More comments on the US-Israeli war on Iran in left and right columns, from contributing pundits to The Hustings. To add your voice, email editors@thehustings.news and please indicate whether you lean left or right in the subject line.

TACO Exit -- To exit this "effort" without a claimable win would be the ultimate TACO. Could Donald J. Trump claim killing Ayatollah Khamenei was enough, and excuse the ensuing days/weeks of fighting with blather? Maaaaybe, but I think he'll want more.

Or, Hegseth can join Noem. –Hugh Hansen

•••

CITIZEN PUNDITS -- You are invited to our first in the Debate & Donuts Series, Talking With, Not At: “Has the Trump economy made life more affordable for Americans?” at The Allen Theatre & Salamander Bookstore Café in Annville Township, Pennsylvania, next Wednesday, March 11. EMAIL us at editors@thehustings.news to confirm your attendance. It’s free and open to the public as audience members or participants in the debate. --Editors

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FRIDAY 3/6/26

The US economy lost 92,000 jobs in February largely attributed to lower employment in health care ‘reflecting strike activity,’ according to the Labor Department, though even accounting for that, the number was worse than economists expected. Health care job growth has been propping up employment gains in recent months. The economy continues to lose information sector and federal government jobs. The unemployment rate inched up 0.1 points to 4.4%. [CHART: Bureau of Labor Statistics]

Israel Hits Beirut – After mass evacuations in Lebanon’s capital, Israel has launched its heaviest air strike on Beirut since its 2024 war with Iranian-backed militias, The New York Times reports early Friday. Israel also is hitting Tehran while air defenses battled incoming missiles from Iran.

Choose the leader we want … After admitting most of his administration’s favored candidates for replacing the late Ayatollah Khamenei were killed in the initial US-Israeli air attacks last Saturday, President Trump encouraged the Iranian people to choose their new leaders. Then on Thursday, Trump told Reuters in an exclusive phone interview: “We want to be involved in the process of choosing the person who is going to lead Iran into the future.”

Fuel prices … Gas and diesel prices have been steadily rising since the US-Israeli war on Iran began nearly a week ago. The AAA reports the national average for a gallon of unleaded regular was $3.32, up from $2.982 February 27. Diesel – used in trucks that deliver much of the goods we buy, as Trump reminded us during his 2024 campaign -- averaged $4.33 a gallon, up from $3.757.

“If they rise, they rise,” Trump said. The president says he has no intention of tapping the national strategic reserves, currently 57% full, according to APR’s Marketplace, which reports most economists agree with Trump that the increases are temporary – so long as the war is short-lived.

•••

Gonzales Out – Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-TX) was headed for Texas’ May 26 runoffs after “The AKA Guy” Brandon Harris edged him out in Tuesday’s GOP primary, 43% to 42%. That changed late Thursday when Gonzalez announced he is dropping his re-election bid, leaving the Republican nomination for Texas’ 23rd District to YouTuber and gun manufacturer Harris, Punchbowl News reports. 

Herrera will face Democratic candidate Kathy Padilla Stout for Texas’ 23rd District seat, which includes Uvalde. –Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

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FRIDAY 3/6/26

More comments on the US-Israeli war on Iran in right and left columns, from contributing pundits to The Hustings. To add your voice, email editors@thehustings.news and please indicate whether you lean right or left in the subject line.

Eight-Week Timeline is Achievable -- The US and Israeli military are performing magnificently – “about a 15” on a scale of 10, according to President Trump. Secretary of War Hegseth’s eight-week timeline seems achievable, given the decisive strikes that have crippled Iran’s nuclear sites and proxy networks. This preemptive action wasn’t about regime change or bowing to Benjamin Netanyahu, but about preventing future threats from a regime bent on nuclear armament and exporting terror. As a result of Operation Epic Fury, the Iranian people themselves – along with those living under constant threat across the Middle East – will be far safer. A short campaign to restore deterrence, without endless entanglement, safeguards America ... and it was long overdue. –Rich Corbett

•••

CITIZEN PUNDITS -- You are invited to our first in the Debate & Donuts Series, Talking With, Not At: “Has the Trump economy made life more affordable for Americans?” at The Allen Theatre & Salamander Bookstore Café in Annville Township, Pennsylvania, next Wednesday, March 11. EMAIL us at editors@thehustings.news to confirm your attendance. It’s free and open to the public as audience members or participants in the debate. --Editors

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FRIDAY 3/6/26

Commentary by K.E. Bell

By now I’m sure you’ve seen the clip. In 2001’s movie Shrek, Lord Farquaad, played by legendary actor John Lithgow, tells the knights of a tournament: “Some of you may die, but it's a sacrifice I am willing to make.”

That quote sums up President Donald Trump’s modus operandi perfectly. 

The US, the UK, France, China, Russia, Germany, and Iran signed the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPoA) in 2015, halting Iran’s ability to produce a nuclear weapon by limiting the country’s ability to enrich uranium. The deal included inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency, and relaxed sanctions imposed on Iran due to its pursuit of nuclear weapons. Iran complied with the agreement.

But then, unable to concede a foreign policy win for former President Barrak Obama, Trump withdrew the US from the deal in 2018. Iran went back to enriching uranium in 2019.

Then, early Saturday, the US and Israel struck Iran in an act of war.

Trump broke diplomacy and now he intends to fix it with war. 

How many will die because of Trump’s unending ego?

So far quite a few, including more than 100 young girls buried in a strike on a school. As of March 1, three American soldiers have died as well. Many more are likely to die on both sides. 

One of the casualties was the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, an extremist Shia Muslim cleric whose government has killed what is estimated by some at more than 35,000 citizen protesters since December 28, 2025. The Ayatollah was a horrible man running a horrible government. I’m not sad to see him go. 

However, it’s not supposed to be up to Trump to decide to go to war. It’s up to Congress as stated in the War Powers Resolution of 1973, but Congress wasn’t consulted. The equally corrupt Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu obviously was. 

Once again Trump has broken the law. That has spurred Reps. Thomas Massie (R-KY) and Ro Khanna (D-CA) to introduce a House resolution calling for a war powers vote on the Iran strikes. Essentially, it’s a vote to apply a law that already applies.

The US has mettled in Iranian politics since the US and the UK backed a coup d’etat that consolidated power with Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in 1953. Not surprisingly, the move was to protect oil interests, this time more for the UK than the US. The Shah was overthrown in the Islamic Revolution of 1979 that put Khamenei’s predecessor, the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, in power until his death in 1989. 

In a video posted after the attacks, Trump said: “Finally, to the great proud people of Iran, I say tonight that the hour of your freedom is at hand. Stay sheltered. Don't leave your home. It's very dangerous outside. Bombs will be dropping everywhere. When we are finished, take over your government. It will be yours to take. This will be probably your only chance for generations.”

It appears that the US has no succession plan to promote or install a more egalitarian government, and reports say Iran’s opposition movement has no succession plan, either. As of now, theocratic hardliners are still in charge of Iran and they intend to avenge Khamenei’s death.

Given the lack of a plan on both sides, we could be looking at an extended stay in Iran. The last time we waged war in the greater Middle East we were there for almost 20 years at the cost of trillions of dollars, more than 7,000 American lives, and hundreds of thousands of Afghani and Iraqi lives. 

This attack on Iran could have been avoided with diplomacy. Now one man’s ego will claim innumerable lives.

Bell is contributing pundit for The Hustings.

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MONDAY 3/2/26

THURSDAY 3/5/26

Trump to Noem: You’re Fired, More or Less – The answer to what do  we mean by “more or less”? is, “depends on what a special envoy for the Shield of America does, exactly.”

Yes, that is Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s next job – until now a nonexistent security position -- in the Trump administration, the president said in firing her, according to The New York Times. Trump also said he wants to replace Noem as Department of Homeland Security secretary with Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-OK).  

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) would not commit to voting for Mullin and Noem’s firing does not change Democrats’ demand for restructuring immigration enforcement in order to fund DHS.

Conversely, Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA) said he would vote for Mullin, a “nice upgrade” from Noem, the NYT reports. Still, no one has called Fetterman a DINO (Democrat In Name Only). Yet. 

•••

Power Vacuum – The Senate rejected a war powers vote Wednesday, 47-53, that would have officially put a stop on President Trump’s war on Iran, (per NPR’s All Things Considered ). The vote was mostly along party lines, which means that Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) voted with most Democrats for the resolution and Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA) voted with most Republicans against it. 

In the House … The House was set to vote Thursday on a similar measure introduced by Reps. Thomas Massie (R-KY) and Ro Khanna (D-CA). Similar results were expected, though it would take just a couple of Republicans joining Massie to approve the resolution.

But Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) teed up the thin GOP majority against it, saying “It would put the country in serious harm, and it would certainly jeopardize the lives of our troops and all those who were involved in making these great sacrifices to defend us.”

Spreading through, and beyond, the region … With Iran controlling the Strait of Hormuz and reports of strikes on US ally Azerbaijan’s Nakhchivan airport, the war has spread wide through and beyond the region. According to Azernews, an Iranian drone strike on Nakhchivan airport has left four dead so far. Meanwhile, Israel Defense Forces have struck Beirut after Iranian-controlled Hezbollah fired rockets and drones on the north of Israel, The Times of Israel reports. 

•••

Tariff Refunds Due – Federal Trade Court Judge Richard Eaton at the Manhattan-based Court of International Trade has issued a written order directing the Trump administration to begin the process of refunding more than $130 billion in import fees, The Wall Street Journal reports, following the Supreme Court’s ruling against the tariffs in its February 20 ruling on Learning Resources Inc. v. Trump. Such companies as Costco Wholesale, FedEx and Pandora jewelry are among more than 2,000 importers that have filed lawsuits seeking the refunds. –TL

________________________________________________

No Arms Shortages – The US has the means to carry out its air campaign on Iran “for as long as it wishes,” War/Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told a press conference Wednesday morning (per The Wall Street Journal). That campaign could last up to eight weeks, he said – or also, Hegseth said in various points in the press conference, six weeks or less than four. 

“They are toast and they know it, or at least they soon will know it,” Hegseth said. 

Hegseth was tamping down concerns the war in Iran would deplete the US arsenal. He was accompanied at the Pentagon by Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Dan Caine.

Hegseth said that a US submarine sank an Iranian warship in the Indian Ocean, the first such sinking by a sub since World War II. 

Caine said that Qatar shot down two Iranian bombers that were “inbound” and that the United Arab Emirates has intercepted multiple drones, while Iran has fired more than 500 missiles and launched 2,000 drones. 

All the President’s Explanations … The US with Israel struck Iran before Iran could get off a pre-emptive strike of its own, President Trump said Tuesday in yet another explanation for the war. The US-Israeli airstrikes brought an abrupt end to negotiations between Iranian diplomats and US special envoy Steve Witkoff and White House son-in-law Jared Kushner last week. 

Trying to straighten out the White House’s message, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said later Tuesday that Tehran was given “every single possible opportunity” to shutter its nuclear weapons program in negotiations with Witkoff/Kushner (per The Guardian).

Tehran “had no intention of actually negotiating a nuclear deal,” Rubio said. 

Rubio earlier had acknowledged that Iran wasn’t enriching uranium for weaponry following the US strike last June on the country’s three major nuclear facilities. 

•••

First Round of Primaries – Texas State Rep. James Talarico topped firebrand US Rep. Jasmine Crockett in the Democratic primary for John Cornyn’s (R-TX) US Senate seat, The Associated Press reports. Talarico took 52.8% of the vote to Crockett’s 45.9% in his quest to become the first Democrat elected statewide in 30 years.

On the GOP side, incumbent Cornyn, after spending $70 million on his campaign, edged state Attorney Gen. Ken Paxton, 41.9% to 40.7%, which means they’re both headed off to a May 26 runoff.

In North Carolina former Gov. Roy Cooper (D) faces former Republican National Committee Chair Michael Watley (R) to replace retiring Republican US Sen. Thom Tillis. 

Arkansas is the biggest climb for Democrats, with Hallie Shoffner winning the party’s primary to challenge Sen. Tom Cotton’s re-election bid. Democratic state Sen. Fred Love will challenge incumbent Republican Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sander’s re-election bid. –TL

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TUESDAY 3/3/26

The Latest – The State Department has closed US embassies in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait after being hit by Iranian drone attacks and has advised ambassadors to immediately depart from 14 Middle Eastern countries, The New York Times reports. Meanwhile, Israel’s military said Tuesday it has seized an area of Lebanon in a conflict with Iranian-backed Hezbollah militia.

Death toll … Six US soldiers have been killed, USA Today reports, with 787 deaths counted in Iran, 11 in Israel and eight in Gulf states.

Munitions buildup … Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) says the case for supplemental funding for munitions was “brought up in discussions” Monday in a Gang of Eight closed door briefing with Trump officials and top lawmakers on the House Armed Services, Foreign Relations and Appropriations committees, Roll Call reports. 

“There are more details to be determined, of course, how long the operation goes and what the need is,” Rubio told reporters after the meeting.

Good questions … President Trump generally has been sticking with his four- to five-week timeline. Impetus for US involvement with Israel has been less clear.

Pre-emption … Israel’s determination to attack Iran would guarantee that Iran would strike back at both Israel and the US, Secretary of State Marco Rubio told lawmakers in a closed meeting with CIA Director John Ratcliffe and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Dan Caine, The Guardian reports. Rubio & Co. held the meeting ahead of an expected House vote Thursday on a war powers resolution sponsored by Reps. Thomas Massie (R-KY) and Ro Khanna (D-CA). 

“It was abundantly clear that if Iran came under attack by anyone – the United States or Israel or anyone – they were going to respond, and respond against the United States,” Rubio told reporters at the Capitol afterwards.

President says … “Our objectives are clear,” Trump said at a Medal of Honor ceremony at the White House Monday (pictured). “First, we’re destroying Iran’s missile capabilities and we see that happening on an hourly basis, and their capacity to produce brand new ones, and pretty good ones they make. Second, we’re annihilating their navy, already we’ve knocked out 10 ships. They’re at the bottom of the sea. Third, we’re insisting that the world’s number one sponsor of terror can never obtain a nuclear weapon, they can never have a nuclear weapon. I’ve said that from the very beginning. They’re never gonna have a nuclear weapon. They were on the road to getting one, legitimately through a deal that was signed foolishly by our country. And finally, we’re insuring that the Iranian regime cannot continue to arm, fund and direct terrorists outside of their borders.”

Trump uncharacteristically took no reporters’ questions after just six minutes of remarks but characteristically pivoted to compliment himself about choosing new gold drapes and how he is building the biggest, best ballroom anywhere in place of what used to be the White House East Wing.

•••

The Clintons’ Recordings – The House Oversight Committee Monday released recordings of its questioning of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and former President Bill Clinton regarding their connection to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, taken at the Chappaqua Performing Arts Center in New York last week, The Wall Street Journal reports.

Hillary Clinton told the committee she did not know Epstein, only that Ghislaine Maxwell had attended daughter Chelsea’s wedding as a “plus-one” with another guest.

Bill Clinton told the committee he recalled seeing Donald J. Trump at a golf tournament about 2002-03 in which the future president told the former president he “had some great times together over the years” but fell out over a real estate deal.

“The president …” Bill Clinton said, “this is 20-something years ago, never said anything to make me think he was involved in anything improper with regard to Epstein, either. He just didn’t. He just said, ‘we were friends, and we had a falling out over a land deal.’ That’s all.” 

•••

Tuesday’s Primaries – Primary elections are held Tuesday in Texas, North Carolina and Arkansas. – Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

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Regime Change? -- MONDAY 3/2/26

By Todd Lassa

Ayatollah Ali Hosseini Khamenei is dead, killed by Israeli and US military forces on sudden strikes announced by President Trump at 2 a.m. Saturday, Washington time.

“Khamenei, one of the most evil people in History is dead,” Trump Truth Socialed. 

In a brief telephone interview from Mar-a-Lago Sunday told The New York Times he intends to keep the assault on Iran going for “four to five weeks.”

“It won’t be difficult. We have tremendous amounts of ammunition,” the president said in the interview. “You know, we have ammunition stored all over the world in different countries.”

The US military attack on Venezuela in which its president, Nicolás Maduro was arrested and brought to New York in January was “the perfect scenario” for regime change in Iran, Trump told the NYT. But Iranian protesters – an estimated 7,000, according to The Associated Press, of whom gave their lives trying to push back against the brutal totalitarian regime in the last month – do not have an organization backing them in order to take over, Middle Eastern analysts say.

“Anytime you start down this path, you don’t really know where it leads,” Daniel Shapiro, former US ambassador to Israel, told NPR’s Scott Simon on Weekend Edition Saturday, from Israel, as Iran counter-attacked that country with missiles. “Again, I hope to see the demise of this regime, and I hope the Iranian people have a better life. But what has been launched now could produce all kinds of outcomes, and it could produce a military dictatorship. It could produce a civil war. It could produce a splintering of the country itself.”

The US-Israeli attack comes after negotiations broke down last week between Iranian diplomats and US special envoy Steve Witkoff with White House son-in-law Jared Kushner. Trump has said just before his State of the Union address that war on Iran could come within a couple of weeks if no accord was reached.

In another, earlier call, this one with The Atlantic’s Michael Scherer Sunday, Trump said of Iran’s post-Khamenei leadership; “They want to talk, and I have agreed to talk, so I will be talking to them. They should have done it sooner.”

But attacks intensified on Sunday, the NYT reports, with Iran striking Israel and Gulf countries in the Middle East, killing three US troops. 

Having prepared for Trump’s apparent capriciousness, Reps. Thomas Massie (R-KY) and Ro Khanna (D-CA) have introduced a House resolution calling for a war powers vote on Trump’s military action in Iran.

Is the start of a new war with Iran a wag-the-dog situation? The week in which only congressional Republicans and the MAGA faithful had anything good to say about Tuesday’s State of the Union address ended with ex-President Bill Clinton testifying on his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein while deferring to the House Oversight Committee to determine whether the current president should do the same.

But any wag-the-dog theories must consider the other party involved in a “four or five week” war on Iran: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who fended off an impending trial into corruption charges against him by claiming it would divert too much necessary attention on the country’s war fighting Iran-backed Hezbollah in Gaza.

Last December, in a request suggested by Trump, Netanyahu asked Israeli President Isaac Herzog for a pardon. Netanyahu has called the three separate cases of bribery, breach of trust and fraud launched in 2019 a “witch hunt.”

Four years before that, Netanyahu vehemently opposed then-President Obama’s Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action written to prevent Iran’s nuclear arms development. Trump killed Obama’s JCPA at the beginning of his first term in 2017.

Today, Netanyahu has yet another diversion from his impending trial, as Trump faces the possibility of another extended US war in the Middle East and the end of the lower gasoline prices at the pump he has claimed as a major part of his second term’s economic miracle. 

After the US-Israeli attacks, Iran notified ships in the region that it had closed the Strait of Hormuz, according to The Independent. By Sunday night, benchmark US crude futures were up by as much as 11% to $75 barrel, with Brent futures, the global price gauge, up 8% to about $79, The Wall Street Journal reports.

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MONDAY 3/2/26

SCROLL DOWN this column for two very different takes on the US and Israel’s war on Iran, from Contributing Pundit Rich Corbett and Pundit-at-Large Stephen Macaulay.

Operation Epic Fury: Strength in Defense of the Free World

Commentary by Rich Corbett

Saturday’s headlines were historic but hardly shocking. A coordinated US and Israeli operation, reportedly targeting the heart of Iran’s military and nuclear infrastructure, marks a decisive turning point in a decades-long confrontation with the Islamic regime in Tehran. The reported death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei underscores the magnitude of what just occurred. 

Iran’s retaliatory missile launches toward Israeli and American military bases were predictable. The Iranian regime has always relied on escalation and intimidation. What may be different this time is the resolve of our side.

For years, successive administrations tried diplomacy, sanctions and strategic patience. According to statements from President Donald J. Trump, renewed efforts were made to negotiate constraints on Iran’s nuclear ambitions and its sponsorship of regional terror networks. Those efforts failed, not because of Western intransigence, but because the regime in Tehran has never truly abandoned its revolutionary mission: Export extremism, threaten Israel and outlast the West.

There comes a point when negotiations become theater. When a regime chants “Death to America,” funds proxy militias across the Middle East, arms groups bent on Israel’s destruction, and continues advancing its nuclear capabilities, deterrence must replace dialogue.

Israel has lived under that threat for decades. No nation can be expected to tolerate a hostile power that openly calls for its elimination while working toward nuclear capability. The Jewish state’s right to defend itself is not merely a slogan; it is a moral and strategic imperative. The United States, as Israel’s closest ally and as a guarantor of broader regional stability, has a parallel responsibility.

This moment is sobering. Civilian casualties are tragic. The prospect of wider regional conflict is real. No serious observer celebrates war. But it is equally serious to acknowledge that peace built on illusion is not peace at all. A nuclear-armed Iran would not stabilize the region; it would ignite an arms race, embolden terror proxies and permanently destabilize global security.

There is also a deeper question at stake when it comes to the future of the Iranian people. For most of the past half-century, they have lived under a regime that suppresses dissent, jails critics and diverts national wealth to ideological warfare. Many Iranians have bravely protested at great personal cost. If this operation weakens the regime’s grip and opens space for reform or transformation, history may judge it as more than a military strike — it may be remembered as the beginning of a national reckoning.

Strength, when exercised reluctantly but decisively, can prevent far greater bloodshed. The United States and Israel did not seek this confrontation; they endured years of provocation and failed diplomacy before acting. In a dangerous world, credibility matters. When red lines are crossed without consequence, aggressors advance. When they are enforced, deterrence is restored.

The coming days will test resolve. Iran’s proxies may lash out. Global opinion will fracture. But the central truth remains: the free world cannot allow a regime committed to its destruction to obtain the ultimate weapon. If Operation Epic Fury signals that era is over, then however grave the moment feels, it may ultimately prove necessary.

Corbett is a contributing pundit to The Hustings.

•••

A Hat & a Tan Suit

Commentary by Stephen Macaulay

While the “what-aboutism” that tends to be used in Washington all too often to justify things that are of a questionable nature is itself questionable at most, let’s play that game for a moment.

What if Barack Obama, while president, wearing a baseball cap, posted a message on social media that said the US was going to war with Iran—as it was happening, in coordination with Israel?

How would that have gone over with not just Republicans, but Donald Trump?

And then, after taping that announcement, flew off to a golf resort.

How would Congress have reacted if he said: “The lives of courageous American heroes may be lost and we may have casualties. That often happens in war. But we're doing this, not for now. We're doing this for the future, and it is a noble mission.”

There is that word war

Article 1, Section 8 of the US Constitution has it that “The Congress shall have Power. . . To declare War, grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, and make Rules concerning Captures on Land and Water.”*

The president doesn’t.

Historically presidents who have launched attacks against foreign actors have avoided the word war so as not to step on the toes of Congress (or at least the members of Congress who have actually read the copy of the Constitution that they carry around).

But let’s go back to the Obama what-aboutism.

What if, cap on head, he said to the Iranian people in his tape: “No president was willing to do what I am willing to do tonight. Now you have a president who is giving you what you want, so let’s see how you respond.”

That’s right: Donald Trump said to the Iranian people that he is their president (“Now you have a president …).

So, who is he going to war on behalf of in Operation Epic Fury?

But he did say the mission is also meant to: “defend the American people by

eliminating imminent threats from the Iranian regime.”

Just what those “imminent threats” are, were not detailed.

Last June, after Operation Midnight Hammer, during which US military aircraft bombed three Iranian nuclear facilities (Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan), President Trump said: “Tonight, I can report to the world that the strikes were a spectacular military success. Iran’s key nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated.”

So evidently that isn’t the source of “imminent threats.”

In his taped speech about the launch of Operation Epic Fury President Trump said:

“For 47 years, the Iranian regime has chanted ‘Death to America’ and waged an unending campaign of bloodshed and mass murder, targeting the United States, our troops and innocent people in many, many countries.”

Somehow something that has been going on for 47 years isn’t exactly “imminent.”

Back in August 2014 Obama held a press conference about the possibility of the US military going after ISIS in Syria. He wore a tan suit.** Then-US representative Peter King (R-NY) said the following day, "There's no way, I don't think, any of us can excuse what the president did yesterday. I mean, you have the world watching.” And he wasn’t the only critic of the sartorial choice.

A tan suit.

Only imagine a baseball hat.

In September 2014 the US — along with coalition partners including Australia, Canada, Denmark, France, Jordan, Belgium, Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, — launched Operation Inherent Resolve against ISIS in Syria.

Operation Inherent Resolve is winding down. On February 18, President Trump said he wants all US forces out of Syria within two months. Although major combat has been over since March 2019, there is continued insurgency, which led to Operation Hawkeye Strike, which was launched by the US on December 19, 2025, and has had strikes as recently as February 12.

Nothing goes quickly or easily in that part of the world and it would be more encouraging were there someone who seems both understanding and serious getting the US involved.

Again.

Operation Epic Fury may be over by the time you read this.

But the situation with Iran won’t be. Not for a long time.

==

*While the bombing of “drug” boats in the Caribbean and elsewhere seems to have dropped out of the news, US Southern Command is still at it. Interestingly, the prepositional phrase in the Constitution that precedes the one about war reads: “To define and punish Piracies and Felonies committed on the high Seas, and Offences against the Law of Nations.” Guess Congress doesn’t seem to want to take up that responsibility, either.

**In 2009 Obama was criticized by the likes of Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham for ordering a hamburger with spicy mustard. As Ingraham called him out: What kind of man orders a cheeseburger without ketchup, but Dijon mustard?” Certainly not the kind of man who is so vain as to wear a baseball cap because he’s losing his hair and probably didn’t have time to have a hairdresser make it look like there is more than is actually there.

Macaulay is pundit-at-large for The Hustings.

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MONDAY 3/2/26

Do not miss commentaries on President Trump's State of the Union address, "America -- and Democrats -- Got the State of the Union Speech They Deserved," by Contributing Pundit T.R. Davis, and "That's Entertainment," by Pundit-at-Large Stephen Macaulay in The Gray Area.

Join the conversation – email editors@thehustings.news with ‘Left Column’ in the subject line.

End Stock Trading -- Last night I gave up two hours of my life to watch a madman spout delusion and grievance. According to Donald Trump, everything he does is the greatest thing anyone has ever done, and all the world's problems are caused by Democrats. I wish I lived in the world Trump described, with low drug prices, a booming economy, affordable healthcare, and worldwide respect for America. Overall, Trump didn't stray too far from the talking points he hits at every speech he gives, which tends to devolve into rally rhetoric. However, he did propose one policy that I would like to see enacted: an end to stock trading by Congress. Extend that to the White House and vote it into law. I'll hold my breath while I wait for that to happen. –Contributing Pundit K.E. Bell

Lacking in Fact Checking -- Reading coverage Wednesday morning, it seems clear to me that fact-checking Trump and his followers is the most secure job imaginable. It isn't even threatened by A.I.: since large language training sucks in social media posts, how would Claude et al ever know what's a lie from them? With no new policies announced, I don't think the speech (or Governor Spanberger's response, which was competent) changed any electoral prospects for this fall. – Contributing Pundit Hugh Hansen

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WEDNESDAY 2/25/26

By Charles Dervarics

If you love reality television, President Trump’s State of the Union address was the place to be Tuesday night.

A man not known for much personal introspection, the president nonetheless likes to put on an entertaining show as he brought a litany of guests to illustrate his views on the economy, immigration, crime and foreign policy. By night’s end, he had awarded a Presidential Medal of Freedom, two Medal of Honor awards, a Legion of Merit award and a Purple Heart.

Amid sagging poll numbers, Trump was at times optimistic about the nation’s economic outlook and confrontational with Democrats who oppose his policies.

On the economy, he blamed former President Joe Biden for high prices and said his administration had achieved a massive turnaround in just one year. “Our nation is back, bigger and richer and stronger than ever before,” he said. 

Large swaths of the public may disagree, as a new poll from ABC/Ipsos/Washington Post poll showed that 57% of respondents disagree with his handling of the economy.

Seeking to address such concerns, the president cited lower gas prices and mortgage rates, increased corporate investments in America, an end to tax on tips and overtime and lower tax burdens for many on Social Security. “The roaring economy is roaring like never before,” he said.

The president also promised a new policy that the federal government would match, up to $1,000, contributions to retirement plans for individuals who lack access to any corporate matching contributions. “A year ago we were a dead country. Now we are the hottest country in the world.”

While Trump’s immigration enforcement policies have drawn sharp criticism, he doubled down on that issue by citing incidents where American citizens were killed or injured by undocumented immigrants. His sharp remarks about how “unrestricted immigration and open borders” may contribute to US crime brought shouts from several Democrats.

Yet in a made-for-TV moment, the president asked his congressional audience where they stand on these issues. “If you agree with this statement, then stand up and show your support: The first duty of the American government is to protect American citizens, not illegal aliens.”

Republicans stood and applauded at length while most Democrats stayed in their seats, to Trump’s dismay. 

Although foreign policy has occupied much of Trump’s attention in the past year, he spent comparatively little time on this issue other than noting that his administration continues to negotiate with Iran about its potential nuclear capacity. 

After the president’s speech — the longest in State of the Union history — Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger delivered the Democrats’ response. The state’s first female governor, Spanberger sharply criticized the president on immigration enforcement. 

"Our president has sent poorly trained federal agents into our cities where they have arrested and detained American citizens and people who aspire to be Americans," she said. "And they have done it without a warrant."

She also sharply criticized the president’s tariffs, saying these “reckless trade policies” are causing massive price increases. With a nod to the midterm congressional elections fast approaching, she added, “Democrats across the country are laser-focused on affordability” this year.

POSTED WEDNESDAY-SATURDAY 2/25-28/2026

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WEDNESDAY 2/25/26

Do not miss commentaries on President Trump's State of the Union address, "That's Entertainment," by Pundit-at-Large Stephen Macaulay, and "America -- and Democrats -- Got the State of the Union Speech They Deserved," by Contributing Pundit T.R. Davis, in The Gray Area.

Join the conversation – email editors@thehustings.news with ‘Right Column’ in the subject line.

Golden Age -- President Trump's 2026 State of the Union was a powerful showcase of America's resurgence — booming economy, secure borders, and bold leadership that puts America First. He avoided directly scolding the Supreme Court justices on tariffs, but had no issue chastising Democrats, stating “these people are crazy” and asking, “how do you not stand up for that?” 

Foreign policy weighed heavily, as all in Congress grasp the gravity of military action. Trump pledged to make peace where possible but said he won't hesitate to use force when necessary. It was an ominous warning, as he highlighted Iran's killing of an estimated 32,000 civilian protesters amid their ongoing nuclear enrichment and weapons pursuit: “I will never allow that to happen.”

A few lines drew extended applause, but one on the threat of criminal illegals stood out: “The first duty of the US government is to protect American citizens … not the illegal aliens.”

Trump’s speech featured extraordinary stagecraft in weaving honored guests throughout — Olympic champions, real heroes, everyday winners from his policies, and inspiring stories that brought the MAGA vision to life. He reflected on the dire economy and inflation under Biden, then expressed confidence that after one year of his policies, “our nation is back—it is indeed a turnaround for the ages.” The address was bold, honoring, positive, and convincing: “The Golden Age of America is upon us.” –Contributing Pundit Rich Corbett

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WEDNESDAY 2/25/26

President Trump’s State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress is 9 p.m. Eastern/6 p.m. Pacific on Tuesday, February 24. 

You are invited to submit your comments on his address, and/or the Democratic response by Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger to be broadcast immediately after. Please indicate whether you lean left or right in your email’s subject line, to editors@thehustings.newsregardless of your opinion within, so we may post responses in the proper column.

The Supreme Court’s ruling Friday on Learning Resources Inc. v. Trump and the president’s tariff policy certainly will come up in his address Tuesday. We invite you to comment on this (and/or any other current) issue, as well with an email to the above address (with your political leanings in the subject line). 

For more on the SCOTUS decision, read our news/aggregate/analysis in the center column, and don’t miss Pundit-at-Large Stephen Macaulay’s “Words Matter” in the right column. 

You also are invited to our first Talking With, Not At/Donuts & Debate; “Has the Trump economy made life more affordable for Americans?” at The Allen Theatre & Salamander Bookstore Café in Annville Township, Pennsylvania, Wednesday, March 11. EMAIL us at editors@thehustings.news to confirm your attendance. It’s free and open to the public as audience members or participants in the debate. --Editors

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MONDAY 2/23/26

Trump's press conference Friday on SCOTUS ruling striking down some of his tariffs [The White House].

TUESDAY 2/24/26

Four Years of War in Ukraine – European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, European Council President Antonio Costa and leaders from Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, Croatia, Norway and Sweden arrived in Kyiv Tuesday, the fourth anniversary of Russian dictator/President Vladimir Putin’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The leaders have scheduled high-level meetings aimed at reinforcing Western support, The Kyiv Independent reports, and coincides with meetings of the Coalition of the Willing and the Ukraine-Nordic-Baltic summit.

Meanwhile, the Independent reports, the European Union has failed to approve its 20th sanction package on Russia after Kremlin-ally Hungary vetoed the measure. 

“Unfortunately, we did not reach an agreement on the 20th sanction package,” EU Foreign Policy Chief Kaja Kallas said. “This is a setback and a message we didn’t want to send today, but the work continues.”

•••

Missing Epstein Files – An NPR investigation reviewing the latest tranche of Epstein Files released in January finds the Department of Justice has withheld more than 50 pages of FBI interviews and notes that include a conversation with a woman who accused Donald J. Trump of sexual abuse decades ago, when she was a minor. The documents were categorized by the Justice Department but not shared publicly, NPR reported Tuesday on Morning Edition

The radio network’s investigation reviewed multiple sets of unique serial numbers appearing before and after the pages in question, stamped onto documents in the Epstein Files database, FBI case records, emails and discovery documents in the January release. Listen to NPR’s report HERE.

•••

What the Puck – Everyone to the left of MAGA is criticizing, and MAGA is celebrating, FBI Director Kash Patel’s celebration of the US men’s hockey team overtime win against Canada for Olympic gold in Milan Sunday. Patel, an avowed hockey fan, watched the game from the stadium, then joined the US squad in the locker room for celebration, where he chugged and sprayed beer and sang and danced with members of the team, according to The Sporting News

CBS News reports that Patel arrived in Milan, Italy, last Thursday on a $60 million government jet. There, he conducted meetings with various officials and law enforcement partners, FBI Assistant Director for Public Affairs Ben Williamson tweeted on X-Twitter. 

After the win, President Trump invited the men’s hockey team to visit him in the White House and added he would have to invite the US women’s hockey team – who also beat Canada for the gold in Milan – “or I’d be impeached.”  —TL

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Tariffs Off? -- MONDAY 2/23/26

SCOTUS Keeps It – For now. The most positive takeaway from Friday’s Supreme Court ruling is that six of the nine justices chose to remind President Trump that Congress determines tariff policy, not the White House. 

The upshot is that importers want their tariff payments back. According to the Bipartisan Policy Center, the US collected $289 billion in tariffs in 2025 and another $35 billion this year up to February 18. Trump has floated the idea of rebating those billions in tax rebates of some sort to the American public, but that won’t happen any tax season soon.

There’s also the question of what happens to special deals Trump made with other countries on tariffs.

In his press conference hours after SCOTUS handed down its decision Friday morning, Trump lamented the court spent months to come to its decision and still failed to weigh in on refunds. Instead, lower courts that punted Learning Resources Inc. v. Trump up to SCOTUS will have to figure that out.

“Wouldn’t you think they would have put one sentence in there saying, ‘keep the money’ or ‘don’t keep the money,’ right?” Trump told reporters, per Politico. “I guess it has to get litigated for the next two years.”

Trump accused the six-justice SCOTUS majority of being “afraid of doing the right thing” and said they are motivated by foreign interests. The president said he is “ashamed” of them and singled out the two of his three appointees that voted with the majority.

“The Supreme Court’s ruling on tariffs is deeply disappointing, and I’m ashamed of certain members of the court, absolutely ashamed for not having the courage to do what’s right for our country,” the president said.

On Saturday, Trump announced an increase in global tariffs from 10% up to 15%, under Section 122 of the Trade Acts of 1974, which allows the president to set tariffs up to that amount for 150 days, according to The Wall Street Journal. Afterward, Trump says, Section 301 of the Trade Act requires new trade investigations before allowing long-term tariffs.

On Morning Edition, Neal Katyal, attorney for the plaintiffs, told Steve Inskeep the federal government already has told his clients they would get a refund for tariffs paid, plus interest. 

“I do” think refunds, plus interest, applies to the rest of the country, he said. “I think basically there’s a common-sense principle, if, you know, you’ve collected a bunch of money illegally, and the court says it’s illegal, then you’ve got to give it back.”

Katyal calls out Trump appointee Gorsuch for picking up on, in his concurrence with the majority opinion, “the long, long tradition going all the way back to the Federalist Papers of why our founders divided power and why they insisted Congress be in the driver’s seat.”

Every American should read the conclusion in Gorsuch’s concurrence, he said. You can read it in The Gray Area HERE– Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

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MONDAY 2/23/26

Commentary by Stephen Macaulay

Why does he think countries are “ripping us off”? Or are “treating us badly”?

Why has Donald Trump been, and why does he continue to be, so agitated, by international trade?

Doesn’t he realize that it is because we — the American people — want to buy stuff from those other countries because we find it financially advantageous to do so? Or perhaps we simply want to get a Mercedes from Stuttgart rather than a Cadillac Optiq (which is built in Mexico)?

As anyone who paid close attention to Schoolhouse Rock knows, the parts of speech in the SCOTUS ruling are as important as the ruling itself:

  • “Each of the nine verbs. …”
  • “… the eight other verbs in §1702(a)(1)(B) are simply wasted ink”
  • “’Regulate’ is one of the nine verbs…”
  • “… one of nine verbs …”
  • “Those verbs are followed by 11 objects … .”
  • “Combine the verbs and objects … .”
  • “Each of the listed verbs — 'investigate, block during the pendency of an investigation, regulate, direct and compel, nullify, void, prevent or prohibit’… .”

“But as the Government thoroughly explains, when a statute contains a long string of verbs and nouns, each term should be understood in context. The relevant section of IEEPA contains nine verbs and 11 objects, for a total of 99 combinations. We do not need to construe each word of the statute to ensure that it is perfectly aligned in all 99 pairings.”

So while much of it is parsing, it is fairly straightforward in what the SCOTUS decision says, which is that Congress is the one that should impose tariffs. As it says in Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution: “The Congress shall have Power to lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States … .”

That’s where the tariff power comes from.

Chief Justice Roberts, in his written opinion for the majority, is forthright about this: “Article I, Section 8, of the Constitution sets forth the powers of the Legislative Branch.  The first Clause of that provision specifies that “The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises.” It is no accident that this power appears first. The power to tax was, Alexander Hamilton explained, ‘the most important of the authorities proposed to be conferred upon the Union.’”

Roberts went on to note: “Recognizing the taxing power’s unique importance, and having just fought a revolution motivated in large part by ‘taxation without representation,’ the Framers gave Congress alone . . . access to the pockets of the people.”

That’s right. Again, for those who gained much of their knowledge about things from Schoolhouse Rock, the whole “No taxation without representation!” thing and the Boston Tea Party should resonate strongly.

It seems as though there are plenty in Congress who evidently grew up without TVs.

One part of Article I, Section 8 that doesn’t get the attention that it deserves is this infinitive clause: “To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations … .”

One of the things that Trump is doing with the tariffs is regulating commerce with foreign nations, and he isn’t shy about pointing that out.

Again, this is something Congress should do, not the president.

But where the president does have power in this regard is when there is a “national emergency.”

As the Supreme Court points out: “The President declared a national emergency as to both threats, deeming them ’unusual and extraordinary,’ and invoked his authority under IEEPA to respond.”

The two threats are fentanyl said to be coming in from Canada and Mexico. The other is the trade deficit that the US is running with other countries.

Let’s look at those two adjectives, unusual and extraordinary.

Drug smuggling is certainly in the top five of oldest professions. There’s nothing uncommon or rare about it.

Is fentanyl bad? Certainly. Should efforts be made to stop it from coming into the US? Certainly.

But by imposing tariffs?

And as for the trade deficit being “unusual and extraordinary”: the newly minted United States of America, despite having fought a war with it for over eight years, racked up a trade deficit with the United Kingdom.

That’s right: the US has had a trade deficit for as long as there’s been the US.

So why are these things considered emergencies?

While the word “emergency” doesn’t appear in the Constitution, so those jurors who are textualists are out of luck, there is still the sense of those who are originalists, who are looking at the public use of language at the time.

According to Samuel Johnson’s Dictionary of the English Language (1755), an emergency is “A state of things that arises unexpectedly; an unforeseen occurrence.”

And in Noah Webster’s American Dictionary of the English Language (1828), an emergency is “Any event or occasional combination of circumstances that calls for immediate action.”

Again, emergencies?

In a piece published on February 12 in its Liberty Street Economics newsletter titled “Who Is Paying for the 2025 US Tariffs?”, the New York Fed authors explain that the cost of tariffs are paid for by the importers (think Amazon or Walmart), and that the importers can absorb all of the costs or pass some on to the consumers. They calculate that during the first eight months of 2025 (they needed some time to run the numbers, so they didn’t run through December) “94% of the tariff incidence was borne by the US”

In effect, by imposing tariffs, President Trump is imposing a tax on the American people.

Unsurprisingly, the next day National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett went on CNBC and called it “The worst paper I’ve ever seen” and the lowest-quality work in the “history of the Federal Reserve system.”

Hassett provided heat. No light in terms of facts or figures.

On February 20, the same day of the Supreme Court ruling, the Bureau of Economic Analysis of the US Department of Commerce reported: “Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 1.4% in the fourth quarter of 2025 (October, November, and December), according to the advance estimate released today by the US Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the third quarter, real GDP increased 4.4%.”

That’s right, GDP was three points lower in the fourth quarter as tariffs fully kicked in, than it was in the third quarter. Lower.

What’s more: “The price index for gross domestic purchases increased 2.6 percent in 2025, compared with an increase of 2.4 percent in 2024.” In other words, what it costs to buy things in the US increased in 2025 compared to Sleepy Joes’ final year in office.

Could it be because other countries are “ripping us off” or because there is a “national emergency”?

Or is it simply because the man who announced on Friday, shortly after the SCOTUS ruling, that he is using Section 122, which allows him to impose tariffs of not more than 15%, for 150 days before Congress gets involved, and Section 301, which requires an investigation into unfair trade practices before it can be utilized (the investigation will be made by the likes of Hassert) really isn’t good at economics.

When US importers start passing along some of the hits they’ve been absorbing from the now-overturned tariffs, Trump and his party are going to find themselves in a national emergency in November because consumers are going to find things even more expensive than they are today.

Macaulay is pundit-at-large for The Hustings.

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MONDAY 2/23/26

The Rev. Jesse Jackson was "a good man, with lots of personality, grit and 'street smarts,'" President Trump said of the civil rights leader who died Wednesday (per Newsweek). Jackson was 84. Jackson ran for the Democratic nomination for president in 1984 and again in 1988, when he finished second in state primaries won, after Gov. Michael Dukakis and ahead of Sen. Al Gore.

How Is Your Economy?

Stephen Macaulay makes his case, as never-Trumper pundit-at-large writing mostly for our right (conservative) column that mostly every American’s economy is costlier after a year of the Trump administration. 

Whether you agree – as conservative or liberal – or disagree –as a liberal or conservative – we now offer two ways your voice may be heard.

  1. Become a citizen pundit and email your thoughts on this question (and/or on any of the political questions covered here, or should be covered here) with an email to editors@thehustings.news and please keep it civil. Also, be sure to indicate your political leanings in the subject line so we may post your comments in the proper (right or left) column.
  2. Join us for the first in our Talking With, Not At … Debate & Donuts series at The Allen Theatre & Salamander Bookstore Café in Annville Township, Pennsylvania, 6 p.m. Eastern Time Wednesday, March 11. EMAIL us at editors@thehustings.news to confirm your attendance. It’s free and open to the public. --Editors

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PRESIDENTS DAY MONDAY 2/16/26

IEEPA Does Not Authorize Trump Tariffs -- President Trump cannot impose tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) the US Supreme Court has ruled in Learning Resources Inc. v. Trump. In its ruling Friday morning, Chief Justice John Roberts Friday writes; "The President asserts the extraordinary power to unilaterally impose tariffs of unlimited amount, duration, and scope. In light of the breadth, history, and constitutional context of that asserted authority, he must identify clear congressional authorization to exercise it."

Roberts read a 10-minute summary of the decision Friday morning with no oral dissents. SCOTUSblog reports a 6-3 decision with Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Brett Kavanaugh dissenting. Solicitor Gen. John Sauer and attorney Neal Katyal, who argued against the tariffs, were present in court for the opinion.

•••

Disappointing GDP – Gross Domestic Product (GDP) grew at an annual rate of just 1.4% for the fourth quarter of 2025, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. That’s less than expected according to APR’s Marketplace, which notes the government shutdown last autumn and softer-than-expected holiday spending did not help. Annual GDP growth was 4.4% for the previous quarter.

Meanwhile … Touring a steel plant in Rome, Georgia, Thursday President Trump said this: “What word have you not heard the last few weeks? Affordability. Because I won. I won affordability.”

Trump cited lower gas and used car prices, NPR’s Morning Edition reports.

•••

10 Days in February/March – President Trump at his first Board of Peace meeting in Washington Thursday “weighed” a limited strike against military or government targets in Iran if he does not get a nuclear deal with the country, The Wall Street Journal reports.

“We’re going to make a deal or get a deal one way or another,” Trump said. 

He said he would decide within the next 10 days. Later, his timeline was expanded to two weeks.

“Only President Trump knows what he may or may not do,” said White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly. 

This all came amidst a military buildup with 12 warships in the region, including a second strike group led by the USS Gerald R. Ford.

“There’s another beautiful armada floating beautifully toward Iran right now,” Trump said. 

About the board … The Board of Peace in its first meeting pledged $7 billion from member countries to contribute to the rebuilding of Gaza, even as disarming Hamas “remains a challenge,” according to Semafor. Chairman for Life Donald J. Trump said the US will donate $10 billion to the board, though he did not suggest where the tax money would come from (or where the money might end up after he leaves the White House, while remaining chairman, in 2029). 

Amidst concerns that the Board of Peace, which has been joined by such countries as Hungary, Argentina, Israel, Saudi Arabia and Kazakhstan, but not France, Germany, Denmark, the UK or Canada will replace the United Nations, CfL Trump suggested it will ensure the UN will “run properly” and hinted at future involvement elsewhere. –TL

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THURSDAY 2/19/26

(Ex-) Royal Arrest – Police arrested Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, ‘Randy Andy’ Thursday morning after the latest release of Epstein Files by the US Department of Justice revealed that the Andrew formerly known as Prince had released sensitive government documents and commercial information to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein while serving as the UK’s trade envoy. The Guardian quotes former UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown saying, “I have submitted a five-page memorandum to the Metropolitan, Surrey, Sussex, Thames Valley and other relevant UK police constabularies.”

Ex-Prince Andrew’s brother, King Charles, said the “law must take its course.”

Police searched Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s former house at the Royal Lodge in Windsor, as well as addresses in Berkshire and Norfolk, according to the newspaper. The former prince turned 66 Thursday.

•••

The Art of Dragging Out Peace Talks – It has been repeated many times by critics of the current administration that President Trump had promised to bring peace to Ukraine on day-one of his second term. Thanks to a deal Moscow is dangling in front of the White House, it looks like it will not happen without Ukraine’s surrender of all the Donbas region and probably questionable security guarantees from the US and NATO. 

After two days of trilateral negotiations between Russia and Ukraine, with US special envoy Steve Witkoff and White House son-in-law Jared Kushner mediating, even Ukrainian diplomats indicated a bit of progress (perhaps the progress is that they were at the same table with the Kremlin and Washington?). 

That might not matter if President Trump bites at Kremlin negotiators led by Vladimir Medinsky who have placed $14 trillion worth of business deals between Russia and the US on the table in exchange for the US dropping its sanctions. The Kremlin’s offer was reported by NPR’s Charles Maynes on Morning Edition.

Meanwhile, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says the talks brought the sides closer to a detailed framework for ceasefire monitoring, according to The Kyiv Independent, but the “political track” remains contentious, especially on the issue of territory.

Zelenskyy told Piers Morgan on YouTube’s Piers Morgan Uncensored: "Thousands, dozens of thousands of Ukrainians have been killed on this direction, defending this part of Ukraine. We have to understand that Donbas is part of our independence. It’s a part of our values. It’s not about the land. It’s not only about territories. It’s about people.” –TL

________________________________________________

WEDNESDAY 2/18/26

‘Difficult’ Peace Talks – Results of the second day of trilateral talks with the US mediating peace negotiations between Ukraine and Russia might be called “mixed,” though on the positive side of mixed. The second day of negotiations in Geneva, Switzerland, ended after approximately two hours, according to news reports.

Russian chief negotiator Vladimir Medinsky described the talks “difficult but practical” and said the next session is expected “soon,” while Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said his countries are ready to monitor a ceasefire, if there is political will to enforce it, The Kyiv Independent reports. 

“They have basically agreed on almost everything,” Zelenskyy said, leaving open the question of what sticking points remain as the Russia’s war on Ukraine approaches its fifth year. 

Monitoring would definitely involve the US, Zelenskyy said, calling this a constructive signal.

“We can see that some ground work has been laid, but positions remain different, as the negotiations were difficult,” Zelenskyy said.

•••

The Paramount View – CNN’s Anderson Cooper announced he is leaving CBS News’ 60 Minutes Tuesday, as millions of fans of CBS’ The Late Show with Stephen Colbert flocked to that show’s YouTube channel to watch the host’s interview with US Senate candidate and Texas Democratic state Rep. James Talarico. By early Wednesday, Colbert’s interview with Talarico had chalked up 5.3 million views on YouTube.

Colbert told viewers Monday that CBS attorneys had warned him “in no uncertain terms” that he “could not have” Talarico, who is campaigning for the Democratic nomination for the seat currently held by Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX), “on the broadcast.” This came after Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr suggested that talk shows might no longer be exempt from the “equal time” rule requiring all candidates in a political race be given the chance to appear.

On Tuesday’s Late Show, Colbert displayed a copy of a statement released by CBS attorneys that the show “was not prohibited by CBS from broadcasting the interview with Rep. James Talarico. The show was provided legal guidance that the broadcast could trigger the FCC equal-time rule for two other candidates, including Rep. Jasmine Crockett, and presented options for how the equal time for other candidates could be fulfilled. The Late Show decided to present the interview through its YouTube channel with on-air promotion on the broadcast rather than potentially providing the equal-time options.”

Colbert countered the attorneys’ Tuesday statement, telling his Tuesday night audience that “every word” of Monday night’s script that revealed CBS attorneys’ prohibition of the Talarico interview was “approved by CBS’s lawyers who, for the record, approve every script that goes on the air.”

The host then “curbed” the attorneys’ contradicting printed statement in a dog-poop bag. The Late Show with Stephen Colbert is scheduled to end in May, and it’s clear Colbert is prepared for a potential early exit.

Applying the equal time rule to broadcasts of The Late Show or Jimmy Kimmel Live would require five interviews prior to the Texas primary March 3, including Talarico and fellow Democrat and US Rep. Crockett. Cornyn is being challenged in a who’s-MAGAier race on the GOP side by Texas Attorney Gen. Ken Paxton and US Rep. Wesley Hunt.

On Morning Edition Wednesday, NPR’s David Folkenflik connected censorship of broadcast of the Colbert-Talarico interview with CBS owner Paramount-Skydance’s attempt to buy Warner Brothers Discovery. Paramount-Skydance is owned by David Ellison, son of Trump supporter and Oracle founder Larry Ellison. The attempted purchase is funded in part by the sovereign wealth funds of Qatar, Abu Dhabi and Saudi Arabia, Folkenflik noted. And target of their intended purchase, Warner Brothers Discovery, owns among other media entities, CNN, whose premier prime time news show is Anderson Cooper 360–TL

________________________________________________

TUESDAY 2/17/26

Geneva Twofer – Indirect talks between the US and Iran have resumed Tuesday in Geneva, Switzerland, The New York Timesreports, with White House special envoy Steve Witkoff and White House son-in-law Jared Kushner also taking on US-Russia-Ukraine peace talks in a two-day meeting. This US diplomacy double-duty doesn’t bode well for Ukraine’s interests, as Russia has signaled it will take a harder line on a peace deal, according to The Kyiv Independent

“This time, we intend to discuss a wider range of issues,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, “including, in fact, the main issue that concerns both the territories and everything else related to our demands.”

Oman Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi is hosting US-Iranian talks, according to the NYT, with emphasis as usual on the Trump administration’s attempt to halt Iran’s nuclear enrichment program. The White House has ordered a buildup of US forces in the region, including two aircraft carriers. Countries in the region are worried potential US strikes on Iran could destabilize the Middle East and endanger US allies that host American soldiers in the region.

Iranian diplomats have indicated a willingness to pause enrichment of uranium, according to The Wall Street Journal, move some stockpiles offshore to a third party such as Russia and in an appeal to Trump’s Art of the Deal inclinations, cut business deals with the US. But Iran has not floated the definitive halt to enrichment that Trump has demanded.

Trump’s deployment of two aircraft carriers to the region in fact has been countered by this bellicose reaction from Iran’s leader, Ayatollah Khamenei: “An aircraft carrier is certainly a dangerous piece of equipment. But more dangerous than the carrier is the weapon that can send it to the bottom of the sea.” –TL

________________________________________________

After Munich -- PRESIDENTS DAY 2/16/26

Dealing With Russia – Special envoy Steve Witkoff and White House son-in-law Jared Kushner are “upbeat” about the latest round of talks with Russia and Ukraine to begin Tuesday in Geneva, Switzerland. Secretary of State Marco Rubio is a bit more cautious.

“The answer is, we don’t know. We don’t know the Russians are serious about ending the war,” Rubio said, per NPR’s Charles Maynes on Morning Edition. “They say they are, and under what terms they’re willing to do it and whether we can find terms that are acceptable to Ukraine that Russia will agree to. But we’re going to continue to do it.” 

The Kremlin indicates it prefers diplomacy to war, but that its victory is inevitable and will continue to take it by force to the point it can convince the US that Ukraine’s case – including holding on to the portion of territory in Donbas Oblast that it hasn’t already lost to Russia – is hopeless. The Kremlin is trying to convince the Trump White House that once it is past this, Russia and the US can get back to business and investment, Maynes reports. Witkoff sees doing business in the region is key to bridging differences with Ukraine, he says.

At the Munich Security Conference last weekend Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said, “The Americans often return to the topic of concessions and too often those discussions are … discussed only in the context of Ukraine. Not Russia.”

Kinder, gentler US … Last year Vice President JD Vance chastised Europe for stifling freedom of speech by limiting access to Europe’s far-right politicians and parties. This year Rubio told the conference Europe and the US “belong together,” The New York Times reports. 

“We want Europe to be strong,” Rubio said. World Wars I and II are a reminder that “our destiny is and always will be intertwined with yours.”

UK Prime Minister Kier Starmer, who so far has survived revelations in the Epstein Files that his ambassador to the US, Peter Mandelson, leaked sensitive government documents to Jeffrey Epstein, conceded at the conference that it’s time for Europe to step up and defend itself. 

“As Europe, we must stand on our own two feet,” Starmer said.

Meanwhile, Hungary … At a joint press conference in Budapest Rubio told Viktor Orbán, who is up for re-election April 12, that President Trump is “deeply committed to your success,” The Guardian reports Monday.

“We are entering the golden era of relations between our countries and not simply because of the alignment of our people,” Rubio said. “But because of the relationship you have with the president of the United States.”

Last Saturday Orbán, Hungary’s PM since 2010, told the Munich Security Conference that the European Union, not Russia, is the “real threat” to his Hungary. Orbán’s Fidesz is effectively Hungary’s only party, and another term is virtually guaranteed in eight weeks.

Trump’s support, then, is of very little surprise.

Killing of a Russian dissident … Monday, February 16 – Presidents Day in the US – marks two years since the killing of Russian dissident Alexei Navalny in a maximum-security prison in the Russian Arctic. On Saturday, the foreign ministries of Britain, France, Germany, Sweden and the Netherlands released a statement that Navalny’s body showed the presence of traces of epibatidine, a toxic substance found in a South American frog, according to The New York Times

“Epibatidine is a toxin found in poison dart frogs in South America,” the statement reads. “It is not found naturally in Russia.”

After a weeklong battle in 2024, Russia released Navalny’s body to his mother, according to the report.

Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria V. Zakharova told the state-owned Tass news agency that the statement from the five European nations is a “PR campaign to deflect attention from pressing issues in the West.”

Addressing the Munich Security Conference Saturday, the dissident’s widow, Yulia Navalnaya, said, “I want to repeat: Vladimir Putin killed my husband, Alexei Navalny, using a chemical weapon. Of course, it’s not news that Vladmir Putin is a killer, but now we have yet another direct piece of proof.” –Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

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PRESIDENTS DAY MONDAY 2/16/26

Commentary by Stephen Macaulay

In August 2024, while campaigning, then-candidate Donald Trump, surrounded by milk, meat, eggs, and packaged foods — items that he was later to begin calling “the groceries,” which he defined as “a bag with different things in it” — said he would reduce prices to consumers “on day one,” the same day he was going to end the war in Ukraine.

This reduced-grocery prices claim became one of his pledges throughout the campaign, along with …

  • border and immigration efforts focused on “the worst of the worst” (according to CBS News, citing a Department of Homeland Security document, “Less than 14% of the nearly 400,000 immigrants arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement in President Trump’s first year back in the White House had charges or convictions for violent criminal offenses,” which pretty much puts the lie to that “worst” claim); 
  • he would put tariffs on those countries that have been “ripping us off” (curiously, there is a 50% tariff on goods from Brazil and we have a trade surplus with that country, which makes the “ripping us off” remark somewhat odd) and would grow US manufacturing (according to the National Association of Manufacturers, “Employment in the sector has been in decline over the past year,” with said year being 2025);
  • he would reduce energy prices by 50% within 12 months and as a result, “everything comes down” in terms of their prices (January 20, 2026, 12 months later, no one has seen their energy costs go down by 50% unless they’ve stopped driving and decided they really don’t need to use their appliances or furnace).

On February 13 the US Bureau of Labor Statistics released its Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers, which was hailed as a victory for the administration, as there was a mere 0.2% increase in January over December. Almost nothing.

Thing is, very few people only bought things in January. So another set of numbers in the BLS release need to be considered.

These are the “Unadjusted 12-mons. ended Jan. 26.”

In other words, the tracking of the rise since January 2025.

“All items” are up 2.4%, which is certainly more than that 0.2%.

Food? Up 2.1%.

Energy is down — but 49.9% off Trump’s 50% decrease number. It is down 0.1%.

But those using electricity saw a 6.3% rise, and those who have natural gas piped to their homes saw a 9.8% increase.

Apparel? Up 1.7%. Shelter? Up 2.9%. Need medical care? Up 3.9%.

In other words, the groceries have gone up in price as have plenty of other consumer products.

Meanwhile, the president is spending his time on things like ballrooms and arches … and golf.

On more than one occasion Donald Trump criticized Barack Obama for spending too much time playing golf and not enough time doing the job he was elected to do.

In his two terms in office Obama played golf 333 times. That was 113 in his first term and 220 in his second.

During his first term Trump played golf 261 times. According to didtrumpgolftoday.com, he has played golf 97 days out of his 392 days back in office. 

261 + 97= 358.

And he still has nearly three years to go.

Yes, the man is working hard to bring down prices for the American people, just like he said he would.

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PRESIDENTS DAY MONDAY 2/16/26