KIDS CAN'T VOTE. KIDS CAN'T LOBBY. KIDS CAN'T WAIT. ONE MAN IS FIGHTING FOR THEM ANYWAY.
A unflinching dispatch from the front lines nobody's filming
There's a war on. You've seen the footage — the sleek graphics, the dramatic music, the breathless anchors. Trump has called it historic. World-saving. Necessary. The kind of war where you get a cool nickname and maybe a commemorative coin. The Iran conflict has all the cinematic hallmarks of a blockbuster: oil fields, geopolitics, superlatives that would make a thesaurus blush. "Greatest." "Strongest." "Most powerful strike in history." What the promotional reel conveniently leaves out — what it always leaves out — are the children.
No one puts the bleeding toddler in the recruitment video. No one features the hollow-eyed seven-year-old in the "America is Back" montage. War, as it turns out, is a lot easier to sell when you keep the victims off-screen. And while the cameras stay locked on missile trajectories and press briefings, a second, quieter war is being waged — not in the deserts of the Middle East, but in the school cafeterias, pediatric clinics, and border crossings of America itself.
The Video Game Version of War (Rated E for Everyone Except the Kids Who Actually Die)
Here's the thing about modern war promotion: it's gorgeous. The graphics are clean. The language is triumphant. Trump has elevated the art of the superlative to a kind of performance sport — every action is the "biggest," every enemy the "most evil," every victory the "greatest in history." It's essentially a video game, and he's playing it on the world stage with real consequences and zero respawn points for the children caught in the crossfire.
Meanwhile, in the actual game being played on children — domestically and globally — the score is devastating:
- 9.7 million American children living in poverty as of 2026
- 5 million kids without health insurance after Medicaid "unwinding"
- 660,000 children in Gaza with no school — because 95% of educational facilities have been destroyed
- 5 million children displaced in Sudan — roughly 5,000 per day, every day
- An estimated 700,000 extra child deaths per year projected globally from USAID cuts
But sure. Tell us more about the oil fields.
The Corporate Media's Favorite Magic Trick: Making Children Disappear
The mainstream corporate press has a remarkable talent for covering wars in ways that make the human cost — particularly the smallest humans — essentially invisible. We get the satellite imagery. We get the retired generals with their pointer sticks. We get the stock market reaction. What we rarely get is the face of a five-year-old in Yemen who just lost access to food aid because the U.S. pulled out of the World Food Programme, ending meals for 2.4 million people including 100,000 children.
That's not an accident. It's a choice — an editorial choice that mirrors the political one. Children don't have lobbyists. They don't have PACs. They can't vote, can't donate, and can't threaten a primary challenge. They are, in the cold calculus of political media, not a story until they become a statistic large enough to be shocking.
And by then, it's too late.
The Domestic Front: A War Fought in Budget Spreadsheets
While the foreign war gets the fireworks, the war at home is being waged with a far more bureaucratic weapon: the budget proposal. The FY 2026 "Skinny Budget" reads less like a governing document and more like a hostage note left on the desk of America's children.
Here's the battlefield summary:
| Program | What's Happening | Who Gets Hit |
|---|---|---|
| Department of Education | 15–16% cut; 18 programs collapsed into a $2B block grant (down from $6.5B) | Rural schools, homeless students, English learners |
| Medicaid/CHIP | Largest cuts in U.S. history via H.R. 1 | Child uninsured rate now 6.1%; Texas hits 13.6% |
| WIC Nutrition | Fruit & vegetable benefit slashed from $26 to $10/month | Low-income infants and toddlers |
| Mental Health Grants | $2 billion in federal grants terminated | School counselors eliminated during a youth mental health crisis |
| Head Start | Funding freezes in Democratic-led states | Low-income toddlers losing early education slots |
| Measles Vaccination | Federal guidance rolled back | Worst measles outbreak since 2000: 900+ cases and climbing |
The administration's response? They're cutting "bureaucratic waste." They're giving states "flexibility." They're focused on whole milk and Education Savings Accounts. Nothing says "we care about children" quite like pulling their health insurance while offering them a glass of 2% — wait, no, whole milk.
The Global Front: When "America First" Means Children Last
The dissolution of USAID in 2025 and the subsequent 85% cut to international assistance didn't just trim a budget line. It yanked the life support from some of the most vulnerable children on earth.
The numbers, assembled by researchers at UCLA, Harvard, and the Center for Global Development, are not statistics — they are an indictment:
An estimated 4.5 to 5.4 million additional children under five are projected to die by 2030 as a direct result of these cuts. That's approximately one child every 40 seconds from a preventable cause.
To put that in perspective: the cost per life saved through U.S. health aid was approximately $3,457. The cost of shutting USAID down — terminating contracts, laying off 10,000 employees, dismantling decades of infrastructure — is estimated at $6 billion. We are, quite literally, paying more to stop saving children than it cost to save them.
The replacement? A $3 billion "America First Opportunity Fund" designed primarily to counter Chinese influence and facilitate deportation flights. Somewhere, a child in the DRC is dying of cholera from a water project that got defunded. But the geopolitical chess board looks great.
Latin America & El Salvador: The Wars Nobody Calls Wars
In Haiti, gangs now control 90% of Port-au-Prince. Children make up 30–50% of gang members in some areas — not because they're criminals, but because they're orphaned, starving, and out of options. Over 741,000 children are internally displaced. Schools have been converted into refugee camps.
In El Salvador, President Bukele's "State of Exception" — now extended for the 50th consecutive time as of March 26, 2026 — has produced a paradox that would be darkly comic if children weren't paying the price. Gang violence is down. Child homicides have plummeted over 90%. Kids can play in parks again. Progress, right?
Except: an estimated 60,000 to 100,000 children have been left effectively orphaned by mass imprisonments — often of parents held without trial or family contact. The age of criminal responsibility is 12 years old. Three thousand children have been detained under the State of Exception. For a child born in El Salvador today, suspended constitutional rights are simply... the weather. The only reality they've ever known.
One Voice Cutting Through the Noise: Kids Can't Wait
In a media landscape that treats children as footnotes, there is one publication that puts them at the top of every page. Bruce Lesley's Substack, Kids Can't Wait, is the sharpest, most grounded source of child policy analysis available today.
Lesley is the President of First Focus on Children and First Focus Campaign for Children — the leading nonpartisan advocacy organizations dedicated to making children a federal budget priority. He's spent over two decades at the intersection of Capitol Hill and child welfare, served four Members of Congress, and raised four children of his own. He has seen, as he puts it, "from the Texas borderlands to the halls of Congress, what it costs children when policymakers look the other way."
Kids Can't Wait covers everything the nightly news skips:
- The real politics behind healthcare and education cuts
- Immigration policy's impact on children in mixed-status families
- The fight over birthright citizenship (currently before the Supreme Court)
- Child poverty, hunger, juvenile justice, and mental health
- The global dimensions of what happens when America stops showing up
It is, in short, the journalism that children would write if they had a vote and a byline. Subscribe. Share it. Make it loud.
A Note for Your Sign at No Kings 3.0
As you sharpen your markers and roll out the poster board for the next march, consider adding a line for the kids. Not as a talking point. Not as a prop. As a principle.
The children in Gaza with no school. The toddlers in Texas with no health insurance. The twelve-year-olds in El Salvador who can be tried as adults. The infants in Sudan dying at the rate of 5,000 displacements per day. The American kids whose school counselors just got defunded in the middle of a mental health crisis.
They will not be at the march. They cannot hold signs. They have no vote, no lobby, and no time left on the clock.
Wars are stupid. Wars are pointless. And wars — all of them, foreign and domestic — are paid for in the currency of childhood.
The cameras will keep chasing the missiles. The anchors will keep counting the oil barrels. The superlatives will keep coming.
But somewhere, a child is waiting for someone to notice.
Kids can't wait. And neither can we.
📌 Subscribe to Bruce Lesley's Kids Can't Wait at brucelesley.substack.com — because the most important political analysis being written right now isn't about power. It's about the people power is supposed to serve.
So bring your pots. Bring your pans. Bring your neighbors, your rage, your hope, and your voice.
March 28. No Kings. Not now. Not ever.
Why This Saturday Matters
This isn't about left or right. It's about up or down — whether power flows from the people upward, or from a single unchecked office downward. The No Kings movement is, at its heart, a love letter to the American founding idea: that no person, no office, no title is above the law or the will of the governed.
From the Boston Tea Party to the March on Washington, Americans have always shown up when democracy needed defending. This Saturday, millions will do it again — some in yellow jackets, some in frog suits, some on their front porches at 8 PM with a wooden spoon and a stockpot.
Find your event at mobilize.us/nokings. Wear yellow. Bring a sign. Bang a pot. Sign the Constitution scroll. And remind the world — and yourselves — that from sea to shining sea, America doesn't do kings.
"No Kings Since 1776. No Kings in 2026. No Kings. Full stop."
For more information on protecting public education funding, visit ProtectPublicEd.org. For No Kings 3.0 rally locations near you, check local listings and national event pages.
Big Education Ape: "WE TOLD YOU SO": THE FOUNDING FATHERS ON SCHOOL VOUCHERS, RELIGIOUS STRIFE, AND THE SLOW-MOTION DEMOLITION OF AMERICAN DEMOCRACY #NoKings https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/03/we-told-you-so-founding-fathers-on.html
Big Education Ape: FROM DUMB TO DUMBER: THE GREAT AMERICAN EDUCATION SHUFFLE: HOW TRUMP IS JUST MOVING THE DECK CHAIRS ON THE MAGA TITANIC #NoKings https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/03/from-dumb-to-dumber-great-american.html
FROM DUMB TO DUMBER: THE GREAT AMERICAN EDUCATION SHUFFLE: HOW TRUMP IS JUST MOVING THE DECK CHAIRS ON THE MAGA TITANIC #NoKings
https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/03/from-dumb-to-dumber-great-american.html
Big Education Ape: NO KINGS 3.0: AMERICA'S MOST FABULOUS ACT OF DEMOCRATIC DEFIANCE IS COMING SATURDAY #NoKingsMar28 #NoKingsInAmerica #NoKings https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/03/no-kings-30-americas-most-fabulous-act.html
#NoKingsProtest #NoKingsMar28 #NoKingsInAmerica #NoKings
No Kings
https://www.nokings.org/
Resource Guide & Community Response For No Kings Day — No Kings





