On January 10, 1776, Thomas Paine published Common Sense and changed history forever. Exactly 250 years later — on January 10, 2026 — Jack Forge publishes the sequel no one saw coming.
This is not another partisan scream. This is a mirror.
We still call ourselves a self-governing people, yet we have quietly abdicated the throne. We scroll, we rage, we blame, we wait for someone else to fix it. The new king is not a man on a distant throne — it is the algorithm that profits from our division and the comfortable lies we tell ourselves.
Jack Forge names the disease both sides refuse to admit they share: we have become spectators of our own republic.
With bar-stool honesty and plow-handle truth, Common Sense 2026 drags every sacred cow — left, right, and in-between — into the light and asks one question the outrage cycle never wants you to answer:
If your side finally “wins” and half the country is now your enemy, who exactly saved the republic?
Read it in one angry, humbled, hopeful sitting. Then pass it to the person you’ve been afraid to talk to for five years.
The republic is not dying. It is waiting.
Will you pull the plow — or keep waiting for someone else to do it?