to abandon its nuclear ambitions,” stated White House spokeswoman Olivia Wales.
Alex Wong/Getty Images
Following the signing, gasoline prices dropped and U.S. Treasury and stock futures rebounded.
Democrats in Congress, Iran hawks, and several Israeli officials have complained incessantly in recent days about the agreement. On Wednesday, however, Republican lawmakers were among the loudest critics of the textual prelude to a final peace agreement.
After sharing critiques by others troubled by the peace deal, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) told The Hill, “History teaches that giving billions of dollars to theocratic lunatics who want to murder us is not a good idea. I think the president is receiving some very poor advice on this deal.”
Cruz seems to have been referring to the sixth of the agreement’s 14 points, which states, “The United States of America undertakes with regional partners to develop a definitive, mutually agreed plan with at least $300 billion for the reconstruction and economic development of the Islamic Republic of Iran.”
Cruz recycled these remarks in an interview with the Daily Wire, where he emphasized his support for Trump’s decision “to initiate military action against Iran.”
Sen. Bill Cassidy, the Republican who finished a distant third in the Louisiana GOP Senate primary last month, similarly chimed in on Wednesday, writing, “Reagan is rolling over in his grave.”
“Iran’s nuclear ambitions were not curbed, and they have learned that threatening the Strait of Hormuz works and will undoubtedly leverage it in the future,” continued Cassidy. “Now, Iran gets to build brand-new infrastructure under this deal.”
“This is the worst foreign policy blunder in decades,” added the departing senator.
Failed presidential candidate Nikki Haley and Sen. Thom Tillis — the retiring North Carolina Republican whom Trump called a “loser” and an “angry man” earlier this month — also aired their concerns.
Tillis suggested that the U.S. was “equivocating” on some of the goals set earlier in the conflict; emphasized the need for “accountability for Iran”; insinuated that the agreement is the result of the administration “getting a bit skittish over the economic consequences of going to war to begin with”; and said he prefers a deal that won’t just last through the remainder of Trump’s terms but for multiple generations.
“Hitting Iran’s nuclear and missile sites was the right move,” wrote Haley.
“Now, we plan to unlock billions of dollars and lift sanctions, with the promise of even more money. They will use that money the way they always do — to further their nuclear ambitions and on terrorist proxies against us. It’s a huge mistake to pay to rebuild the threat we just destroyed.”
Not all champions of the war, however, condemned the deal.
South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham wrote, “It is my opinion that signing the MOU will be beneficial to the United States, in as much as the Strait of Hormuz will begin to open, and the hostilities with Iran will stop.”
While casting doubt on whether a final deal could be reached, Graham emphasized that signing the agreement constituted an “essential step” to creating economic stability for the U.S., the region, and the world, a step he regards as a prerequisite for “the expansion of the Abraham Accords and normalizing relations between Saudi Arabia and Israel.”
Trump evidently caught wind of all the pearl-clutching and weighed in on Thursday morning, stating on Truth Social, “These fools, who think I haven’t been tough enough on Iran, when the Stock Market Just Hit A RECORD HIGH, and Oil prices are ‘tumbling’ down, are either jealous, bad people, or stupid. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!”
According to AAA’s tracker, the national average gas price fell to $3.99 per gallon on Thursday — the lowest it has been in over two and a half months.
Brent crude futures are down to just over $78.28 per barrel — down from highs north of $110 in recent wartime months.
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Donald trump, Gop, Bill cassidy, Ted cruz, Republican, Senate, Iran, Tehran, Israel, Marco rubio, Nikki haley, Politics
EXCLUSIVE: Austin Metcalf’s father on the verdict and why he won’t — and shouldn’t — apologize
More than a year after the murder of his son Austin, Jeff Metcalf is finally saying everything he couldn’t before — and BlazeTV host Jason Whitlock is all ears.
“I have to give God 100% credit here. I’m not that smart. I couldn’t come up with all that on my own,” Metcalf tells Whitlock on “Fearless.”
Metcalf calls the murder of his son “surreal,” explaining that then having to be “put under the gag order and then have my son dragged through the mud and memes and just the vile comments” was incredibly “taxing mentally, spiritually, physically.”
“So when the gag order was finally lifted, yeah, I mean, I did go off,” he says, admitting that it was not his “best moment.”
“But it was raw, and it was accurate, and it was truthful. I don’t apologize for anything I said. I am who I am. I own it,” he tells Whitlock, explaining that he doesn’t usually cuss as much as he did when he finally went “off.”
“Put somebody in my shoes and go, ‘Look man, if your kid was murdered violently and these people did this to you for 12, 14 months and you had to say nothing,’ I really think I was pretty light. I could have been a lot worse,” he says.
Metcalf has received death threats, emails, and text messages and had to see what Anthony supporters are saying online since his son’s murder.
“Just the vile statements from everyone, and ones who are in denial of the truth. That’s the hardest part. It’s like now that the truth has been shown, all the facts have been presented. So all your lies have been debunked, but they still refuse to accept the verdict, the truth, and they’re all hanging their hat on this appeal,” he explains.
“They’re not going to retry the case. They’re not going to reintroduce evidence. I mean it’s a process. I knew it was going to happen before it happened, and I don’t have any concern about the appeal. They don’t have any grounds,” he continues.
And while Anthony’s supporters are focused on his appeal, Metcalf believes the focus should be on the kids who had to witness his son’s murder.
“This is the thing I really want to talk about most, is look at these kids who saw this murder, who have to be traumatized for the rest of their life. Every one of them is in counseling. I guarantee every one of them will not ever forget that day and what they saw,” he adds.
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Jason whitlock, Fearless, Karmelo anthony, Verdict, Austin metcalf, Jeff metcalf, Jason whitlock harmony
Illegal alien masterminded UFC Freedom 250 assassination plot, DHS claims
The suspect described as the “RINGLEADER” of the alleged UFC Freedom 250 assassination plot is an illegal alien, the Department of Homeland Security has confirmed.
According to the DHS, Abraham Hermosillo Alvarez, previously identified as a 31-year-old of Omaha, Nebraska, is actually an illegal immigrant from Mexico.
‘This illegal alien should NEVER have been allowed in our country.’
Alvarez’s B-2 tourist visa expired in 2001, the department said, when he would have been just 5 or 6 years old. Alvarez was then included in the Deferred Action for Children Arrivals program during the Obama administration, per the DHS.
Contrary to popular belief, DACA is not a form of amnesty, but instead temporary protection against deportation for certain children brought to the U.S. illegally by their parents or guardians. Even the American Immigration Council admits, “DACA does not provide permanent legal status to individuals and must be renewed every two years.”
RELATED: Alleged UFC 250 assassination plot targeted Republicans — and the Trump DOJ names suspects
Win McNamee/Getty Images
Indeed, Alvarez is on track for deportation now that ICE has lodged a detainer against him. “This illegal alien should NEVER have been allowed in our country — and we will ensure he faces justice and is swiftly removed from our nation,” the DHS stated.
Alvarez was arrested by the FBI on Sunday in connection with the UFC Freedom 250 alleged assassination plot. According to the accusations, Alvarez and at least four co-conspirators planned to use explosive drones in and around the event to prompt an evacuation and then deploy snipers to assassinate specific individuals within the fleeing crowd.
Many of their alleged targets are Republicans: Sens. Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee and Jim Justice and Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia and Reps. Carol Miller and Riley Moore, both of West Virginia. President Donald Trump, Vice President JD Vance, and even Elon Musk were also allegedly identified as possible targets.
Between those on the South Lawn of the White House and the crowd at the nearby Ellipse, nearly 90,000 people attended the patriotic UFC event held last Sunday.
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Ufc, White house, Freedom 250, Daca program, Politics
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Big Medicine is about to make pregnancy more expensive
The American Medical Association is overhauling the way doctors bill for pregnancy care. Anyone who cares about families should be alarmed.
The AMA says the new model promotes accuracy and modern care. Nice slogan. For millions of American families already struggling with rising costs, it looks more like an unelected lobbying organization has found a way to make having children even more expensive.
Policymakers cannot allow the AMA to blow up the current system at the expense of families.
Starting January 1, 2027, the long-standing global maternity payment will be replaced with a more complicated system that bills pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum care in pieces. Instead of treating pregnancy as a single episode of care, the new structure lets providers bill separately for visits and services.
But pregnancy is not a menu where mothers pick one item from column A and one from column B. It is a coordinated journey that should be managed as a whole. A bundled payment system rewards providers for delivering care efficiently and effectively. An unbundled framework rewards the accumulation of billable moments.
For many couples, the question is no longer whether they want children. It is whether they can afford them. Now one of the most expensive moments in family life could become even more expensive.
The AMA controls the billing codes — those five-digit numbers patients see on medical receipts. The codes tell insurance companies what providers did so they can get paid. Moving pregnancy from one bundled code to many separate codes pushes maternity care toward a fee-for-service model. That model incentivizes more services and more fees.
Federal watchdogs have warned for years that fragmented billing creates openings for abuse. The Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General investigates billing practices and often identifies coding and billing integrity problems.
In one audit, the inspector general found that Medicare made up to $17.8 million in potentially improper payments tied to complicated coding and other billing problems in opioid treatment programs. Different specialty. Same lesson. When payment systems get sliced up or loosely controlled, waste, fraud, and abuse follow.
RELATED: The right to life cannot depend on a baby’s zip code
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images
Pregnant women and their families get stuck with the bill. Patient advocates already warn that the new system could mean higher out-of-pocket costs.
Policymakers moved toward bundled payments for maternity care because the model had the potential to lower costs and improve quality. Bundling can discourage unnecessary cesarean sections, which cost significantly more than vaginal births, carry greater risks for mothers and babies, and require longer recovery times.
When payment incentives reward more services rather than better outcomes, families can face higher medical bills, extra recovery time, more follow-up visits, and increased child-care costs.
The policy question is not whether every provider will abuse the system. It is whether Washington should allow a system that makes abuse easier and family life more expensive.
This billing-code change is landing at exactly the wrong moment. The United States recorded its lowest fertility rate ever in 2024. If conservative policymakers are serious about family formation, they should not tolerate the AMA worsening one of the most expensive and stressful experiences in American life.
As the father of a large family, I know firsthand that having children in America is not for the faint of heart. Every new baby is a blessing. Every parent also knows the bills come fast.
Policymakers cannot allow the AMA to blow up the current system at the expense of families. American families will notice when the bills multiply and the care journey is less coordinated. We cannot allow another elite institution to call this progress while ordinary Americans pay more for the privilege of bringing a child into the world and pursuing the American dream.
American medical association, Pregnancy cost, Dhhs, Medical bills, Federal watchdogs, Medicare, Opinion & analysis, Birth rates
