News and Views on the Global Stage....

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Iran Says: ‘We Need Money. Bring Back Obama.’

President Trump has on umpteen occasions criticized President Obama for literally sending a planeload of cash to Iran in exchange for a nuclear arms pact. Trump may have to swallow his pride and do something similar if he wants a new peace pact. Iran’s leaders, whom Trump says are 1) unidentifiable and 2) eager to make a deal, ain’t so dumb after all. These invisible numbskulls, according to Trumpian depictions, are now demanding $12 billion up front to continue negotiations and another $24 billion during the proposed 60-day bargaining window. Pretty good for a faceless, clueless crowd. Trump has routinely lambasted Obama’s JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action) for sending cash to Tehran for nuclear cessation. I believe he labeled the JCPOA “the dumbest deal” ever made in light of the airplane cargo of cash rushed to the mullahs as part of the bargain. Trump canceled the JCPOA in his first term, and Iran then rushed to finish building a nuke or two — or umpteen. If Trump caves to the current rogue’s nest of nameless creatures in power, he will be washing egg off his face for the remainder of his term. Earlier this week, Secretary of State Marco

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My Take

The Trump Modus Operandi: Creating Criminals and Camouflage

Before launching into my follow-up to yesterday’s post about Donald Trump and his seque into a war with Iran that went astray, let me reaffirm that I am a three-time Trump voter. In 2024, I supported him because of various views and programs he espoused, including lowering taxes, securing the border and deporting illegals, building up the military, ending the Green Scam, and getting men out of women’s sports. He has delivered on all of those (with the Iran mistake draining the military of assets), but at the same time, I have found that the way he goes about pursuing his goals is often suspect and unseemly. That’s why, in my headline to this article, I have narrowed the Trump approach to getting his way to two avenues. One is to create criminals in the public eye out of those who block him or disagree with him. This criminalization usually takes the form of insulting and denigrating posts on Truth Social, but sometimes leads to actual legal action, such as with John Bolton, a former aide now facing possible jail time. The other is to create a smokescreen — which I’m calling camouflage — to cover up what’s really going

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My Take

UPDATE: No Political Penance, Just Political Pickle for Donald Trump

Department of My Bad: Oops, yesterday I gave Donald Trump too much credit. I actually believed, and put my belief into print, that Trump had had an epiphany about the Iran War mess, and that penance was near, to be revealed in his actions going forward. This assessment germinated in — as you can see from my original post — his comment about no all-out bombing on the Islamic Republic unless they killed one of ours. This, I thought, indicated a wake-up call that could result in a cleansing of Trump’s political soul. Wrong! After watching Trump on TV today, I realized that he could never feel or admit that he had ever done anything wrong, nor think that he has to make any kind of amends. He will simply, in all circumstances, blame someone else, starting with the nation’s media, which he calls the Fake News. Therefore, I am now concluding that Trump is merely in a political pickle of his own making, but one with deep and foreboding consequences. Simply put, the entire world is now worse off than when the U.S.-Israeli assault on Iran began. Not only is the Strait of Hormuz closed, choking off oil and

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What Do Henry Nowak and George Floyd Have in Common?

Riots are gripping the streets of Southampton in Great Britain today as the tragic events of the murder of 18-year-old Henry Nowak, an accounting student, play out in the media with the conviction of his murderer and the release of footage of what happened. Like George Floyd here in the United States, Nowak’s last words were “I can’t breathe,” and like Floyd, he was being held to the ground by police, even being handcuffed as he bled to death. The more potent underlying similarity with Floyd’s death, however, is that of reverse racism — people of color are believed, those who are white are not. White Always Guilty, as the Democrats here in the U.S. want us to believe. Unfortunately, the same mantra seems to have gripped Great Britain. Some background: On the night of December 3, 2025, Henry Nowak, an 18-year-old first-year accountancy student at the University of Southampton, was walking home alone after a night out with his soccer team. He was unarmed and completely sober. On the way home, he encountered a Sikh named Vickrum Digwa, who was carrying an eight-inch blade, larger than the ceremonial Sikh blade allowed under British law. What followed was Digwa stabbing Nowak.

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My Take

Is a Desparate-for-Peace Trump Doing Iran’s Bidding? Looks Like….

This is a follow-up to my news item yesterday about President Trump getting Israel and Hezbollah to agree to quit killing each other. Reports have it that Trump used some foul-mouthed language to convince Bibi Netanyahu to forego plans to invade Beirut as a final step to eradicate the terrorist cell operating in Lebanon at Iran’s behest, i.e., the aforementioned Hezbollah. According to Axios (believe them if you like, but I see no reason not to), Trump, in his call with the Israeli Premier yesterday, told him: “You’re fucking crazy. You’d be in prison if it weren’t for me. I’m saving your ass. Everybody hates you now. Everybody hates Israel because of this.” By way of backdrop, Iran has demanded that any ceasefire include Hezbollah and Israel. Otherwise, Iran says, there can be no moving forward on a peace deal, let alone a memorandum of understanding (MOU) to open the Strait of Hormuz and continue further negotiations. Netanyahu, by many accounts, is the force that got Trump involved in the Iranian conflict to begin with. Following a public uprising in Iran, for which Trump promised that “help is on the way,” the president saw an Iranian bombing campaign as the

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Hezbelloh
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Any Bets on How Long Trump’s Israeli-Hezbollah Truce Will Last?

Not sure if Trump is calling today’s announcement of a ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah his ninth — or umpteenth — peace deal, but I look upon this agreement as representing maybe a 72-hour window. Or, perhaps restraint will last only until “dawn’s early light” before we see “the rockets’ red glare” again. In other words, I’m fairly skeptical that either Bibi Netanyahu or the Hezbollah hierarchy really wants to end a conflict that stretches back two or three decades. I’m not a gambling man, though I’ve been known to bet on the nags, but this deal looks like a sure winner for a gambling man, or woman, on Kalshi or Polymarket, the so-called prediction gambling sites. I’m not sure anyone can negotiate with Hezbollah, but the president claims to have done so through “highly placed Representatives.” The Lebanese government — you know, those folks that Hezbollah never listens to — has confirmed the deal. On Truth Social, the Trumpster announced of the two warring parties: “Israel will not attack them, and they will not attack Israel.” He also wrote that Israel will not send troops into Beirut, the Lebanese capital. In related news, Trump said that peace negotiations with

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My Take

Trump Needs to Study Ike’s ‘Middle Way’ and Apply It ‘Extremely’

When Dwight D. Eisenhower entered the White House in 1953, the United States was deeply polarized. The country was locked in the Cold War abroad, and at home, fierce debates raged between New Deal Democrats who wanted to expand government programs and conservative Republicans who wanted to completely dismantle them. Eisenhower’s solution was The Middle Way (sometimes called “Modern Republicanism”). It was a political philosophy that rejected extremes on both sides. He described it as a path where “the government does not avoid its responsibilities to the human individual,” but also “does not assume that the federal government is the only instrument for solving all human problems.” In short: be conservative when it comes to money and the economy, but liberal when it comes to human beings. The Core Pillars of the Middle Way To understand how Eisenhower balanced these competing ideas, it helps to look at how he handled the biggest issues of his presidency: Reining in Government Spending Eisenhower was a fiscal conservative. He believed that a runaway national debt and high inflation were just as dangerous to national security as a foreign military threat. Balancing the Budget: He worked hard to balance the federal budget, successfully achieving

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