By Jim Geraghty
Tuesday, July 08, 2025
He’s the greatest president ever . . . at least for today:
President Donald Trump said Monday
that the United States would send more weapons to Ukraine to aid in its war
against Russia, days after the White House announced that the Pentagon had halted deliveries of some key weapons to the country.
“We have to,” Trump said of the
U.S. providing weapons to Ukraine, speaking to reporters at a dinner with
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. “They have to be able to defend
themselves. They’re getting hit very hard now.”
The shipment will include
“defensive weapons, primarily,” Trump said, remarking that “so, so many people
are dying in that mess.” Among the weapons paused were air defense missiles,
precisely at the time Russia dramatically increased its overnight bombardments of Ukrainian cities.
Trump’s comments appeared to be an
abrupt turnaround from last week, when White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly said
that the Defense Department had decided to halt some shipments to Ukraine after
a review found American military stockpiles to be low.
Bravo, Mr. President!
A curious detail from the Wall Street Journal’s reporting:
Trump told Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelensky in a telephone call Friday that he wasn’t responsible for
the halt in weapons shipments to Kyiv.
Trump said that he had directed a
review of Pentagon munitions stockpiles after the U.S. struck Iran’s nuclear sites last month but hadn’t ordered
the department to freeze the arms deliveries, according to people briefed on
the conversation.
If that halt in weapons shipments to Ukraine wasn’t
ordered by the president . . . who did order that change in policy?
We’re a long way from that Oval Office dressing-down of
Zelensky alongside Vice President Vance, now, aren’t we? Everything can change
in a New York minute, particularly with a New York mogul.
President Trump is bombing the Iranian nuclear facilities, bombing the Houthis and restoring freedom of the seas,
getting NATO to dramatically increase defense spending . . .
honestly, this guy is terrific — the best neocon president we’ve had in ages.
That’s only about 35 percent tongue-in-cheek; President Trump is feeling his
oats and sending an explicitly clear message to hostile foreign regimes, rogue
states, and terrorist groups around the world. Second-term Trump doesn’t have
any time or patience for your nonsense. Perhaps over the preceding four years,
you saw U.S. forces leaving Afghanistan in chaos and got used to a doddering
octogenarian muttering, “don’t . . . don’t . . .” as a warning.
Since January 20, the world has indeed grown more
unpredictable and dangerous . . . for a lot of America’s enemies.
Zohran Mamdani and the Phenomenon of ‘Too Left to
Fail’
On Independence Day — a day most Americans are paying
attention to fireworks and cookouts, not the news — the New York Times revealed that New York City mayoral
candidate Zohran Mamdani identified his race as “Asian” and “Black or African
American” as a high school senior applying to college. Mamdani’s heritage is
Indian, and he was born in Uganda.
When an outlandish street interviewer asked Mamdani in April, “Would you claim
African American status, like Elon Musk?” Mamdani replied with a laugh, “No, I
would not claim that status. . . . I’m proud to be Ugandan, but I think that
that is misleading.”
Apparently, teenage Mamdani felt differently.
If you call the Mamdani campaign, is the on-hold
music “Soul Man”?
You can ask whether a candidate’s college application —
particularly to a school where he was rejected — matters much. (Depending on
your age, this wasn’t that long ago; Mamdani applied to college after
Barack Obama’s inauguration. But there is no way that the son of a Columbia
professor and a successful Hollywood filmmaker did not know that he was
increasing his odds of acceptance by telling the school he was “Black or
African American,” and that he was misrepresenting his identity on some level.
Christopher Rufo wonders if Columbia University, where
Mamdani’s father was a professor, recognized that the applicant did not meet
the usual definition of “Black or African American”:
There is a possibility that
Mamdani’s box-checking gambit backfired. The full application includes the name
and contact information for his father, Mahmood Mamdani, and his mother, Mira
Nair, both of whom are public figures and neither of whom is black. The
application also included a flag noting that the elder Mamdani appeared to be
“affiliated with Columbia” and another line noting the family’s address in an
exclusive Manhattan neighborhood. With even cursory research, an admissions
officer could have seen that Mr. Mamdani was neither black, nor
underprivileged.
We all know schools have different standards for
different ethnic groups. As of
2023, the average SAT score of an Asian student is 1219, the average SAT
score of a white student is 1082, the average SAT score of a Hispanic student
is 943 and the average SAT score of a black student 908.
Schools lower their expectations and standards for
certain ethnic groups and raise them for others. This is not an allegation or conspiracy theory, this is a
proven fact:
Overall, Harvard’s policies roughly
quadrupled the likelihood that an African American applicant would be accepted
relative to a white student with similar academic qualifications, while
multiplying the likelihood of admissions 2.4 times for Hispanics. For
out-of-state applicants to UNC, the force of racial preferences multiplied
African Americans from 1.5 percent of admitted students to 15.6 percent, a
tenfold increase. Black applicants applying in-state to Chapel Hill gained a
smaller advantage from affirmative action, becoming 70 percent likelier to win
admission.
Colleges and universities contend that if you notice
this, you are racist.
Just as there was no serious consequence for Senator Elizabeth Warren claiming
Native American heritage based upon erroneous claims in family stories,
there will be no serious consequence for Mamdani. Our society has a
well-established precedent: You are allowed to lie about your race or heritage
to benefit from affirmative action, as long as you are a progressive and the
progressive movement needs you. Nobody needed anything from Rachel Dolezal and
she couldn’t do favors for anyone, so she could be turned into a national punchline. By the time Warren’s false claims were discovered and widely reported in
2018, she was already a senator and a leader of the progressive movement — she could hire people, blurb books, introduce
legislation, speak at their events. Warren had allies who would defend her.
This made her effectively untouchable.
It will probably not surprise you to learn that
progressive commentators are coming out of the woodwork to insist that it is
perfectly fine for a young man of Indian heritage to identify himself as black
on college applications. The New York Times metro section ran a lengthy
article asking whether the scoop by other reporters “should matter.” I look forward to tomorrow’s article, “why
you shouldn’t read or trust what we reported a few days ago.”
In fact, some progressives contend, by reporting the
story, the New York Times is pushing the message of white supremacists.
The report apparently has enraged younger and more
progressive New York Times staffers, who apparently believe that the
paper is violating its ethics by reporting news that makes their preferred
candidate look bad. From Semafor:
The piece also seemed to divide
staff, and reignited years-old internal tensions between some younger, more
left-leaning members of staff and management.
“People are really upset,” one
Times journalist told Semafor.
In a series of posts on Bluesky,
Times columnist Jamelle Bouie said, “i think you should tell readers if your
source is a nazi.” On Friday, he deleted his posts, saying they violated the
Times’ social media guidelines. Bouie also deleted subsequent posts on Sunday
that also seemed to express frustration at the Times’ decision to publish the
story, and shared a post that said “NYT & many of its elite white readers
are still obsessed with race-conscious college admissions.”
Look, man, you can’t publicly take shots at your
colleagues and not expect some consequences. If I could hold my tongue about
Taylor Lorenz while she was working at the Washington Post, you’ve got
no excuse.
You’ve heard of “too big to fail.” Mamdani is “too left
to fail.” The progressive movement needs a new icon. Bernie Sanders is older
than Joe Biden. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez won her shock primary victory back in
2018. “The Squad” is smaller than it used to be, with Jamaal Bowman and Cori
Bush now former members of Congress after losing primaries. The left needs a
new hero, and by virtue of being the odds-on favorite to be the next mayor,
he’s the guy.
No scandal can be deemed important enough to count as a
serious reason to oppose him. Every sin will be forgiven, every crime excused.
The progressives need him to be their next Great Whi—er, their Great Hope of
Undetermined Hue.
And let’s point out that Mamdani doesn’t exactly have a
lengthy record in government to chew over and analyze. His former primary
rival, Andrew Cuomo, sneered that Mamdani had been in government for “twenty
minutes,” and while that’s an exaggeration, the 33-year-old Mamdani’s record is
sparse.
He spent most of his younger years as a rapper under the
name “Young Cardamom.” He was elected to public office by winning a state
assembly race in 2020 and ran unopposed in 2022 and 2024. (The highest turnout
in any of Mamdani’s state assembly races was 38,817 in 2020.) In his four years
in the state assembly, three bills he introduced have become law; one of them
was to allow liquor to be consumed at the Museum of the Moving Image in his
district. He was the driving force behind a pilot program to phase out bus
fares, but the program was not extended.
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