Tuesday, June 23, 2026

The Mind and Brilliance of Alexis de Tocqueville, Part One

The Mind and Brilliance of Alexis de Tocqueville, Part One

The Mind and Brilliance of Alexis de Tocqueville, Part One
AP Photo/Angelina Katsanis

Most of you have heard of Alexis de Tocqueville, the Frenchman who visited America in the 1830s and wrote a two-volume classic, Democracy in America, about his findings. De Tocqueville was an incredibly brilliant man, and I’d like to share with readers a little of his genius. Like our Founding Fathers, he had a solid grasp of history, human nature, and great, eternal spiritual truths. Here are a few of his thoughts.

     1. “The American Republic will endure until the day Congress discovers that it can bribe the public with the public's money.”

I’ve made this point so many times in my writings that my readers might be getting tired of it. I’ve quoted Benjamin Franklin to the same effect: “When the people find they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic.” And historian Sir Alexander Fraser Tytler: “A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves largesse from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most benefits from the public treasury with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy.” Here I simply wish to demonstrate that Alexis de Tocqueville understood the same common-sense truth. I find it interesting that he said that Congress would bribe the people with their own money. The man was honest. That is exactly what the corrupt Congress is doing today, and the government is $39+ trillion in debt because of it. We learn nothing from great minds, but are enamored by idiots.

     2. I think this second quote from de Tocqueville is funny: “I do not know if the people of the United States would vote for superior men if they ran for office, but there can be no doubt that such men do not run.”

De Tocqueville wrote in the 1830s when America actually still had some pretty good men in public office; probably a step down from our Founders, but far superior to nearly anything we have today. I wonder (no, actually, I don’t) what de Tocqueville would think of U.S. Democrat Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (NY-14), Jasmine Crockett, U.S. Democrat Rep. Maxine Waters (CA-43), and the 533 other members of Congress that currently plague the American nation. Superior? Don’t make me laugh.

The American people appear to be diligently searching rubbish bins and toilet bowls for people to run for office today. We could (and should) tell them, resoundingly, “NO!” But then, read the first quote above again.

     3. This next quote has some brilliant subtleties that really need an entire article to analyze. Maybe later. Here is the quote: “Democracy extends the sphere of individual freedom, socialism restricts it. Democracy attaches all possible value to each man; socialism makes each man a mere agent, a mere number. Democracy and socialism have nothing in common but one word: equality. But notice the difference: while democracy seeks equality in liberty, socialism seeks equality in restraint and servitude.”

Socialism, or at least socialistic ideas, has existed all through history, and de Tocqueville (as well as our Founding Fathers) was aware of, and rejected, them. Notice that de Tocqueville talked about “democracy” in opposition to “socialism.” Now, it’s important to understand that the Frenchman understood certain limitations of democracy (point number 2 above implies such). A “virtuous democracy” (or republic) a la our Founding Fathers, would be in view here. But given that kind of democracy, de Tocqueville’s analysis is sheer genius.

Democracy looks at the individual, at “individual freedom” in de Tocqueville’s term. Socialism sorts men into groups, classes, collectives (“agents”, “numbers”, not individuals). Socialism is not just an economic theory; it is also a way of organizing a society. And that organization is “collectively,” not “individually.” Individualism is the enemy of the collective; socialism always has an “enemy.” In the 20th-century communist, socialist countries, the enemy was “rightists,” “capitalist roaders,” “anti-revolutionaries”—in other words, peasants, etc., who wanted their own land and basically just wanted to be left alone to live their lives as best they could. Socialism can’t allow that; people (farms) must be “collectivized,” as they were in the Soviet Union and China. Individual freedom leads to private property, which is the bane of Marxism (and socialism).

In America, the Democrat Party has accepted socialism. They look at Americans in groups, collectives—blacks and other “minorities,” women, homosexuals, transgenders, DEI—any way they can deny individualism and sort people into units to whom they can give certain benefits (see point number one above again, please), and thus restrict individualism. Black people are not individuals to Democrats; they are members of the “group” to be exploited for the gain of socialists. And the enemy, of course, is “white supremacy” (white men). The only individual “liberty” the Democratic Party believes in is not true liberty, but licentiousness, and even then, it is “group” licentiousness—abortion, homosexuality, transgenderism, promiscuity, etc. Individuals have no way of rising above the “group.” The Democrat Party has no concept of “virtuous liberty (or democracy)”. 

De Tocqueville’s last point is also exquisite. (Virtuous) democracy and socialism do have one word in common: equality. But while to democratic individualism, “equality” means “equality of opportunity,” to socialism, “equality” means “equality of results.” And the latter can only happen under government (forced) redistribution of existing resources. And since only individuals can create the resources necessary for a society to become truly wealthy (freedom is necessary for such, and government’s vested interest is always to restrict freedom as much as possible), it is not surprising that the typical socialist country does indeed have equality—an equality of poverty, oppression, and misery. Look at America’s big cities to see where the Democrat Party’s “socialism” has had its obvious (and frankly, to Democrats, desired) effects. Control, not freedom. That is socialism vs. virtuous democracy.

More brilliance from de Tocqueville forthcoming.

https://townhall.com/columnists/marklewis/2026/06/20/the-mind-and-brilliance-of-alexis-de-tocqueville-part-one-n2677972?utm_source=thdailyvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl&utm_content=ncl-JpxPVUYedw&utm_term=&_nlid=JpxPVUYedw&_nhids=nc3loIaEt4a7ls

Why Trump Signed the MOU — and What’s Going to Happen When All That Iranian Oil Hits the Marketplace

Why Trump Signed the MOU — and What’s Going to Happen When All That Iranian Oil Hits the Marketplace

X/The White House

Tales of Deceptive PR, Chapter 26: About fifteen years ago, I worked in-house for a billionaire who had just bought his own private club in Tampa Bay. The bayside property had been in and out of bankruptcy, and the billionaire hoped to rebrand it as exclusive, ultra-elite, and high-end.

The trouble was that the club had embarrassingly low, dirt-cheap membership rates because it was so desperate for members. It directly undercut our desired branding.

So I had the club create a brand-spanking-new “international corporate” membership category that cost foreign businesses $1 million a year. 

Nobody ever paid for an “international corporate” membership, of course. (No foreign businesses were club members!) But that wasn’t the point: I just wanted to be able to tell the media that club membership rates ranged from surprisingly affordable to $1 million annually.

Technically, I didn’t lie — but I deliberately created a false impression. I used a big, impressive number to distract our target audience.

Today, the exact same strategy is at play with the just-revealed U.S.-Iranian memorandum of understanding (MOU), and the shocking number that has tongues wagging, the $300 billion Iranian investment fund.

It’s a huge number. Enormous! It dwarfs the billions in President Barack Obama’s 2015 deal. And because money is a fungible commodity, the $300 billion could be spent on anything — weapons, terrorism, you name it.

Except that’s not at all how President Donald Trump’s deal is structured.

When President Obama airlifted billions of paper dollars into Iran, the mullahs could do whatever they wanted with it. The money was theirs; they 100% controlled it. 

In Trump’s deal, that doesn’t happen.

From Reuters:

The new fund is a private investment vehicle, not a reconstruction or reparations programme and will not include any government ⁠money or grants, the source said, adding that companies based in the U.S., the Gulf Arab states, Asia, South America and Africa have agreed to commit financing.

Investments pledged span energy, logistics, manufacturing and transport, the source said.

U.S. President Donald Trump pushed back on Wednesday against any characterisation of the fund as a U.S. investment. "We're not investing, we're not putting up 10 cents," he said, adding that he was not asking Gulf countries to invest either. [emphasis added]

The first sentence is key: In a reconstruction or reparations deal, the only metric that matters is the amount you spend. If you offer someone $1 million for reconstruction or reparations, you cut a check and move on. What he spends the money on is none of your business.

But this isn’t a reconstruction or reparations program. It’s an investment fund. 

And implicit to an investment fund is the ROI — your return on investment.

Investments aren’t charity. Instead, they’re an opportunity for investors to make more money. And if you’re an investor, your most meaningful metric is the ROI: You put some money in to get even more money out.

After weeks of American and Israeli military attacks, Iran has already absorbed between $1.5 trillion and $2 trillion in damages. (And that’s excluding the loss of revenue from oil seizures, sanctions, and the U.S. blockade. Plus all the missiles, drones, and hardware it’s already wasted.)

So if Iran behaves — and foreign investors think they can carve up Iran with sweetheart business deals — from America’s perspective, there’s far more upside than downside. Carve that sucker up!

In fact, if we can’t achieve regime change, this is probably our best long-term solution.

Worst case scenario: Iran sticks to the agreement juuuust long enough for foreign investors to spend billions of dollars — but then nationalizes those projects, steals from investors, and reallocates the money for terrorism, weapons, or nuclear development. 

And that’s a legitimate concern. 

But since the $300 billion won’t be spent simultaneously, Iran can’t steal all the money — that’s impossible. (The moment the first project is nationalized, all foreign investments will cease.) But yes, there’s still a chance for theft, graft, and misappropriation.

Presumably, the wording of the still-unfinished Iran-U.S. peace deal will close this loophole. (And just as presumably, investors will understand that investing in Tehran has obvious risk factors, and their terms will reflect that reality: The greater the risk, the more onerous the lender’s terms; that’s usually how investments work.)

Best case scenario: Foreign investors get their hooks deep into Iran, the mullahs participate in the profiteering, and the new Iranian government prefers this cozier status quo to the old one with large craters, rampant poverty, and a dead Supreme Leader. Iran honors the peace agreement, foregoes nuclear development, stops funding terrorism, and is gradually integrated into the family of normal nations.

These investments, after all, are contingent on Iran’s behavior: If the mullahs want the money, they must behave.

Will it work? Maybe, maybe not. But to dismiss the idea as dead-on-arrival is unfair and inaccurate.

I’m also unpersuaded by MOU critics who say we’re “rewarding” Iran for closing the Strait of Hormuz. Not that closing the Strait was a good thing (it wasn’t), but personally, I’d much rather Iran saber-rattle by threatening shipping than by dividing atoms. If one of the Iran War’s long-term legacies is Iran pivoting from nuclear blackmail to shipping blackmail, so be it.

In hindsight, it seems that President Trump had a two-prong Iran plan all along: The first part was to overwhelm Iran with military force, kill its leaders, decapitate the government, and see if regime change could be achieved without any U.S. ground troops. It was the “go big or go home” philosophy — and we rolled the dice to see what would happen.

But the regime didn’t fall. (And based on Trump’s decisions, it’s clear that U.S. intelligence agencies no longer believe regime change is in the cards.)

So our president — who’s transactional by nature — opted for the second plan: Apply maximum pressure with bombs, missiles, and Truth Social posts, destroy as many Iranian military and/or nuclear targets as you can on your own, and then negotiate the best possible peace deal.

The way Trump sees it, the American people lack the patience for a longer Iran War — and we definitely aren’t clamoring for U.S. boots on the ground. The polls are what they are; it’s a losing political issue that could cost the GOP the midterms.

But y’know what could win the GOP the midterms? A dramatic turnaround with the economy — i.e., finally solving the Biden Affordability Crisis — and letting the American people feel all the glorious benefits of falling prices before Election Day.

While everyone was focusing on what Iran gains (and/or tracking the bitter flame-wars between Republican hawks, Groypers, and isolationists), the bigger story was being ignored: A remarkable glut of Iranian oil is about to hit the global market!

Iran now has a ridiculous amount of oil to sell. Because of the war, sanctions, and the U.S. blockade, all that oil’s been sitting on a shelf, getting stockpiled. And if Iran gets slapped with sanctions again, the oil goes back on the shelf.

Thus, Iran is heavily incentivized to sell its oil ASAP — and flood the market to offset all the revenue it lost. (And if doing so lowers the price for Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the U.A.E., and the OPEC states that sided against it, too bloody bad.)

This means that — just in time for the midterms — oil prices are going to crash! 

Everything that’s shipped by truck, ship, or plane will be cheaper. And as inflation drops, the new Fed Chair, Kevin Warsh, will have a free hand to fulfill one of Trump’s biggest economic goals: lowering the interest rate.

Prediction: When the Federal Reserve meets again on July 28 — a mere 98 days prior to Election Day — interest rates will FINALLY be cut. The collapsing oil prices will negate the Fed’s (earlier) fear of inflation.

And that’s enough time for the American people to feel the benefit!

The 2026 midterms won’t rise or fall on the Iran War. Despite all the teeth-gnashing, the American people don’t care that much about it: Economic concerns still reign supreme. We care about gas, groceries, and household goods.

It’s (still) the economy, stupid!

The least-charitable interpretation of the MOU is eliciting gasps, curses, and moans from the MAGAverse — with the $300 billion payoff serving as Exhibit A. But that money doesn’t belong to Iran, and the MOU was never intended to be the finished document. They’re both a means to an end —and then, perhaps, to a new beginning.

And so was the Iran War.

President Trump had to thread the needle between an unpopular conflict, a vulnerable economy, a still-standing Iranian regime, and the 2026 midterms. Whether or not he struck the right balance remains to be seen — but the short-term political benefits for the GOP are considerable. Ignore them at your own peril.

Even if you hate the deal, you must acknowledge that it’s reasonable and logical… and it just might be the best deal that could’ve been brokered without losing the political farm. 

Eating bad press in June so you can make a winning economic argument in November? It’s actually very smart.

https://pjmedia.com/scott-pinsker/2026/06/18/why-trump-signed-the-mou-and-whats-going-to-happen-when-all-that-iranian-oil-hits-the-marketplace-n4954109?utm_source=pjmediavip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl_pm

Say What?

Say What?

Say What?
AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda

President Trump and his sidekick are saying some very strange things of late.

There are some people for whom you truly feel sorry. They mean well, but sometimes they are so clueless that they don’t realize how much damage they bring upon themselves. An organization that brought Gazans to Israeli towns for work had several of its members murdered. Instead of learning from October 7, it simply relocated its activities to the West Bank. Then there is James Wolfensohn, who in 2005 raised $14 million to buy the Israeli hot houses in Gaza. Israeli farmers made millions selling bug-free leafy greens to Europe, and Wolfensohn figured that the Palestinians could use the facilities as a source of income as they took over Gaza from Israel. Within three days of Israel’s departure, the hot houses had been taken apart by wild Gazans, and the entire project went kaput.

JD Vance and Donald Trump remind me of Wolfensohn: they think that they can create peace from violent and hateful people. The outcomes will be the same, but only on a much larger and more destructive scale. The U.S. is presently in the process of giving Iran a third of a trillion dollars and Israel the finger. Qatar flak Witkoff and Saudi friend Kushner apparently helped birth the destructive now-signed MOU and retreat from victory. Donald Trump joins Barack Obama and Joe Biden in losing to Iran with claims of winning the negotiation. Why would JD Vance do a photo op with the butcher of Tehran?

The president and his VP have decided to play tag-team as they give Iran billions, which will go to terror and not to rebuilding the country. Some strange recent comments are included below.

From the president:

- Iran needs some ballistic missiles like its neighbors. Hezbollah drones just fall in the desert and do nothing. The dozens killed in Israel by Iranian missiles and Hezbollah drones were unavailable for comment.

- Israel would not exist without the U.S. and without Donald Trump.

- Israel has killed too many people in Lebanon as it continues to lose soldiers to Hezbollah.

- Israel may have starved people in Gaza, though there is no evidence of it.

- Israel should let Syria deal with Hezbollah (despite Erdogan telling al-Jolani not to do so).

- Bibi is f***ing crazy.

- Bibi can be very difficult.

From the vice president:

- Bibi has “got some things wrong” but is a partner.

- Israel will eventually come around to the Iran agreement, though “hawks” want every Iranian dead. Never heard anyone suggest the same.

- Vance said World War II ended in negotiations; it ended in unconditional surrender.

There may be arguments that some of the comments above are technically true. The U.S. gives Israel a lot of military aid, which it uses for its survival against Muslim terrorist groups and states. The U.S. also gets a lot of benefits from Israel, and one might believe that without Israeli tech and combat experience, the number of dead soldiers in Caracas and Iran might have been a lot higher. The question is, why are the two top executive officials of the United States turning against Israel and attacking her and her prime minister after the two countries worked seamlessly during the recent Iran War? Pete Hegseth, Marco Rubio, and even President Trump said that Israel was a model ally. What changed?

President Trump has fallen into the same rut in which Joe Biden and Barack Obama were born. They concluded that they can be friends with big Iran, with its 90 million people. They look at a map and believe that being in alliances with treacherous countries like Qatar, Turkey, and psychotic Iran will be good for the U.S. I had thought that Trump was immune to money due to his wealth and experience living in opulence. And maybe for garden-variety billionaires like those who try to buy American politicians, Donald Trump is unaffected. A Zuckerberg or Cuban cannot buy him. But apparently Qatar is in a whole new league with its “$1.2 trillion in investments.” And even though this Islamist country is pushing the Muslim Brotherhood in K-12 and universities, Trump always praises their emir and speaks highly of this terror-supporting country. Donald Trump, like Barack Obama, has decided to go for a pro-Iran agreement so as to make Iran a new friend of the United States. Maybe when they fire their nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles at Washington, they’ll swaddle them in velvet as a token of appreciation.

Countries turn against Israel because she is a small country, and how much does she really have to offer? Yes, she has a powerful tech sector, and military sales went over $19 billion last year. But support for Israel should be based on Israel being right. Israel is a democracy where none others exist. She guarantees rights for minorities, including those who hate Jews. Israel is not a perfect country, and one can certainly criticize it on legitimate grounds. But it is far better in every way than Iran, Qatar, and Turkey. Iran mowed down 42,000 of its citizens. Israel might send in the water cannons and horses against the ultra-Orthodox protesting universal conscription. There is a very real chance that Bibi Netanyahu will not win the elections this fall. Will the Qatari emir face elections? Does Egypt’s al-Sisi or Syria’s al-Jolani expect to be deposed by a democratic vote? Israel is a good country whose values are all but identical to those of the United States. Israel’s enemies tend to be the same as those of the U.S. Hezbollah killed a lot of Americans before it began to kill Israelis regularly.

The president and vice president have tired of Bibi Netanyahu and Israel. They think that they, like Obama, can bring Iran around to become a “normal” country. An advisor to Winston Churchill said that the British leader told him that if they would treat “Uncle Joe” (Stalin) like a member of the club, maybe he would come to behave like a member of the club. Stalin did not change but took all of the goodwill and countries granted to him by Churchill. The Iranians are tied to their religious belief that they must destroy Israel and the West. The $300 billion will go to arms and terrorists, not to rebuilding cities. Not for nothing have they been saying for five decades that the U.S. is the “Great Satan.” No agreement or massive payout will make the Iranians friends of the West. It will only help them achieve their goal of wiping out Western civilization that much faster.

And what will become of Israel? The Jews have been around for over 3,000 years. We have experienced pogroms, forced expulsions, and holocausts. The Jews will keep going. If Israel can do it alone or with smaller countries that have not been bedazzled by Qatari wealth, she will. If she still needs a big benefactor for fighters and other big-ticket items, Jews can pick up Mandarin pretty quickly. Everybody knows that Jews love Chinese food, so if the U.S. gives Israel the boot, the country is not going to say the mourner’s “kaddish” on itself but will soldier on alone or with new friends. The loss for the U.S. will be enormous in both Israeli tech and the blessings that come with being good to the Jewish people. Not one country in history that turned against the Jews is advanced or successful. Iraq and Iran were both thriving countries that held their own in the 1950s; they both lost their Jews at different times, and they are now one step better than Afghanistan and Somalia. Screw the Jews, and you screw yourself. Can you say Yemen?

Donald Trump has surrendered to Iran. JD Vance has shown that he is not ready for prime time.

https://townhall.com/columnists/alanjosephbauer/2026/06/19/say-what-n2677949?utm_source=thdailyvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl&utm_content=ncl-bfrQRhVdRp&utm_term=&_nlid=bfrQRhVdRp&_nhids=nclznsk8tLyqls

Monday, June 22, 2026

Some Real Talk About the Iran Deal

Some Real Talk About the Iran Deal

Some Real Talk About the Iran Deal
X/The White House

It’s time to take a hard look at the memorandum of understanding (MOU) and to think about it objectively. On one hand, it is not the utter catastrophe that a lot of people – people who largely agree with my position that we should be actively destroying these goat-molesting, pagan semi-humans – think it is. On the other hand, it’s a crap sandwich, and there’s no need to take a bite and announce that it’s “Yummy.” It is not yummy, but it might be the best we can hope for today.

The adult world is full of bad choices. If there were some sort of easy solution to this conflict, it would’ve likely been solved long ago. But there isn’t. There are no optimal courses of action. There are only various levels of suboptimal courses of action. Once we, like adults, accept that, we can move forward. First, let’s examine what the MOU is. It’s more of a pause, an interregnum, or even a halftime (as my friend Hugh Hewitt calls it). This isn’t going to be the end of the 50-year war with the Iranian mullahs. Nobody thinks that, including Donald Trump, no matter what he says. Like every experienced negotiator, Donald Trump is never going to publicly say what he actually thinks, and anyone expecting him to is a child and unworthy of your attention. This agreement will not end the war because the war is rooted in an irresolvable dispute. These 17th-century savages are religious fanatics who believe that their fake Mahdi is going to crawl out of a well or something and blah blah blah blah blah. The bottom line is they can’t tolerate the existence of the Jewish state, or the West, or anybody whose culture isn’t run by people who shouldn’t be allowed within 1,000 feet of a school. The only way this war is going to end is when one side is fully and completely defeated. So this is not peace. This is a hudna, a temporary truce that both sides exploit to prepare to resume fighting.

If you can’t accept that we are at war with Islamic fanatics, I can’t help you. To those of you with your eyes tightly shut and your hands pressed against your ears, yelling, “I can’t hear you! I can’t hear you!” I know you don’t want to be in a forever war. I know that it’s inconvenient for you, and you don’t like it. And I also know that what you want doesn’t matter. It doesn’t take two to be in a war. It only takes one. If one guy isn't in a war, the war doesn’t last long because the guy who doesn’t fight back loses. I propose we not only fight back, but we defeat this enemy that’s been trying to destroy the West for 1,500 years.

Yes, you can put me down as a hawk. My preferred way to fulfill our strategy – which must be regime change, even though nobody can say “regime change” aloud – is kinetic. I propose we blow the living snot out of them, to use the technical term. But here’s the problem. Most Americans don’t agree with me. If you look at the polls, it’s very clear that people would prefer not to be in a kinetic fight with the Iranians at this time. I have the luxury of not having any responsibility. I wasn’t elected president. I’m not in command of anything. But Donald Trump was elected and is in command, and he’s got a lot of moving parts to consider. He chose to go forward with the MOU not because he’s weak or stupid or cowardly or a bad negotiator – that’s a cope – but because he’s got other priorities at present that this lame MOU supports.

Here’s one key fact – for various reasons, including the perfidy of allegedly allied governments, oil is not moving through the Strait of Hormuz. Part of that has to do with insurance, and a big part has to do with alleged allies leaning on insurance companies not to cover ships that would otherwise transit the Strait. The idea that somehow the Iranians just discovered, like a month ago, that they had hundreds of miles of coastline along the Strait and could interdict it with military force is so stupid it’s not even worth addressing. Of course, they knew about that. And of course, we knew about that. We’ve wargamed it for decades. It was a risk of war, and war is in large part about managing risk.

What Trump did was make a deal to open the Straits so the American economy could recover. You can already see gas prices going down. Now, this was important to him for a couple of reasons. First, we didn’t need a worldwide recession. There is talk out there, and I’m no expert on the oil industry, so take it for what it’s worth, but apparently, Trump believes that world oil stocks were going to be depleted, and the price was going to go through the roof. That would have sent the Western economy into a tailspin, and there would’ve been follow-on effects from that. Yeah, war is expensive and disruptive to the economy. Who knew? And while I would’ve happily borne the increased price per gallon in order to destroy the Iranian mullahs, the fact is, most people wouldn’t. I don’t have to like that fact. But that’s a fact. And Donald Trump is forced to deal with facts, not just theory on X.

So Donald Trump kicked the can down the road, although it’s not clear how far. Threatening the Strait of Hormuz is viable right now, but the mullahs’ now- acknowledged ability to interdict traffic through the Strait is what we call a depreciating asset. It’s not going to be there, at least to the same extent, forever. The other Gulf States have figured out what’s happening, and they’re not just going to sit there and not do something about it. There are already massive oil pipelines heading west – those of us in Desert Storm drove by the major one in northern Saudi Arabia as we went out to the desert along scenic Tapline Road (Who else remembers beautiful Hafir al-Batin, which makes Deming, New Mexico, look like Paris?). They will build a lot more. It’s going to take time, but eventually, the Gulf States are going to work around the ability of Iran to completely cut off their oil exports. Time is on our side, but you have to think of time not in terms of months but years. Americans are notoriously bad at that. 

It’s going to be years until we resolve this war. We have to think in the long term, and the long-term goal is getting rid of these mullahs and installing somebody who’s not going to be a problem. This war was an opportunity for the Iranian people to rise up and get rid of their fanatic masters. They didn’t do that, for various reasons. We can thank the Kurds for stealing the weapons Trump tried to send them – yeah, the Middle East is wonderful. But what’s clear is that we’re not going to do it for them. There’s literally no one who wants to physically invade Iran and take it over and govern it. That gives the mullahs an advantage: all they have to do is not die. I would make them die, but that’s just me.

But we’ve got a long way to go to neutering them. And while we’ve utterly gutted their military capabilities, including their nuclear program – anybody who ignores that and starts telling you that this MOU is worse than the JCPOA is unworthy of your attention because that’s just stupid – they still have a bunch of guys with small arms who can oppress their own people. These thugs have to be eliminated in detail, and the only ones who can do that are the Iranians themselves.

Again, the mullahs have been largely defanged. Most of their current threats are hypothetical – it’s not clear they can actually sink a ship going through the Strait of Hormuz, but the shippers don’t want to take that chance, so the threat is sufficient. The mullahs have other moves to make, too. Remember that the enemy gets a vote. They are desperately trying to keep Israel from annihilating their primitive pederast proxy Hezbollah, whose members have a ton of American blood on their paws. Israel can’t live with these creeps firing missiles into its land and essentially making northern Israel uninhabitable. It’s got to drain this abscess, but the Iranians are trying to use that as a wedge to drive the United States and Israel apart. The predictably moronic collection of podcasters, libertarians, traitors, and drooling idiots is going along with the information operation, demanding that America abandon Israel.

At the moment, it would be more convenient for the United States if Israel weren’t publicly wiping out Hezbollah – I don’t think anyone who’s not a clown sheds any sincere tears for these monsters. JD Vance is taking the lead in telling Israel to essentially chill out, and a lot of pro-Israel Americans are upset about that. That’s overwrought – America and Israel do have different interests, and he’s just saying that truth out loud. What we should be doing is giving Israel a behind-the-scenes go-ahead to do what it needs to do. Every time it kills a Hezbollah or Hamas terrorist, an angel gets its wings. And here’s the tough news for the pro-Israel crowd, of which I am one – you’ve got no place else to go. All the Democrats hate you and want all the Jews to die. Let’s get the cards out there – they would be happy for Israel’s enemies to butcher everybody from the river to the sea. The Republicans are largely aligned with Israel on security concerns, but the Venn diagram is not a perfect circle. A 90 percent friend is not a 10 percent enemy. 

And here’s some more real talk, which I don’t necessarily love. The American people like this MOU deal. A majority supports it. They want the current kinetic phase over. They don’t love Iran. They don’t hate Israel. They just want this fighting to stop. I don’t agree with them, but I don’t get to tell them what to think. Trump’s the guy who has to deal with that. And Trump understands the stakes. If the Democrats take the House (which is not entirely assured, as recent polls show the Democrats losing ground) and/or the Senate, that would be really bad. He’s got to consider that. And he is considering that. He wants the economy kicking. He wants the shooting to stop. He thinks that’s the best way to survive the midterms, and he’s got pretty good instincts.

There are complaints that the Iranians are going to be able to sell their oil again, but any deal was going to allow them to do so. They were selling their oil before the conflict started, and their country's economy was still in ruins. It will still be in ruins after it starts selling oil again. 

As for sanctions relief and this $300 billion rehabilitation fund, we will see. That is only supposed to happen if the mullahs cooperate. But, of course, the mullahs aren’t going to cooperate. They are going to be a continual pain in the tush. We need to see whether President Trump will reward them for their misbehavior. He will, if he thinks it’s to his advantage. Now, there’s an idea out there that Donald Trump actually believes and trusts these guys, and that’s either unbelievably stupid or pure wishcasting. He knows exactly who these people are, and he’s got to know that they will screw with him from now until November. But that’s OK. A bunch of these savages getting on Twitter and making their announcements is not the same as actual fighting. 

Trump is going to try to drag this out past the midterms. That 60-day nuclear negotiation? Of course, that’s going to get extended. There’s precisely zero chance that’s going to be resolved. But understand that their nuclear program has been blown to smithereens. We are not back in a worse position than we were before we entered this righteous conflict. We’re in a much better position. And in the long term, the correlation of forces is in our favor. Israel is wiping out its proxies. The Gulf states are strengthening their defenses, so Iran can’t do again what it just did. We are rebuilding, rearming, and retargeting. And Iran’s regime? It’s still impoverished and teetering on the edge of collapse.

You wouldn’t know it from all the whining online and the self-serving crap of the Democrats, who seemed just as mad about us not shooting as they were at us shooting, but we’re in a good position for the future. All the Iranian mullahs are just crying like the little b****s that they are. They accepted the MOU because they need the MOU as much as Trump does, maybe more. So, at the end of the day, crying like a little b***h is all they can do.

https://townhall.com/columnists/kurtschlichter/2026/06/22/some-real-talk-about-the-iran-deal-n2678042?utm_source=thdailypmvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl&utm_content=ncl-ACH7f6cTFQ&utm_term=&_nlid=ACH7f6cTFQ&_nhids=ncQq4CNMukdlls

Feds Reveal Violent Antifa Conspirators Coordinated With a Major Labor Union to Fight ICE in Minneapolis

Feds Reveal Violent Antifa Conspirators Coordinated With a Major Labor Union to Fight ICE in Minneapolis

AP Photo/Evan Vucci

It was a violent, full-court press against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) by Antifa and other leftists in Minneapolis last winter, and some of the planning included a major labor union. 

The 94-page indictment released this week by the Justice Department officials in Minneapolis outlined in detail, using Antifa members' own words in their multiple encrypted Signal chats, how 15 defendants coordinated their "direct actions" to stop ICE from arresting and deporting people in the country illegally. 

They used their cars, breastplates, bodies, and other paraphernalia to hurt officers, barricade roads with multiple types of coordinated styles in an attempt to stop officers from moving freely about the city. Their "force, intimidation, and threats" against ICE and Department of Homeland Security officers

Most of the indictment outlining the conspiracy "to impede or injure a federal officer" is devoted to sharing the Signal messages capturing the coordination among the members of several sub-groups who called themselves Twin Cities Direct Action (TCDA), which they later changed to Direct Action Minnesota (DAMN), probably because it was a cooler acronym. 


In the chats, they discussed how they used protest marches to set up their hard and soft blockades.

And they urged violence against federal officers. A guy who made news for the following video, Kyle Wagner, was one of the 15 indicted by the feds. 

The coordinated activity included directing the local AFL-CIO union on where to place its members for maximum effect. 


Saying a labor union is involved in far-left protest activity is like saying the sun came up today for those who have been watching the Wobblies since the dawn of the last century, but the AFL-CIO was heavily involved in the Minnesota protests. One of their members was Alex Pretti, who was shot by federal agents as he tried to stop them. The Minnesota unions were all in on the protests. 

The 15 are charged with conspiracy, an extraordinary charge which has never been lodged against an organized Antifa activity, according to Antifa watcher Andy Ngo. 


Wagner was also charged with solicitation to commit a crime of violence and interstate threats in which he threatened to kidnap and murder a federal officer.

Isaac Sant and William Morgan are each charged with interstate stalking, in which they're alleged to have crossed state lines and used the federal interstate with "the intent to kill, injure, harass, intimidate, or place under surveillance" at least one federal officer in an attempt to scare the hell out of him. Or worse.

Morgan is also charged with assaulting a federal officer and destruction of federal property. 

Natasha Rakotz was also individually charged with assaulting a federal officer for purposely running her car into an officer. Renee Good wasn't alone in using this tactic. 

More: This Is the Biggest Self-Own by Leftists in This Entire Minneapolis ICE Charade

Far from being the disconnected collection of individuals in an imaginary organization as the left continually attests, the 15 Antifa anarchists, who belonged to multiple subgroups, discussed plans, mapped movements of ICE officers, organized rapid response vehicles, and had thousands of dollars to spend on their quest to stop ICE. And then carried out those plans. Maybe we'll find out where all that money came from.

Two of the indicted Antifa members are still on the loose. 

My prediction is that Portland Antifa is next. This same kind of coordinated activity continues to occur there.

To recap: What do you call 15 charged Antifa terrorists? A good start. 

https://pjmedia.com/victoria-taft/2026/06/18/feds-reveal-violent-antifa-conspirators-coordinated-with-a-major-labor-union-to-fight-ice-in-minneapolis-n4954092?utm_source=pjmediavip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl_pm