A rare above-the-fold twofer from Erick Erickson on this fine Flag Day. First up is The Beclowning of a President, from Friday June 12.
The President, the other days, said Iran was playing us. The only one being played is President Trump. A state of war exists between Iran and its neighbors. The ceasefire is a farce. The President has turned into a clown.
It is Obamaesque to think one can negotiate with a terrorist regime that is premised on bringing about the apocalypse. The Vice President claims the Trump Administration is dealing with both moderates and hardliners. The definition of a moderate in Iran is one who wants to nuke Israel tomorrow, instead of today.
The President of the United States chose to engage Iran. It dealt a serious blow. But instead of dealing a knock out blow, the President ordered Israel to pull its punches. We have now harmed our relationships with our Middle Eastern allies who depend on us for protection. The situation is now more unstable than before the war began and it is all because of a single person who swears he’ll get a deal any day now.
The President should be embarrassed. Instead, he’ll be mad at everyone except the man in his mirror.
Ah, but maybe Erick should have waited until more facts were revealed? Until the four-dimensional chess moves finally became clear?
Nah. Erick's take yesterday, Saturday June 13: A Clown Show Still. Problems:
First, Iran and Oman would share a “service fee” for ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz. That is new and would provide regular funds to Iran. While Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates can divert some, not all, of their oil flow via pipelines, some of their oil still flows by ship. Kuwait, Bahrain, and Qatar overwhelmingly ship their oil by boat.
This will be a new and novel revenue stream for Iran.
Second, anything having to do with Iran’s nuclear program will be deferred for later talks. As I am writing this, Iran is hard at work laying mines and otherwise actively taking steps to block access to its nuclear materials.
Third, the United Arab Emirates, despite denials, does appear ready to transmit a few billion dollars to Iran. The UAE is quibbling over the wording of what money goes to Iran, but has not actually explicated denied any transfer of funds to Iran.
I do not know why it is so hard for President Trump to understand that, having provoked this war, he cannot now end it with Iran in the position Trump has left that nation.
Erick's bottom line is sobering, to say the least:
The United States won a war and appears now willing to lose it and allow its enemy — which has killed thousands of Americans for years — to rearm and nuclearize.
Joe Biden handed Afghanistan back to the Taliban.
Donald Trump intends to embolden Iran’s quest for the apocalypse.
I stand by what I wrote yesterday. The President is beclowning himself.
And as befits a clown, he's offering us a circus. Cheers!
Also of note:
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Anyone notice the real inequality here? Veronique de Rugy looks at The Paris-to-Sacramento Pipeline: How Three Economists Built a Blueprint for Taking Your Stuff.
A coordinated agenda to impoverish rich countries and keep poor countries poor in plain sight.
There is a pattern that’s worth naming. Over the past several years, three French economists — Thomas Piketty, Emmanuel Saez, and Gabriel Zucman — have together produced a body of work that functions less like independent scholarship and more like a coordinated legislative program. Understand the logic of each piece, and the larger design becomes visible: a vast wealth-tax net drawn tight enough that no one can escape it, not by moving to Nevada, not by renouncing citizenship, not by relocating a business. Global, compulsory, enforced. For what goal? To level countries down.
They have told you that this is the goal. Believe them.
The real inequality? It's power: the difference between (1) us and (2) the people carrying out this legal plunder.
You-know-who said it well:
When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men in a society, over the course of time they create for themselves a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that glorifies it.
Nellie Bowles takes a more sarcastic look at the Picketty plunder proposal in her TGIF column:
→ This is where the green movement has gone: The hugely popular economist Thomas Piketty, the guy everyone in college read and quoted, is out with a big new proposal to completely flatten and stop growth. That’s it! That’s the innovation! To end innovation. It’s supposedly how we will tackle climate change. Rich countries would be de-riched through a global wealth tax. Degrowth for all, mangoes in winter for none. The money would be transferred to a Global Justice Fund that would handle massive resource transfers to get us all, globally, at the same level of poverty. Hipster economists all banded together to announce their new scheme:
We economists have done the maths! As Ross Douthat puts it: “Worth noting that this is basically Peter Thiel’s vision/fear of the Antichrist—the soft slipper of bureaucratic degrowth environmentalism on the human face, forever.” Maybe I need to watch one of Thiel’s Antichrist lectures. Yes, economists have gathered together and decided that it would be best for all of us if we just died—not immediately, but soon. Just slip away. On a serious note: Thank god the white supremacists are always losing because if the world were run by delicate Europeans like Piketty, we’d be very conscientiously, very articulately, told to hold hands and jump off a cliff.
You first, Tom.
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One can only laugh. Your only other option is to weep bitter tears. Noah Rothman notes: Obama Alum Mourns How Effective Their Social Security Demagoguery Was. (NR gifted link) He is more than a little miffed at this sort of thing:
Good piece by @jasonfurman for @nytopinion about the blithe march toward the Social Security cliff, without serious thinking about the hard choices to pay to keep it going. https://t.co/Ba07LtdUER
— Nicholas Kristof (@NickKristof) June 12, 2026How did we find ourselves in this predicament? Furman’s cursory historical review fails to uncover a culprit. Perhaps his investigation was hindered by his obvious conflict of interest. After all, the problem Furman laments has been dutifully cultivated by the political party to which he has devoted himself.
Democrats spent decades demagoguing the issue of Social Security reform, attacking anyone who dared notice the program’s documented shortfalls. It was a reckless and irresponsible political messaging campaign. But it was also a wildly successful one on the Democratic Party’s own terms.
Recall how Democrats reacted back in 2005 when George W. Bush proposed allowing workers to divert just 4 percent of their payroll taxes into personal retirement investment accounts. Furman’s former boss, the 44th president, accused Bush of attempting to “privatize Social Security and gamble your retirement.”
As noted here a few days ago; in my local race for US Senator, there are no candidates willing to come out in favor of making "hard choices".
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You deserve a break from all this grim news. Dave Barry is here for that: Your Biological Age.
Recently I became concerned about zinc. This happened because of an article I stumbled across on EatingWell, an educational website devoted to making the act of consuming food, which most of us perform every day, seem as complicated as the United States Tax Code, but more threatening. Whatever you’re eating, and whatever way you’re eating it, I can pretty much guarantee you that according to the experts at EatingWell, you are doing it in an incorrect, and possibly fatal, manner.
And I’m not just talking about food. I’m also talking about water. Yes. It turns out that consuming water is a complex and potentially hazardous activity that probably should not even be attempted by untrained civilians such as yourself without expert supervision, as explained by the many, many articles EatingWell has published on this topic. Here are just some of the headlines (I am not making any of these headlines up):
Is Water Good For You?
Here’s How Much Water You Should Drink Every Day, According To Dietitians
What Happens to Your Body When You Don’t Drink Enough Water
This Simple Change to My Daily Routine Turned Me into a Water Drinker
The Benefits of Front-Loading Your Water Intake, According to Dietitians
What Happens to Your Skin When You Don’t Drink Enough Water in the Day
Didn’t Drink Enough Water During the Day? Here’s What You Can Do Tonight
Should You Be Drinking a Glass of Water Before Bed? Here’s What Dietitians Have to Say
Should You Be Drinking a Glass of Water When You Wake Up? Here’s What Health Experts Say
Should You Drink a Glass of Water After You Work Out? Here’s What Experts Say
I Drank the Recommended Amount of Water Daily for a Week — Here’s What Happened
Here’s What Happened When I Drank More Water for 30 Days
4 Signs You’re Drinking Too Much Water
When Did We Get So Fixated on Hydration?
And there are plenty more EatingWell articles about water. There’s one that’s nearly 1,000 words long devoted entirely to the question of — I am still not making this up — whether it’s OK to drink from a glass of water you left sitting out overnight. (Spoiler Alert: It’s “probably OK,” but “with a few caveats.”)
The late Mrs. Salad was a Registered Dietitian, and a longtime professor of nutrition at the University Near Here. And one of the things I miss most about her is sharing Dave Barry's stuff with her.
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