April 27, 2026
The Slow Fade of Freedom
History Doesn’t Repeat Itself—But It Rhymes
By: Idaho Dist. 24 State Senator Glenneda Zuiderveld

America rarely loses freedom in one dramatic moment.
It fades when people are told that one more regulation, one more emergency power, one more surrender of local control is necessary “for the greater good.” History shows that liberty is usually not destroyed all at once; it is sliced away piece by piece until the people wake up and realize the system no longer belongs to them.
That is not a new pattern. It is exactly the kind of abuse our Founding Fathers knew firsthand. They had lived under a government that imposed taxes without consent, kept standing armies among the people in peacetime, quartered troops, and concentrated power far from the citizens who had to live under it. James Madison warned that the accumulation of legislative, executive, and judicial power in the same hands is “the very definition of tyranny,” and Patrick Henry’s cry for liberty came in direct response to a government that had stopped listening to the people and started ruling over them.
The American Revolution was not fought over one tax or one isolated act. It was fought because the colonists recognized a pattern. They saw power centralizing, consent being bypassed, and government treating the people not as citizens to be respected, but as subjects to be managed. The men who signed the Declaration pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor because they understood that once freedom is surrendered by degrees, reclaiming it comes at a terrible cost.
History kept proving them right. In postwar Eastern Europe, communist parties did not always seize control in one obvious blow. In Hungary, communists entered coalition government, then took control of key institutions and dismantled their opposition “slice by slice,” a method that became known as salami tactics. Across Eastern Europe, similar patterns allowed Soviet-backed regimes to preserve the appearance of democratic process while hollowing out real political freedom.
Chile offers another warning. Salvador Allende came to power through an election, then pursued nationalization, state expansion, and deeper government control over the economy in the name of justice and reform. What followed was not stability or equality, but soaring inflation, shortages, social breakdown, and finally political collapse ending in the 1973 coup.
Venezuela may be the clearest modern example of the slow fade. Hugo Chávez was elected on promises to fight corruption and help ordinary people, but over time his government rewrote the constitution, expanded executive power, nationalized industries, and tightened state control over society and the economy. Under Nicolás Maduro, Venezuela descended into hyperinflation, mass emigration, and authoritarian rule, showing how a system can move from democratic language to centralized control step by step.
The lesson is not that every public program is communism or that every policy disagreement is tyranny. The lesson is that free people must learn to recognize patterns before they harden into systems. When government grows beyond its constitutional bounds, when unelected institutions dictate more of daily life, when speech is pressured, property rights are weakened, and citizens are trained to depend on centralized power, the warning lights are already flashing.
The slow fade depends on distraction. It depends on people dismissing one small step after another because each step, by itself, does not seem big enough to fight over. But history repeats itself in patterns, and the pattern is always the same: power accumulates, freedom shrinks, and those in charge insist it is temporary, necessary, and for your own good.
Our Founders gave everything to save us from exactly that kind of government. They did not build a constitutional republic so future generations would quietly trade liberty for comfort, security, or political convenience. They built barriers against centralized power because they knew human nature had not changed, and they understood that the greatest threat to freedom often comes wrapped in promises of order, fairness, and protection.
The question for our time is not whether history will repeat itself word for word. It won’t. The question is whether we are wise enough to recognize it when it rhymes. If we fail to notice the slow fade, we may one day discover that we have drifted back toward the very kind of rule our Founders risked everything to escape.
The Choice Before Idaho
At the end of the day, this race isn’t about personalities. It’s about whether Idaho keeps drifting toward the same big‑government mindset that has been running things for decades, or whether we turn and go the other way.
On one side, you have a man who has spent 35 years inside government, moving from one title to the next, comfortable with the way things are and convinced that more programs, more agencies, and more centralized control are just “how it’s done.” He talks about managing government. I am running to limit it.
When you’ve lived in that environment long enough, more regulations, more boards, and more top‑down control start to feel normal, even reasonable. I don’t see it that way. I come from the world that has to live under those decisions, the families trying to keep their land, the small businesses trying to survive another mandate, the parents fighting to protect their kids and their values.
I did not go to the Capitol to make friends with the bureaucracy. I went there to fight for families, for property rights, for local control, and for the God‑given freedoms our Founders risked everything to secure. I am not interested in going along to get along while Idaho drifts the same direction as every other bloated, top‑down government.
So here is the contrast in District 24:
- He represents the system as it is.
- I represent the people who are tired of being managed by it.
If you want another long‑time government insider who sees the answer in more of the same, my challenger is your candidate. If you want your sitting senator to keep standing in the gap, push back, draw a line, and say “No more slow fade of our freedoms,” then I am asking for your vote.
Not because I want a career in politics, but because I want my grandchildren to inherit an Idaho that still looks like the Republic our Founders fought for, and not the centralized system they warned us about.
I’m Senator Glenneda Zuiderveld, proudly serving Idaho’s District 24.
If you believe Idaho should remain a place where freedom is real, where local people make local decisions, and where the slow fade of liberty stops at our borders, then I’m asking you to stand with me.
Vote Glenneda Zuiderveld in the Republican Primary, May 19th.
Let’s send a message: Idaho is not for sale, not for control, and not for surrender.
























