News and Views on the Global Stage....

DroneFleet
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Iranian Suicide Drones Spotted in Cuba: Are They Trump Bound?

Jeb Bush, whose political career vanished during debates with Donald Trump in 2015-2016, is now warning that Iran has stationed a fleet of Kamikaze drones in Cuba. This development comes on the heels of a warning from Israel that Iran has hatched new plots to assassinate President Trump. Another interesting twist to all this is that yesterday, when Trump was scheduled to depart Turkey after the NATO Summit, the Secret Service had him fly home in the old Air Force One. The new Qatari-gifted Trumpcraft was deemed too penetrable to foreign attacks when compared to its predecessor. Was this decision borne of the news out of Israel? The fleet of drones in Cuba could well serve both nations’ interests. Iran, of course, has lost its Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, due to Trump-sanctioned air bombardment. And Cuba is currently suffering not only an ongoing nationwide blackout, but also severe deprivation, because of Trump’s ordered sanctioning of gasoline supplies to the island nation. At an event called United Against Nuclear Iran, Bush said Cuba has 300 Shahed drones, which can be loaded with up to 110 pounds of explosives and fly 1,500 miles. Cuba, of course, is just 90 miles from

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Gavel on wooden table with USA flag. High quality photo
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Filling in the Blanks of the Ratified U.S. Constitution Part II: The Second Amendment

When we argue about the Second Amendment today, we usually talk about gun control, personal safety, or the right to own firearms for hunting and self-defense. But here’s the thing: none of that is what the founders were actually debating when they wrote it. The real fight was about something completely different—and understanding it provides perspective on how we read those famous 27 words that, as interpreted by successive Supreme Courts, have indeed come to give citizens the right to defend themselves and their rights with weapons, when circumstances so warrant. The Fight Nobody Talks About Anymore Picture this: It’s 1787. The Revolutionary War ended just four years ago. The thirteen states are trying to figure out how to work together as one country, and they’re writing a brand-new Constitution to make it happen. But there’s a massive problem everyone’s arguing about: Who gets to control the guns? Not your personal hunting rifle. We’re talking about military power—armies, organized fighting forces, the ability to wage war or put down rebellions. Should that power belong to the new national government in the capital? Or should it stay with individual states? This was the real Second Amendment debate. It was a power

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Scum
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A Trump for the Ages Speaks His Mind: ‘They’re Scum!’

President Trump has certainly made headlines at the NATO Summit in Ankara, Turkey. When questioned about the recent skirmishes with Iran and what effect the ongoing military standoff has on negotiations, Trump said of his Iranian counterparts, “They’re scum.” He said the memorandum of understanding (MOU) has run its course. “I think it’s over. I don’t want to deal with them anymore; they’re scum…. They’re led by sick people, and they’re vicious, violent people,” he told reporters. “There’s something wrong with them. They’re cuckoo. As far as I’m concerned, it’s [the ceasefire is] over.” The president’s comments come after Iran attacked three commercial vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz, and the U.S. retaliated. The administration has also pulled its authorization for Iran to export oil, though it will honor previously granted passage rights. As for continuing negotiations with Iran, Trump said  his team could continue the talks “if they want,” though it’s “a waste of time.” Oil prices immediately jumped after his comments and the U.S. air strikes on Iran, including on Kharg Island. The stock market also tanked. Despite all those domestic and international costs, let me say that this is the Trump I love and voted for. He

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SpeechFree
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Filling in the Blanks of the Ratified U.S. Constitution Part I: The First Amendment

The creation of the First Amendment wasn’t a moment of sudden, harmonious inspiration. Instead, it was born out of intense political pragmatism, fierce debate, and a deep-seated suspicion of centralized power. When the US Constitution was drafted in 1787, it actually did not include the First Amendment—or any Bill of Rights at all. Why It Didn’t Exist at First The Framers of the Constitution, led by figures like Alexander Hamilton and James Madison, initially argued that a Bill of Rights was completely unnecessary. Their logic was simple: the new federal government was only being given specific, limited powers. Since the Constitution didn’t explicitly give Congress the power to censor speech or establish a national religion, Hamilton argued, why write a rule saying they couldn’t do it? They feared that listing specific rights might imply that any right left off the list wasn’t protected. The “Anti-Federalist” Backlash This didn’t sit well with a large segment of the American public, known as the Anti-Federalists. Having just fought a war to escape the tyranny of the British Crown, they were terrified of creating a new, distant, and overly powerful central government. They looked at the draft of the Constitution and saw a document

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DSRB
Currently...

NATO Countries Announce Creation of an International Bank of War

Okay, they’re not really going to call it that, but a coalition of NATO countries is looking to open a bank that can guarantee loans to defense contractors. The problem is, though NATO countries are beefing up their war readiness, manufacturers of weapons and war materiel are finding it hard to secure financing from normal banks. European laws restrict banks from dealing in pornography and tobacco (defense contractors all smoke and watch porn videos at work, evidently). Thus a loan-guaranteeing entity could ease the conscience of the banking establishment. The new entity is actually going to be called the Defense, Security and Resilience Bank, or DSRB. Already, Canada, Luxembourg and seven other countries, including Turkey and Ukraine, have announced their support for the DSRB. Contractors are under increased pressure as European nations, per Donald Trump’s mandate, are increasing defense spending, the goal being 5 percent of each year’s budget. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, a former Bank of England governor, is the impetus behind the venture, which so far has attracted only middle-level NATO countries, not the biggies like Great Britain and Germany. 

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XiTrump
My Take

Kowtow: The Presidential Posture Toward Superpower Leaders

President Trump’s reverential treatment of superpower leaders became painfully evident when he greeted madman Vladimir Putin in Alaska to resolve the war in Ukraine. He not only rolled out the red carpet — literally — but he also fawned all over the Russian dictator. Until the very end…. When the peace summit, so-called, was over, Trump looked defeated. He immediately assigned further negotiations to Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy and receded into his White House cubicle, aka Oval Office, upon returning to D.C. Trump’s posture toward those in power was even more evident on his visit with China’s Xi Jinping. When it was over, he immediately put on hold an arms sale to Taiwan after Xi warned him not to interfere in the island’s future. Taiwan should be worried. Xi has indicated 2027 is the year of the proposed takeover. When it comes to our “weakling” allies of many decades in Europe, Trump has no problem walking all over them, even pulling the plug on American NATO forces on the mainland. He last month completely alienated his sole European ally — Italy’s Prime Minister Georgia Meloni — when he publicly said she “begged” him for a photo op. Trump is now in

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SenateYore2
History

How the States Forced Congress to Give Up Control of the Senate

By the early 1900s, the United States Senate had become a national embarrassment. Seats sat vacant for months—sometimes years—because state legislatures couldn’t agree on whom to appoint. Corporate interests, particularly railroad and mining magnates, openly bribed state legislators to install sympathetic senators, earning the chamber its notorious reputation as the “Millionaires’ Club.” And perhaps most perversely, state legislative races—meant to address local concerns—had been completely hijacked by national politics, with voters choosing their representatives based solely on which U.S. senator candidate they promised to support. This wasn’t what the Framers had envisioned when they wrote Article I, Section 3 of the Constitution in 1787, establishing that each state’s two senators would be “chosen by the Legislature thereof.” The system was designed to protect states’ rights and serve as a deliberate check against what the Founders feared as “popular passion.” But by the late 19th century, that elegant constitutional mechanism had collapsed under the weight of its own contradictions. The dysfunction reached its nadir in 1905, when Delaware’s legislature became so hopelessly gridlocked that the state went entirely unrepresented in the U.S. Senate. It wasn’t an isolated incident. Across the country, legislative deadlocks routinely left senate seats empty, depriving states of

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