Monday, March 2, 2026

‘Our Resources Are Done’

By Arash Azizi

Sunday, March 01, 2026

 

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is dead, and the regime he ran will very likely transform. But no one should imagine that its nature or future will come down to a single person.

 

The country’s 13-man National Security Council essentially sidelined Khamenei after the 12-day war in June. It has effectively run the country since the summer and will likely continue to do so, even after a new supreme leader is appointed.

 

At the moment, a temporary three-person leadership committee has officially taken charge, but real power continues to rest with the security council, which is dominated by military and political insiders. Among them are the council’s powerful convener, Ali Larijani, and the current speaker of Parliament, Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, a wily former air-force general popular with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

 

The first task of the country’s rulers, whether through the three-man leadership committee or the security council, will be to manage the current war with the United States and Israel. They will face relentless pressure to abandon Iran’s decades-long hostility and find a different path forward. Iran’s two major adversaries have thoroughly humiliated it; the regime was not able to hide its reclusive leader for even a few hours.

 

Mostly to save face, Iran’s new leaders will likely continue to hit at American and Israeli targets in the region for a little while. But in time, those in charge will probably be willing to strike a new bargain if it extends the regime’s lease on life. Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu might be receptive to such a deal as an alternative to open-ended conflict.

 

“This atmosphere, and loud speeches by Iran’s leaders against America, will change in a matter of months,” a source close to Qalibaf told me by phone. He asked that we withhold his name because of the sensitivity of wartime conditions. “The Islamic Republic has no way but to end the conflict with the U.S. and focus on economic development. Our resources are done. That’s the only way forward.”

 

The source envisaged that Iran would establish diplomatic ties with the United States and take a position on Israel similar to that of Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf states. This would mean giving up Khamenei’s quixotic quest to destroy Israel and instead conditioning recognition on a diplomatic solution to the conflict with the Palestinians. The source also pictured the relaxation of socially repressive domestic laws, such as the mandatory hijab, and perhaps even a slight political opening.

 

If the future of the country depends on a new clerical leader, however, the composition of the three-man interim leadership committee doesn’t inspire much hope. It includes President Masoud Pezeshkian, who is a reformist, but also Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei, an ultra-hard-line former minister of intelligence and the current head of the country’s brutal judiciary. The third member is Alireza Arafi, a hard-line cleric who serves on the Guardian Council and has long been seen as a continuity candidate to succeed Khamenei. The Assembly of Experts, the body tasked with the job of selecting the new supreme leader, could anoint one of the two clerics on the three-man committee. Or it could pick somebody else.

 

There are many reasons to believe, however, that the successor to Khamenei will not be the decisive factor in determining Iran’s course, and that the country will take the path described by my source, regardless of the clerical leadership. Arafi has spent most of his life in the seminary and will be no match for the military power players in the regime. Ejei is a murderous extremist, but he has also historically been open to wheeling and dealing with the likes of Qalibaf. The Guards, and other parastatal institutions, control not just the guns but most of the Iranian economy.

 

Larijani and Qalibaf have made plenty of harsh statements of their own about Israel and America, but they both incline toward pragmatism. They know full well how little ammunition (real and metaphorical) Iran has for fighting a prolonged war. Larijani is also close with former President Hassan Rouhani, who can be brought in from the cold as the doyen of the regime’s West-facing faction. If men like these call the shots, the regime’s policies will be transformed, however cynically. The 1979 revolution will have finally reached its thermidor and abandoned its founding zealotry.

 

Such an outcome would fall far short of what so many Iranians, myself included, have fought for—what thousands have only recently died for. It would not bring Iran democracy. It would not vindicate the brave civil-society leaders who fill Iran’s prisons on spurious convictions because they demanded an end to the Islamic Republic’s authoritarian rule. These figures and many others call for elections for a fresh constituent assembly that could draw up a new social contract for Iran.

 

Yesterday, in an effort to galvanize democratic forces, oppositionists announced the foundation of the Strategic Council of Republicans Inside Iran. The group’s name emphasizes what it is, but also what it is not: That it is “republican” means it is not monarchist, and is therefore distinct from the movement behind former Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi. That it is “inside Iran” sets it apart from the activist diaspora. The council is formed of 70 political figures inside the country whose names have not been declared publicly but have been sent to the U.S. and European governments.

 

The success of this group is to be fervently desired, but for now it remains unlikely. Even if American and Israeli air strikes eliminate yet more of Iran’s top leaders, the country’s democrats will have a hard time taking power, because they lack organized networks. This doesn’t mean that they—we—should give up. Only that we should get organized. Iranians have striven for democracy at least since 1906, when the Constitutional Revolution led to the establishment of our Parliament. That fight shouldn’t stop now, just as one of its greatest adversaries has been removed from the scene.

 

Even in the not-quite-best-case scenario, Khamenei’s demise will likely allow Iran to abandon some of his most destructive core policies in the short-to-medium term—not least, his insistence on sacrificing Iran on the altar of a failed ideology. To that extent, even if the Islamic Republic lives on a little longer, Khameneism will be buried alongside Khamenei. That’s almost enough to make me hopeful for the future of Iran.

The Evil of Empathy

By Christine Rosen

Sunday, March 01, 2026

 

In a recent issue of the Nation, essayist Anna Krauthamer told a harrowing story: “I was raped by a group of men during a three-day trip I took to Las Vegas with two of my best friends,” she wrote of an incident that took place four years earlier. “Of the rape, which lasted all night, I remember both too much and too little. I never did anything about it.”

 

Rape is a horrific crime that too often goes unreported; victims can experience feelings of shame and fear, and many blame themselves, especially if the rapist was someone they knew. But Krauthamer had other motivations for not pressing charges. “The simple answer to the question of why I never reported the rape is that I believe in the abolition of police and prisons,” she wrote, adding that “to pursue prosecuting and potentially incarcerating other people is inconceivable to me.”

 

What is also evidently “inconceivable” to her is the logical consequences of a world where everyone acts like Krauthamer, refusing to report crime because they feel bad for the perpetrators. Krauthamer’s solipsism and self-regard are on full display when she admits, “I don’t want to ruin the lives of my rapists and I don’t know if they have children. The only thing I want is for them to never have done what they did to me—and nothing, including sending them to prison, will ever change that reality.” Nowhere does she acknowledge that by refusing to report her own rape, she guarantees that her rapists remain free to attack other women. If her prison-abolition fantasies were ever realized, she would also take away from others the right to pursue justice for the crimes committed against them.

 

Not surprisingly, the response to the piece was overwhelmingly negative. Many people questioned its veracity and noted that Krauthamer wrongly claimed she could not press charges now because the statute of limitations had passed; in Nevada, the statute of limitations for rape is 20 years, something that basic fact-checking by editors at the Nation would have revealed. Other observers wondered whether the essay was perhaps a bit of fabulism in service to career goals, given that Krauthamer is pursuing a Ph.D. in literature at Columbia University and her research “addresses sexual violence and contemporary narrative.”

 

This was not the first essay on rape that Krauthamer has authored; in the Baffler, she criticized Hillary Clinton for noting that rape and gender-based assault have been used as weapons of war in conflict zones such as Ukraine and in Israel during the October 7 attacks. Krauthamer’s criticism wasn’t that Clinton was wrong (Krauthamer herself goes on at length defending Hamas by claiming falsely that its people never raped Israeli women). It was that Clinton didn’t admit that her real aim in drawing attention to gender-based violence around the world was to encourage Western imperialism.

 

But the most frequently invoked criticism of Krauthamer’s story was that it was an example of “suicidal empathy”—that is, a maladaptive and harmful form of the ability to understand and share the feelings of others. Empathy has been enjoying a cultural moment. You can buy sweatshirts with “EMPATHY” emblazoned on them and bumper stickers that say “Practice Radical Empathy.” Bookstore self-help aisles are filled with titles such as Sensitive Is the New Strong and children’s books that purport to teach empathy-building skills. We are told to read more literature because it will make us more empathetic (an update of an older notion of literature’s ability to cultivate the sympathetic imagination), and even technologists are claiming they can build “empathetic AI.”

 

And yet, as a society, we are evidently failing to be sufficiently empathetic. President Bill Clinton once told the public, “I feel your pain,” but former Democratic leaders can’t seem to stop scolding Americans—particularly those who aren’t supporters of the Democratic Party—about their lack of empathy. Barack Obama has complained about the “empathy deficit” among Americans, and in a recent issue of the Atlantic, Hillary Clinton used the recent killing of Minneapolis resident Alex Pretti as a jumping-off point for condemning “MAGA’s war on empathy.” Invoking Jesus’s guidance to love thy neighbor and help others, Clinton notes that Jesus said, “Do this and you shall live.” “Not in Donald Trump’s America,” she writes.

 

On the right, a debate has been raging about the dangers of too much, rather than too little, empathy. Last year, during an appearance on Joe Rogan’s podcast, Elon Musk said, “We’ve got civilizational suicidal empathy going on…and it’s like, I believe in empathy. Like, I think you should care about other people, but you need to have empathy for civilization as a whole and not commit to a civilizational suicide.” He noted open-border policies and unrestricted immigration as evidence of the practice. Likewise, Christian podcaster Allie Beth Stuckey’s book decrying the effects of “toxic empathy” has generated significant controversy among Christians. Canadian marketing professor Gad Saad’s forthcoming book about suicidal empathy, subtitled Dying to Be Kind, promises to continue the debate in a secular context.

 

But the arguments about too much or too little empathy overlook the greater danger embedded in the logic of Krauthamer’s argument: the radical ideological motivation behind such seemingly irrational decisions. Krauthamer and her ilk are not expressing an extreme form of empathy. They are weaponizing pity. A genuinely empathetic person would understand the risk of not reporting her rape because of the potential harm to other women. And in doing so, she would recognize that the incarceration of criminals is both punitive and protective of society.

 

A revolutionary, by contrast, weaponizes pity in service of radical ideological goals such as prison abolition. In On Revolution, Hannah Arendt outlined the result. As it did for Robespierre during the French Revolution, pity becomes a tool for abstractions about the “sufferings of mankind,” as opposed to compassion (what we now call empathy), which is supposed to be singular and focused on another person. Once this abstraction of “suffering people” is invoked, it encourages the use of any means to end it. “Politically speaking, one may say that the evil of Robespierre’s virtue was that it did not accept any limitations,” Arendt wrote. His “pity-inspired virtue, from the beginning of his rule, played havoc with justice and made light of laws.”

 

Such notions have not disappeared. “Since the days of the French Revolution, it has been the boundlessness of their sentiments that made revolutionaries so curiously insensitive to reality in general and of persons in particular, whom they feel no compunctions in sacrificing to their ‘principles,’ or to the course of history, or to the cause of revolution as such,” Arendt noted.

 

Labeling revolutionary behavior an extreme form of empathy risks overlooking both the appeal of, and the greater harm caused by, the ideological mission. These are radicals—knock-off Robespierres—whose abstract notion of the good is unconnected to the real-world experiences and needs of actual human beings. (It is not a surprise that Krauthamer cites as one of her intellectual heroes a supporter of political violence: the Soviet apologist, card-carrying Communist, and Black Panther supporter Angela Davis.)

 

The motivating force of people like Krauthamer is ideological victory in the battles they have chosen (in her case, the abolition of prisons). Her claim to victimhood allows her moral grandstanding to carry greater weight and visibility, even as it turns into distant abstractions the individual women who are at real risk of being assaulted by the men she refuses to report. The danger isn’t empathy; it’s the way such abstraction can lead to dehumanization.

 

This form of radical pity in service to ideology might explain why, in recent months, many nurses—practitioners of a “caring” profession—have been fired and lost their licenses for posting on social media their intention to harm people with whom they disagree. One nurse stated her intention to refuse to provide anesthesia to supporters of Donald Trump; a labor and delivery nurse wished of Trump Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, who is expected to give birth in May, “I hope that you f—ing rip from bow to stern and never sh— normally again, you c—.” Yet another nurse encouraged people to drug ICE agents. Their duty to individual patients was sacrificed to the radical pity they feel for the people targeted by the Trump administration. In the face of such cruelty, they argue, anything goes.

 

Is there a solution to our “empathy” problem? After cataloging the many vices of the anti-empathy MAGA universe, Hillary Clinton claims, “If we give up on empathy, we give up on any real chance of coming together to solve our problems. Empathy…opens our eyes to moral complexity. It’s not a sign of weakness; it’s a source of strength.”

 

This is wrong. As Paul Bloom argued a decade ago in Against Empathy, empathy is “a poor moral guide. It grounds foolish judgments and often motivates indifference and cruelty. It can lead to irrational and unfair political decisions.” He makes a much more persuasive case for rational compassion as a guide to resolving conflict. I would add respect for the rule of law and rejection of political violence. Whether or not we heed this advice, it’s useful to have case studies like Anna Krauthamer, someone whose own sense of right and wrong has become so deformed by ideological devotion to extremist ideas that she found herself performatively pitying her rapists while insisting they shouldn’t be prevented from raping again.

Against Grievance Politics

By Richard M. Reinsch II

Sunday, March 01, 2026

 

Conservatives in America find themselves at a crossroads in 2026. For a half century, there was a pretty firm consensus on a few cardinal precepts. Conservatives advocated for economic growth as the primary means of generational advancement and American success, argued for limits to government power, supported the buildup of American military forces to be wisely deployed rather than unthinkingly restrained, and spoke out on behalf of the embodied person and the dignity of the unborn. All of these core beliefs have found themselves under challenge from inside the movement and the Republican Party. And yet, despite the impression given by both the mainstream media and the podcast wing of the GOP that the forces challenging these core beliefs have taken over the right, a recent authoritative survey of the same electorate in 2024 showed that conservatives of traditional stock retain the lion’s share of the electorate on the right.

 

That means the current conventional wisdom that the GOP’s future will be economically populist, isolationist, and anti-Israel is simply unsupported by data. But clearly conservatism is in crisis, even if that crisis is the result of a false belief that people and politicians who don’t reflect the true opinions of Americans on the right are the vanguard. So where do we go from here?

 

To determine the answer, a historical perspective is needed. We should turn to a previous hinge moment in American history, one that aligns with this one, and see how the arguments and policies to which conservatives gravitated created a bold new future on the right very different from the ideas and nostrums that preceded it.

 

Start with the conservatism that emerged and coalesced post-Nixon and -Ford: a conservatism of economic opportunity and self-government. This era is instructive because it began with Richard Nixon’s triumph over left-liberalism in the elections of 1968 and 1972 even as his presidency followed a much less conservative path—creating new activist agencies, imposing government controls on wages and prices, working toward détente with the Soviet Union, and, in general, evading the battleground issues of abortion and cultural relativism that impassioned voters. In his history of conservatism, The Right, Matthew Continetti focuses on the political evolution of the “new right” in the 1970s. This group included supply-side economists, an emboldened National Rifle Association, the newly established Heritage Foundation, the anti-feminist activism of Phyllis Schlafly, the rise of first-wave neoconservative foreign policy, and the growing importance of evangelical Christians represented by the rise of the Moral Majority.

 

What the “new right” brought to the forefront after the Nixon and Ford presidencies was the belief that core principles had to be front and center if the right was to achieve its aims. This was necessary not only to speak honestly to voters; it also allowed politicians and the movement to offer new answers and solutions to problems in American life and governance—both of which seemed to have gone off the rails.

 

***

 

In the early 1970s, in the face of double-digit inflation and rising unemployment—what became known as stagflation—both the Ford and Carter administrations acknowledged that their policy solutions couldn’t resolve this ongoing crisis. But that didn’t mean there were no solutions; what arose, in the words of economic historian Brian Domitrovic, was “the most consequential revolution in economic policy since the New Deal.” It was made possible by a collection of thirty-something economists, journalists, and congressional staffers “removed from or hostile to the economic establishments in academia, Washington journalism, and business.”

 

The economic ideas that would transform the Republican Party largely sprang from the arguments of two—and only two—academic economists, Robert Mundell and Arthur Laffer, whose prescriptions, in retrospect, seem obvious and even simple. Their suggested tax cuts and changes in monetary policy changed the way Americans thought about the economy. Laffer and Mundell sought to restore and enhance the productivity and remunerative strengths of American economic activity. This approach resonated with owners, workers, and investors who were tired of punitive taxes and a mismanaged currency that were eroding their gains. The victory of the supply-side school, and the subsequent economic boom it brought about, revived support for free markets, the value of work, abundant energy, and national independence. More important, it renewed a general belief in the centrality of the individual—that a person’s freedom, choices, and efforts are meaningful and deserve recognition. These remain in force. The best results of President Trump’s economic policy in his first and second terms derive from tax cuts for personal and corporate income, and from capital expensing for businesses—alongside pro-growth energy policies and deregulation.

 

Another revolution in conservative policy thinking came about in the realm of social policy. It was guided by the introduction of the term “mediating structures” by Peter L. Berger and Richard John Neuhaus in their 1977 work, To Empower People. Berger and Neuhaus argued that American domestic policy, almost across the board, was failing because it ignored or disregarded the institutions that are necessary for human beings to thrive. They stressed that political and economic legitimacy emerged through family, neighborhood, associations, and religion. These “mediating structures” both enriched the lives of the individual and provided a buffer against the iron hand of activist government. One idea they promoted was “school vouchers,” which would allow citizens to use their tax dollars to choose the schools their children attended—thus potentially strengthening families, neighborhoods, and traditions, rather than forcing everyone into one-size-fits-all, one-directional government schools. Wildly controversial at the time, vouchers are today a mainstream idea.

 

One area in which the “mediating structures” analysis continues to shape discussion is in family-policy debates. Some on the right are now advocating large transfer payments to American families to increase fertility, which currently stands at 1.6 births per woman in the U.S. Kevin Roberts, president of the Heritage Foundation, argues in his 2024 book Dawn’s Early Light that the federal government should emulate Hungary’s family policies and provide mortgage and loan subsidies to families based on the number of children they bear. In the same vein, Oren Cass, president of American Compass, supports a monthly cash benefit paid to mothers or families for each child. The idea of using government subsidies to direct the behavior of a self-governing people is violative of conservatism—and Roberts and Cass are fully and proudly aware of this; they both want to supplant laissez-faire ideas in favor of direct government intervention into the lives of the citizenry.

 

These ideas, however, fly in the face of some uncomfortable realities. The fact is that America has higher fertility levels than Hungary, whose own programs have barely moved its fertility needle despite their massive expense. The hunger to intervene displayed by Cass and Roberts (and Vice President JD Vance, who is also attracted to this approach) ignores or downplays what most families in this country want: more economic and career opportunities, and better housing, educational, and health-care prospects. Also, while families seek lower prices for the unavoidable costs of raising a family, they intuitively yearn for a faith- and family-friendly culture.

 

That is one of the reasons economic mobility matters to Americans and their families. As University of Virginia sociologist Brad Wilcox recently observed, “American families have been migrating from blue states like California, New York, and Minnesota by the hundreds of thousands to red states like Idaho, Tennessee, and Texas.” It’s not just that the red states are more socially welcoming to families and people of faith. Wilcox further explains that these states allow families to support themselves financially “more readily than in blue states” because red states have lower taxes, stronger job growth, and more affordable single-family homes.” A successful conservative alternative for American families would seem to be the revival of a supply-side economic and cultural agenda for families, not Hungarian traditionalism.

 

***

 

Before entering the White House, Ronald Reagan had absorbed the soulful anti-Communist prose of Whittaker Chambers and William F. Buckley Jr., Chambers’s great supporter. Buckley’s conservative movement had shaped Reagan. Buckley’s God and Man at Yale identified the intellectual and spiritual corruption of the postwar American elite, which mocked God and man, promoting ideas that inevitably lead to human degradation by claiming that man’s freedom and spirit were arbitrary inventions of a fading patrimony. Reagan worked to reverse that trend. One surprising fruit of that success was the successful campaign for “originalism” in constitutional law.

 

A new book, The Meese Revolution, recounts the successful effort to adopt “originalism.” Its authors, Gary Lawson and Steven Calabresi, show how Edwin Meese, Reagan’s attorney general, brought together in his Department of Justice a formidable mix of lawyers and legal scholars who were developing the case for interpreting the Constitution through an understanding of what the Founders intended even as conventional thinking was dominated by the idea that the Constitution was malleable and should accommodate contemporary fashionable ideas. In three speeches in 1985 at the American Bar Association, the Federalist Society, and Tulane University, Meese set forth the terms of what he called a jurisprudence of original intention. They remain a remarkable achievement of statesmanship by an attorney general who was constructing a legal framework for future generations of constitutionalists.

 

Originalism doesn’t mean there aren’t profound and important arguments to be had over the meaning of the words in the Constitution; it only disputes and discredits the idea that the plain meaning of the text can be ignored at will. Originalism and textual restraint have flourished in the past decade across race, abortion, transgenderism, separation of powers, and administrative law, highlighting some of the most consequential victories secured by Trump’s presidency. Originalism’s triumph also indicates that a rule-of-law conservatism remains superior to the strange insistence on the part of some thinkers on the right that conservatism pre-Trump was simply a form of liberal window dressing.

 

Numerous authors have voiced versions of this argument over the past decade, including Adrian Vermuele, in his Common Good Constitutionalism (2022); Michael Anton, in his The Stakes: America at the Point of No Return (2020); and Patrick Deneen, in his Regime Change (2023). A recent symposium at the Claremont Institute’s American Mind featured arguments that, despite originalism’s successes, the interpretive philosophy is incapable of achieving a conservative constitutional morality rooted in family, faith, and civilization. An originalist conservative court just couldn’t be counted on to vindicate any conservative principles when it mattered.

 

It is true that the Supreme Court under Barack Obama approved gay marriage and other socially liberal desiderata. But the idea that originalism itself was somehow to blame for that—that it was too weak a philosophy to support the need for a judicial body that would uphold traditional values—has lost much of its force after a series of more recent victories in the last three years. The Court overturned Roe v. Wade, has prohibited racial preferences in higher education, and has handed the conservative movement victories in administrative-law cases and on transgender issues. Originalism’s triumphs and contributions to restoring constitutionalism are manifestly evident. The war against liberal change remains a slog, true, but an adult understands that much of life is a slog.

 

***

 

There is another unsavory feature of American life that has emerged in the past few decades, one that has inexorably redefined the quality and moral fiber of what it means to be an American, and with that, our collective understanding of American exceptionalism: the unabated explosion in the growth of means-tested entitlements. While conservative thinkers and some policymakers deserve credit for trying to keep the public’s focus on this ruinous fact, in general the right has avoided engaging with the subject. That is very dangerous.

 

As the political demographer Nicholas Eberstadt explains, “Between 1983 and 2012, by Census Bureau estimates, the percentage of Americans participating in entitlement programs jumped by nearly 20 percentage points.” Only one-fifth of this 20 percent increase can be attributed to Social Security and Medicare. Eberstadt notes, “By late 2012, more than 109 million Americans lived in households that obtained one or more such [means-tested] benefits—over twice as many as received Social Security or Medicare. The population of what we might call ‘means-tested America’ was more than two-and-a-half times as large in 2012 as it had been in 1983.” Consider also that from 1983 to 2012, “the total U.S. population grew by almost 83 million,” but “the number of people accepting means-tested benefits rose by 67 million.” It has only gotten worse in the last decade. Means-tested benefits can no longer be considered an exception; they are woven into the fabric of American life.

 

Christopher Caldwell suggests in his bookThe Age of Entitlement that this was the result of an original conservative sin—that Reagan cut a deal with the country to achieve power by implicitly refusing to question the legitimacy of most Great Society programs and the enforcement apparatus set up by the civil rights legislation of the mid-1960s. Those receiving welfare-state benefits would continue to receive them, and the productive and investing members of the American economy would receive tax cuts, much of which was funded by debt. Successive Republican governments never questioned that general approach. President Obama’s signature health-care achievement made things worse, as did the spending blowouts of both Trump and Biden during the Covid fiasco.

 

In view of this, we should not be surprised that the new “new right” Vice President JD Vance hopes to lead and usher into office in 2029 wants not to end or reform this spoils system but to turn it to the advantage of his followers. Like Democrats of old and of today, who always have a victim group that requires more federal programs and more federal spending because of what the country has unjustifiably done to it, Vance is a grievance-based politician. The small-town white male is no longer the salt of the earth; no, he’s a victim. International trade took his job, he fought in the War on Terror for no purpose, and he fell victim to the opioid crisis that corporations imposed on him. Accordingly, the “new right” government must step forward with tariffs, industrial policy, a harsh anti-immigration posture beyond removing illegal aliens, pro–labor union policies, and progressive antitrust measures to provide for these new aggrieved Americans.

 

The hidden premise of the Vance right is that we are now living in a post–American Dream era. Reaganites have failed, leaving the vast majority of adults who once aspired to stand on their own, living free and independent lives, unable to survive. According to a new caste of American right-wing leadership, taking its cues from European conservative statists, American citizens should lead lives scripted for them, and leaders should abandon policies rooted in growth, work, and citizenship grounded in freedom and virtue.

 

Vance has been consistently clear, both before and after entering public life, that drastic government action is warranted on behalf of the American people. He has expressed admiration for Lina Khan—President Biden’s director of the Federal Trade Commission, known for her aggressive and progressive antitrust posture—and has supported the Affordable Care Act, and he can be expected to adopt an accommodating stance toward the means-tested entitlement state. His rhetoric of emergency and of a country in extremis reveals an agenda to increase the size of government “for our own purposes,” as he noted in a 2021 interview on the Jack Murphy Live podcast.

 

At a 2023 Intercollegiate Studies Institute event featuring a panel on Patrick Deneen’s book Regime Change, Vance stated that “changing the regime” of the “uniparty” is imperative. Other conservatives have made similar noises. But it’s what Vance doesn’t say next that matters. Vance reflected that he had observed “no meaningful distinction between the public sector and private sector in the American regime” in Washington, and that this public-private regime had conspired “against the people in the state of Ohio” (whom he represented at the time). Vance did not follow these observations with a commitment to rebuilding freedom and opportunity for his fellow Ohioans. Instead, he wants to throw them federal morsels.

 

Vance is one of the most successful Americans of our time, a creature who emerged all of a sudden at the beginning of the Trump era and rose stratospherically during the past decade of American disorder. He has embraced exactly the policies that would have crippled him as he sought to transcend his own origins: the politics of grievance. His mantra: Many are owed something from a few who have victimized them. Right-wing grievance policies will not succeed in pulling anyone out of misery, economically or otherwise. The only path forward for an America that wishes to remain the world leader through the 21st century is to restore the conservatism of self-government and opportunity.

Enough With Immigration

By John Podhoretz

Sunday, March 01, 2026

 

‘You never know what is enough unless you know what is more than enough.” These immortal words from William Blake’s 1790 prose poem “The Marriage of Heaven and Hell” offer a rueful perspective on the turn in Donald Trump’s fortunes in 2026. It appears his administration did “what is more than enough” in implementing its policies related to illegal aliens inside the United States and, in so doing, turned an unalloyed political and policy triumph into a possible defeat.

 

What was “enough” was stemming the tide at the border in 2025. Last year, the net number of illegal crossings into the United States was zero. All in all, according to the Brookings Institution, “net migration to the U.S. was negative in 2025, a sharp reversal from net inflows exceeding three million in 2023 and two million in 2024.” This came about due to better patrolling, increased apprehensions of those attempting to cross and their subsequent return south of the border, and the general sense among those outside of the United States that the effort to enter under this new administration would be a fool’s errand.

 

That change demonstrates just how out of control the border had become during the feckless Biden years, when the administration adopted a triumphally petulant “whatever the Trump people did, we’re going to do the opposite” attitude. It arguably got Trump elected to his second term as a result. Trump promised to put an end to the Biden approach. And he fulfilled that campaign promise.

 

Polls suggested the public was overwhelmingly supportive of the results. And then Trump did “more than enough.”

 

Throughout 2025, even as the work at the border was uncontroversial in the eyes of the public, the decision to use ICE and the Border Patrol to go in active pursuit of illegals inside the United States proved to be a controversial policy. Closing the border was essentially an act of defense. But conducting raids across the United States to capture and deport illegals—some of them criminal actors but others simply people gathered in one place to seek temporary day jobs in parking lots—was more akin to a war of choice. It did not come in response to an immediate existential threat—unless, that is, you are single-mindedly focused on the idea that the presence of illegals among us constitutes a fast-acting social poison that we must flush out of our system without delay.

 

It’s true that Trump promised to conduct “mass deportations” in his second term, but he never offered a clear definition of what that meant or how it would be done. And while 6 in 10 Americans said they were in favor of deportations in 2024, the visible effort to pursue them in 2025 seemed to make Americans queasy. Nate Silver’s poll average calculates that overall public support for Trump on immigration turned negative in June 2025 and has stayed that way since. The news coverage of ICE’s actions in cities, showing masked agents moving aggressively on what appeared to be unthreatening people, surely played a significant role in the shift.

 

Then things took a particularly bad turn for Trump when he made the decision to “surge” forces into Minneapolis in December. This was not a direct reaction to any specific change on the streets there but a naked effort to shine a national light on an important story dating back to 2018: the channeling of public dollars into fraudulent and nonexistent relief organizations run by members of the Somali community in the Twin Cities. The details were so egregious that the state’s sitting governor, 2024 Democratic VP candidate Tim Walz, found it necessary to announce he would not run for another term.

 

The Walz humiliation could have been a Dayenu moment—that’s the word Jews sing on Passover that means “it should have been enough.” The Somali fraud scandal was a slow-acting agent that turned suddenly lethal at the end of 2025 when it came to Walz’s career and offered the promise that all kinds of blue-state coziness between leftist politicians and not-for-profit groups might be exposed and more fraud uncovered. The Somali scandal didn’t need ICE. It was going to ice liberals all on its own.

 

That was not good enough for Trump. No, in the Blakean marriage of heaven and hell that is his administration, Trump evidently needed to learn what was more than enough. He surged ICE. He added Border Patrol agents. The city’s (and the country’s) highly organized network of leftist activists was there and ready for it. They instantly redirected the national spotlight away from Walz and Co. and toward the immigration-enforcement officers. They sought to provoke confrontations and they succeeded. Two activist citizens, both personally imprudent but politically more useful than they could ever have known, were killed by ICE and Border Patrol agents during chaotic scrums lasting fewer than 10 seconds. One was minimally defensible, the other in no way defensible. The whole business of the Minneapolis surge became at best tragically unnecessary—a war of choice gone wrong—and at worst either a sign of an armed agency out of control or of a brilliantly manipulated PR campaign that was turning Trump’s greatest strength into a liability.

 

American attitudes on immigration are incredibly confused and incredibly confusing. We believe immigration is a benefit to the country. At the same time, we do not support illegal immigration and say in large numbers that it should be prevented and that illegal aliens should be deported. There’s something irreconcilable there. And matters become even more knotted due to the influence of a radical vanguard led by White House deputy Stephen Miller that opposes all immigration, illegal and legal, and is actively working to eliminate it. The vanguard is also seeking to end birthright citizenship, which has been accepted as a constitutional right since the passage of the 14th Amendment (and which was implicitly seen as such in the nine decades that followed the inception of the United States in 1776).

 

Miller and others define what is “more than enough.” Trump has largely been walking along the path they laid for him. He is showing signs of stepping off because he sees that the American people do not like how it feels to live in a country whose government acts in the way it has. Mere self-preservation suggests it’s time for him to say enough.

 

 

The Epstein Panic

National Review Online

Monday, March 02, 2026

 

The release of the Epstein files was supposed to uncover a vast conspiracy of elite pedophiles, or at least expose people who were guilty of crimes but got a free pass from prosecutors.

 

Instead, it has led to Yale University suspending from his teaching duties . . . computer scientist David Gelernter.

 

What did Gelernter do? He didn’t commit any crimes or even do anything unethical. He sent an email to Jeffrey Epstein years ago that mentioned in passing that a female applicant for a job with Epstein was attractive.

 

Instead of the real-life QAnon scenario we were promised, the release of the Epstein files has embarrassed, and led to professional consequences for, a series of accomplished people who emailed and socialized with Epstein but didn’t abuse underage girls.

 

Should Larry Summers have been pursuing an affair with an adult fellow economist to whom he was apparently a mentor? No, of course not. But should we have violated every rule and norm around how we typically handle raw investigative materials in a federal investigation in order to nail Summers for a lapse that has nothing to do with what was the purpose of the release of the files?

 

We got to this place because voices on the right — including some that now have significant responsibility in the administration — stoked lurid conspiracy theories about Epstein for years. Then, Democrats opportunistically picked up the mantra last year when they realized that the release of files was a way to damage Trump politically. The dam broke in Congress in part because no one trusted Attorney General Pam Bondi to handle the matter in a competent, aboveboard manner.

 

President Trump has promoted conspiratorial thinking in general, and has been all over the map on the Epstein files in particular, over time. But he was correct when he said during the 2024 campaign that releasing them willy-nilly would catch up people who had done nothing wrong. He was presumably thinking primarily of himself. Sure enough, the files contain utterly fantastical claims about him. The latest controversy has to do with the Justice Department supposedly withholding material having to do with an allegation against him. No one should be inclined to give the DOJ the benefit of the doubt in such matters, but the underlying claim dates from the 1980s and is almost certainly bogus.

 

There’s a reason that it is not the usual practice of the Justice Department to dump into the public domain unverified, disparaging information about people it’s not charging with crimes. And nothing in this sordid episode justifies Congress having forced the department to violate this standard so flagrantly.

 

Yes, all sorts of people should have exercised better judgment in their dealings with Epstein, especially after his 2008 conviction in Florida. But we don’t have FBI agents and federal prosecutors to track down and expose instances of mere poor judgment. In the fullness of time, the one congressional vote against this travesty, Clay Higgins of Louisiana, is going to look like a lone pillar of courage and good sense.

Over Iran, U.S. and Israeli Aircraft Fly as Equals

By Mark Dubowitz

Monday, March 02, 2026

 

President Trump has rightly underscored America’s decisive role in the joint air campaign against Iran. But the operational reality is even more striking: The United States and Israel are flying as equal partners in this fight.

 

This is not symbolic parity. It is battlefield parity. The operation — “Epic Fury” on the American side and “Roaring Lion” for Israel — reflects a mature strategic partnership in which the two militaries are sharing burdens, risks, and operational responsibility at unprecedented levels. That symmetry underscores a larger truth: Israel has emerged as the preeminent military power in the Middle East at precisely the moment when successive U.S. presidents have sought to reduce America’s permanent footprint in the region. President Trump has found the right partner.

 

Within the first 36 hours of combat operations, Iran’s senior military leadership was decimated. Critical nuclear and ballistic missile infrastructure was severely degraded. The regime’s command-and-control architecture absorbed a shock from which it may not fully recover. Notably, these results were achieved without confirmed losses of American or Israeli pilots.

 

The Israeli Air Force opened the campaign with roughly 200 aircraft in coordinated sorties — its largest operational launch in history — conducted with tactical surprise. By March 1, Israeli pilots had effectively secured air superiority over Tehran.

 

Meanwhile, U.S. assets provided strategic depth and global reach: carrier-based aviation from the Gulf, stealth B-2 bombers conducting high-altitude precision strikes, and F-22s and refueling aircraft integrated seamlessly into the operational architecture.

 

Israel reportedly executed roughly half of all alliance strike missions — an extraordinary figure given that Israeli aircraft must traverse over 1,000 miles of contested airspace. American forces, by contrast, benefit from offshore carrier groups, forward-deployed bases, and long-range stealth capabilities.

 

This campaign marks a departure from prior Israel–Iran confrontations and a new model of alliance warfare. In April and October 2024, U.S. support was largely defensive — missile interception, emergency funding, and deterrent signaling. During Israel’s 2025 “Rising Lion” operation, the United States entered kinetically only on the eleventh day, when B-2 bombers struck hardened enrichment sites. This current operation began as a full-spectrum, public, and synchronized partnership from the outset.

 

President Trump previewed this shift in his October address to the Knesset: “We have confronted evil together and we have waged war together.” The current campaign operationalizes that doctrine.

 

The United States brings unmatched strategic lift, stealth, logistics, and global strike capabilities. Israel brings regional dominance, combat-tested innovation, intelligence penetration, and a military culture built on national mobilization and technological agility. Together, they represent the most formidable air power coalition in the world.

 

The campaign also sends a message across the Middle East. Iran’s missile salvos have not only targeted Israel; they have threatened Gulf states as well. Countries such as Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and others in the region have faced Iranian coercion for years — from missile and drone attacks to proxy warfare. Many have strengthened their defenses and quietly deepened security coordination as a result. The current operation may accelerate those trends.

 

Some states will reassess the durability of Iranian power. Others may see renewed value in expanded regional integration frameworks such as the Abraham Accords. Still others will pursue quieter security understandings. The trajectory points toward pragmatic realignment rather than ideological confrontation.

 

For Saudi Arabia in particular, the calculus is complex. Riyadh must balance deterrence, domestic stability, and regional diplomacy. But it also understands that unchecked Iranian aggression threatens the entire Gulf order. The demonstration of U.S.–Israeli operational cohesion may strengthen incentives for broader strategic cooperation over time.

 

Israel’s performance confirms what years of investment, innovation, and battlefield experience have produced: a military capable not merely of defending itself but of operating at peer level alongside the United States in high-intensity warfare. For Washington, this is the ideal regional partner — one that can project power, absorb risk, and align strategically without requiring indefinite American occupation or nation-building commitments.

 

In an era of great-power competition stretching from Tehran to Beijing and Moscow, alliance structures that combine American strategic weight with capable regional powers are indispensable. Over Iran, U.S. and Israeli aircraft are flying as equals. That fact will not be lost on Tehran. Nor should it be lost on the rest of the Middle East.

Half a Million Syrians Didn’t Have To Die

By Seth Mandel

Sunday, March 01, 2026

 

We don’t know how much of Operation Epic Fury remains before us, and so it’s too early to know what lessons we’ll take from it. But while we can’t know the future, the past has been illuminated by the present.

 

And what’s been illuminated about the past is this: The world let hundreds of thousands of Syrians die needlessly. And no one could have done more to prevent that than the United States under Barack Obama.

 

President Obama made three determinations about Iran. The first was that the Islamic Republic’s quest for a nuclear bomb could only be postponed, not unilaterally ended. The second was that any significant setback to the nuclear program could only come through negotiations, because real progress on this issue required Iranian consent. The third was that getting any Iranian agreement to delay its nuclear breakout required ceding a degree of regional hegemony to Tehran.

 

Operation Epic Fury’s key purpose is to end the tyrannical and bloody rule of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The earlier mission to significantly set back Iran’s nuclear program was conducted by force, and it was successfully carried out without a single American casualty.

 

Six months before those strikes, Bashar al-Assad, the dictator with the blood of a half-million Syrians on his hands, fled Damascus, ending his family’s 53-year rule.

 

Six weeks before the ignominious end of the Assad dynasty, Syria’s patron Iran was brought low by Israeli retaliatory strikes that virtually wiped out Iran’s air defenses and froze its ballistic missile program. Before that, Iran’s other proxies were flattened by Israel in Lebanon and Gaza.

 

Assad’s power was an illusion. He was a paper tiger. So was Iran.

 

And yet, one of the gravest consequences of the Obama administration’s policy of appeasement toward Iran was the belief that in order to get a nuclear deal that was already stacked in Iran’s favor, no action could be taken to save the civilians being gassed by Assad and buried in Syria’s mass graves.

 

The defining moment of this shameful policy came in the summer of 2013. Obama had set out his “red line” that, when crossed, would trigger U.S. intervention in the Syrian civil war: Assad’s use of chemical weapons. As his administration argued, the use of illicit chemical weapons anywhere constitutes a threat to U.S. personnel and interests everywhere.

 

In August 2013, Assad unleashed a chemical weapons attack in the Syrian city of Ghouta, killing hundreds with poison gas. Obama acknowledged the line had been crossed and signaled that the U.S. would fulfill its own stated obligation to act. And then, as the Washington Post’s David Ignatius memorably put it, “it was all in motion, and at the last minute, the president blinked.”

 

From there, the administration welcomed Russian involvement in a failed diplomatic scheme to prevent future such attacks. It was emblematic of Obama’s overall Syria policy throughout the war.

 

But why?

 

“Getting a legacy-boosting nuclear deal with Iran was everything for the Obama administration,” recalled Frederic Hof, who worked on Syria policy for the Obama administration until 2011 and was highly critical of the White House’s inaction. “Nothing should be done in Syria that would offend Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, or the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ support for Assad’s mass murder strategy. Offending them — or so the theory went — might cause Iran to walk away from the nuclear talks and forsake a monetary cornucopia in sanctions relief and foreign direct investment.”

 

Syrians, Hof lamented, “have involuntarily paid such a high price” for America’s ill-fated nuclear deal with Iran.

 

Inaction in Syria was directly tied to the administration’s false narrative about the Iranian nuclear program. The nuclear program could have been dealt a far greater blow than Obama unconvincingly argued was being delivered by his capitulation to Iranian negotiators, and Syrians could have been saved.

 

Operation Epic Fury has not been designed to make a point about past Syria policy. But it has done so. And the point is a valuable one.