K and I are back in the warmth, comfort, and safety of Delray Beach on the eastern shore of South Florida. Loved our 10 days in New York City. And very happy to be home.

A good part of this issue was inspired by a thought-provoking book I just read and liked so much that I’m including a good-sized excerpt for you. It’s about, among other things, the author’s view of US and European culture – a topic I’ve been thinking about for a number of years. In fact, I’ve been preparing a longish essay on it, which I will publish in the next few weeks. In the meantime, you should see what he has to say.

I’ve also included a funny and scary mini-history of 9/11, nine facts about lions and scavengers that may surprise you, a super-simple five-step solution to our broken government (that I could not argue with), and several letters I recently received that reminded me of why I write the books I write.

And finally, I’ve ended the issue with a slice of the life of a genuine “lion whisperer.”

Let’s get started with this quick history lesson about 9/11…

Everything You Should Know About 9/11 in 5 Minutes

I’ve mentioned Brett, my barber, in previous issues. I’ve told you that one of the reasons I enjoy patronizing him is that he provides, along with an excellent haircut and relaxing shave, an in-depth monthly update on all the hottest conspiracy theories currently in discussion on what I presume is the Dark Web.

This morning, he was giving me the lowdown on 9/11, with which I thought my knowledge was au courant. But no. As usual, he explained to me that the truth is much stranger and scarier than all the strange and scary facts I knew. I didn’t know, for example, that the film footage we had of two planes crashing into the buildings was obviously doctored. And that, in fact, the planes were flown to an undisclosed place in the wilderness where the occupants were gassed. And that the buildings collapsed from bombs that had been planted there days before.

I make it a practice to consider Brett’s theories with the greatest respect, because I don’t want him to think I’m another one of those people that don’t understand how the world really works, which could very well result in being denied access to the astonishing facts I’d be learning during my next appointment.

In this case, I just said, “I always found it difficult to believe that a single plane crashing into each of those buildings could bring both of them down to their foundations.” And that was true.

I won’t tell you the rest of what I learned from Brett because it’s confidential and he’d probably have to kill me if I did.

But when I came across this video from The Corbett Report this afternoon – which promised to explain 9/11 in five minutes – I watched it. It was well and wittily written, so it was fun. But it also made me consider again how many highly unlikely “facts” surrounded that “highly improbable” event.

Now, let’s get to the book I’ve just read and am recommending…

Lions & Scavengers 
The True Story of America (and Her Critics) 

By Ben Shapiro 

Published: Sept. 2, 2025
256 pages

Overview: Ben Shapiro examines the current state of America and Western civilization, and poses a question: Will we be noble Lions, or will we be destructive Scavengers?

What I Liked Most About It 

* I like the simplicity of looking at problems bilocally. In this case, Shapiro is positing that if your perspective is human and social value, you can group the world into two types: Lions and Scavengers. There is no doubt that this rhetorical strategy is reductive (as Liberals like to say). But it is also very helpful because it limits the discussion to two ideas that can be clearly compared and contrasted throughout a discussion and remembered later on. Plus, this sort of focus allows for insights that can be deep and true. And it prevents the argument from disintegrating into a morass of relativistic goop that makes solutions impossible to reach.

* I very much like a secondary (but important) point he makes several times – that at the heart of today’s conflicts (political, economic, and cultural), there’s a dangerous lie: that all people are equal in ability, and that all inequality stems from oppression and exploitation.

* For a true brainiac, Shapiro writes with a high degree of simplicity and clarity, which makes for easy reading of his ideas about difficult and complex issues.

What I Didn’t Like as Much 

Shapiro is religious, and although he makes it a practice to make his arguments without sourcing religious beliefs as authoritative (which renders my objection to a quibble), he does often point out the correlation between the solid moral ethical positions he is supporting with religious text.

Critical Reception 

The book was just published last Tuesday. So, I could find only one review, from the New York Post:

“With his signature clarity and sharp insight, Shapiro refutes that lie, emphasizing that in a free country, inequality is rooted in differences of talent and work ethic – not oppression – and that the best solution to lack of success lies in duty and virtue. Lions, like America’s founding fathers, strive for the highest good, building systems that promote freedom, prosperity, and equality of opportunity. Meanwhile, Scavengers degrade these ideals, spreading resentment and entitlement that threaten to dismantle the foundations of Western civilization.”

Interesting: Lions Begetting Scavengers 

In writing about Luigi Mangione, the killer of the UnitedHealthcare CEO, Shapiro points out something I’ve often noticed and have written about in past issues.

“[Mangione] grew up rich. And then he basically decided that he was a victim of the system and that, because the system itself was deeply flawed, that gave him the excuse to commit murder of a person he had never met.”

It’s a great irony, he notes, that Scavengers are often the privileged children of Lions themselves.

“So many people build community, build family, make the systems that make the West great stronger, and then they don’t pass that on to their kids in any way, shape, or form,” he laments. “They seem to think that… their kids will somehow imbibe the correct values from the water or from the air.”

About the Author 

Benjamin Shapiro is the cofounder of The Daily Wire and host of The Ben Shapiro Show, the top conservative podcast in the nation. A bestselling author, Shapiro graduated from UCLA summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa in 2004, then from Harvard Law School cum laude in 2007. His work has been profiled in nearly every major American publication, and he has appeared as the featured speaker at many conversative events on campuses nationwide.

Watch him talk about the book with Megyn Kelly here. 

Five Possibly Surprising Facts About Lions 

* All wild lions (Panthera leo leo) live in Africa except for a small population of Asian lions (Panthera leo persica) that live in and around the Gir Forest National Park in India.

* The average male lion weighs about 420 pounds. The average female weighs about 280 pounds.

* Most, but not all, male lions have manes. They get longer with age. Manes tend to protect them from the intense African heat.

* Lions are big eaters, able to eat up to a quarter of their body weight in a single feeding.

* There aren’t as many lions today as there were when Tarzan was in the movies. About 80 to 100 years ago, their population in Africa was in the hundreds of thousands. Today, it is dangerously low at only about 23,000.

Four Possibly Surprising Facts About Scavengers 

* Scavengers are animals that feed on decaying organic matter, and are divided into sub-groups depending on what they eat. Vultures are in the sub-group that feeds on dead animals. Squirrels and racoons are in the sub-group that feeds on refuse.

* Scavengers play a role in the ecological system by reducing the accumulation of decaying matter.

* There is such a thing as a scavenger insect. Burying beetles and vulture bees are two examples.

* Some scientists believe that Tyrannosaurus Rex was a scavenger that preyed on hadrosaurs, ceratopsians, and juvenile sauropods.

An Excerpt from Lions and Scavengers 
By Ben Shapiro
(via The Free Press

I spent virtually my entire life in Los Angeles. I was born in 1984 in Burbank, California, a firmly middle-class suburb – clean, well-run, and friendly – in a 1,100-square-foot home with two bedrooms and a bathroom for six people.

As my parents became more observant in their Jewish practice, they sought an Orthodox community, and we moved to Valley Village, where we ended up on a quiet street in a 2,400-square-foot home. That’s where I spent the rest of my childhood. At the age of 16, I went to college at the University of California, Los Angeles.

When I came back from Harvard Law School at age 23, my sister introduced me to my future wife, then a junior at UCLA; she went on to graduate from UCLA Medical School. We both worked hard, and eventually we earned enough money to buy a condo, then a home, then another home in Valley Village. In 2016, we bought a gorgeous, historically preserved place in Hollywood – the house where Judy Garland had celebrated her 16th birthday party – and made renovations. This was supposed to be our forever home.

But things began collapsing.

They began collapsing because Los Angeles – and California more broadly – had spent two decades actively driving away Lions and lionizing Scavengers.

What do I mean by Lions and Scavengers?

Lions are people guided by the spirit of success, responsibility, and duty. The Lion understands that the universe is constructed by a set of rules he can discern. He thrills in his capacity to choose. He embraces his moral duties, revels in his responsibilities. When faced with a problem, the Lion does not complain about the unfairness of life: He seeks an answer.

The spirit of the Scavenger is the spirit of envy. The Scavenger is driven by a burning impulse: the impulse to escape his own failures and shortcomings by blaming others. The Scavenger believes that his own failure is the fault of the stars, and of the fates, but mostly, of the Lion. The Scavenger does not believe in an understandable universe in which success is the result of performance of duty; any such argument, he believes, is a guise for power, and power alone.

The Scavenger mentality has consumed LA in the form of disastrous policies: confiscatory tax rates designed to punish business rather than reward innovation; public policy treating homelessness as a right rather than as a plight; a brutal crackdown on the police’s ability to fight crime and public disorder; failing public schools; decaying public services.

My family felt the effects of these policies personally. Whether it was walking past drug addicts passed out face down in the gutter just outside the gates of our home or spotting open needles on the streets where we walked our children, the quality of life in Los Angeles declined slowly. And then rapidly. And then all at once.

When the COVID pandemic broke out, the state of California lost its mind. Everyone was confined to quarters for months on end. Schools and public parks were closed. Los Angeles became a ghost town. Then, after the death of George Floyd that summer, it burst into riots.

While the authorities threatened law-abiding citizens for congregating in private or public, Black Lives Matter rioters were allowed to run roughshod over the city. Police officers were villainized, told to stand down as the city burned. Videos of police cars burning on Melrose Avenue became ubiquitous. Looters smashed the windows of our local Walgreens and Foot Locker.

At night, after we put our kids to bed, my wife and I could sit in our living room and hear the sounds of helicopters and gunfire nearby. My business, The Daily Wire, had to be boarded up after rioters attacked it. That’s when my family decided to leave for Florida, and my company for Nashville, along with nearly 100 employees. The Scavengers won in LA, and we had to get out.

We’ve now lived in Florida for nearly five years. There’s a reason why so many people are relocating here. The state of Florida is geared toward protecting the fundamental foundations of a successful, civilized Western society.

When I was living in Los Angeles, I applied for a concealed carry weapon permit, on account of the enormous number of death threats I received daily. I went to the Los Angeles Police Department with a binder of documented threats and explained that the FBI had already arrested and jailed someone for threatening my life. Yet the LAPD denied my application. Their reasoning? The person was already behind bars, and none of the other threats had been acted on, so I had nothing to worry about. It was the very definition of a Catch-22.

This would never happen in Florida. Florida has been a constitutional carry state since July 2023, meaning that qualifying legal residents may carry concealed weapons without a government-issued license. This policy expands a “shall-issue” permit law in place since 1987 and reflects a broader cultural emphasis on self-reliance and natural rights. Combined with widespread respect for law enforcement, the result is an empowered citizenry and a well-funded, competent police force.

In Florida, security is treated not as a dangerous indulgence, but as a civic necessity. This is what a healthy society does: prizes individual autonomy and celebrates the fulfillment of personal responsibility.

And not only when it comes to crime. Florida elevates individual rights of all kinds, while California subordinates religious rights to progressive ideology.

In California, I was constantly worried that the rubric of antidiscrimination law would be used to punish schools – particularly religious ones – that failed to comply with left-leaning social policies.

For instance, a school could have state funding revoked for abiding by traditional religious standards with regard to sexual behavior. Of course, there would most likely be a legal response to a situation like that, but what school district or parent wants to be subjected to that kind of madness?

Florida, by contrast, has universal school choice: Taxpayer money follows students to whichever school they choose, including many private and religious ones.

California sees religion as something to be regulated and eventually broken – another institution to tear down. Florida sees it as a partner in building strong communities, and as a fundamental pillar of a civilized society.

And rightly so. Religion instills civilizations with a moral core. It helps explain why Lions fight for things: truth, duty, and God-given dignity. Scavengers unite only in opposition: against the Lion, against the “system.” The Scavengers tear down; the Lions lift up.

Why, then, have the Scavengers enjoyed such success?

Envy, a hallmark of the Scavenger philosophy, is an irresistible force. Politicians understand this reality, and they weaponize it. I will be your warrior against the person you envy, they promise. And I will eradicate your envy by punishing that person, who is the reason for your suffering.

Zohran Mamdani, New York City’s Democratic mayoral candidate, embodies this approach. His coalition believes that the West is exploitative and brutal, that it’s uniquely responsible for suffering around the world, and that punishing the rich and successful will advance the plight of the poor.

This is the driving force behind self-contradictory movements like “Queers for Palestine.” How can Mamdani supporters preach the wonders of Palestinian culture – which in Gaza means throwing gay people off of buildings – while simultaneously advocating taxpayer-funded gender transitions for minors?

The answer is simple: Both beliefs run counter to Western values. There is no undergirding philosophy to the Scavengers. There is only opposition to the thing that is, and that therefore must be destroyed.

The logical extension of this ideology is violence.

Consider Luigi Mangione, the alleged murderer of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. According to Mangione’s defenders, Thompson ran a greedy, venal, and corrupt healthcare company. His coverage decisions led to people’s deaths. Thus, he is a murderer and killing him was just.

It sounds barbaric. And it is. But that’s the Scavenger logic: If the system is irredeemably corrupt and can’t be fixed from within, then violence is justified to tear it all down.

This is the most radical manifestation of the Scavenger mentality. And it’s spreading. Worse, it doesn’t need to reach a majority of the population to take control. All it requires is a dedicated core group of believers, and the complicity of everyone else.

That is exactly what has happened over the past several decades.

In direct and open wars between Lions and Scavengers, Lions almost always win, because Lions are warriors, while Scavengers are cowards.

But in recent years, defenders of the West have gone silent. Some, because they believed the battle had been won with the fall of Communism. Others, because they fell for the lie of Western sin, paralyzed by unfounded guilt for societal problems.

Any civilization that loses its confidence opens itself to predations from those who would tear it down, from within and without. And so the Scavengers have thrived – feeding on shame, elevating victimhood, and spreading anti-Americanism.

But perhaps not anymore.

In January of this year, I attended Donald Trump’s presidential inauguration. He pledged himself to a “golden era.” He vowed, “We will forge a society that is color-blind and merit-based…. We will begin the complete restoration of America and the revolution of common sense.” He spoke about prosperity, pride, victory, and freedom. He spoke of the Lions.

I believed, then, that a new day was dawning. Seven months later, I still do.

The Trump administration has dismantled the edifice of diversity, equity, and inclusion – the core of Scavenger philosophy – and restored common sense.

On the foreign stage, deterrence has replaced hesitation, and strength has prevented chaos. Look no further than the decision to help Israel neutralize Iran’s nuclear enrichment capacity. That singular act may have saved the world decades of violence and terrorism.

These policies are popular, and for good reason. The American people are tired of the idea that crime is a manifestation of the exploitation of the oppressed. They’re tired of the idea that the meritocracy has to be put to heel because of the evils of a white supremacist system. They’re tired of the notion that the “system” has somehow harmed the “marginalized,” simply because people demand decent, law-abiding behavior – equality before the law.

Could these sentiments fall out of favor? Absolutely. People forget. Prosperity breeds complacency. A single economic downturn, a single careless policy, and the Scavengers will retake power.

This isn’t only about civilizational Lions and Scavengers and the policy battles between them. It’s also a question of the individual human heart. For if we all have two impulses beating within us – the spirit of the Lion and the spirit of the Scavenger – then the failure of the Lions is the success of the Scavenger. And when Lions fail to pass down their values to their children, their children join the Scavengers.

Bred into unearned prosperity but taught ignorance and dependency, livid at the men and women who defend the very country they inhabit, unmoored from a civilization their parents refuse to defend, they become rabid, and seek revenge on those who left them adrift. They become the hellish mutation of a spent culture.

In each of us, the battle between Lion and Scavenger rages. Sin crouches at all of our doors. But we can conquer it. For the Lions to win requires no great scheme, no clever machinations, but rather courage, pride, responsible parenting, and constant vigilance.

We must not become creatures of envy. And we must deny the creatures of envy the ammunition of our unearned shame.

The Scavengers will never surrender. The battle will go on for the rest of time. But they cannot win. Unless we let them.

How to Fix Our Broken Government: Five Simple Rules 

I loved this video clip. Here’s a guy with no stated credentials talking about how to fix what has been impossible for legislators and political pundits to fix for as long as I’ve been alive: the fundamentally corruptible nature of the US.

Why I Write the Books I Write 

I’ve been getting testimonials from people who got something useful from my books on a regular basis since I began writing them 25 years ago. You can imagine how it feels to discover that the product of the work you do has benefited people you’ve never met. This week, I spent a half-hour looking through those I haven’t read in a while, and I found many that left me feeling like the return I got from my investment of time was more than I could have expected.

Here are a few examples…

“I can apply [The Power of One] to my life today.” 
From LH: “Your chapter on The Power of One was an incredible ‘aha’ moment for me. I can see how I can apply it to my life today. I hope it will stay with me throughout my career!”

A reminder of “the truly important versus the seemingly important.” 
From BS: “I have always thought of you as a genius, but I am now convinced. I will be sending copies of your book to those I know and respect in business. I doubt that many can benefit from your pearls of wisdom because of their egos or mistaken predilections, but for those few who are open minded, your work will be an eye-opening classic. The basic truisms included should be written on the inside of the eyelids of every businessperson so each can be constantly reminded of the truly important versus the seemingly important factors that are crucial to financial success.”

“I got so much from your book.” 
From AS: “As a director and manager of a large group of people, I got so much from your book. I was able to rally the team into seeing the vision of what CAN be if we all do a little bit more with a lot less…. We are coming out with new products almost every month, sometimes more. I continue learning priceless skills that I may not have if everything went as planned with the business or if I would have left.”

“Over $1 billion in trackable results” 
From DG: “As a mentor from afar, your core principles were a tremendous catalyst in my career. Ten years ago, I arrived in the USA with $80 and have since generated over $1 billion in trackable results through copywriting and marketing strategy. Entering an early retirement but wanted to say Thank You!”

“I study them like I do my Bible.” 
From DJ: “I have pored through your books, Great Leads and The Architecture of Persuasion…. I study them like I do my Bible… new adventures, new discoveries unfold… significant… valuable.”

“My husband is super-excited too.” 
From DE: “I am super-excited to be on my journey. Thanks to your book, The Pledge, my husband and I have increased the amount of money we put into savings and paying off our debt. One of the most important ‘takeaways’ I got from it on this incredible journey to increasing our wealth is that increasing our income is the key. By the way, one of my first week’s goals was to talk to my wonderful husband about all of this, which I did. He is super-excited too, and is interested in looking into writing/building websites as his new stay-at-home career.”

Kevin Richardson, the Lion Whisperer 

This guy, Kevin Richardson, deserves the title of “Lion Whisperer.” He has a great story, a great job full of love and fun (that makes me jealous), and a good cause you might want to support. Oh yes, there’s also a reunion between him and one of his lion pals after 10 years. Watch it here.