A Funeral for the Ayatollah

Featured image Ayatollah Khamenei has been dead for a while, but his funeral will take place tomorrow. Reportedly the funeral needed to await a truce agreement between Iran and the U.S. Perhaps the timing–July 4–is coincidental. The Telegraph headlines: “Supreme leader’s funeral expected to draw 20 million Iranians to streets of Tehran.” Around 20 million Iranians are expected to pack the streets of Tehran for the funeral of Ali Khamenei, the country’s »

Gratitude

Featured imageWe will celebrate the Declaration of Independence tomorrow in our accustomed style, quoting Abraham Lincoln and Calvin Coolidge. Implicit in the tributes of Lincoln and Coolidge to the Declaration is an expression of gratitude — for our liberty — to the men who pledged their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor to win it. To express our gratitude properly, we need to bring them to mind, recall their names, »

Not Everyone Hates Trump

Featured imageIf you follow Democrat news sources, you would think that the entire country had turned against President Trump. There are headlines about Trump’s “record low” approval ratings and stories about Trump voters who regret their votes. But not everyone has turned against Trump. This week he went to Medora, North Dakota to open the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library. The library is an impressive project, and a point of pride in »

Can Europe Be Saved?

Featured imageAs a result of third-world migration–some say, invasion–much of Western Europe is no longer recognizable. Mass third-world immigration is unpopular nearly everywhere, but European elites, being unhappy with their populaces, seem determined to replace them. Campaigners including Eva Vlaardingerbroek and Martin Sellner have proposed the Save Europe Act, which you can read about here. The proposal strikes me as entirely reasonable. It petitions the European Union to exercise its right »

A pardon too far

Featured imageFrom Bill Melugin of Fox News, For Tou Vang, child rape is “normal in his culture.” Then let us each act according to our national customs and deport Vang back to his homeland, where he can practice his cultural traditions as he sees fit, and see where that leads. The details of the Vang case are horrific enough. But now we have the added outrage of Democratic politicians trying so »

1776 Live

Featured imageManny Marotta is the “curator” of the X thread 1776 Live — “[l]ive-posting as a reporter embedded in history.” The X thread has been of particular interest over the past few days and should continue in this vein for the foreseeable future. Thomas Paine publishes an open letter in the Pennsylvania Evening Post, under the name “Republicus,” which advocates for the name “United States of America” for the new nation »

Podcast: “Divided Over the Declaration,” with Bobb & Williams

Featured imageMy final conversation with authors of new books about the Declaration of Independence before this Saturday’s formal observance features the co-authors of Divided Over the Declaration: How an Enduring Debate Sustains the Vision of America. The authors of Divided Over the Declaration are David J. Bobb and Tony Williams, who are colleagues at the indispensable Bill of Rights Institute, and old pals. Bobb and Williams have hit upon a unique »

Everything Is Political

Featured imageWestern Europe has been sweltering under a heat wave, and quite a few people have died as a result. The heat wave is unusual, but the phenomenon isn’t: every year, lots of Europeans die from extremes of heat and cold, far more than in the United States. And European climate deaths vastly exceed deaths in the U.S. from gun homicides, which many Europeans like to decry. A sane response to »

Scott Wiener’s struggle session

Featured imageYesterday in “The Scott Wiener experience” I posted the video of the insane harassment suffered by San Francisco congressional candidate Scott Wiener on the subject of Israel’s mythical “genocide” in Gaza. Wiener long ago sought to rectify his purported shortfall on this point in a struggle session that he posted on X this past January, nearly six months ago (video below). The New York Post covered it here. For years, »

Too windy for wind turbines

Featured imageFrom Accuweather, the feel-good story of yesterday, Accuweather has some video from the site here. Yes, the hurricane/tornado force winds did heavy damage to a wind farm in South Dakota yesterday, snapping wind turbine towers (not blades, towers) like matchsticks. Contrary to popular opinion, wind farms prefer relatively low (but steady) wind speeds. Not enough wind: blades won’t start spinning. Too much wind, and the machines tear themselves apart. But »

Supreme Court Term Ends

Featured imageThe Supreme Court term ended today with the release of three final opinions. I have not yet had time to read them, but for now will simply recite the results with a few additional comments. The most important decision is Trump v. Barbara, in which the Court held, 6-3, that the 14th Amendment requires that the children of illegal aliens be citizens of the United States. This result is disappointing »

Iran: Realism or appeasement?

Featured imageMelanie Phillips posted her interview with Konstantin Kisin and Francis Foster of the British podcast TRIGGERnometry under the title “Realism or Appeasement?” TRIGGERnometry gave it the title “Has Trump surrendered to Iran?” The discussion takes up the possible folly of President Trump’s stalemated war on the Iranian regime. Neither title quite captures the gist of the conversation. Phillips provides this summary at her Substack site: While in London, I was »

OK to hate

Featured imageThe Minneapolis Star Tribune finally found an illegal alien that it’s OK for you to hate. No institution in Minnesota, let alone any media outlet, has been more opposed to the enforcement of America’s immigration laws. Today, they published this story, ICE says it’s after the ‘Worst of the Worst,’ but didn’t detain this sex offender: Federal immigration officials decided that a Minnesota parolee facing deportation should instead be subject »

“We wanted to inform you…”

Featured imageRom Braslavski is a former Israeli hostage held in Gaza. He was working as a security guard at the Nova music festival during the October 7 massacre as an active-duty soldier on leave from the Logistics Corps. In captivity he was tortured and assaulted. In the video below he is informed by an Israeli security official that his chief tormentor in captivity — a member of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad »

After last night

Featured imageThe Commie Corridor isn’t just a New York congressional district. It’s the throbbing heart of the Democratic Party. In a Colorado primary yesterday, DSA member Melat Kiros handily defeated 15-term incumbent Diana DeGette in the Colorado’s 1st District. The district covers metropolitan Denver. Kiros handily defeated DeGette, by nearly 10 points with 93 percent of the vote counted. It’s a Democratic district — D+29. Minnesota’s 5th district, represented by Ilhan »

There’s something about the MOU

Featured imageThere’s something happening in the Strait of Hormuz. What it is ain’t exactly the Jews. I have expressed my doubts about the the Memorandum of Understanding that was to open the Strait. Complications have arisen. Vice President Vance’s negotiating partners do not appear to be operating in good faith’ I read the news today, oh boy: US envoy Steve Witkoff and President Donald Trump’s son-in-law ‌Jared Kushner are in Doha »

Mao’s party never ends

Featured imageFrank Dikötter is the author of The People’s Trilogy (“a series of books that document the impact of communism on the lives of ordinary people in China on the basis of new archival material”) and, more recently, China After Mao (2022). Dikötter serves as Chair Professor of Humanities at the University of Hong Kong since 2006 — “one wonders for how much longer,” Tunku Varadarajan added in his Wall Street »