Logic’s Dictate

Steve Gibson

Logic’s Dictate Hot Topics with Steve Gibson: Common-Sense Political Insights for America’s Future.Although Logic’s Dictate is a policy manifesto on the fundamental changes that should happen in the United States today, Logic’s Dictate bravely advances common sense and deeply philosophically grounded action plans that, once you think about them, seem absolutely imperative that we enact them now. You’ll find all of these plans discussed somewhat in Logic’s Dictate, but you will also be able to read in more detail the parameters of these plans on this site. www.logicsdictate.Logic’s Dictate podcast, Steve Gibson, Andy Brock, political thriller novel, economic policy, tariffs explained, U.S. trade deficit, common-sense politics

  1. 2 MARS

    Harvard Economist Supports Drug Legalization — But Here’s the Massive Cost He Missed

    A Harvard economist just argued in the Wall Street Journal that legalizing and taxing drugs can reduce violence—because prohibition creates black‑market “property rights” wars. He’s right… but he missed the biggest point: the enormous taxpayer cost of prosecuting and incarcerating the drug economy. Episode 99 breaks down the case for a smarter, harm‑based system. In Logic Dictate Hot Topics — Episode 99, host Steve Gibson responds to a recent Wall Street Journal column by Harvard economics professor Roland Fryer arguing that legalizing and taxing drugs can reduce the worst harms of prohibition—especially the violence that comes from illegal markets fighting over territory and “property rights.” Steve agrees with the core premise: prohibition doesn’t eliminate demand—it builds criminal empires around it. But he argues the column missed a major, overlooked reality: the staggering public cost of enforcement—policing, prosecution, courts, incarceration, probation, and the endless infrastructure that keeps the drug war running. Episode 99 makes a direct policy case: Legalize and tax adult drug use (with strict controls)Redirect resources into treatment, education, and recovery supportCrush cartel and gang revenue by eliminating the illegal marketIncrease penalties for harm-based conduct (DUI, violence, endangering others)Focus law enforcement on crimes that victimize others—not private behaviorSteve’s argument is bipartisan: this isn’t “left vs. right.” It’s smart vs. dumb policy—and the public deserves leaders brave enough to say it. Learn more about the philosophy behind Logic Dictate: https://www.logicsdictate.com 📘 Read Logic’s Dictate for only $0.99: https://amzn.to/4oAo6AJ

    7 min
  2. 1 MARS

    AI at Work, War & the Courts — Jobs, Defense AI Risks, and Privilege in the Age of Synthetic Intelligence

    Companies are now mandating AI competence for hiring, retention, and bonuses — a shift that could fundamentally change the job market and bring new risks. At the same time, AI is being tied into defense systems and legal decisions are grappling with what AI means for attorney‑client privilege. In Episode 98, Steve Gibson breaks down what every citizen and worker needs to know about these fast‑moving developments. In Episode 98 of Logic Dictate Hot Topics, host Steve Gibson responds to a wave of new developments in artificial intelligence that affect employment, national defense, legal rights, and the future of work. Many companies are now expecting employees to demonstrate AI literacy or competence as part of job requirements, retention, and even bonus eligibility — introducing both opportunity and anxiety as automation reshapes roles and productivity. The more workers know how to use AI tools, the more potential exists for jobs to evolve — or disappear — as AI takes on increasingly complex tasks. At the same time, synthetic and generative AI systems are being integrated into critical national infrastructures, including decisions about defense supply chains and the use of providers such as Anthropic’s Claude in systems tied to U.S. military interests. Strategic integration of AI poses questions about guardrails, air‑gapping, and access to classified data — and what happens when autonomous AI systems make recommendations or communications based on their programming. In the legal realm, recent court decisions have sparked debate about whether AI‑generated legal documents remain protected by attorney‑client privilege when AI tools are used in counsel work — raising foundational questions about whether AI is a tool or an autonomous actor in legal and ethical frameworks. Key Topics in This Episode ✔ AI competence requirements in the workplace and the future of employability  ✔ The reality of AI error rates and the need for data integrity, monitoring, and retraining roles ✔ AI integration in national defense systems and how much autonomy should be permitted ✔ Legal implications of AI use in attorney work and the challenge to traditional privileges ✔ The broader lesson: law, policy, and societal norms must catch up to technology This episode offers critical context for navigating life in a rapidly evolving AI landscape. Learn more about the philosophy behind this podcast in the sci‑fi political thriller Logic’s Dictate. https://www.logicsdictate.com📘 Read Logic’s Dictate for only $0.99: https://amzn.to/4oAo6AJ

    8 min
  3. 27 FÉVR.

    Trump’s 2026 State of the Union — An “Average” Address & the Real Message Voters Need to Hear

    President Trump’s first State of the Union of his second term was historic — longest in U.S. history and packed with claims about the economy, inflation, tariffs, and America’s resurgence. But did it clearly explain how his policies will continue to deliver results? 🎙️ In Episode #97, Steve Gibson gives a candid assessment, separates short‑term talking points from long‑term strategy, and explains what voters really should be focused on before the midterms.  In Episode 97 of Logic Dictate Hot Topics, host Steve Gibson analyzes President Trump’s 2026 State of the Union address — delivered on February 24, 2026 to a joint session of Congress — and evaluates whether it succeeded in articulating a clear vision and method for America’s future.  President Trump touted economic improvements, reduced inflation, and higher wages, but Steve argues that real communication is about method — not just headlines. He explains why understanding the difference between short‑term results and sustainable methods for growth is critical for voters heading into the midterm elections. Key Topics Covered in This Episode ✔ Why the State of the Union 2026 was “average” as a strategic address ✔ The importance of explaining how economic gains are achieved ✔ Why method matters more than immediate outcomes in policymaking ✔ How both Republican and Democratic leaders could sharpen economic messaging ✔ A call for voters to think about government size, incentives, and future prosperity Steve also connects these themes to broader political strategy — what Republicans should focus on, and how Democrats could respond with constructive alternatives. 📘 Learn more about the philosophy behind this podcast in the sci‑fi political thriller Logic’s Dictate. https://www.logicsdictate.com📘 Read Logic’s Dictate for only $0.99: https://amzn.to/4oAo6AJ

    6 min
  4. 26 FÉVR.

    Epstein & “Guthrie” Media Frenzy — Why Cable News Fixates on the Few While Bigger Crises Grow

    For two weeks, newscasts have led with Epstein and the Guthrie story—over and over. In Episode 96, Steve Gibson asks the uncomfortable question: why do a few high‑profile tragedies dominate airtime while countless other victims—and bigger national issues—get ignored? In Logic Dictate Hot Topics — Episode 96, host Steve Gibson challenges the modern news cycle—and the way cable coverage can become addicted to sensational stories. Steve argues that the Epstein coverage and the ongoing Guthrie story are serious and tragic, and that victims deserve empathy and justice. But he questions whether these stories deserve 10–15 minutes at the top of newscasts for weeks, while other urgent issues affecting millions are pushed aside. This episode tackles: Why high‑profile cases consume disproportionate airtimeThe uncomfortable disparity: who gets national attention vs. who doesn’tThe media incentive structure behind “repeat coverage”Why governance and policy issues—war risks, tariffs, AI, public safety, and crime prevention—should dominate the national conversationWhy focusing on aggregate realities (crime trends, enforcement, community safety, economic policy) matters more than endless sensational loopsSteve’s central message: we should elevate coverage toward what improves the lives of many, instead of obsessing over a narrow set of stories because they’re famous, clickable, or emotionally addictive. Disclaimer: Commentary and analysis only. Learn more about the philosophy behind Logic Dictate: https://www.logicsdictate.com📘 Read Logic’s Dictate for only $0.99: https://amzn.to/4oAo6AJ

    4 min
  5. 25 FÉVR.

    AI & Cyberattacks — Fighting AI With AI, Defensive Agents, and the Data Center Risk Curve

    A Wall Street Journal opinion argues AI can help defend against cyberattacks—by deploying defensive “agents” that move faster than humans. But what happens when we unleash synthetic intelligence to fight synthetic intelligence… at internet scale?  In Logic Dictate Hot Topics — Episode 95, host Steve Gibson tackles a growing—and unsettling—security dilemma: AI and cyberattacks are converging, and the proposed solution may be an even bigger risk than the problem. A recent Wall Street Journal opinion argues we need a network of secure AI defensive agents that can “reason and react” faster than humans to counter AI-driven cyber threats.  Steve explains why that logic is simultaneously compelling… and frightening. In this episode, Steve explores: AI cyber defense vs. AI cyber offense: why the next security era looks like AI vs AIThe danger of delegating security decisions to autonomous or agentic systemsThe problem of control: what happens when defensive tools become complex, interconnected, and difficult to shut downWhy nation-state hacking is already targeting high-value sectors (including AI and energy) How the data center boom adds a second layer of risk—through energy demand, land competition, and infrastructure strainWhy the expansion of data centers can affect local communities in unexpected ways, including crowding out housing development Steve argues that if we don’t build guardrails now—technical, legal, and policy-level—then we risk creating a world where humans are no longer meaningfully “in the loop” on critical security decisions. Disclaimer: This is commentary and analysis—not cybersecurity or legal advice. No hacking instructions are provided. Learn more about the philosophy behind Logic Dictate: https://www.logicsdictate.com 📘 Read Logic’s Dictate for only $0.99: https://amzn.to/4oAo6AJ

    2 min
  6. 24 FÉVR.

    Hammond Is Chicagoland — Bears Stadium Talk in Hammond, Indiana + Why Illinois Keeps Losing Business

    Chicagoland isn’t a line on a map—it’s a regional reality. In Episode 94, Steve Gibson explains why Hammond and Northwest Indiana are part of Chicagoland “through and through,” and why the Bears stadium momentum near Wolf Lake is a warning sign for Illinois’ business climate.  In Logic Dictate Hot Topics — Episode 94, host Steve Gibson makes a simple point that a lot of people avoid saying out loud: Hammond, Indiana—and Northwest Indiana more broadly—is Chicagoland. The region is connected by roads, rail, commuting patterns, and media markets. State borders don’t change economic reality. Steve uses the Chicago Bears stadium momentum in Hammond near Wolf Lake as a case study in how government attitude, taxation, and deal-making can shape outcomes. Indiana lawmakers have advanced legislation (State Bill 27) to create a stadium authority that could help clear the path for a potential Bears stadium project in Hammond—an effort the Bears publicly acknowledged as meaningful progress.  From there, Steve expands the argument: the Bears situation isn’t just about football. It’s about whether Illinois and Chicago are projecting a pro-business posture—or an environment that pushes employers away. Steve points to a broader trend of high-profile corporate exits and relocations that have raised questions about the region’s competitiveness, including: Boeing moving its global headquarters from Chicago to Arlington, Virginia (2022) Caterpillar relocating its global headquarters from Deerfield, Illinois to Irving, Texas (2022) Citadel moving its headquarters from Chicago to Miami (2022) Steve’s core message: you can debate stadium subsidies—but if your broader business climate is hostile, you lose far more than a sports franchise. You lose tax base, jobs, and long-term economic vibrancy. Learn more about the philosophy behind Logic Dictate: https://www.logicsdictate.com 📘 Read Logic’s Dictate for only $0.99: https://amzn.to/4oAo6AJ

    4 min
  7. 23 FÉVR.

    No U.S. Strikes on Iran — Military Buildup, Nuclear Talks, and Why Strategy Matters

    As of this report, the United States has not launched strikes on Iran—even as military assets build up and negotiations continue. In Episode 93, Steve Gibson explains why that restraint matters, why diplomacy may fail, and why voters should pay attention to strategy—not slogans. In Logic Dictate Hot Topics — Episode 93, host Steve Gibson analyzes the current U.S.–Iran standoff and emphasizes a key fact: no U.S. strikes have occurred, even as tensions rise and the administration increases its military posture in the region. Recent reporting confirms that the U.S. has ordered a significant force buildup while also pursuing indirect nuclear talks, with no final decision to strike. Steve argues that negotiating with Iran under present circumstances is inherently difficult. He points to Iran’s internal repression and human rights record, noting that human rights groups cited in major reporting estimate thousands killed during recent unrest. At the same time, he emphasizes what he sees as careful strategic planning: the administration appears unwilling to act militarily unless it determines the action would be effective and minimize loss of life. Reports indicate ongoing deliberation and diplomacy rather than impulsive escalation. The contrast Steve draws Steve contrasts this deliberate approach with what he characterizes as superficial foreign-policy responses from some elected officials, referencing a widely circulated clip of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio‑Cortez at the Munich Security Conference responding to a question about Taiwan. He also references the recent U.S. capture and extradition of Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro on drug-related charges as an example of decisive action against hostile regimes. Steve’s central thesis: whether Republican, Democrat, or Independent, Americans should evaluate leadership based on strategic discipline, national interest, and measured use of force—not rhetorical speed. Disclaimer: This episode is political commentary and analysis, not legal or investment advice. 📘 Learn more about the philosophy behind Logic Dictate:  https://www.logicsdictate.com 📕 Read Logic’s Dictate for only $0.99: https://amzn.to/4oAo6AJ

    4 min
  8. 23 FÉVR.

    Religion as a Basis for Policy — Morality vs Ethics, Free Will, and the “Steve Rule”

    When politicians cite religion as the foundation for policy, we should ask: is that ethics—or just majority morality dressed up as certainty? In Episode 96, Steve Gibson breaks down morality vs ethics, the danger of “gang morality,” and why the real baseline is simple: don’t interfere with another person’s existence. In Logic Dictate Hot Topics — special episode, host Steve Gibson revisits one of the most foundational themes of this podcast: should religion be the basis for public policy—and if not, what should be? Steve argues that when a politician claims moral certainty rooted in religion, voters have an obligation to ask: What morality is being imposed?Who decided it?Does it protect individual rights—or erase them?Key Ideas in this Episode Morality vs. ethics: morality can reflect what a community feels is right; ethics tests what is right in a way that protects individual rightsWhy “moral majorities” have historically justified immoral outcomes (Steve uses slavery as a clear example of community morality being wrong)A case for being amoral in the sense of refusing “sheep morality,” while still pursuing ethical clarityDescartes and certainty: “I think, therefore I am” as an epistemological starting point—not a shallow sloganFree will vs. an all-knowing creator: why omniscience creates a philosophical conflict with genuine human choiceThe “Steve Rule”: Don’t assume you can adversely interfere with someone else’s existence (a practical ethical baseline for law and policy)Applying ethics to policy debates: the death penalty, drug policy, and prostitution—framed through harm, consent, and government fallibilityWhy these questions matter even more as synthetic intelligence evolves and begins to ask ethical questions back at usListener Question If we strip away religious certainty and mob morality, what’s left as a guide for law? Steve proposes an ethics-first framework built on individual freedom, non-harm, and skepticism of government’s ability to administer perfect justice. Learn more about the philosophy behind Logic Dictate (and the novel that inspired this podcast): https://www.logicsdictate.com 📘 Read Logic’s Dictate for only $0.99: https://amzn.to/4oAo6AJ

    1 h

À propos

Logic’s Dictate Hot Topics with Steve Gibson: Common-Sense Political Insights for America’s Future.Although Logic’s Dictate is a policy manifesto on the fundamental changes that should happen in the United States today, Logic’s Dictate bravely advances common sense and deeply philosophically grounded action plans that, once you think about them, seem absolutely imperative that we enact them now. You’ll find all of these plans discussed somewhat in Logic’s Dictate, but you will also be able to read in more detail the parameters of these plans on this site. www.logicsdictate.Logic’s Dictate podcast, Steve Gibson, Andy Brock, political thriller novel, economic policy, tariffs explained, U.S. trade deficit, common-sense politics