Wednesday, July 15, 2026

The Plan to Confiscate AI Company Stock

By Daniel J. Pilla

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

 

For years, socialist advocates of Big Government have pushed wealth taxes as the next step in redistributing the fruits of one’s labor and enterprise. Their premise is that government has a superior claim to the wealth accumulated by successful individuals and businesses, even after the payment of taxes incurred in the creation and consumption of that wealth. Whether the target is high-income earners, inherited wealth, or unrealized capital gains, those advocates’ objective has been to transfer private assets (beyond mere “income”) into the hands of the state.

 

Leftist U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders’ proposed American AI Sovereign Wealth Fund Act (introduced in the Senate on June 19 but yet unnumbered) crosses a line that previous redistributionist lawmakers didn’t reach. Sanders’ scheme goes beyond simply taxing wealth. It compels business owners to surrender ownership of the company itself that creates their wealth.

 

The distinction matters.

 

I’ve written before about proposals such as Minnesota’s wealth tax proposal, which would punish the accumulation of capital by taxing assets that were built through years of investment, creativity, innovation, and risk-taking. Those proposals are economically destructive, but at least they leave ownership of the income-producing assets in private hands.

 

Sanders’ proposal is fundamentally different. Instead of merely taxing successful businesses, it would require qualifying artificial intelligence (AI) companies to transfer half of their ownership interests directly to the federal government, to be controlled in a so-called “sovereign wealth fund.” The federal government would become a major owner of private companies, but not because it invested capital, developed technology, assumed entrepreneurial risk, or purchased stock in the marketplace. They would become owners because Congress ordered the transfer.

 

While the mechanism is labeled as an “excise tax,” the tax must be paid by transferring company equity in such an amount that “immediately after the tax has been paid, the [federal government] shall hold 50 percent of all outstanding equity interests” in the company. That’s not taxation. That’s outright theft by government of private assets carried out under the socialist concept of compulsory state ownership.

 

Sanders’ motivation is driven by the same philosophy that drives all modern socialists: free markets are unfair in that they end up vesting substantial wealth in the hands of just a few. Sanders’ remarks in the proposed act justifying the theft of private assets include: “The 8 richest Americans — all AI oligarchs — together have more than $2.9 trillion in wealth, more than bottom 59 percent of U.S. households combined.” Beyond that, the “findings” of fact presented in the introduction to the bill itself declare that artificial intelligence “is a public resource” chiefly because “a small number of oligarchs have essentially stolen the creative work of hundreds of millions of people” in order to create it.

 

To Sanders’ way of thinking, the alleged theft of intellectual property by AI developers justifies government theft of half the stock of AI companies. The bill asserts that the wealth generated by AI “must benefit humanity.”

 

Sanders portrays his proposal as allowing every American to “share in the wealth” of the AI revolution. He ignores the fact that every American already has the right to “share in” such wealth. All one has to do is buy stock in any AI company that is publicly traded. But the truth is this proposal is not about providing opportunity to the common citizen. It’s about the Marxist idea of transferring ownership of private property into the hands of the state, by force when necessary.

 

Under the legislation, a government-controlled “sovereign wealth fund” would receive the value of the transferred ownership interests, and all Americans would purportedly receive annual dividend payments, estimated at roughly $1,000 per person. Sanders claims that eventually, “the wealth that it generates could be used to ensure that every man, woman and child in the United States has a decent and dignified standard of living, including the right to health care, education, housing, and a healthy and habitable environment.”

 

But the proposal is that just 5 percent of the wealth of the fund would be used for direct payments to Americans. What would the balance of the 95 percent be used for? The answer is government-sponsored welfare programs, including “access to health care, education, and housing.” In other words, programs that create even more dependence on government.

 

Who doesn’t want free money from the government? But that promise ignores the most fundamental principle of free markets: Those who receive the rewards should also bear the risks. Investors purchase stock with their own money. Entrepreneurs mortgage their homes, invest their savings, sometimes go without paychecks, and spend years building businesses that often fail. They devote their careers to creating products that consumers voluntarily purchase. Every dollar earned represents risk assumed by someone. The recipients of these proposed government dividends have assumed none of that risk. They invested nothing. They sacrificed nothing. They stand to lose nothing if the enterprise performs poorly. Sanders affirms this very fact, claiming that “If the value of these companies goes down, as others have suggested, the companies would bear the losses, not the federal government.”

 

And there’s the rub. The federal government stands in the unique position of an uninvested “partner.” It would acquire ownership without purchasing it. Unlike every legitimate shareholder in the marketplace, Washington would obtain its interest by legislative fiat entirely without risk.

 

There is a world of difference between earning ownership and confiscating it.

 

Moreover, once the federal government has control of the income generated by its 50 percent ownership interest, there’s simply no restriction on what it can do with it. As we know from the long experiment with the Social Security benefits program, future Congresses can change the law any way they wish with just 51 percent of the support of sitting legislators and a willing president. As years pass, future citizens might get a dividend payment, but they might not.

 

Perhaps the most troubling aspect of the proposal is its governance structure. The legislation contemplates an “Independent Commission for Democratic AI” to manage the public’s interest. The commission would consist of seven unelected members (nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate) selected from a list of candidates provided by Congress. The commission would exercise voting authority over government-owned shares and participate directly in corporate governance.

 

The irony is rich. Sanders is concerned that currently, just eight individuals in the private sector control substantial amounts of American wealth. Instead, he would substitute that for seven unelected bureaucrats and political hacks exercising forced control over the operations of private businesses. That concept should alarm anyone who values free enterprise.

 

Businesses exist to develop products, satisfy customers’ needs, innovate, and earn returns for those who invest their resources. Government exists to establish reasonable rules to prevent one person or business from unlawfully converting the income or assets of another through force or by fraud. Those are entirely different functions. Once political appointees begin participating in the management of private enterprises, business decisions inevitably become political decisions. And you can be sure that depending upon who happens to control Congress and the While House, about one half of the population will vehemently disagree with those decisions.

 

History demonstrates that governments are remarkably poor at efficiently allocating capital. Bureaucrats respond to political pressure, election cycles, interest groups, and ideological agendas. Entrepreneurs respond to the wants and needs of consumers. Their free purchasing decisions (or not) in the marketplace control the success or failure of a particular business. Government should never be involved in such decisions.

 

The commission would not be bound by factors that ensure the best interests of the company’s investors or customers. Rather, the commission would be “mandated to promote the goals of worker welfare, public safety, fair competition, environmental sustainability, and financial solvency.” These politically motivated concepts are entirely undefined. Moreover, the money in the fund could never be used to provide “financial assistance to, or for the benefit of” any AI company from whom the wealth is confiscated. Thus, the proposal is, in every sense of the word, a one-way street.

 

Even more concerning is the unique nature of the companies targeted by this legislation. AI is rapidly becoming one of the principal means through which Americans obtain information, conduct research, communicate, and create and operate businesses. Government ownership of substantial voting interests in these companies raises obvious concerns.

 

To be clear, the legislation does not expressly authorize government officials to determine what information Americans may access via the AI platforms it would partly own. But it is not unreasonable to ask where that path may lead. If political appointees possess and exercise meaningful influence over the governance of companies that increasingly shape information, communications, and technological development, today’s corporate governance authority could become tomorrow’s influence over product design, content policies, or access to emerging technologies. It is not a wild leap to suggest that government’s direct control of boardrooms could turn into direct control over the nature of the information Americans are allowed to use and consume. Remember the Disinformation Governance Board, created in 2022 within the Department of Homeland Security during the Biden administration? Here we go again!

 

This is precisely the potential worst-case scenario that Americans should examine before granting government unprecedented ownership authority over the nation’s most innovative private enterprises.

 

This proposal also creates a dangerous precedent that could extend far beyond artificial intelligence. If Congress can require AI companies to surrender half their ownership because the industry has become so “systemically important,” what prevents the next Congress and president from applying the same reasoning to pharmaceutical companies, energy producers, home builders, financial institutions, insurance providers, food producers, biotech firms, or car manufacturers? Aren’t all of these sectors systemically important? Once compulsory government ownership of private enterprise is accepted as legitimate, the list of future targets becomes a matter of political preference rather than constitutional principle.

 

This is an open, brazen Marxist attack on private property itself. Private ownership is not merely an economic arrangement. It is one of the principal safeguards of individual liberty. When citizens own property independent of government, they possess a measure of independence from government itself. As government ownership of the means of production expands, private independence necessarily contracts. The end result is total dependence on government for one’s daily needs. There is no leverage in changing another’s opinion or compelling his support greater than that of being the provider of the daily sustenance that person needs to live.

 

That is why proposals like Minnesota’s wealth tax are so troubling. They gradually erode the connection between effort and reward. Sanders’ proposal goes even further by weakening the connection between ownership and investment. America did not become the world’s leader in innovation because unelected bureaucrats directed the activities of private enterprise. It became the world’s leader because entrepreneurs risked their own fortunes, investors voluntarily supplied capital, and consumers — not bureaucrats — determined which ideas succeeded.

 

The American AI Sovereign Wealth Fund Act turns that formula upside down.

 

It allows politicians to acquire substantial ownership of successful companies without risking taxpayer capital in the marketplace. It allows millions of Americans to receive investment returns from businesses in which they invested nothing, and for whose failures they bear no financial responsibility. It places government appointees in positions of influence over some of the most strategically important technology companies in the world with no accountability to the marketplace.

Mission Creep

By Nick Catoggio

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

 

The term “Friday news dump” refers to a PR strategy of releasing embarrassing information on Friday afternoon, hoping that most people won’t see it because they’ve already logged off for the weekend.

 

Are you a politician with a scandal that’s about to be exposed? A corporation with a major production setback to announce? A government with an aimless war on its hands that’s about to turn hot again? Wait until Friday to spill the beans. Many Americans won’t notice.

 

The White House showed how it’s done last week, executing a Friday news dump so flawlessly that the information contained within didn’t get picked up by Politico until Monday afternoon. Per a letter to Congress dated July 10, America is officially at war with Iran again.

 

If you were under the impression that we’ve been at war since February 28, you’re technically incorrect. The first stage of the conflict, Operation Epic Fury, was declared over on May 6—conveniently right around the time that the 60-day window for unauthorized presidential warmaking (which isn’t really a thing) under the War Powers Act was expiring.

 

Now that the peace deal between the two sides has collapsed and hostilities have resumed in earnest, replete with the U.S. reinstating its blockade of ships using Iranian ports, the president has formally notified Congress that a conflict is again underway. But it’s not a continuation of the original war, supposedly. It’s a whole new war, which means he gets a whole new 60 days to do whatever he likes without accountability to the legislature.

 

Needless to say, abusing the War Powers Act this way could hypothetically continue forever, letting the president fight on indefinitely without congressional approval by simply declaring every 60 days or so that the current conflict is over and a new, distinct conflict has begun. By the time he leaves office, we might be bogged down in Iran War XVIII or whatever.

 

And as long as Republicans control the House and Senate, nothing will be done to stop it.

 

I’ll say this in Donald Trump’s defense, though. The “new” Iran war does seem to have a meaningfully different mission from the one that started in February. If we’re defining discrete conflicts by how distinct their goals are, he’s got a case that Iran War II should be distinguished conceptually from Iran War I.

 

Here, in the president’s own words, is the goal of the new conflict as of Monday,:

 

The Hormuz Strait is OPEN, and will remain OPEN, with or without Iran. We are reinstating the [sic] THE IRANIAN BLOCKADE, so named because it is only stopping Iran’s ships or customers from entering or leaving. All other countries will have fair and open use of the Strait. The U.S.A. will be, from this point forward, known as “THE GUARDIAN OF THE HORMUZ STRAIT,” but as such, and as a matter of FAIRNESS, will be reimbursed, at the rate of 20% on all cargo shipped, for any and all costs necessary to do the job of providing safety and security to this very volatile section of the World. The process and formation will begin immediately. Thank you for your attention to this matter! President DONALD J. TRUMP

 

A 20 percent toll on shipping in the strait—to be collected by the United States, not Iran. Now that’s what I call “mission creep.”

 

On Tuesday morning Trump walked it back, sort of, by announcing that the tolls he’d proposed would be replaced by “Trade and Investment Deals” with the Gulf states. That makes the financial extortion he was planning to conduct in the strait less direct and overt, but his impulse to monetize the U.S. presence in Hormuz—in a war he had hoped to end less than a month ago!—is plainly still there.

 

Have you ever seen the Bugs Bunny “duck season/wabbit season” cartoons?

 

Wabbit season.

 

Until now, the best Looney Tunes analogy for the Iran war was any episode involving Yosemite Sam. A belligerent orange-y blowhard armed to the teeth and obsessed with his own toughness attempts to take down a wily enemy, only to end up repeatedly tied in knots.

 

But watching Trump adopt Iran’s own blackmail tactics yesterday reminded me of Daffy Duck being manipulated into agreeing with Bugs that Elmer Fudd should be hunting ducks, not rabbits. Only in a cartoon would someone be idiotic enough to take up his enemy’s cause, against his own interest, one might think.

 

Yet one would be wrong, it turns out.

 

Explain this to me like I’m 5 years old, then: Why did Trump entertain the idea of a 20 percent American toll even briefly? In what way would that have benefited the United States on balance?

 

“He didn’t seriously entertain the idea. He was trolling,” you might say. Not so. A White House official told Semafor yesterday that he was “very serious” about it. “This is what he’s always wanted to do, but people tried to talk him out of it,” the source explained. “To him, this was his instinctual decision always, and he’s sort of just come back around to it.”

 

When I first saw Trump’s post about the toll, I thought he might have been referring only to ships using Iranian ports. Turnabout is fair play: If Iran insists on extorting other countries’ tankers transiting the strait, the U.S. Navy will extort Iran’s. Maybe that will teach them a lesson about blackmail.

 

But that didn’t make sense. If the point of the U.S. blockade is to crush Iran’s economy until the regime begs for peace, why would we allow them to continue exporting oil under any circumstances? And in any case, it’s not true: Trump made clear to reporters on Monday that the 20 percent toll would be imposed on U.S. allies like Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, and Bahrain.

 

He wasn’t trying to give the Iranians a taste of their own medicine. He was trying to cut in on their action.

 

Wait, though. It gets stupider.

 

In proposing the tolls, the president undercut months of messaging from his own deputies. “It’s an international waterway,” Marco Rubio told reporters on June 23 while discussing Iran’s tactics in the strait. “No country is allowed to charge tolls or fees on an international waterway. That’s existing international law.” J.D. Vance underlined the same point days earlier, shortly after the peace deal was signed: “First of all, we believe international waterways should be free of tolls. And that’s been our position. That’s what you see, of course, in the 60 days of the [memorandum of understanding].”

 

Vance and Rubio were trying to maintain the taboo against Iranian hostage-taking. On Monday, in one Truth Social post, President Daffy Duck blew it up—and Iran was grateful. “POTUS is absolutely right. Whoever provides secure and safe passage of commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz should be compensated for this service,” the country’s foreign minister quipped on social media.

 

Amazingly, the toll Trump proposed was also far more onerous than what Iran itself has sought to charge. At one point in April, an Iranian official suggested demanding $1 per barrel of oil carried on passing tankers; the number the president floated would have extracted roughly 15 times as much. Trump’s scheme made Iran’s ongoing extortion seem reasonable, even generous, relative to what America had in mind.

 

And again the Iranians were grateful. “20% is of course too much. We will be fair,” the foreign minister went on to say in his tweet. Imagine a world in which a commercial crew sees a warship pull up alongside and feels relieved that it’s the Islamic Revolutionary Guard, not the U.S. Navy.

 

Protection without protection.

 

But wait. We haven’t reached the stupidest part.

 

The stupidest part is that Trump’s argument last month for striking a weak peace deal with Iran was that the alternative was worse. “I didn’t want to see economic catastrophe. If you kept this going, that could have happened,” he warned at the G7 summit, alluding to the knock-on effects of letting oil prices continue to rise as global reserves dwindled. “Rather than possibly going into a depression,” he went on to say, he made a difficult bargain that would hopefully reopen the strait and bring down the cost of living.

 

And it worked. Inflation declined in June, per the latest numbers released on Tuesday morning. So … why the hell would he turn around Monday and propose a massive new U.S.-imposed tax on oil in the strait that would have ended up being passed on to global consumers, driving gas prices up again?

 

On top of everything else, Trump went out of his way yet again to show America’s allies that their friendship won’t spare them from a shakedown.

 

“One of the president’s goals in this conflict should be to deepen the Islamic Republic’s international isolation,” Noah Rothman wrote yesterday at National Review, mystified as to why Trump would deepen America’s instead by proposing the toll. The only thing worse than showing the Gulf states that they might find postliberal Iran easier to deal with than a postliberal United States was showing them that and getting nothing in return, which is what the president did when he said he was willing to take 20 percent of their oil revenue before quickly backing off.

 

Right, I know—he now says he got “Trade and Investment Deals” in lieu of tolling. We’ll see. That smells like something cooked up to let him save face as he retreats from the toll idea, but even if it’s true, I wouldn’t count the money just yet. Our Gulf allies aren’t likely to go on submitting forever to a protection racket that’s stopped actually protecting them.

 

Meanwhile, it almost goes without saying that the president likely didn’t consider the unintended big-picture consequences of imposing a U.S. toll regime.

 

Trump is a guy who reportedly thought Iran would “be another Venezuela” and who shrugged off repeated warnings before the war about a potential crisis in Hormuz, which makes it a cinch that he floated his “Guardian of the Strait” nonsense without weighing some of the obvious complications mentioned by Jonathan Last. Would the U.S. Navy’s presence in the Persian Gulf be permanent? Would America really fire on passing tankers that refused to pay? What would the White House do when China inevitably decided that it, too, should extort commercial vessels in international waters?

 

Daffy Duck at least had the excuse that he was maneuvered into his lamebrained idea about “duck season” by a clever opponent. The Iranians didn’t maneuver Trump into mimicking their plan to toll the strait, though. He came up with it all on his own.

 

To call all of this stupid, as I have, is true but doesn’t capture the problem. It’s not that it reflects poor strategy as much as it reflects no strategy. There’s simply no strategic thought behind the tolling scheme at all, and the muted response to it abroad suggests that friends and foes of the United States grasped that instantly. “The rest of the world understands that America is no longer a country to be taken seriously,” Last deduced from their silence. There was no point in anyone raising hell diplomatically about the latest inane proposal from a senescent mobster so devoid of strategic benefit to the U.S. that it would have to be rescinded immediately. And was.

 

Losing the plot.

 

Semafor’s source is correct about why Trump floated the toll idea, I suspect: “To him, this was his instinctual decision always, and he’s sort of just come back around to it.”

 

It was a matter of instinct, the same way extorting Europe over Greenland remains a matter of instinct despite that dispute having supposedly been settled months ago. The urge to shake down weaklings comes to the president as naturally as the urge to eat or drink does, so much so that he reliably sounds aggrieved whenever some norm or law prevents him from indulging.

 

We don’t need to stray beyond the current conflict to find examples. In March, for instance, he complained to the Financial Times that Americans were too squeamish about plunder. "To be honest with you, my favorite thing is to take the oil in Iran,” he observed, “but some stupid people back in the U.S. say: ‘Why are you doing that?’ But they’re stupid people.”

 

A month later, presaging yesterday’s cockamamie toll proposal, he told ABC News that he’d consider a partnership with Iran to squeeze oil commerce in the strait. “We’re thinking of doing it as a joint venture. It’s a way of securing it—also securing it from lots of other people. It’s a beautiful thing,” he claimed. There was no indication that he was joking.

 

There’s a childlike quality to his rapaciousness. He sees something valuable, he wants it, and he really can’t be made to understand why he shouldn’t have it. He might be convinced that he can’t have it, but that he shouldn’t have it? When it’s within his means to take it? Does not compute.

 

So it makes sense that, as the war in Iran drifts further from its original purpose, the president might supply a new rationale for the conflict that satisfies his own sense of when military force is justified. We’re not going to seize Iran’s uranium; we’re not going to oust the Khomeinists from power; we’re not going to cripple their missile capabilities; we’re not even going to force them to let go of the strait.

 

But what if we used the crisis as an opportunity to extort billions of dollars from our own allies? That would convince Americans that the war was worth it after all, no?

 

It would certainly convince Trump.

 

The tolling scheme was nothing more or less, I think, than his attempt to improvise a casus belli at a moment when the White House has otherwise lost the plot in Iran. He can’t get out without losing face, he can’t keep going without risking economic calamity, and he’s been bored with the whole endeavor for months. All he can think to do in his frustration is fall back on what he knows and loves—that is, extortion. Character is destiny, as usual.

How Israel Should Handle Progressive Palestine Pilgrimages

By Seth Mandel

Monday, July 13, 2026

 

After Ro Khanna’s failed attempt to spark a potentially dangerous confrontation in the Hebron Hills, the Democratic congressman issued a threat to Israel: “Free advice to the Israelis: It’s not a good idea to detain long-shot presidential candidates.”

 

Khanna is referring to his failed confrontation. Settlers reportedly stopped him at a closed military zone, and the police and the IDF showed up and cleared the way for him. The IDF would have preferred to have already been escorting the congressman, but Khanna apparently rejected Israel’s offer of coordination. And then once Khanna was safely on his way thanks to the government, he told the government to watch its back. This is a ridiculous man.

 

But Khanna’s faceplant should not tempt Israel into complacency. Had a group with an ounce of savvy showed up instead of Ro Khanna and his juvenile keyboard warriors—he reportedly let a couple of inexperienced anti-Israel activists plan this trip—it could have been easier for them to get the confrontation they were after.

 

Judea and Samaria is a tinderbox. Some recent reports: teenaged settlers arrested for an arson attack on a mosque and other settlers detained for allegedly attacking a CNN crew; Palestinian attacks on Jewish farmers in Karmei Zur and Jewish shepherds in Gush Etzion, and the deliberate poisoning of farm animals belonging to Jews.

 

Is Ro Khanna a dangerous fool for trying to throw sparks into this atmosphere? Of course. But it’s not like settler violence or violence toward settlers—though Khanna is unbothered by the latter—is a figment of anyone’s imagination.

 

Khanna’s stunt was a warning. The congressman was soft-launching his presidential campaign, using scary-looking Jews as his background, and he is unlikely to be the only such member of his party to try it.

 

Khanna’s trip comes after the implosion of Graham Platner’s campaign for Senate in Maine. Khanna was Platner’s most devoted high-profile supporter, making excuses for Platner’s Nazi tattoo, credible claims of his violence against women, his celebrating the deaths of American troops, and about a thousand other indicators of Platner’s unfitness. He only encouraged Platner to withdraw from the race once Platner was credibly accused of sexually assaulting a Democrat, his previous credible accusation of violence having come from a Republican.

 

How quickly the Democratic Party has changed. In 2020, Joe Biden claimed his decision to run for president was influenced by the horrible scene of white nationalists marching in Charlottesville, one of whom killed a woman. Six years later, Khanna made himself a national figure by defending a Nazi-inked mercenary accused of repeated violence against women.

 

Israel should not assume Khanna will be the last Democrat to launch a political campaign in Judea and Samaria, nor will Khanna be the last to make his campaign explicitly about punishing the Jewish state. But the next one to do so might be less blockheaded, less ignorant of the environment and its history. That would make them more, not less, capable of igniting the type of international incident that Khanna tried and failed to provoke.

 

And they might have credibility that Khanna doesn’t. Khanna popularized the phrase “Epstein Class,” the Internet’s new favorite way to imply that all Jews are degenerate child molesters. Khanna also, as noted above, devoted himself to the Nazi-tattooed campaign in Maine. Just before he left for his trip, he claimed that the U.S. defense bill making its way through Congress gives Israel “sovereignty” over America. Khanna will never be mistaken for a truth-seeker.

 

Khanna is what we might call a thirsty demagogue. He is desperate to be seen as a leader in the pitchforks-and-torches campaign against American Jews, but he doesn’t have the bona fides of Democratic candidates with Nazi tattoos. Khanna is a super-wealthy but boring power-luster. And it shows in everything he does.

 

That means it’s wholly possible that a Democrat who has charisma and who hasn’t been bleating about Epstein and Zionist power will try the same stunt. Israel needs a plan for when that happens—an understanding that a bad-faith actor masquerading as a concerned congressman shouldn’t be given the option of waving away Israeli security and coordination in a conflict-ridden disputed territory. The government must plainly insist on it, period.

 

Israel needs to remember that folks like Khanna want something bad to happen, and it will be blamed if a progressive agitator gets what he wants.

 

That is, from both an information standpoint and a security standpoint, the Israelis should be prepared for malicious intent from their haters abroad. Someone coming to Israel solely for a publicity stunt is easy to prepare for, but only if you’re not naïve about what they’re really after. In this case, what they were really after was propaganda that makes people angry at Jews.

The ICC Deserves ‘Dismantling’

By Noah Rothman

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

 

The Guardian probably didn’t set out to make Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s point when it critiqued the secretary of state’s searing condemnation of the International Criminal Court, but it did.

 

The progressive venue scoffed at Rubio’s invocation of “images of US border patrol agents and elected leaders being ‘dragged before an international court’ and tried by judges from around the world,” which Trump’s chief diplomat warned the ICC “now claims the power to do.”

 

“The ICC is not claiming jurisdiction over conduct in the United States,” Human Rights Watch’s onetime executive director Kenneth Roth explained. Rubio not only misstated the court’s role, but he’s also “dressing up his quest for impunity for American war crimes,” Roth added. “Trump wants to be able to commit war crimes on the territory of countries that have accepted the court’s jurisdiction — that’s what this is about.”

 

But CBP and ICE do, on occasion, operate on foreign soil in investigative, screening, security roles. And the ICC does claim the authority to prosecute alleged violations of human rights and war crimes conducted inside the territory of member states, even when the accused is a non-member. That’s one of the foremost reasons why the United States did not ratify the Rome Statute that established the ICC in the first place — because it was foreseeable that someone, somewhere would try to prosecute Americans for lawfully executing orders designed to preserve its security and that of its allies.

 

That’s exactly what has happened, as Rubio himself explained:

 

Americans found themselves in the crosshairs anyway: In 2020 the ICC launched an investigation into what chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda of Gambia described as “war crimes by members of the United States armed forces” in Afghanistan, declaring that the U.S. government hadn’t prosecuted enough American soldiers to satisfy the court. In effect, Ms. Bensouda was anointing herself the final judge of U.S. military policy and the entire U.S. justice system.

 

For this, and many other valid reasons, the U.S. will use “all the tools at our government’s disposal” to “dismantle the ICC,” Rubio declared, “brick by brick, if necessary.”

 

The reality is that the ICC has never strictly observed its jurisdictional limitations. Indeed, its members are more inclined to test their parameters and invent fantastical alternative realities that justify their meddlesome impulses.

 

Take, for example, “the situation in the State of Palestine.” That’s how the ICC opened its report announcing its intention to seek warrants for the arrest of government officials within the “territory of Israel.” These linguistic fictions were necessary for the court to fabricate the existence of an “international armed conflict between Israel and Palestine.” That was the necessary pretext to legitimize the ICC’s efforts to intervene in Israel’s post-10/7 war on Hamas’s behalf, after all.

 

That useful fairy tale was spearheaded by ICC prosecutor Karim Khan. He was specifically named in an annex to Trump’s 2025 executive order imposing sanctions on the ICC, and events have subsequently proven the White House’s wisdom. In June, the U.K. Bar Standards Board suspended Khan after a two-year investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct involving a female aide. That preliminary suspension was upheld this week in advance of disciplinary proceedings. As it debates whether to remove Khan from office, the ICC’s Bureau of the Assembly of States Parties determined that Khan’s denials were “devoid of credibility.” Indeed, Khan’s credibility is a depreciating asset across the board.

 

The ICC, an arm of the United Nations, benefited from the Biden administration’s reflexive deference to international talk shops. Biden’s successor withdrew that toleration. From the outset, Trump 2.0 took aim at the UN’s most corrupt bodies — including the U.N. Human Rights Council, UNESCO, and UNWRA. The administration’s turn against the ICC is neither a departure from the Trump administration’s approach to the UN nor inconsistent with U.S. policy under Trump’s predecessors.

 

Trump’s 2025 executive order sanctioning the ICC for the “dangerous precedent” it set under Khan accused him and his agency of “directly endangering current and former United States personnel, including active service members of the Armed Forces, by exposing them to harassment, abuse, and possible arrest.”

 

That statement is entirely consistent with the rationale that has led presidents from both parties over the last quarter century to refuse to observe, much less seek the Senate’s approval for, the Rome Statute.

 

“Independence is our birthright,” Rubio wrote. “To accept the ICC is to surrender control of our national destiny.” Not only that, but it would be to surrender American sovereignty to a supranational body that is corruptly managed, morally blinkered, and power-hungry. The European left seems to think that is a controversial position for the Trump administration to take. It’s unlikely that most Americans would agree.

Have You Considered Talking To Israelis?

By Seth Mandel

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

 

While conducting research for his book on the ways American policies and culture complicate parenting, my friend Tim Carney traveled to Israel. He wanted to see what the Western country with an above-replacement-level birthrate was doing that the rest of the West wasn’t.

 

If he were lazy, he could have written something shallow about ultra-Orthodox Jews with large families and called it a day. But Tim suspected that wasn’t the full story, so instead of relying on caricature, he talked to as many Israelis as he could. In Tel Aviv, he approached one secular dad and began asking about Israelis having more children than people in Europe or the U.S.:

 

“‘I know! It’s horrible. It’s not here in Tel Aviv,’ Ezra defended himself, pointing eastward toward Jerusalem while kicking a soccer ball back and forth with his four-year-old son. ‘It’s the very religious in Jerusalem. The women there all have eight or nine kids,’ he said, pointing at my notebook, insisting I write this down, while his wife walked up and handed him their newborn.”

 

While his wife walked up and handed him their newborn. In other words, the Israeli version of the secular anti-natalist had two kids. Another secular Tel Avivian he spoke to had three. It wasn’t just ultra-Orthodox Jews who were out of step with the declining family formation of the West; it was Israelis of all stripes.

 

Just imagine how much less interesting his work would have been had he instead phoned it in and tossed readers a couple stats about Orthodox Jews in Jerusalem, plus a quote from someone who hates Orthodox Jews.

 

In other words, imagine if his book chapter had been like most Western journalism and political activism regarding Israel.

 

The dynamic that made Tim’s research possible is also the dynamic that makes much reporting on Israel, and the kind of stunt pulled by Ro Khanna last week, so useless. Israel is a democracy; it is diverse in every way it is possible for a society to be diverse; and it is a country full of very un-shy people.

 

Khanna’s attempt to frame Israelis as violent and wild Jews has been the subject of a great deal of criticism and ridicule, all of it deserved. The criticism is of the spectacularly dangerous idiocy of a member of Congress trying to spark a confrontation between Jews and Arabs in a conflict-ridden area. The ridicule is because he failed, then his team released a video they insisted vindicated their claims but that in fact disproved everything Khanna asserted.

 

But also worth criticizing is the reason anti-Israel activists seem incapable of portraying an accurate picture of Israelis: the movement against “normalization.” Progressive dogma holds that Israelis should mostly not even be engaged with. The BDS movement is built around this idea (and other, more murderous concepts). And it is the current position of much activism in the arts and entertainment world and among NGOs.

 

It’s why the novelist Dinaw Mengestu resigned as president of what once was known as a free-speech organization, PEN America. The organization posted a story about how Israelis have been increasingly blacklisted in the publishing industry, and the writer spoke to Israelis who’d been affected. Mengestu resigned in protest of this engagement with the silenced Israelis.

 

Normalization is humanization. Many people are upset by the humanization of Jews, especially those from the Jewish state. But this dehumanization has a strategic purpose: It is very easy to find out what Israelis really think, and so if you want to dehumanize them you must ban contact with them outside of those whom you know will express a pre-approved line of thought.

 

If you publish an Israeli writer, it’ll be much more difficult to convince the wider public of your flattened stereotype of them.

 

And if you want to portray Israel as a Mad Max colony of frontier fanaticism, your only chance is to go to Judea and Samaria unannounced, wave off coordination and security help from the government, and try to goad a couple of settlers into a fight. Even then, you will probably fail—as Khanna failed.

 

The premise of this type of propaganda is that there is a story Israelis won’t or can’t tell you, something the nefarious regime in Jerusalem is hiding from you, a deep dark truth only rich power-seeking scam artists from California can tell you.

 

And you might believe this, right up until the moment you talk to actual Israelis.

 

Because they’ll tell you their problems with their government, or the settlers, or the army, or any other institutions. You can even read polls, of which there are many, that will tell you that nearly half the country thinks security forces are too lenient with settlers who attack Palestinians and that those settlers should be dealt with more harshly. Or that the percentage of Israeli adults who think the settlements detract from Israel’s security is nearly as high the percentage who think the settlements increase Israel’s security.

 

If you want to conduct a thoughtful, informative discussion about Israel’s policies in the disputed territories, you should talk to Israelis. They are having a fascinating debate about all these subjects.

 

Israel is a vibrant democracy. That fact bothers anti-Zionists in the West, because they need Israelis to be one-dimensional ogres for their own personal gain.

 

Israelis are people. That scrambles the prejudices of longshot presidential candidates who live thousands of miles away, as well as the propaganda of anti-normalization bubble-dwellers who support such candidates. They want to suppress knowledge and information. Thankfully, they often fail.

Strait Gangsterism

By Kevin D. Williamson

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

 

Iran is being swept by a wave of nationalism, while the United States is being swept by a wave of explosive diarrhea—do you ever get the feeling that Hegelian capital-H History is laughing at you?  

 

In a war with a filthy little junta in Tehran, Donald Trump has managed to make the United States of America the bad guy. If you are looking for a quick-and-easy definition of shmuck, there you go. Of course, it doesn’t help that it is an illegal and immoral war being waged by an incompetent game show host.  

 

What did it take to get Iran’s former dissidents to line up shoulder-to-shoulder with the ayatollahs who have been murdering and torturing them? A former opponent of the ruling cabal in Tehran—one who had been tear-gassed and beaten so badly that “he couldn’t move for days” during the 2022 protests—tells the Wall Street Journal: “They said that a civilization was going to be destroyed, not a regime.” You’ll remember that post, no doubt. I guess the Iranians haven’t heard whatever the Persian is for “take him seriously, not literally.” It is a pity that Lindsey Graham, the Rudy Giuliani of the Senate, is no longer around to explain it to the long-suffering Iranian people, who surely would have benefited from the wisdom of his experience and the constancy of his judgment.

 

The Trump administration has been fought to an effective standstill by Tehran, which pulled off the remarkable feat of gaining a strategic asset—effective control of the Strait of Hormuz—as a result of a war in which it has not won a single engagement. The U.S. is now trying to recover from that descent into geopolitical buffoonery. Trump may declare total victory twice a week, but in the real world the likeliest outcome is one that is economically and strategically worse for the United States than the status quo ante bellum.

 

Yes, the U.S. military has destroyed the Iranian navy. I have spent a fair bit of time at the ports of Los Angeles, New York, and Houston, and do you know what I have never seen at any of them? A lookout posted with a spyglass pointed toward the horizon keeping his eyes peeled for the Iranian navy, a former maritime nonentity that probably could not have survived an engagement with the Cajun Navy or even a couple of Bubbas in jon boats looking for that 5-pound bass. I’m sure we could kick the stuffing out of the Mongolian navy, too, and give massive noogies to all seven of its sailors.

 

The first big engagement of the U.S. Marine Corps was chastising those infamous Barbary pirates—“to the shores of Tripoli!” and all that. That was then. Under the Trump administration, we’re the pirates: Trump proposed, and then rescinded his proposal of, a 20 percent pizzo on traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. From the world’s policeman to the world’s taxman—terrific progress, there.

 

The new idea is that our gulf allies (and “allies”) will offset the cost of the apparently open-ended U.S. mission in the strait by entering into various private business deals with U.S. partners—i.e., we have a new maritime “forever war” in which the costs will fall upon the U.S. taxpayer while profits are to be collected by cronies, family, and political allies of Donald Trump. This is, as the poet put it, straight gangsterism.

 

The United States is being fought to something worse than a draw by a third-rate power that cannot adequately supply its own capital city with water and electricity. The world is noticing—it may even get bad enough that Americans start to notice, too. One half suspects that Trump’s expected Thursday announcement of an even wider and deeper attempt to intervene in the upcoming midterm elections is simply the reality show grotesque’s familiar gambit of trying to provoke a supplanting synthetic controversy into existence in order to distract the audience from the much more serious business—the humiliation and de facto defeat of the United States—transpiring abroad.

 

Under the giveh-heel of tyranny or the Florsheim-heel of tyranny—tyranny is tyranny. But credit the ayatollahs with this much: They believe in something. Trump is just a guy who used to dabble in softcore pornography and beauty pageants and has now worked his way up to trying to run the world’s largest protection racket, dragging the reputation of the United States into the sewer that is his natural habitat.

 

What do we have to show for it? Well-earned gloating in Tehran, high fuel prices at home, and persistently high inflation. More than a baker’s dozen of dead Americans, too—so far. And if that sounds like a familiar story from the 1970s, consider that U.S. economic growth in the Carter years was significantly stronger than current U.S. performance in the most recent data.

 

One is tempted here to defame, by implication, the wits of nits.

How Will We Remember the Iran War?

By Jonah Goldberg

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

 

The war with Iran that never really ended is back on. Like everybody else, including the Trump administration and the Iranian regime, I have no idea how it will end. But it will eventually, and how it will be remembered will matter enormously.  

 

Politics is about many things, but whether you call it “spin,” “framing,” or “narrative competition,” storytelling is never far from the heart of it. As the philosopher Richard Rorty observed, “Competition for political leadership is in part a competition between differing stories about a nation’s self-identity, and between differing symbols of its greatness.”

 

Sometimes the story itself is the point, like the recent clashes over the American Founding—1619 vs. 1776—and sometimes the story is a means to some other political end, like winning an election or passing controversial legislation. If people believe the spin that elections are routinely stolen thanks to votes by illegal immigrants, then passing the SAVE Act makes sense. If they don’t believe that story—perhaps because it’s not true—but do believe that the bill is another chapter in the story of President Trump’s goal of undermining confidence in elections, then passing it doesn’t make sense.

 

Very often the story is more lasting than the facts.

 

Take the New Deal. Save for the Founding and the Civil War, I’m hard-pressed to think of a story that shaped American politics more. The modern Democratic Party was defined by it. And in many ways, so was the GOP.

 

For decades, the reigning view was that President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal was a huge success. To deny this was—and often still is—dismissed as nuttery. According to legend, the New Deal unified the country, defeated the Great Depression, and proved that politicians and experts could plan the economy for the benefit of all Americans. Hence the unceasing progressive quest for anew New Deal.”

 

This story has facts in its favor. It also has facts weighing heavily against it. The economy didn’t really recover until well after the New Deal was over. The 1930s were no period of “we’re all in this together” unity. Instead it was a time of significant domestic upheaval: the Harlem riots and labor unrest—“the Uprising of 1934” alone was one of the largest industrial strikes in American history—and hundreds of unemployment protests.

 

Nor was the New Deal a coherent, uniformly successful plan. FDR made up stuff as he went.

 

“To look upon these programs as the result of a unified plan,” wrote Raymond Moley, FDR’s right-hand man during much of the New Deal, “was to believe that the accumulation of stuffed snakes, baseball pictures, school flags, old tennis shoes, carpenter’s tools, geometry books, and chemistry sets in a boy’s bedroom could have been put there by an interior decorator.”  

 

In 1940, when Alvin Hansen, an economic adviser to FDR, was asked if the principle of the New Deal was “economically sound,” Hansen replied, “I really do not know what the basic principle of the New Deal is.”

 

My aim isn’t to relitigate a very lost cause, but simply to note that the triumphant narrative of the New Deal swamped all others and shaped domestic politics and policy for generations.

 

Which brings me, finally, to the war. I think it’s obvious that once Trump realized his little war in Iran wasn’t going to repeat the “success” of his little war in Venezuela, he had no idea or plan for what to do next. He’s been improvising ever since. His strategy looks more like the boy’s messy bedroom Moley described than a successful work of interior design.

 

But what if the war ends successfully? A lot of the president’s critics assume that’s impossible. They shouldn’t. It’s true that Trump misread the Iranians, but that doesn’t mean the Iranians aren’t misreading Trump. Indeed, hostilities resumed last week precisely because the Iranians got greedy, launching fresh attacks in the Strait of Hormuz.

 

The Iranian regime could still fall. Europe, fed up with the chaos and disruption, could get over its well-earned frustration with Trump and join the fray, helping to secure the strait. I’m not saying this is likely, just that it is quite possible.

 

What then? You can be sure people will have very different stories to tell about this war. Many opponents of “forever wars,” on the left and right, will still pronounce it a failure no matter what. Some supporters will argue that Trump merely lucked out. Many others will claim this was the “chess master’s” plan all along.

 

Some story will prevail, and that story—accurate or not—will shape American foreign policy for years to come.