A biological invasion in Texas, once thought vanquished, is testing the resilience of the nation's food supply and exposing familiar patterns of governance that stretch back centuries.
The Crown's New Tax: How Screwworms Echo Imperial Folly in Texas
A biological invasion in Texas, once thought vanquished, is testing the resilience of the nation's food supply and exposing familiar patterns of governance that stretch back centuries.
Why it matters: The re-emergence of the New World screwworm highlights how public trust erodes when institutional assurances falter. Soaring beef prices become a de facto levy on every household, reminiscent of duties imposed by a distant authority without consent. Such burdens coalesce into grievance when accompanied by government's uneven candor. This incident challenges the social contract: governance must prioritize citizen welfare and operate with transparency. The very notion of AMERICA, as conceived by its founders, was predicated on the rejection of such opaque authority and its economic impositions.
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