Thursday, February 26, 2026

Against Over-Inclusivity

By Jeremiah Johnson

Thursday, February 26, 2026

 

Last weekend, a controversy exploded at the British Academy of Film and Television Arts awards. During the ceremony John Davidson, a man with Tourette syndrome whose life inspired a BAFTA-winning film, repeatedly interrupted the show with obscene outbursts, including shouting the n-word as black actors Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo were presenting an award. The episode instantly dominated online conversations; it pitted two historically disadvantaged groups against each other—black attendees subjected to a racial slur, and a person with a disability who routinely faces ostracization. The “Which marginalized group is really worse off here?” nature of the incident led to a firestorm of controversy, at the center of which is the idea of inclusivity—that despite the challenges that Tourette’s poses, excluding individuals with Tourette syndrome would be wrong.

 

Reacting to this debate, a user on the Tourette subreddit stated, “You are allowed to exist in public.” At the risk of sounding like the villain, I’m not sure that slogan is universally true.

 

To be clear, society should absolutely make reasonable accommodations for people who have conditions like Tourette syndrome. Historically people with disabilities have often been segregated or shut out of public life entirely, and we shouldn’t accept that as normal. Disabled people shouldn’t be discriminated against in housing or in professions where their disability isn’t material to their work. We should all have patience and understanding as they navigate daily life, and people with disabilities like Tourette’s deserve dignity like anyone else.

 

But if you are someone who literally and physically cannot prevent yourself from screaming the n-word at black folks in front of thousands of people (and millions watching at home), I don’t think it’s crazy to suggest that you should perhaps stay home from the BAFTAs and send in a pre-recorded message instead. Inclusion doesn’t require that every single space accommodate every possible behavior, regardless of the cost to others.

 

At the BAFTAs, for the benefit of one person—who described himself as “deeply mortified,” left the ceremony partway through, and likely had a miserable time—two presenters had to withstand racial slurs, thousands of guests had their ceremony disrupted repeatedly, and millions of people heard the slurs broadcast. That level of “inclusion” did nobody any good. Instead, it alienated far more people than it included.

 

Karl Popper introduced the idea of the paradox of tolerance—that by tolerating intolerance, you erode the conditions that make tolerance possible. Here, we see a paradox of inclusivity. When inclusion becomes unconditional—when no behavior is too disruptive, no boundary legitimate—shared spaces collapse. The BAFTAs were so inclusive they ended up excluding people.

 

Award ceremonies themselves are low stakes. The millionaire movie stars will be fine. But this same dynamic applies to much more consequential parts of our lives.

 

***

 

Every six months or so, progressive social media spaces relitigate a never-ending argument. A story circulates of someone behaving in a deeply antisocial way in public—perhaps smoking meth on a train, or masturbating on a bus—and an enormous fight erupts about the correct response to such behavior. Recently, for example, there was a massive debate about whether it’s okay to be bothered when a homeless person urinates in the middle of a crowded subway train. Some commenters expressed disgust and demanded stricter policing of public indecency. Others made fun of the complaints, called those who were upset reactionary and racist, called the complaints examples of something called “carceral sanism,” and blamed the incident on the failure of social services, late-stage capitalism, or a general lack of compassion in society.

 

On the surface, this episode seems unrelated to the BAFTAs incident. But at the heart of both controversies is the same idea: over-inclusivity.

 

Society has become dramatically more inclusive over the past few generations, and this has largely been a good thing. Discrimination has become less and less acceptable over time, and many barriers for marginalized groups have crumbled. But somewhere along the way, we became so obsessive about never excluding anyone that we failed to realize that over-inclusivity might carry its own harms.

 

In our public transit systems, the demand for maximal compassion and inclusivity towards homeless people runs squarely into the fact that disruptive, antisocial behavior ruins public spaces for everyone else. If buses and subway cars are riddled with people openly using drugs, engaging in lewd behavior, and experiencing untreated mental illness, they become unusable for other people—that is, the majority. Public libraries in many cities have become de facto homeless shelters, scaring away other citizens. Some school districts have grown so reluctant to fail students that they pass them along even though they can’t meet basic educational benchmarks, as if it would be bigoted or exclusionary to fail anyone. These policies may seem empathetic and spare feelings in the short term. But they undermine our civic structures and degrade the public spaces that benefit us all.

 

At some point, we have to ask what the purpose our institutions serve. The purpose of the BAFTAs is to honor achievements in film and television. They can’t do that very well if someone, however sympathetic we may find their plight, is continually shouting slurs. Passing failing students does nothing to educate them, and it demoralizes teachers and leads some to leave the profession altogether. Public transit systems are meant to transport people safely and comfortably around a city, not serve as holding pens for homeless or mentally ill people.

 

I understand why progressive commentators have deep sympathy for the homeless, even those who disrupt public spaces. But however much sympathy we have, when transit authorities allow unchecked antisocial behavior, it prevents public transit from doing its job. Progressive institutions are allergic to excluding anyone for any reason, but that just doesn’t work. It ultimately excludes people anyways by proxy of public disorder.

 

And the costs of that disorder are not evenly borne. When public order frays, the most vulnerable are hit the hardest. Women may face harassment. Children, the elderly, or the disabled can’t as easily avoid hostile, unsafe environments. Poor folks might not be able to afford safer alternatives.

 

Over-inclusivity isn’t even beneficial for those it claims to help. Allowing unchecked antisocial behavior in the name of empathy doesn’t actually help those engaging in antisocial behavior in the long run. Failing to enforce standards in schools lets down the students who most need our help. Inviting someone to attend an event where his condition will predictably cause harm and humiliation is no kindness at all.

 

It’s important to remember why inclusivity is so often seen as a virtue. For much of human history, people have been arbitrarily and cruelly excluded from institutions because of their race, gender, sexuality, or other inborn characteristics. But excluding someone for their race is not the same thing as asking them not to smoke meth on a subway train.

 

None of this should absolve the government of its obligation to care for its citizens. If there’s a crisis of homelessness, we need to build more housing. If there’s a crisis of mental illness, we should invest in treatment options. But enforcing rules and norms is still necessary. It’s what preserves public spaces while social policy catches up to the problem.

 

We’ve corrected great wrongs by becoming more inclusive, and there’s still more work to do. But expanding inclusion doesn’t eliminate tradeoffs, and inclusion shouldn’t extend infinitely. Society can’t function without empathy. But it also can’t function without boundaries, and the refusal to set boundaries is not a moral virtue. Instead, that refusal harms the public, shared life that makes pluralism possible. Inclusion is a means, not an end, and should be used to sustain and grow our institutions, not dissolve them.

Delusion Keeps the Iranian Threat Alive

By Danielle Pletka

Thursday, February 26, 2026

 

Danger persists as a result of the United States’ historically rosy view of Iranian politics and Iran’s fantasies about real-world events.

 

In the words of Iran envoy Steve Witkoff, President Donald Trump is “curious” as to why the Islamic Republic has not “capitulated” to his threats. As is often the case, this president says out loud what most others have only whispered for decades: Why is Iran an irrational actor? The answer is neither simple nor certain, but it rests at the heart of why Western policy has consistently failed to curb the Iranian threat.

 

Since the Islamic Revolution in Iran in 1979, American and European leaders have layered their own hopes and biases on the regime. In a 1978 cable just before the return of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, U.S. Ambassador to Iran William Sullivan described Khomeini, who would go on to preside over Iran’s rise as one of the Middle East’s most tyrannical and destabilizing forces, as a “Gandhi-like” figure. U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Andrew Young memorably predicted that “Khomeini will be somewhat of a saint when we get over the panic.”

 

President Jimmy Carter publicly supported the shah even as he privately urged the embattled Iranian leader to leave. And upon the shah’s departure, Carter publicly insisted that “we have no intention of trying to intercede in the internal political affairs of Iran. . . . We hope that the people of Iran will be able to form a government that will be stable and which will maintain the friendship that we have had in the past.”

 

That 1979 triumph of hope over experience became the framework for 47 years of failed efforts to contain Khomeini’s Islamist, expansionist model. Even the 1981 Algiers Accords, which resulted in the freeing of U.S. hostages taken by the nascent regime, rested on a vain hope that having sorted the hostage-taking of 66 American diplomats and employees, pledged not to “intervene, directly or indirectly, politically or militarily, in Iran’s internal affairs,” unfrozen almost $8 billion in Iranian assets, and waived any claims by victims of Iran’s hostage-taking, Iran would somehow abandon the path of Shiite extremism.

 

Just two years after those accords, Iranian leaders and terrorist proxies plotted the terrorist attack that left 241 American servicemen stationed at the Marine barracks in Beirut dead. What followed were years of Iranian-backed terrorism, hostage-taking (including the murder of CIA Beirut station chief William Buckley), and regional destabilization that continue to rock the Middle East decades later. And yet, hope remained alive.

 

Despite ample evidence that Iran had begun investing in earnest in an illegal nuclear weapons and missile program, and a 1996 Iranian-managed bombing of U.S. military barracks at Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia, the Clinton administration shifted from its earlier containment to an explicit policy of rapprochement. The effort was not entirely ill-placed: For the first time, a “reformist” president — Mohammad Khatami — had been elected in 1997, and Tehran seemed to be looking to dial down tensions with the United States. But, in keeping with tradition, Washington allowed a skewed vision of Iranian history, governance, and policy to dictate its approach.

 

Bill Clinton and his secretary of state, Madeleine Albright, leaned in hard to appease what they believed to be Iran’s greatest grievances with the United States: The secretary apologized for U.S. involvement in the 1953 overthrow of Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh, allowing that it was “clearly a setback for Iran’s political development.” She expressed regret for supporting Iraq during the devastating 1980–88 Iran-Iraq War. And Washington lifted sanctions on Iranian luxury goods, approved long-sought-after aviation spare parts, and offered to settle Iranian claims over still-frozen shah-era state assets in American banks. Secret offers promised dialogue “without preconditions” and more. Nothing came of these efforts.

 

Similar such efforts in the George W. Bush administration, notwithstanding Iranian involvement in the murders of U.S. troops in Iraq, met with a similar end. Ultimately the Obama administration was able to come to terms with the Iranian regime because, like the Carter administration, it rationalized that Iran would reform itself before the temporary restrictions it negotiated on Iran’s nuclear program would expire.

 

Obama’s 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (the so-called Iran nuclear deal) offered permanent relief from international sanctions in exchange for time-limited concessions. It also effectively gave Iran a pass on its ongoing sponsorship of terrorism and its human rights abuses inside the country. The deal’s promise of a $150 billion cash infusion from the United States, with hints of more from Europe, coupled with the temptation of permanent sanctions relief, was too sweet for Iran to pass up.

 

Trump terminated the deal in 2018, and efforts to restart talks have largely failed. That’s not surprising, given Trump’s reneging on the original nuclear agreement. But why, in light of America’s destruction of Iran’s uranium enrichment program last year and its massive military buildup in the Middle East this year, is the regime still balking at doing serious business with Washington?

 

There have long been debates outside Iran about the nature of the regime. Are there factions? Are there true reformers? Is the supreme leader truly supreme? And the answer is that like any group of humans with power, the officials helming the Islamic Republic are divided into camps, with differing views on issues such as the veiling of women, the nuclear weapons program, and the need for diplomacy with the United States. What most Western leaders fail to appreciate is that these camps are irrelevant on two questions where decision-making rests solely with the supreme leader: regime security and the nature of the Iranian government.

 

Iran’s nuclear weapons program ultimately relates to regime security, as do the missiles that would deliver those weapons. Tehran rationally looks at the examples of Moammar Qaddafi and Saddam Hussein and notes that if both had not given up on the nuclear option, they would, like Pakistan’s and North Korea’s leaders, still be enjoying the fruits of power. This makes sense.

 

What doesn’t make sense to Trump is why, facing annihilation at the hands of the U.S. armed forces, the ayatollah still doesn’t want to give up on his nukes for a time. And this is where persistent faulty analysis again rears its ugly head: because Iran does not see its options the way Washington, London, Paris, and Berlin do.

 

Foreign leaders like Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the current supreme leader, don’t just dress differently and speak different languages. They live in a different reality. In their reality, Iran is a formidable power that killed scores of Americans with a strike on Iraq in 2020, downed Israeli F-35s, and killed hundreds of Israel Defense Forces troops in its 2025 strikes on Israel. Of course, these things didn’t happen, but Iran’s senior-most leaders nevertheless believe they did.

 

It gets worse. Iranian leaders firmly believe that Israel — and Jews — controls decision-making in Washington, D.C. Thus any promises proffered by Trump are merely a trap designed to weaken Iran for the ultimate Zionist takeover. Nor is anything that Trump is promising likely to lead to greater security for the regime; what brought thousands to the streets in January was not the nuclear program but criminal economic mismanagement. And even if Trump extends sanctions relief, that cannot undo the damage that almost half a century of incompetence and thievery have inflicted.

 

Thus the leadership of the Islamic Republic, reassured by lies about its own military prowess, paranoid about the ambitions of its perceived enemies, and uninterested in resolving moot grievances about the past, has decided to hunker down and wait for the blitz, irrationally secure in the belief that it can outlast whatever Washington and Jerusalem have planned.

Who’s Honoring Whom?

By Nick Catoggio

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

 

If you want to know how open someone is to still voting Republican in 2026, ask them how they feel about the U.S. Olympic men’s hockey team attending last night’s State of the Union address.

 

It’s not a perfect proxy, as we’ll see, but it’s apt to tell you something about how comfortable that person is with [gestures broadly] all this.

 

Fresh off their kegger with the director of the FBI, the players made a dramatic entrance during the president’s speech wearing their gold medals, the first for Team USA in men’s hockey since the “Miracle on Ice” Olympics of 1980. Their appearance in the House chamber drew cheers from both parties, one of the few moments in a nearly two-hour(!) “weave” to do so.

 

For a few precious minutes, Americans put aside their differences over questions like “Is being ruled by a corrupt Caesar with ‘dark triad’ psychological problems preferable to James Madison’s vision?” and came together to bask in athletic glory.

 

The president did the right thing by inviting them. It would have been political malpractice if he hadn’t. When you’re rocking a 36 percent approval rating and are handed a gift-wrapped opportunity to leverage the popularity of newly minted national heroes, you grab it and you don’t let go.

 

Even if he hadn’t benefited from their attendance, an invitation would have been appropriate. Sports teams routinely visit the White House to be honored after winning a championship, a tradition that’s continued under Donald Trump. But a team that wins a championship at the Olympics, representing the entire country, in the marquee sport at the Games enjoys an unusual patriotic distinction that deserves special recognition. Offering them an SOTU victory lap was a no-brainer.

 

Which is not to say that the team should have accepted.

 

The same day the president spoke, The Athletic published a piece titled, “The U.S. men’s Olympic hockey team won gold—and then lost the room.” By partying with Patel and agreeing to attend Trump’s speech, author Jerry Brewer complained, the players tainted a moment of national unity that should have, and otherwise would have, transcended politics.

 

“Trump, perhaps more than most modern presidents, understands the optics of standing next to winners,” he wrote. “It normalizes him. It softens his cruel instincts and crude jokes, recasting them as locker-room banter. It washes his reputation and reduces the impact of polls that indicate a significant majority of Americans disapprove of his second term. … Team USA’s visibility in Washington functions as an endorsement, whether the players intend it to be or not.”

 

Last night wasn’t a simple case of the president honoring the team. It was a case of the team honoring the president with their presence.

 

There are three schools of thought about that, broadly speaking. Each reflects a different reaction to this question: How legitimate is Trump’s presidency?

 

Three schools.

 

The first school of thought includes everyone from MAGA diehards to normies who don’t pay much attention to politics, a category that I’m guessing includes plenty of twentysomething gold-medal-winning professional hockey players. Insofar as this school has considered the matter at all, it believes Trump’s presidency is as legitimate as any other.

 

Why wouldn’t it be?

 

One might not agree with everything he does, like depicting the first black president as a monkey, but no one agrees with a politician 100 percent of the time. He won the 2024 election fair and square and is the duly elected head of state. So when he does things that heads of state traditionally do, like honoring Olympians, why would anyone boycott apart from the pettiest possible partisan reasons?

 

The type of person who holds this view, I suspect, is the type of person who believes the most objectionable thing Trump has done since returning to office is failing to restore grocery prices to what they were in 2019. He or she has bills to pay, kids to school, and life to live, without the luxury of following the news closely. Many in this school of thought voted for the president two years ago and will vote Republican again if they see the economy moving in the right direction. Because a bad economy doesn’t make a president illegitimate, these people might think, there’s no reason Team USA shouldn’t have attended Trump’s speech.

 

The second school of thought spans the politically conscious center, from Trump-leery Republicans to Democrats who aren’t quite Resistance-pilled. They grasp the legitimacy dilemma at the core of this presidency but, for different reasons, aren’t so disquieted by it that they’d fault a bunch of athletes for accepting a rhetorical high-five from the commander in chief.

 

The legitimacy dilemma is this: Trump is the legitimate president of the United States, but he’s directed his presidential powers toward the illegitimate end of gutting the country’s liberal civic heritage. From unilateral tariffs to waging undeclared wars, from shaking down political enemies to treating the Justice Department as his personal law firm, from sending National Guard troops to occupy American cities to building his own secret police force, he’s done everything he can to supplant the republic with a monarchy.

 

A really sleazy one, too.

 

Members of the second school understand that. But they also understand that life is bigger than politics and must go on even during a rolling constitutional crisis. When Team USA wins gold and the legitimate president pauses for a moment to recognize them, we can and should be able to suspend our alarm for one g-ddamned night to feel good about the country we live in.

 

“One thing the normies are right about is that there’s such a thing as ‘politicizing everything’ and the people who do it are super annoying,” Nate Silver, a sports junkie who’s very much not a Republican, observed this morning. Many swing voters would agree, no doubt. Why should we begrudge a group of hockey players who won gold a well-deserved moment in the sun just because Americans were stupid enough to reelect Donald Trump?

 

When I said earlier that one’s feelings about the team attending the speech aren’t a perfect proxy for one’s willingness to vote Republican, it’s this second school I was thinking of. Nate Silver won’t be voting GOP this fall, I’m reasonably sure, nor will many other left-leaning hockey fans who hate the administration but enjoyed the players’ SOTU cameo—possibly the only reason some tuned in to watch, in fact.

 

But “stop politicizing everything!” will also assuredly be the preferred take on this episode among anti-anti-Trump conservatives who have been looking for, and reliably finding, excuses to continue supporting the GOP since 2015 despite their misgivings about the president. It can’t be otherwise: Team USA’s willingness to swallow any moral qualms it might have about Trump and associate with him mirrors Reaganite partisans’ own willingness to do so. This sort of person will insist that boycotting an event like this one, in which the president aimed to do nothing more than congratulate the team on behalf of the nation, would have been—and could only have been understood as—disgustingly “political.”

 

But that isn’t true. Which brings us to the third school of thought, those who believe the illegitimacy of Trump’s ambitions should inform interactions with him even when he’s carrying out the legitimate duties of his office.

 

An illegitimate president.

 

The case against the president is a civic one, not a “political” one.

 

Politics relates to policy. I’m sure there are Resistance types who, if asked why they think Team USA should have boycotted the State of the Union, would answer in prosaic political terms—that is, due to some policy difference they have with the administration. Trump didn’t extend the Obamacare subsidies. Trump cut taxes for the rich in the One Big Beautiful Bill. Trump isn’t an “ally” to the LGBT community.

 

Those aren’t the grounds I’d cite to defend a boycott, though. What makes Trump illegitimate isn’t his views on taxation or “wokeness.” What makes him illegitimate is that he put his picture on the Justice Department.

 

He’s an unabashed autocrat. Last night he told members of Congress to their faces that he won’t need their permission for the new tariffs he ordered following last Friday’s Supreme Court ruling even though the law plainly requires it.

 

He treats his opponents as enemies, including some U.S. Olympians. At one point during his speech, while people in the first two schools of thought I mentioned wheezed about a hockey kumbaya moment at the SOTU, Trump blithely assured the tens of millions of Americans watching that Democrats “wanna cheat. They have cheated. And their policy is so bad that the only way they can get elected is to cheat.”

 

When he targets Democratic jurisdictions for military or paramilitary occupations while conspicuously exempting ones where Republicans have some electoral interest, that’s not a “political” problem. It’s a civic perversion by a postliberal regime that wants to dominate and subjugate its opponents the way a victorious army might occupy conquered territory.

 

To round things off, he engages in graft that’s as preposterously blatant as it is preposterously huge. Team USA might have told itself that it was attending an official state function last night, not a Trump political event, but the president himself has never perceived a distinction between his official duties and his personal interests. (That’s why he was impeached in 2019.) He used his executive powers to rename the Kennedy Center after himself, for cripes sake.

 

No other president in our lifetime has been as corrupt, as vicious, and as authoritarian. So why would the players of Team USA honor him with their attendance—let alone do him the favor of swinging by the Oval Office beforehand to let him try on a gold medal?

 

“It’s unfair to expect twentysomething hockey stars to know about the things he’s done, let alone to have firm opinions about it,” you might answer.

 

Is it?

 

Five players from the team didn’t attend last night. They didn’t say why, but it’s notable that three were born in the ICE-scorched state of Minnesota while a fourth, Jake Guentzel, was raised there. The entire U.S. women’s hockey team, which also won gold in an overtime thriller over Canada, declined the president’s invitation as well. And Alysa Liu, who won gold in women’s figure skating and became the breakout star of the Games, was nowhere to be found at the Capitol. It’s hard to believe she wasn’t asked to attend and easy to believe she preferred not to.

 

People, especially athletes, are entitled to be apolitical—but as I say, the gravest and most obnoxious episodes of Trump’s second presidency haven’t fundamentally been “political.” Do we really think that the captain of the Ottawa Senators has no opinion about the president threatening Canada repeatedly, to the point where the Canadian military has felt obliged to wargame a U.S. invasion? If he does have an opinion, what was he doing posing with a big toothy grin yesterday next to America’s ersatz Putin?

 

Deflecting civic objections to fascism by caterwauling about “politicization” inescapably, and in some cases deliberately, minimizes the moral force of the liberal critique of Trump. To resent him for tampering with national elections or pitting the military against Americans or turning the Justice Department into a legal hit squad or reducing Congress to something lowlier than the Russian Duma is, supposedly, little different from resenting him for securing the border or supporting gun rights. Fascism is just another partisan policy choice in 2026, you see; expecting guests at the State of the Union to have such a strong aversion to it that attending should trouble their conscience isn’t just unreasonable, it’s petty.

 

When those of us in the third school mutter about boiled frogs, that’s what we’re muttering about. And when Jerry Brewer complains that “Team USA’s visibility in Washington functions as an endorsement,” that’s what he’s complaining about. Attending the SOTU doesn’t mean that the players endorse the president’s policy agenda but it does mean, implicitly, that they believe the way he’s governed is unobjectionable—or at least not meaningfully more objectionable than the way any other politician might govern.

 

In that sense, they’re better representatives of their nation than they might realize. The third school won’t be voting Republican again.

Yes, Celebrate the U.S. Men’s Hockey Team

National Review Online

Thursday, February 26, 2026

 

The U.S. men’s Olympic hockey team didn’t just bring home the first gold medal for the program since the 1980 “Miracle on Ice”; they did so in dramatic fashion — with a game-winning goal in overtime against a stacked Canadian team and an otherworldly performance by their goalie.

 

It was a wonderful moment for Americans, with plenty of added human interest for the media to feast on. Jack Hughes had teeth knocked out by a stick during the game, only to return to score the winning shot; his brother and teammate, Quinn Hughes, had scored a game-winning goal in the quarterfinals; and their mother, Ellen Hughes, won a world championship with the 1992 U.S. women’s hockey team. NHL star Johnny Gaudreau was supposed to play for the team but died tragically at 31 after being hit by a drunk driver in 2024. Team USA’s players never forgot him, parading around with his jersey after wins, and in a touching moment after the Olympic victory, they grabbed his kids to pose with them in their team picture.

 

It was the stuff of a Hollywood movie, and yet, with the champagne still spraying in the locker room, the American media already had turned on them. All because they celebrated with FBI Director Kash Patel and welcomed a call from President Trump. The supposedly problematic moment came when they accepted Trump’s invitation to visit the White House and attend the State of the Union, and laughed when Trump joked that he would be impeached if he didn’t also invite the women’s hockey team. In the same call, he also sarcastically said of the legendary performance by goalie Connor Hellebuyck that he played “not bad.” (During Trump’s address to Congress, he announced that Hellebuyck would receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom.)

 

In typical media fashion, journalists injected political controversy into what should have been a unifying celebratory moment and then commented on the controversy they had created as if it were reality. Former NBC Meet the Press host Chuck Todd said that Patel’s presence “helped sully the team.” A headline from the New York Times read, “The U.S. men’s Olympic hockey team won gold — and then lost the room.” Hockey writer Ian Kennedy lamented that the players didn’t “apologize for laughing” at Trump’s remark. Reporters spent all week asking men and women players leading questions, desperately trying to create a rift where none existed, but all of them reaffirmed the close bond among squads.

 

This would be the same media that spent the last several weeks gushing over Eileen Gu, the American-born and raised freestyle skier who competed for the oppressive Chinese communist regime. Beyond parody, Vox even named the hockey team a “loser” in the Olympics while mentioning Gu as a “winner.”

 

In this warped view of reality, Gu is a girlboss for being unapologetic about her decision to be a paid propagandist for an American adversary and a serial violator of human rights, while American hockey players are attacked for being unapologetic about being gracious to the U.S. president.

 

When Alysa Liu took home gold for the United States in figure skating, conservatives overwhelmingly celebrated, and leftists tried to burst their bubble by resurfacing past comments that made her sound “woke.” Of course, conservatives didn’t care about her actual politics, because she represented America joyfully and proudly. In hindsight, progressives were telling on themselves. They see everything through a political lens and cannot be content to simply join others of all political stripes to enjoy a moment of national pride.

Trump’s Emerging Case for More Iran Strikes

By Noah Rothman

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

 

The president didn’t have much to say about the dozens of American naval assets he has dispatched to the Middle East amid the growing and credible threat of a new round of air strikes on Iranian targets. But what he did say was portentous.

 

Donald Trump’s logic could easily serve as the predicate for a sustained air campaign against the Islamic Republic designed to deliver the mullahs to a reckoning with the Iranian people they’ve abused for so long:

 

Since they seized control of that proud nation 47 years ago, the regime and its murderous proxies have spread nothing but terrorism and death and hate. They’ve killed and maimed thousands of American service members and hundreds of thousands and even millions of people. With what’s called roadside bombs. They were the kings of the roadside bomb.

 

“And we took out Soleimani,” Trump said of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps commander whose neutralization the president ordered in early 2020. “I did that during my first term. Had a huge impact. He was the father of the roadside bomb.”

 

It’s worth dwelling on this section. It departs from the casus bellum to which Trump typically defaults: Iran’s pursuit of a nuclear bomb. Here, Trump argued that the “terrible people” in control of Tehran are an acute threat to U.S. national security even if they never cross the nuclear threshold.

 

“They’ve already developed missiles that can threaten Europe and our bases overseas, and they’re working to build missiles that will soon reach the United States of America,” the president warned. The Iranian regime is the “world’s No. 1 sponsor of terror,” he added. And they’ve already drawn American blood.

 

By “roadside bombs,” Trump is referring to the Iranian campaign of support for insurgents inside Iraq, whom the Islamic Republic furnished with shaped-charge explosive devices designed to penetrate American armor. “The Pentagon is upping the official estimate on the number of U.S. troops in Iraq who were killed by Iranian-backed militias, now putting that number at least 603,” the Military Times reported in 2019. “That means roughly one in every six American combat fatalities in Iraq were attributable to Iran.”

 

It’s hardly the first time Iran has killed American soldiers. The 1983 Beirut Embassy and Marine Barracks bombings, in which Iran-backed Hezbollah played a leading role, killed 258 Americans. The 1984 embassy annex bombing in Beirut took another 23 American lives. Hezbollah al-Hijaz, an Iran-backed militia supported by Lebanese Hezbollah, masterminded the 1996 Khobar Towers bombing, in which 19 Americans died.

 

Add to that list the efforts by Iranian agents to assassinate foreign dignitaries on U.S. soil, as well as American political figures and government appointees, to say nothing of the combat in which U.S. forces and Iran-backed militias in Iraq and Syria have been engaged for the better part of the last decade, and you are liable to conclude that the United States and the Islamic Republic of Iran have been at war for nearly a half century.

 

But the president continues to base his case for a decisive war with Iran on Tehran’s quest for a bomb. The Iranian nuclear program may have been crippled by Operation Midnight Hammer, and there are few indications that Iran has either the resources or capabilities to recover the nuclear technology or material lost in those strikes. But Iran’s leaders refuse to abjure nuclear technology wholly and without reservation.

 

“We wiped it out, and they want to start it all over again and are at this moment again pursuing their sinister ambitions,” Trump said. “They want to make a deal, but we haven’t heard those secret words, ‘We will never have a nuclear weapon.’”

 

It’s odd that this administration seems to be resting its case for regime change in Iran on the dubious proposition that Tehran’s WMD program is the primary threat. In much the same way that Saddam Hussein’s Iraq posed a perennial conventional threat to the United States and was a thorn in its side, putting the U.S. in near-constant conflict with the country since 1991, Iran is a conventional threat, too. It will never cease to wage war against the U.S. and its allies so long as the regime survives. The Islamic Republic’s implosion would be accompanied by new challenges, but those challenges would be good problems to have compared with the perpetual menace from Tehran’s indefatigable terror masters.

 

The State of the Union was never going to be the venue in which Trump laid out his case for the robust and sustained application of U.S. airpower against Iran’s suicidally millenarian clerisy. That will require another speech — hopefully, one in which the president outlines the Iranian threat, details the record of American blood the regime has spilled, and enlists the public in a national project to rid the world of this cancer. We haven’t heard Trump make that case yet. But this was a good start.

The Fake Proletarianism of Gavin Newsom

By Jonah Goldberg

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

 

I’m not technically on vacation, I’m actually on vacation.

 

But given the life I have chosen, I find it very difficult to relax if I have a deadline I am supposed to hit and am able to hit (take note, Dispatch young’uns).

 

I do not, however, find it difficult to skip the State of the Union address. On the long list of ways Woodrow Wilson made our country worse, reviving the tradition of the president physically addressing Congress is not in the top five, but it might be in the top 10 or 15 (Keith Whittington penned a worthy contribution to the extensive literature of why the SOTU is not worth keeping).

 

But here’s a thought: if we can’t get rid of it, how about just not televising it? The Constitution requires the president to check in with Congress from time to time about the state of the union, sort of like when a mechanic calls you and says he discovered that your brake pads are a little worn out and might be worth replacing while they still have your car up on the lift. I’m not going to revisit my whole spiel against cameras in Congress, but it’s just obvious the founders never intended this requirement to be a taxpayer-funded political ad and pep rally for the president.

 

It’s funny: A lot of people, for understandable reasons, believe the “mainstream media” suffer from groupthink. The main reason for this view is that it is objectively true. But it’s not always true in the ways people think. During commercial breaks on CNN or, even back when I was a regular on Fox News, there would often be a lot of political or ideological disagreement. But when I’ve been a guest during “special coverage” of the State of the Union, I’ve often said something like, “I think this whole ritual is stupid.”  People looked at me like I just threw my hot coffee in the Dalai Lama’s face.

 

What I’m getting at is a lot of people—regardless of ideology—who make a living from being on TV tend to think TV is just really, really important. And while ego definitely plays a big part for some people, the story most of them seem to tell themselves isn’t obviously narcissistic but charmingly patriotic. Media types have told themselves that this is a vital and important ritual for the country, and they’re jazzed to play a part in it. I think they’re mostly wrong on the substance, but it’s a form of bias that most people don’t think of when they decry media bias.

 

A similar dynamic applies to a lot of political traditions. For instance, when I tell people that I think the primaries should be rotated out of Iowa and New Hampshire, some of the biggest resistance I get is from reporters and pundits (including—cough, cough—Steve Hayes) who’ve invested a lot of sweat equity in reporting from Iowa and New Hampshire. Knowing the names of local diners and having sources in various precincts is not just a valuable journalistic resource, it’s a credential and bragging right.

 

Something similar happens when I argue that political conventions are Potemkin versions of the real thing and don’t deserve the coverage they get. That’s in part because party conventions are actually media conventions, too. Indeed, it’s often the case that there are two to three times as many people from the media than there are actual delegates at conventions. Attending conventions is also a credential and bragging right that has intangible but real value to journalists.

 

I could go on about international climate conferences, Davos, etc. The point isn’t that these things are all unimportant, just that there’s an incentive for the people who cover them to exaggerate their importance. Inflating the importance of these events and pseudo-events is a subtle way of inflating the importance of the people who cover them.

 

Again, this is a kind of media bias that cuts across ideological and partisan lines.

 

The same bias, of course, applies to all sorts of other disciplines and professions, too. Academics have a similar incentive to make their research subjects as “relevant” as possible. The normal and obvious reasons have to do with the desire for grants, tenure, etc. But there’s also just a human component as well. Who wants to spend years studying and writing about stuff that isn’t important?

 

Newsom’s Romney problem.

 

Let me start off by saying I think Mitt Romney is a good and honorable man who will be better remembered by history than many of his detractors.

 

But you might recall that one of Romney’s biggest political liabilities was that he had no rough edges, no narrative of struggle. This was not a new problem for Republicans. George H.W. Bush had a similar problem, despite his heroic service in World War II. I remember that someone asked Bush’s baseball coach at Yale what kind of player he was. The coach said something like, “He was the kind of player who, if you told him to bunt, he bunted.”

 

Romney had a similar vibe. He was born to privilege, worked hard nonetheless, and was very successful, with a beautiful wife and five handsome sons. I used to joke that he looked like the picture that comes with the frame. I also talked about his “authentic inauthenticity problem.” To a distrustful and ornery public his scar- and scandal-free life, his compulsive decency and good manners, his almost Ned Flanders-like cheeriness made him seem fake. But that was really him.

 

Enter Gavin Newsom. Newsom’s an adroit politician but, from what I can tell, an extremely mediocre governor. We will undoubtedly have time to look at his record again.

 

But I want to take a moment to discuss his battle with dyslexia, or rather the way he’s using it.

 

A couple of weeks ago, Sen. Ted Cruz gave an interview in which he claimed that Newsom was “historically illiterate” for claiming that we had never federalized the National Guard in the states (whether Newsom actually said that, I don’t know).

 

On social media, Newsom replied not by saying Cruz misquoted him or missed some relevant facts. He instead played the victim: "Ted Cruz calling a dyslexic person illiterate is a new low, even for him."

 

At the time I thought it was just … weird.

 

But it turns out this was the beginning of Newsom’s presidential messaging—timed to coincide with the publication of his book, Young Man in a Hurry.

 

This week, at a book event in Atlanta, Newsom said, “I’m not trying to impress you, I’m just trying to impress upon you, I’m like you. I’m no better than you. I’m a 960 SAT guy,” Newsom told Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens. “And I’m not trying to offend anyone,” he went on. “You’ve never seen me read a speech because I cannot read a speech.”

 

Now, this took on more of a racial vibe than the facts warranted. So I’ll ignore that ginned-up part of the controversy. Let’s concede he wasn’t saying black people can’t read or break a thousand on the SAT, he was saying all of you normal Americans can’t read and are grateful for the 250 points you get for filling out your name on the SAT.

 

That’s … better, but not a lot better. But saying that he can relate to all of the unwashed because he can’t read or that being a rich and powerful man with dyslexia makes him no different than un-rich, un-powerful people struggling to make ends meet, is not great.

 

Also, I don’t mean to make light of dyslexia (which I have a minor case of myself), but boasting about how you can’t read on your book tour is a weird flex. It reminds me of all my sophomoric jokes when Stevie Wonder came out with a music video.

 

Given what Newsom thinks about normal Americans, I guess he’s hoping for big audiobook sales?

 

Privileged politicians have learned that the old line about the elder Bush—“a man who was born on third base and thinks that he hit a triple”—can sting. And Newsom is nothing if not privileged. He grew up not quite rich, but rich-adjacent (his father managed the Getty family trust), attractive, and extremely well-connected. I also have no problem being honest about his disability. It’s the way he’s using it that bugs me. The interesting thing about Newsom is that he overcame his disability, not that he has one. But he’s touting it as if it defines him, so that he can claim to be like the little people who can’t read or score poorly on tests. I understand that the trial-lawyer-inflected political culture of California—which gives us hazardous chemical signs posted in businesses and those warnings about flashing lights at the beginning of TV shows—has turned every affliction into a monetizable form of identity politics. But the simple fact is that his dyslexia isn’t a ticket to membership in the proletariat.

 

He didn’t get where he is by attending the “Derek Zoolander Center for Children Who Can’t Read Good and Wanna Learn to Do Other Stuff Good Too.” He got there because he worked really hard and is a talented politician, but also because he pushed on a lot of doors that were opened by rich and powerful people.

Trump Hands Vance a Ticking Time Bomb

By Noah Rothman

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

 

Marco Rubio received a prolonged standing ovation when Donald Trump name-checked him during the State of the Union address. But contrary to the secretary of state’s reputation as a jack of all administrative trades, this time, it was JD Vance whom Trump saddled with a job.

 

“Tonight, I am officially announcing the war on fraud to be led by our great Vice President JD Vance,” the president said following a prolonged riff on the network of largely Somali fraudsters in Minnesota. “This is the kind of corruption that shreds the fabric of a nation, and we are working on it like you wouldn’t believe,” Trump observed. “And we’re able to find enough of that fraud, we will actually have a balanced budget overnight. It’ll go very quickly.”

 

Unlikely. Of course, the fraud that became inevitable when lawmakers opened the Treasury’s spigots during the Covid-19 pandemic should not be hard to find. The Government Accountability Office has furnished lawmakers with a roadmap to track down roughly $200 billion lost to theft and $100 billion in misallocated funds. Indeed, even the Minnesota fraudsters accused of embezzling an estimated $9 billion were hiding in plain sight, their misdeeds chronicled for years by intrepid local reporters.

 

However, recovering those funds and identifying perpetrators is the work of prosecutors. But Vance will not find fish big enough to satisfy those who expect, as Trump said, that the “kind of money you’re talking about” is sufficient to “balance our budget.” If that or anything like it is the expectation that will be set for the vice president’s performance, he’ll fail to meet it.

 

Vance’s charge is reminiscent of the jobs Joe Biden outsourced to Kamala Harris — finding the “root causes” of the migration crisis, for example, and uncovering “voter suppression” initiatives at the state level, where federal constitutional officers have limited authority. Superficially, these roles seemed to offer Harris a platform to burnish her brand among the Democratic partisans who invested in the causes she oversaw. But Harris was set up to fail. Vance should be wary of stumbling onto the path Harris followed to political oblivion.

 

“Corruption” will take on a far different political valence if Democrats control one or both chambers of Congress next year. Congressional Democrats are all but guaranteed to chase down claims that the Trump administration’s principals have enriched themselves and abused public funds in the process. Crypto currency investment vehicles, foreign emoluments, pay-to-play allegations, conflicts of interest, suspect pardons, and so on — the subpoenas will fly, and it’s not at all assured that congressional investigators won’t hit pay dirt.

 

Democrats would no doubt love the opportunity to make Vance — still the likeliest of Trump’s possible successors — the face of Trump’s anti-corruption initiatives. If their investigations into the Trump administration’s dealings play out as they expect them to, Democrats will claim that his presidency’s interest in good governance never extended to its own misdeeds. And Vance breezily presided over all of it, closing his eyes to the corruption right under his nose.

 

That’s a lot of baggage to haul with you into a presidential campaign.