Sunday, January 25, 2026

Khamenei has gone underground

 

Khamenei has gone underground

Iran’s supreme leader retreats underground, warned of likelihood of US airstrikes

Shane Galvin, New York Post

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has gone underground, reportedly hiding out in a bunker out of fear of being wiped out by US airstrikes — as the USS Abraham Lincoln steams toward the Persian Gulf.

The 86-year-old supreme leader has moved to a fortified shelter in Tehran connected to a series of elaborate underground tunnels after senior military officials warned of the increasing likelihood of an imminent US attack, Iran International reported, according to the Jerusalem Post.

Khamenei has left his youngest son Masoud Khamenei, 53, in charge of running the day-to-day management of the Islamic Republic, the Jerusalem Post reported.

Masoud Khamenei’s emergency duties include being the primary communication channel with the regime’s executive branch, according to the report.

Iran has deemed the likelihood of US airstrikes to be high after President Trump announced that warships were headed to the Middle East as a warning to the ayatollah, following a continuing war of words between the two leaders in recent days.

Trump boasted Friday that the US Navy was sending a massive “armada.”

The Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group, which includes three destroyers, is currently motoring from the Indian Ocean to the Persian Gulf region of Iran, Stars and Stripes reported.

Publicly, Tehran has not backed down from heightened tensions with the US as Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian threatened to treat any attack against the supreme leader by the US or Israel as “an all-out war against us.”

Iran’s national security parliamentary commission also declared this week that any attack against the embattled Khamenei would trigger a declaration of jihad, the Iranian Students News Agency reported, according to the Jerusalem Post.

Khamenei, who is frequently active on social media, has not posted on X since Jan. 17, though it is not known when he allegedly entered into hiding.

It’s not the first time the supreme leader has holed up underground. Khamenei also went silent after retreating to a bunker last June, during the 12-Day War with Israel. He reportedly had even drafted a list of potential successors in the event he was killed in the short-lived conflict.

His latest X post this year threatened to go after both internal and international “criminals” who he claimed were responsible for the widespread protests that have gripped the nation since Dec. 28.

Those protests — against a disastrous economy that came on the back of the worst drought the country has seen in decades — have seen regime forces gun down at least 3,000 civilians, with some groups claiming the death toll as high as 20,000.

Friday, January 23, 2026

The American Grizzly

 

The American Grizzly

Richard Jordan, Law & Liberty

The first year of Trump 2.0 has seen extraordinary changes in American foreign policy. Last December, the new National Security Strategy (NSS) made waves, and like everything about President Trump, responses were never tepid. From “alarming” (the NYT) to “beautiful” (The American Conservative), our twittering elites were glad to have a new reason to rant about foreign policy. In any case, the recent spectacle in Venezuela certainly demonstrated the administration’s resolve to put its new NSS into practice.

Still, many commentators, even on the right, have been frustrated that Trump’s new NSS doesn’t offer a “doctrine.” As everyone who studies international relations knows, every president needs a doctrine: some readers may remember the Truman Doctrine, and in my lifetime we’ve had a Powell Doctrine, a Bush Doctrine, an Obama Doctrine, and even (bless his heart) a Biden Doctrine. So where is the Trump Doctrine?

In short, there isn’t one. In both domestic policy and foreign policy, Donald Trump has never peddled an ideology. From the beginning, “America First” has been much more of an attitude than a blueprint. With the new NSS, his bold moves in Venezuela, and even his rhetoric around Greenland, Donald Trump is offering what he has always offered: a character, a WrestleMania narrative for America abroad.

This need for character, not doctrine, has always tripped America’s elites. For all his brilliance, Henry Kissinger saw his foreign policy eclipsed by Ronald Reagan’s, because Reagan understood American character and Kissinger did not. Americans do not want realism or “restraint”—though Donald Trump’s foreign policy could arguably fit both. Rather, Americans want to understand their role in the world. They want to understand how American character fits into the script of international politics. Elites talk about worldviews. Normal Americans don’t. They talk about stories.

So what is the American character, and what does that character look like on the international stage?

That question is engaged directly, and unapologetically, in the last of Hollywood’s great sword-and-sand adventures, The Wind and the Lion (1975). Starring Sean Connery as a Moroccan bandit chief (complete with Scottish brogue), the film centers on the kidnapping of Eden Pedecaris (Candice Bergen) and the efforts of Theodore Roosevelt (Brian Keith) to recover her. John Milius, one of Hollywood’s most gifted screenwriters (Apocalypse Now) and rare conservatives (he preferred to be paid in kind with guns rather than cash), wrote and directed the swashbuckling desert epic. While overshadowed at the box office by Jaws, it has long since cemented its status as a classic. And fifty years later, it is hard not to see it as a commentary on modern America and our own twenty-first-century larger-than-life populist.

At the start of his first term, Donald Trump chose Old Hickory’s portrait to hang in the Oval Office. He might have done better to choose the Rough Rider.

Under Teddy Roosevelt, the United States for the first time stepped fully into the role of a Great Power. Milius intuited that in the first decade of the 1900s, American character on the world stage was being redefined, and this redefinition was embodied in the man of Theodore Roosevelt. You cannot understand how America sees itself in the world without understanding it. And Milius understands it well.

The Wind in the Lion opens in Tangier, where Mrs. Pedecaris, an American citizen, is kidnapped by desert brigands. The film tracks the initial, failed diplomatic efforts to secure her release, and it culminates in a spectacular American show of force that, in a single day, upends the Great Power politics of the region, with the fate of Morocco firmly in the hands of a singular American president. (One can’t help but draw parallels to the current situation in Venezuela.) But unlike most films about foreign policy, even exceptional ones like Argo, The Wind and the Lion does not keep its characters in constant danger or its audience in constant suspense. The opposite of Hamas, these Muslim brigands treat Mrs. Pedecaris with respect, and the tension in her scenes is usually thanks to Sean Connery’s sex appeal rather than any immediate threat to this heroine’s life or limbs. The film revels in landscapes and horses and Winchester rifles, but above all in the American soul and the way Roosevelt embodied so much of what is best in our country.

Although a grand adventure story, and one that took several crowd-pleasing liberties with its historical source material, the film centers on a pensive monologue given by Roosevelt in Yellowstone. That monologue is worth quoting in full:

The American grizzly is a symbol of the American character: strength, intelligence, ferocity. Maybe a little blind and reckless at times … but courageous beyond all doubt. And one other trait that goes with all previous. … Loneliness. The bear lives out his life alone. Indomitable, unconquered—but always alone. He has no real allies, only enemies, but none of them are as great as he. … The world will never love us. They respect us—they may even grow to fear us. But they will never love us. For we have too much audacity. And we’re a bit blind and reckless at times, too.

Teddy Roosevelt bequeathed to America the Roosevelt Corollary and the Big Stick—both of which, incidentally, Trump has now wielded in Venezuela. But what Roosevelt really stamped upon the face of America was not a doctrine but an ethos. Ever since, American foreign policy has been something of a grizzly bear: strong, audacious, and (mostly) alone.

America is strong. The Wind and the Lion revels in the martial parades, swagger, and iconography that once captivated Americans and still captivate our president. Roosevelt is portrayed, accurately, as a man’s man: a powerfully built and virile boxer; an impeccable shot; and a loving and authoritative father. Unlike his willowy Secretary of State (a delightfully sly and cynical John Huston) or the stooping Washington creatures who mill about him, Roosevelt—like the crowds that adore him—is upright, energetic, and imposing.

The same vim enlivens American policy. Where Europeans had paid handsomely for their ransomed nationals, Roosevelt defies the Moroccan bandits with clear threats and bold action. The Europeans sent gold; Roosevelt sent warships. And in a Kiplingesque touch, Keith’s Roosevelt and Connery’s Raisuli gradually come to admire each other: they respect the strength and daring of the other man, and each, of course, wants to “find out what kind of weapon the old ****** uses.”

Along with this strength, the United States has historically exercised a brash disregard for Old World niceties. International law is often the first casualty of our gumption. At one point in the film, Secretary Hay objects, “But that’s illegal,” and Roosevelt responds, “Now why spoil the beauty of a thing with legality?” Yet this blithe treatment of international norms does not mean America is warmongering: Roosevelt, like Trump, brokered many peace deals and started no wars, and the film depicts the Japanese celebrating the new “American wind” that blows against injustice—not unlike the Venezuelans who are rejoicing in the streets, even as comfortable elites wring their hands over legal indelicacies.

A second casualty is our opinion of Europe, and theirs of us. Donald Trump is by no means the first president to recognize in the Old World a tendency to authoritarianism, decadence, and debility; Milius gives us the same glimpse in 1904 Tangier. Indeed, if anything, the semi-barbaric Muslim Berbers are portrayed with much greater sympathy than the Europeans. Moreover, Milius does not try his audience’s patience with ahistorical depictions of Islam as a tolerant and egalitarian “religion of peace.” Rather, he paints the Berbers in all their raw virtues and vices. Roosevelt feels a kinship with this kidnapping desert brigand, and so too does Mrs. Pedecaris, because they are all strong-willed and audacious characters who thirst for great things, whereas the Europeans do not.

And this is perhaps the most poignant theme of the film: greatness means loneliness. Roosevelt cautions his daughter Alice that he does “not pity any man who has the good sense not to [pursue] it.” Aristotle made the same point about his great-souled man. Whether Donald Trump understands this truth on a personal level, I cannot say; but on a national level, he does seem to grasp that American greatness sets it apart. When I was an undergraduate, elites felt a great deal of anxiety about anti-Americanism. At the same time, I noticed that ordinary Americans did not share this anxiety; instead, they expressed a certain (deserved) contempt for the French and the Germans, but also tended to accept that our country could not exercise great power without arousing a certain amount of envy. America, I hope, will not return to isolationism, but it will always be isolated. It is part of who we are.

At the beginning of the Cold War, Charles Burton Marshall warned that “a world power cannot lead a double life.” Its policies, he insisted, must match its character. Too often our policy elites, on the left and right, have demanded doctrines and worldviews but neglected this more elemental matter of the nation’s personality. Our rulers and prognosticators pay great attention to national security, but they ignore national character. For the past few decades, both our realists and our idealists have been obtuse because they have been denationalized: the idealists have thrown overboard Woodrow Wilson and anything that might make them distinctively American, while the realists have forgotten Teddy Roosevelt, and with him any narrative that might once again capture the American imagination. Thankfully, that seems to be changing.

At the start of his first term, Donald Trump chose Old Hickory’s portrait to hang in the Oval Office. He might have done better to choose the Rough Rider. Roosevelt’s swagger and bravado, his contempt for dandified, out-of-touch elites, his willingness to flaunt convention—these are all hallmarks of Roosevelt and, in truth, hallmarks of the American personality. Of late, our storytellers have stopped exploring these facets of our national ethos. I believe that is all the more reason to revisit an old favorite. In The Wind and the Lion, John Milius presents us with a spectacular vista of American greatness—in all our power, audacity, and solitude, a nation at times terribly near-sighted, and yet somehow also indispensable, indomitable, and good.

Richard Jordan is an associate professor of international relations at Baylor University, where he studies grand strategy, game theory, and imagination.

Sunday, January 18, 2026

The party of lawbreaking

 

Democrats — the party of lawbreaking

Hugo Gurdon, Washington Examiner

Minnesota’s Democratic politicians have lost touch with reality — hardly surprising when their heads are lodged in a fundamentally dark place. Despite strong political competition to say the most clueless and incendiary things, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey and Gov. Tim Walz (D-MN) might already have won this year’s prize.

Inveighing against federal enforcement of immigration law, Frey said, “Imagine [your] city or town was suddenly invaded by thousands … that do not share the values that you hold dear. Imagine if your daily routines were disrupted. … Imagine if schools shut down.”

The supposed invasion he refers to is by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers, whose search for and detention of illegal immigrants is necessitated only because Frey’s “sanctuary city” bans local police from cooperating with ICE, so even violent criminals are let go rather than being handed to the feds. If Minneapolis cooperated with ICE deporting criminals, the mayhem Frey bemoans would not be happening.

Americans also don’t have to imagine schools being closed unnecessarily, they only have to remember it. That’s what they endured in 2020-2021. Minneapolis schools have closed again, supposedly for fears of children’s safety amid the “invasion,” but those same children are being organized into anti-ICE street protests. One suspects safety is not the real concern of teachers unions, who think more about left-wing resistance and propagandizing rather than educating students.

There is an even more stark detachment from reality in Frey’s rhetoric. When he calls the influx of ICE officers an invasion of aliens who don’t share local values, does he not hear himself? To him, American federal agents are invaders but not the foreign migrants from alien and often incompatible cultures with whom ICE is dealing. The former are just doing their jobs in difficult circumstances but are condemned, the latter — one thinks of Somali fraudsters who ripped off billions of dollars from taxpayers — are protected during years of official refusal to hold them accountable?

Frey and his ilk are hermetically sealed in a left-wing bubble and can’t or won’t hear the cries of a public that sees up to 20 million outsiders who have no right to be here, who have brought customs and mores that create a low-trust society that, for many Americans, makes the country unrecognizable as the one they grew up in and love.

Frey is not the only one confusing citizens for outsiders and illegal migrants for locals. Walz made an extraordinary speech on Jan. 14, referring to ICE officers’ presence in his state as an “occupation,” and accused them of conducting a campaign of “organized brutality” for President Donald Trump.

Perhaps Walz is going for broke because, after abandoning his hopeless reelection bid, he no longer has any political reason for restraint. This is a man who, if the Democrats had won the White House in 2024, would now be vice president, a stopped heartbeat from the Oval Office.

He and Frey represent what the Democratic Party has become — a party that doesn’t believe in enforcing laws it does not like, which wants citizen resistance to law enforcement, and whose rhetoric encourages the violence and confrontation they deplore.

Recent events in Minnesota reveal that acceptance of lawbreaking and obstruction has become the norm for the party of the Left. It is its modus operandi. It wants to make laws for the nation, but when the nation puts the other party in charge, it wants the laws broken with impunity.

Thursday, January 15, 2026

Erase Jimmy Carter’s Iran shame

Erase Jimmy Carter’s Iran shame

Rich Lowry, New York Post

The 1979 Iranian Revolution was one of the most stinging US setbacks of the Cold War era. 

A longtime ally that the United States depended on as a pillar of regional security, the Shah, gave way to a theocratic regime based on hostility to America. 

The revolutionaries stormed the US embassy and seized our diplomatic personnel in November 1979.

If that wasn’t enough of a national embarrassment, a dramatic rescue attempt by the US military in April 1980 ended in abject failure at a staging area in Iran dubbed Desert One. 

As the Islamic Republic totters on the precipice, struggling to put down country-wide protests that are more threatening than any it has ever faced, it’s possible to imagine that we could be about to experience a bookend, from 1979 to 2026. 

The first Iranian revolution came in the context of a United States brought low by its exit from Vietnam, of a hollow US military, of the advance of our enemies around the world (from the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan to the Sandinista takeover in Nicaragua) and of a feckless president in the person of Jimmy Carter whose administration was associated with American retreat. 

A second Iranian revolution, which is obviously not guaranteed, would underline the opposite dynamic on all counts. 

It’s not true that Carter threw the Shah overboard: The Iranian ruler’s own incompetence and indecision did him in.

He couldn’t decide to suppress or placate the protest movement, and proved unable to do either. 

By some estimates, it was — as a share of the population — the largest revolutionary movement in modern history.

In echoes of the current situation in Iran, rampant inflation, regime self-dealing, middle-class disaffection, and ideological and regional priorities that didn’t align with what most Iranians wanted fueled the revolt. 

In a crucial dynamic that we haven’t yet seen in contemporary Iran, the military began to melt away — and it wasn’t clear, if the Shah had tried to shoot his way into staying in power, how many troops would have been ready to carry out his orders. 

Once in charge, the mullahs undertook a low-level, ongoing war against the United States via terrorist proxies, and spread their malign tentacles throughout the Middle East in a bid for regional dominance. 

American presidents tended to believe that it was too difficult to do much about this, and Barack Obama actively sought to accommodate Iranian power. 

Now, though, the dynamic has changed.

As President Donald Trump has said in a different context, the hunter has become the hunted. 

After Oct. 7, the Israelis systematically neutered Iran’s proxies, and Tehran lost a significant ally with the fall of Syria’s Bashar Assad. 

Whereas Iran humiliated us in 1979 with the embassy seizure, we humiliated Iran last year with the strikes on its nuclear sites that made the regime’s painful, decades-long effort to get a nuke seem a costly misadventure. 

The contrast in US military proficiency between Operation Eagle Claw, the aborted Delta Force operation in 1980, and Operation Midnight Hammer in 2025 couldn’t be starker.

At the same time, the United States now has a president very different than Jimmy Carter.

No one will ever find Donald Trump wearing a sweater and talking to the nation about malaise.

Trump’s mode is pure assertion, based on an impulse toward personal and national dominance alien to Carter. 

The Iranians may be able to cajole Trump into negotiations, but they will never be able to push him around, and they disregard his threats at their peril.

If the regime actually falls and is replaced by an allied or non-hostile government in Iran, it would move a large piece off the strategic chessboard for our enemies, and change the geopolitical balance of the Middle East.

As much as the 1979 revolution was a debacle to the West, a favorable 2026 revolution would be a boon — to the Iranians, and to us and our allies.

Saturday, January 10, 2026

Thank You President Trump



Thank You President Trump

Thank You President Trump for Bravely Standing with the Iranian and Venezuelan People, and for Freedom and Peace

Majid Rafizadeh, Gatestone Institute

President Donald J. Trump has emerged as the first leader to stand decisively, openly, and courageously with the Iranian people themselves — against the dictatorship, against repression, and in favor of genuine freedom, democracy and peace.

What distinguishes Trump's position is not rhetoric, but resolve. For years, Western leaders have issued statements of "concern" while avoiding any action that might inconvenience their diplomatic calculations or economic interests. President Trump broke from that spinelessness.

More importantly, Trump sent a direct warning to the Iranian regime: if it continues to kill innocent protesters, he will "rescue" them: the United States will not stand idly by. This is the opposite of a call for war; it is deterrence in the service of peace -- a warning designed to prevent bloodshed, signaling to all violent regimes that massacres will not be tolerated or ignored.

Thank you, President Trump, for standing with the oppressed, for choosing people over tyrants, and for reminding the world that peace is not achieved by silence in the face of evil, but by courage in defense of individual freedom. May the Iranian, Venezuelan, Gazan and Cuban people -- and others held hostage by cutthroat leaders -- achieve their long-denied dream of freedom, democracy, and peace. God bless you, President Trump.

Over the past decade, the Iranian people have turned out again and again against one of the most entrenched and brutal dictatorships in the modern world. From students and workers to women, minorities, and the urban poor, Iranians have poured into the streets demanding dignity, freedom, and a government that represents them rather than ruling them through fear.

These uprisings have been nationwide, sustained and extraordinarily courageous, often carried out in the face of live ammunition, mass arrests, torture and executions. Yet despite the clarity of the Iranian people's demands and the scale of the regime's violence, no European country, no self-described democratic power, and no U.S. administration claiming to champion freedom and human rights has ever stood with them in a meaningful way -- until now.

President Donald J. Trump has emerged as the first leader to stand decisively, openly, and courageously with the Iranian people themselves — against the dictatorship, against repression, and in favor of genuine freedom, democracy and peace.

What distinguishes Trump's position is not rhetoric, but resolve. For years, Western leaders have issued statements of "concern" while avoiding any action that might inconvenience their diplomatic calculations or economic interests. Trump broke from that spinelessness. He made it unmistakably clear that in Iran, the United States stands with the oppressed Iranian people, not with the ruling clerics who have hijacked the country.

More importantly, Trump sent a direct warning to the Iranian regime: if it continues to kill innocent protesters, he will "rescue" them: the United States will not stand idly by. This is the opposite of a call for war; it is deterrence in the service of peace -- a warning designed to prevent bloodshed, signaling to all violent regimes that massacres will not be tolerated or ignored.

This posture represents a moral clarity long absent from international politics. In theory, the United Nations exists explicitly to prevent mass atrocities of civilians through principles such as the "Responsibility to Protect." In practice, the UN has repeatedly failed. When thousands of civilians in Iran and Venezuela were murdered in confrontations with repressive regimes, and thousands of civilians in Ukraine and Israel killed by hostile foreign powers, the international response amounted to little more than press releases and closed-door meetings. No protection was offered, no accountability imposed, and no deterrence established. Trump, by contrast, has stepped into the vacuum left by international institutions. By warning regimes directly, he assumed the role that the global community has refused to play: defending civilians against states that wage war on their own population.

Previous U.S. administrations, during earlier nationwide protests, particularly under the Obama administration, when Iranians desperately looked to the United States for moral leadership, many Iranians openly asked whether President Barack Obama stood with them or with the ruling clerics. The response they received was silence. The administration's priority at the time was negotiating a bogus nuclear agreement and lifting sanctions to enable Iran's nuclear build-up, even if that meant overlooking the bloodshed in Iran's streets. Human rights were subordinated to diplomacy, and the Iranian people were treated as an inconvenience rather than as central actors in their own struggle for freedom. European governments, eager to preserve trade ties and economic engagement while turning a blind eye to repression, followed a similar path. The message to Iranians was that commercial interests mattered more than their lives.

Trump reversed that message. He did not wait weeks or months, or balance his words to appease Iran's regime. He stood immediately and unambiguously with the Iranian people from the very first days of unrest. Speed matters. For protesters risking everything, early international support means the difference between hope and despair. No leader in recent history has responded so directly or forcefully to the Iranian people. For the first time, they heard a powerful voice from the outside saying, clearly and without ambiguity: you are not alone.

Now, if Europe and other Western democracies truly believe in freedom, human rights, and the rule of law, they need to prove it when it is costly, not only when it is convenient. Issuing generic statements while maintaining business as usual with Tehran exposes the most repulsive hypocrisy. The Iranian people see this clearly. European governments need to decide whether they will stand with a people demanding freedom or continue prioritizing trade deals with a regime that survives through torture, repression and mass-executions.

The Iranian regime's survival strategy is brutally consistent. Whenever protests erupt, it responds with overwhelming force. Security services fire on crowds, conduct mass arrests, extract forced confessions, and use torture to instill fear. The year 2025 saw the hangings of more than 1,500 Iranians. The objective is not merely to suppress a particular protest, but to crush the very idea of resistance. That is why words alone are insufficient. A credible deterrent is essential. A clear military warning -- with follow-through -- that mass killings will trigger consequences, can save lives by forcing the regime to reconsider the cost of violence. Such a warning does not escalate conflict; it restrains it by telling regimes that there is a line they cannot cross.

Equally refreshing is Trump's response to communications. One of any brutal regime's most effective tools is its ability to shut down the internet during moments of unrest. By cutting their citizens off from one another and from the outside world, these regimes create an environment in which abuses can occur unseen and unchallenged. Access to the internet in moments like these is a lifeline. It allows protesters to organize, to document atrocities, and to alert the world in real time. Any serious commitment to freedom must include concrete efforts to keep communication channels open.

Supporting democratic change in Iran, Venezuela and elsewhere is a strategic necessity for the West. Many current regimes that pose as friends but are secretly hostile to Western interests -- such as Qatar, Turkey and Pakistan -- actively support terrorists, undermine regional stability, and quietly align themselves with other authoritarian powers against democratic nations. A free and representative Iran, Venezuela, Cuba and Gaza would serve as stabilizing forces in the Middle East, the Western Hemisphere and beyond. Helping people there achieve the governments they seek is an investment in long-term peace and security, not a risk to it.

Trump's stance toward the Iranian and Venezuelan people reveals great leadership in moments of moral clarity. By standing openly with those demanding freedom, by warning violent regimes against killing their own citizens, and by refusing to hide behind empty diplomatic language, he is demonstrating the courage that everyone else lacked. This is what it means to be a true advocate of peace — not one who merely speaks about it, but one who acts to prevent injustice and bloodshed. For that, the Iranian and Venezuelan people have been heard: history will take note.

Thank you, President Trump, for standing with the oppressed, for choosing people over tyrants, and for reminding the world that peace is not achieved by silence in the face of evil, but by courage in defense of individual freedom. May the Iranian, Venezuelan, Gazan and Cuban people -- and others held hostage by cutthroat leaders -- achieve their long-denied dream of freedom, democracy, and peace. God bless you, President Trump.

Dr. Majid Rafizadeh, is a political scientist, Harvard-educated analyst, and board member of Harvard International Review. He has authored several books on the US foreign policy. He can be reached at dr.rafizadeh@post.harvard.edu 

Sunday, January 04, 2026

Why Johnny Can’t Read

 


Why Johnny Can’t Read

Stephen Moore, The Epoch Times 

Reading and math scores are abysmal across the country, as national testing results keep documenting. Illiteracy rates are rising: The number of 16- to 24-year-olds reading at the lowest literacy levels increased from 16 percent in 2017 to 25 percent in 2023, according to data from the National Center for Education Statistics.

In some inner-city schools, less than half of kids are reading or doing math at grade-level proficiency. Many high school grads can’t read their diplomas. As an economist, I would submit that this is our greatest crisis. It puts the future of American prosperity in grave danger. Also, the learning gap widens income and wealth disparities.

The apparent solution among the education establishment is not to challenge kids to stretch their minds and hit the books but rather to dumb down the curriculum so everyone passes. I call this the “make everyone below average” solution.

Some schools are now no longer requiring kids in English class to read cover to cover the classic books that students have been reading for decades. Perhaps the students don’t have the attention spans. Perhaps their reading skills aren’t up to par. Perhaps they are too busy texting or playing video games on their cellphones.

This is one of the best public schools in the city, with reading proficiency rates at 80 percent, or double the D.C. district’s abysmal 38 percent average.

Alice Deal has decided to remove all full-length novels from their eighth-grade English curriculum. The educrats behind this strategy claim that moving from full-length books to section readings will better prepare students for high school.

Huh? How is it better for reading proficiency and knowledge-gathering for a student to read sections of “Huckleberry Finn” or “To Kill a Mockingbird” but not the whole book? Would anyone watch only a few scenes of the movie?

It’s almost as if the school is instructing the 13-year-olds to read the CliffsNotes version of “The Scarlet Letter” or “A Man for All Seasons.” That used to be considered a form of cheating. But now it’s the schools that are cheating the kids.

If it is true that reading a full-length novel is now too heavy a lift for a sixth, seventh, or eighth grader, Houston, we have a problem. If the kids in the top public schools can’t be expected to read a full-length book, it’s scary to think about the reading levels at the bad schools.

We solved the problem of illiteracy nearly 100 years ago. Now the problem is back.

This is yet another sad example of subjecting our children to the tyranny of low expectations. It is sadly symbolic of all that is wrong with government-run schools.

Ironically, it is coming at a time when poor states such as Louisiana and Mississippi have returned to the basics—such as good old-fashioned phonics—and have seen miraculous jumps in their reading scores. They are now beating out higher-income blue states.

Raise the bar, don’t lower it. We can do this. We all remember with fondness reading our favorite books—such as “The Outsiders.” The joy of reading comes from reading a great book and learning its life message.

Kids are now being robbed of that joy.

Washington will reap the illiteracy it sows, and my only hope is that other schools don’t participate in this dumbing down of America’s children.

Stephen Moore is a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation, chief economist at FreedomWorks, and co-founder of the Committee to Unleash Prosperity. He served as a senior economic adviser to Donald Trump. His latest book is “Govzilla: How the Relentless Growth of Government Is Impoverishing America.”