The Providers and Protectors: Why the Real Heroes Aren’t in Office — They’re Among Us
While the headlines scream and the politicians perform, the real heroes keep showing up — the ones who build, heal, teach, and protect without applause. The Providers and Protectors is a CommonX look at the people holding America together while the elite play pretend.
The aisles were empty. No crowds, no noise, just quiet shelves where struggle used to have company. That’s when it hit me — the real story in America isn’t about who’s shouting loudest in D.C., it’s about who’s still showing up for each other in the silence.
We’ve spent decades watching politics sell performance art while regular people carry the weight of survival. The rich get richer, the talking heads get louder, and the rest of us — the providers, the protectors, the ones who actually build and keep this place running — get written out of the script.
The Distraction Economy
Scroll long enough and you’ll see it: politics turned into a 24-hour circus. Outrage sells better than truth. Drama clicks faster than compassion. And somewhere between the ads and algorithms, we stopped asking who’s really taking care of us?
The answer isn’t on a stage or in a headline. It’s the nurse on a double shift. The dad who fixes a stranger’s car. The woman holding down two jobs to keep her family steady. These people don’t trend. They don’t go viral. But they’re the backbone of a country that’s been too busy arguing to notice them.
The Collapse of Pretend Leadership
Every generation hits a point where the mask falls off. For Gen X, it’s right now. We grew up without filters, without the comfort of participation trophies or curated feeds. We were told to deal with it — and somehow, that made us stronger.
Now, while the political world stages its next act, Gen Xers and the generations following are starting to build outside the system. They’re turning podcasts, indie media, local movements, and community projects into new power bases. The microphone became the megaphone, and authenticity became currency.
The Rise of the Real Ones
The people who never quit — they’re the ones redefining influence. The firefighters, the veterans, the teachers, the artists, the single parents, the blue-collar dreamers. They don’t need a platform to matter. They already do.
What they need is amplification — and that’s where media like CommonX steps in. We’re not chasing clicks; we’re chasing connection. The next revolution won’t come from a press conference — it’ll come from the garage, the studio, the podcast mic, the gym, the backyards where people are still talking about change like it’s possible.
So here’s to the guy at the gym who said, “Don’t quit on the 5,000th step.”
He’s right — this is the climb. This is the moment before everything breaks open. Because while the world waits for another political savior, we already have the people who save it every day.
We’re not just telling stories — we’re documenting the uprising of the ordinary. — Ian Primmer CommonX
🎙️ CommonX. The New Rolling Stone. The Voice of the Working Class Dreamer.
The Stroke — What It Takes to Build Something Real
In 1981, Billy Squier dropped The Stroke — a track so sharp and ironic that half the world missed the joke. On the surface, it sounded like a swaggering rock anthem. Underneath? It was a middle finger to the music industry’s obsession with fame, ego, and transactional love.
Fast-forward forty-plus years, and it’s still the same song — only the instruments changed. Likes, views, algorithms… that’s the new Stroke. Everybody’s working it, talking it, streaming it, chasing it. But few are still feeling it.
At CommonX, we’re trying to change that.
By Ian Primmer Co-host, CommonX
Intro: The Grind Behind the Glory
In 1981, Billy Squier dropped The Stroke — a track so sharp and ironic that half the world missed the joke. On the surface, it sounded like a swaggering rock anthem. Underneath? It was a middle finger to the music industry’s obsession with fame, ego, and transactional love.
Fast-forward forty-plus years, and it’s still the same song — only the instruments changed. Likes, views, algorithms… that’s the new Stroke. Everybody’s working it, talking it, streaming it, chasing it. But few are still feeling it.
At CommonX, we’re trying to change that.
The CommonX Connection
Building this thing — this crazy media dream — feels a lot like that lyric: “Put your right hand out, give a firm handshake.” Every collaboration, every guest, every article, every episode… it’s the grind. It’s the stroke.
We’ve been lucky enough to shake hands with legends: Richard Karn, Rudy Sarzo, Ivan Doroschuk, Sid Griffin, Dr. Gerald Horne — and every single one of them reminded us of the same truth: success only lasts if you mean it.
Billy Squier wasn’t mocking ambition. He was warning us: don’t let the performance replace the purpose.
Hustle, Humility, and the New Stroke
“Making it” in 2025 isn’t fame — it’s consistency. It’s the grind, the late nights, and the vision to keep going. The stroke never left — it just went digital.
And while the industry still loves its quick hits and viral strokes, there’s a quiet revolution happening underneath it. It’s people like us — the builders, the storytellers, the Gen-Xers who know how to balance grit with gratitude. We’re not chasing the algorithm. We’re chasing authenticity.
Closing Reflection: From Billy to the Builders
Billy Squier’s message still echoes in every creator’s struggle:
“Put your left foot out, keep it all in place.”
That’s what CommonX is doing — staying grounded while the world moves fast. Humble enough to remember where we came from. Hungry enough to keep pushing. Because whether it’s a guitar riff or a podcast mic — if you’re building something real, you’re still in the business today.