Maine Writer

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My blogs are dedicated to the issues I care about. Thank you to all who take the time to read something I've written.

Monday, May 18, 2026

Question to Donald Trump and maga cult Republicans? Has Iran surrendered yet?

In response to the letter “Trump ridding the world of Iranian nuclear threat” (May 7, TribLive), I object to the letter writer because I have a thought or two.
First, didn’t Donald Trump announce last June that military strikes had “obliterated” any Iranian nuclear threat If true, why strike again, this time after their leaders and civilians Obliterate defined is to “destroy completely.” I can’t imagine that Trump would ever lie to the American people, can you❓🤥😒I recall him promising no more foreign wars on the campaign trail.

Secondly, it would appear that Iran has handed Trump and Secretary Pete Hegseth (aka "Whiskey Pete") more problems than their genius strategy expected. Military experts warned them both of the response an attack would create. But, they ignored it and are now scrambling to win something that looks on the surface as an unlikely outcome. If the war is “won,” as Trump claims, then why is the Strait of Hormuz still closed, negotiation necessary and deals needed to be made? Thirteen service members have been killed and hundreds more wounded, and Iran is no closer to bowing to those two than the day of the first strikes. So much for a four- to six-week “military excursion.” Empty threats and boasts of victory are hollow words of weakness.

Finally, should Trump decide to “make Iran glow” - a major war crime, as he threatened, he will not only continue his path as being the worst president in modern history, he will be tried as a war criminal too. Is this entire mess what the letter writer is thanking God for
(Maine Writer- "War does not solve problems; on the contrary, it amplifies them and inflicts deep wounds on the history of peoples, which take generations to heal."- Pope Leo XIV)

Has Iran surrendered yet

From Howard Cade in Franklin, Pennsylvania




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Sunday, May 17, 2026

Donald Trump projects blame on the media for serial copy cat attempts to cause him harm but he stirs this cauldron of violence

Echo opinion letter published in the Dallas Morning News, in Texas:

Trump and media vitriol

Is it just coincidental  King Charles III gave another quote from Oscar Wilde in his popular April 2026, speech to the Congress.  Hmmmm

Maine Writer:  In my opinion, Trump's whining about how the media is causing his serial assassination attempts is a classic case of the cliché "what goes around comes around".  Check out my substack commentary on this subject here. I agree with this Dallas Morning News letter: 

To the Editor: Boston says assassination attempts against Donald Trump have increased due to over-reporting by the media and lack of sufficient security. #YGTBK He says the volume of vitriol aimed at Trump by the media, and politicians should be turned down and that “unhinged rage directed at a political opponent serves no useful purpose and might just inspire a psychopath to try to kill someone.” (🙄Ya' think)

The author of this "no brainer" is either uninformed or willfully ignoring the “unhinged rage” that paranoid Donald Trump delivers near daily about his perceived political enemies. 

From his comments about Mexicans being murderers and rapists, to insinuating Gen. Mark Milley should be put to death, to his memes of Joe Biden hogtied in the back of a truck, to his constant insulting and demeaning language towards women and minorities, to accusing Barack Obama and others of treason, to his failure to disavow white supremacy groups, Donald Trump constantly delivers unhinged rage to this nation and the world.



Although political violence is all too common, it is wrong to place the blame on the media and political opponents, while ignoring Trump’s hate-filled rants and rages, is wrong, disingenuous, and dangerous.

From Suzan Staley, in Flower Mound, in North Texas

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Saturday, May 16, 2026

Donald Trump imagined a China meeting with President Xi, but his brain does not reflect reality- Trump is delusional!

New York Times echo analysis: By Anton Trioanovski 

Trump Calls Xi a ‘Friend.’ But He Left China Without Any Breakthroughs.

The lack of concrete agreements with Beijing shows the risks of Donald Trump’s personality-driven foreign policy, which rests on the belief that he can defend U.S. interests through charm and force of will.
Trump’s lavishing of praise on President Xi was in contrast to the Chinese leader’s more measured tone.

There was a vague agreement that China would purchase Boeing jets and more American soybeans. There was discussion about Iran and opening the Strait of Hormuz, and a nod to other issues, like cracking down on chemicals used to make fentanyl.

But President Trump departed Beijing on Friday with almost nothing concrete to show for his two-day summit with President Xi Jinping of China. After months of buildup and a delay necessitated by Mr. Trump’s difficulty in extricating the United States from the war with Iran, the summit ended with no major public progress on the Middle East, trade, Taiwan, nuclear proliferation, artificial intelligence or any of the other myriad issues that are sources of friction between the world’s two superpowers.

Instead, Trump seemed intent on a different kind of diplomacy, forging a personal bond with a Chinese leader who appeared far more focused on advancing his own nation’s strategic agenda.

Trump toasted President Xi Jinping as “my friend” at their banquet in Beijing on Thursday and said he had “become really a friend” when they sat down before the cameras on Friday.

A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman, asked at a briefing during the summit whether Mr. Xi considered Trump a friend, responded with boilerplate: “the two sides exchanged views on major issues.”

Trump has hailed the summit in Beijing as a major success, highlighting the personal bond he says he has built with China’s longtime leader. But the feeling is not necessarily mutual, as evidenced by Mr. Xi’s more measured tone and the lack of clarity about any major agreements.


Orville Schell, vice president of the Center on U.S.-China Relations at the Asia Society in New York, called the summit “quite insubstantial and aspirational.”

“We have Trump dreaming out loud,” he said.

The mismatch shows the risks in Trump’s personality-driven foreign policy, his bet that he can solve the world’s problems and defend American interests by his charm and force of will. 

In Mr. Xi, the U.S. president faced a counterpart this week well versed in Trump’s desire for praise and pomp, and with an apparent strategy for how to exploit it.

The result, analysts said, was a summit that illustrated the growing confidence of China on the world stage alongside a strategically muddled U.S. foreign policy under Trump.

Nevetheless, the summit might yet come to be seen as the start of a shift toward a more stable relationship between the United States and China. 

But, few of even the limited accomplishments that Trump spoke about were confirmed by China, while Mr. Xi set the tone with an assertive posture over Taiwan.

Experts say there is no question that personal chemistry between leaders is crucial, especially when authoritarian, centralized countries like China are involved.

Susan L. Shirk, a senior State Department Asia specialist in the 1990s, said President Bill Clinton worked hard to establish a rapport with Jiang Zemin, the Chinese leader at the time; he would keep his eyes on Mr. Jiang even during the translation of his remarks, Ms. Shirk recalled.

But Trump’s lavishing of praise on Mr. Xi was different, Ms. Shirk said, especially in contrast to the Chinese leader’s more restrained language. At times it was “embarrassing,” she said, like when Trump told the Fox (Fake
)News host (aka Trump's shadow echo) Sean Hannity in an interview during the summit that Mr. Xi was “tall, very tall,” and then veered into ethnic stereotyping: “especially for this country, because they tend to be a little bit shorter.”

“He was flattering him excessively and it was clearly not working,” said Ms. Shirk, a professor at the University of California, San Diego. “The lack of preparation created this kind of void of substance in the meeting, and the Chinese stepped into that void.”

Trump has already discovered that the power of his personality has limits in foreign policy. In his first term, he failed to get North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons despite asserting that he and Kim Jong-un, the country’s leader, “fell in love.” 🙄

In his second term, he has failed to stop Russia’s invasion of Ukraine despite a dozen phone calls with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia and their summit in Alaska.

Still, asked to name the summit’s most important achievement for the United States, Mr. Trump told Fox News’ Bret Baier: “I think the most important thing is relationship. It’s all about relationship.”

“It sounds like something that doesn’t mean anything, but it’s everything,” Mr. Trump said.

China, too, hailed the personal aspect of the visit. Wang Yi, China’s foreign minister, said after the summit that “head-of-state diplomacy is the ‘guiding star’” of “the most important and complex bilateral relationship in the world.” He said Mr. Trump and Mr. Xi spent nearly nine hours together and had been able “to achieve overall stability after experiencing ups and downs.”

But China entered the meeting with a broader agenda, while deflating U.S. claims of success. Mr. Xi warned Mr. Trump about the threat of a clash over Taiwan, even as Mr. Trump said nothing about the island democracy until after Air Force One took off from Beijing. Mr. Wang also suggested that the achievements Trump had trumpeted — for example, China buying as many as 750 “big beautiful” Boeing jets — were not a done deal. On Saturday, China said it would acquire some aircraft, but stopped short of confirming a specific purchase of Boeing planes.


“The working teams of both sides are still discussing the relevant details and will finalize the results as soon as possible,” Mr. Wang said, referring to the economic talks between the United States and China.

The disjointed dynamic stood in contrast to Mr. Xi’s relationship with the leader he does call a friend: Mr. Putin. Their summits have featured much warmer displays than the pomp in Beijing this week, including the time they made pancakes and drank vodka in 2018. Their meetings often include joint statements, including the one in 2022, just before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, that their countries’ friendship had “no limits.”

Putin will visit China next week, the Kremlin said on Saturday. The announcement was a reminder that Mr. Xi still looks to Russia as a crucial geopolitical partner and helps enable Russia’s war with trade and technology — a relationship that many in Washington see as a threat to American security.

Trump could see Mr. Xi again at a gathering of Asia and Pacific region leaders in Shenzhen, China, in November and at the Group of 20 summit that Trump will host at his Doral golf resort near Miami in December. Trump also said Mr. Xi would visit the United States on Sept. 24, a sign that the high-level diplomacy that Trump has kicked off with China may only be beginning.


Whether all the meetings will yield benefits for the United States is yet to be seen, analysts said, though few dispute that any U.S. president needs to build a relationship with his Chinese counterpart. Mr. Schell, the Asia Society expert, cautioned that Mr. Xi had little track record of making concessions to the United States.

If concrete agreements do “come as a result of the bonhomie of this summit, I think we might be able to call it something of an inflection point,” Mr. Schell said. “That has not yet happened.”

Keith Bradsher contributed reporting from Beijing, and Chris Buckley from Taipei, Taiwan. Ruoxin Zhang contributed research.

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Donald Trump and maga Republicans hurt middle class by enabling Iran war causing high gas prices

 Trump’s War Is Punishing the Poor, Starting at the Gas Pump

The cruelty of high fuel prices isn’t just about the cost, but also about the unequal burden it places on American households
Energy costs have been walloping the working class since the United States and Israel attacked Iran on February 28. And things could get a lot worse this summer, with prices rising ever higher the longer the Strait of Hormuz remains closed to shipping.

A research team at Brown University built a website to track the rising, real-time energy costs of the war with Iran. By mid-May, higher prices for just two energy products — gasoline and diesel fuel — added nearly
💲40 billion in costs to American consumers. That’s more than the Pentagon’s cost estimate of its military operations, now approaching $29 billion.

Before the attack, the average price for a gallon of gasoline in the United States was
💲2.98. Since then, the average price has soared to about $4.50 a gallon. That average smooths over a lot of regional variation. In California, prices have climbed past 💲6 per gallon. Colorado had an increase of more than 💲1.50 per gallon since February, lifting prices from below the national average to above it.

The rise in diesel fuel prices, critical to commerce, has been even sharper. Diesel is up by more than 50 percent. Even if you don’t purchase diesel directly, you’re paying a premium for other daily goods, because many of them are transported using trucks, locomotives and other engines that run on diesel fuel. If you buy a package online, you’re paying for diesel indirectly. Farmers are feeling it, too. There’s no escape in the air, either, with FedEx and UPS imposing surcharges as a result of rising jet fuel prices.
Americans watched campaign ads with Trump driving a garbage truck and serving fries at MacDonalds, but we never see his fake PR with a picture of him pumping gasoline! 

On average, each U.S. household has paid an extra 💲295 because of higher gasoline and diesel fuel prices since Trump's Iran war began. That’s more than a week’s worth of groceries for the average household. The burden falls hardest on poorer people, who are using less fuel than richer households, but whose costs make up a far larger portion of their budgets.

According to our analysis, Americans in the bottom 18 percent have had to spend at least half a week’s income to pay off the higher price of fuel since the end of February. As a result, they are cutting back on the gas they use, while households with incomes above
💲125,000 barely reduced their real gas consumption.

Fuel prices are likely to remain elevated for months, even if the fighting stops. Oil tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz will remain low until Iran grants passage, either explicitly through an agreement or simply in practice, without acknowledgment. 

But, even if the strait opens again, many insurers will be wary of allowing ships to transit it — just as the insurers were after the Houthis previously threatened shipping in the Red Sea.

Moreover, Iran might continue to charge a toll or tax on tankers for moving through the strait, which would get passed on to refiners. And don’t forget the physical damage already inflicted on the oil production equipment and processing facilities in the Persian Gulf, some of which will take years to repair or reconstruct. All these supply constraints push prices up.

Without a resolution soon, experts expect the fuel crisis to get much worse. Energy producers have been shielding the markets from the full impact of the conflict by drawing down their inventories, in hopes of refilling storage tanks when supply constraints ease. 

But, global inventories will reach critically low levels by the end of May, just as the summer driving season ramps up. That could drive oil prices higher — up to $200 per barrel, according to some analysts.

Suppose that gasoline prices rise to
💲5 per gallon across the United States. That would mean an extra 💲513 per household from Memorial Day to Labor Day, compared with what consumers were paying before the war began, bringing the total gas bill for a typical household to 💲1,558 over the course of the summer.

If gasoline prices top
💲6 per gallon on average — a real possibility if oil goes to 💲200 per barrel — that would mean an extra 💲825 per household. Just for gasoline. Other fuels, such as diesel and jet fuel, will skyrocket. Those prices will, in turn, affect the prices of everything else, from groceries to air travel. Tomato prices are already up nearly 40 percent.

Extra energy costs are bound to have a political effect. High gasoline prices are visible, posted on thousands of roadside signs nationwide. Americans saw them rising soon after Trump ordered the attack on Iran. That makes it difficult for Trump to avoid blame.

And it could spell trouble for the Republicans in the November midterm elections. No one should doubt Trump’s uncanny ability to shift the conversation away from potentially damaging topics, but even he may struggle with the anger voters feel every time they fill their tanks.

They’re not being unreasonable. Americans can and should hold  Trump accountable for the mess he has created in the Persian Gulf. Despite claiming to be the party of national security, the Republicans have proved to be poor shepherds of the national interest. 

In the case of Iran, their missteps are having direct, visible consequences for Americans’ pocketbooks.


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Friday, May 15, 2026

Antisemitism directed at hard working Jewish business people is evil and accomplishes nothing!

Echo opinion published in The Boston Globe by Steven Peljovich.
Why is my Jewish deli a battleground for foreign policy❓✡️
My establishment has been the target of malicious sticker campaigns since 2023. By Steven Peljovich Updated May 15, 2026.
Anisemitism accomplishes nothing!
On May 3, 2026, I showed up to work around 6 a.m. and found an all-too-familiar message on my shop’s front door: Covering a picture of my family was a sticker that said, “End the Israeli Occupation of Palestine.”

I am the owner of Michael’s Deli in Brookline, and since Oct. 7, 2023, the day more than 1,200 people were killed by the terrorist group Hamas, unleashing the war in Gaza, my storefront has been a designated landing spot for more than 40 stickers.

Their messages range from political rhetoric (“End the occupation,” “Free Palestine”) to straight-out Jew hatred (“Boycott Jews,” “Death to Israel,” and worse), and I am the recipient because I am proudly Jewish.

For the past two and a half years, I have removed the stickers and gone on with my day, but this time I had had enough. I decided to express my frustration on the shop’s Instagram account. The post has been viewed nearly 40,000 times and my deli has landed front and center in the battle against unchecked antisemitism and hate.

Over the past week, I was visited by elected officials from Washington, D.C., the Massachusetts State House, the Anti-Defamation League, the American Jewish Committee, and members of the Brookline Select Board, as well as law enforcement, all in a show of support.


Although I appreciate their support, it all feels a bit surreal. I am just a guy trying to create food that makes people happy and brings people together. We have no ties to governments or political parties; we have no influence over foreign policy; we are just a restaurant. The only thing we profess is pride in our heritage, our traditions, and in the food we serve.

There’s a reason these messages feel targeted. My business is in Coolidge Corner, and every time I have found hate stickers on my door or on my window, I look around to see if other businesses have been targeted. They have not. Just mine.

If these stickers had been placed all over the neighborhood, I would not be so upset. But they are placed on the shop owned by the guy with a “Proudly Jewish” sign in the window. I also have Israeli and Cuban flags on my counter. The Israeli flag is how I show pride in my Judaism. The Cuban flag is for my parents, who were born there after their parents fled Eastern Europe to avoid being persecuted for being Jewish. They then fled the oppression of the Castro regime.




Several other Jewish-owned businesses and synagogues in Brookline have been targets of antisemitic crimes over the past year. In fact, my neighbor up the street, The Butcherie, a kosher grocery store, had a brick with “Free Palestine” written on it thrown through its window last year.

The ADL (Anti-Defamation League) Audit of Antisemitic Incidents that came out last week reports there were 17 antisemitic incidents per day in the United States in 2025 — and that’s only the ones that were reported. Up until last week, I had never reported what happened at my deli. I just took the stickers down and went on with running my business. Nevertheless, the day after this incident, Brookline Select Board member Paul Warren came in after reading my Instagram post and told me that it was important that I report the incident to the Brookline police. And so I did.

All I can figure is that the folks who are targeting my business and others like mine see us as representatives for a country, or a government or a policy that they don’t agree with.

And it makes me wonder: If my business was an all-American hot dog stand and I had an American flag inside my store, would people harass me if they were upset with America’s government or policies
I don’t think they would. And that’s antisemitism.

Folks once had actual conversations about issues that were divisive. Now, we retreat into our corners, wrap ourselves in our bubbles, and use the anonymity of social media to express opinions and spew hate.

These stickers, always placed at night, are an extension of that. It is easy and cowardly to slap a sticker on a door or window of an establishment and just walk away. It also accomplishes nothing.

Ultimately, supporting and promoting something you strongly believe in is a constitutional right. But, at the end of the day, I am just a guy who is proud of his heritage and whose goal is to make great food for all of my guests to enjoy. It would be nice if I can just continue to show up to my store everyday and focus on that, rather than finding hate at my door.😔😔😔😟😥

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Thursday, May 14, 2026

King Charles III speech summary from an ethical point of view: "What's important to maintain our democracy"

Why did it take a visiting English king, King Charles, to remind Americans about why we are a democratic republic

Echo essay published in The Times Herald newspaper in Michigan.
But there he was, Britain’s King Charles III, reminding us in his speech before Congress of some of our historic and current principles that some seem to have forgotten.

In his address the king reminded us of our ties to Europe, how our allies there came to assist us after the Sept. 11, 2001, attack on our country and why Ukraine was so important to combat Russian aggression. And he expressed the need to protect nature given the shrinking polar ice caps.

But I was most impressed by his remarks about what’s important to maintain our democracy, ironically offered by the king of a country against which we fought to secure our freedom nearly 250 years ago. I believe protecting our democratic values, norms and laws are the most essential issues facing America, the key to our republic.

King Charles spoke about the rule of law as central to our country and his, referring us to his country’s Magna Carta, which was one of the sources for our system of government as well. England’s charter in 1215 was a foundational document forced upon King John to limit his power, protect feudal rights, establish such ideas as due process and trial by jury and protect against illegal imprisonment.

The king also told us: “Our common ideals were not only crucial for liberty and equality, they are also the foundation of our shared prosperity. The rule of law: the certainty of stable and accessible rules, an independent judiciary resolving disputes and delivering impartial justice.”

And King Charles called upon us to remember the importance of checks and balances in how the government functions, ironically not wanting a monarch here. It’s important to understand that he is head of state, reigning not ruling, in a constitutional monarchy.

It was a 30-minute concise speech about what’s really important in our republic and his constitutional monarchy. He spoke with clarity, empathy and humor — rare these days in our political discourse.

The king acknowledged the historic ties between the two nations: “Ours is a partnership born out of dispute, but no less strong for it, so perhaps, in this example, we can discern that our nations are in fact instinctively like-minded — a product of the common democratic, legal and social traditions in which our governance is rooted to this day.”

Listening to the king speak, I felt sad😔
 that we seldom hear the same thoughts spoken by our political leaders but also a sense of relief to hear them spoken in a building where so often we hear petty and often nasty words. His speech felt like that of a seasoned teacher to his students, reminding them of why they were there in the first place.

I confess I had many personal emotions arising as I listened to the king’s speech. My father, born in Baltimore and thus a naturalized U.S. citizen, was nonetheless raised in England. Some of my family remained in the United Kingdom, and others moved to the United States.

I chuckled when the king quoted Oscar Wilde, a London-based writer of the late 19th century who said, “We really have everything in common with America nowadays except, of course, language!” I often struggled to understand what my British cousins were saying and, of course, they sometimes laughed at my American utterances.

I also realized King Charles’ humor was touched with a serious comment about our respective democracies: “The Founding Fathers were bold and imaginative rebels with a cause. Two hundred and fifty years ago, or, as we say in the United Kingdom ‘just the other day…’”

It was the king’s way of reminding us of our relative new emergence on the historical scene and his country’s long traditions. Tradition means more than the institutions of government; it means also the values, norms and cultures that support democracies.

From members of my family in the UK, I learned that they sometimes thought of us as a fledgling democracy without yet being a fully functioning government with a long tradition. This keeps me humble but also hopeful that we still have much to learn in order to grow

John C. Morgan is an author and educator who writes about both personal and social ethics.

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Donald Trump and maga Republican enablers desecrating America's heritage: Trump was not elected to be a dictator!

This message will probably be a surprise to Donald Trump, but, just so he knows, no one hired him to be a despot decorator in chief. 
Echo opinion letter published in the Reading Eagle in Reading, Pennsylvania.
Donald Trump is a convicted felon guilty of 34 felony counts

Trump's takeover of that position has had disastrous results: examples include paving the iconic Rose Garden to hold umbrella tables, gilding the Oval Office to imitate a Russian palace, tearing down the East Wing of the White House to add a billion-dollar Louis XIV ballroom, painting the once-elegant Reflecting Pool a swimming pool blue so it will no longer reflect and now wanting to put a coat of white paint on the historic, granite Eisenhower Executive Office Building. (Painting stone now means painting it forever.) We don’t yet know what he intends to accomplish in the Kennedy Center, but past performance indicates it will likely be supremely garish and outrageously costly.

After stealing health care and feeding programs from Americans and people around the world, he’s spending billions of taxpayer
💲dollars on a war of choice and hideous vanity projects.

Remaking our nation’s capital into his own image will remind future generations of what happens when unchecked narcissism reigns, truly a gut-wrenching prospect.

From Fred Opalinski in Reading Pennsylvania

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Wednesday, May 13, 2026

To Donald Trump and maga Republicans: Has Iran Surrendered Yet? Prepare for a long Iranian "Winter"


Donald Trump could try reading instead of wasting his sleepless nights ranting in slanderous screeds on his fake social media❗  This article published in the New York Review of Books by Christopher de Bellaiger would be excellent if he could understand it, but maybe he can find a bedtime 📘📕📖story reader to help
Apparently, according to de Bellaigue's report, Iranians would rather endure hardship, and suppression by their own Islamic Republic, than support a Trump-Netanyahu control over their 2,600 year old united Iranian nation. 
A billboard with an AI-generated portrait of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, Tehran, April 22, 2026

In 1953, Iran’s prime minister, Mohammad Mossadegh, was toppled in a coup planned by MI6 and the CIA and carried out by Iranian army units and hoodlums supportive of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. Mossadegh had nationalized Iran’s British-run oil industry and allowed Iranians more freedom than they had ever known; the constitutional monarchy he favored was a path between the extremes of royal tyranny and popular radicalism that had beset the country for the previous three quarters of a century. In the years after Mossadegh’s overthrow, as the Shah built a dictatorship backed uncritically by the United States, Iranian democrats and liberals sank into a despondency that was expressed in works of art, perhaps the most lasting of which, the poem “Winter” by Mehdi Akhavan-Sales, describes the insidious effect of political failure on the spirit of the individual and the cohesion of society:

They do not wish to return your greeting, their heads are buried in their collars,
No one dares raise their head to greet, to acknowledge friends,
They see no further than their own foot,
For the path is dark and slippery,
And if you stretch a kindly hand toward someone,
They withdraw their hand from their coat-pocket with reluctance,
So searing is the cold.
The breath that rises warm from the chest turns to a dark cloud,
Standing like a wall before your eyes,
So much for breath; what do you hope to gain from meeting the eyes of friends
Near or far


The revolution that swept away the Shah in 1979, was supported by the country’s liberals and leftists, but the government that replaced him was captured by hard-line theocrats and their followers in the Revolutionary Guard. Iran spent the next four and a half decades waging wars hot and cold, covert and declared, its hostility toward the West hardly wavering, regardless of the price to be paid in hardship at home and ostracism abroad.

The Islamic Republic was a pariah long before its latest war with the United States and Israel. Its economy has been crippled by sanctions and the corruption that is their concomitant, its middle class increasingly inured to privation, its workers crushed by inflation and the nonpayment of salaries, and life for all marred by the power outages, water shortages, and unchecked pollution that are the ambient signifiers of the failing state.

And yet the regime has repeatedly belied predictions of its demise, saved by revenue from the oil it sells to China and by a hard core of ideologues who retain a monopoly on force and a readiness to employ it against dissidents whom they view, without irony, as the agents of Satan. In January they suppressed mass protests with unprecedented savagery at the cost of thousands of lives. In the war that followed, Iran gained prestige around the world by defying its exponentially more powerful foes and not merely surviving the assassinations of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and other military and civilian leaders but using them to inspire loyalists. My Iranian dentist in London was congratulated by his Malaysian, Pakistani, and Indonesian patients on the pluck exhibited by a regime he detests, which shows how cleverly the Islamic Republic wages the propaganda war.

During the war the US and Israel attacked not only military and nuclear targets but also steelworks, petrochemical plants, bridges, ports, railway lines, schools, universities, a bank, and a medical research center. Antique plaster and mirror fragments fell from the ceilings of palaces not designed to withstand bombs and missiles. With the cease-fire that came into effect on April 8, Trump stopped short of extinguishing “a whole civilization,” as he had threatened to do. But his hope, shared by Benjamin Netanyahu, that attacking Iran would embolden the people to rise up against their rulers and encourage the armed forces to mutiny was unfounded.

We are often told that the regime does not adequately represent its citizens. As US secretary of state Marco Rubio put it during his confirmation hearing in 2025, “I don’t know of any nation on earth in which there is a bigger difference between the people and those who govern them.” The Islamic Republic’s internal opponents are thought to amount to around 40 percent of the population, or 36 million people, with at most 20 percent being die-hard supporters and the remaining 40 percent floating between the two.

Between 1997, when Iran’s first reformist government was elected, and 2022, when many thousands braved truncheons and torture chambers to protest the killing of a young woman, Mahsa Amini, in police custody, Iranians tried every means short of armed insurrection to force the Islamic Republic to grant them personal and political freedom and to negotiate an end to some of the harshest sanctions in the world. Their efforts came to naught, and after January’s bloodbath Hatam Ghaderi, perhaps the country’s most respected political scientist and a man who usually chooses his words carefully, told an Iranian YouTube channel that “any eventuality, even war and annihilation, would be better than the survival of the Islamic Republic.” Since the war started Ghaderi has either withdrawn or been removed from the public scene.


Other than the severity of the regime’s response, what distinguished the January protests was that many of the participants flouted a taboo on expressing support for foreign intervention that had lingered since the 1953, coup. Thousands in the streets called on the United States and Israel to attack and topple the Islamic Republic, selecting as their white knight not one of the many reformists who languish in Iranian jails but Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of the last Shah and a US resident who is scathing about reform, flaunts his alliance with Netanyahu, and hasn’t seen his homeland in forty-eight years. Support for Pahlavi was always stronger outside the country than within, and his silence after a US attack on a girls’ school in southern Iran on February 28, in which 175 people were killed, condemned him in the eyes of many of his compatriots.
The yearning for foreign intervention among some opponents of the regime and the unease this caused in many others have opened a fissure that the Islamic Republic, adept at divide and rule, will exploit. I know people who, despite loathing their rulers, refused to leave the capital during the war because they felt it would be a betrayal of their country and their compatriots. (“Iran isn’t a hotel you leave for another if you don’t like the service,” one Iranian told me.) So they stayed, pushing beds onto landings, sleeping in their clothes, sweeping up shattered glass. They spoke witheringly of “supporters of the war,” especially those who at the first bombings quit Tehran for the safety of the hills or the coast. Iranian democrats who were “against the war” desire regime change no less fervently than those who petitioned Trump to attack. The difference is that they want Iranians, not foreigners, to do the job.

The current cease-fire resembles a pause for breath more than a prelude to peace, and it is informed on both sides by Trumpian exhibitionism. The Western media directs much attention at the negotiations and the Iranian officials who appear to control them: former and serving Revolutionary Guards, for the most part, with CVs as bloodstained as those of the martyrs they replaced, and the ambiguous, invisible figure of Mojtaba Khamenei, who has succeeded his father as supreme leader but who appears to be a plaything of the Guard. The agony of ordinary Iranians, meanwhile, is forgotten.

Iran is entering a new winter of political failure that will be harder than that of the prerevolutionary period, when the experience of being insulted and infantilized by a crowned despot was alleviated somewhat by rising living standards. There is no such comfort now. In March year-on-year inflation rose to 72 percent, one of the highest rates since the revolution. 

Food prices are rising much faster. According to Hadi Kahalzadeh, a former economist at Iran’s Social Security Organization, the war disrupted “supply chains, transport networks, and commercial services,” with many firms suspending operations “under the combined pressure of war, inflation, recession, and collapsing demand.” Kahalzadeh estimates that between 10 and 12 million jobs in Iran are under threat, “putting the main source of income for millions of households…at risk.”

The Islamic Republic no longer pretends to speak for all or even the majority of its citizens; it pours vitriol on the “scum, spies, and hirelings”—the national police chief’s phrase—who participated in January’s unrest. In Tehran armed boys of fifteen or sixteen stand on street corners searching cars and demanding phones so they can scroll through photos for evidence of espionage. 

Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the parliament speaker and Iran’s chief negotiator in talks with the US in Pakistan, has urged loyalists not to surrender the public sphere to the opposition and has called attendance at the funerals, rallies, and religious ceremonies that succeed one another on the streets of Tehran and other cities an “obligatory jihad.”(IOW Arabic word “jihad” means struggling or striving)

The Internet remains blocked for most Iranians, the better, the authorities say, to defend against cyberattacks and to stop traitors from passing information to the enemy or disseminating antinational propaganda; the foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, justifies his own unimpeded access on the grounds that he is “the voice of the Iranians.” The Islamic Republic has even appropriated “Ey Iran” (O Iran), a monumental nationalist anthem that was composed as a response to the Allied occupation of Iran during World War II and is an opposition favorite.

Parliament recently passed legislation prescribing twenty-five years’ imprisonment for anyone who passes video footage of the war to a hostile TV station. The judiciary is confiscating the property of “treasonous and mercenary elements who supported the aggression.” On April 13, the chief prosecutor announced that expatriate Iranians will no longer be able to buy and sell property through their appointed representatives. This is punishment for their actions “against the Islamic Republic” and preparation, doubtless, for further expropriations.

That loot will need a home, and the authorities have been advising young people to “come into the system,” which is to say, don the uniform of a Basiji or the guise of an informer and accept the sinecures and perks that alone in a state-run “resistance economy” offer a measure of financial security. When the central bank introduced its most valuable banknote, worth 10 million rials—around seven (
💲7❓dollars*—in March, there was huge demand for this hedge against a possible crash of electronic payments. “I waited my turn,” an eighty-year-old Tehran resident told the Financial Times, “and the clerk told me he could only give me 10 million rials. But when I made a fuss, telling them I had no money and needed cash, I got 30 million instead.” This in an economy backed by the second-largest natural gas reserves and third largest crude oil reserves in the world.

On April 19 Ghalibaf told state TV, “In the field [of battle], the street and in diplomacy, we are in control.” The number and diversity of the issues that divide Iran and the US—from Hezbollah and the Strait of Hormuz to Iran’s stock of highly enriched uranium and the Houthis of Yemen—militate against the kind of agreement that would bring the Islamic Republic sanctions relief comprehensive enough to save the economy. 

So do Iran’s new leaders, who are happier than their predecessors to talk to the enemy, but also bolder—the elder Khamenei never actually closed the Strait of Hormuz. Meanwhile Iran’s relations with its neighbors on the far side of the Persian Gulf have returned to the bad old days of the 1980s, when the nascent Islamic Republic fought an eight-year war with Saddam Hussein’s Iraq and was all but encircled by his Arab allies.

As long as the country remains on high alert and public discourse is dominated by warnings of spies, sabotage, and treachery, the opposition will struggle to reemerge. War breeds tyrants. The Terror that followed the French Revolution drew much of its ferocity from fears of invasion. In the 1980s, the young Islamic Republic decided that the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iranian youths on the battlefield with Iraq and the immiseration of the economy were prices worth paying to entrench its power and eliminate its domestic opponents. Like Eisenhower and Churchill when they ordered Mossadegh’s overthrow in 1953, Trump and Netanyahu have set back the cause of Iranian freedom. Their responsibility for the political winter that follows will not be small.

—April 30, 2026

*❗1 Iranian Rial equals
0.00 United States 💲Dollar

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Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Donald Trump attracts violent behavior because he preaches violence in incoherent rants

A small sample of Donald Trump’s violent rhetoric:
Echo opinion letter published in TribLive in Pennsylvania

    • 2016 rally: “Knock the crap out of” protesters; “I will pay for the legal fees.” 
    • 2020 Oval Office: He allegedly asked officials in his administration about shooting protesters in the legs.
    • 2021 Select Committee testimony: He stated that when informed that insurrectionists of the Capitol Building wanted to hang Vice President, Mike Pence, his reply was that maybe he deserves it.
    • 2023 on Truth Social: He stated Gen. Mark Milley deserves “DEATH” for perceived disloyalty.
    • 2023: He made fun of the vicious hammer attack on former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband.
    • 2024 rally: Liz Cheney should face “a rifle standing there with nine barrels shooting at her.”
    • 2024 speech: He stated political opponents are “enemies from within,” worse than foreign threats.
    • 2025: He stated Sen. Mark Kelly and five other veterans’ “seditious behavior” is punishable by death because they reiterated what the Uniform Code of Military Justice states regarding unlawful orders.
  • Following the death of former FBI Director Robert Mueller in March 2026, Donald Trump posted on Truth Social: “Robert Mueller just died. Good, I'm glad he's dead
Yet he wants Jimmy Kimmel fired and James Comey in prison (because Comey took a picture of a seashell formation on a beach, aka the "seashell indictment"). 

Do you think he and Melania even understand the meaning of the word hypocrite? Doubtful. 😒

All this from the self-declared stable genius who stated the “Jesus-like” image he posted of himself was actually him being a doctor. Haven’t you wondered why he’s had to take so many cognitive tests

From Jack Sillaman in Latrobe, Pennsylvania

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