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Gotta Love It: Stephen A. and Sir Donald Squaring Off

A potential 2028 presidential candidate, who now claims he wants only to be involved in the debates, is blaming Donald Trump for the New York Knicks’ Monday night loss to the San Antonio Spurs. ESPN sportscaster Stephen A. Smith, never one short of words, is blaming another media big mouth, President Trump, for causing his hometown basketball team’s loss — just by showing up! According to Smith pre-game, Trump has “got no business here tonight. It has nothing to do with politics. It was everything to do with the fervor that exists around the New York Knicks and he is disrupting everything the Knicks have been vibing with.” Trump, of course, shot back with his overused insults at someone who disagrees with him. “I think he’s a nice guy, but you need a certain aptitude to run for president,” Trump said. “You need a high IQ. I’m not sure that Stephen has that. I don’t think he does, actually.” Smith would probably make a great centrist in the Oval Office, but he has disavowed actually wanting the job. What he wants, he told Fox’s Sean Hannity, is to be involved in the debates leading up to the 2028 presidential nominations.

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gpt-image-2_Draw_a_detailed_map_of_the_Middle_East_with_flames_engulfing_the_entire_region_s-0
My Take

Is the Donald-Bibi Middle Eastern Powerdkeg About to Explode?

We have all heard the saying about the “best laid plans of mice and men,” but how about the best laid plans of Donald Trump and Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu — their scheme to reshape the Middle East into a terrorism-free, Iran-neutralized region? Oops… the “best laid plans” of anyone can indeed “go awry.” The Middle East is now a mess. Netanyahu always had his eye on the prize, the elimination of Iran as a threat. He found an ally in Trump, who became like the drunken sailor of yore after his overnight success in Venezuela in bringing down a ruling government in a few hours flat with no casualties. The latest incidents involving Iran, Israel, and the U.S. reveal that the Middle East has indeed been changed, but not for the better. The whole region is now in crisis and could go up in flames over the slightest provocation. Consider these happenings: This past week, Israel bombed a Hezbollah command center in Beirut, and in response, Iran sent missiles into Israel. Trump tried to settle matters, but as before with the Iranian ceasefire, there is now only a facade of spoken restraint. Israel is still carrying out operations in Lebanon.

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TariffsPier
My Take

The Trump Tariff Addiction: What the Cost?

Tariffs may have worked well back in America’s great manufacturing days under President William McKinley, but a couple of decades later, the 16th Amendment shifted revenue collection to taxation of the American public. To his credit, Trump 47 did lower a whole slew of taxes in his “Big Beautiful Bill,” but since then, he has also inflicted tariff mania on the world with the goal of bringing back manufacturing to the U.S. His April “Independence Day” announcement of new tariffs was later ruled unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court, but that didn’t deter the man. He then turned to Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 to impose a 10-percent, across-the-board tariff on all nations. A federal court recently struck that down, and it was already limited to 150 days from the outset. Now he’s using Section 301, which allows him to impose tariffs in response to “unfair foreign acts, policies, or practices affecting U.S. commerce.” Under 301, he’s targeting countries that fail to “effectively enforce” bans against products created by using “forced labor.”  He has singled out six entities — Canada, Ecuador, the European Union, Indonesia, Mexico, and Pakistan — for a 10-percent tariff. All other nations will

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Apache
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Drone to the Rescue, But What Next in Iran Conflict?

An unmanned drone rescue boat saved two Apache helicopter pilots in the Gulf of Oman after Iranian drones, the flying type, took down their craft. Both men are safe and recovering from the incident. The broader implication is that President Trump’s repeated prediction that a deal with Iran is just a day or two away is just more camouflage for the administration in its mistaken war effort. Whenever Trump makes his day-or-two prediction, Iran does something to set the record straight. In the past two weeks, it withdrew from negotiations, then demanded $36 billion in blood money to continue the talks, then bombed Israel, and now has taken down a U.S. copter. Trump might be getting the message. In a post following the pilot rescue operation, the president said that “the United States must, of necessity, respond to this attack.” I agree, but let’s do it big time: Take out the current leaders and bomb the crap out of everything. Send a message that “your stupid negotiating tactics” are toast. Will our response, if it comes, be big time? Doubtful, probably just a strike here or there. Worse, as matters currently stand, the U.S. is trying to determine if the

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vd99w
My Take

Will Trump Be Cheered or Jeered at Tonight’s Knicks Game?

My guess: Boos will overpower yeas, just as Spurs will overwhelm the Knicks in tonight’s NBA Championship Game to be attended by President Donald Trump. Now, Trump is a native New Yorker, and he did as much to transform New York City as probably anyone in the past half-century, but he also lost two costly legal battles there. A fraud charge, based on a law that didn’t apply and whose statute of limitations had run out, was quickly approved by a jury that included two attorneys. The other was a sexual harassment lawsuit, which was made possible only because New York State lifted its civil statutes of limitations for one year, and that yielded something like an $88-million judgment. (My Opinion: If he actually sexually approached E. Jean Carroll, as was alleged, he should be ashamed. She wouldn’t be worth a free glance in a bar.) Security is tighter than ever around Madison Square Garden. Fans are already irate because the outside watch party has been moved blocks away due to security concerns. One more reason for boos over cheers.

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Beirut2
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Israel Bombs Beirut: All Bets Are Off!

On June 1, President Trump announced a truce (of one sort or another) involving Lebanon, Hezbollah, and Israel. Basically, all sides would cease and desist, with an emphasis on no strikes on Beirut by Israel. In a post that day, I predicted the deal would last no more than 72 hours. Indeed, Hezbollah rejected the deal on first blush. There were skirmishes almost immediately, but now six days later, or 144 hours basically, Israel has indeed struck Beirut, targeting what it said was a Hezbollah command center in the south of the Lebanese capital. Iran in response launched three waves of missiles toward Israel and announced it might not stop. U.S. military bases might also be hit. Anyway, my 72-hour bet on how long the ceasefire would last — which could have been made only on a prediction market site — would have been a bust if Beirut were the trigger for when the pact was broached. After the strikes on Israel, Iran’s state media issued a warning that if Israel “expands its attacks on that region or responds to Iran’s actions, it will begin with devastating strikes against the regime and its supporters.” Meanwhile, Trump continues to insist that

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RuthTV
My Take

How Would Babe Ruth Fare Against Today’s Pitchers?

The only person I know who could answer my question — “How would Babe Ruth fare against today’s pitching?” — is my AI friend Gemini. What follows is his answer (illustration courtesy of my Grok subscription, close but not that great a resemblance to The Babe). HINT: Either as a bench-warming bum or Aaron Judge-esque…. Read on: This is one of the ultimate baseball debates. To answer it fairly, we have to look at it through two different lenses: dropping 1927 Babe Ruth straight out of a time machine onto a modern field, versus giving him access to modern sports science, nutrition, and training. Here is how the physics and analytics break down the Bambino’s chances. Scenario A: The Time Machine (0 to 15 Home Runs) If you plucked Babe Ruth out of the 1920s and put him in a batter’s box tonight, he would look completely lost. That isn’t a knock on his legendary talent; it’s just a reflection of how much the physics of pitching have evolved. The Velocity Shock: In the 1920s, the average fastball sat around 85–88 mph. Rare elite pitchers like Walter Johnson could touch the mid-90s, but it was uncommon. Today, the average Major

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