Wednesday, May 13, 2026

The End of Our Illusions

By Seth Mandel

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

 

We try to avoid imagining that our ideological opponents are morally inferior. But it can be just as dangerous to convince ourselves that our declared antagonists want the same things we want and hold to values that approximate our own.

 

That is part of the reason for the pained reaction to Nick Kristof’s opinion column yesterday, in which he claimed (without evidence, obviously) that Israel has instituted a state policy of militaristized bestiality.

 

Today, a meticulous, harrowing report was released on Hamas’s systematic rape and sexual violence toward Israelis on and after October 7. The commission that undertook this investigation “has examined over 10,000 photographs and videos of the attack totaling more than 1,800 hours of visual analysis.”

 

We want to believe that Nick Kristof and all the people who defended and shared his article are just like us—believers in honesty, men and women of integrity, a community of truth-seekers with a baseline sense of human decency. We want to believe this in part because of that very sense of human decency.

 

But we are making a massive error. Kristof’s named sources not only provided no evidence for his lurid bestiality fantasies but themselves were also people with massive credibility deficits.

 

Conversely, the documentation of sexual violence by Palestinians who invaded Israel on October 7, 2023—the total number of infiltrators was several thousand that day—took years, even though we all watched videos of Palestinians dragging the unclothed bodies of Israeli women through the streets of Gaza, and even though Hamas documented many of their crimes, and even though Hamas members admitted to raping women that day. All of that is what is known as evidence—apologies to Kristof and his readers for using such technical, obscure SAT words—and evidence needs to be compiled, examined, analyzed, and used as the jumping-off point for additional investigation.

 

That is what Israeli officials did, and that is what those who support the Jewish state’s existence did, and what they called for others to do, because that is what is done when the goal is to obtain the truth. To the anti-Zionist collective, the truth is to be avoided like the plague, and therefore what is rewarded is not evidence but creativity and imagination.

 

And that is what was on display in the New York Times. We want Kristof and his defenders to be like us. But they are not like us—and they punish us for our good faith.

 

Serious allegations—and there are few allegations more serious than the ones being alleged here—deserve heaps of evidence and careful scrutiny. The report delivered by the Israeli commission is a model of such investigation. The Times’s rumor mill is the opposite.

 

There is another reason the timing is important. The Times’s evidence-free allegations against Israelis dulled outrage about the evidence-packed report of sexual violence perpetrated by Gazans against Israelis. The only beneficiaries of this timing are the Hamas foot soldiers who raped and tortured innocent civilians. Only the very worst people in the world have gained.

 

And there’s another reason we want to believe that Israel’s critics are morally intact. Plenty of them are. Those are probably the ones we don’t hear from. Unfortunately, the ones we keep hearing from don’t believe this conflict has anything to do with where Palestinians live but rather that Israelis live at all.

 

And that is depressing, because we’d all like to believe that the conflict can be solved. But for that to happen, we’re going to have to be more honest with ourselves. We’re going to have to learn to treat the rumor-mongers differently than those who possess a shred of honesty, decency, and good faith. We’re going to have to draw a line and be wholly unsentimental about who belongs on which side of it.

Bait and Switch

By Nick Catoggio

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

 

In the spirit of peace and mutual understanding ahead of this week’s big summit in Beijing, let’s open today with a topic on which the American people and the Chinese leadership broadly agree:

 

China is gaining on the United States in our ongoing great-power competition.

 

Earlier this year Pew Research conducted a poll in which it listed 12 nations and asked respondents whether each had gotten stronger or weaker in global influence “in recent years.” China ran away with the top spot, with 62 percent of Americans believing it’s grown stronger versus 9 percent thinking it’s grown weaker.

 

Asked about their own country, 34 percent said the United States had grown stronger while 41 percent estimated that it had gotten weaker.

 

The Chinese Communist Party agrees. “China increasingly casts itself not as a fading civilization trying to catch up to the West but as a superpower poised to surpass it,” the New York Times observed today of the mood in Beijing before the summit. “Chinese nationalists and state-linked commentators say they have [Donald] Trump to thank.”

 

One analysis published by a Chinese think tank in January argued that the president’s “tariffs, attacks on allies, anti-immigration policies, and assaults on the American political establishment had inadvertently strengthened China while weakening the United States.” That analysis—literally titled “Thank Trump”—described him as an “accelerator of American political decay” who, in the Times’ words, had led the U.S. “toward polarization, institutional dysfunction, and even ‘Latin American-style instability.’”

 

Well … yes.

 

You don’t need to be a regular reader of this newsletter to know that that ain’t just CCP propaganda. A Gallup global survey published last month found that approval of China’s leadership is now five points higher than approval of America’s, the largest such gap in nearly 20 years of testing. A Politico poll taken in Great Britain, France, Germany, and Canada in February asked locals whether they’d rather depend on China or the United States, their longtime ally, under Trump. Beijing was the preference in all four countries.

 

A third survey conducted in March and April by a Danish organization measured perceptions of various nations across a sample spanning 85 countries. China scored +7. The U.S. scored -16, down from +22 two years ago. Russia scored -11 by comparison.

 

I mention all of this not as a QED about the cancer of postliberalism (although it certainly is that) but because of how squarely the data contradicts one of the president’s core priorities dating back to 2016. In theory, the entire point of a nationalist foreign policy is to contain China, the one country on Earth that poses a meaningful threat to us economically and militarily. To make America great again and secure the continued primacy of the United States in global relations, one would think we should be doing everything possible to encourage other nations to join us in isolating Beijing.

 

Trump has done the opposite. He’s bungled the task of taming the dragon about as thoroughly as it can be bungled, most recently by burning through weapons stockpiles in Iran that were supposed to keep China honest in the Far East. And the Chinese have noticed.

 

That’s the story of his second term across the board. Increasingly the Trump presidency feels like an experiment in how comprehensively an elected official can betray the ethos of the platform he ran on without his support collapsing. The engine of suspense surrounding the coming midterm elections boils down to this: In a hyperpolarized country, can an incumbent do more or less the opposite of everything he promised to do as a candidate and still turn out enough tribalist partisans to hold down losses?

 

Opposite day.

 

Yesterday the president told Fox News that he was “seriously considering” making Venezuela the 51st state, pointing to what he claimed was $40 trillion in oil reserves under that country’s soil.

 

Lay aside the obvious objections. No, he can’t create new U.S. states without congressional approval. No, Venezuela’s leaders don’t want to join the union, as doing so would deprive them of their power. No, Venezuela can’t be the 51st state when that honor has already been reserved for Canada. (Or Greenland?) No, Trump probably wasn’t totally serious in floating the idea—although he likely wasn’t entirely kidding either.

 

What’s interesting about him bringing it up is how utterly it contradicts his movement’s thinking on immigration.

 

Immigration is the one area of policy in which he really has delivered for his base, tightening the border since returning to office and ramping up deportations. The deepest conviction of tribal nationalism is that national greatness can only be restored by restoring the demographics of the era(s) in which that nation achieved greatness. That means kicking out Hispanics—and maybe not just those here illegally—and rebalancing political power as much as possible to favor whites, Christians, and men.

 

It emphatically does not mean turning a country of almost 30 million Hispanics into a U.S. state, particularly a country that’s famously impoverished. Doing so would place Uncle Sam on the hook for providing Social Security and Medicare to millions more people when our entitlement programs are already unsustainable. (That might or might not pay for itself depending on how fast Venezuela’s oil could be extracted and sold.) It would also entitle Venezuelans to travel to, and reside in, the continental United States if they chose, and I’m guessing many of them—including those gang members that the president is always so worried about—would take advantage.

 

There’s no way to reconcile making Venezuela a state with Trumpists’ antipathy to “importing the third world.” That the president would entertain it even hypothetically proves that he’s open to betraying the most devout beliefs of his own movement, at least if you put a big enough dollar sign in front of him.

 

But that’s par for the course. Practically everywhere you look over the past 16 months, you’ll find Trump breaking one of the promises that got him elected. Failing to contain China is the least of it.

 

Some of his broken promises are momentous, like pitching himself in 2024 as the candidate who’d keep America out of another one of those endless Middle East conflicts that warmongering Democrats are supposedly ever eager to fight. The Iran war may be the most consequential ideological betrayal by any president in my lifetime, poisonous to everyone except his core base. It’s now polling at 36-61, on par with public disapproval during the Vietnam and Iraq eras.

 

Other broken promises matter less to voters but are no less egregious for their lower salience. If you’re one of the three or four people in America who took Trump at his word when he promised to end the weaponization of government, you’ve been rewarded by getting to watch him turn the Justice Department into a menagerie of vengeful hacks and henchmen whose headquarters now bears his photo over the front entrance. If you believed him when he and his party complained about the so-called Biden crime family, you’ve had to endure the Trump clan turning the presidency into a full-time influence racket worth many billions of dollars in plain sight.

 

Still, no betrayal has been grander than his disinterest toward the problem that got him elected.

 

His polling on handling the economy has declined more or less steadily throughout his second term, driven by frustration over the lingering high cost of living and the president’s insistence on making it worse with tariffs. He’s at 35.6 percent approval on the issue today in Nate Silver’s tracker, down from 48.8 percent near the start of his term. But things can, and probably soon will, get much worse due to the ongoing oil shocks caused by his war of choice with Iran: A new CNN survey has his disapproval on the economy at 70 percent.

 

And that poll was taken before this morning’s news about inflation jumping in April by the highest rate in nearly two years, another casualty of the bottleneck in the Strait of Hormuz.

 

Trump occasionally makes gestures toward easing the pain, like when he told reporters yesterday that he’d like to suspend the federal gas tax. But you’re far more likely to hear him chattering excitedly about his billion-dollar ballroom or his work on the reflecting pool at the Lincoln Memorial than you are about affordability.

 

If you’re the sort of chump who set aside your qualms about January 6 and the president’s basic fitness for office and voted to reelect him because you hoped he’d stabilize your family’s finances, his negligence toward the cost of living is the ultimate electoral bait-and-switch. You thought you were getting a president who would prioritize helping Americans make ends meet, avoid the usual military misadventures, and halt the rising tide of Chinese influence abroad.

 

You got the stone-cold opposite instead. How dire will the electoral consequences be this fall?

 

Less dire than they should be, assuredly.

 

An inefficient market.

 

We’ve had presidents who’ve broken a major campaign promise to voters—George H.W. Bush’s “no new taxes” pledge comes to mind—and paid for it. We have not, to my knowledge, had a president who broke most of his major campaign promises by governing on an agenda that contradicted much of what he ran on.

 

There’s no historical analogy. And the reason there’s no historical analogy is because, unlike his predecessors, Trump’s movement is engineered to assure loyalty to the man, not the cause. You don’t support his program, you support him—to the point where, more than once over the past year, he’s claimed the power to redefine policy orthodoxy for MAGA Republicans even if his new orthodoxy conflicts with his prior orthodoxy.

 

For instance, here’s how he answered isolationist critics on the right who accused him of betraying the “America First” ethos after he first attacked Iran last summer: “Well, considering that I’m the one that developed ‘America First,’ and considering that the term wasn’t used until I came along, I think I’m the one that decides that.” More recently, after the current war began, he condemned attacks on Iran hawk Mark Levin by the likes of Tucker Carlson and Megyn Kelly with this pronouncement: “THEY ARE NOT MAGA, I AM, and MAGA includes not allowing Iran, a Sick, Demented, and Violent Terrorist Regime, to have a Nuclear Weapon.”

 

For much of the Republican base, there’s no such thing as a “broken” Trump promise. His only truly consequential pledge is to make America great again, and belonging to his movement requires faith that his policy preferences at any given moment will produce that outcome.

 

That’s one of the ways in which Trumpism has hacked American democracy. When you’ve got evangelical supporters worshiping the equivalent of a golden calf, you don’t need to worry about being consistent on policy to keep them in the fold.

 

The president’s boldest electoral gambits this year are all forms of “hacking” democracy, not coincidentally, attempting to maximize his ability to govern as he likes by reducing voters’ ability to punish him and his party for his policies. The redistricting push is the most obvious example, with more than a dozen safe-ish red House seats now set to fall into the GOP’s lap via some creative map-making facilitated by the Supreme Court’s recent ruling on majority-minority districts. But White House scheming on how to seize more control over federal elections is still ongoing behind the scenes, just in case ruthless gerrymandering isn’t enough to fully contain a blue wave propelled by public discontent.

 

If it’s true that democracy is a sort of market, with shareholders “buying” and “selling” parties as they glean new information about the two sides’ policies, one way to understand the goal of Trump’s authoritarian project is to make that market as inefficient as possible. Investors in the “business” he’s created are expected to value their shares not based on profits but simply on whether he remains CEO. If evidence emerges that the business is being mismanaged, they’re encouraged to dismiss it as “fake news.”

 

And if their shares look set to dive in value due to a mass sell-off, they can rest assured that extraordinary action—like gerrymandering or direct election interference—will be taken to limit their losses.

 

A market whose highest priority is insulating managers from accountability to their stakeholders is a liberal’s nightmare and a postliberal’s dream. There is no way around this: By making that sort of market possible in America, devout Trumpers have become the architects of their own serial betrayal on policy.

 

And probably the midwives of their own defeat. Needless to say, the president would be more nimble about ending unpopular policies like tariffs and more cautious about not pursuing unpopular initiatives like war with Iran if his base were more willing to withhold its support from him in response. Markets incentivize businesses to perform well by rewarding them with higher value when they do and penalizing them with lower value when they don’t; the American right understands that principle vis-à-vis finance and private enterprise, but has allowed it to be demagogued out of them with respect to politics.

 

A president who knows he can break (almost) every promise he’s made and still retain the support of at least 85 percent of his base, no questions asked, is a president who’s going to do stupid and pernicious things that will inevitably alienate most of the rest of the electorate.

 

So when Democrats take back the House this fall—and they probably will despite the GOP’s best “hacking” efforts, as the generic ballot has begun to widen in their favor and now looks downright gruesome in some polling—don’t blame the president or his cronies in government for the party’s failure. Blame the enablers, the right-wing rank-and-file. They’ve been the problem since June 2015, and they’ll continue to be the problem after Trump is gone.

Israel Is the Weapon

By Abe Greenwald

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

 

There’s a pervasive misconception about the so-called information war that erupted after the Hamas massacre of October 7, 2023. The misconception is that Israel constitutes one of the war’s two fighting sides.

 

The truth is that anti-Semites launched the information war as an attack on global Jewry and settled on Israel as their weapon of choice.

 

Once you understand that, much else becomes clear. You can look back on the past two and a half years and discern exactly how the propaganda campaign achieved its aims. What began merely as supposed criticism of the Jewish state has arrived at a very different place. Those who’ve been captured have largely shifted their focus from Israel to Jews—along with Jewish history, Jewish belief, and Jewish organizations.

 

The anti-Semites waging the information war advanced provably false claims of Israeli war crimes, from forced starvation to targeting civilians to genocide. On the left, this set in motion a war on “Zios,” who support Israel and therefore stand accused of vicious chauvinism, bigotry, and unquenchable bloodlust.
 
Another key piece of the anti-Israel propaganda operation has to do with the large amounts of aid that Israel receives from America. Never mind that virtually all of the aid must be spent on American-manufactured weapons and equipment. And never mind that it gives Washington what is arguably an intrusive degree of influence over Israel. On the populist right, the anti-aid offensive aroused a movement obsessed with Jewish control of the government and disloyalty to country. That movement immediately expanded its indictment of Jews to include falsifying history, censoring speech, committing assassination, and practicing black magic.

 

There’s increasing overlap between the left and right dupes on all these issues. The point is that anti-Semites merely used Israel to turn them into their anti-Jewish foot soldiers. They’ve been recruited to dehumanize Jews online, disrupt Jewish events, and attack Jews around the world. Not Israel—Jews.

 

Because the aim of the information war is not merely to turn public opinion against Israel—although it’s certainly done that. The idea is to alchemize anti-Zionism into kinetic Jew-hatred in the real world, to instigate a war against the Jews of the Diaspora parallel to the one that Hamas launched against the Jews of Israel.

 

Many American Jews say that Israel should do a better job fighting the information war—without understanding that war was declared against them. Israel has done an astounding job of fighting its war. We are the ones who’ve been under attack from anti-Israel propaganda this whole time.

 

We still are, and it’s getting ever worse. No longer do the propagandists bother to sprinkle meager crumbs of credibility over their work. There’s no incentive for them to cover their tracks and every incentive to prevaricate. Photographs of the Gaza famine that never happened earn Pulitzer Prizes. The New York Times now publishes horror stories about Israel that are not only impossible to verify but impossible period—literally impossible. When Nicolas Kristof writes a story about IDF-trained rape-dogs, he’s sending the mob after all of us—including those liberal American Jews who then denounce Israel. What they don’t realize is that accusing Jews of committing impossible crimes is the oldest, most primitive category of anti-Semitic propaganda. It takes us out of the realm of the human, no matter where we are on this planet.

 

It would be hard for a famous journalist simply to assert that Jews, as a people, have dark powers that defy the laws of nature. But when Israel is your weapon, you never hold your fire.

Bill Maher’s Category Error on Socialism

By Marian L. Tupy

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

 

On last Friday’s episode of Real Time with Bill Maher, Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman warned that socialism has moved from slur to badge of honor among some Democrats, and that some candidates now go as far as to speak positively about communism — a political and economic system responsible for some 100 million deaths in the last century. Maher’s glib reply was that America, like other Western democracies, is already “quasi-socialist,” because of Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.

 

That answer sounds moderate. It is actually a category error.

 

Socialism is not any government program. Nor is it any tax. Nor is it a disability check, a school voucher, or a police department. Socialism, properly understood, means public rather than private ownership or control of property, natural resources, and the means of production. Encyclopedia Britannica defines it as a doctrine calling for public rather than private ownership or control of property and natural resources. Merriam-Webster similarly defines it as collective or governmental ownership and administration of the means of production and distribution.

 

That distinction matters. A safety net inside a market economy, however inefficient, is one thing. Government command over production, prices, wages, capital, housing, health care, energy, and investment is another. Maher blurs the two and thereby gives socialists the rhetorical gift they most desire. If Medicare is socialism, then why not government medicine? If Social Security is socialism, then why not government pensions, housing, childcare, college, energy, and food? If all Western democracies are already socialist, then the remaining argument is only about dosage.

 

But socialism is not wrong because it is unfashionable among those who remember the horrors of the 20th century. It is wrong because it rests on a false moral premise and fails for a practical reason.

 

Socialism’s moral premise is that “society” has a superior claim on an individual’s labor and property. In practice, “society” always means politicians, regulators, committees, and favored constituencies. The worker earns, the entrepreneur risks, the saver defers consumption, and the state arrives with a theory of justice that just happens to require other people’s money. There is room in a decent society for charity, mutual aid, insurance, and limited public assistance. There is no moral case for treating productive citizens as state property.

 

The practical problem is even harder for socialists to escape. Markets are not merely channels for the expression of human greed. They are information systems. Prices tell millions of people what is scarce, what is abundant, what should be conserved, what should be produced, and where labor and capital should move. Friedrich Hayek’s point was that knowledge is dispersed across society, and prices help coordinate the separate plans of millions of people who do not know one another.

 

Ludwig von Mises similarly argued that when the state abolishes private ownership in the means of production, it destroys the market prices needed for rational economic calculation. Without prices for land, labor, capital, machinery, risk, and time, planners cannot know whether they are creating value or burning it. They can issue orders. They can print plans. They can punish dissent. What they cannot do is calculate as well as free people trading under private property.

 

That is why socialism keeps producing shortages, queues, rationing, black markets, declining quality, and repression. The repression is not an accident. When the plan fails, the planner does not blame the plan. He blames hoarders, wreckers, speculators, profiteers, foreigners, landlords, doctors, farmers, and shopkeepers. Economic failure becomes a search for enemies.

 

Maher’s favorite examples do not rescue his case. Social Security and Medicare are not proof that socialism works. They are proof that even popular entitlement programs become fiscally strained when politics promises more than math can deliver. The 2025 trustees’ report projected that Social Security’s Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund can pay full scheduled benefits only until 2033, after which continuing income would cover 77 percent of scheduled benefits. The combined Social Security trust funds are projected to cover full benefits until 2034, after which income would cover 81 percent. Medicare’s Hospital Insurance Trust Fund is projected to pay full benefits until 2033, after which income would cover 89 percent.

 

Nor is American health care an example of unrestrained capitalism begging for socialism. It is already a maze of subsidies, tax distortions, public payment formulas, mandates, licensing rules, third-party payment, and political bargaining. The U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services reports that national health expenditures reached $5.3 trillion in 2024, or 18 percent of GDP. Medicare accounted for 21 percent of total national health spending, Medicaid for 18 percent, private insurance for 31 percent, and out-of-pocket spending for only 11 percent. That is not a libertarian paradise. It is what happens when consumers, providers, insurers, employers, and government all face distorted incentives.

 

The tax debate is similarly confused. When Senator Bernie Sanders talks about “millionaires and billionaires,” he erases the difference between a retired couple with a paid-off house and a tech founder with a private jet. And speaking of the latter, there is no shame in having lots of money by creating value — like Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk, and other captains of industry have done. Nor is it clear that the government can spend Bezos’s and Musk’s money better than they can by plowing their earnings into innovation and business expansion. When politicians say the rich do not pay their “fair share,” they should at least admit the current burden. IRS-based summaries show that in 2023, the top 1 percent paid 38.4 percent of federal income taxes while earning 20.6 percent of adjusted gross income. The top 10 percent paid 70.5 percent.

 

I am not an anarchist who believes that the government has no role in modern life. But the government should know what it cannot know and should not claim what it does not own. A humane society can protect the poor without nationalizing production. It can regulate fraud and force without replacing prices with commands. It can tax without treating every private fortune as stolen goods.

 

Fetterman’s warning matters because socialism has become socially fashionable among historically ignorant people who would never tolerate its consequences. They want Swedish benefits, American innovation, Silicon Valley capital, Manhattan restaurants, cheap imports, private pensions, and moral superiority, all while sneering at the system that makes those things possible. They do not want socialism. They want capitalism with a guilty conscience and a bigger bill that’s paid by someone else.

 

Maher is wrong. The right response to the rising popularity of socialism is not to say, “We are all quasi-socialists now.” The right answer is to say that a free society may choose limited public programs, but it must never forget the line between assistance and control. Socialism crosses that line. It is immoral because it subordinates the person to the plan. It is unworkable because the plan cannot know what free people know through prices, property, profit, loss, and choice. Maher should stop giving America’s socialists an alibi.

The Democratic Socialists Need a New Model

By Noah Rothman

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

 

The capitalist enterprise is alive and well, even in that “paragon of collectivism,” as the Wall Street Journal put it: Sweden.

 

“Today, nearly half of primary healthcare clinics are privately owned, many by private-equity firms,” reporter Tom Fairless observed this week. “One in three public high schools is privately run, up from 20% in 2011. School operators are listed on the stock exchange.”

 

In addition, Sweden’s market-oriented reforms have transformed it into an investment hub. “Sweden’s economy is expected to grow by around 2% a year through 2030,” the report added — a level of growth that would keep pace with the United States and eclipse its industrialized European neighbors, like France and Germany.

 

Even more impressive is what Sweden is doing with its newfound wealth: shrinking the size of the state. Stockholm has lowered its overall tax burden, reduced its health care and welfare expenditures, and created incentives for private-sector actors and charities to take on what were once government mandates.

 

Fairless’s report might come as a shock to American progressives, many of whom still hold up the Scandinavian social compact as the model of what state-dominated capitalism should look like. The Scandinavian states, Bernie Sanders said earlier in the decade, observe “strong democratic socialist principles,” and they have some of the “best” and most accessible public services in the world as a result. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, too, advocated importing the Swedish model — at least, their confiscatory tax rates on their highest earners. The 2018 PBS documentary “Sweden: Lessons for America?” found a striking number of Americans who believed both that the Swedish model was socialist and that it was superior to America’s.

 

This misconception about the relative level of socialism that prevails in Scandinavia has long vexed economists. Indeed, it has frustrated plenty of Scandinavians, too. When Senator Elizabeth Warren ran for president on a platform that she claimed would emulate the Nordic experience, onetime Swedish Prime Minister Carl Bildt said her “protectionist impulses are not reassuring from a European perspective.”

 

What America’s democratic socialists are praising is a bygone era in Swedish politics that the Swedes themselves remember as the bad old days. When the Social Democratic Party was in power in the middle of the 20th century, it sharply increased public spending and taxation rates. “The changes triggered a long period of weak growth, stagnant after-tax incomes, and ballooning budget deficits and debt that culminated in a banking crisis in the early ’90s,” Fairless observed.

 

Today, however, the wealthy are flocking back to Sweden, and they’re taking their capital with them. Swedish per capita GDP is the envy of the European Union, and the country has become a hub of tech and telecom innovation. Its public services have not suffered as a result of increased privatization. Indeed, reduced public-sector costs for services like health care create “efficiencies” that allow providers to “serve more patients.” Students are flocking to privately operated schools, and “school choice is now deeply entrenched in Sweden.” Even the Social Democrats, now relegated to the opposition, support it.

 

With even the Scandinavians running away from their unearned reputation as diehard collectivists, it’s not clear where America’s democratic socialists will turn to for guidance. At least they still have Cuba.

 

 

 

 

The Media Remain Blind to Democratic Radicalism

By Charles C. W. Cooke

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

 

A couple of weeks ago, I expressed the fear that, if the Democratic Party were to try to pack the Supreme Court, the media would run cover for the enterprise, implicitly or explicitly:

 

If the Democrats give in to their worst instincts the next time they enjoy uniform power, all manner of supposedly respectable figures are likely to go along. Undoubtedly, the press will be among them. In theory, our journalists exist to push back against this sort of Jacobinism. In practice, they are sympathetic to the ends and therefore indulgent of the means. If it comes to it, they will mislead, euphemize, downplay, and create false equivalences, such that contextualized debate becomes impossible. The Democrats’ press releases will be echoed in the newspapers verbatim.

 

Yesterday, Politico‘s Josh Gerstein illustrated precisely why I am worried. Gerstein penned a report about a speech by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, in which Jackson had “urged Americans”

 

to defend the judicial system against salvos that jeopardize its independence, warning that such threats have the potential to do serious damage to American democracy.

 

Gerstein points to these specifics of what Jackson said:

 

“Equal justice under law is a key tenet to freedom in our society, and in order to have that, you have to have an independent judiciary — one that is not beholden to the political branches or beholden to people,” Jackson said during an appearance before hundreds of students at Southern Methodist University. “I just wish that people really focused on that and, therefore, stood up in some ways for the judiciary, when people — judges are being attacked and undermined, that is really an attack on our society.”

 

This is all well and good. Everything that Justice Jackson said is correct, and I am pleased that she said it. But Gerstein simply cannot — or will not — contextualize these comments for his readers.

 

Jackson, he notes,

 

did not mention any specific attacks on the judiciary.

 

No. Well, she wouldn’t, would she? It’s appropriate for her to remain vague. But Gerstein is under no such obligation. He can list those “specific attacks.” He can discuss the politics around this area in as much detail as he likes. And yet, grasping around for potential candidates, he lands here — and only here:

 

Since the Supreme Court struck down a key aspect of President Donald Trump’s tariff policy earlier this year, Trump has unleashed an unusually caustic series of attacks on the three members of the court’s conservative majority who joined the liberal justices in the 6-3 ruling.

 

Trump has also called for the impeachment of district court judges who have ruled against the administration on other issues, like deporting alleged gang members to a notorious anti-terrorism prison in El Salvador without due process. Those calls prompted Chief Justice John Roberts to declare publicly that he believes that judges should not face impeachment due to disagreement with their rulings.

 

All of this is true. Trump did do this, and it was disgraceful. I have no problem with Gerstein or anyone else calling it out — as I have, each time it’s happened. The problem is that this is all Gerstein can come up with as an example of the judiciary “being attacked and undermined.” That isn’t the start of the list, or a sampling of the list. That is the list. Donald Trump is where his examples begin and end. Which means that, on May 12, 2026, Gerstein searched for “specific attacks on the judiciary” — for examples, in his words, of “salvos that jeopardize its independence” — and, when his search was complete, he had found only those that had come from Donald Trump.

 

That is incredible. It is astonishing. It defies belief. The last week in American politics — including while Gerstein was writing this piece and while Justice Jackson was talking yesterday — has been so thoroughly dominated by Democrats threatening to pack the United States Supreme Court, abolish the Virginia Supreme Court, and interfere with any other court that gets in their way that there has barely been room for any other news. And he can’t — or he won’t — see it.

 

In the last seven days alone, the Democratic minority leader in the House of Representatives, Hakeem Jeffries, has said on TV that he covets “massive judicial reform” and that “everything should be on the table,” both “state by state and at the federal level”; Representative Ro Khanna has said that the Democrats “need to expand this morally bankrupt [Supreme] Court from 9 to 13”; Senator Ruben Gallego, a supposed moderate from Arizona, has said that the Democrats must “add term limits and more justices”; Senator Cory Booker, of New Jersey, has said that the Supreme Court is “corrupt”; the governor of California, Gavin Newsom, has said that “Americans are rightly questioning why it deserves such power”; Representative Brendan Boyle, of Pennsylvania, has said that “every Dem prez candidate better have a plan for bold and aggressive judicial reform”; and Graham Platner, who is running for the Senate in Maine, has said that “if we retake the Senate, get the majority, fingers crossed, we need to use every single lever of power that we have to deal with the Supreme Court,” by which he meant, he explained, “stacking the court” and impeaching some of the current justices.

 

In Virginia, meanwhile, the rhetoric has been even sharper. The lieutenant governor of the state, Ghazala Hashmi, has said that the state’s Supreme Court is engaged in an “assault on our democratic institutions,” while Virginia’s attorney general, Jay Jones, accused it of having “put politics over the rule of law,” fueled “growing fears across our nation about the state of our democracy,” and effected “a dangerous trend of tilting power away from the people.” Worse still, as the New York Times reported, Democrats at the federal level — including Jeffries, who will almost certainly be speaker of the House of Representatives next year — got together with Democrats in Virginia to discuss a bizarre plan to abolish the Virginia Supreme Court in retaliation against its decision:

 

During a private discussion on Saturday that included Democratic House members from Virginia and Representative Hakeem Jeffries of New York, the minority leader, the lawmakers vented anger at their defeat at the Virginia Supreme Court, spoke about a collective determination to flip two or three Republican-held seats under the existing map and discussed a bank-shot proposal to redraw the congressional lines anyway, according to three people who participated in the call and two others who were briefed on it.

 

The most dramatic idea they discussed — which would involve an unusual gambit to replace the entire state Supreme Court, with a goal of reinstating their gerrymandered map — drew mixed reactions on the call, said the people, and it was not clear that it would even be viable, or palatable to Gov. Abigail Spanberger and Democrats in the Virginia General Assembly.

 

Or, apparently, to Josh Gerstein, to whom it was completely invisible, along with every single other thing that high-ranking members of the Democratic Party have said in the last few days. Somehow, Gerstein heard a member of the United States Supreme Court “defend the judicial system against salvos that jeopardize its independence,” and the only thing that he could think of was Trump. That’s telling, but it’s also pretty alarming as a harbinger of things to come.

The Wrong Way to Talk About the Iran War

By Noah Rothman

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

 

As Donald Trump prepared to embark on his trip to China, he was asked by a reporter if Americans’ worsening “financial situation” had motivated him to “make a deal” with the Iranians. “Not even a little bit,” the president confidently replied. “The only thing that matters, when I’m talking about Iran: They can’t have a nuclear weapon.”

 

As rhetoric, Trump’s response was a touch myopic. But he was projecting steadfastness, and that’s a desirable quality in a wartime president. If only Trump had stopped there. What followed was a statement so portentous that no one with a lick of political horse sense could dismiss it.

 

“I don’t think about Americans’ financial situation,” Trump added. “I don’t think about anybody. I think about one thing: We cannot let Iran have a nuclear weapon. That’s all. That’s the only thing that motivates me.”

 

That distant rumble you hear is the sound of a thousand Democratic ad-makers racing to cobble together 30-second spots with that remark as the centerpiece. Democratic lawmakers, at least, instantly recognized its significance.

 

“And they still want you to believe he’s fighting for you,” Representative Summer Lee jeered. Trump “literally doesn’t give a damn” about Americans’ financial hardships, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro concluded. “Trump says he doesn’t think about Americans’ financial situation at all,” wrote Representative Brendan Boyle. “We can tell.”

 

Trump went on to explain how he thinks about the war, although that did nothing to repair the political damage he’d done to himself. The “American people understand when it’s over, you’re going to have a massive drop in the price of oil,” Trump insisted. In a reference to April’s miserable 3.8 percent increase in the inflation rate, the president issued a non sequitur: “If you go back to just before the war, for the last three months, inflation was at 1.7 percent,” he said, reassuring no one. “Now, we had a choice,” Trump closed, “let these lunatics have a nuclear weapon. If you want to do that, then you’re a stupid person.”

 

Trump’s commitment to creating the conditions that could compel what remains of the Iranian regime to back down has frustrated his critics, some of whom mourn Trump’s failure to display some of that manic inconstancy for which he’s famous. It should be clear by now that the president will not wiggle out of this conflict or slap his name on something that approximates Barack Obama’s nuclear deal. That’s commendable. The majority of Americans who want to see an end to the war in which Iran’s nuclear program is “permanently” disabled, its people “safe and free,” and the Islamic Republic gone might take heart in Trump’s perseverance.

 

But Trump couples that resolve with an unfailing refusal to acknowledge the burdens the American people are expected to bear in the interim. He either refuses to recognize their financial precarity or, when he does, insists their struggles will be short-lived — assertions that a plurality of voters, at least, do not believe. The voting public does not think the president is giving them his honest assessment of what it will take to win this war, and they’re repaying his mistrust of the public in kind.

 

As Michael recently observed, spiking energy costs are just about all that stands between Trump and a booming domestic economy. Trump’s domestic allies see the warning signs ahead of November’s midterm elections, and they can no longer contain their anxiety. And as Joe Biden learned, an inflation rate that outpaces wage growth can have fiendish effects on the national political psychology — none of which redound to the benefit of the party in power.

 

The papers are glutted today with stories written around leaked intelligence that purport to claim that the devastation meted out against Iran over 40 days of high-tempo combat operations amounted to nothing. Iran’s nuclear program endured more damage during the hours-long Operation Midnight Hammer than in Operation Epic Fury, the assessments allegedly contend. And Iran’s ballistic missile arsenal and launchers are largely intact. Indeed, they were wholly intact at the outset of the war. And yet, launches slowed to a trickle by the end of that operation anyway, perhaps because U.S. and Israeli forces interdicted them. And if combat operations resumed in the effort to hit the Iranian regime’s pain-tolerance threshold, they would be again.

 

All this is designed to convince the American people that Trump’s project in Iran was a waste of everyone’s time. Only the costs of that campaign are real.

 

Trump isn’t going to counter his political adversaries’ messaging by insisting that his critics are “stupid,” that the inflation they’re experiencing is transitory, or that he is so focused on his mission that the public’s hardships are none of his concern. The war to defang Iran and reshape the landscape in the Middle East for a generation is a national project, and Trump needs to solicit the public’s participation in it — hat in hand, if need be. A little humility would go a long way.