3 Top Cybersecurity Stocks to Buy in January
This story raises questions about governance, accountability, and American values.
The mainstream framing treats cybersecurity like just another “resilient” trade, a tidy list of tickers to buy and forget. That misses what’s actually driving the sector: Washington’s failure to set clear priorities and hold agencies accountable when breaches happen. CrowdStrike, Zscaler, and Palo Alto may be strong companies, but the real question is whether we’re building **national security** resilience or merely monetizing insecurity.
New Republican Times Editorial Board

CrowdStrike, Zscaler, and Palo Alto Networks are all resilient investments.
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New Republican Times Editorial Board
The mainstream framing treats cybersecurity like just another “resilient” trade, a tidy list of tickers to buy and forget. That misses what’s actually driving the sector: Washington’s failure to set clear priorities and hold agencies accountable when breaches happen.
CrowdStrike, Zscaler, and Palo Alto may be strong companies, but the real question is whether we’re building national security resilience or merely monetizing insecurity. Markets can price growth, but they cannot replace public trust after critical systems are compromised. Cyber is now infrastructure, and that means higher stakes than quarterly earnings.
A conservative view starts with institutional accountability and rule of law: enforce standards, punish negligence, and stop outsourcing core defense functions to whoever writes the best slide deck. Investment is fine, but America First security demands governance that’s as serious as the threat.
Commentary written with AI assistance by the New Republican Times Editorial Board.

