Friday, March 13, 2026

Why We Fought

By Paul D. Miller

Friday, March 13, 2026

 

One of the more head-scratching facts about World War II is this: The United States responded to the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor by sending more than 5 million troops to Europe. It is counterintuitive, at least, that the U.S. would send half its military to the opposite side of the globe from the enemy who attacked it.

 

Even after Nazi Germany declared war on the United States—on December 11, 1941, days after Pearl Harbor—the U.S. could have prioritized Japan and left Europe to Britain and the Soviet Union. Many Americans, including Adm. Ernest King, the commander in chief of the United States Fleet, argued for a “Japan First” strategy. The U.S. did the opposite. Why?

 

The answer reveals something important about the role the United States chose to play on the world stage. American power was supposed to be different from the great powers of the Old World. It would not be cynical, narrow, used exclusively for its own preservation to the detriment of others. American power would be linked to American ideals.

 

It would be tough-minded, yes, and prudently self-interested. But American statesmen took a longer view and understood that a truly self-interested strategy was not the short-term, cynically transactional, calculating self-interest in dollars and cents, but relational and ideological, measured in the growth of American ideals and the networks among like-minded nations.

 

These ideals found expression in President Franklin Roosevelt’s idea of the neighborhood of nations, in his Four Freedoms, and in the Atlantic Charter, the clearest and most consequential expressions of the American experiment on the world stage.

 

The neighborhood of nations.

 

Earlier in 1941, months before Pearl Harbor, the American and British militaries had already war-gamed a possible global conflict against the Axis powers. They rejected the “Japan First” strategy and agreed, at least for planning purposes, on “Germany First.”

 

The logic was straightforward and starkly realist. Germany was the center of gravity of the Axis powers: It was the largest, richest, most technologically advanced industrial power. If it conquered Britain, it imperiled the Atlantic Ocean. If it conquered the Soviet Union, it would amass untold resources. Japan, by contrast, could be contained.

 

Yet when it came time to sell the war to the American public, Roosevelt made a different argument. He did not argue to the American people about Germany’s GDP, how many metric tons of steel its factories produced, or the advanced state of its armaments factories. He linked American security to the moral meaning of the war.

 

“The Nazi masters of Germany have made it clear that they intend not only to dominate all life and thought in their own country, but also to enslave the whole of Europe, and then to use the resources of Europe to dominate the rest of the world,” he said in his December 1940 fireside chat.

 

The Nazis “openly seek the destruction of all elective systems of government on every continent—including our own,” Roosevelt told the White House Correspondents Dinner in March 1941. “They seek to establish systems of government based on the regimentation of all human beings by a handful of individual rulers who have seized power by force.”

 

That is why the United States could not be aloof from events in Europe. In December 1940, explaining his proposed lend-lease program, Roosevelt argued that if a neighbor’s house caught fire, any decent person would immediately lend their garden hose to help put out the fire. The analogy played to Americans’ sense of altruism but also their self-interest: Fires spread, including in the neighborhood of nations.

 

The neighborhood of nations: That image is key to Roosevelt’s—and America’s—vision of what the war was about. If America was intent on defending its house alone, it would have adopted a “Japan First” strategy, possibly leaving the fighting in the European theater to the British and Soviets armed with American weapons. Adopting a “Germany First” strategy was not just a calculation about the relative strength of the Axis powers. It was also a statement about America’s vision of the world and its role in it.

 

Fires spread, and America would be the fire warden.

 

The ‘Four Freedoms.’

 

The fire warden had a firm idea of how the neighborhood should be organized. In January 1941 Roosevelt reiterated the injustice of the Nazis’ vision of the world and contrasted it with the principles of American freedom.

 

“No realistic American can expect from a dictator’s peace international generosity, or return of true independence, or world disarmament, or freedom of expression, or freedom of religion,” Roosevelt told Congress. He argued that the “principles of morality” prevented him from “acquiesc[ing] in a peace dictated by aggressors and sponsored by appeasers,” because “enduring peace cannot be bought at the cost of other people's freedom.” The Nazis, he said, wanted to build a new “one-way international law, which lacks mutuality in its observance, and, therefore, becomes an instrument of oppression.”

 

Contrasting with the Nazis’ vision of the world, Roosevelt famously outlined his Four Freedoms: freedoms of speech and religion, freedom from want, and freedom from fear. Freedom from want referred to conditions that enabled a nation to provide a “healthy peacetime life for its inhabitants,” and freedom from fear meant disarmament to the point that aggressive warfare became impossible.

 

Roosevelt saw a cohesive moral order underlining American democracy at home and the Four Freedoms abroad. “Just as our national policy in internal affairs has been based upon a decent respect for the rights and the dignity of all our fellow men within our gates,” he said, “so our national policy in foreign affairs has been based on a decent respect for the rights and dignity of all nations, large and small. And the justice of morality must and will win in the end.” American strategy in World War II was an outworking of American ideals on the world stage.

 

“By winning now, we strengthen the meaning of those freedoms, we increase the stature of mankind, we establish the dignity of human life,” he later said. He called for the nations of the world to “serve themselves and serve the world” by respecting the Four Freedoms and “abandon man’s inhumanity to man.” The Four Freedoms are the best summation of Roosevelt’s understanding of the just cause for which the war would be fought.

 

The Atlantic Charter.

 

Roosevelt’s moral vision of the war received its formal expression in the Atlantic Charter, a joint declaration with British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in August 1941. The Charter became a declaration of war aims, a touchstone outlining the sort of world the allies were fighting for, and became a foundation of the postwar order.

 

The allies foreswore territorial conquest, affirmed the consent of the governed, affirmed free trade and economic cooperation and the freedom of the seas, called for general disarmament to a level that would make aggressive warfare impossible, and looked forward to a durable and lasting peace “which will afford assurance that all the men in all the lands may live out their lives in freedom from fear and want.”

 

The charter is the founding document and constitution of what is clunkily called the “liberal international order,” but is more accurately called the free world. It was later incorporated into the Charter of the United Nations—but the real animating spirit of the charter found life in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), an alliance of free democracies that has anchored world order for eight decades.

 

Most Americans today have only the dimmest understanding that for most of human history, most people were poor, unfree, and miserable. The emergence of a free world order—with democracy and rights, capitalism and free trade, international cooperation and collective security—is the greatest thing that has ever happened in (secular) history.

 

It happened because of the convergence of American power with American ideals. We did not beat the fascists with the power of American ideals; we beat the fascists because we had bigger guns. But so did the Soviets, and the Soviets did not write the Atlantic Charter, did not talk about Four Freedoms, and did not create a free world order in the aftermath.

 

Global ambitions and national identity.

 

Armed idealism is usually a straight road to zealotry, crusading, and tyranny. But consider: The same ideals that led America to assemble the mightiest army in world history, to build and use nuclear weapons, are the same ideals that led America to annex no territory, to voluntarily demobilize its military, and to go home. As Colin Powell often said decades later, “The only land we ever asked for was enough land to bury our dead.”

 

Of course, there was a measure of hypocrisy in preaching a gospel of liberty while overseeing Jim Crow at home. But rather than letting our imperfections hobble our aspirations for the world, the causal arrow went the other way: We let our global ambitions reshape our national identity. Black veterans came home and demanded rights, white veterans came home readier to grant them, and Americans stung by the horror of white supremacy’s atrocities abroad were more prepared to acknowledge them at home. Sometimes foreign policy leads, rather than follows, our national mission.

 

If there was ever a moment when one nation had the means to conquer the world, it was the United States of America in 1945. That we did not is an underrated tribute to American virtue, a national reenactment of George Washington’s resignation at the height of his power. And it happened because of American beliefs in limited government and republican liberty; in a neighborhood of nations that look out for each other; in freedom of speech and religion, freedom from want and fear; in consent of the governed, free trade, freedom of the seas, and international comity. These are America’s greatest legacy and, through the Second World War, our greatest bequest to the world.

From Every Direction

By Abe Greenwald

Thursday, March 12, 2026

 

The following occurred within the space of an hour earlier today: I read Seth Mandel’s bracing post about repeated shootings on synagogues and other violent anti-Semitic attacks in Toronto. I saw breaking news about a car-ramming and active-shooter situation at a Michigan synagogue and learned, minutes later, that the suspect was killed before he harmed anyone. Immediately after that, I was sent an alert about an attack on a synagogue in Norway.

 

At a certain point, it gets hard to say anything about such a miserable time in the West other than that it’s miserable—and shows no sign of getting better. The Jew-hunts go on.

 

There are questions, of course: Was all or some of today’s violence the work of Iran? Are these self-radicalized jihadists? Did they, perhaps, emerge from the pro-intifada left? Or were they inspired by the dissident right?

 

The answers matter, but they’re starting to seem less important than the growing number of questions. In the years immediately after 9/11, you heard news of an attack on Jews and suspected Islamist terrorism. After a white nationalist killed 11 people at the Tree of Life Congregation in Pittsburgh in 2018, you had to factor in a new type of killer. Then the post–October 7 wave of anti-Semitism delivered the far-left Jew-hunter who allegedly shot and killed two young Israeli Embassy staffers in D.C. And, in January, the alleged arsonist behind the January synagogue fire in Jackson, Mississippi, explained his motives to police in terms that echo the woke right.

 

Violent anti-Semitism is now coming from so many directions, and has been stoked in so many different ways, that Jews rightly feel surrounded by those who want to do them harm.     

 

On Sunday, the socialist mayor of New York City hosted an anti-Semitic terrorist-supporter at Gracie Mansion. Yesterday, Tucker Carlson blamed Israel for the likely American, and obviously accidental, bombing of a girls’ school in Iran. Today, Candace Owens tweeted that this makes sense since “Israel is required to mass murder children because they worship Baal.”

 

There are times when I think this can’t last. The West’s leading Jew-haters are becoming so outlandish, and they’re making ever more preposterous claims with each passing day. Aren’t they bound to discredit themselves, I wonder, even among the most gullible of their fans? After all, there was a time not so long ago when we all understood jihadist bloodlust to be, in purely colloquial terms, crazy. Surely, we can still recognize maniacal hatred.

 

And then, there are days like today, too many of them, when it seems as if that’s a foolish hope.

 

Anti-Semitism isn’t just the world’s oldest hatred. It’s also the most impervious to reason. Jew-hatred can take hold in the most technologically advanced and enlightened societies because it functions as a superstition, and modernity cannot eradicate the superstitious impulse. At best, it can redirect it toward more benign fixations. At worst, the massive scope and breakneck pace of modern advances can leave people grasping for false gods, soothing delusions, and scapegoats. What all the anti-Semites share, no matter their particular camp, is an affinity for the primitive. Times are miserable because the savages are on the march.

The Peacemaker

By Nick Catoggio

Thursday, March 12, 2026

 

Stop me if you’ve heard this one before.

 

An autocrat deluded about his military capabilities launches a regime-change war, expecting to topple the enemy quickly. Things go bad. Quickly he finds himself trapped, unable to achieve his goal by force yet unable to retreat without destroying his prestige.

 

(Yes, I realize that describes a lot of wars throughout history. We’re not done.)

 

Then the autocrat gets a break. A rival autocrat with leverage over his enemy offers to mediate in the conflict and broker a face-saving outcome for the invader, with whom he hopes to repair relations after many years of tension. I can rescue you from this strategic debacle, the would-be mediator whispers, promising to squeeze the nation being besieged into suing for peace.

 

Who am I talking about? Russia versus Ukraine, with Donald Trump in the role of peacemaker?

 

Or the United States versus Iran, with Vladimir Putin in that role?

 

Russia’s dictator reportedly offered to midwife an end to America’s latest Middle Eastern misadventure during a phone call with Trump earlier this week, presenting “several proposals” to the president. That’s not the first time Moscow has dangled its influence when the United States has found itself in a jam involving a Russian client, but it must have been extra enjoyable for Putin to rub the White House’s face in his leverage over its new war after four years of America propping up Ukraine’s resistance.

 

Still, Trump’s posture toward Ukraine and Putin’s posture toward Iran aren’t perfectly analogous.

 

For one thing, Putin surely wants the outcome of America’s war to inflict a strategic defeat on the United States whereas Trump is neutral—at best—about the outcome in Ukraine. Russia’s peacemaking efforts will be biased toward Iran whereas America’s peacemaking efforts, for all intents and purposes, are biased toward Russia.

 

Nor are the two leaders equally desperate to settle their conflicts. Putin just began Year 5 of his push toward Kyiv and seems to relish the pageantry of indomitable Russian will involved in sacrificing hundreds of thousands of troops to restore imperial glory. Everyone understands (except possibly Trump) that a negotiated “end” to that war will be nothing more than a truce, giving Moscow time to retrench and rearm before the next attempt to conquer Ukraine begins. The czar will battle on until the Russian people hang him from a lamppost.

 

Trump is a more traditional bully who’ll balk at a fight that he can’t win easily and look for excuses to end it before it reveals the extent of his impotence. We’re already approaching that point in Iran, less than two weeks into the war: Despite threatening the Iranians, touting the possibility of naval escorts, and offering to insure oil tankers willing to take their chances, the president is no closer to restarting commercial traffic through the Strait of Hormuz than he was a week ago. A prolonged closure seems probable—unless someone with pull in Tehran, hint hint, intervenes to convince the regime to let the strait reopen.

 

All of which is to say that while Russia hasn’t been very cooperative with Trump about winding down the war in Ukraine, Trump might be quite receptive to help from Russia in winding down the war in Iran.

 

Assuming Russia really does want to help, that is.

 

The benefits of war.

 

The obvious question about Putin brokering peace in Iran is this: Why the hell would he want to?

 

The Iran war is one of the best things to happen to him in years.

 

It’s a bonanza for his economy. With the strait closed and oil prices spiking from the global supply shock, Russia is raking in an extra $150 million per day. The longer commercial traffic stays bottled up in the Persian Gulf, sending prices higher, the more exorbitant that windfall will become.

 

It also means renewed leverage for Russia over Europe, which has tried weaning itself off of cheap Russian energy and is now discovering how expensive that can be. “If European companies and European buyers suddenly decide to reorient themselves and provide us with long-term, sustainable cooperation, devoid of political pressures ... then go ahead. We’ve never refused,” Putin said a few days ago, offering to resume sales to the continent. “Long-term” cooperation presumably means a rethink about whether Ukraine deserves sovereignty.

 

Speaking of which, the Iran war is also making it easier for Russia to terrorize Ukrainians. U.S. air defense munitions that otherwise might have ended up protecting cities like Kyiv are now needed to protect American service members in the Gulf. “If Putin was feeling any pressure to negotiate [over Ukraine] before, and it’s not clear he was, it’s gone for now,” one EU official told Politico. “The U.S. is distracted and burning through some of the weapons Europe wants to purchase for Ukraine. … It’s a very gloomy scenario.”

 

There are intangible benefits to Moscow from the Iran conflict too. After four years of having its battlefield prestige torched by Ukraine with help from the United States, the Kremlin is now enjoying payback by supplying Iran with intelligence on U.S. targets. There’s nothing Russia can do to restore its own military reputation, but there are things it can do to damage America’s, and it’s doing them. The icing on the cake would be forcing the president of the United States to dial up the czar and beg for a solution to the de facto hostage crisis in the strait.

 

Seems pretty cut and dried. What could Putin possibly gain relative to all that to make ending the Iran war worth his while?

 

The benefits of peace.

 

Well, there is the small matter of a potential quid pro quo with the White House involving Ukraine.

 

Last week former Trump national security adviser turned prosecution target John Bolton told CNN that he worried about the terms of the bargain Russia might offer the president. “Donald, you know, you’re right. We should not be fighting with each other here,” he imagined Putin telling Trump. “Let’s make a deal. We’ll cease all intelligence … to Iran if you cease the supply of all intelligence to Ukraine.” The president might accept that, Bolton fretted.

 

Indeed he might. To Trump, that would be a twofer, a way to expedite the end of not one but two conflicts that are currently bedeviling him. At last he’d have a pretext for abandoning Ukraine that he could semi-seriously sell to Americans: I didn’t want to do it but I had to in order to protect our boys.

 

Would Putin trade the oil dividend he’s been reaping since Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz for a significant advantage in Ukraine that he can secure by convincing Iran to reopen it? Quite possibly, I think.

 

Especially if that quid pro quo came packaged with further sanctions relief from the White House. A few days ago the Treasury Department granted India a monthlong waiver to purchase Russian oil without U.S. retaliation to help that country cope with the supply in the Persian Gulf drying up. It would be easy for Trump to justify extending that policy to other nations to reward Putin for his assistance with Iran, framing it as a measure to ease gas prices as quickly as possible for consumers after the Iran crisis.

 

The Kremlin would also benefit from an outcome in Iran that reasserted its influence over the global order, at least in its near-abroad. “The current paradigm seems to be that the U.S. does what it wants, and no one else, Russia included, can do much about it,” a source in Moscow complained this week to The New Yorker, hinting at another unexpected role reversal between our two countries. America has traditionally scolded Russia for settling its disputes militarily, without regard for diplomacy or international law; now, with Russian power diminished and a Putin-esque figure in the White House, the scolding runs the other way.

 

Brokering peace in Iran would be Russia’s way of reestablishing that the world remains multipolar to a greater degree than Donald Trump would have everyone believe. And, perverse as it may seem, it would let Ukraine’s tormentors argue that they’re as much a force for global stability as postliberal America is. Putin didn’t start any wars that threatened to destabilize the world economy within the first 12 days, right? And hey—when it comes to seizing territory from NATO members, the United States is now at least as much of a threat as Russia is.

 

If nothing else, the Kremlin might be willing to help end the war in Iran simply because its leverage in this matter isn’t indefinite. Should the U.S. military figure out a way to neutralize the threat to oil tankers in the strait, most of Russia’s usefulness to Trump as a liaison to Tehran will evaporate. Admittedly, that doesn’t seem likely—some analysts think nothing short of a ground operation to seize Iran’s coastline will do—but every day that Putin waits increases the odds that the crisis will be resolved without Russian input.

 

That probably explains why he offered his assistance to Trump during their phone call this week. Even so, enlisting Putin to pressure Iran to reopen the strait is worth doing for the White House only if there’s good reason to believe the Iranians would bow to that pressure.

 

Is there?

 

Fighting on.

 

My guess is that if you asked the average American what it’ll take to get oil in the Gulf flowing again, he or she would say it’s simple. Once the U.S. and Israel stop attacking, Iran will stop firing at ships in the strait.

 

I’m not sure that’s true. Various statements from regime figures this week suggest that holding the global oil supply hostage isn’t a mere matter of pressuring its enemies to stand down. It’s a form of punishment that might persist even after the bombs stop falling.

 

When the president said a few days ago that the war will be over soon, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps responded with a statement declaring that they “are the ones who will determine the end of the war.” Iran’s top national security official elaborated on that this morning. “Trump says he is looking for a speedy victory. While starting a war is easy, it cannot be won with a few tweets. We will not relent until making you sorry for this grave miscalculation,” he wrote, appending his message with the hashtag “#TrumpMustPay.”

 

Empty bravado? Maybe. But a few days ago one expert told the Wall Street Journal he believes Iran might not agree to stop shooting even if the United States and Israel are willing. The Iranian “calculus is that [their enemies] paced themselves out,” he said, “and that in coming days the U.S. and Israel will run out of interceptors and they will be able to inflict much more harm on every one of the U.S. allies in the region, and then Trump will be coming to beg for some kind of ceasefire, for which they could dictate the terms.”

 

If the regime’s determination to prolong the conflict seems unlikely to you, ask yourself this: What have the U.S. and Israel achieved strategically since the first 48 hours or so of the war?

 

They’ve accomplished a lot tactically, destroying Iranian missiles, aircraft, and naval ships. But as far as I can tell, they’re not meaningfully closer to any of the various big-picture strategic goals that Trump has offered to justify the mission. Iran’s enriched uranium remains buried under the rubble from last year’s bombings, presumably reachable by excavators in time. There’s been no popular uprising by Iranian civilians amid the chaos of the air campaign. And the regime remains intact—and is likely to stay that way, according to the latest assessment from U.S. intelligence.

 

A bunch of its leaders are dead, yes, but a group of lunatics obsessed with religious martyrdom is plainly willing to pay that price to accomplish its goals.

 

The closest thing to a strategic victory for the good guys is that Iran’s ability to threaten its neighbors has been temporarily degraded. But that’s not much of a victory, as the Wall Street Journal reported this week: “From the Gulf’s perspective, a wounded but undefeated Iranian regime would represent the worst possible outcome, as it would retain the ability to terrorize cities such as Doha or Dubai with drones, and continue disrupting oil traffic through Hormuz.”

 

The bad guys, on the other hand, have achieved many of their strategic aims. They’ve put Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu on the hook for an energy calamity that could tank the world’s economy. They’ve demonstrated their resilience against the combined power of two of the most formidable militaries on Earth. And they’ve raised the cost to Arab nations of allying with the U.S. by successfully menacing those nations’ oil infrastructure. If this ends with the mullahs still in charge, more radicalized than they were before, and bent on deterring future military campaigns to take them out, everyone in the region who’s worried about Iranian nuclear weapons will need to worry that much more.

 

So why wouldn’t they fight on and keep the war going for a while?

 

If they get lucky, they might even open a rift between the U.S. and Israel. Trump prefers an outcome in Iran like that in Venezuela; he’s indifferent to the nature of the regime that governs the country provided that it answers to him. Israel wants nothing less than regime change after decades of being targeted by a fanatic Shiite revolutionary cohort and its proxies. The longer Iran keeps shooting into the strait, the more likely the two partners’ goals will diverge: The White House will want a ceasefire deal that ends the energy bottleneck, but Tel Aviv will want to stay the course and eliminate an existential threat.

 

And remember, in this case it takes two to TACO.

 

Putin’s task.

 

That’s the situation that Vladimir Putin, peacemaker, would confront if Trump were to seek his help in getting Iran to stand down.

 

As an Iranian partner, Russia does have cards to play with Tehran. Volodymyr Zelensky believes Moscow is supplying Iran with drones and missiles while CNN has heard that the Russians are now providing the Iranians not just with intelligence on American targets but advice on drone tactics gleaned from the war in Ukraine. “Specific tactical advice would indicate a new level of potentially lethal support,” the outlet alleged.

 

Russia could, in theory, threaten to cut all of it as a way to pressure Iran to wrap up the war. And the Iranians might find that exit ramp attractive depending on how humiliating the circumstances of America’s withdrawal look to be. If Trump is willing to “extract the U.S. from the war and make the case that the military had largely achieved its objectives”—i.e. cutting and running amid pro forma claims of victory if only Tehran will reopen the strait—then maybe the regime will conclude that’s as total as a strategic victory is likely to be and accept Russia’s request to cease fire.

 

But if they’re determined to teach the U.S. a hard lesson about never messing with it again, turning Hormuz into a killbox for tankers until oil hits $200 per barrel, then one can imagine them ignoring Putin. That would be another way in which the Ukraine and Iran wars are symmetrical: In each case, the U.S. and Russia are managing client states who have strong ideological motives to resist coercion by their patrons to get them to stop shooting. The Ukrainians have spent 13 months fighting on despite Trump’s effort to bully them into carving off a piece of their country for Russia. Now, perhaps, it’s Iran’s turn to do the same with Putin.

 

But here again, the two conflicts aren’t analogous, are they? The president’s pressure on Ukraine has been sincere and intense; Putin’s pressure on Iran would be considerably gentler and probably not in earnest at all. For the reasons I explained earlier, he won’t be crying into his borscht if Iran decides it wants to bloody the White House’s nose by keeping the strait closed and sending global demand for Russian oil through the stratosphere.

 

Two autocrats, each deluded about his ability to impose his will via military force but only one stupid enough to start a war that’s directly benefiting the other: That’s who’s responsible for the conflicts in Ukraine and Iran. Americans are led by the stupider one.

How to Be a One-Hit Wonder: The Ibram X. Kendi Story

By Luther Ray Abel

Thursday, March 12, 2026

 

Ibram X. Kendi, the man whose book, How to Be an Antiracist (along with its derivative satellites), was a fixture on the New York Times‘ bestsellers list for nearly a year from 2019 well into the racial upheaval of 2020 — as well as a virtue-signaling totem on your medicated aunt’s coffee table until recently, when her cats made some use of the yet-unopened hardback — is attempting a relaunch.

 

A trucklesome profile in New York Magazine begins:

 

“People cast aspersions on me as a director in order to cast aspersions on my scholarship,” says Dr. Ibram X. Kendi, “because they do not see a direct way to undermine my scholarship.” Huddled in a storage room inside Founders Library at Howard University, the 43-year-old historian, speaking softly and deliberately, is reflecting on the roller-coaster arc of his fame. Nearly seven years ago, his 2019 book, How to Be an Antiracist, was seized upon by liberals as a sacred text, rocketing up the best-seller lists and earning Kendi, already a National Book Award winner for Stamped From the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America, a reputation as a racial-reconciliation guru. Written as he was being treated for stage-four colorectal cancer, the book is infused with a spirit of personal transformation. (“The heartbeat of antiracism is confession,” Kendi writes in an oft-cited passage.) Both its language and its stakes felt biblical after the killing of George Floyd.

 

Yet today, How to Be an Antiracist is widely remembered as a self-flagellating manual for bleeding hearts. This baffles Kendi, for whom the book’s thesis — that racist” is not a pejorative identity, like “evil,” but a descriptive term that should be applied to policies according to whether they shrink or widen racial disparities — is focused on material effects.

 

“The heartbeat of antiracism is confession” really does encapsulate the racialist gospel of irredeemable total depravity that Kendi hawked all the way into presiding over a Boston University–affiliated think tank that made him a very wealthy man while producing two mediocre pieces of academic research. Since being dismissed from his ivory tower in Boston, where he spent his working hours transmuting white guilt into green, Kendi has been in exile at Howard University along with Nikole Hannah-Jones. It’s an Elba of sorts for those who can’t be bothered to conquer a monthly column, let alone Europe.

 

I could go on, but other writers at National Review deserve their due when it comes to reminding the world and, apparently, Mr. Kendi about his scholarship, leadership, and venomous effect on American life and goodwill toward one’s fellow man.

 

The Lies and Fall of Ibram X. Kendi — Jeffrey Blehar (June 5, 2024)

 

What is racism, per Kendi? Anything that oppresses minorities but most especially African Americans. What is “antiracism”? Anything that promotes their social, economic, or physical well-being. How to be “antiracist”? It’s simple: Question literally every single decision you make in life on a granular level. Does voting for this candidate or referendum advance “antiracism”? How about reading this book? Wearing these clothes? Boycotting this show? Not boycotting this show? (How about this hummus? It’s made by Zionists!) The logic wasn’t even particularly compelling, merely ironclad in its suffocatingly recursive and intentionally ill-defined way. “There is no neutrality in the racial struggle,” warned Kendi, and the book (and his subsequent lectures on it — which might have cost you $20,000 a pop, provided you were an institutional sponsor) made it clear: Every single choice we make marks us like Cain as “racist” or — hopefully, the way Calvinists reckon with future salvation — as “antiracist.”

 

Read the rest here.

 

Ibram X. Kendi, Prophet of Anti-racism — Christopher Caldwell (July 23, 2020)

 

Kendi spends a lot of energy turning up ancient grievances — an article in a 1903 issue of Medicine about the “sexual madness and excess” of black people, the speculations in a New York City prison doctor’s report in 1894 about whether lesbians are physically different from other women. He tends to imagine his interlocutors as eccentric and simple-minded, holding opinions that hardly anyone would dream up, let alone defend: “Black neighborhoods do not all have similar levels of violent crime,” he insists. “If the cause of the violent crime is the Black body, if Black people are violent demons, then the violent-crime levels would be relatively the same no matter where Black people live.” Who needed to be convinced of that? What is this “Black body” that Kendi and other ethnic-studies authors constantly allude to? Kendi leaves the impression he has had few conversations with people he really disagrees with. The distinction between mainstream Republicans and night-riding bigots does not appear to be an important one to him, given his references to what “white supremacists” think of climate change and Obamacare.

 

In African-American studies departments you can address racial problems in an atmosphere of esprit de corps and ideological unanimity. Because they traditionally had a different academic culture than other university departments, it long seemed natural to ignore them. But their very isolation has turned them into mighty bases for consciousness-raising, dogma construction, and political organizing. They are Internet Age equivalents of 19th-century Fenian Brotherhood lodges. It is from these hives of like-minded activists that the country’s human-resources departments have been staffed. That helps explain how, within hours of the first urban protests in June, hundreds of far-flung corporations had spontaneously and independently produced identical press releases and Facebook posts, identical right down to the catchphrases.

 

Read the rest here.

 

Boston University Plans to Close Anti-racist Center as Ibram X. Kendi Departs for Howard — David Zimmermann (January 31, 2025)

 

Around the same time as the layoffs, the founder faced accusations of exploiting workers and mismanaging the center’s financial resources. BU Today said the layoffs happened because public support for the center’s work “shifted” and financial contributions were “waning.”

 

In its nearly five years of existence, the antiracism venture raised more than $50 million in funding from donors, including Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey, who donated $10 million to the cause. Despite the generous funds, only two new research papers had been produced by the time of the employee layoffs. The exact count of total research papers is unclear.

 

“Despite all the headwinds we faced as a new organization founded during the pandemic and the intense backlash over critical race theory, I am very proud of all we envisioned, all we created, all we learned, all we achieved—the community we built, the people we helped and inspired,” Kendi said in a statement Thursday.

 

Read the rest here.

 

The Incredible Lightness of Ibram X. Kendi’s ‘Anti-Racism’ — Rich Lowry (July 25, 2021)

 

Rarely has a sympathetic interview, or at least an overtly friendly interview, done more to expose the shallowness and bankruptcy of the interviewee’s worldview.

 

Kendi, who has become an industry unto himself, famously contends that any policy that creates a racial inequity, no matter what the intentions, is racism. This is a sophomoric and indefensible view that Klein punctures with a series of “how is this supposed to work?” questions.

 

The crux of the conversation is an exchange about crime and policing, a topic that would seem relatively simple — let’s get good, robust policing to make black neighborhoods safer — but that presents insuperable problems for Kendi given the absurdity of his premises.

 

Klein asks Kendi whether support for defunding the police would be an anti-racist policy.

 

Kendi tries to get around the question. He says that some people have believed that the cause of crime in black neighbors is black people — “it’s their culture, it’s their behavior.” According to his hostile caricature, this is why people believe that “you need police, well-funded police, who can basically control those animals because they’re the cause of crime.”

 

Then, he posits an opposite view: that crime is caused by things such as high levels of poverty and unemployment, the number of guns in circulation, the lack of mental-health services, and resource-starved schools.

 

It’s yet another sign of how silly Kendi’s theory is that he apparently can’t take into account that many earnest, well-intentioned people might loosely draw on both of these buckets of causes. In other words, they may believe (correctly) that there is a culture of crime in dangerous urban neighborhoods and believe that kids in those neighborhoods are being failed by the schools.

 

Read the rest here.

 

Is Ibram X. Kendi a Racist? — Charles C. W. Cooke (September 21, 2023)

 

Is Ibram X. Kendi a racist? Here’s Kendi’s rather novel definition of a racist policy:

 

A racist policy is any measure that produces or sustains racial inequity between racial groups. By policy, I mean written and unwritten laws, rules, procedures, processes, regulations, and guidelines that govern people.

 

Here’s the Boston Globe describing the center that Kendi runs at Boston University:

 

Since its announced launch in June 2020, just days after the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis, the center has raised tens of millions of dollars from tech entrepreneurs, Boston-area corporations, and thousands of small donors.

 

At the time, Kendi, the author of the bestselling 2019 book “How to Be an Antiracist,” said the center would “solve these intractable racial problems of our time.”

 

And here’s the Boston Globe describing how Kendi’s approach has made it impossible for the center to succeed, and thus impossible for it to “solve” the “intractable racial problems of our time” — a result that, one assumes, must help to “produce or sustain racial inequity between racial groups”:

 

In interviews with the Globe this week, current and former employees described a dysfunctional work environment that made it difficult to achieve the center’s lofty goals.

 

The organization “was just being mismanaged on a really fundamental level,” said Phillipe Copeland, a professor in BU’s School of Social Work who also worked for the center as assistant director of narrative.

 

Although most decision-making authority rested with Kendi, Copeland said he found it difficult to schedule meetings with him. Other staffers described paralysis in the organization because Kendi declined to delegate authority and was not often available.

 

Copeland resigned from the center in June.

 

Copeland is black, and he believes that his work — which Kendi’s bad behavior destroyed — was as important as “life and death.” Again, here’s Kendi’s definition of a “racist policy”:

 

A racist policy is any measure that produces or sustains racial inequity between racial groups.

 

By taking millions of dollars designated for the fight against racism and doing nothing useful with it, does this not describe Kendi? He was in charge of this project — a project that he promised would “solve” the “intractable racial problems of our time” — and the result of his conduct was a failure to “maintain the nation’s largest online database of racial inequity data in the United States”; accusations of professional “mismanagement” that led to an “exploitative” environment that caused “employment violence” and “trauma”; and mass layoffs that left one staff member accusing Kendi of having engaged in “theatre, therapy, and marketing masquerading as institutional commitment,” and having “let down, betrayed, abused and neglected” his employees. It sounds to me like the man has some self-reflecting to do.

 

You can find the piece here.

 

Tragically, despite the time in the wilderness that may have prompted reflection and some humility, the Kendi of 2026 doubles back to the motte of people misunderstanding him — he never meant for his use of the “racist” label to imply his ideological foes were evil. He can only sing one song, and no one is asking for an encore.

 

For a man who has been shown more grace than Jordan Cowan’s camera, Kendi’s “tendency to claim that aspersions of his motives were rooted in racism,” (as Cheney-Rice begins the final paragraph in the New York Magazine profile), is sufficient evidence to conclude that Kendi remains enslaved to the same ugly mix of arrogance and racism that have been the ruin of men far more brilliant than he.

Antisemitism Has No Place in Our Movement

By Tom Cotton

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

 

The following is a lightly edited transcript of remarks by Senator Tom Cotton (R., Ark.) at Tuesday’s symposium on antisemitism in Washington, D.C., hosted by National Review and the Republican Jewish Coalition.

 

It’s an honor to join you all today. Norm [Coleman], it’s always great to be with you. I want to thank the RJC Chief Operating Officer Alex Siegel. It’s always great to be here with you. I’m sorry Matt Brooks couldn’t be here with us today. Chuck DeFeo, National Review CEO and my old friend the editor in chief of National Review, Rich Lowry. Thank you all for convening this conference. Thank you all for leading the fight against antisemitism. This is unfortunately a timely and important symposium given the state of affairs in the world.

 

I know many of you are deeply concerned about what seems to be a rising tide of antisemitism. I am as well, but as King Solomon said in Ecclesiastes: “There is nothing new under the sun.” There’s a reason antisemitism is called the ancient hatred. It’s been with us always; sadly it will probably always be with us whether it’s spouted by the likes of Father Coughlin, Adolf Hitler, Louis Farrakhan, Ilhan Omar.

 

I know many of you are also concerned, though, about a seeming rise of antisemitism among “influencers” on the erstwhile right. Now I use sarcastic air quotes for a reason; first off, these “influencers” are perceived to be on the “right.” And maybe they once were, maybe they once wrote for center-right magazines, maybe they once worked for center-right websites or media companies, but I do not agree that I share a political movement or political party with anyone who traffics in antisemitism. And for that matter doesn’t just traffic in antisemitism or at least adjacent to antisemitism, but shares Liz Warren’s economic policies or Rashida Tlaib’s foreign policy. Because if you notice, these so-called influencers, like antisemites usually do, often have a deep antipathy to free-market capitalism. Whatever their views once were, they have since adopted Liz Warren’s economic policies. They also, as I’ve said, share Rashida Tlaib’s foreign policy, which could be summed up as Jeane Kirkpatrick once said, “blame America first.” They always blame American first; if they’re not blaming Israel first, it’s a close competition.

 

I also used ironic, sarcastic air quotes about the term “influencer.” That is a fake, made-up, phony word. It didn’t exist five or ten years ago; go look at a dictionary. See if that word was present in that dictionary five or ten years ago. It wasn’t. So the question is, Why did people have to make up the word “influencer”? And I think the answer is the time-tested, old-fashioned, sturdy word “influential” does not apply to them. They are not influential. They are at least not influential with Donald Trump, who continues to reject their kooky advice. They’re not influential with Republicans in the Senate, who continue to reject their kooky advice. And if you look at public opinion polls, they’re least influential of all with normal voting Republicans all across the country. Indeed, self-identified MAGA Republicans — there’s polls out there you can identity. The pollster asks the respondent, “Are you a Republican?” “Yes.” “Do you identify as a MAGA Republican or let’s call it a traditional Republican?” Self-identified MAGA Republicans are more supportive in general of the president’s foreign policy than self-identified traditional Republicans. Think about that, people who are asked to identify as a MAGA Republican with Donald Trump are more in favor of bombing the hell out of the ayatollahs than self-identified traditional Republicans. So it’s clear that these “influencers” don’t have much influence where it matters.

 

Right now, these days it matters most in the White House. And is that all that surprising? I know we’re having a conference about antisemitism, but in the White House we have the most philosemitic president ever. Not only has he been the strongest supporter of Israel, not only does he condemn antisemitism in all its forms, Donald Trump loves the Jewish people so much that he has Jewish grandchildren. The image of Donald Trump going to a grandchild’s bar or bat mitzvah, it’s very entertaining to me. I’d like to be a fly on the wall there. But, again, these so-called “influencers” don’t have influence where it really matters. And where it really matters today, besides the White House, is taking the fight to the worst source of antisemitism in the world, which is of course the Islamic Republic of Iran. That is where, I know, many of your thoughts are today, it’s where my thoughts and a lot of my work in the Senate is today. So, I just want to touch briefly on where things stand there.

 

First off, I want to express my condolences and sympathies to the families of seven brave Americans who have been killed so far in our campaign against the ayatollah’s revolutionary regime. I also want to express condolences to the Israelis, whether they’re soldiers, or whether they’re innocent civilians, and for that matter the innocent civilians in Arab nations who have lost their lives due to Iran’s, I don’t know what you might call it, their Yosemite Sam strategy of just shooting at everyone in the region, even countries who have been relatively friendly to Iran, like Oman, who tried to facilitate a diplomatic resolution here. They did not die in vain, not those Americans or anyone in the Middle East, because after 47 years of terror and revolutionary violence, America is finally putting our foot down and saying we’re not going to take it anymore.

 

Their outlaw regime from the very beginning has waged a campaign of terror against the United States, invading our embassy, taking hostage dozens of our fellow citizens for more than a year, killing more than 200 at the Marine Barracks in Beirut, killing several of our troops at Khobar Towers, likely being complicit in the bombing of the USS Cole, maiming and killing thousands of our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, and generally terrorizing the civilized world. The president has said time and again, as I’ve said since I entered public life, we can never allow such lunatics to have a nuclear weapon, and we put an end to their ambitions last June when our Air Force, combined with the Israeli Defense Forces, destroyed their nuclear program, but apparently the ayatollahs didn’t get the picture.

 

As the president said yesterday, we had clear evidence that they were trying to move forward at other locations with their nuclear program, but perhaps even more importantly, we couldn’t live with the imbalance of power of their missiles and our defenses. I can’t get into the numbers, but I can tell you that before this war started, Iran had thousands and thousands of missiles, and their vast missile arsenal far, far exceeded the combined missile defenses of the United States, Israel, and our Arab friends. That is an unacceptable threat to the United States. That would create in essence within a few months, maybe a year, an impenetrable shield through which they could continue to build a nuclear program in the future. That’s much like what happened with North Korea in the 1990s and 2000s. They didn’t have nuclear weapons yet, but they had tens of thousands of rockets, and artillery shells, and missiles aimed at Seoul which prevented a barrier to stop them from going nuclear. But if it’s an unacceptable threat to the United States, it’s an existential threat to Israel. Because they have enough conventional missiles to destroy Israel’s way of life. That is not something that we could allow to continue. That was a dark and gathering storm cloud on the horizon, and the president decided in conjunction with Prime Minister Netanyahu that after Iran had been so badly weakened over the last two years, now was the time to go for the jugular and put an end to this menacing threat, and that’s what we’re currently on the path to do. So that was the first objective of this operation, to destroy their missile forces, and to destroy their ability to reconstitute them by hitting their manufacture sites.

 

The second, while we are at it, was to sink their navy, which was old and decrepit and small, but it is powerful enough to threaten shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, which no president since World War II has ever been willing to tolerate. Third, we’re also going to return to those nuclear sites and make sure that they get the message once again, that we will never allow it. And fourth, we’re hitting, and especially Israel is hitting, the thugs that have been responsible for repressing Iran’s own people and supporting terrorists around the world: the Revolutionary Guard Corps, the Quds Force, the Basij militia. Now, we can’t predict the future about what will happen with Iran, or who might be the next leader of Iran. Hopefully, the people of Iran can rise up and reclaim their destiny and once again live with some measure of freedom and dignity, but even if that’s not the case, at least Iran will be totally neutered as a military threat to the United States, to Israel, and to the rest of the civilized world.

 

Those are big ambitions, but we are a big nation. We have power that far exceeds any other nation. We have a president who is willing to use it. And you see that thanks to the bravery and skill of our troops, and Israel’s troops, that less than two weeks into this war we have Iran on the back foot. You probably saw Admiral Cooper, who commands our forces in the region, who said that their launches of missiles and drones has declined by more than 90 percent since the first days of this war. We expect it to continue to decline. We might still face more casualties, there might be more civilian lives lost, but in the end, when we face either a new Iran that is a normal nation, not an ideological and revolutionary exporter of violence and terror — or if we simply have an Iran that is totally defanged, which has no navy, has no air force, has no missile arsenal — the world will be much safer because of the skill and bravery of our combined forces and because of the strength and resolution of the president and the prime minister.

 

So, we’ve got many uncertain days ahead of us, and there may be more cost to pay, but I predict that when all is said and done, because of these actions, once again, we will be the strongest and most powerful nation in the region. And not just Israel and not just our troops, but everyone who lives within shooting distance of Iran will be grateful for what the United States and Israel has done in these days.

 

Thank you all. God bless you. God bless the United States.

Senate Republicans Should Not Unilaterally Disarm by Abandoning the Filibuster

National Review Online

Friday, March 13, 2026

 

John Cornyn is a fine senator, and we wish him well in his bid for reelection. In the midst of his hotly contested primary runoff against Ken Paxton, Cornyn argues in a New York Post op-ed for ditching the filibuster’s 60-vote threshold and backing “whatever changes to Senate rules that may prove necessary for us to get the SAVE America Act and homeland security funding past the Democrats’ obstruction, through the Senate, and on the president’s desk for his signature.”

 

Cornyn admits not only that this is an about-face, but that it is a change for the worse: “For many years, I believed that if the US Senate scrapped the filibuster, Texas and our nation would stand to lose more than we would gain. My fellow conservatives and I have proudly used the 60-vote threshold to protect the country from all sorts of bad ideas and dangerous policies.” But, he argues, the battle is already lost, because Democrats intend to break the rule once they return to power, so Republicans may as well wave the white flag. “Process matters,” Cornyn writes, “but outcomes matter more.”

 

This is terribly short-sighted. Cornyn may feel he has to take this position in order to blunt Paxton’s populist appeals and court the endorsement of Donald Trump, who has long favored ending the filibuster. Presidents often chafe at it, because it is most needed by the party out of presidential power. But the Senate has its own responsibilities as an institution — including defending its own traditional prerogatives. Senators should have the self-respect to stand up for those.

 

Contra Senator Cornyn, process actually matters quite a lot — not least because it affects outcomes. Nobody understands this better than the left, which is why it has long loathed the filibuster and sought its destruction. Regardless of whether the mechanism used to defang it is a rule change or merely a change from existing practices, the end the left seeks is the same: to enact laws without 60 votes for cloture in the Senate. That is exactly what Cornyn now advises.

 

The core of Cornyn’s argument is that Democrats are certain to end the filibuster when they next take power. Maybe so; surely, much of their caucus would like to. But to claim that “Democrats, with their votes and statements, have already dealt the filibuster a fatal blow” is false: the rule held against their assault in 2021–22, preventing the enactment of much mischief. Resisting that onslaught cost the party two Trump-state senators, one of whom (Joe Manchin) was replaced by a Republican in a seat the Democrats won’t soon get back.

 

That is a real political cost. The grim reality for Democrats is that they can take and hold a majority in the Senate only by winning seats in red and purple states. Only one Republican senator (Susan Collins) remains in a state won by Kamala Harris, but Democrats need three more seats to get to 51. In the six states that flipped from Joe Biden to Trump in 2024, Democrats already hold ten of the twelve Senate seats. Any Democratic majority in the near future will be able to break the filibuster only with the votes of senators outside of safe blue-state seats. They can be made to pay the consequences for radicalism. After Harry Reid broke the judicial filibuster in 2013, Democrats lost nine Senate seats in 2014 — and they have recovered only one of those seats since then, while losing the judiciary for a generation. Republicans should neither relieve them of that cost nor repeat their error.

 

And for what? As we have previously editorialized, while the SAVE America Act’s policy goals of preventing noncitizens from registering to vote and (as the bill was more recently amended) requiring voter ID are laudable and long-standing policy commitments of ours, they are better handled at the state level and would likely not produce dramatic results or even be ready to implement in time for the midterm elections. In any event, the bill’s merits are hardly dramatic enough to justify permanently stripping the Senate’s defenses against far more radical and sweeping legislation. It is not as if the narrow House Republican majority now has a fleet of major bills on deck to follow this. Nor are such steps justified by a routine impasse over funding a department — a lever that Republicans, too, find useful when in the minority.

 

In fact, it is far from certain that there are enough Republicans in the Senate who can be counted on to pass the SAVE America Act, let alone who would support reworking Senate rules or procedures in order to pass it. The purely political argument that Republicans need to break the filibuster in order to show their demoralized voters that they can pass something besides the One Big Beautiful Bill Act is therefore backwards: it would be even more demoralizing to go through a public reversal of great and permanent benefit to Democrats only to get nothing enacted. That may benefit activists who want an excuse to promote primary challengers to incumbent Republican senators, but it does nothing to serve either the country, the party, or conservatism.

 

It is abandoning the filibuster, rather than defending it, that constitutes unilateral disarmament. Senate Republicans should have the courage to hold on to weapons they may need again.

Trump Puts Midterms Above National Security

By Kevin D. Williamson

Friday, March 13, 2026

 

“In Africa,” Ernest Hemingway wrote, “a thing is true at first light and a lie by noon.” And so it goes with the Trump administration’s illegal war in Iran: In the case of tapping worldwide strategic petroleum reserves, the administration had the right idea at breakfast—don’t—and the wrong one sometime around the president’s third Diet Coke of the day. 

 

As one might expect, waging war in a critical chokepoint in the world’s supply of petroleum—and many other goods—has been disruptive, with oil prices spiking and consumer gasoline and diesel prices following. President Donald Trump had at first resisted calls to tap oil reserves in the United States and the other 31 members of the International Energy Agency, but then came TACO Wednesday, which follows TACO Tuesday and precedes TACO Thursday—if it is a day of the week ending in the letter “y,” then you can count on it: Trump Always Chickens Out. His resolve to hold the line on oil reserves lasted about as long as his relationship with Stormy Daniels.

 

Some of you readers will be elderly enough to remember the first Trump administration, when the president’s response to the emerging COVID epidemic was framed almost entirely in terms of the stock market, a decline in which apparently was too terrifying a prospect for the toughest president in the history of presidential toughness. (Well, the 44th-toughest maybe, though even that pansy “Fainting Frank” Pierce tried to serve when his country called on him.) Putting market volatility above ordinary public health concerns led to some idiotic decision-making in that period.

 

Joe Biden led his Democrats to an epochal ass-whoopin’ when Americans grew outraged by inflation that, though it was bad enough, was nowhere near as bad as it was in the 1970s; Trump, who is very much a creature of the 1970s, surely has thought at least a little bit about Jimmy Carter-era gasoline rationing, gasoline lines, and high gasoline prices, which caused the already insufferable gentleman from Georgia to end his presidency reviled and pitied and scorned. The way the graph lines are moving right now, Trump’s approval ratings are poised to dip below his BMI more or less presently.

 

So, the oil taps will be opened. The total 32-country discharge is significant as a share of the reserves but not very significant as a share of the oil market, representing less than three weeks of typical oil traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. That may be enough to quell markets for a hot minute, but it is unlikely to prove dispositive. Oil traders can do math, and they understand that stopgap measures do not address the underlying risk or the sources of that risk. Trump’s character is chaotic, unstable, and erratic, which produces policies that are chaotic, unstable, and erratic, which, in turn, push world affairs in a chaotic, unstable, and erratic direction. The United States does not lack adequate resources for dealing with such a power as Iran or a challenge such as its mining of the Strait of Hormuz or other attempts by Tehran to wage economic warfare—the tools are fine, but the workman is a dim, lazy neurotic who spends his days watching cable television “news” programming and getting ragey on social media. The Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marines are all ready, willing, and able to do whatever is asked of them: The problem is the commander in chief.

 

Trump also sees himself as commander in chief of the economy, which is why it is not entirely unfair to describe his fundamental policy orientation as fascist, corporatism being the ordinary economic form of fascism. It is not that Trump cares very much about the economy—his tariff policies should have made that clear enough—but he cares about how the economy affects the public’s opinion of him, and high gasoline prices are, for parochial cultural reasons, especially irritating to Americans in a way that other price increases are not. (No one living has ever heard an American complaining about high book prices.) The strategy being served by these strategic reserves is not a national security strategy or even a national economic strategy—it is a Republican campaign strategy.

 

Strategic petroleum reserves are intended to be deployed in genuine emergencies, e.g., for military use if wartime circumstances should make it difficult to access oil at any price. Moderately high gasoline prices that displease Yukon XL owners driving to Okie Family Market are not a national emergency—they are a political inconvenience for Donald Trump. But Donald Trump treats the U.S. government—and, in this case, U.S. strategic assets—as his personal property for his personal use: He refers to “my generals” as though the military were his personal Praetorian Guard, uses ICE as a personal political goon squad, uses the DOJ as a gang of personal henchmen and henchwomen, etc.—why not use the power and prestige of the United States to also treat worldwide petroleum reserves as his personal property, too? One thing follows from the other.

 

Trump insists he has a grand plan, which brings us back to Hemingway: “In Africa a thing is true at first light and a lie by noon and you have no more respect for it than for the lovely, perfect weed-fringed lake you see across the sun-baked salt plain. You have walked across that plain in the morning and you know that no such lake is there. But now it is there, absolutely true, beautiful and believable.” The problem with Donald Trump and his followers is that they cannot tell the mirage from the real thing, which ought to be of some concern when launching a new violent engagement in the Middle East.