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Oswald Spengler, Call Your Office: New Political Ad Signals Decline of Western Civ. Iran Still Up in Air. Dem “Secret Sauce.” Supreme Court Vacancy Rumors. More

“Has Contrived Coarseness Jumped the Shark?”

Well, something’s jumped the shark. Under the above headline, National Review’s Noah Rothman writes:

In her bid for the U.S. Senate, Illinois Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton may have done the country a great service. Her debut campaign ad is so gratuitously obscene that it may push past its breaking point a trend in which politicians attempt to convey authenticity via the liberal use of four-letter words.

If you’re inclined to watch the spot, I’d recommend doing so with headphones.

Stratton’s campaign ad consists of a string of people saying “f… Trump.” The ad is embedded in the NR piece. Illinois Senator Tammy Duckworth is one of the people facing the camera and saying, “F— Trump.” Illinois Governor and 2028 hopeful JB Pritzker appears in the ad, which he reposted on X, but doesn’t say the f-word. Stratton, who is running for retiring Senator Dick Durbin’s seat, did have a political message, overshadowed as it was by the repeated obscenity:

She added that she’s “not scared of a wannabe dictator. I’m running for Senate to stand up to Donald Trump.” Stratton said she will abolish Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and “hold Trump accountable for the crimes he’s committed.”

I am scared of the civilizational rot that would lead to anybody’s thinking this is okay, much less a Governor and sitting Senator. Pritzker has given the Stratton campaign $5 million. Words fail me.

In other news, we are still on tenterhooks about Iran, and President Trump’s advisers are urging him to focus on the economy—but it’s difficult with the fate of Iran and other international concerns. Oh, and in response to former President Obama’s offhand remark about space aliens, President Trump is directing the Pentagon to release files related to UFOs and space aliens. Sorry, I meant to say undocumented critters from other galaxies.

President Trump may be distracted from talking about the economy, but the Wall Street Journal isn’t. An editorial headlined “The Embarrassing Truth About Tariffs” continues the Journal’s criticism of the President’s beloved tariffs:

The flap concerns the analysis we told you about last week by four economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. They found that American households and businesses are bearing nearly 90% of the cost of the Trump tariffs, contrary to Mr. Trump’s claim that foreigners will pay.

Clearly the White House is worried that voters might conclude this research aligns with their own experience. Kevin Hassett, director of the National Economic Council, took to CNBC Wednesday to pan the New York Fed research as “the worst paper I’ve ever seen in the history of the Federal Reserve System” and suggested the people who wrote and published it should be “disciplined.” Disciplined how? Put in stocks? For a tariff paper?

The Fed analysis aligns with other research into the distribution of tariff costs from Harvard economists and Germany’s Kiel Institute—and with common sense. There isn’t widespread evidence that foreign producers are cutting their prices to offset the tariffs, the main mechanism by which foreigners would “pay” for the border taxes.

The Times of London compares the impact of arrest of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor to the abdication crisis that shook the monarchy in 1936. Andrew’s arrest is the “end of reverence for the royal family,” writes a saddened Tim Stanley in the Washington Post:

The arrest on Thursday of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, the fool formerly known as a prince, marks the definite end of public reverence toward the British monarchy. I write that as an Englishman who is rather fond of it. …

When the Epstein scandal spread to Britain, it looked to many of us like the moral indictment of an establishment we have long suspected of being rotten.

Rather ironically, “Randy Andy” is in trouble not for his fabled sexual adventures but on suspicion having shared secret British trade information with foreign powers (also addressed in a WSJ editorial). Thank God the late Queen Elizabeth II isn’t here to witness this is the response of many. Mountbatten-Windsor’s facial expression as he was driven away from the police station was one of extreme shock and terrible fear.

Wall Street Journal columnist Kimberley Strassel writes that the Democrats plan to deploy a “secret sauce” to win in the midterms:

When Democratic operatives look at Texas state Rep. James Talarico, they don’t see just another young progressive vying for a U.S. Senate seat. They see the political equivalent of In-N-Out Burger Spread—a new secret sauce to win over voters. The party is rolling out the recipe nationwide, and the midterms will provide initial sales figures.

Mr. Talarico is an early test. In 11 days he faces progressive steamroller U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett in the Senate primary. If he’s got a shot, it’s because a growing number of Democratic money men and influencers see in the 36-year-old Presbyterian seminarian one answer to their cultural alienation from voters. 

Whatever the outcome, there’s a warning here for Republicans. Democrats aren’t letting working-class voters go without a fight. This shift will tempt some GOP leaders to try to match the left’s economic pandering, in a race to see who can better stoke class warfare, or promise more subsets of voters. That’s a recipe for loss (the left always wins bidding matches), not to mention an insult to working-class Americans who are voting for the GOP because they want good policy—not for handouts, or because they like tattoos.

Virginia Governor Abigail Spanberger doesn’t have tattoos (as far as I know), but she did run as a moderate. Now, she will give the Democratic affordability-themed response to next week’s State of the Union address. Larry Kudlow writes that the SOTU should be optimistic:

And that boom has already started. And it’s generating 4 percent-plus growth. I know you can’t eat GDP, but you can eat groceries, or buy essentials at the local Walmart.

Meanwhile, Liberal Patriot Ruy Teixeira says that his party has a “fraud problem:”

The specter of welfare fraud haunts the Democrats once again. Concerns about abuse of generous government programs helped power the rise of Reagan-era conservatism in the 1970s and ’80s. Could the criminal abuse of hundreds of millions of dollars in welfare costs in Minnesota, which has brought down the state’s Democratic governor, Tim Walz, be leveraged to similar broad political effect today?

Another potential liability for the Dems, according to Leor Sapir, writing at City Journal, is the transgender issue. Sapir argues that “gender medicine” is shaking the general public’s faith in doctors, even ones who don’t perform gender surgeries.

News Flash. The MAGA base is not isolationist. That’s the conclusion of Mark Penn and Andrew Stein who write at the Wall Street Journal that the MAGA base backs Trumps foreign interventions. Real Clear Politics discusses whether Trump’s Board of Peace might replace the United Nations.

Rumor Mill. Will there be a Supreme Court vacancy this summer? Real Clear Politics cogitates on this matter:

Justices Clarence Thomas and Samel Alito are, by some order of magnitude, the two most principled conservative justices currently sitting on the high court. It stands to reason that they would like to be replaced by ideological fellow travelers — something that likely requires a likeminded president and a likeminded U.S. Senate majority.

Nancy Guthie’s family goes into the weekend with the case of their missing 84-year-old mother seemingly not much closer to resolution. It is being alleged that the Pima County Sheriff in charge has turned the case into an ego trip. The FBI can only take over if the family requests it.  

For a heart-stopping moment, I thought the item was going to be bad news. But it was a milestone, not the obituary I feared: Larry the cat marked 15 years as the official mouser of 10 Downing Street earlier this week. Here are pictures of Larry’s remarkable career and the Prime Ministers who have served under him.

More good news from the animal kingdom: An orphaned monkey has found a cuddly pal. Awww.

‘Iraq Syndrome’ Affects Iran Views. SCOTUS’ Blow to Rad Trans Movement. Nero Newsom Sips Wine as LA Burns. And More

As Israeli Defense Forces carried out a series of overnight strikes on Tehran, the world waits for President Trump to decide whether the U.S. will bomb the Islamic Republic’s principal nuclear installation.

The president says his decision will come sometime in the next two weeks, insisting that there is still a chance for a deal with the Mullahs, but breaking news is that the Mullahs have rejected President Trump’s overtures. But is there hidden brilliance in Trump’s delaying tactics?

Meanwhile, Douglas Murray writes that President Trump can end the nuclear threat from Iran with one call. Murray recalls that since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, Iran has exported terror all over the world. Murray writes:

President Trump’s campaign promise is that he will never allow Iran to have nukes.

The president’s only need is to make good on his promise to the American electorate.

If he does that, then he will send a sharp but necessary message to a regime that has too long threatened his own life, the life of Israel and indeed the world.

Is it as clear-cut as Murray suggests? In an exclusive report, the New York Post cites unnamed White House insiders who say that Trump fears that Iran might become another Libya. The Post observes:

The president in recent days has specifically mentioned the oil-rich North African country’s decade-long plunge into anarchy in 2011 — after the US joined a NATO bombing campaign to oust dictator Muammar Gaddafi — three sources close to the administration said.

Libya is not the only issue. The thing that is holding many Republicans back from full-throated support of U.S. strikes on the Fordow nuclear facility is (as the headline on Peggy Noonan’s all Street Journal column puts it) “Iraq’s shadow over the Iran debate.” You remember how that turned out. “Iran in 2025 Is Not Iraq 2003” is the headline on Robert Spencer’s PJ Media column. Spencer, who has written extensively on Islam, did not support the Iraq War. He writes:

And now, the idea that the Islamic regime in Iran could well be in its last days is giving a lot of people who style themselves “America First” the vapors. But Iran in 2025 is pretty much the polar opposite of Iraq in 2003. Saddam’s Iraq did not enforce Sharia; it was a secular state, which rankled many Muslim hardliners within the country….

In Iran today, on the other hand, people have been suffering under the rule of Islamic law for 46 years now. They’re so sick of it that a recent survey revealed the shocking fact that fewer than 40 percent of Iranians now identify as Muslim at all. The country was Western-oriented and secular before 1979, and many people still fondly recall those days, and have told their children about them. 

Examiner Chief Political Correspondent Byron York asks two essential questions: Is a U.S. strike on Fordow really necessary, and will it work? The Wall Street Journal’s Kimberley Strassel addresses “the ‘America First’ faceoff” over the pressing Iran question. Strassel argues that “the isolationists” made a mistake in taking a stand against a position most Americans support.

Meanwhile, an editorial in the same newspaper writes in the same vein. Coining the term “Iraq Syndrome,” the WSJ editors write:

The press is full of reporting on the “MAGA civil war” over Iran, but what’s notable is that the loudest isolationists appear to be losing the debate. It’s worth considering how they’ve misread the historical moment, the views of most Republicans, and above all President Trump….

Mr. Trump sees himself as a peacemaker, but that is no contradiction with wanting to deny a nuclear bomb to a theocratic Iranian regime. On that point he has been consistent since before he entered politics. The inconsistencies lie with the isolationists so traumatized by Iraq and Afghanistan that they would let a revolutionary regime go nuclear in the name of peace.

The Supreme Court’s 6-3 ruling upholding Tennessee’s ban on surgical and chemical castration for minors came down Wednesday, the day before Juneteenth. So we’re just getting around to this all-important ruling, which delivered a “major blow” to the activist transgender movement. Justice Clarence Thomas signed on to Chief Justice John Roberts’ majority opinion but wrote a concurring opinion that demolished “the expert class”:

“First, so-called experts have no license to countermand the ‘wisdom, fairness, or logic of legislative choices.’ … Second, contrary to the representations of the United States and the private plaintiffs, there is no medical consensus on how best to treat gender dysphoria in children,” Thomas wrote. “Third, notwithstanding the alleged experts’ view that young children can provide informed consent to irreversible sex-transition treatments, whether such consent is possible is a question of medical ethics that States must decide for themselves

Meanwhile, a California Democrat whose daughter had toyed with the idea of “gender transition,” proclaimed herself “absolutely thrilled” with the high court’s ruling:

“We need to protect all the children in the United States, not just those who are lucky enough to live in Republican states,” she added.

New York’s Democratic primary is June 24th, and all eyes are upon anti-Israel radical socialist mayoral candidate Zohran Mandani. The eyes of business leaders, especially, are on Mamdani because they wonder if, in the event of his election, it will be time to pull up stakes in Gotham. “It only takes a handful of successful people to leave to decimate the city’s tax base,” Bill Ackman told The Free Press. While Mamdani is getting the buzz, a Manhattan Institute poll has former Governor Andrew Cuomo ahead.

Did Nero Use Hair Gel: We now learn that America’s own Nero has repeated his French Laundry debacle by having a festive time at an exclusive wine tasting in Napa Valley while Los Angeles burned during the ICE riots. City Journal has the story:

In this instance, it was wine, rather than food, that caught Newsom’s attention. But the principle is the same: Newsom sips Cabernet while his state burns.

But Newsom has sorrows to drown: He lost to Trump on the National Guard issue.

Another powerful figure in Democratic politics, teachers’ union boss Randi Weingarten, has resigned her position at the Democratic National Committee. What? You didn’t realize that Weingarten, the power behind the school closures that led to learning loss for countless American children, was even a member of the DNC? The Washington Examiner has that story (“Randi Weingarten Exemplifies DNC and Union Corruption”):  

Weingarten has evidently been a member of the DNC for the last 23 years, including serving on its Rules and Bylaws Committee. That fact is seemingly impossible to find in liberal media coverage of Weingarten prior to her resignation, even though Weingarten is the leader of the second-largest teachers union in the country….

To summarize, Weingarten served as a member of the DNC while her public union, which bargains against taxpayers, was funneling money to Democrats. For most of that time, Weingarten’s AFT was taking dues from people who did not want to pay them. All the while, Weingarten was directing CDC guidance. The corruption of the teachers’ union-Democratic Party relationship was in full swing, with Weingarten representing both sides.

For all the rants from Democrats about Republican “dark money” and the undue influence of groups such as the National Rifle Association, the DNC was happy with this corrupt relationship with Weingarten and her union. Evidently, so was liberal media, which made next-to-no mention of her DNC role and offered almost no pushback against her as she used her union and DNC influence to write CDC policy and keep schools closed.

The Wall Street Journal opinion pages are hot-hot this morning. Highly recommended are Heather Mac Donald’s “Is Rioting Acceptable? And If So, How Much?” and an editorial headlined “The Social Security Iceberg Gets Closer.” The estimates are for a 23% cut in Social Security and an 11% cut in Medicare in eight years if something is not done. Somebody needs to get to work on this.

Underreported Stories of May 31

It’s Tuesday, May 31, and these are the five underreported stories that you need to know.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ookgnoOx6js

1. Nancy Pel...

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Underreported Stories of May 9

It’s Monday, May 9, and these are the five underreported stories that you need to know.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1LzSTBh8q6M

1. Incoming Wh...

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Unlock members-only content, resources and events by activating your Free Pass or gain access to additional features by selecting a monthly membership package. Join Now Already a member? Login