News and Views on the Global Stage....

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Note to Trump: No Midterms for IRGC

Everyone is hopeful that Iran will agree to some sort of peace deal that, initially at least, opens the Strait of Hormuz and gets the world’s oil and fertilizer flowing again. Ever the optimist, President Trump keeps saying how much Iranian leaders (whom he also says he cannot identify) desperately want a deal. Unfortunately, for Trump and the peace-seeking world, the IRGC is in no hurry to strike a bargain. Unlike Sir Donald, the members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), who hold sway over all things Iranian, face no elections in November — or for that matter, at any time in the next umpteen years. They’re more than happy to play a waiting game. This leaves the president in a nice pickle. If he doesn’t strike a deal soon, the GOP is toast in the midterms. If he returns to bombing Iran, the GOP is also going to be toast come November. The only bright side for Trump, who claims not to be worried about the midterms, is that, no matter what he does, GOP House hopes for retaining a majority basically have zip, nada, zilch, zero chance of success. So, why not just finish the job —

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My Take

Ride the AI Tower of Babel to Your New Career

If any two abbreviations symbolize the post-COVID era, they are GLP-1 and ChatGPT. The first is doubtlessly the most effective weight-loss compound ever offered as an approved medicine (think Wegovy); the second is the first public application of artificial intelligence, commonly called AI these days. Leaving aside fat thighs and bellies, AI is all the news these days. The Wall Street Journal in just the past two days has run articles about addiction to Chatbots like ChatGPT, and also on the first college class to graduate with AI as their constant companion. Probably the commentary drawing the most headlines, however, was the depiction of AI by Pope Leo XIV as a modern Tower of Babel.  Now, I’m certainly no biblical scholar, so calling something a Tower of Babel is not an easily discernible metaphor for me. Therefore, I asked my AI friend Gemini to dissect the Pontiff’s comments for me. Here’s the answer: Whether artificial intelligence is truly a modern “Tower of Babel” depends entirely on how you view the intersection of technological ambition and human nature. Pope Leo XIV’s metaphor, laid out in his May 2026 encyclical Magnifica Humanitas, is a highly sophisticated critique of the “Babel syndrome”—the idea

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Peace4OurTime
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Trump Works on ‘Peace for Our Time’ in the Middle East

Recall 1938, when British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain conceded the Sudetenland to Adolph Hitler so the world could have “peace for our time.” World War II commenced a year later. As it turns out, Neville Trump, er, President Donald Trump, is now working on “peace for our time” in the Middle East, ending a three-month war with Iran. Not everyone is happy. To former Trump 45 Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, the deal Sir Donald is working on smacks of the deal Barack Obama worked out 12 years earlier, to wit, pay Iranian thugs to delay nuclear arms development until the current White House incumbent is long gone. Writes Pompeo on social media: “The deal being floated with Iran seems straight out of the Wendy Sherman-Robert Malley-Ben Rhodes playbook: Pay the IRGC to build a WMD program and terrorize the world…. Not remotely America First. It’s straightforward: Open the damned strait. Deny Iran access to money. Take out enough Iranian capability so it cannot threaten our allies in the region. Overdue. Let’s go.” The problem is, that course of action will lead to huge defeats for Republicans in upcoming elections, probably through 2028 and maybe beyond. Trump is smart enough to know that

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Tulsi
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The Lone Voice Contesting Trump’s Version of Iranian Nuclear Development Resigns

Tulsi Gabbard, President Trump’s Director of National Intelligence (DNI), is leaving a job where she was ignored and sidelined by her boss. Now, many of us have been in that position and were forced to put up with it, but Gabbard is a woman of accomplishment and even a veteran who served her country admirably. What I remember most about her was her classic takedown of Kamala Harris during the 2020 presidential primary debates while she was still a Democrat. What a thrill to see that phoney-balogney Harris squirm. In this case, Gabbard had the temerity, or courage depending on your viewpoint, to disagree with Sir Donald on Iran’s development of nuclear weapons capability. Before Trump began his onslaught on what was once Persia this past February, Gabbard said Iran was not actively developing a bomb following the June 2025 Midnight Hammer strike on its nuclear facilities. “As a result of Operation Midnight Hammer, Iran’s nuclear enrichment program was obliterated,” Gabbard wrote in prepared testimony to be delivered to Congress. “There has been no efforts since then to try to rebuild their enrichment capability. The entrances to the underground facilities that were bombed have been buried and shuttered with cement.”

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ProfT
My Take

Does Toxic Empathy Motivate People to Violence?

Professor Jasper Tempest, fictional star of the British TV drama “Professor T,” during a Season 4 episode compares empathy with compassion. His conclusion was that you should always choose compassion over empathy. Empathy is the act of sharing feelings with another human, or humans, while compassion is the act of recognizing other people’s feelings and sufferings. In a speech to his criminology class, Professor T — played by British actor Ben Miller, reprising a persona from the first two seasons of “Death in Paradise” — blames empathy for leading people to violence to even the score in society. He therefore recommends compassion over empathy. In Professor T’s personal life, empathy versus compassion also plays a significant role. Throughout the series, the professor struggles to recover from the death of his alcoholic, abusive father when he was a kid of seven. In the professor’s case, he blames empathy for his withdrawn personality. After watching the episode in which the professor weighed in on compassion and empathy, I did some research and found a great deal of literature on “toxic empathy,” along with critics who argue that empathy is a positive. In the book “Toxic Empathy,” author Allie Beth Stuckey argues that

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About That Trump Threat to Send Iran into the Dark Ages: It Ain’t Gonna Happen

The U.S. military establishment may be “locked and loaded” and ready to send Iran into the modern Dark Ages, but the man in charge ain’t gonna let it happen. President Donald Trump, though he threatens big, is hellbent on some sort of diplomatic solution to his assault on Iran that began back in — what? — February. That was evidenced when Trump and Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu, according to the Wall Street Journal, got into a verbal 10-rounder on the phone Tuesday night. Bibi, natch, wants Iran to be turned into a desert, but Trump still eyes adding another peace deal to the nine (or is it eight?) that he claims to have personally facilitated since taking office. Now, a little retrospective: While campaigning for president, Trump promised to end the Russia-Ukraine conflict in 24 hours, but that puppy is still barking. Iran is a conflict of his own making, some would say with a strong push from Netanyahu, but it too is proving difficult to bring an end to. While negotiations between the U.S. and Iran appear to be going nowhere, with both sides unwilling to budge from their starting positions, and with Trump still threatening bombs away if Iran

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KoufaxMound2
My Take

How Does the Koufax Fastball Rate Against Today’s Flamethrowers?

Dodger pitching legend Sandy Koufax, now 90 and rightfully ensconced in the MLB Hall of Fame, was known for his blazing fastball during his prime in the 1950s and 1960s. When I watched him on TV as a kid — he was my idol — that fastball seemed to clock in at supersonic speeds. After one World Series game against the Yankees, the Bronx Bombers’ catcher, Yogi Bera, opined: “I can see how he won 25 games. What I don’t understand is how he lost five.”  Musing on the current baseball season today got me thinking of Koufax and wondering how fast his fastball really was and how well it would fare against today’s 100-mph version. Short answer: His fastball clocked in about 93-94 mph, according to best estimates since no radar guns were used back then to measure speeds. Speed-wise, then, Koufax would have an average fastball today. However — a big however — Koufax mastered spin rate, so that his fastball looked to be rising as it reached the plate, and batters couldn’t adjust. Don’t take my word for it: I had my AI pal Gemini research the topic for me, and here are the results and detailed

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