The concept of Wake Forest empire — where federal overreach reaches local streets — defines this moment. Iraq and Afghanistan didn’t happen in a vacuum. The problem was the entire post-9/11 project—the wars, the Patriot Act, rendition, GITMO, the Obama-era drone program, even the killing of U.S. citizens abroad without due process. I’m a veteran of Iraq and a contractor in Afghanistan. I took part in operations across the globe. Looking back, much of it was imperial policing.
Now the chickens are coming home to roost. We see the military deployed on U.S. streets, policy and posture shaped by the same counter-insurgency logic we exported. We see echoes of this in Gaza, Russia, Hungary, China—creeping authoritarian reflexes justified by “security.” We must refuse a future of mass surveillance— cameras logging every face, license plate, and movement, drones overhead, sprawling databases—because a free town cannot breathe under permanent watch, we must not allow federal troops or federal law enforcement into our city under any pretext.
From Fire Base Davis, I could see an ancient fortress the local Afghans call The Castle—the site known as Qala-e-Bost—rising above the village of Qalat. Archaeological studies trace its occupation to at least the first millennium BCE, long before Alexander the Great’s campaigns into the region (Pleiades; Encyclopaedia Iranica). The firebase I was on supported small Operational Detachment Alphas—the Green Berets. Our mission was fluid: we’d establish an operations site, fly missions, then tear it all down, load the containers and trucks, and roll to the next fight—first in MRAPs, later in MAT-Vs. Later in that deployment, I overwintered in Gelan, in southern Ghazni Province. It snowed for weeks. No mail came for months; it finally arrived on New Year’s Eve, just after the 101st Airborne commander stopped by to see what the “bearded weirdos” were doing out there in the middle of winter.

I spent time at FOB Ghazni and hated it. The 82nd Airborne ran the base—strict garrison life. I preferred the smaller SOF teams; they didn’t care who you were as long as you pulled weight. I wound up in Gardez at a base called FOB Lightning for the election, living in a joint SEAL–ODA team house as a contractor and prior Navy guy. It was chaos, but those were good men.

A Call to Action
Some of us made it home. Many didn’t. And some who did carried the war inside until it claimed them just the same—by wreck, by overdose, by despair. I’ve wrestled with the same shadows: depression, anxiety, sleepless nights that never really end. War teaches you how fragile life is—and how sacred it becomes when you fight to keep it.
That’s why this moment matters. We can’t let fear, division, or apathy hollow out what others bled to preserve. The same vigilance that kept us alive overseas is needed here at home—to guard our democracy, to protect one another, and to push back against the slow creep of authoritarianism.
The work isn’t abstract. It starts right here, in Wake Forest, in your block, on your street. Show up. Vote in your local elections. Help a neighbor. Defend the truth when it’s twisted. Choose compassion when cynicism feels easier.
We don’t vote for parties or personalities—we vote for people: for the hungry kid who needs a meal, the teacher stretching a classroom budget, the elder who wants a safe sidewalk, the worker keeping the lights on, and the quiet spaces where truth still matters.
This is not ideology; it’s a covenant. It’s how a free people stay free.
So live by the Code.
Protect your community.
Do the work.
Love your neighbor.
Because love—honest, stubborn, everyday love—is how we keep the republic.
Footnotes (MLA)
“Qaʿla Bost: A Pleiades Place Resource.” Pleiades: A Gazetteer of Past Places, created by Carolin Johansson and Rune Rattenborg, contributor Jeffrey Becker, 10 June 2023, https://pleiades.stoa.org/places/310634609
Paine, Thomas. The American Crisis. Philadelphia, 1776.
Washington, George. General Orders, 2 July 1776. Library of Congress, www.loc.gov/resource/mgw3g.002
United Nations Charter, Art. 2(4); see also Glennon, Michael J. “The UN Charter and the Use of Force Against Iraq.” The American Journal of International Law, vol. 97, no. 1, 2003, pp. 141–154.
“U.S. Report on Iraq’s WMD Claims.” Central Intelligence Agency, 2004, www.cia.gov/library/reports/general-reports-1/iraq_wmd_2004/
Powell, Colin, with Joseph E. Persico. My American Journey. Random House, 1995; see also Powell interview, ABC News, Sept 2005.
United States. American Servicemembers’ Protection Act of 2001. S. 1610, 107th Cong., 1st Sess., U.S. Government Printing Office, 2001.
“U.S. Announces Intent Not to Ratify International Criminal Court Treaty.” ASIL Insights, American Society of International Law, May 2002, www.asil.org/insights/volume/7/issue/7/us-announces-intent-not-ratify-international-criminal-court-treaty
“The United States Should Ratify the Rome Statute.” Council on Foreign Relations, 2022, www.cfr.org/article/united-states-should-ratify-rome-statute
Snyder, Timothy. On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century. Tim Duggan Books, 2017.
“Hands (advertisement).” Wikipedia, Apr 2025, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hands_%28advertisement%29.
“Thomas Farr, Jesse Helms, and the Return of Segregationists.” IndyWeek, 3 Jan 2018, indyweek.com/news/thomas-farr-jesse-helms-return-segregationists/.
“Protesters march on NC legislature as House lawmakers advance new congressional districts.” WRAL News, 20 Oct 2025, www.wral.com/story/protesters-march-on-nc-legislature-as-house-lawmakers-advance-new-congressional-districts/22207351/
“NC GOP Accused Of ‘Surgical Racism’ After Redrawing ….” Yahoo News, 24 Oct 2025, www.yahoo.com/news/articles/nc-gop-accused-surgical-racism-165420451.html
“North Carolina Gov. Candidate Mark Robinson Declared Himself ‘Black Nazi’ on Porn Site: CNN.” Axios Raleigh, 19 Sept 2024, www.axios.com/local/raleigh/2024/09/19/mark-robinson-cnn-report-nc-scandal
“Republican Mark Robinson Suggested ‘Deadbeat’ Parents Should Be Sterilized in Racist Social Media Posts.” The Guardian, 23 Oct 2024, www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/oct/23/mark-robinson-racist-facebook-posts
“One of North Carolina’s Highest-Ranking Lawmakers Called LGBTQ+ People ‘Filth’.” Them Magazine, 2024, www.them.us/story/north-carolina-lawmaker-called-lgbtq-people-filth
Barber II, William J. The Third Reconstruction: Moral Mondays, Fusion Politics, and the Rise of a New Justice Movement. Beacon Press, 2016.
Kaste, Martin. “Ghosts in the Stadium: How Four Iconic Carolina Football Stadiums Buried Black History.” WRAL News, 2023,www.wral.com/story/ghosts-in-the-stadium-how-four-iconic-carolina-football-stadiums-buried-black-history/21113793/
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