Tuesday, June 16, 2026

As the World Inexorably Turns

There is so much going on in the world today…where to start?  We’ve got gladiators on the White House lawn, crowds burning school buses in New York City because they WON a championship, visitors from all over the world FIFA-traipsing across American and going gaga at what they find, a big wait-and-see moment in the Middle East with apparently no one happy with it, the markets continuing their yo-yo reactions to every day’s news tease, mid-term election drama rumbling in the background of every political thing (and that includes just about EVERYthing), historically-significant SCOTUS decisions ready to drop at any moment, a US economy just itching to break out of its doldrums, and of course…education, education, education.

 

Due to the wealth of good links below, I will limit my brief commentary on this piece to the Middle East.  Like so many of you, I am conflicted about how to view the pending settlement of this conflict.  It must be terribly frustrating to deal with the leadership of Iran, which has no credibility whatsoever.  Making it even more difficult is the fact that the leadership is broken up into various factions who do not agree on Iran’s future path, and you can never be sure exactly which faction you are dealing with.  On top of all that is the overriding limitation that the American public will simply not accept the insertion of US ground troops into Iran.

 

Ratcheting up the pressure on this dynamic is the impact it might have on the approaching mid-term elections, the impact on the US economy, the relationships between America and its NATO allies, the adversarial matrix of Iran tied in with China/Russia/North Korea, and the ever-suffocating influence of a media that demands minute-by-minute coverage regarding every piece of information available.  And then, in lieu of that…they have no hesitation to irresponsibly opine on what might happen or is likely to happen.

 

To me, the bottom line is this: At the end of the day, America will be leaving the Middle East with a much reduced military presence remaining.  We will not be occupying Iran.  Iran’s future will ultimately be in the hands of the existing government…such as it is…and its citizenry.  The neighbors of Iran must live with it as a regional partner.

 

 Israel has every right to defend itself against any threat that might come its way and that privilege can never be denied.  While the nexus between Iran/Lebanon/Israel is clearly a central element in all things Middle East, America has no right to tell Israel how it must defend itself against wanton aggression.  America does not negotiate for Israel; they do that for themselves. 

 

If we cannot occupy and control Iran, then we must arrive at an end game alternative to that scenario.  That end game has apparently now been determined and we shall see how it turns out.  If American and Iranian leaders do not know the answer to that question, then certainly the armies of political pundits do not know either. 

 

President Trump has taken bold military action to destroy the ability of Iran to threaten America and the world.  Could we have hit them harder and hit them again…and again?  Of course we could…but where do you draw the line?  Do we want to destroy the ability of Iran to ever rebuild and have a reasonable standard of living for its people?  I think not.  They have been weakened to what must be considered near maximum extent, given the exclusion of ground troops.  When it comes to fighting, a large portion of the success determinant is in knowing when to walk away.  Most of us allow our emotions to rule during times like this and we either fail to step up or fail to step back at the right time.  As our President…Trump stepped up at the right time.  Is this the right time to step away?

 

At some point, the reality is that we…the USA…must leave, go back home, accept that we have done all we could within the existing limitations, and put the future of Iran into others’ hands. The time of that departure has apparently arrived.  The terms…and consequences…of that departure are yet to be determined.  The only way to predict the future of Iran with any degree of certainty is to OWN Iran.  America will never own Iran.

 

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https://reason.com/2026/06/15/the-iran-war-is-over-for-now/

 

https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2026/06/memo-to-file.php#google_vignette


https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/22597/no-good-deal-with-iran

 

https://jewishworldreview.com/0626/york061026.php

 

https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/news/articles/trump-pallets-cash-iran

 

https://freebeacon.com/israel/the-case-for-israel/

 

https://claritywithmichaeloren.substack.com/p/israel-has-no-choice-left-but-to

 

https://freebeacon.com/israel/exclusive-hamas-turns-gaza-hospitals-and-schools-into-torture-chambers-as-it-reestablishes-police-state-gazans-describe-horrific-interrogations-beatings/

 

Once this Middle East conflict is tamped down and somewhat settled, much attention will return to the US economy.  In the days before the COVID epidemic hit America, the US economy was simply roaring.  The cost of living was acceptable, there were plenty of jobs for those willing to work, and for those workers with ambition…there was plentiful upward mobility.  COVID and the Joe Biden Administration put an end to all of that. 

 

I personally believe that if the Iran conflict can be reasonably and responsibly ended, our economy will once again return to that pre-COVID state of high performance and opportunity.  But a huge part of that potential depends on our government…specifically the Executive and Legislative branches…gaining some semblance of fiscal sanity.  Our government must refrain from their arrogant approach of micro-managing all things economic and simply put the pieces in place to allow the awesome gears and machinery of capitalism and the free market to work.

 

A precursor to this discussion from five years ago shows how little things have actually changed: https://centerlineright.blogspot.com/2021/08/fiscal-reality-check.html

 

https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/can-the-normal-democratic-process-lead-to-deficit-reduction/

 

https://americanmind.org/memo/tariffs-built-to-last/

 

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/cpi-report-today-may-2026-inflation-iran-war-trump/

 

https://www.nationalreview.com/2026/06/social-security-insolvency-creeps-further-up/

 

https://reason.com/2026/06/11/social-security-is-going-bankrupt-because-its-benefits-are-too-generous/

 

I have long railed against the autocratic tendencies of our government, its unquenchable desire for power and authority, the far too many rascals that inhabit it, and the shameful way that we as citizens empower it to steal our constitutional rights and privileges.  I cannot repeat it too many times: Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.

 

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/fisa-section-702-expiring-congress-what-that-means/

 

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/house-vote-extension-fisa-702-spy-power-bill-pulte-uproar-trump/

 

https://amgreatness.com/2026/06/10/the-potemkin-ballot/

 

https://www.wsj.com/video/series/opinion-docs/wsj-opinion-the-lockdown-dissidents/179C024E-10D0-4428-AF47-2941CDB5CC83?st=k3HNnQ

 

Government overreach is not simply an American concern: https://jonathanturley.org/2026/06/10/merkel-receives-the-first-european-order-of-merit-and-repeats-call-for-crackdown-on-free-speech/

 

Our Constitution is the blueprint that should rule our three branches of government.  The last firewall between domestic anti-Americanism and the terms of that document is the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS).  There are those among us who would tear apart our Constitution and rebuild it, rather than work within its confines to help it evolve properly.  Our nation and its people must hold dear the Constitution and SCOTUS, for if we lose either or both…our country will cease to exist as we know it.  By their very design, the Executive and Legislative branches of our government will continue to be political circuses.  We cannot afford, as a nation, to permit our Constitution and SCOTUS to be dragged into that arena.

 

https://americanmind.org/salvo/our-revolutionary-constitution/

 

https://justthenews.com/government/courts-law/supreme-court-nears-end-term-several-high-profile-cases-still-pending


https://thefederalist.com/2026/06/16/supreme-court-to-hear-major-case-on-trump-admins-detention-of-illegal-aliens/

 

https://jonathanturley.org/2026/06/14/drinking-the-court-packing-kool-aid-buttigieg-joins-the-calls-to-take-over-the-supreme-court/

 

Just as the Democrat Party is wrestling with its factional demons, so is the Republican Party doing likewise.  As I have previously noted, the big difference between the two is the power and influence of the radical elements within each.  The Republican far right (neo-cons) is simply one of the many groups in the party that hold some…but not massive …influence.  In the Democrat Party, the far left (liberal progressives) is actually controlling the party’s leadership and dictating its agenda. 

 

This nation needs a strong and vital two-party system that features coexistence with statesmanlike disagreements on policy.  They need to be civil in discussion; reasonable in debate; and they need to share a common love and respect for this country.  That is not the current environment.  I fervently hope for the Democrat Party to pare down its radical elements and return to its Blue Dog roots.  This would be good for their Party and a good thing for our nation.

 

https://amgreatness.com/2026/06/12/a-conservative-audit-of-the-lefts-ruling-assumptions/

 

Here is one of the liberal progressive’s poster children: https://freebeacon.com/media/lesley-stahl-says-journalists-getting-fired-is-worse-than-child-trafficking-nazi-torture-dungeons/

 

https://americanmind.org/memo/dei-by-default/

 

https://freebeacon.com/democrats/socialist-operatives-behind-scandal-plagued-platner-and-squad-member-summer-lee-recruited-independent-dan-osborn-to-run-in-deep-red-nebraska/

 

https://reason.com/2026/06/12/graham-platner-signals-a-problem-for-democrats-and-the-rest-of-us/

 

President Donald John Trump is…if nothing else…an unconventional president.  His character and moral behavior has been, at times, undeniably reprehensible.  While living a life of privilege, he has been without a doubt quite accomplished in a material sense.  Unfortunately…his arrogant personality and his undisciplined rhetoric at times diminish the obvious wisdom and practicality of his many policy initiatives. 

 

As he approaches the midway point of his second term, one can reasonably question whether or not his policy assets will continue to outweigh his personal affronts.  While he was clearly essential to ending the idiotic and incompetent policies of the Obama/Biden Administrations, his continuing inability to subjugate his personality to presidential leadership concerns brings his chief executive performance into doubt.  One thing is for certain: He ain’t gonna change.  Love him or hate him…Trump is gonna be Trump.

 

His unconventional approach is at times refreshing and exciting: https://reason.com/2026/06/14/the-white-house-ufc-fight-is-the-perfect-event-for-the-present-not-the-past/

 

But the reality of father time is quite sobering: https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/80-year-olds-should-not-be-president/

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As the World Inexorably Turns

There is so much going on in the world today…where to start?   We’ve got gladiators on the White House lawn, crowds burning school buses in ...