Tuesday, March 24, 2026

The Age of America

 

The Age of America

Is it coming to a close, or just getting started?

Spencer Klavan, American Mind

At 73 years old, Francis Fukuyama has become a meme. He is the victim of a title too good to be true. “The End of History?” was the name of a landmark essay published in The National Interest and later expanded into his career-making 1992 bestseller, The End of History and the Last Man. So now, when this urbane philosopher posts pictures of himself at conferences on Instagram, his comment section is flooded with plaintive young people saying things like “mr fukuyama please end history again” and “francis history keeps happening what do I do.”

History would appear to be rolling on undeterred, however. It’s far too soon to say how Operation Epic Fury, Donald Trump’s sudden all-out assault on Iran, will affect the course of world events. But it’s safe to say at this point that even his well-wishers sure hope he knows what he’s doing. This dramatic act by the commander-in-chief of America’s titanic army is the latest of several fresh reminders that sometimes things really do happen. Others include the removal of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, the calamities in Ukraine and Afghanistan, and Trump’s own election—both times. Cumulatively, these sorts of upsets have created the distinct impression that history might be starting up again. At the very least, it’s been an eventful millennium so far.

To be fair to Fukuyama, what he actually argued was not that consequential changes would cease to take place after the fall of the USSR. He considered it more likely that, after the victory of liberal democracy over Soviet Communism and imperial fascism, history would have a hard time going anywhere but backward toward more chaotic and brutal states of affairs. Contending with Karl Marx and G.W.F. Hegel, Fukuyama worked out a sophisticated argument that the forces of politics had conspired to produce not Marx’s proletarian uprising, but the rules-based Western order as an endpoint of civilization. He added that some people would likely find the resulting stasis less than satisfactory. The Nietzschean “Last Men” of Fukuyama’s title, bloated and complacent amid their supposedly perpetual peace, might give way to “first men,” regressive knuckle-draggers “engaged in bloody and pointless prestige battles, only this time with modern weapons.”

So one way of looking at our current precarious situation—the return of large-scale warfare in Europe and the Middle East, the increasingly powerful spasms of populist discontent, the buckling postwar settlement—is not as a refutation of Fukuyama’s sunniest predictions but as a confirmation of his worst fears. That’s basically how those who consider themselves keepers of the liberal order have reacted to its recent fracturing: as a regression into barbarism. “We Are Not Going Back,” a mantra of Kamala Harris’s short-lived presidential campaign, sums up the outlook of those determined to resist what they see as a historic reversal in every sense of the term.

Of course, it was always a little odd to expect that history would or even could stand still, come to an end, or move backward. History has only ever moved forward—making it somewhat pointless to debate whether it should do otherwise. Better questions might include which way forward history will take us next, and how, if at all, we might nudge it our preferred way. The classic American answers to these questions might then be worth revisiting at such a time as this.

After all, forward is America’s favorite direction to move, much as it is history’s. It’s not just the progressives, old and new, who feel this way: in the 19th century, Alexis de Tocqueville described the peculiarly American confidence with which a sailor explained that his trimmest vessel would be cast aside in a few years and replaced with a newer model. The typical American, Tocqueville indicated, “tends unceasingly towards that unmeasured greatness so indistinctly visible at the end of the long track which humanity has yet to tread.” There’s always been something propulsive about this place and its people, something eager for the future. Pull out a dollar bill, and you’ll find the Latin motto put there by Charles Thomson, Secretary of the Continental Congress: Novus Ordo Seclorum. “A new order of the ages.” The advent of a new world.

What kind of new world? Revolutionary-era Americans were fond of likening themselves to the founders and defenders of the Roman Republic. But Thomson’s Latin tag came from the first generation of Rome’s empire, heralded by its consummate poet, Virgil. In his portentous Fourth Eclogue, Virgil saw a child coming who would usher in

The final age of prophecy:

The order of the ages now is born afresh.

The sign of Virgo now returns, and Saturn’s reign returns.

From heaven a new generation now descends.

The newborn babe Virgil hoped for was probably the much-anticipated son of Augustus, Rome’s first emperor, or else another future dignitary. But the unmistakable note of messianic grandeur, sounded by a man who lived not long before the birth of Jesus, tends to make Christians wonder if Virgil had forebodings of an even more profound transformation afoot than the one from republic to empire. Virgil saw all things being made new by a world-historic power, and he indulged in the prophet’s ambiguity about whether that power was Roman or divine. For his purposes, it may have been a distinction without a difference.

It’s not too much to say that early Americans left it similarly vague whether the plans that had lately been fulfilled were George Washington’s or God’s. They certainly saw themselves as instruments of a design that Providence had been working out since at least the start of European history. “In the theories of the Crown and the Mitre man had no rights,” said John Quincy Adams, reflecting on the revolution he had lived through as a boy. For centuries, Europe labored under “two principles of subserviency to ecclesiastical usurpation, and of holding rights as the donation of kings” until “our forefathers sought refuge…in the then wilderness of this Western World.” The story Adams was telling began with the invention of the wheel and climaxed with the Constitutional Convention. It featured America as the first nation ever truly established on “the agreement of soul with soul.”

The first—but not the last. Adams famously described America as disinclined to go looking for “monsters to destroy.” But he never doubted—as Christopher Flannery points out—that the sheer rightness of America’s ideals would prove irresistibly attractive. Soon copycat rebels would arise of their own accord to sweep away “all the rubbish of accumulated centuries of servitude.” As Mark Twain’s Connecticut Yankee later put it, America had begun to purge the “poison” of rank and title that ran “in the blood of Christendom.” Now that the Reformation and the Revolution had secured their twin footholds in the Western Hemisphere, the days of papal and monarchic despots were numbered. The New World Order wouldn’t stay in the new world.

There’s a version of this story that has grown increasingly popular in which America comes across as something totally unmoored from history, uniquely unburdened—to recall another Kamala Harris adage—by all that has been. Again, it’s not just the progressives who routinely lapse into talking this way.

Frank Meyer, that lynchpin of Reaganite conservatism, argued in a 1968 essay, “Western Civilization: The Problem of Political Freedom,” that “In England, both in practice and in theory, there arose out of the conflicts of the seventeenth century and the relaxation of the eighteenth, something closer to a society of personal freedom and limited government” than had yet been realized. “But the drag of established ideas, institutions, and power held that society back from achieving the political potentiality towards which it was moving.” It took the American colonists, “In the open lands of this continent, removed from the overhanging presence of cosmological remains,” to establish “a constitution that for the first time in human history was constructed to guarantee the sanctity of the person and his freedom.”

Fukuyama, for his part, has taken to proposing that America should want to cut itself off from the old world, cleaving to a vision of Western civilization “built around liberalism itself, encompassing Enlightenment values like openness, tolerance, and skepticism about received ideas,” including “the role of religion in politics.” In this retelling, America at its best really does proceed from a kind of Year Zero, and everything that came before—religious conviction, native allegiance, national or civilizational pride—must be at least suspect as an artifact of the World We Left Behind. Even the Founders “saw their new nation as a break with the European past,” argued Jamelle Bouie in the New York Times, objecting to a speech in which Secretary of State Marco Rubio invoked the shared Western heritage of America and Europe. The real America, Bouie proposed, is something else entirely: “a new civilization rooted in popular sovereignty and republican self-government.”

This attitude may bear some resemblance to the original American one, but it’s missing some key features. For one thing, even the most confident patriots of the founding era saw the dawn of the new age as a restoration of virtues which, though they had always been partially obscured by corruption, had equally always been present in the nations of Europe. Christian truth was, contra Fukuyama, chief among the things being recovered. The preachers of colonial America were overwhelmingly champions of the Reformation; they viewed even religious liberty as a necessary consequence of what they took to be true religion. When John Winthrop called Massachusetts Bay a “city upon a hill,” he had in mind that Americans should be exemplars of ancestral Christianity to a church grown slack in its teachings. Their ethos would be “the same as before, but with more enlargement towards others.”

If the first Americans thought of themselves as proceeding from a Year Zero, it was the Year Zero AD.

More broadly, the New Order of the Ages they hoped to inaugurate was a ripening, not a rejection, of all that went before. It’s right there in the Virgil: “The sign of Virgo now returns, and Saturn’s reign returns.” Meyer, too, in his more careful moments, recognized that “the American tradition…is pre-liberal and pre-conservative. It predates the French Revolution.” Alfred, Lord Tennyson got it about right when he told his fellow Britons that the American revolutionaries had “Retaught the lesson thou hadst taught / And in thy spirit with thee fought.” The liberties asserted by the Declaration and safeguarded by the Constitution were supposed to be the same ones imperfectly codified in Magna Carta and the common law. Even Rome was to be refurbished: if Virgil saw the dawn of imperial glory coming at the cost of republican freedoms, Thomas Jefferson could hope that America would boast an “Empire of Liberty,” held peaceably together by trade rather than conquest. Of course, this is the part that has proven a little dicey.

Now, in our 250th year, Americans are haunted by fears that our empire of liberty has morphed, is morphing, or will morph into a good old-fashioned empire of guns and soldiers. These fears have been intensified not just by Joe Biden’s ugly withdrawal from George W. Bush’s grueling occupation of Afghanistan, but now too by Donald Trump’s adventure, alongside Benjamin Netanyahu’s Israel, into Iran. One thing history tends to do, besides advance, is change the face of nations. Not many people seem to expect that the change will improve us. There is even the possibility, well articulated recently by John B. Judis, that Trump might be the kind of Hegelian figure who crashes through the barrier between eras with disastrous consequences. “Trump has pushed us into a new stage of history,” writes Judis. “But it is a stage in which, because of his overreach, America may find itself diminished and disempowered.” If that’s right, empire might turn out to be too much to hope for.

There is another possibility, no less shocking to contemplate but somewhat less bleak for partisans of the founding. America is approaching its 250th anniversary. That’s about half as long as Rome’s republic endured. Halfway through its own 500 years of republican government, Rome was not yet transforming into an empire but was just beginning to come of age as a global power, facing up to its entanglements with neighbors and headed for conflicts that would strain, but ultimately consolidate, its civilizational self-confidence. If something like that is what we’re up against—not an imminent imperial age but a dangerous new period in our republican history—then another American century or so is still among the possibilities on the table.

Whatever happens, it’s unlikely that things will proceed on the terms of Francis Fukuyama’s free-floating and faithless “Enlightenment,” which was always something of a fiction and is fast becoming a relic. Tepid internationalism seems unlikely to fire anyone’s blood. Nor is Trumpism obviously the way of the future so much as the harbinger of it: Trump inaugurated, but will not be around to direct, the stage we’re entering into. Whoever succeeds him will have to draw water from deeper wells. Americans will need to recover a sense of their country as an era-defining project, forward-looking but steeped in ancient traditions of faith and law—not just a Western nation, but the Western nation par excellence. Much depends on whether we can learn to see ourselves that way again.

Spencer Klavan is author, most recently, of Light of the Mind, Light of the World: Illuminating Science through Faith. He is associate editor of the Claremont Review of Books and senior editor of The American Mind.

Friday, March 20, 2026

Tucker Carlson Backstabs Trump

 

Deranged Tucker Carlson Backstabs Trump

Douglas Murray, New York Post

In politics, it is often the people who you think have your back who end up stabbing you there.

Nobody knows that better than Donald Trump, who has been stabbed in the back more times than Julius Caesar — yet has still survived.

This week, part of the noisy right-wing online podcast-sphere again turned on the president.

Leading the virtual charge, again, was Trump’s one-time cheerleader, Tucker Carlson.

There was a time when Carlson was fully Team Trump.

Carlson often appeared at Trump rallies as part of the warmup act.

But in the past year, he has tried to lead the MAGA base away from Trump and down a very dark path.

Fortunately, the Trump base hasn’t followed him there.

The president’s strong Middle East policy seems to have particularly deranged his one-time supporter.

While the president has advocated a strong defense of America’s regional allies, Carlson has spent 100% of his time trying to turn the MAGA base against Israel and in favor of Islamist regimes.

His podcast has become a remorseless roll call of Holocaust deniers, antisemites, Islamic extremists and World War II revisionists.

While attacking Trump, Carlson eagerly softball-interviews people who love both Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin.

Quite an achievement.

Undermining

While accusing everyone else of being obsessed with Israel, Carlson has obsessed about nothing else.

While saying “We’re not allowed to talk about Jews,” he has talked about nothing but Jews.

This obsession has culminated in a total derangement over the president’s Iran policy.

Carlson and other people in the right-wing podcast-sphere pretend to be confused by the president acting to stop the mullahs from getting an atomic bomb.

At one and the same time, they say Iran was never seeking nuclear weapons. And that Iran has the right to nuclear weapons.

They pretend the Iranians were nowhere near having a nuclear weapon. But that it would be understandable if they were.

This culminated in Carlson calling Trump’s actions “evil.”

And suggesting he has once again been manipulated by, well — guess who?

From being Trump cheerleaders, Carlson & co. are trying to do everything they can to destroy the president.

This week, Joe Kent, head of the National Counterterrorism Center, resigned — supposedly over the president’s Iran policy.

Since his resignation, the FBI has opened a leak investigation suggesting Kent’s own turn on the president might not be everything it first appears.

But with whom did Kent appear within 24 hours of resigning?

Why, with Tucker Carlson, of course.

Where he spread a range of crazed conspiracies — all of which just happen to align with Carlson’s own prejudices.

Now it seems there is almost nothing Trump does that these one-time supporters will not try to undermine.

This week, sitting in the Oval Office, Trump made reference to the bust of Winston Churchill.

A bust that Trump returned to the White House in his first term.

This week, Trump referred to Britain’s wartime prime minister as “the late, great Winston Churchill.”

A suitable reference to the man who for a time stood alone against Hitler as the Nazi tyrant sought to overrun Britain and all of Europe.

But for the online right, Churchill has become an enemy.

In their efforts to demonize Jews and rewrite the history of World War II, they have decided that Churchill was not the hero of the war but in fact its chief villain.

Fact-checking Tucker

Just a day after Trump made his admiring remarks about Churchill, Carlson said something that is worth quoting at length.

Because it is where the ignorant and the sinister meet.

“Winston Churchill, who I know we’re required to deify, presided over the imprisonment of his opposition party during the entire length of the war. And their families, and their wives. They’re rotting in prison away from their little kids — in some cases their infants. And their crime was being the opposition party and being ‘disloyal and unpatriotic.’ They weren’t. The opposition party was led by a First World War hero who fought not just as a pilot in the sky but in the trenches. One of the great war heroes, former member of Parliament, the country ever produced.”

The person to whom Carlson is referring there is Oswald Mosley.

Mosley was not the leader of the opposition party in Britain.

That was the Labour party leader — and First World War hero — Clement Atlee.

Once war was declared, Atlee became deputy prime minister in the coalition government that led Britain through the war.

Mosley was once a Labour MP, but fell out with his party and indeed mainstream politics in the 1920s.

In 1932, he formed the British Union of Fascists — a party that wanted to introduce Hitler’s policies to the UK and form an alliance with Nazi Germany.

Mosley was not an “opposition party” leader.

His wretched fascist party never managed to get a single member elected to Parliament.

Mosley was a traitor to his country. He married his second wife — like him, a fascist and friend of Hitler — in Berlin in 1936.

They married in a small, private ceremony at the home of Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels.

One of the only other people to attend the wedding was Adolf Hitler, who gifted the newlyweds a silver-framed photograph of himself.

Why does this matter?

Because in his attempts to undermine Trump, Tucker Carlson has decided to subvert and pervert history.

Mosley and his wife were imprisoned during the war because in a time of total war, they were people who wanted to sell out their country to Hitler and would have done anything they could to continue collaborating with their country’s mortal enemy.

MAGA base can’t waver

Of course, Carlson tells his viewers none of this.

He doesn’t tell them he is running cover for the most odious fascist in British history. Simply in order to defame Winston Churchill.

But it is a reminder that the president is at the center of a battle not just for MAGA, but for the soul of the American right.

The president rightly said he is MAGA and his base follows him.

We must hope he continues to be right.

Because if his critics on the right succeed in knocking him out, they would lead this country down the darkest path possible, and destroy any chance of ­Republicans gaining elected office again.

Monday, March 16, 2026

Wake-Up Call for a Sleeping Giant

 

Wake-Up Call for a Sleeping Giant

Sean Durns, Free Beacon

REVIEW: ‘Mobilize: How to Reboot the American Industrial Base and Stop World War III’ by Shyam Sankar and Madeline Hart

China is engaged in the largest military buildup in modern history. It has both Washington and world domination in its sights. To prevent the cataclysm of great power war, the United States must revamp its industrial base and once again prioritize manufacturing.

So argue Shyam Sankar and Madeline Hart in their new book Mobilize: How to Reboot the American Industrial Base and Stop World War III. Sankar is the chief technology officer and executive vice president at Palantir Technologies, where Hart is a deployment strategist

Mobilize asks an important question: What went wrong with America’s defense industrial base? And can it be fixed?

These aren’t small questions. Indeed, the fate of America and the free world hinges on answering them.

With the Cold War’s end, the triumphant West indulged in what Secretary of State Marco Rubio recently called "dangerous delusions." The United States and its compatriots believed that every nation would eventually become a liberal democracy, that trade and commerce would be liberalizing forces, and that "international law" and not military force would be the final arbitrator.

All of these beliefs have been proven false. China and Russia and their allies in Iran, North Korea, and elsewhere don’t want to join the family of nations. Rather, they want to tear down the American-led global order. While the United States and its allies pretended that the basic rules of geopolitics didn’t exist, their enemies knew otherwise.

The West was outsourcing a key component of national power—manufacturing—that China wholeheartedly embraced. Beijing made itself the "factory of the world" using its industrial power to gain leverage over huge swaths of the globe, the United States included. And that leverage comes with a steep cost.

While we believed that manufacturing and tech could be separated, China was busy building. By some estimates, China now has 232 times the shipbuilding capacity that America possesses. In 2024 alone, it's estimated that one Chinese firm built more ships by tonnage than the United States has in the eight decades since World War II. We now find ourselves in a place where, according to most war games, this country would run out of key munitions in a war with China in mere weeks, perhaps even days.

The Allies won World War II thanks to America’s fabled "Arsenal of Democracy." We outproduced the Axis powers, fielding munitions and weapons that were essential to a hard-fought victory. In 1943, Joseph Stalin acknowledged as much, toasting "American production, without which this war would have been lost."

The victors of that war knew something that future generations in the West would tragically forget: Industrial power wins wars.

In February 1941, 10 months before Pearl Harbor and America’s entry into that conflict, Winston Churchill addressed a joint session of Congress. While Britain battled alone, Churchill made his pitch to an isolationist America. "Give us the tools," he pleaded, "and we’ll finish the job." Now, eight decades later and facing another great power war, it is America that is short on tools.

Sankar and Hart explore why. They could use the occasion to throw their hands in the air or point fingers, but thankfully they don’t. Instead, the authors use historical case studies to highlight where things went wrong. They avoid dogmatism and partisanship, tracing the roots of America’s defense industrial decline back decades, before the Cold War’s end and the consolidation of prime defense manufacturers in the 1990s.

Indeed, Mobilize stretches all the way back to the interwar years and the Great Depression to highlight systemic flaws in how the military builds and acquires platforms. Several well-known figures, such as the first secretary of defense James Forrestal, come in for opprobrium. Well-meaning reforms enacted during the 1960s by Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara and his "Whiz Kids" forever changed procurement at the Pentagon, and largely for the worse. "The Pentagon," the authors note, "has tried to centrally plan its way to success" and "to no one’s surprise, it has found that Americans are bad commies."

Yet the heroes have their day in the sun, too. Sankar and Hart also take a look at those who fought to get key weapons into the hands of America’s warfighters. To do so, they had to be people of vision, proudly unorthodox, and willing to buck the system. The risk averse need not apply. The heretical, they note, are often the heroic. Thomas Jefferson, they observe, put it best: "A little rebellion every now and then is a good thing."

And the Pentagon itself is often standing in the way. Andrew Higgins, the man who built the landing vessels that made D-Day and Allied victory possible, spent years fighting the Navy’s Bureau of Ships. Higgins had the foresight that staid, status quo-loving commanders at the Navy did not.

The Navy initially dismissed the winning boat design as the work of "some nut." As Sankar and Hart observe, "Many GIs owe their lives to the fact that a couple of nuts were willing to learn from experience on the battlefield." This too is another theme in Mobilize: the value of being forward deployed. Great engineers and designers have to be on the front line, not just walled behind some far away office.

Mobilize is peppered with plenty of such lessons. The authors are clear that the fight with China isn’t lost yet. America has a homefield advantage in innovation and capital. But it must make rapid and far-reaching changes to avert a looming disaster. And rebels, visionaries, and yes, private industry, must be at the tip of the spear.

Mobilize: How to Reboot the American Industrial Base and Stop World War IIIby Shyam Sankar and Madeline Hart, Bombardier Books, 384 pp., $30

Sean Durns is a Washington D.C.-based foreign affairs analyst and the deputy commentary editor for the Washington Examiner.

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Our Long Road to War With Iran

 

Our Long Road to War With Iran


Victor Davis Hanson, American Greatness

Until last year, for some 46 years, Iran enjoyed a North Korea-like reputation in the heart of the Middle East: always unpredictable, reckless, dangerous, inevitably to be nuclear, self-destructive, and nihilistic.

All that said, was it really ever all that formidable?

The mullahs came into power after the removal of the Shah and, subsequently, the interim secular socialists. They did so by taking American hostages, murdering opponents, executing former supporters, and transforming the most secular and modern of the Middle East Muslim nations into the most medieval that routinely hung homosexuals, adulterers, and almost anyone who questioned the authority of the ayatollahs. In other words, these were gruesome people, but they didn’t necessarily have a competent military.

The theocracy’s only constant with the prior monarchical Iran was that it inherited near limitless oil and natural gas reserves, sophisticated arms, and the Shah’s modernized cities. It controlled the key strategic chokepoint at the Strait of Hormuz and enjoyed a geostrategically critical location between Asia and the Middle East. It fueled Iran’s historical chauvinism and pique that the millennia-long historical preeminence of Middle Eastern Persia was not fully appreciated by its Arab neighbors. So there were lots of natural advantages—and all for the most part squandered.

Under the camouflage of Shiite puritanism and otherworldliness, the ayatollahs proved even more corrupt (and far more incompetent) than the Shah’s entourage. They fought a destructive eight-year war with Saddam Hussein’s overrated Iraqi dictatorship and showed they were mostly just as militarily incompetent.

Over decades, they killed and wounded thousands of Americans by bombing U.S. embassies, barracks, and bases in the Middle East—without directly confronting the American military. For years, they sent lethal shaped charge IEDs to the Shiite insurgents to slaughter and maim thousands of Americans in Iraq and to the Taliban to do the same in Afghanistan.

At the first sign of popular protests, the regime never hesitated to gun down thousands of unarmed protesters. And, of course, they were abject hypocrites—hating the West, damning the Great Satan—and sending their pampered children to universities in America. The apparat proved quite earthly in its desire for money, estates, foreign travel, and the good life.

Their general strategies were never hard to follow.

One, the theocrats’ prior familiarity with Americans under the Shah and in exile in Europe bred an irrational fixation with and hatred of the West in general that made them useful proxies for the grand designs of communist and then later oligarchic Russia, and later ascendant communist China.

Iranian realpolitik alliances with secular communists were based on the quid pro quo of granting Russia and China access to the Gulf, selling oil to China, and buying arms from both.

Two, they were endlessly chagrined that the Persian Shiites had been overshadowed by more populous Sunni Arab neighbors that supposedly lacked their own historical sophistication and more legitimate claims of embodying and speaking for global Islam.

So they would correct that historical travesty by doing their best to mobilize their clients and proxies to bully, isolate, and weaken Arab autocracies, especially those that are pro-Western.

Three, their planned eventual destruction of Israel would ensure that theocratic and Shiite Iran regained its lost prestige and honor by finally accomplishing what the Sunni world had failed to do. By arming murderous clients in Lebanon, Gaza, Syria, the West Bank, and Yemen, they fashioned a global network of death that compromised European foreign policy toward the Middle East and terrified Western leaders and many of their Arab neighbors.

Fourth and finally, they sought to diminish the role of the United States in the Muslim world, drive it from the Middle East, and wage a virtual 47-year opportunistic war against American citizens and soldiers, with help from their terrorist surrogates.

Iran’s zenith in power and prestige came during Obama’s presidency (2009–17), and the so-called “Iran Deal” that they believed would guarantee them eventual nuclear power status.

But far more importantly, their massive acquisitions of air, land, and sea weapons and the empowering of terrorists, coupled with their passive-aggressive claims to victimhood, both scared and enticed President Obama into dropping sanctions. Soon, he was apologizing for supposed past sins and nocturnally sending them millions of dollars in Danegeld.

But worse by far, Obama thought he had squared the circle of neutralizing the supposed Middle Eastern Iranian juggernaut by envisioning it as an empathetic victim—and eventual friend if not ally.

Iran was to be rebooted as the Persian and Shiite righteously aggrieved underdog—bullied unfairly by Western imperialists and their surrogate corrupt Arab petro-kingdom clients for its asceticism and courage in fighting the West since its own birth in 1979.

Obama would remedy this “injustice” by bolstering Iran as a counterweight to not just the Sunni Arab world but to Israel itself. The reset would include an American détente with the murderous pro-Iranian Assad regime in Syria, the supposedly benign neglect of Hezbollah’s takeover of Lebanon, and the championing of the “Palestinians,” which de facto had insidiously become indistinct from Hamas terrorists.

Such creative tension between the Iranian Shiite crescent and a diminished Arab world would be adjudicated from time to time by Obama himself, whose America would go from oppressor to ally of the oppressed.

So by 2017, Iran, for some reason, was considered all-powerful in the Middle East with its missiles, soon-to-be nuclear status, and Hamas, Hezbollah, and Houthi killers who would murder Westerners and Israelis year after year. For the last seven American presidents, the very thought of challenging Iran militarily had been considered taboo, all the more so after the American misadventures in Afghanistan and Iraq.

No one, perhaps not even the Israelis, actually calibrated the true status of Iranian arms or diplomacy. Despite its huge advantages in population, Iran could not defeat Iraq and was reduced to sending 10-year-olds as human pawns to clear minefields. It never directly confronted Israel but always used surrogates to murder Jews, either abroad, as in the slaughter in Argentina, or through its “ring of fire” terrorist cliques that surrounded the borders of the Jewish state.

In sum, no one apparently realized—with the exception of Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu—that beneath its rough, ugly shell, theocratic Iran was rotten and decayed inside. Its corruption and the hatred of its own people ensured that even its huge revenues and sophisticated Chinese and Russian weapons could never translate into a modern, lethal military.

And in summer 2025, the Israelis and Americans first proved that Iran was indeed hollow.

Its Arab partner in Syria imploded in weeks. The supposedly goose-stepping Hezbollah shock troops were decimated.

The scary subterranean Hamas may have proved deadly in surprise attacks against unarmed women, children, and the aged, but they were nearly obliterated by the IDF.

The Houthis mimicked Iran’s madness as they sent drones and missiles to shut down the Red Sea and hit Israel. But the U.S. and Israel finally taught them that while the Houthis had no power to harm their enemies’ interior, their Western opponents easily could destroy their airports, ports, power generation, and modern economy in days, and would happily do so if the terror continued.

So here we are, in March 2026, watching the systematic destruction of the entire five-decade façade of a supposedly invincible Iranian military, the systematic elimination of its theocratic leaders, and the dismantling of the Iranian military and Revolutionary Guard terrorists.

The regime has no military ability to ensure its survival. Instead, its rope-a-dope strategy assumes that the U.S. will be attuned to domestic criticism, the looming midterms, the price of gas, and pressure from allies to end the war before the global economy sinks into recession.

We are left somewhat confused. Why did prior presidents not hold Iran accountable for its killing, thus nourishing the myth of Iranian invincibility? Why did Israel not respond earlier to Iran itself rather than just its terrorist clients?

And what now are the surviving theocrats thinking? What is their strategy of survival?

The remnants of the theocracy intend to ride out the bombings and, at some point in extremis, expect an armistice from “negotiations.” Their ultimate strategy is to wait out the tenures of both Trump and Netanyahu and hope for another sympathetic president like Obama, or a non compos mentis Biden, or someone ideologically akin to Mamdani or AOC.

When Trump and Netanyahu are out of office, they dream of using their oil to rearm and resume their role as Chinese and Russian proxies, eventually getting the bomb, and the second time around, perhaps using it.

Theocratic Iran, in its fantasies, still believes that if it ever destroyed Israel with a bomb or two, the world, especially given the recrudescence of Western antisemitism, would be appalled—for a day or two.

Then it would resume business with it. And with a dozen or so deterrent nuclear-tipped missiles, the Iranian ritual boilerplate of crazed pronouncements would follow of supposedly welcoming a nuclear pathway to an eternal virginal Paradise.

Sunday, March 08, 2026

Explaining Foquismo in Iran

 

Explaining Foquismo in Iran


Mike Walker, Col USMC (ret)


All,

 

Thought it might be wise to explain how a “foquismo” uprising could occur in Iran.

 

Three (3) steps are required:

1.     A population ripe to overthrow the government.

2.     An identified alternative leadership (such as a government in exile).

3.     Cracks in the military/security forces i.e. they will not obey orders to kill the people protesting to overthrow the government.

 

In Iran today, the first requirement has been obtained.

The second has not. That needs to happen immediately.

 

To put it perhaps too simplistically, Iran's organized resistance falls into two camps: (a) NCRI supporters and sympathizers and (b) Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi supporters and sympathizers.

 

If these two factions rapidly can form a transitional government in exile that promises a quick transition to democracy in a post-Ayatollah Iran then that could fulfill the second requirement.

 

That leaves the third step: Cracking the military/security forces.

 

For that to happen in Iran, requirements 1 and 2 need to be in place to create the resistance's political focal point (hence the name “foco” or “foquismo).

 

Once the resistance focal point is established then the tipping point is within reach and big things can happen very quickly.

 

There already are signs of military cracks but without the political focal point, a foquismo uprising may remain elusive.

Thursday, March 05, 2026

Parental Rights vs California Lunacy

 

Cleverly masked...

California Told Us to Deceive Parents, but We Said No

Teachers shouldn’t be forced to lie to parents about their child’s asserted gender identity.

Elizabeth Mirabelli and Lori Ann West, National Review

etween us, we spent more than five decades teaching in California public schools. We both won Teacher of the Year awards. We coached teams, mentored struggling students, and built the kind of trust with families that only comes from showing up year after year. We didn’t enter education to become plaintiffs in a federal lawsuit. We entered it because we believed in children and in the partnership between schools and parents.

Then California told us to start lying to those parents.

Under policies enforced by Governor Gavin Newsom and Attorney General Rob Bonta, California schools were required to conceal a child’s asserted gender identity from parents, even when a student was living as a different gender at school with a new name and pronouns. These policies apply to children as young as two. We were told to participate or face consequences. As educators, and as women of faith, we couldn’t comply.

So we sued. In December 2025, Judge Roger Benitez of the Southern District of California ruled that the state’s parental exclusion policies are unconstitutional. He found that schools cannot hide a child’s social gender transition from that child’s own parents and that teachers who want to share such information cannot be prohibited from doing so.

Consider what those policies did to real families. One family in our case discovered that their daughter’s school had been secretly transitioning her and treating her as a boy since the start of seventh grade. For 13 months, her mental health deteriorated while her parents knew nothing. She attempted suicide. Her parents learned the truth not from any teacher or counselor, but from doctors at a hospital. Even after this tragedy, school administrators continued to withhold information about their daughter’s gender identification, citing California law.

The daughter in another family was secretly transitioned beginning in fifth grade. Her parents found out only because another mother let the secret slip. When they confronted the principal, they were told that state law prohibited sharing information about a child’s gender identity without the child’s consent.

California defended its approach by claiming that it protects students. But after more than two years of litigation and full discovery, the state could not produce a single piece of admissible evidence that parental involvement causes harm. Its own expert witnesses did not meaningfully disagree that parental notice and involvement is best for the child.

Our refusal cost us personally. Someone broke into one of our classrooms to put up malicious posters. Students harassed us, encouraged by school employees who circulated protest videos. One of us was placed on involuntary leave after retaliatory complaints from colleagues. The other went on leave, fearing for her safety. Even after winning a preliminary injunction, we had to fight for months before being reinstated. The years-long legal battle took a heavy toll.

What began as two teachers refusing to comply grew into something much larger. Other educators joined our case, some under pseudonyms for fear of retaliation. Then parents came forward, including the families of children whose stories are now cited in a Supreme Court opinion. What started as a stand on conscience became a certified class action on behalf of teachers and parents across California, the largest of its kind in the country.

On Monday night, the Supreme Court vindicated those families. In a 6–3 decision, the Court vacated the Ninth Circuit’s stay and restored Judge Benitez’s injunction for parents across California. The per curiam opinion held that the state’s secrecy policies likely violate parents’ rights under both the free exercise clause and the due process clause of the 14th Amendment. The policies, the Court said, “cut out the primary protectors of children’s best interests: their parents.”

The Court’s order formally applies to parents, not teachers. But the logic of the decision protects us, too. If parents have a constitutional right to know about their child’s gender transition at school, then California cannot punish a teacher for providing that information. You cannot have a right to receive the truth if the person who would tell it can be fired for speaking. The state was ordering us to violate parents’ constitutional rights every single day. The Supreme Court has now said those rights are real.

The debate over parental rights in public schools continues to rage across the country, and the Court has signaled that further issues in this arena will probably come before it. But the Supreme Court has spoken with unmistakable clarity: California’s secrecy policies likely violate parents’ constitutional rights, the harm those policies inflict is real and irreparable, and the state’s interest in concealment cannot justify it.

We refused to lie to the parents who trusted us with their children. California punished us for it. The Supreme Court has now told California it was wrong.


Elizabeth Mirabelli and Lori Ann West are the lead plaintiffs in Mirabelli v. Bonta, represented by the Thomas More Society, a national nonprofit public-interest law firm.

Wednesday, March 04, 2026

The Trump Doctrine Is Here

 

The Trump Doctrine Is Here. It Ends Forever Wars.

Marc A. Thiessen, The Washington Post

Critics say President Donald Trump’s decision to strike Iran is a violation of his promise not to engage in “forever wars.” In fact, the opposite is true. Trump is not starting a forever war in Iran; he’s ending one.

For 47 years, the Iranian regime has been waging war against the United States. That war began in 1979, when Iran seized the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, taking more than 50 Americans hostage for 444 days. The war continued as Iran orchestrated the 1983 bombings of the U.S. Embassy and Marine barracks in Beirut that killed 258 Americans, followed by the 1996 bombing of the Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia that killed 19 Americans. It continued in 1998, when Iran provided “direct assistance” to al-Qaeda for the 1998 bombings of the U.S. Embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, training its “operatives about how to blow up buildings,” according to a ruling by the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.

After the 9/11 attacks, Iran provided sanctuary to senior leaders of al-Qaeda fleeing U.S. forces in Afghanistan, and allowed the group to use Iranian territory as a pipeline to move money, facilitators and operatives from across the Middle East. (It still harbors Saif al-Adel, successor to Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri as leader of al-Qaeda, in Tehran). Iran also provided training and bomb-making equipment to insurgents in Iraq, including “explosively formed penetrators” that killed and maimed thousands of American troops.

On Oct. 7, 2023, Iran’s proxy Hamas slaughtered more than 1,200 innocent people – including 46 Americans – and took 12 Americans hostage. The Iranian regime has also attempted terrorist attacks on U.S. soil, including a 2011 plot to set off a bomb in Cafe Milano in Washington to kill the Saudi ambassador, a plot to kill former secretary of state Mike Pompeo and other senior U.S. officials, and a plot to assassinate Trump himself. And the regime that did all this was pursuing nuclear weapons and refused Trump’s repeated demands to peacefully disarm.

Now, Trump is taking decisive action to bring this reign of terror to an end. If he succeeds, the impact will be profound, opening up the possibility of enduring peace in the Middle East and beyond.

The Iranian threat is a primary reason the U.S. has to spend billions on large deployments in the Middle East. If that danger is eliminated, and a new government — one whose mantra no longer is “Death to America” — takes power in Tehran, the United States can finally draw down those forces, execute the long-promised “pivot” to the Indo-Pacific and focus on defending American interests in our own hemisphere.

As important as what Trump is doing is how he’s doing it. With Operation Epic Fury, we are witnessing the birth of a new doctrine to guide U.S. global leadership in the 21st century: the Trump Doctrine.

When Trump came to office, he faced a situation similar to the one Ronald Reagan inherited in 1981. In the wake of the Vietnam War, Americans had no appetite for sending U.S. troops to fight in distant lands. Reagan had to find a new way to lead on the world stage. So, he forged the “Reagan Doctrine,” supporting anti-communist freedom fighters across the globe to roll back the tide of Soviet Communism. That strategy helped win the Cold War.

Today, after the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, there is similarly no popular appetite for U.S. boots in foreign hot spots. So, Trump, too, is pioneering a new way to lead. From Caracas to Tehran, he is using sanctions, tariffs, diplomacy and other tools to impose America’s will on its adversaries. If those adversaries don’t yield, then he is employing military force to decapitate regimes that threaten the American people. And he is controlling events on the ground through his willingness to strike those regimes again and again until leaders emerge who will work with America.

At this moment, the U.S. is striking Iran from the air — eliminating the regime’s leadership, its retaliatory capabilities, its nuclear program and its infrastructure of repression. Expect this campaign to last for weeks, not days. After that, what happens will be up to the Iranian people. As Trump proclaimed on Saturday: “To the great, proud people of Iran, I say tonight that the hour of your freedom is at hand. … When we are finished, take over your government. It will be yours to take.”

In other words, there is no need for a U.S. invasion force. The Iranian people are the boots on the ground, and the fate of the country is in their hands. And if things do not turn out as we hope, and a government emerges that resumes its hostile posture toward America and its pursuit of nuclear weapons, Trump can eliminate it as well.

This much is certain: Donald Trump is making history. There have been just 45 presidents since the founding of our republic. Of those, only a handful truly transformed the world. In the modern era, Franklin D. Roosevelt defeated Nazi fascism and Ronald Reagan defeated Soviet communism. If he succeeds in defeating Islamic radicalism in Iran, Trump will take his place alongside them as one the most consequential presidents in U.S. history.