
America does not collapse in one thunderclap. It frays quietly, almost politely, while people are busy surviving.
First the family weakens. Then the school forgets what a child is. Then politics rushes into the empty space with promises, programs, labels, maps, and slogans. Before long, dependency is called compassion, confusion is called progress, and control is called justice.
Peter Vazquez sits down with Terris Todd, Director of Coalitions and Outreach for Project 21, for a conversation that moves past headlines and into the deeper wound: formation.
Who is shaping our children? Who is teaching citizenship? Who is defining justice? Who benefits when black Americans are treated as a voting bloc instead of free citizens? Who profits when broken schools promote children they failed to educate? Who answers when parents, pastors, teachers, and leaders surrender their responsibility to systems that keep producing collapse?
Terris brings the weight of lived experience: teacher, school administrator, college instructor, pastor, political leader, former White House education official, and a black conservative voice committed to truth over performance. He does not speak from a balcony. He speaks from the classroom, the church, the public square, and the hard places where America’s future is either formed or forfeited.
The discussion cuts into the Supreme Court’s 6-3 redistricting decision, racial gerrymandering, and the dangerous assumption that black voters must be politically warehoused for their own good. Todd and Vazquez challenge the idea that civil rights require permanent racial sorting, asking whether equal protection still means equal treatment or whether power has learned to wear civil-rights language like a disguise.
Then the conversation turns to education, where the numbers are not just statistics. They are children. A Baltimore student passed only three classes in four years, failed twenty-two, was late 272 times, and still moved forward through the system. Behind that scandal is a larger question: who failed him first? The school, the parent, the culture, the bureaucracy, or all of the above?
There is no shortage of blame, but there is also no substitute for responsibility.
From there, the conversation widens into energy, economics, and public trust. New York’s grid heads toward summer with thin surplus capacity while political leaders chase climate theater. California-style energy mandates collide with the reality that working families cannot always afford electric cars, rising bills, or fragile infrastructure. A society that cannot keep the lights on has no business lecturing families about sacrifice from air-conditioned offices.
Seattle becomes another warning sign. A mayor waves “bye” to wealth creators under a 9.9 percent tax, as if jobs, capital, and businesses are chained to ideology. But opportunity moves. Employers move. Families move. And when prosperity leaves, it is not the elites who suffer first. It is the worker, the renter, the small business owner, and the young person trying to climb.
Vazquez and Todd also return to America’s memory: the Constitution, slavery, contradiction, sacrifice, and the hard task of teaching history honestly without teaching children to hate the nation they are called to improve. America is not perfect. It never was. But if America does not work, what replaces it? Resentment is not a system. Grievance is not a future. Destruction is not restoration.
The conversation lands where it began: truth.
Project 21 exists to elevate black conservative voices that refuse to bow to the tired script of racial dependency, progressive gatekeeping, and political fear. Todd’s message is direct: people are asking for honesty. Not flattery. Not manipulation. Not narratives dressed up as compassion. Truth in love, whether fashionable or not.
Peter closes with Isaiah 59:14: “Judgment is turned away backward, and justice standeth afar off: for truth is fallen in the street, and equity cannot enter.”
That is the heartbeat of this conversation.
- When truth falls in the street, somebody has to pick it up.
- When children are failed, somebody has to speak.
- When voters are carved into racial inventory, somebody has to object.
- When government replaces family, faith, and responsibility, somebody has to stand.
Be a leader. Be a voice for liberty. Be awake while there is still time.
No comments yet. Be the first to say something!