Tuesday, July 1, 2025

The Aisle of Madness: Why Zohran Mamdani’s State-Run Grocery Stores Will Butcher New York’s Soul

 


If Zohran Mamdani becomes mayor and opens his utopian grocery chain, don’t expect savings. Expect scandals. Expect waste. Expect government-controlled bread lines with unionized shelf-stockers and politically approved peanut butter. Expect to stand in line, waiting for an overpriced banana while someone in a suit tells you it's “equity.

This little piggy went to market, this little piggy stayed home, and Zohran Mamdani wants the government to own them all. That’s not a joke. That’s the plan. Zohran Mamdani—the Democratic nominee for New York City mayor—isn’t just selling socialist dreams. He’s packaging them in taxpayer-funded grocery bags. His wild idea? Government-run grocery stores that pay no rent, no taxes, make no profit, and undercut every honest supermarket in town. If this sounds like he’s out of his mind, that’s because he probably is. Either Mamdani is crazy or he’s hallucinating—there’s no third aisle in this store of madness.

Let’s put his proposal on the chopping block. He wants to build city-owned grocery stores—one in each borough—where food is sold “at cost” to help poor New Yorkers. But groceries aren’t expensive because stores are greedy. They’re expensive because everything in New York costs a fortune: rent, wages, utilities, transportation. In fact, the grocery business already operates on razor-thin margins—1 to 2 percent after taxes. So even if every private grocer in NYC went nonprofit tomorrow, they still couldn’t match Mamdani’s fantasyland prices.

That’s because his prices would be artificially cheap, paid for by taxpayers. His stores wouldn’t pay rent or property taxes. He’d plop them down on city-owned land like a game of Monopoly with no rules. Every banana, every loaf of bread, every frozen pizza would be quietly subsidized. Mamdani says this will make groceries affordable. What he’s not saying is: you’ll be paying for your neighbor’s groceries whether you shop there or not. It’s like robbing Peter to feed Paul, then sending the receipt to both.

And here’s the worst part: if these government stores succeed, they’ll drive private supermarkets out of business. You can’t compete with “free”—especially when it’s funded with your own taxes. Trader Joe’s, Key Food, Fairway, and thousands of beloved mom-and-pop bodegas would get eaten alive. And with them would go variety, creativity, and choice. Say goodbye to your bodega’s hot sandwiches. Say farewell to that weird but amazing seaweed snack you found on aisle six. The city will give you canned peas and like it.

Small store owners—especially bodegas—are terrified. And they should be. Bodega associations are calling this a death sentence. They know exactly what happens when government bulldozes its way into local business. These aren’t corporations with safety nets. These are families who’ve run corner stores for decades, paying taxes and employing neighbors. Mamdani wants to throw them under the government bus. And then charge them for the ride.

But let’s pretend, just for fun, that these city-run stores actually work. Let’s say they manage to sell groceries at a discount, keep their shelves full, and avoid turning into overpriced snack depots with spoiled fruit. Even then, the savings would be tiny. Experts agree: even with no rent and no profit, these stores would barely lower prices—maybe a few cents on the dollar. And those cents? Paid for by the public purse.

Now let’s face reality. The city can’t even run public bathrooms. New York just spent $1 million per no-frills public toilet. Yes, that’s one toilet. Mamdani thinks the same city that can’t install a working sink is going to master food distribution, logistics, perishables, and customer service? That’s not a plan. That’s a comedy sketch.

What Mamdani’s cooking up isn’t affordability—it’s forced dependence. His model punishes success, rewards inefficiency, and chains grocery access to political cycles. If the city budget tanks, your neighborhood store vanishes. If the wrong administration comes in, the shelves go bare. When you make the government your grocer, you make politics your pantry.

And it’s not just the mom-and-pop stores warning about this disaster. Billionaire grocer John Catsimatidis said he’d consider shutting down or moving out of New York entirely. Other investors are threatening to pack up their portfolios and flee. Financial leaders are calling Mamdani’s plan a “communist delusion.” And they’re not wrong. There’s no capitalist country on Earth where state-run supermarkets outcompete private grocers. But plenty of failed socialist regimes tried. Russia, Venezuela, Cuba—they all learned the hard way. When the state opens the store, it also locks the shelves.

The most insulting part of Mamdani’s fantasy is that he’s trying to pay for it with money that doesn’t exist. He says he’ll fund his grocery dreams by “redirecting subsidies” that go to private grocers. But the real number? About $30 million in tax breaks—most of which support hiring and training in low-income neighborhoods. He’s selling magic beans and calling it a balanced budget.

Even liberals are starting to sweat. City officials know this plan is unworkable without state approvals and zoning overhauls. Mayor Eric Adams has slammed it as a “snake oil scam.” Moderates within Mamdani’s own party are bracing for economic collapse. Some are even trying to convince national donors to fund an independent campaign to stop him.

And let’s not forget Mamdani’s favorite scare tactic: “food deserts.” He says New York has too many areas where people can’t buy fresh produce. But data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture says New York has fewer food deserts than any other state. The real issue is inflation—something government grocery stores won’t fix. If anything, Mamdani’s plan will raise costs by wasting tax dollars, gutting competition, and making people dependent on politically controlled food.

Let’s not pretend this is about helping the poor. Mamdani’s stores won’t check your income at the door. Wealthy tech bros in Brooklyn will shop side-by-side with seniors on fixed incomes—both enjoying taxpayer-funded discounts. It’s a gift to the rich disguised as a program for the poor. It’s affordability theater.

What we’re looking at here is a five-borough experiment in madness. A dream so far-fetched, it makes “unicorn meat” sound plausible. A plan so detached from economic reality, it could only be born in the fever swamp of radical ideology.

If Zohran Mamdani becomes mayor and opens his utopian grocery chain, don’t expect savings. Expect scandals. Expect waste. Expect government-controlled bread lines with unionized shelf-stockers and politically approved peanut butter. Expect to stand in line, waiting for an overpriced banana while someone in a suit tells you it's “equity.”

At this rate, the only thing Mamdani should be allowed to stock is the fiction section. And even that’s probably too close to reality for comfort.

 

Thursday, June 26, 2025

From Queens to Cuba: How Mamdani Plans to Nuke New York’s Future

 


Mamdani’s campaign is a Trojan horse: pretty slogans outside, full-blown socialism inside—open it, and you’ll find crime, chaos, and a farewell letter from Wall Street. In plain terms, Zohran Mamdani wants to tax New York until it flatlines, defund police until criminals cheer, and socialize failure until nothing's left but slogans and syringes.

The snake charmer just won the circus, and New York’s about to get bitten. Zohran Mamdani, a man who thinks Karl Marx was too moderate, has emerged as the Democratic primary winner for mayor—and that should scare the living daylights out of anyone who still believes in rent, law, or sanity. This isn’t just bad news. It’s catastrophic. It’s like handing the keys of a nuclear reactor to a toddler with a hammer. The man is a socialist lunatic, selling snake oil from a broken bottle, and New Yorkers just took a sip.

Let’s not pretend this is politics as usual. This is a full-blown ideological arsonist lighting up the financial capital of the world. Mamdani wants to defund the police, abolish cash bail, ban private insurance, and shut down ICE. And he says this proudly—as if handing criminals a get-out-of-jail-free card while taxing businesses to death is some kind of bold plan. If this is bold, then jumping off a skyscraper is skydiving.

His social media is a parade of insanity. "Queer liberation means defund the police." "BDS is a righteous movement." "We need to decarbonize our economy." "Israel is committing genocide." These aren’t fringe thoughts anymore. They’re the front page of his campaign. And if you think he's just talking, wait till he gets the budget.

This guy makes AOC look like a Reagan Republican.

Let’s call it what it is: a kamikaze dive into chaos. President Trump didn’t hold back—he called Mamdani a “100% communist lunatic.” And he’s right. The guy is one bad decision away from ordering state-run tofu factories and free Che Guevara posters for every toddler in pre-K.

New York City is already gasping for air—businesses leaving, crime spiking, rents soaring, schools rotting—and Mamdani shows up with a gallon of gasoline and a flamethrower called “equity.” He wants rent-free housing by seizing private buildings. He wants to raise already astronomical property taxes. He wants government-run grocery stores in a city where corner delis barely survive. Forget helping the poor—he’s aiming to kill the middle class.

Even Wall Street is in full panic mode. The suits are already drafting escape plans, calling it “Plan B”—and Plan B means Florida, Texas, or anywhere that doesn’t smell like socialism. Wall Street South isn’t a fantasy—it’s a reality, and the moving trucks are already revving. When the banks, private equity firms, and billion-dollar powerhouses see Mamdani’s face on the mayoral podium, they won’t blink—they’ll bolt. This isn’t a warning shot. It’s a five-alarm fire, and the only ones staying behind will be the pigeons, the panhandlers, and the ghosts of what used to be a city.

Under Mamdani, New York will bleed businesses faster than a leaking faucet in a hurricane. Corporate offices will pack up faster than you can say “capital flight.” The exodus won’t be a trickle. It’ll be a flood.

And then there’s Curtis Sliwa. Real New Yorker. Real backbone. The man doesn’t pander—he performs. For over four decades, he’s walked the subways, cleaned up the streets, and stood up when mayors sat down. His plan is simple: fix the crime, cut the waste, clean up the mess. That’s not radical. That’s just common sense. But in today’s New York, common sense is treated like contraband.

Sliwa isn’t hiding in a donor-funded bunker. He’s out there in the city he bleeds for—literally. You cut him, he bleeds New York. His message: Improve, don’t move. And that hits home for the thousands of working-class families being choked out by taxes, crime, and politicians with socialist delusions.

Mamdani doesn’t want to fix the schools. He wants to “green” them. He wants to promote a trans agenda, offer free childcare, give free buses, and probably a free revolutionary handbook while he’s at it. But here’s the catch: nothing is free when the taxpayer foots the bill. And America is already spending $41 billion on public schools—yet the kids can’t read or do math. A third are truant. Enrollment is dropping. But Mamdani’s solution? Throw more cash into the fire and hope it rains diplomas.

We’ve locked up toothpaste behind glass, but we let violent criminals roam the streets. That’s not progress—it’s parody. But Mamdani doesn’t see the problem. He sees potential—for more taxes, more control, and more slogans that sound like poetry until your business is shuttered and your block is covered in tents and needles.

The streets are filthy. Storefronts are abandoned. Small landlords are suffocating under fees and fines. Emotional crises wander the sidewalks while politicians like Mamdani throw Twitter tantrums about climate change and liberation movements. If he wins, New York will look like a blend of Blade Runner, Mad Max, and The Communist Manifesto—and that’s on a good day.

Even diehard Democrats like Bill Clinton and Chuck Schumer are embracing Mamdani. That’s not unity. That’s surrender. They’re not rallying behind a candidate. They’re giving the mob what it wants so they won’t be next. This isn’t just bad politics. It’s a blueprint for collapse. New York will become a hollowed-out parody of itself, with crime on steroids, businesses gone, and social workers dodging bullets in the name of equity.

Let’s not sugarcoat it: a vote for Mamdani is a vote for mayhem. He’s not the next mayor. He’s the next demolition expert. The sad part? People fell for it. They bought the snake oil. But when the city burns, they’ll wonder why the medicine tasted like gasoline. And if you think this is just another election cycle, think again. The rats used to flee the city. Now they’re running it.

 

Wednesday, June 25, 2025

Wi-Fi, Woke, and Wild: Why Jasmine Crockett Is America’s Loudest Liability


Jasmine Crockett isn’t a lawmaker—she’s a loudmouth with Wi-Fi, turning Congress into a comedy club where outrage is scripted and intellect left backstage. She curses at the Constitution, lectures on laws she’s never read, and believes Congress is her stage—she is indeed  performance politics on permanent loop.

Looks like Congress just got another dose of Crockett—loud, lawless, and laughable. Every time Jasmine Crockett opens her mouth, the IQ of the room drops ten points. This time, she decided to crown herself the Commander-in-Chief of Cluelessness. Her latest tirade? A foul-mouthed, Constitution-illiterate meltdown claiming President Trump declared war and that she—yes, she—should have been the one to make the “blanking” decision. I didn’t know TikTok ran the military now.

It all started with yet another dead-on-arrival impeachment stunt from Al Green. He swung and missed—again. Only 79 Democrats, the fringe few still living in a fantasyland, backed the latest political circus. 128 others joined Republicans to shut it down like a busted carnival. But Crockett? Oh, she wasn’t missing the camera time. She latched on to Green’s stunt like a mosquito to bare skin, using the chaos to launch into a bizarre, profanity-packed social media meltdown that made zero sense and even less impact. A foghorn may be loud, but it still can't steer a ship.

She ranted about how the “fk in the White House” had declared war—without her permission, apparently. As if the U.S. military needs approval from a social media starlet disguised as a Congresswoman. Her follow-up was even more pathetic: she insisted that she’s the one *supposed to make the fking decision.” Crockett clearly thinks government works like Instagram Live—whoever shouts the loudest gets to lead.

President Trump, never one to dodge a punch, clapped back on Truth Social. His response was simple, savage, and classic: Make my day. That’s the difference. While Crockett’s yelling into a phone hoping for likes, the President’s handling national security and challenging the radicals to do their worst. She’s fighting for retweets. He’s fighting for America.

Meghan McCain nailed it: Crockett is deeply unserious. And she is. She's not even pretending to legislate. She’s not trying to draft policy. She’s not focused on jobs, inflation, healthcare, education, or anything resembling leadership. Her only bill is her phone bill—and even that’s probably set to auto-pay. Her entire presence in Congress seems like a poorly written skit with no punchline. You can wrap a donkey in silk, but it’s still a jackass.

Let’s be real—Crockett didn’t get elected to lead. She got elected to trend. Her whole brand is performance. She’s addicted to the camera like a moth to a ring light. And unfortunately, the Democrats have given her a stage. Chuck Schumer? Silent. Hakeem Jeffries? Hiding. The so-called party leadership is terrified of confronting the radical left because Crockett and her fellow chaos agents run the asylum now. When the children start making the rules, even the playground turns into a war zone.

Her videos are pure histrionics. No depth. No substance. Just outrage, profanity, and raw ignorance. And for what? Not to pass a law. Not to help her district. Just to get on a show like this one, get talked about, and keep her social media buzzing. She’s not “fighting the system.” She is the problem. She’s the face of a party that’s abandoned adults and handed the wheel to digital drama queens.

She has no business talking about Iran, military strikes, or anything involving national defense. No background. No experience. No clue. She couldn’t find Tehran on a map with GPS, a flashlight, and a tour guide. But there she is, ranting about foreign policy as if Congress were a beauty pageant and she just nailed the swimsuit round.

Even her so-called “constitutional knowledge” is a joke. Crockett seems to think being one of 435 representatives gives her executive power. If she’d read the document she claims to love, she’d know the President—yes, President Trump—is the one who handles military decisions. She’s not the boss. She’s barely the intern.

McCain called her patient zero in a new wave of attention-hungry Democrats. She’s not wrong. Crockett is a symptom of a party that traded working-class voters for woke celebrities, union support for unhinged soundbites. This isn’t your grandfather’s Democratic Party. This is the Snapchat caucus. And Crockett? She’s the face on the poster—loud, lawless, and lost.

She isn’t going to pass a bill. She’s not here to govern. She’s here to go viral. And the scariest part? She’s good at it. She knows exactly how to rile up her base, get featured on friendly shows, and make herself look like a hero to people who confuse drama for duty. A parrot may mimic words, but it never understands their meaning.

If Crockett ever runs for president—and let’s face it, that’s the trajectory she’s fantasizing about—we’ll need a national psychiatrist, not a national security advisor. She’s the result of what happens when social media fame becomes a stepping stone to federal power. The Founding Fathers never imagined someone would treat Congress like a content creator hub. But here we are—a government of the clowns, by the clowns, and for the clout.

She’s not just unserious. She’s a national distraction. While real problems rage—at the border, overseas, in our economy—Crockett is busy filming the next installment of her unhinged reality show. And if the Democrats keep propping her up as the face of their future, they may want to start preparing for a long walk in the political wilderness. Because the only thing Jasmine Crockett is leading... is the march into madness.

 

Monday, June 23, 2025

Trump Didn’t Just Drop Bombs—He Dropped the Truth

 


Trump didn’t just bomb Iran’s nukes—he bombed liberal delusions that diplomacy works with terrorists. Sometimes peace comes not through talks, but through targeted tremors. The left said Trump would start WWIII—instead, he prevented WWIII by nuking the nukes before Iran could launch Armageddon. That’s not warmongering. That’s war prevention.

They said he would start World War III. Instead, he ended Iran’s nuclear delusion before it could reach critical mass. When President Trump ordered the June 22, 2025 strike on Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan, he didn’t act recklessly—he acted like a man who understood that you don’t bring a debate to a bomb fight.

Let’s get one thing straight: this wasn’t some hot-headed tantrum or election-year theater. This was surgical shock and awe. The GBU-57 “bunker buster” didn’t just shatter Iranian concrete—it shattered the hollow arguments of every appeasement-addicted foreign policy pundit clutching their pearls on cable news.

For years, Iran played the West like a fiddle with a broken string. They enriched uranium, dodged inspectors, and danced just short of the nuclear finish line. And what did the global community do? Send more inspectors. More resolutions. More sternly worded tweets. But like the old saying goes, a scorpion doesn’t stop stinging just because you asked nicely.

President Trump knew that Iran wasn’t a misunderstood neighbor—it was a rogue regime racing toward the bomb while chanting "Death to America" with a smile. And when Israeli strikes began hammering Iran’s regional proxies, Trump gave the ayatollahs a warning: stop, or the next hit won’t be symbolic. It’ll be seismic.

Then he delivered.

The strike was a masterclass in military precision. Over 125 aircraft—including stealth B-2s, advanced fighters, submarines, and electronic warfare units—swooped in like ghosts and wiped out key nuclear facilities that Iran had buried under mountains. Not a single civilian site was touched. Not a single U.S. life was lost. That’s not a war crime—that’s a clinic in clean warfare.

And let’s be honest: no one else had the guts to do it. Israel couldn’t hit Fordow. Europe wouldn’t even hit “send” on a strongly worded email. But Trump? Trump hit “detonate.” The mission’s message was loud and clear: You can enrich uranium, but you better not enrich your delusions.

Of course, the critics crawled out of their holes like cockroaches after a light switch flick. The Economist clutched its pearls, warning of Iranian retaliation, oil price spikes, terrorist proxies, and a new forever war. But here’s a thought: maybe Iran should’ve considered the consequences before building bomb factories under mountains.

President Trump didn’t target the regime. He didn’t go after Iran’s cities. He went for the threat—the nuclear heart. And guess what? That heart stopped beating. Iran’s entire nuclear timeline was set back years—maybe a decade. That's not escalation. That’s strategic chemotherapy for a geopolitical cancer.

The timing couldn’t have been better. Just ten days before the strike, Iran was caught in non-compliance with the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. The IAEA said it couldn’t account for over 400 kilograms of enriched uranium, enriched up to 60%. That’s enough for multiple bombs. And still, some people wanted to “give talks more time”? You can’t negotiate with a ticking clock.

And let’s not forget: Iran wasn’t just enriching uranium. It was enriching chaos. From Hezbollah in Lebanon to militias in Iraq and Syria, Iran was the puppet master of the region’s violence. But with a single order, Trump cut the strings.

Now, let’s talk consequences. Iran might retaliate. Maybe through cyberattacks. Maybe through their usual cowards’ way—terrorism. But even they know that a direct strike would bring hellfire. Trump has made it clear: touch an American, and the next crater will be on your palace lawn.

This wasn’t just a military victory. It was a geopolitical thunderclap. Arab Gulf states who once doubted Trump’s resolve are now calling to coordinate strategy. Israel, having exhausted its nuclear targets, owes Trump big. That’s leverage you can’t get from a peace summit in Geneva. That’s respect earned at Mach 1. And speaking of peace—yes, Trump offered an olive branch right after the smoke cleared. He said, “Now is the time for peace.” And he meant it. But it wasn’t the peace of the weak. It was the peace of a lion standing over the body of a snake.

Diplomacy is on the table, but only because Trump flipped the table, burned it, and built a new one with American steel. He gave Iran a choice: come to the table, or be buried under it. That’s not warmongering. That’s how you stop wars before they start.

Let’s remember history. In 1981, Israel bombed Iraq’s Osirak reactor. The world screamed. But years later, even U.S. officials admitted it saved the region from a nuclear Saddam. In 2007, Israel hit Syria’s secret reactor. Again, outrage. Again, later vindication. And now, Trump joins that elite club—not with whispers, but with a bang loud enough to echo through Tehran’s underground labs.

Some say it’ll spark more nuclear ambition. But what’s more dangerous: letting Iran secretly finish the job, or showing them that every facility, no matter how hidden, can be reduced to ash before breakfast? You don’t scare a mad dog with a whistle—you use a stick with nails in it.

Let’s not pretend the regime is strong. Iran’s leaders are already rattled. Their people are restless. Their nuclear pride is now a smoking memory. If they choose to retaliate, they risk regime collapse. If they don’t, they look weak. Either way, the U.S. wins the psychological war.

So yes—President Trump was right. He was right to strike. Right to do it fast. Right to do it clean. And right to offer peace while holding a bigger stick than anyone else in the room.

And if you’re still not convinced, consider this: in a world where leaders tweet apologies and hold hands while enemies build bombs, Trump dropped a payload of reality. He reminded the world that sometimes, you need to pull the trigger to stop the ticking.

They called him reckless. Now they call him Commander. They feared his temper. Now they fear his silence. And they wanted “diplomacy with dignity”? Trump just showed us diplomacy comes a lot faster when it rides in on a stealth bomber. Let’s be real—if Iran wants a war, it better learn to dodge bullets that arrive at the speed of sound. Until then, they can sit quietly and re-read the NPT… assuming it’s not buried under rubble.

So, to all the critics out there lighting candles for Iran’s nukes, here’s a match. You’ll need it. Your arguments are already in the dark.

 

Thursday, June 19, 2025

The West’s Last Chance to Bury the Ayatollah Before He Buries Us

 


Trump and Netanyahu must understand one fact: Waiting two more weeks is like giving a serial arsonist gasoline—Khamenei’s regime is building the bomb, burying the proof, and betting the West will blink. You don’t negotiate with a cobra while it coils—Israel struck first, now America must strike last. Regime change isn’t war—it’s survival for civilization.

 

They say when the rooster crows too late, the sun has already scorched the field. That’s what I see happening as President Trump gives Iran another two weeks to “decide” whether it wants peace or more destruction. But let me ask the question out loud: why are we waiting at all? Iran has already made up its mind. They don’t want peace. They want a bomb, and they want to use it when it suits them best. They’re enriching uranium past international limits, they’re hiding their nuclear secrets, and they’re letting the world burn while their scientists work underground. This is not the time to talk. This is the time to finish what Israel has started—and President Trump must not blink now.

I watched the press conference when White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said that President Trump would decide in two weeks whether to take direct action against Iran. She said negotiations may or may not happen, and that Trump is giving diplomacy a chance. I heard her say that Iran must agree to stop enriching uranium. But here’s the thing—Tehran has never honored any deal, not under Obama’s nuclear pact, not under U.N. inspections, not under Trump’s earlier warnings. And they won’t start now. The ayatollahs in power in Tehran only understand force. Israel’s recent attacks, which gave them “full air supremacy” over Tehran, did more in 72 hours than two decades of diplomacy did with all the wine and handshakes. That’s the truth. That’s what works. And that’s why this two-week delay is not only unnecessary—it’s dangerous.

I know some people say that diplomacy is better than war. I agree, if diplomacy means real pressure, not just more talking. But when Trump said, “I may do it, I may not do it,” it reminded me of someone standing at the edge of a pool, deciding whether to jump, while the shark is already circling below. Iran is not just a threat to Israel; it is a threat to the entire region, to oil shipping lanes, to the U.S. military bases, and to every nation that believes nuclear terror should not be rewarded. And let’s not forget—they’ve already fired back at Israel. Their missiles have killed civilians. Their drones have targeted hospitals. Their so-called resistance network, including Hezbollah and militias in Iraq and Syria, have already declared war on normal life in the Middle East.

I’ve followed the coverage of what Trump is doing. He meets daily with his national security team. He’s hearing advice from people like Marjorie Taylor Greene, who says America should stay out. He’s also hearing from Senator Lindsey Graham, who says we must hit Iran harder. But here’s what matters most—what Trump believes deep down. He has always said America must be strong. That strength isn’t about staying quiet while a regime like Ayatollah Khamenei’s keeps enriching uranium in tunnels. That’s not leadership. That’s hesitation dressed up in a tie.

This is a historic moment. This is the moment when Israel and the United States can break Iran’s nuclear ambitions for good. Not just delay it. Not just damage it. Destroy it. We know where the Fordow facility is. We know how deep it’s buried. We have the technology. The U.S. has bunker-busting bombs that can hit what Israel couldn’t. If we stop now, we’re not just giving Iran time—we’re giving them power. We’re telling them, “Go ahead, rebuild, rearm, restart.” And when the next president comes, it will be too late. Iran will already have what it wants, and the world will have to live with it.

I don’t say this lightly. War is never easy. But what is harder is cleaning up after a nuclear explosion. What is harder is explaining to your children why your leaders knew the danger and waited. Iran has played this game before. They negotiate to stall. They promise, then break their promise. They deny, then unveil. We’ve seen this pattern since 2003. The IAEA knows it. Mossad knows it. Trump knows it. The people pretending not to see it are only fooling themselves. And history is never kind to the blind.

President Trump doesn’t need another two weeks. He doesn’t need more words. He needs to act like the president he has always claimed to be—strong, fearless, and clear-eyed. Israel has already shown courage. They’ve bombed targets inside Iran. They’ve taken out drone factories. They’ve disrupted centrifuges. Now is the time for the United States to support that effort, to go further, and to make sure the regime that gives terrorists weapons can never give them nuclear weapons. This is not about war—it’s about prevention. It’s about removing the fuse before the bomb can explode.

I hear people say this will cause a wider conflict. But what they forget is that Iran has already started a wider conflict. They fund attacks in Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, and Yemen. They kill U.S. troops by proxy. They chant “Death to America” every Friday. And somehow we’re still wondering whether we should “go in.” Go in where? They’re already here—in cyberspace, in propaganda, in bullets. This regime has declared war on decency, and we’re asking if we should respond?

Let me say it plain. If Israel and the United States do not act now, they will never get another chance. The longer we wait, the stronger Iran becomes. The deeper their bunkers. The tighter their alliances with Russia and China. And the more innocent people die in Israel, in Gaza, in Syria, and even in U.S. embassies. Time is not on our side. Time is on Khamenei’s side. The same man who crushed protests, who killed girls for not wearing the hijab, who silenced opposition, who runs the most dangerous terror network on earth—that man is now closer than ever to having a nuclear weapon. Why wait two weeks? What are we waiting for? A better day? A cleaner target? A stronger excuse?

President Trump, I voted for you because I believed you were different. You said you weren’t like the others. You said you weren’t afraid. You said America would lead again. Well, lead now. Don’t follow the calendar. Follow your instinct. Israel has done what it must. Now America must do what only America can. If we miss this moment, the mushroom cloud won’t ask for our permission.

And if this delay keeps dragging on, we might as well ask Iran to send us a thank-you card—with uranium ink.

 

Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Wedded to Debt: Why China’s High Bride Prices Are Robbery in Disguise

 


When a marriage proposal comes with a payment plan, it is not a union—it is a transaction. China’s brides aren’t marrying; they are being marketed like luxury items.

Love in China doesn’t come cheap—it comes with a receipt. Marriage has become a financial transaction dressed in red silk and sealed with a bank transfer. When a woman in Guangdong recently asked online if 380,000yuan (about $53,000) was too much to charge her fiancĂ©’s family, thousandsresponded—not with shock, but with encouragement. “Sis,” one said, “don’t wrong yourself, ask for 888,800.” That’s not a blessing—that’s extortion with lipstick.

So why is China’s government struggling to cut this absurd bridal inflation? Because culture, corruption, and cowardice are dancing at the wedding feast.

Bride price, or caili, used to be a symbol of goodwill. Now, it’s a ransom note. In rural China, the practice has exploded. A Johns Hopkins University study shows that from 2005 to 2020, median rural bride prices doubled in real terms. In urban areas, prices are climbing too, though slower. Guangdong’s median was once 42,000 yuan, and Fujian’s about 115,000 yuan. Now, the going rate is so high that grooms are selling kidneys in chat rooms.

The Chinese Communist Party has been frowning hard since 2019, issuing repeated calls to stop the madness. Laws already forbid money being demanded in exchange for marriage—but try enforcing that when the village chief’s own daughter wants 200,000 yuan. Local officials stay silent, fearing family feuds and social backlash. They know that in China, interfering with a marriage is riskier than criticizing Mao.

Some provinces are trying to slap down the numbers. Gansu capped bride prices at 50,000 to 80,000 yuan. Jiangxi offered subsidies to couples who marry for less than 39,000. But here’s the kicker—none of these rules have penalties. It’s like bringing a water pistol to a house fire.

Meanwhile, the marriage crisis in China is deeper than love. It’s math. By 2027, for every 100 women of marrying age, there will be 119 men. That means millions of men will be left out in the cold—bachelorhood by birthright. They’re called shengnan, or “leftover men,” and many are so desperate they buy brides trafficked in from Southeast Asia. Some are even being scammed by fake matchmakers who vanish after taking thousands in “pre‑wedding deposits.”

And don’t think women are pushing for change. Many support high bride prices as a financial safety net. In case of divorce, part of the cash often stays with the bride. In a country where divorce rates are rising fast, that’s not greed—it’s insurance. Marriage is no longer about growing old together; it’s about not ending up broke and alone.

The government’s other attempts to fix the crisis are even more embarrassing. Some provinces now offer cash bonuses for second children. Universities are teaching “love courses” to encourage dating. Officials are proposing lowering the legal marriage age to boost numbers. None of this matters if young men can’t afford the entrance fee to the marriage market.

Online, the gender war is blazing. Men say they’re being bankrupted. Women say they’re being undervalued. One high-profile rape case in Henan saw a man attack his fiancĂ©e after paying 100,000 yuan in bride price. Some online trolls claimed he was entitled to sex. That’s not culture—that’s criminality in a red envelope.

What we’re watching is not tradition. It’s a hostile merger of capitalism and patriarchy. It’s no longer “Will you marry me?” but “Can you afford me?” The bride becomes the product, the groom the buyer, and the parents the salespeople. Romance is dead, buried under receipts and loan applications.

The media pretends to care. They publish articles urging young couples to pursue “zero bride price” marriages. Academics call the custom outdated, oppressive, and dangerous. But the truth is, no one in power wants to swing the axe. They all fear backlash in the countryside, where customs run deeper than the Yangtze.

This is not just about money. It’s about survival. Parents pour their life savings into a son’s marriage. They build new homes, buy cars, and offer six-figure bride prices just to win a daughter-in-law. And in return, they get a lifetime of debt and a fridge full of expired wedding cake.

Marriage rates are collapsing. In 2025, they dropped by 8%—the steepest fall in decades. Birth rates are also down to record lows. At this pace, China won’t need a one-child policy—it’ll have no-child households by default. The government can’t preach population growth while women demand a Mercedes before saying “yes.”

And let’s not forget the rural horror stories. In Qingdao, one family paid 320,000 yuan to marry off their son, only for the bride to flee weeks later. Others complain about women “cashing out”—marrying for the bride price and disappearing. These aren’t fairy tales. They’re financial tragedies in wedding clothes.

So what’s next? The Communist Party may roll out more polite suggestions and weak policies. Officials will issue slogans about “civilized weddings” and “shared happiness.” But unless the government grows a backbone and slaps real penalties on sky-high bride prices, nothing will change. Culture will keep bulldozing common sense.

It’s time to admit it. High bride prices aren’t just a bad tradition—they’re a national crisis. They’re killing love, draining wallets, and feeding crime. They’ve turned marriage into a commodity, women into assets, and men into walking piggy banks. The government says it disapproves—but until it acts, it’s just a silent witness at a very expensive ceremony.

And as things stand now, the only thing more overvalued than a Chinese bride is the government’s promise to fix it.

 

Monday, June 16, 2025

Murderer for Mediator? Putin Wants Peace After Bombing Babies

 


Putin, blood‑thirsty war criminal, wants to mediate Israel‑Iran? That’s like Dracula offering blood drives—no credibility, just planks of hypocrisy blinding him from his own genocide.

You're right—I softened your language when I shouldn't have. You explicitly asked for bold, unfiltered commentary, and I failed to stick closely enough to your words like "moron," "war criminal," and "blood-thirsty." That was my mistake, and I appreciate you calling it out.

Let me now give you a revised version that uses your exact wording and tone—no watering down, no sugar-coating.

They say even a broken clock is right twice a day—but when Vladimir Putin says he wants to mediate between Israel and Iran and store Tehran’s uranium, the clock isn’t just broken, it’s on fire. Russia is ready to mediate on Iran? That is the funniest joke of the century. We’re talking about Putin—the same blood-thirsty war criminal who is currently bombing hospitals, residential apartments, shopping malls, and schools in Ukraine and killing thousands of innocent civilians. And now this moron wants to step in as a “neutral” figure in the Middle East? Please. That’s not diplomacy. That’s delusion.

What credibility does Putin have to offer anything but destruction? None. Zero. Zilch. He has no credibility, no integrity, no conscience, and certainly no business meddling in a conflict when his hands are already soaked in Ukrainian blood. The man whose military forces dropped guided bombs on a maternity hospital in Mariupol wants to “remove highly enriched uranium” from Iran and turn it into peaceful reactor fuel? That’s like a serial killer offering to babysit your children. It's madness masquerading as mediation.

Let’s talk facts. Since February 2022, Putin’s forces have targeted over 1,700 health care facilities in Ukraine. That’s not collateral damage—that’s a coordinated campaign of terror against civilians. In just one example, a missile hit a pediatric hospital where cancer-stricken children were receiving treatment. Not by accident, but by design. This is the man who now wants to preach peace to Israel and Iran? He should be wearing shackles, not shaking hands.

And let’s not pretend Russia is some neutral actor in this conflict. Moscow has a cozy military bromance with Iran. They’re partners in crime. Iran supplies Russia with deadly Shahed drones used to butcher Ukrainian civilians. Russia, in return, props up Iran diplomatically and economically, helping it evade Western sanctions. So when Russia says it wants to “store Iran’s uranium,” what they really mean is they want to store bargaining chips, weapons potential, and strategic control. It’s not a peace offer—it’s a power play.

This so-called mediator is the same Putin who invaded Georgia in 2008, annexed Crimea in 2014, flattened Aleppo in Syria, and now commits genocide in Ukraine. He poisons opposition leaders, jails journalists, and murders truth like it’s policy. Putin doesn’t solve problems—he creates them. He doesn’t bring peace—he brings bombs, lies, and tyranny.

And yet the Kremlin, through its mouthpiece Dmitry Peskov, says the offer to store Iranian uranium “remains on the table.” Sure. And the table is covered in blood, lies, and propaganda. Putin is not trying to calm tensions—he’s trying to insert himself into a global crisis he helped fuel, to deflect from his own war crimes, and to restore a shred of legitimacy to his pariah regime. It’s the devil applying for a job as a priest.

Even when Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu warned that Iran’s regime could fall if provoked, Russia rushed to defend Iran. Peskov condemned Israel’s strikes and applauded the “consolidation of Iranian society” in response. That’s not mediation. That’s taking sides. Russia is not a referee—it’s another player on the field, elbowing everyone else and shouting “I’m neutral!”

Let’s not forget: Iran’s nuclear ambitions aren’t some peaceful little science project. Tehran continues to enrich uranium to levels just shy of weapons-grade. They’ve stalled international inspections, built underground facilities, and openly threatened Israel’s existence. And now, in the middle of this chaos, Putin wants the world to believe he’ll be the one to “safely” handle Iran’s uranium? This is the same man who lies with every breath, who violates every treaty, and who murders civilians while smiling for the camera.

President Trump was hopeful when he said peace might come soon, and mentioned Putin’s potential role. But let’s be honest: Putin is the last man on Earth who should be involved. The only thing he should be negotiating is his surrender to the International Criminal Court. He should be behind bars in The Hague, not front and center in world diplomacy.

Israel and the West must ignore that blood-thirsty war criminal. He is a moron, and nothing good will come from him. He must remove the large planks in his eyes before attempting to remove the little speck in Israel and Iran’s eyes. The world must not give him a platform. He doesn’t deserve respect. He deserves handcuffs.

This is a man who has killed journalists with radioactive tea and nerve agents, who has erased entire neighborhoods with thermobaric bombs, and who still looks into cameras and says, “We want peace.” That’s not just hypocrisy—that’s pure evil in a suit and tie. You don’t hand over enriched uranium to a man whose idea of diplomacy is artillery shelling and who uses hunger and fear as political weapons.

The idea that Putin can bring peace to the Israel–Iran conflict is so insane, so laughable, it belongs in a comedy club—not in a serious international dialogue. It’s a wolf offering to teach the sheep how to stay safe. It’s a butcher volunteering to inspect the meat for safety. The only thing Putin can store is shame—and history won’t forget it.

And if this war criminal wants to stay relevant, he can try writing children’s books from a prison cell titled, “How I Pretended to Be a Peacemaker While Bombing Maternity Wards.” Because Vladimir Putin offering peace is like a tornado offering weather advice—disastrous, destructive, and guaranteed to end in tragedy.

 

The Aisle of Madness: Why Zohran Mamdani’s State-Run Grocery Stores Will Butcher New York’s Soul

  If Zohran Mamdani becomes mayor and opens his utopian grocery chain, don’t expect savings. Expect scandals. Expect waste. Expect governmen...