My friends,
What we learned this week about the case of Ian Andre Roberts is more than an immigration story — it’s a flashing red warning light about a system that’s breaking right beneath our feet.
Here you have a man who entered the U.S. on a student visa 25 years ago, overstayed it, accumulated immigration violations, was under a final order of removal … and still managed to rise to the top job in Iowa’s largest school district. Not substitute teacher. Not assistant principal. Superintendent. The one hire school boards are responsible for getting right.
And yet we’re supposed to believe no one knew? No one caught it? No one bothered to check?
Then the story gets even stranger. Somehow this same individual ends up registered to vote in the state of Maryland — a state he wasn’t living in, legally or otherwise — all because of an “automatic registration error.” That’s the explanation we’re given. A glitch. A clerical hiccup. Nothing to worry about.
My friends, are we really that gullible?
This is what happens when ideology replaces responsibility. When the priority becomes “inclusion” at all costs instead of competence and accountability. When the system bends so far to accommodate political narratives that it forgets its most basic job: protecting the integrity of our institutions.
Voting shouldn’t be burdensome — but it shouldn’t be so easy that it is cesspool for fraud either. But the Radical Left prefers it that way.
And the same people who tell us the border is secure, that elections are airtight, and that illegal immigrants “can’t possibly vote” are now scrambling to explain how this happened — without admitting that their own policies made it possible.
Shouldn’t it concern us when we create systems so loose, so automated, so detached from verification that even individuals under removal orders can slip through every crack?
Of course we believe in fairness. Of course we believe in opportunity. But what do we do when the people shaping these systems don’t believe in transparency? What do we do when they prioritize political narratives over national security? What do we do when they label anyone who raises concerns as hateful or conspiratorial?
Are we just supposed to nod politely and pretend the system is working?
That’s insane.
This isn’t about attacking one individual. It’s about facing the reality that a nation cannot function when the mechanisms that uphold citizenship, voting, and public leadership are treated as optional formalities. A republic cannot survive when truth becomes inconvenient and consequences become optional.
We are watching, in real time, what happens when lawlessness becomes the root of a political party’s platform.
And my friends, if we don’t pay attention and stay engaged — not for party politics, but for the very survival of ordered liberty — we will wake up to find that the foundations many thought were solid have collapsed and caused this nation to fall head first into the ground.
Conservative, not bitter.
Todd
🎧 Listen to today’s Toddcast here.
Key Highlights from Today’s Toddcast
🇺🇸 Illegal superintendent hired despite expired visa and removal order
🗂 District claims no knowledge of his immigration status during hiring
📋 Maryland’s voter system mysteriously registers him as a Democrat
⚠️ Auto-registration programs continue to enable illegal entries on voter rolls
🚫 Left dismisses concerns, insists the system is functioning flawlessly
🗳 Election integrity questioned as safeguards repeatedly fail
Listen here.
Quote of the Day
A society that forgets to guard its foundations will one day be shocked to see what’s been built on top of them.
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Todd Talk: Why Phone Voting Is a Dangerous Election Idea
My friends, if we’ve learned anything about elections these past few years, it’s that they’re nowhere near the most secure in the history of the world. The goal of election officials should be to make voting efficient and citizen-friendly while protecting every legal vote. In case it needs to be said, illegal ones should not be counted.
Anytime the government opens a window to receive ballots, it also opens a window for potential fraud. That’s not hysteria, that’s just common sense.
So when Eric Swalwell, a leftist lunatic running for governor of California, proposes voting by phone, it’s beyond ridiculous. At a time when you can make a strong case for returning to in-person paper ballots, these folks want automatic registration, no meaningful ID, and limitless technological pathways.
My friends, that’s not securing elections, that’s begging for trouble.
My Open Letter to Indiana State Senator Rod Bray
Senator Bray, I’m writing to you as a Hoosier who lives in District 37 — and as someone who discusses politics, culture, and faith on a syndicated radio show and podcast. I’m your constituent, and I stay informed about the issues that impact our state.
Like many of my neighbors in Morgan County, I’m asking a straightforward question you haven’t answered: Why did you refuse to convene the special session on redistricting?
You said the votes “weren’t there” in the Senate — but provided almost no explanation for that conclusion. No transparency. No record. No accountability. No maps for the public to review. There was no vote, no debate, no chance for Hoosiers to hear where their senators stand — not even after the governor formally requested the session.
My team reached out to your office repeatedly for weeks to discuss this issue and give you the opportunity to share your perspective on our program. We’ve heard nothing. Meanwhile, we’ve hosted Lt. Gov. Micah Beckwith and Democrat Beau Bayh — leaders willing to speak directly to Hoosiers. Many more of your own constituents want to hear from you as well. This isn’t about my show. It’s about your responsibility to the people you serve.
Your refusal to convene the session carries real consequences. It affects Indiana’s representation in Washington — representation increasingly shaped by national Democrats whose agenda doesn’t reflect that of Hoosier Democrats. But when moderate Democrats are elected in Indiana, they vote for radical leaders who weaponize the government and enact policies that fuel inflation, open borders, and cultural depravity.
This is why an open debate and an on-the-record vote matter. If senators believe redistricting is wrong for Indiana, they should say so publicly and vote that way.
Closing the door before the debate begins and refusing to answer your constituents isn’t leadership. It isn’t transparent. And it isn’t conservative.
Hoosiers expect transparency, not decisions made out of sight. They expect leaders willing to fight the Radical Left within the bounds of the law. It matters to me. And it matters to my audience.
The invitation remains open.
Conservative, not bitter.
Todd Huff



