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Oscars: The Thrill Is Gone. Long Gone. The REAL History of Iran’s Quest for Nukes. Pletka: We’re Not Losing. Favorite Supreme Leader Rumor. Bowman on “Jeerleading.” & More

The glitz, the glamor … the tedium.

“Super Long Oscars 2026 Had Plenty of Holier-Than-Thou Lectures, Few Memorable Moments” is the New York Post headline.  “One Battle after Another,” described by a Brit source as  a “Hollywood liberal fantasy in movie form” was Best Picture. The movie presented “a mix of serious themes like political struggle, oppression and resistance with comedy.” The Free Press found the movie “unredeemable,” which was pretty must your humble scribe’s impression.

Jessie Buckey, as was not unexpected, won Best Actress for her portrayal of Mrs. Shakespeare as a pagan, half witch in the interminable “Hamnet.” Unherd detected the “whiff of a gimmick” as nagging Mrs. Shakespeare (you’re always in London and not paying enough attention to my needs, blah blah blah) so completely upstaged Mr. S. Yes, in 2026 the Oscars have a lot of girl power.

 “Oscars? What Oscars?” asks Powerline’s John Hinderaker, who suggests (rightly, I think) that in a politically divided country conservatives don’t give a hoot about the left-shewing OscarsNational Review’s Jeffrey Blehar writes that it’s the night when “Hollywood celebrates its collapse into cultural irrelevance.” The evening is a “celebration of coastal elite tastes and politics,” writes Blehar. “Can the Oscars leave the woke era behind?” asks Spiked On-line (the article does offer interesting comments about a new award this year, for casting). Best Supporting Actor Sean Penn skipped the evening to visit Ukraine, host country to the socially acceptable war.

You can bet your bottom dollar with absolute certitude that nobody at the Oscars was supporting the other war. President Trump says that the U.S. has wiped out Iran’s air defenses, but he is not ready to declare a win. In an editorial headlined “The Real Nuclear History of Iran” the Editorial Board of the Wall Street declares:

So much of today’s media framing of the Iran war relies on a mythology of what came before. The gist is that Iran was contained by Barack Obama until Donald Trump mucked it up, and now the regime will really pursue nuclear weapons.

Naive is too kind a word for this deceptive, partisan history. The real history is worth rehearsing because it shows that Iran’s regime has been relentless for decades in its quest for the bomb, which is why President Trump is weakening it by force….

Critics of Mr. Trump’s bombing campaign now say it will motivate Iran to pursue nuclear weapons in earnest. But that’s what it has been doing for years. Critics also say the IRGC will now steer the ship of state, but it’s been doing that since the days of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. The IRGC’s humiliation of Iran’s President in recent days only lifts that veil.

Bill Clinton faced a similar moment of truth with North Korea in the 1990s before it had the bomb, and he chose to trust Pyongyang’s diplomatic promises. North Korea lied and cheated and built a bomb anyway. Now it is building missiles that could reach the U.S. Mr. Trump chose to act instead, after his predecessors didn’t, and that is a service to the world.

Rich Lowry also addresses former President Obama’s “disproven illusion” about a nuclear Iran. The American Spectator says the administration has not defined victory, while an X post from the Institute for the Study of War finds that the military trajectory in Iran is relatively positive for the U.S. (Thanks to RCP for noticing this.) U.S. allies have begun working to open Strait of Hormuz in response to pressure from President Trump. The New York Times emphasized that the allies were “cool” to the President’s demands. The U.S. has hit Kharg Island, which raises the stakes for Iran’s oil exports. President Trump is warning of “very bad future” if NATO allies don’t help open the Strait of Hormuz. AEI’s Danielle Pletka: “No, We’re Not Losing in Iran.” Just for fun: Rumors that Supreme Leader Jr. is gay.

Formerly, we worried primarily about terrorists coming into the United States. “Terrorists Are Now Often Made in the USA” is the headline over a sobering op-ed in the Wall Street Journal. Kevin Cohen, an Israeli security expert, points out that in recent terrorist attack on U.S. soil, the perpetrators were naturalized U.S. citizens or offspring of naturalized immigrants:

The violence that unsettled Western societies throughout 2025 looked nothing like the earlier era of clandestine crossings and centrally directed terrorist cells. Increasingly the danger emerges inside societies that still treat admission as the end of a security process rather than the beginning of one. The shift isn’t simply about the number of attacks. It is about where the failure occurs.

Federal agencies now warn that lone-actor violence may be among the hardest threats to detect, precisely because people who are radicalized domestically often remain invisible to investigators until they act.

Radicalization is a strange concept. Would it be rude to ask if these terrorists came to our shores pre-radicalized and we overlooked it? James Gagliano elaborates on our willful blindness. Believe it or not, some have seen loss of a family member in the Iran war as a mitigating factor in the terrorist attack on a kid-filled synagogue in Michigan. The family was a brother who belonged to the terrorist organization Hezbollah—or as the no-nonsense New York Post puts it “hez my brother.” “Why was Mohamed Bailor Jalloh [who had previously been convicted on a terrorist charge before his attack that left one dead at Old Dominion University) not in federal prison?” asks former federal prosecutor Andrew McCarthy. Jesse Arm says in City Journal that the Jewish community must take defensive measures.

While all this is happening, Democrats are refusing to fund the Homeland Security Department. “Put Chuck Schumer on TSA Duty” is the headline over a WSJ editorial. TSA comes under DHS. Since they are not being paid to work, many are calling in sick or outright quitting their jobs. In addition to national security risks, this is no way to treat people.

The SAVE America Act, which would require an ID to vote, will likely come up for a vote tomorrow. USA TODAY has a story explaining what the act would require:

So there are a number of different types of documents that could potentially be eligible for demonstrating a proof of citizenship, birth certificates, passports, all those types of things would help folks. But it’s important to acknowledge that there are lots of citizens that don’t necessarily have these types of documents readily available. 

Oh, c’mon. Readily available? I bet anyone can scrounge us these elusive documents to board a plane or get a benefit. The story goes onto quote the left stalwart Center for American Progress to the effect that 146 Americans do not have a valid passport. You don’t have to have a passport. Townhall has a story on a “Minnesota Elections Official Finally Admits What We All Knew About Illegals Voting.”

Ms. Must has avoided Tucker Carlson stories because they seem so insider baseball. And maybe because I long ago had a soft spot for the preppie populist. Apparently, the former Fox host is alleging that he is being framed as a spy. Eli Lake has a story at The Free Press.

Karol Markowicz writes that it does matter that New York’s First Lady Rama Duwaji is an enthusiastic fan of the abhorrent October 7 massacre.  Also only in New York, kids, New York’s ‘Environmental Justice Communities,’ Pumps Money Into Minority Neighborhoods in What Could Be Illegal Discrimination.

Don’t miss James Bowman’s “Melania: The Age of Jeerleading” at American Greatness. A culture that once celebrated heroes now prefers sneering at them—proof that Western self-forgetfulness has turned admiration into ridicule and criticism into a spectator sport, Jim argues.

Also at American Greatness, “Is James Talarico Really a Christian X-Ray?” Hey, David French likes him, but was that endorsement the kiss of death (or more likely a source of mirth).  

Filibuster, RIP? Don’t Be Spooked by Nuclear Testing. Insurance Fraud and “Trans” Medicine. Boo: Glamour UK Picks Guys for Dolls. And More

Ghosties and ghoulies and long legged beasties will be out for Halloween haunting today, along with politicized witches.  It may also soon be RIP for the filibuster.

President Trump is urging the GOP to end the partial government shutdown by going nuclear on the Senate filibuster:

President Donald Trump on Thursday urged Republicans to end the filibuster in order to end the monthlong government shutdown.

In a late-night Truth Social post, Trump noted that Democrats had tried to eliminate the Senate procedure when they had control of both chambers of Congress and the White House during the Biden administration, but then-Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema — both of whom have since left the Democratic Party to become independents — helped block the effort.

Trump revived talk of the “nuclear option,” after his returning from his Asia trip this week. 

The Senate filibuster rule benefits the minority party prevents Senate minorities from being railroaded by the majority:  

The filibuster is the Senate rule for agreement by 60 of its 100 members to pass most legislation. Republicans hold a 53-47 majority in the Senate and a 219-213 majority in the House of Representatives.

“It is now time for the Republicans to play their ‘TRUMP CARD’, and go for what is called the Nuclear Option — Get rid of the Filibuster, and get rid of it, NOW,” Trump wrote on Truth Social on Thursday, Oct. 30.

Food stamps lapse tomorrow—though a federal judge is planning to wave a magic wand and keep them going—and airlines are feeling the pinch. No More Trick or Treat for Teachers’ Unions? Interestingly, the shutdown has exposed the biggest lie in education—i.e., that the Department of Education is essential for education. An editorial in the Wall Street Journal headlined “The Truth about ObamaCare Costs” explains how Dems, who see extended enhanced subsidies as essential to ending the shutdown, aren’t being candid.

President Trump is also going nuclear on … nuclear testing.

“Trump Reverses ‘Asinine’ US Nuclear-weapons Policy — and It’s about Time” is the headline on Rich Lowry’s column in the New York Post:

Donald Trump has trampled on another taboo, and it’s a good thing. 

The president said in a Truth Social post that the United States will begin “immediately” testing our “Nuclear Weapons” on “an equal basis” with Russia and China.

It’s not clear what this means exactly; Trump could be referring to the delivery systems that carry nuclear weapons, or the weapons themselves. 

If it is the latter, as most news accounts assume, it will represent an advance for the US nuclear deterrent and a victory of common sense over superstition.

Climate activism sometimes verged into superstition. That is one reason why Microsoft founder Bill Gates’s rethinking climate change is HUGE. An editorial in the Wall Street Journal looks at Mr. Gates’ revised view:

Mr. Gates now sounds like Bjorn Lomborg, the “skeptical environmentalist” whose writing often runs in these pages. Mr. Lomborg has been arguing for years that while warming temperatures are a reality, the world’s poor in particular face far more urgent challenges. He believes, as these columns have also long argued, that the best way to cope with rising temperatures is through innovation, adaptation, and policies that continue to spread economic growth and prosperity.

“Sorry Republicans, There’s No Silver Lining to a Mamdani Win” is the headline of Joseph Sternberg’s Wall Street Journal column today. Sternberg writes:

New York is on the cusp of electing a mayor who’s far outside the mainstream of a country that otherwise saw a pronounced shift toward Donald Trump less than a year ago. Everything about Mr. Mamdani’s economics and left-wing culture warring seems to scream “unelectable outside New York City.” Much of his persona should scream “unelectable inside New York City,” too….

The problem for Republicans and others opposed to far-out leftiness is that failure doesn’t speak for itself. Voters around the world are in a break-things mood. Although parties of the right often are the beneficiaries, voters aren’t always discriminating when they choose between one political sledgehammer or another.

Meanwhile, former Governor Andrew Cuomo, running a distance second in the New York mayor’s race, might have hope, according to a New York Post op-ed, if he would embrace New York’s Republican voters, but he spurns them. They make up 20 percent of the electorate. Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa’s chances “aren’t looking good.” Jack Ciattarelli, GOP candidate for Governor of New Jersey, appears to be facing much better odds.

Gone Fishing. “Jack Smith, Master Angler” is the headline on the Wall Street Journal’s Kimberley Strassel’s column on the Special Prosecutor, who, in prosecuting Donald Trump “cast a net the size of the Republican ocean.” Strassel writes:

To appreciate fully the outrageousness of this fishing expedition, remember the original setting for the Smith probe. By the time Attorney General Merrick Garland named the prosecutor to the job—in November 2022—the Justice Department had been investigating the events of Jan. 6 for 22 months and had charged hundreds of people. Yet none of those charged were named Trump, in part because there to this day is no evidence he communicated with the only actors (Proud Boys, Oath Keepers) who actually plotted to—and did—breach the Capitol on that awful day….

Let the legacy of Jack Smith be no more Jack Smiths.

Ms. Must doesn’t do much royalty coverage. But the saga of the man formerly known as prince (this headline is much in vogue today) who is now merely Andrew Mountbatten Windsor is so astonishing that it rates a mention. Hard on the girls, but they keep their titles. It is not beyond the realm of possibility than Mr. Mountbatten Windsor could face a police investigation of his role in the Jeffrey Epstein scandal.  

Well, I Guess They Learned to Code. “Insurance Fraud Is Widespread in Transgender Medicine” is the headline of a dynamite City Journal expose by Leon Sapir. Sapir writes:

A key strategy in the Trump administration’s crackdown on gender medicine is identifying and prosecuting insurance fraud. A common form of potential billing fraud involves use of the diagnosis “Endocrine Disorder Not Otherwise Specified” (E34.9 in the International Classification of Diseases handbook), instead of “Gender Identity Disorders” (F64), for patients who do not have or are not being treated for endocrine disorders….

A castrated male will be unable to produce sex hormones, which play a critical role in the maintenance of most body systems. Iatrogenic primary hypogonadism—or doctor-induced underproduction of hormones—results in infertility and can lead to osteoporosis, a serious medical problem.

In its clinical practice guideline on gender medicine, the Endocrine Society recommends that females be given six to 100 times the normal reference range of the virilizing hormones. “Gender-affirming care,” in this case, means iatrogenic hyperandrogenism—an endocrine disorder desired for its secondary cosmetic effects.

Glamour magazine, U.K. edition, probably doesn’t use the term “castrated male” in its “Women of the Year” issue that profiles nine men who identify as “transgender” women—or “Dolls,” as the magazine calls them. All are pictured wearing “Protect the Dolls” T-shirts (“What we really crave is to work, love and exist with dignity”).

If you’re still in need of something unsettling for the spooky day and night upon us, City Journal celebrates Halloween with a nice story on the novelist Shirley Jackson, whose dark, gothic tales deserve a place on your shelf not too far from the Master, Edgar Allen Poe. Jackson’s press “reduced her to being a feminist icon,” which was horribly unfair to Jackson’s genius.

The Trumps charmingly gave Halloween treats to kids at the White House last night, which was probably scary to people like this.  This just in: Kash Patel’s FBI foiled a plot for Halloween violence.