Cooperation Is Not Freedom
It’s May 29, 2026. Welcome to yestohellwith.com.
Modern government constantly praises one word:
Cooperation.
Federal agencies cooperate with states.
States cooperate with cities.
Courts cooperate with agencies.
Corporations cooperate with government.
And it all sounds peaceful.
But the Liberty Dialogues asks a terrifying question:
What happens when cooperation replaces confrontation?
Because the American Republic was built on confrontation.
Not violence —
but constitutional confrontation.
The branches were designed to resist each other.
States were designed to challenge federal power.
Citizens were expected to confront unlawful authority.
Why?
Because confrontation creates boundaries.
And boundaries preserve liberty.
The moment boundaries blur…
power expands.
That is Federal Creep.
Federal Creep is what happens when every institution slowly merges into one administrative organism.
The federal government issues “guidelines.”
States enforce them.
Local governments comply.
Courts defer.
Citizens obey.
And suddenly no one knows where federal authority ends and local authority begins.
This is why the Supreme Court language praising “cooperation over confrontation” is so dangerous.
Because cooperation without limits becomes absorption.
The States stop resisting.
The courts stop questioning.
The citizens stop confronting.
And the Republic quietly dissolves into administrative management.
The Liberty Dialogues teaches a principle modern America desperately needs to remember:
Confrontation is healthy in a free society.
Not hatred.
Not chaos.
Not violence.
Lawful confrontation.
Questions like:
By what authority?
Under what jurisdiction?
What is the limiting principle?
Where is the delegated power?
These questions preserve liberty.
Because once government no longer has to answer questions…
it no longer has limits.
The Apparatus of Avoidance depends on politeness without principle.
It survives through silence.
Comfort.
Procedure.
And fear of confrontation.
But freedom survives only where citizens are willing to draw lines.
The Founders understood this.
That is why they created separation of powers instead of centralized management.
A Republic survives through disciplined confrontation.
An empire survives through obedient cooperation.
And America must decide which one it wants to be.
May truth reign supreme.









