Monday, June 1, 2026
Life & Death Distractions Even as the Big Picture Looms
Life & Death Distractions Even as the Big Picture Looms
“Indeed it has been said that democracy is the worst form of Government except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time.…”
Winston Churchhill, November 11, 1947.
I love my country, and as we approach the quarter millennium celebration of our nationhood, simply, I want my great America back… flawed, imperfect and a chaotic as it is, but one anchored in reality and not afraid to accept and face facts. We have a rogue Supreme Court, aiding and abetting autocracy at every turn, a Trump-captive GOP-led Congress, a clown car of blithering idiot “cabinet members” blathering falsehoods as the gospel, a snobbish “big business cronies rule” President who has unilaterally led us into a war we cannot truly win, tanking our economy in a way even his illegal tariffs never could; we are an isolated nation, a global pariah, but I still believe in the resiliency of the majority of Americans, who also love their country, to respond.
While all of this is going on, unprecedented floods, toxic weather, drought and searing heat plague our country (and the rest of the world), as the President of the United States declares the obvious massive “climate change” – the escalating killer disaster that impacts everyone on Earth – to be a “hoax.” He is doing everything he possibly can to undo the alternative energy progress to date and incentivize the root cause of it all, burning fossil fuels as his “drill baby, drill” profoundly misguided mandate to his entire government. The United States has become the global outlier on containing climate change, ceding the competitive technology research and resulting consumer products to China, perhaps sending Detroit’s automotive industry into a slow, lingering death spiral.
The notion of losing sufficient land mass to force severe dislocations of population centers, due to rising seas, is something that happens “over there” or in small isolated Native American communities on small patches of the Arctic Ocean shore in Alaska. Like Tuvalu: “Nestled in the heart of the Pacific Ocean, Tuvalu, a collection of nine coral atolls and islands, emerges as a tranquil haven of natural beauty. This small island nation houses just over 11,000 people. Blessed with pristine landscapes and surrounded by azure waters, Tuvalu has long been celebrated for its unique charm. However, beneath this idyllic exterior lies a pressing and immediate challenge: the subtle yet relentless embrace of rising sea levels.
“Tuvalu’s struggle is not just a local narrative but a poignant reminder for the wider repercussions of climate change to small island nations. As this paradisiacal archipelago grapples with the looming prospect of disappearing forever, it serves as a strong wakeup call that the impacts of climate change are not a distant future but an unfolding and harsh reality that needs immediate action.” Earth.org (January 29, 2024).
We lack empathy for those peoples, but there are so many climate change warnings, threatening large cities, even in the United States, that we ignore those realities at our peril. Sooner or later, every US coastal city will face infrastructure collapse requiring the relocation of vast populations inland. The Gulf coast, centering on New Orleans, already decimated by sea rise/storm surge flooding from Hurricane Katrina in 1965, is already unraveling… as these excepts from two reports (one from Nature.com/The Weather Channel – which presented the above map – and the other from the Yale School of the Environment – YSE) suggest.
Telling us that population relocation should already be on the planning/beginning implementation agenda, Jennifer Gray, writing for May 5th Weather Channel, begins with this warning: “Scientists are issuing a stark warning for coastal Louisiana communities, including New Orleans, that the time to begin planning for relocation is now… In a new study published in Nature, the latest research examines how climate change is causing a combination of sea-level rise, sinking land and intensifying extreme weather, and how it is all impacting one of the most vulnerable coastlines in America.
“Yes, New Orleans has made improvements to its levee system, floodwalls and drainage ability. However, these defenses may not be enough to keep pace with worsening conditions expected over the coming decades. Scientists warn that these vulnerable coastal communities should retreat before a powerful storm gives the city no choice… We have known for some time that New Orleans stands out as one of the most at-risk urban areas in the United States. But scientists now believe the conversations surrounding its long-term future need to be addressed.
“Does this mean we close down one of the nation’s most unique cities and tell everyone to pack up? Absolutely no… Since 2005, at least five major hurricanes have struck the Louisiana coast. Research shows that Rita, Laura and Delta, all of which struck Cameron Parish, have had a major impact on the 50% population decline in the last 24 years. Orleans and St. Bernard Parishes have both had a 25% population decline… Delaying those [relocation] conversations could lead to far more chaotic outcomes, especially after major flooding events, when decisions are made under pressure.” The May 8th Yale study echoes this reality:
“‘Louisiana is a canary in the coal mine. It is one of the rare places where we’re already clearly seeing climate-motivated depopulation combined with other social and economic factors,’ said Brianna Castro, assistant professor of urban sustainability at YSE… [She] worked with an interdisciplinary team of scientists from Tulane University, Florida State University, and Coastal Carolina University on the study, which was published in Nature Sustainability. The team noted that the current population retreat in Louisiana offers a ‘first mover advantage,’ which provides opportunities to learn what policies and plans are effective in advancing social welfare and environmental quality during relocation. By acknowledging the inevitability of the shoreline’s retreat now, the state can begin managed relocation — an orderly, multigenerational transition of people and infrastructure to higher ground — and set an example of how areas around the world can plan for climate adaptation, they noted.
“‘Transition planning offers significant first-mover opportunities, including the development of innovations in infrastructure and housing that is affordable for people on the move,’ said study coauthor Jesse Keenan, the Favrot II Associate Professor in Tulane’s School of Architecture and Built Environment… What kind of retreat do you want? Do you want to incentivize it and then people go naturally for jobs, housing, and lifestyle amenities — or do you want people to wait and then have to leave abruptly in crisis.” Nature does not seem to care what politicians say or want; she is not distracted from the laws of physics by the rantings of a failed US presidency.
I’m Peter Dekom, and I believe that the United States is particularly failing Gen Z and younger generations – the segment of the US population destined to be most affected by our ignoring climate change – and current administration policies are only making a very bad reality ever so much worse.
Sunday, May 31, 2026
Without Trust, Can the United States Survive as a Democracy?
Without Trust, Can the United States Survive as a Democracy?
"If you do it cavalierly, overrule precedent just because you think it’s wrong, then the whole system begins to suffer."
US Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts, appointed by former President George W. Bush, seemingly addicted to leading the court to reverse precedents and encourage partisan rulings.
We live in a pick-a-side nation where many individuals believe they have a right: to impose their faith/views on everybody, to demonize anyone who disagrees with them, to outsource their opinions to cult leaders, to harm others (or allow designed categories of people to harm those) who are not on their page, to apply different laws to different classes of people, to ignore fundamental constitutional rights they do not like, to disenfranchise voters who are likely to elect people they do not like or disapprove of, to judge entire groups of people based on traits they cannot change (like race, ethnicity, religious upbringing, family wealth or status), to deny scientific or medical facts that benefit others, and that they have a right to repeal or reject judicial decisions they do not like, etc. These factions do not even trust these designated minorities to have a vote. And no, Donald Trump, as a majority of young American Jews believe, disagreeing with our giving Netanyahu’s Israel a blank check to pursue their goals against Iran or Gaza civilians, where these goals are not US objectives, is NOT ANTISEMITISM!
Most of all, trust in general has left the United States, undermining the possibility that democracy simply can function. The last time we saw this trend so extreme was our Civil War, and as many historical scholars are noting, many of the issues that divided our nation during that four-year inferno of hatred seem never to have been resolved. During Reconstruction and well into the Jim Crow era, mostly southern states, defeated in the Civil War, simply could not accept former slaves and their descendants having the right to vote, entitled to equal protection under the law.
Racial discrimination has been institutionalized since the Constitution established that slaves were 3/5 of a human being (Census determination). The Chinese Exclusion Act (1882-1943) lasted 61 years. Segregation in our military did not end until after WWII. Emancipation under the 13th Amendment required repeated additional amendments to implement the citizenship rights accorded to former slaves, and the civil rights legislation of the 1960s and beyond was necessary to continue the movement that the Civil War, a century before, was intended to normalize.
Underlying these trends well into the modern era are (i) fear of being “replaced” (out-voted) by racial and/or ethnic minorities and (ii) racial/religious arrogance. The latter grouping usually is driven by mostly white American evangelical Christians (who constitute fewer about half the 53 million US Roman Catholics). As the above chart of major religion membership, only a small minority of members of any major religion globally are US evangelicals, the MAGA core.
Still, the religious right battles to push their values everywhere, like their fight to ban all abortions. Since the repeal of Roe v Wade (in Dobb vs Jackson Women’s Health Organization, in 1922), KFF tells us; “In the three years since the Supreme Court ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade, the total number of abortions nationally has slightly increased. The most recent data from the Society for Family Planning’s #WeCount project show that the average monthly abortion volume during the first half of 2025 was higher than the monthly average in 2024. From January to June 2025, there have been more than 590,000 abortions compared to 1.14 million abortions in all of 2024 and 1.06 million abortions in 2023.” For the most part Democrats oppose the ban, and Republicans are split.
But on May 1st, a unanimous ruling from a three-judge panel of the New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals (which covers Louisiana, Texas and Mississippi) ruled that the mifepristone abortion pill be distributed only in person and at clinics, overruling regulations set by the federal Food and Drug Administration. That ruling is now subject to a temporary stay from the US Supreme Court. With a majority of Americans opposing this abortion ban, surveys “have found that the majority of abortions in the U.S. are provided via pills and that about 1 in 4 abortions nationally are prescribed via telehealth.” Associated Press, May 1st.
But this effort to impose religious beliefs on our secular nation stretches, in several states, to forcing Christian biblical mandates (like the Ten Commandments) to be posted in all public classrooms, that the Bible be included in instructional materials and that books that counter Christian teaching be banned from school and public libraries. What’s worse, the good faith efforts of governmental agencies, including courts (including the US Supreme Court), to right historical racial wrongs has now been deemed to be actionable racism, entitling white Americans to redress against diversity, equality and inclusion programs designed to give minorities suffering from rather obvious multigenerational discrimination access to opportunities denied them for decades. And no, Donald Trump, as a majority of young American Jews agree, disagreeing with our giving Netanyahu’s Israel a blank check to pursue their goals against Iran, where these goals are not US objectives, is NOT ANTISEMITISM!
The US Supreme Court has stated that racism is no longer an issue, even though after their recent final nail in the Voting Rights Act in Louisiana vs Callais, that assumption was conclusively proven false: Most of the red states immediately thereafter invoked legislative action to redraw their redistricted maps to carve out and exclude Black and brown voters – typically a strong Democratic constituency – before the next elections. Racism defines the Trump administration and its appointees. We can and must stop that vicious anomaly!
So, we live in a land where the President lies to contradict the Pope on the correctness of his Roman Catholic teachings, Major Pete Hegseth proselytizes our troops in his wildly misinformed white Christian nationalist belief that not only is God on our side, but He favors the vicious military saturation bombing of civilian targets as a legitimate tool of warfare… even if such actions are pretty clearly war crimes under various international statutes, treaties and conventions. Is this the America that generations of brave American soldiers fought and died for? Is this the true spirit of the United States? Can we ever even trust ourselves to let those who might oppose our views vote in a fair and un-gerrymandered election?
I’m Peter Dekom, and it seems clear to me that the policy vectors needed to keep democracy alive and well are not going to be made by rightwing incumbents totally beholden to Donald Trump’s MAGA minions; so we must hope and pray that a grassroots majority, tired of nasty divisiveness, will overwhelm the partisan gerrymandering and remake a democracy based on the rule of law our American truth... again!
Saturday, May 30, 2026
Government by Desperation
Government by Desperation
"This lunatic, Hakeem ‘Low IQ’ Jeffries, should be charged with INCITING VIOLENCE!"
Trump wrote on social media. May 7th
“The pope would rather talk about the fact that it’s OK for Iran to have a nuclear weapon, and I don’t think that’s very good… I think he’s endangering a lot of Catholics, and a lot of people, but I guess if it’s up to the pope, he thinks it’s just fine for Iran to have a nuclear weapon.”
Trump’s May 4th false attribution to Pope Leo XIV
“I have already spoken from the first moment, ‘Peace be with you.’ The mission of the Church is to preach the Gospel, to preach peace. If anyone wants to criticize me for proclaiming the Gospel, let them do so truthfully… The Church has spoken out against all nuclear weapons for years, so there is no doubt about that.”
Pope Leo’s response
Virtually every facet of the MAGA/Trump movement today is driven by utter desperation. Trump knows he is wildly unpopular, that his signature “achievements” – the cut the tax for the super-rich “Big Beautiful Bill,” the massive cuts to popular federal programs (ACA subsidies, SNAP and medical coverage) to pay for the tax cut, cronyism/favoritism to big business, mimicking “Trump as Jesus” and building gaudy temples to himself (planting his name and likeness everywhere he can), his scandal-ridden political appointments, once again using tariffs to punish nations that do not tow the Trumpian line (especially once strong allies), more “Epstein leaks” pouring out, wealth-enhancing grift and corruption in the billions of additional Trump family net worth, cruelty to everyday undocumented workers and their families, his label-ridden language of “them vs us” divisiveness, his attempt to prosecute people who simply disagree with him, his one-way battle with the Pope, the huge deficits his programs have caused, and most of all, a very significant cost-increase from a unilaterally declared war on Iran – are now viewed by a majority of Americans as Trump’s litany of “shoot from the hip” failures.
As Trump seeks domestic and global recognition as a man of greatness, his efforts seem destined to have him be remembered as one of the greatest failed and corrupt presidents in our nation’s history. He’s like a tot knowing his toys and candies are about to be taken away for bad behavior seeking to force total control over his parents. And because Trump’s followers, who seem to be in total control of red state primaries, have become a self-imposed barrier to elected officials acting to fulfill their official fiduciary duty to the Constitution and all voters, Trump’s toxicity is excused, explained away (via twisted distortions and escalating lies) and reinforced without restraint. We’re in a mess that American voters seem to have embraced with the best intentions.
To understand how far apart Trump’s desired image has become separated from reality, take this simple “pre-Mother’s Day” moment at the White House (above right), where Donald and Melania Trump gathered to honor mothers of our military. “President Donald Trump and the first lady welcomed mothers of military service members to the White House on May 6. Melania Trump, a mother to Barron Trump, said mothers' love and power are at the heart of America's strength. She then introduced President Trump, who spoke on the ‘skirmish’ in Iran… A crowd at a military Mother's Day event laughed lightly when first lady Melania Trump referred to her husband's empathy.
"Most know my husband as the strong commander-in-chief, but his empathy transcends the role,’ she said as laughter bubbled up in the crowd, and she paused to look back at the president…. ‘And shape a caring leader who constantly remembers each and every American soldier is someone's child.’… The laughter grew louder as President Trump shrugged and the first lady smiled back at him.” Kinsey Crowley, writing for the May 7th USA Today.
Trump is using his cult-like MAGA control of primaries to rig future elections by any means possible. Hence, his pressure on red state legislatures to gerrymander Democrats out of office, grateful that his has the total support of the GOP majority in the Supreme Court, who just placed their seal of approval on partisan gerrymandering. And Trump is now extolling and inciting his captive DOJ to take political opponents out by embroiling even the most obviously innocent partisan players exercising their First Amendment rights in having to pay for the expensive legal process (“punishment by process”) even if their ultimate vindication is all but certain. Comey, Brennen, James, Kelly and now, as he argues that his fellow Democrats respond to Trump’s anti-Democratic efforts as political warfare: “Trump argued in a Truth Social post on Thursday [5/7] that House Minority Leader, Hakeem Jeffries, should be arrested after promoting "warfare" against Republicans just days before the assassination scare at the White House Correspondents” Association Dinner in April. Political warfare is not armed insurrection!!!
Meanwhile, with a Supreme MAGA conservative majority making a mockery of the 15th Amendment (literally intended to protect Black voters), allowing partisan gerrymandering even if it disenfranchised Black and Brown voters, Alabama, Florida, Tennessee and Democrat-controlled Virginia (with a lingering MAGA majority state Supreme Court hellbent on partisan exclusion of minority voters), quickly shifted perhaps enough House districts to hand the House of Representatives to the GOP, simply by excluding the votes of local Democrats. The same Republican Party that delivered a federal budget deficit that has now exceeds our annual GDP.
As FBI Director Kash Patel’s purported lapses in being able to attend to his duties, his alleged drinking problem, all as related to The Atlantic’s Sarah Fitzpatrick’s seemingly well-documented support for her embarrassing articles about Patel, pushed Patel both to file a defamation against that magazine and begin an FBI criminal investigation of Ms Fitzpatrick. To figure out who within the FBI was talking to Fitzpatrick, Patel has also ordered a number of polygraphs of his agents. Desperation using Trumpian attack response standards.
Yet Trump’s advisors have privately advised the President that his recent courses of action, supported by the GOP, may tank the midterms for Republican candidates regardless of Trump’s push for partisan gerrymandering. “The vast majority of Americans are suffering at the pump, the airport, or both—and they’re correctly blaming it on Trump. Trump and his Cabinet have continuously downplayed the negative impacts the war is having on fuel prices, with the president stating that these high prices are ‘a very small price to pay for getting rid of a [non-existent] nuclear weapon from people that are really mentally deranged.’ Americans don’t see it that way, especially if it means their plans get canceled. If the senseless death, destruction, and displacement in Iran and Lebanon weren’t enough to catalyze people against Trump’s war, paying hundreds of dollars for a vacation ticket might.” Malcolm Ferguson for May 7th The New Republic. And Trump totally is aware of this reality, as his desperation clearly illustrates.
I’m Peter Dekom, and we should all fear the decision-making of a President terrified of his plunging popularity and the negative effect it has on the GOP candidates who support him.
Friday, May 29, 2026
Major Pete – A Major Source of Donald Trump’s Humiliation in Iran
Major Pete – A Major Source of Donald Trump’s Humiliation in Iran
“An entire nation [the US] is being humiliated by the Iranian leadership, especially by these so-called Revolutionary Guards… And so I hope that this ends as quickly as possible…. The Iranians are clearly stronger than expected and the Americans clearly have no truly convincing strategy in the negotiations either… The problem with conflicts like this is always: You don't just have to get in, you have to get out again. We saw that very painfully in Afghanistan for 20 years. We saw it in Iraq.”
The Chancellor of Germany, Friedrich Merz, on April 26th while addressing students at a school in Marsberg, Germany.
“He doesn’t know what he’s talking about! If Iran had a Nuclear Weapon, the whole World would be held hostage.”
Donald Trump’s Truth Social Response, although Iran does not have a nuclear weapon.
“Under Barack Obama, 197 general officers were removed…So this is not something specific to this administration.”
Secretary of Defense/War Pete Hegseth, April 29th testifying before the House Armed Services Committee. His numbers were totally fabricated.
“The biggest challenge, the biggest adversary we face at this point are the reckless, feckless and defeatist words of congressional Democrats and some Republicans.”
Part of Hegseth’s same testimony.
Our biggest adversary is not China, Russia, Iran or even North Korea… It’s just American citizens and elected members of Congress who disagree with Trump and his mini-me, recovering alcoholic, Major Pete? I guess that’s the response you can expect from a profoundly under-qualified cabinet appointee who passionately believes in a one-party autocratic state. Major Pete. Military dilettante Major Pete took particular delight in firing close to 30 senior admirals and generals who either had the temerity to disagree with him (or were insufficiently enthusiastic over the young major’s goals)… or who (perhaps because they were older) didn’t look like the fit soldiers he wanted as role models.
With those firings went the accompanying tactical and strategic “hands-on” experience, education and leadership – qualities Major Pete was insufficiently experienced to appreciate or understand – that were replaced by Major Pete’s apparatchik, ready to embrace a Christian Crusader mentality of a war lover (warriors, not peacekeepers) without ethical boundaries, as the policy-setting presidential advisor and top military leader of the land. The same man who has led a wildly unsuccessful war in Iran, who has zero appreciate that his proclivity to spend gobs more money than we have ever spent on military budgets (by quantum leaps), adding an extra $50 million to pay for an absurd name change (from Department of Defense to Department of “War’), combined with his failure to return the Strait of Hormuz to the status quo ante (a wide open international channel), resulted in a global energy crisis and staggering cost increases (fuel, shipping, fertilizer, etc.) to everyone, including the American public.
And no, Major Pete, most of the American public is NOT behind your war. But then, despite your Princeton degree, you just may lack the reading skills to have reviewed the consistently and profoundly negative polls evidencing the out-and-out rejection of this Iran war by a vast majority of Americans. The only poll that supports your malign effort was a MAGA only sampling. Your testimony before the House Armed Services Committee at the end of April was an insubordinate, egotistical rant that came across as a disastrous joke. Indeed, listening to you, it is hard to believe that you will escape international charges as a war criminal. Your respect for the law, even the Constitution, reflects your betrayal of your oath as a soldier and a cabinet secretary. Further, your arrogant scofflaw mentality resulted in your erroneous statement (mirroring Donald Trump) to that committee that the President didn’t need congressional authorization to continue his war with Iran because the cease-fire deal had paused the clock on a 60-day legal obligation. Good thing you didn’t go to law school, where your ignorant interpretation would have been reflected in a comparably horrendous grade.
Major Pete’s testimony noted above was both disrespectful and filled with inaccuracies and contradictions. “Wednesday’s [4/28] hearing stretched nearly six hours as Democrats and some Republicans questioned Hegseth over the war and his ouster of several top military leaders… In one tense exchange, Hegseth told Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.) that Iran’s nuclear facilities were obliterated in a 2025 attack by the U.S., prompting Smith to question the Trump administration’s reasoning for starting the Iran war less than a year later.
“‘We had to start this war, you just said 60 days ago, because the nuclear weapon was an imminent threat,’ said Smith, the ranking Democrat on the committee. ‘Now you’re saying that it was completely obliterated?’… Hegseth responded by saying that Iran ‘had not given up their nuclear ambitions’ and still had thousands of missiles…Smith said the war ‘left us at exactly the same place we were before.’” Associated Press, Los Angeles Times, April 29th. So just looking at Major Pete’s statement that we started a war, resulting in a global catastrophe, because Iran may have maintained an “ambition” (desire?) to have nuclear weapons someday? Clearly there were no nuclear weapons to remove!
“Democrats accused Hegseth of misleading Americans about the reasons for the conflict and said rising gas prices are now threatening the pocketbooks of millions of people in the U.S… ‘Secretary Hegseth, you have been lying to the American public about this war from Day One and so has the president,’ said Rep. John Garamendi of Walnut Grove [Cal.], who called the war ‘a geopolitical calamity,’ a ‘strategic blunder’ and a ‘self-inflicted wound to America.’… Hegseth blasted Garamendi’s remarks… ‘Who are you cheering for here?’ he asked the lawmaker. ‘Your hatred for President Trump blinds you’ to the success of the war.” LAT/AP.
What Garamendi was cheering for seemed fairly obvious: common sense, truth and a willingness to understand that the United State had been stalemated by a much smaller nation, one we bombed into oblivion, and that we were much worse off than we were before the war started: the once open Strait of Hormuz was closed, Iran’s missile stash was anything but depleted, her vast stockpile of cheap drones and small boats was continuing to wreak havoc, our stockpile of sophisticated (and very expensive) missiles were seriously diminished, Tehran’s attacks on under-protected regional US bases were profoundly effective, the world blamed Trump and not Iran for the global catastrophe as we spent billions and billions of dollar to achieve failure.
If there were anything like regime change, it was to a much less pliant cadre of super-hardliners, quite willing to let the local population suffer as they dug in to resist big bully America. By pulling the US out of the 2015 nuclear accord in May of 2018, Trump unleashed a fury of Iran’s remilitarization, resumption of its nuclear enrichment program on steroids and presented a formidable foe to any nation that would attack her. After Israeli PM Netanyahu had failed to convince prior US administrations to join in his forever war against Iran and her surrogates, one strategic presentation by Netanyahu and his advisors to Trump made the “I hate to read or study the past” President of the United States of America ignore generations of American generals… and swallow a flailing Israeli PM’s most passionate wish… hook, line and sinker.
I’m Peter Dekom, and Trump’s appointment of a former Fox News host, a recovering alcoholic, a man who never rose above the rank of major and a “Warrior for Christ” will rank as one of the greatest mistakes by a US president in history.
Thursday, May 28, 2026
Undoing Trump’s Numerous Failures
Undoing Trump’s Numerous Failures
Donald Trump has had one hell of bad second term to date. His Big Beautiful Bill has gutted US healthcare and left the nation with a staggering increase in deficit debt… and that was before his massive Iran WAR miscalculation. His climate change policy – “hoax” driven falsehood – has left our American carmakers at a massive international competitive loss to China with federal policies making us look more like a backward, third-world country. Our resulting environmental pullback has made air and water pollution edge towards previous dangerous levels of toxicity. Allowing RFK, Jr’s conspiracy theories to dominate our HHS and CDC medical contractions as once eradicated diseases, like measles, have returned to infect and kill; HHS antivaxxers have redefined “acceptable” medical science.
Trump’s bully tactics, his territorial claims against Canada and Greenland and his constant put-down of allied leaders as he embraced autocrats everywhere, perhaps irretrievably alienating “allies,” were compounded with his inexplicably cruel immigration policies that have wasted billions and billions of taxpayer dollars with strong negative economic results. His exceptionally ineffective DOGE purges of federal payrolls saved nothing but hampered an otherwise effective workforce. Funding cuts to research, attacks against once prolific prestigious universities, the false use of “antisemitism” as an excuse to decimate those schools, and the rampant attack on major law firms as agents of change for the better have paralleled his hollowing out of federal lawyers, eliminating so many simply on perceived disloyalty to him… have crippled so many once-extraordinary bastions of excellence that once made the United States stand high.
The world has reacted to Trump glaring failures by pushing Trump-like politicians out of office (Hungary’s Orban) and moving liberals to new positions of power (Canada’s Carney). So, with so much wrong with Trump’s double-down failures, I asked myself what a well-implemented “big fix” might look like. So, here’s my take on those repairs, assuming America is even willing to admit it made a massive error in reelecting an autocrat tyrant wannabe, who has decimated our nation.
Climate Change. To me, this is priority one. It may be too late, but the recent spate of “natural disasters” screams the necessity of change. All of Trump’s efforts to reverse or deny climate change must instantly be reversed. Subsidies for alternative energy, restoring cancelled energy programs and scientific expertise (NOAA, Weather Service, etc.) must be restored. As red state Wyoming illustrates, this should not be a partisan issue.
Tax and Tariff Policies. Repeal the Big Beautiful Bill in its entirety. Base tariffs taking only these factors into consideration: balance foreign industries that survive only because of government subsidies and embrace true reciprocity. Recognize that except for very complex technologies, the US just might not be the most appropriate place for a renewed emphasis on manufacturing. Encourage high-end foreign manufacturers to locate facilities here.
As other nations (Canada) have successfully done, allowing for up to $5 million exemptions for intergenerational inheritance of farmland and marital property, repeal estate taxes in their entirety. We desperately need to stop perpetuating the growing massive disparity in wealth and income; it has killed upward mobility and rendered only the rich with true political power. Except as noted above, inheritance should be treated as income.
Healthcare. It’s time we stop kidding ourselves: universal healthcare, now available as a right in every other developed nation on Earth, is cheaper, more efficient and more humane than the US system. It is a social program, not “creeping socialism” as rightwingers are wont to tell us. We spend far more per capita on healthcare than any other developed nation (17%+ of GDP) with a lower average standard of care than many third world countries. The middlemen and corporate profiteers have made a mockery of the term “American healthcare.” We still can retain private insurers as administrators with a cap on fees if we must. But an uncapped version of Medicare, with no “donut hole” for medications, should be available to all Americans.
Military Policies & Expenditures. Congress’ power to wage war, clearly established in Article I of our Constitution, must be restored and reinforced to cover conflicts we initiate that could lead to war as well. As clearly illustrated by our asymmetrical losses (“failure to prevail”) in Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan and recently in Iran, our massive military superiority simply does not get the job done in most of the armed conflicts we have faced in recent years. We need to continue building defensive systems, and our cybersecurity is a joke. Massive aircraft carriers ($15B+, excluding aircraft, crews and necessary escort ships) have not been able to defeat hidden mobile missile launch platforms, mines, cheap drones and very small swift boats. If one carrier were taken out, that could be a $50B hit to our nation. Look at how much damage was inflicted by the fire on the USS Lincoln. We’ve wasted billions as we have depleted our mega-expensive munitions on a WAR that seems endless. We also need to stop subsidizing Israeli arms; they can afford to pay full price (as most of our allies do). We also have to learn that where there is a divergence between US and Israeli goals, we need to protect US values over Israeli priorities. We need to have a modern and effective military, not just a big, archaic and mega-expensive vestige of the past. Our military is an unjustified amplifier of national deficit that can no longer be tolerated.
Rebuild, restore alliances and admit our mistakes to our long-term allies. Everyone knows we screwed up. Our power and influence have plunged. Our allies are meeting without us, figuring how to move forward and sidestep what they see as a rogue nation, where political cronyism rules, where the “rule of law” (where no one is above the law) is fading in favor of “rule by law” (where a privileged elite call the shots) and where election rigging has become an American national sport. Congress can no longer be a rubber stamp for appointments by an angry cult leader. We have terrible leadership at so many federal agencies, as fact-averse, doctrinaire zealots and conspiracy theorists have replaced neutral, science-based leaders with common sense and a notion of representing all Americans. The Supreme Court needs to stop issuing shadow docket rulings without any published logical reasoning. And…
I’m Peter Dekom, and I suspect all of the above can be summarized by reversing and giving true meaning to the misused phrase, “Make America Great Again.”
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
International Suffering & Iran’s Lucrative Alternatives to End the War
Chicago “No Kings” Protest
Ships unable to pass thru the Strait of Hormuz
International Suffering & Iran’s Lucrative Alternatives to End the War
“Early in this administration, high-ranking Israeli officials and influential members of the American media deployed a misinformation campaign that wholly undermined your America First platform and sowed pro-war sentiments to encourage a war with Iran… This echo chamber was used to deceive you into believing that Iran posed an imminent threat to the United States, and that should you strike now, there was clear path to a swift victory… This was a lie and is the same tactic the Israelis used to draw us into the disastrous Iraq war that cost our nation the lives of thousands of our best men and women. We cannot make this mistake again.”
Trump-appointed director of the National Counterterrorism Center, Joe Kent, in his March 17th letter of resignation to the President.
At a March 25th prayer session at the Pentagon, Hegseth prayed for U.S. troops to inflict “overwhelming violence of action against those who deserve no mercy … We ask these things with bold confidence in the mighty and powerful name of Jesus Christ.”
As an estimated 9 million people took part in the March 28th “No Kings” day protests, it’s abundantly clear that even within MAGA ranks, Trump’s WAR is exceptionally unpopular. The depth of ignorance among the top American deciders is staggering. Farmers are watching the cost of fertilizer (petroleum based) skyrocket, airlines are forced to jack-up travel costs to accommodate jet fuel price hikes, virtually all commodities and manufactured goods now reflect the increased cost of shipping, the price at the pump is vectoring upwards with no sign of abating, and corporate employees are increasingly asked to cut costs at every corner and take on more responsibility for the same pay (life for much of that labor force has dropped to “miserable”).
“A malaise is sweeping office life at American companies, which appear to be in a race to find inefficiencies and cut costs. The curtailing of perks, from offsites to travel, is happening against the backdrop of an AI push that employees say seems aimed at squeezing more work out of fewer people. The upshot, many employees say, is that work has been stripped of fun. Middle managers say they’re on the front lines.” Wall St Journal, March 30th. Still, the various spokespeople for the Trump administration speak of “temporary price increases” and their absolute military victory at every level. But ground forces are converging into that theater, with discussions of finding and removing Iran’s almost one thousand pounds of enriched uranium. Any significant use of US ground forces is precisely the same step that foretold the “forever wars” in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Still nothing passes the Strait of Hormuz unless Iran permits passage. Even as Iran’s most expensive and sophisticated weapons – from radar stations, manufacturing plants to launching facilities, Iran’s navy and air force and most of the “big stuff” – are severely damaged or destroyed, Tehran’s massive decentralized stash of cheap weapons (e.g., drones, mines and surrogates like the Houthis) seem to provide an inexhaustible means of controlling that exceptionally narrow Strait. With unarmed citizens living in an extreme surveillance state, our strategy seems to depend, ultimately, on boots on the ground defeating the IRGC and all supporting military groups, well beyond the mere occupation the oil port on Kharg Island is hardly determinative.
We seem to forget how badly the US military has fared against asymmetrical warfare, the slow but consistent use of cheap weapons by doctrinaire or religious zealots, avoiding massive confrontation in favor of the sapping strategy of hit and run tactics, has hobbled us time and again. Vietnam. Iraq. Afghanistan. And with a Secretary of WAR/Defense more concerned with shoving white Christian nationalism as the guiding vector for our armed forces instead of attempting to understand what Trump’s aspirations are up against, we are at a profound, self-inflicted disadvantage.
With adequate healthcare plunging, as popular social programs (like Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and SNAP) are being rapidly diminished to accommodate the record-breaking tax cut for the rich embodied in Trump’s misnamed “Big Beautiful Bill,” the administration’s demand for a $200 billion dollar deficit-busting additional allocation for the WAR against Iran (we’ve spent about $1 billion/day so far), the fulfillment of Benjamin Netanyahu’s wish list to destroy Iran, would seem to be an easy way for Congress to reassert its war powers and reject this absurd request… by just saying “no.” Trump is lobbing insults at GOP members of Congress to force them to eliminate the Senate filibuster rule and pass the Save America Act, a statute aimed at culling as many likely Democratic voters as possible.
As much as Iran’s leadership (which has replacements waiting for every level of government) has no particular concern for its people and seems to be enjoying decimating civilian targets (like hotels) in neighboring Arab states, outlasting the US is a complete victory to them. As the price of oil soars, they are able to export enough of their product (through the Strait with US consent) “Iran may be getting pummeled on the battlefield, but it is winning the energy war. The Islamic Republic is now earning nearly twice as much from oil sales each day as it did before American and Israeli bombs started falling. Our report goes inside Iran’s wartime oil machine, a complex operation that relies on front companies and shadow banks.” Wall Street Journal, March 29th.
And Iranian leaders are wise enough in dealing with a US transactional President – who has never been able to understand that running a government is not remotely like running a business – where the off-ramp will probably include recognition of a new Iranian toll for ships to pass the Strait safely. Meanwhile that mega-ignorant faction of the Republican Party has, once again, resorted to Muslim-bashing, claiming religious superiority, while still not knowing the difference between Shiites (Iran is 95% Shiite, a faith that deems the highest prelate in the faith as the sole interpreter of the Koran) and Sunnis (most of the Muslim world, where the Koran is taken literally, at face value). Bigotry seems to be the go-to response of the ignorant.
I’m Peter Dekom, and it must come as no surprise that Donald Trump’s utterances about the progress of the Iran WAR are both conflicting and bear no resemblance to the real WAR news.
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