Welcome to my friend D. Franconia! A man of uncommon service to our country, well versed in the ways of the appropriations process with regards to matters military, and now doing interesting things in the private sector.
Up to him whether he wishes to flesh that out

EDITED TO ADD:
DF sent this to me:
I asked ChatGPT to write an assessment of the philosophical and ideological pillars of the D'Anconia Journal and this is what it derived. You've read most of those entries, so I'd be interested in your take on this. I'll be honest, I was flattered by some of this, and surprised to see some of my core influencers left out:📚 The Philosophical Pedigree of The D’Anconia Journal
A Fusion of Reason, Liberty, and Moral Responsibility
🔱 I. Core Foundational Thinkers
These thinkers form the backbone of the Journal’s worldview—its moral absolutism, emphasis on individual responsibility, and belief in truth as an objective force.
1. Ayn Rand – Objectivism, Moral Absolutism, Individualism
Key Influence: The Journal’s rejection of altruism-as-compulsion, glorification of the value-creator, and insistence on reason as man’s fundamental tool of survival.
Where It Shows: The moral condemnation of hypocrisy; the defense of producers and innovators; the disdain for the morality of need.
Quote Embodiment: “You have the right to exist for your own sake.”
2. Viktor Frankl – Existential Responsibility and Meaning
Key Influence: The belief that man finds purpose not through comfort, but through suffering nobly borne and meaning deliberately chosen.
Where It Shows: Emphasis on choosing your response to hardship, and rejecting victimhood culture as a moral cancer.
Quote Embodiment: “Between stimulus and response, there is a space... in that space is our power to choose our response.”
3. Marcus Aurelius / Stoic Tradition – Self-Mastery, Rational Discipline
Key Influence: Emotional control as a moral discipline; clarity through reasoned detachment; valuing character over conditions.
Where It Shows: Tone of calm moral strength in the face of institutional collapse; admonitions to “see what is, not what you wish.”
Quote Embodiment: “Waste no more time arguing what a good man should be. Be one.”
🗽 II. American Political Founders & Classical Liberalism
The Journal’s fierce defense of liberty, skepticism of centralized power, and insistence on moral character as the engine of a functioning Republic draws heavily from America’s founding intellectuals.
4. Thomas Jefferson – Natural Rights, Limited Government
Influence: Liberty as an unalienable birthright; rebellion against illegitimate power as moral necessity.
Shows in: Rejection of state compulsion and defense of self-determination.
Quote: “When the people fear the government, there is tyranny...”
5. Benjamin Franklin – Pragmatism, Industry, Wry Moral Insight
Influence: Humor married to wisdom; civic responsibility without moralizing; liberty with a wink.
Shows in: The balance of satire and severity; the use of folksy plainspoken truths in sharp critiques.
6. Thomas Paine – Moral Outrage Against Injustice, Revolutionary Logic
Influence: Emotional intelligence fused with intellectual firepower; a populist appeal to reason.
Shows in: Plainspoken yet elevated argumentation; calls for moral courage in the face of oppression.
Quote: “It is the duty of the patriot to protect his country from its government.”
🔥 III. Subtle but Formative Dissidents & Philosophical Radicals
These thinkers infuse the Journal with depth, edge, and moral ferocity—each contributing sharpened perspectives on power, society, and truth.
7. Eric Hoffer – Mass Movements and The True Believer
Influence: Understanding of how weak individuals become dangerous through identification with collective moral crusades.
Shows in: Journal’s recurring theme of warning against social extremism and identity-based morality.
Quote: “A man is likely to mind his own business when it is worth minding.”
8. George Orwell – Propaganda, Language, and Moral Courage
Influence: Language as a tool of manipulation; moral clarity in the face of totalitarianism.
Shows in: Dismantling of euphemism (e.g., “my truth”), aggressive defense of objective reality.
Quote: “The further a society drifts from truth, the more it will hate those who speak it.”
9. Aldous Huxley – The Soft Tyranny of Comfort and Consensus
Influence: Warning against cultural sedation through pleasure, distraction, and technocratic control.
Shows in: The Journal’s warning against “manufactured consensus” and weaponized comfort.
Quote: “The surest way to work up a crusade... is to convince people they are being attacked.”
10. Frederick Douglass – Moral Eloquence, Self-Redemption, and Dignity
Influence: Liberty not as a gift, but as a birthright reclaimed by moral will and intellectual clarity.
Shows in: The Journal’s insistence that moral victimhood cannot be outsourced or inherited.
Quote: “I would unite with anybody to do right and with nobody to do wrong.”
11. Thomas Sowell – Economic Reality, Moral Consequence, and Cultural Clarity
Influence: Economics as a moral science; skepticism of intent divorced from outcomes.
Shows in: Journal’s argumentation against the morality of redistribution, and the exposure of elite hypocrisy.
Quote: “Much of the social history of the Western world over the past three decades has involved replacing what worked with what sounded good.”
🎭 IV. Stylistic & Rhetorical Influences
These figures influence not what the Journal says, but how it says it—giving it voice, cadence, and teeth.
12. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn – Moral Gravitas in the Face of Tyranny
Influence: Fearless bearing of witness; insistence that moral clarity can destroy great lies.
Shows in: Journal’s framing of truth as a weapon, and the moral burden of silence.
Quote: “Let the lie come into the world, even dominate the world. But not through me.”
13. Camille Paglia – Cultural Heresy, Intellectual Independence
Influence: Firebrand analysis from within the Left; fearless iconoclasm.
Shows in: Refusal to yield to ideological tribes; criticism of cowardice and conformity in art, politics, and academia.
14. Christopher Hitchens – Debate as Rhetorical Theater and Moral Trial
Influence: The pleasure of combat; the moral and intellectual sport of debate with stakes.
Shows in: The Journal’s balance of invective, logic, and style—persuading with elegance and force.
🧩 V. Modern Pragmatic Influences (Post-2000)
These voices help ground the Journal in contemporary conditions, sharpening its utility for today’s battles.
15. Jordan Peterson – Order, Meaning, Responsibility
Influence: Defense of meaning through personal discipline and narrative clarity.
Shows in: The Journal’s insistence on personal responsibility as a cornerstone of liberty.
16. Elon Musk – Disruptive Rationalism and Institutional Skepticism
Influence: The role of the “rational technocrat” who pushes back against cultural rot.
Shows in: The Journal’s aesthetic of truth-first bluntness and refusal to be shamed into silence.
🧠 Unifying Philosophical Themes
ThemeDerived FromMoral SovereigntyRand, Jefferson, Douglass, SowellIntellectual Self-DisciplineAurelius, Frankl, Hoffer, PetersonInstitutional SkepticismOrwell, Huxley, Solzhenitsyn, PaineAnti-Collectivist EthicsRand, Sowell, HofferLanguage as Weapon or ShieldOrwell, Paglia, HitchensIndividual Before IdentityDouglass, Sowell, FranklinResponsibility > EntitlementRand, Sowell, Aurelius, PetersonDignity through CreationRand, Douglass, FranklinRefusal to Be GaslitOrwell, Solzhenitsyn, Paglia