Clarence Thomas Just Told Every Progressive in America That Their Ideology Has an Expiration Date — And He Brought Receipts

Justice Clarence Thomas — 77 years old, 35 years on the Supreme Court, and still the most dangerous man in Washington if you’re a leftist — just walked into the University of Texas at Austin School of Law and told a room full of law students that progressivism and the Declaration of Independence “cannot coexist forever.” He said it calmly. He said it clearly. And he meant every word of it.

Somewhere, a gender studies professor just spilled oat milk all over her laptop. Unbelievable.

Thomas was there to commemorate the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, and instead of delivering some boring ceremonial speech about unity and healing — the kind of lukewarm mush that every other public figure would have served up — he went straight for the jugular. The core argument? Progressivism holds that your rights come from the government. The Declaration says they come from God. Those two ideas are on a collision course, and Thomas isn’t pretending otherwise.

“It holds that our rights and our dignities come not from God, but from government,” Thomas said of the progressive worldview. Read that again. That’s not some talk radio host riffing between commercial breaks. That’s the longest-serving member of the United States Supreme Court — the second-longest-serving justice in the entire history of the Court — laying it out in plain English at one of the most prestigious law schools in the country.

And then he went full history professor on them.

Thomas traced progressivism back to its “most prominent advocate” — President Woodrow Wilson. Yeah, THAT Woodrow Wilson. The one who resegregated the federal government, screened a KKK propaganda film in the White House, and described the American people as “selfish, ignorant, timid, stubborn and foolish.” Wilson complained that Americans did “too much by vote and too little by expert rule” and openly admired Germany’s “docile and acquiescent” people.

(So the founding father of American progressivism thought we were all idiots who should shut up and let the experts run everything. And Democrats wonder why we don’t trust their “experts” on climate, gender, economics, or anything else.)

But Thomas didn’t stop at Wilson. He connected the progressive ideology — this idea that government grants rights instead of God — directly to eugenics and segregation. He cited Plessy v. Ferguson, the Supreme Court case that gave us “separate but equal.” He cited Buck v. Bell, the case where the Court ruled that the government could forcibly sterilize people it deemed “unfit.” And then he drew the line all the way out to its logical conclusion: Stalin, Hitler, Mussolini, and Mao.

Now, before the fact-checkers start hyperventilating — Thomas wasn’t saying progressives are literally Nazis. He was making a philosophical argument that has been made by serious scholars for decades: when you replace God-given natural rights with government-granted privileges, you open the door to every atrocity of the 20th century. Because if the government gives you your rights, the government can take them away. And historically? It does.

That’s not a hot take. That’s just history.

What makes this speech matter isn’t just what Thomas said — it’s WHERE he said it. The University of Texas at Austin. A major public university. The kind of campus where students are marinated in progressive ideology from orientation day to graduation. Thomas walked into that environment and told those students, point-blank, that the worldview their professors have been feeding them is fundamentally incompatible with the document that created their country.

And then he told them what to do about it. Stand up in class. Confront antisemitism. Stand up for religion. Run for a local school board. Not “post about it on social media” or “start a petition.” Actual, concrete, real-world action.

This is why the Left has spent 35 years trying to destroy Clarence Thomas. They’ve called him every name in the book. They’ve investigated his wife. They’ve demanded his recusal from cases. They’ve run hit pieces questioning whether he even deserves to be on the bench — as if a man appointed by a president and confirmed by the Senate somehow needs their permission to keep serving.

They do all of this because they know what he is. He’s the one member of the Court who will say out loud what the rest of them are too careful to say. Progressivism is not just a different political preference. It is a competing value system that is fundamentally at odds with the principles this country was built on. And one of them is going to win.

Thomas has been on the Court since 1991. He was appointed by George H.W. Bush. He has outlasted every political movement that tried to take him down, and at 77, he’s still walking into hostile territory and speaking truths that make the entire progressive establishment squirm.

Legend. Absolute legend.

The Declaration of Independence turns 250 this year. Clarence Thomas just made sure we’re still arguing about what it means — and more importantly, that at least one branch of government still believes it.


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