Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Don’t Ban Teenagers from Social Media: Prohibition Failed Before. Don’t Repeat It With Your Kids

 


Ban social media and you raise liars and rebels; regulate it and you raise disciplined, high-achieving teens who earn every scroll. Simply put, Smash the apps and teens go underground; weaponize screen time and watch grades, grit, and ambition explode.

Let’s stop pretending this is complicated. Banning teenagers from social media is not strength. It is panic dressed up as policy. It is adults shouting, “I can’t control this, so I’ll outlaw it.” That may win applause at a press conference, but it will not fix the problem. Australia already blocked under-16s from major platforms. Britain and parts of America are circling similar ideas. Polls show majorities cheering the move. Fine. Popular does not mean smart. Prohibition once had majority support too. It failed spectacularly. When you ban what people crave, you don’t erase the craving. You drive it underground.

Yes, some children have been harmed online. Some have been tricked, bullied, manipulated by ugly algorithms. Those cases are real and serious. But turning worst-case stories into universal law is lazy thinking. The broader evidence that social media has single-handedly wrecked an entire generation’s mental health is not settled science. Teen anxiety and depression trends began rising before TikTok exploded. Social media may amplify problems for some kids, but it is not the sole villain. Blaming one app is convenient. Reality is more uncomfortable.

And here’s what politicians don’t want to admit: bans are porous. Teenagers are not clueless. Give them a wall and they’ll build a ladder. Age checks can be gamed. Accounts can be borrowed. Platforms can be swapped. Block Instagram and they drift to smaller, less regulated corners of the internet where oversight is weaker and predators are harder to track. That is not safety. That is displacement. Worse, when teens sneak around bans, they hide what they see. If something disturbs them, they hesitate to tell adults because they were not supposed to be there. Fear silences honesty. That is the opposite of protection.

There is also a hard truth about how we got here. Adults shrank teenagers’ physical freedom for decades. We stopped letting them roam neighborhoods. We feared traffic, strangers, lawsuits. We pushed them indoors and gave them Wi-Fi. Now we are shocked they socialize through screens. That is rich. You cannot confine a generation and then criminalize their coping mechanism. Social media became their public square because we dismantled the physical one.

So what do we do? We regulate. We do the harder thing. Governments should force tech companies to redesign features that trap teens in endless scroll loops. Stronger age verification should separate minors from adults. Teen accounts should default to higher privacy and stricter moderation. Platforms should release real data so researchers can measure harm instead of arguing in the dark. That is regulation. That is responsibility. It is slower than banning, but it is smarter.

Yet the most powerful regulation does not sit in parliament. It sits at the dinner table. Social media has immense pull for teenagers. That pull can either be fought in a losing war or used as leverage. I choose leverage. If I am raising a teenage daughter, I do not thunder, “Delete the app.” I look her in the eye and say, “Finish this week’s homework early and you earn 1.5 hours online tonight. Do the family laundry and you get 2 hours on Saturday.” Effort unlocks privilege. That simple shift changes everything.

I can raise the stakes. “Bring your math grade from a B to an A this quarter and you unlock 3 extra hours of screen time each week.” Suddenly algebra is not abstract torture. It is a key. Or I say, “Volunteer 4 hours this month at the shelter and you earn bonus online time.” Service gains immediate relevance. Or I push fitness: “Train hard and finish that 5K under 30 minutes, and you get extended access for the weekend.” Discipline meets desire. Even reading can enter the arena: “Read 2 books this month and give me thoughtful summaries. Do it well and you earn 5 hours of credits.” Literature now competes with TikTok—and sometimes wins.

This is not bribery. It is incentive design. Adults live by incentives. Employees grind for bonuses. Athletes train for trophies. Students chase scholarships. Teenagers are wired the same way. When screen time becomes earned instead of assumed, it transforms from entitlement into achievement. The same magnet pulling them toward memes can push them toward excellence.

Critics will say social media is too toxic to use as leverage at all. That view ignores its benefits. For isolated teens—those in rural towns, those questioning their identity, those who feel different—online communities can be lifelines. Social media exposes young people to ideas, cultures, and opportunities that once required access to elite institutions. It has replaced the evening newspaper and the nightly news broadcast. Whether we like it or not, this is the information ecosystem they inhabit. There is also psychological wisdom in gradual exposure. If you block access entirely until age 16 and then flip the switch to full freedom overnight, you invite binge behavior. Sudden, unrestricted access without training overwhelms judgment. Structured access builds digital literacy. It teaches restraint. It allows parents to coach instead of merely police. Experience, not isolation, builds competence.

Let’s also drop the fantasy that removing TikTok will suddenly create book-loving, tree-climbing saints. Many teens will simply shift to gaming consoles, streaming platforms, or encrypted messaging apps. The dopamine does not disappear. It changes outfits. Pretending otherwise is self-deception.

Banning feels dramatic. Regulation feels tedious. But drama does not build character. Structure does. Technology is not retreating; it is accelerating. Artificial intelligence is already reshaping education, work, and relationships. If society cannot manage platforms that have existed for more than 20 years, how will it manage the next wave of digital tools? Shielding teenagers from technology does not prepare them for adulthood. Teaching them to navigate it with boundaries does.

I refuse to treat teenagers as helpless addicts or social media as pure evil. It is a tool—dangerous when unmanaged, powerful when directed. Ban it and you create rebels who learn to hide. Regulate it and you create competitors who learn to earn. If we are serious about raising high-achieving teens, we must stop chasing easy applause and start building disciplined systems. Do not smash the screen. Make them earn it.

 

On a different but equally important note, readers who enjoy thoughtful analysis may also find the titles in my  Brief Book Series” worth exploring. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Monday, March 2, 2026

Let Them Cancel: America’s Defense Isn’t a PR Problem

 


Dario Amodei talks morality; Sam Altman backs defense. Freedom wasn’t won by slogans—it was bought in blood. History will judge who understood survival. Optics fade. Power decides who stands tomorrow.

I am tired of watching grown executives tremble because Reddit got mad. Sam Altman signs a deal with the Department of Defense and suddenly the sky is falling. Subscriptions are being canceled. Claude jumps to number 1 in the App Store. ChatGPT drops to number 2. A thread screams, “You’re training a war machine.” Katy Perry reportedly walks out the door. And Dario Amodei stands there polishing his halo, refusing to let Anthropic’s AI be used without tight limits.

Spare me.

Let me say it plain. Dario Amodei should be ashamed of himself for refusing the Pentagon’s request. The freedom that allows him to run Anthropic did not fall from the clouds like fairy dust. It was bought. Paid for. With blood.

More than 1.3 million Americans have died in U.S. wars since 1775, according to historical military records. In World War II alone, the United States lost over 400,000 service members. In Iraq and Afghanistan, over 7,000 U.S. troops died after 2001. Those men and women did not die so Silicon Valley executives could lecture the Pentagon about morality from glass offices.

Anthropic says it does not want its AI used for autonomous weapons or mass surveillance. Fine. That sounds noble. But I ask a blunt question: who exactly protects Anthropic’s headquarters from hostile states? Who keeps the shipping lanes open so its servers can be built with chips from Taiwan? Who deters regimes like Iran from targeting American companies?

The U.S. military.

The same Pentagon that Amodei treated like a moral hazard.

I hear the argument already. “We must not militarize AI.” That sounds clean in a podcast. But the world is not clean. China is investing billions into military AI. The Chinese government’s military-civil fusion strategy openly blends private tech with the People’s Liberation Army. Russia uses AI tools in Ukraine. Iran funds proxy groups across the Middle East and has long pursued nuclear capability. This is not a debate club. It is a chessboard with real casualties.

When OpenAI signed its agreement, critics said it was crossing a line. They called it bending the knee. I call it reality. If AI is the new electricity, then national defense will use it. That is not evil. That is strategy.

Some users accuse OpenAI of helping a “war machine.” I find that phrase dramatic. Every nation-state has a military. The U.S. defense budget in 2023 was about $816 billion. That money funds soldiers, sailors, airmen, cyber defense units, and yes, technology. The Constitution empowers Congress to raise and support armies. National defense is not a secret hobby. It is the government’s core duty under Article I, Section 8.

Amodei’s refusal may look moral on social media, but in practice it is selective outrage. Reports suggest that even Anthropic’s Claude was used by the Department of Defense to help select targets in Iran. If that is true, then this whole moral stand becomes theater. A stage play for venture capitalists who want to feel pure.

Let us talk about Iran. The regime led by Ali Khamenei has ruled since 1989. It has funded Hezbollah and other militant groups. The U.S. State Department has labeled Iran a state sponsor of terrorism for decades. The Iranian government has suppressed protests at home and backed armed groups abroad. When the U.S. and Israel strike Iranian targets, critics cry imperialism. But they stay silent when Iranian proxies fire rockets.

I am not naïve. War is ugly. Civilians die. Mistakes happen. But pretending that refusing to help your own country’s defense makes you morally superior is shallow. It is easy to tweet from safety. It is harder to face a world where adversaries do not share your ethics.

And then there is Katy Perry. I have nothing personal against her. She is a pop star. She sings. She performs. Good for her. But when she cancels ChatGPT over a Pentagon deal, I shrug. On what grounds is she qualified to teach us about military ethics? Fame does not equal expertise. A catchy chorus is not a security clearance.

If she wants to leave, let her go. As the proverb says, the river does not stop flowing because one leaf falls.

Sam Altman went on X and tried to calm the storm. He promised OpenAI would refuse unconstitutional orders. He joked about going to jail if necessary. He said the deal was rushed and that the optics did not look good. I think that is where he slipped. He framed patriotism as a PR problem.

It is not.

The armed forces swear an oath to defend the Constitution. There have been scandals in American history, yes. Edward Snowden exposed surveillance programs that many Americans found troubling. That debate is real. But to suggest that every partnership with the Department of Defense equals tyranny is lazy thinking. If OpenAI refuses to work with the U.S. military, what happens? The military will work with someone else. Maybe a less responsible firm. Maybe a contractor with fewer ethical guardrails. Technology does not disappear because one CEO says no. It simply moves.

I believe that if AI is going to be used in warfare, it is better for American companies, under American law, with public scrutiny, to be involved. Sunlight beats secrecy. If we push all advanced AI away from the Pentagon, we do not end militarization. We just reduce oversight.

The backlash against OpenAI feels like a “woke hype” cycle. A spike of outrage. A surge to number 1 on the App Store. A viral Reddit thread. Then what? People move on. They always do. Remember when companies were boycotted over minor political donations? Most of those companies are still standing. Anthropic may enjoy a short-term PR boost. But I question the long game. If the Pentagon labels you a “supply chain risk” and threatens to cut off federal contracts, that is not symbolic. The federal government is one of the largest customers in the world. Walking away from that over abstract moral branding may look brave, but it also looks ungrateful.

I say it clearly. The rights and business climate that allow Anthropic to exist were secured by force of arms when necessary. From Normandy to Fallujah, Americans fought. The U.S. Navy secures sea lanes. The Air Force deters aggression. The Army stands ready. Those realities create the stability that lets tech firms thrive.

I would rather see Sam Altman stand tall and say, “Yes, we support our country’s defense.” No apology tour. No nervous jokes about optics. Just clarity.

Helping America counter hostile regimes is not shameful. It is responsible citizenship. If that includes using AI to weaken a government like Khamenei’s, then so be it. We live in a world where adversaries are building their own tools. Refusing to participate does not make us pure. It makes us slower.

Some call it training a war machine. I call it defending a nation.

And I am not ashamed of that.

 

If you’re looking for something different to read, some of the titles in my “Brief Book Series” is available on Google Play Books. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Kill the Monster in the Lab: Why Hitting Iran Now Makes Brutal Sense

 


Waiting 10 years means betting your future on a regime that chants "Death to America" today. Smash the lab now—or meet Frankenstein armed with nukes.

Let me say it plain. Waiting 10 years for Iran’s regime to grow stronger is not strategy. It is surrender with better manners. If you see smoke in the basement, you do not hold a seminar. You grab a hose. President Donald Trump is grabbing the hose. And I support it.

Critics say he is inconsistent. They shout that he once mocked wars in the Middle East. True. He did. He blasted so-called “neocons” for chasing regime change like it was a hobby. He tore up the 2015 nuclear deal negotiated under President Barack Obama. He promised better. He did not get it. That is the record.

But here is the part his critics do not want to face: Iran is not Denmark with bad manners. It is a regime that has funded and armed proxies across the region for decades. Hezbollah in Lebanon. Militias in Iraq. The Houthis in Yemen. Hamas in Gaza. After October 7, 2023, when Hamas killed about 1,200 people in Israel and took around 240 hostages, the mask slipped again. Iran’s fingerprints were all over the wider firestorm that followed. You can call that “regional complexity.” I call it blood on the floor.

The Defence Intelligence Agency reportedly assessed that intercontinental ballistic missiles were about 10 years away if Iran chose to build them. Critics cling to that number like it is a comfort blanket. “We have time,” they say. Time for what? Time for centrifuges to spin? Time for engineers to perfect enrichment? Time for hardliners to learn from North Korea’s playbook?

Look at North Korea. In 1994, the Agreed Framework was supposed to freeze its nuclear program. By 2006, Pyongyang tested its first nuclear device. By 2017, it was launching ICBMs capable of reaching the continental United States. Diplomacy bought time, yes. But it also bought the regime time. Feed the cub long enough and one day you meet the tiger. I see Iran the same way. The regime has enriched uranium to levels that the International Atomic Energy Agency has warned are far beyond civilian needs. It has installed advanced centrifuges. It has restricted inspectors. You do not move that chessboard unless you are thinking about checkmate. Waiting 10 years for a theoretical missile timeline is like arguing about the size of the match while the gasoline tank is already open.

Critics also mock Trump for fearing a nuclear program he once said he “obliterated.” Fair shot. Politicians exaggerate. He is not the first. He will not be the last. But degrading a program is not the same as deleting it from existence. Ask any engineer. You can bomb facilities. You can set them back 1 year, 3 years, maybe more. But knowledge does not vaporize. Scientists survive. Blueprints survive. That is why the question is not whether Iran can rebuild. The question is whether you make rebuilding too costly to try.

History is not kind to those who wait politely for threats to mature. In the 1930s, Europe watched Adolf Hitler rearm Germany in open violation of the Treaty of Versailles. In 1938, the Munich Agreement handed him the Sudetenland in exchange for “peace.” By 1939, Poland was invaded. By 1945, about 60 million people were dead worldwide. I am not saying Iran is Nazi Germany. I am saying this: appeasement has a track record, and it is ugly.

Now let me address the charge that Trump is acting because Iran is weak. Yes. That is precisely why this moment matters. Since October 7, Israel has battered Iran’s proxies. Hezbollah has taken hits. Hamas has been decimated. Iranian air defenses have reportedly been degraded by Israeli and American strikes. This is not 2019. This is a regime under pressure.

When your adversary is off balance, you push. You do not offer him a chair. Trump seems to understand that. I can almost hear the street logic in it: “You want to wait until he gets his wind back?” That is not bravado. That is cold math.

Critics argue he abandoned Obama’s deal recklessly. Let’s examine that deal. The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action placed limits on enrichment levels and centrifuges, but many of its core restrictions were set to expire after 10 to 15 years. Sunset clauses. After that, Iran could legally expand parts of its program. In other words, the clock was ticking from day one. If you believe the regime’s long-term intent is hostile, then the deal was a pause button, not a cure.

I am not naïve. War is messy. American interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan cost trillions of dollars. Brown University’s Costs of War project has estimated over $8 trillion in spending tied to post-9/11 wars. Thousands of American service members were killed. Hundreds of thousands of civilians died in conflict zones. I do not forget that. I carry that weight. But here is the moral knot: sometimes avoiding short-term pain guarantees long-term disaster. If Iran were to cross the nuclear threshold, the Middle East would not stay calm. Saudi Arabia would rethink its options. Turkey would rethink its options. Proliferation would spread like a virus. One nuclear state in a volatile region is dangerous. Several is a nightmare.

And do not forget oil. The 1979 Iranian Revolution helped trigger a global oil shock. Prices spiked. Inflation soared. The U.S. economy bled. Trump’s worldview was shaped in that era. He saw 52 Americans held hostage for 444 days in Tehran. That humiliation burned into American memory. When he talks about strength, it is not abstract. It is personal, historical, economic.

I hear critics say, “He is flouting international law.” Maybe. International law is often invoked by the same global bodies that failed to stop Syria’s civil war, failed to stop Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, failed to stop mass slaughter in plain sight. Law without enforcement is theater. A badge without a gun is just jewelry.

Trump’s style is chaotic. I admit that. He speaks off the cuff. He contradicts himself. He muses about “taking over the whole thing.” That unsettles allies. It unsettles markets. But style is not substance. The substance is this: deal with a regime that chants “Death to America” while it is cornered, not crowned.

The alternative is to gamble that 10 years from now Iran will be softer, friendlier, more reasonable, even as it accumulates technical know-how and possibly long-range missile capability. That is a bet on goodwill from a government that has shown little of it. I do not take that bet.

I know the risks. Airstrikes can escalate. Proxies can retaliate. Oil prices can spike. American forces can be drawn deeper into conflict. Nothing about this is clean. But I would rather confront a weakened adversary today than a nuclear-armed, missile-equipped Frankenstein tomorrow.

History rarely rewards the timid. It punishes the complacent. If Trump succeeds in permanently crippling Iran’s nuclear ambitions, critics will say they disliked the process. Fine. Process does not stop centrifuges. Power does.

So I take the hard view. I would rather smash the lab before the monster wakes up. Because once it does, you are no longer debating policy. You are bargaining for survival.

 

If you’re looking for something different to read, some of the titles in my “Brief Book Series” is available on Google Play Books. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Sunday, March 1, 2026

The Khamenei’s Regime Feasted. The People Bled.

 


For 35 years, fear ran Iran. Protests meant graves. The supreme leader falls, but the system still breathes. Will the streets finally win—or bleed again?

When I think about Ali Khamenei’s 35 years in power, I don’t think first about missiles, clerics, or speeches from balconies. I think about a mother in Tehran staring at a grocery bill she can’t pay. I think about a student whispering in a dorm room because walls have ears. I think about a nation of 80 million people trapped inside a system that called repression stability and called fear faith. That’s the real story. It was never just Khamenei versus America or Israel. It was Khamenei versus his own people.

Late last year, the rial collapsed again. Inflation bit hard. Savings turned to paper. Workers watched wages shrink while prices sprinted. Anger spread from Tehran into all 31 provinces. That detail matters. All 31. When unrest hits every corner of a country, it is not a foreign plot. It is not a social media trend. It is a national scream. People poured into streets because they were tired of being squeezed dry by corruption, sanctions, and a leadership that preached sacrifice while controlling billions through religious foundations and state-connected networks.

Khamenei responded the way strongmen always do. He called protesters “rioters” and warned they would be “put in their place.” I’ve heard that script before. It always ends the same way. Security forces rolled in. The Revolutionary Guard tightened its grip. The Basij, a paramilitary force numbering around 1,000,000, enforced discipline like a street gang with official badges. In the weeks that followed, at least 7,000 people were killed. Activists say the real number may exceed 36,500. Even if you cut that number in half, the picture is brutal. That’s not crowd control. That’s collective punishment.

But the deeper wound is not only in the body count. It’s in the pattern. In 2019, when fuel prices jumped and people protested, Amnesty International reported at least 304 deaths within days. In 2022, after Mahsa Amini died in morality-police custody, demonstrations erupted again. Hundreds were killed. Thousands were arrested. Teenagers were shot. Women were beaten for showing hair. Judges issued death sentences like they were stamping forms at a post office. This was not an isolated crackdown. It was a governing strategy. Rule by fear. Rule by exhaustion. Rule until the streets fall silent.

Meanwhile, the regime’s inner circle did not live on bread and slogans. Khamenei controlled powerful bonyads, religious foundations that operate across construction, mining, finance, and more. They pay no tax. They face little competition. Sanctions that strangled private businesses often strengthened state-linked networks by keeping outsiders away. So while a shop owner watched the rial sink, someone in a marble office signed contracts worth millions. That contrast is not theory. It is daily life in an economy warped by politics.

Some will say Iran’s isolation was forced by foreign pressure. That sanctions hurt ordinary people. That is true. Sanctions bite. But leadership choices matter too. Nuclear brinkmanship, regional proxy wars, and rigid ideology deepen isolation. When a government funds militias abroad while unemployment and inflation rage at home, priorities become obvious. You can’t preach resistance while your youth line up for visas.

And they did line up. For years, talented Iranians left in waves. Engineers, doctors, students, entrepreneurs. Brain drain is not just an economic term. It is a quiet vote of no confidence. When the ambitious pack their bags, the system has already failed them. Khamenei rarely traveled abroad and kept public appearances limited, especially later in life as reports described him as frail and recovering from surgeries. Yet from behind guarded walls, he maintained a tight grip on power, appointing loyalists, shaping the Guardian Council, and ensuring that any “moderate” who slipped through elections had limits.

I imagine the conversations in small apartments during those protests. “Should we go out?” one voice asks. “If we don’t, nothing changes,” another replies. That’s the tension of living under a regime that punishes both action and silence. Go out and risk a bullet. Stay home and watch your future shrink. That’s not politics. That’s a trap.

When the bombing campaign began on February 28 and President Donald Trump declared Khamenei dead, the headlines focused on geopolitics. On Washington. On Jerusalem. On escalation. But I kept thinking about those apartments. About the chants that had grown louder in recent months, some openly calling for his death. That kind of chant does not come from comfort. It comes from despair. When citizens risk prison to shout against a supreme leader, something inside the social contract has snapped.

I am not naïve. Removing one man does not dissolve a system built over 35 years. Institutions remain. Networks remain. Hardliners remain. Power rarely evaporates just because the figurehead falls. Yet symbols matter. In authoritarian states, the supreme leader is not just an administrator. He is the spine. When the spine breaks, the body trembles.

Still, I refuse to romanticize this moment. There is moral ambiguity here. War is messy. Bombs do not come with surgical guarantees. Regional tensions are real. Retaliation is possible. But let’s not lose the central fact: for decades, ordinary Iranians paid the highest price. They paid in lost income, in censored speech, in prison terms, in graves. When protests flared over a collapsing currency, the answer was live ammunition. When young women demanded dignity, the answer was force. When voters hoped for reform, the system clipped reform’s wings.

I stand with the Iranian people, not with the regime that ruled them. I stand with the shopkeeper who watched prices double. I stand with the student who whispered because microphones might be hidden. I stand with the families who buried sons and daughters after security forces cleared the streets. If a leader presides over the killing of at least 7,000 protesters, possibly more than 36,500, then history will not grant him gentle adjectives. A throne built on fear eventually shakes.

Now comes the hard part. What replaces him? Will power consolidate around another hardliner? Will internal fractures widen? Will the next chapter bring reform or more repression? No one knows. Revolutions are not movies. They do not wrap up in 2 hours with swelling music. They grind. They stall. They surprise.

But one truth is already written. For 35 years, the regime feasted on control while its people absorbed the blows. The rial collapsed, sanctions tightened, youth protested, and the answer was always the same: crush them. That pattern defined an era. If that era is ending, even partially, then the story is not about vengeance. It is about a nation that has been holding its breath for decades.

I don’t celebrate death. I don’t cheer destruction. But I refuse to shed tears for a system that buried its youth and called it order. The real question now is whether Iran’s future will belong to the men with guns or to the millions who once filled the streets across all 31 provinces and dared to demand something better.

 

As a side note for regular readers, I have also written many titles in my Brief Book Series, now available on Google Play Books. You can also read them  here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

 

Peace Through Fire: The Trump–Netanyahu Doctrine

 


When tyrants like Ali Khamenei bankroll terror and butcher dissent, deterrence gets personal. The Trump–Netanyahu doctrine says leaders aren’t untouchable—and the Middle East just learned the price of pushing too far.

I have heard the whispers. “Too far.” “Too reckless.” “This will explode the region.” Maybe. Maybe not. But I know this much: when a regime slaughters its own people, funds militias across borders, and plays nuclear chicken with the world, soft words don’t work. Sanctions sting. Speeches echo. But bombs? Bombs rewrite calculations.

February 28 was not subtle. It was not diplomatic theater. It was a message written in smoke. President Donald Trump stepped up that evening and declared Ali Khamenei dead. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stood firm. No apology. No trembling voice. Just a blunt fact delivered like a verdict. The era of warnings was over. This is what I call the Trump–Netanyahu Doctrine. No more endless shadow boxing. No more pretending that a regime built on repression can be charmed into reform. If you bankroll terror, crush protests with live ammunition, and threaten your neighbors while inching toward nuclear capability, you become a target. That’s not cruelty. That’s deterrence.

For years, Iran’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei played the long game. He controlled the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. He had the Basij, about 1,000,000 strong, policing ideology in streets and schools. He presided over a system that killed at least 304 protesters in 2019, according to Amnesty International, and hundreds more in 2022 after Mahsa Amini’s death. Late last year, when protests over the collapsing rial spread across all 31 provinces, security forces killed at least 7,000 people. Activists say the real number may exceed 36,500. That’s not rumor. That’s blood.

And yet the world kept talking about “engagement.”

I’m not naive. I know diplomacy has its place. But diplomacy without leverage is begging. When you bring a violin to a gunfight, don’t be shocked by the noise. For decades, Iran expanded its reach through Hezbollah in Lebanon, militias in Iraq, and support for Bashar al-Assad in Syria, where more than 500,000 people have died since 2011 by UN estimates. Tehran built influence in the shadows, while Western leaders debated adjectives.

Trump and Netanyahu looked at that board and said enough.

Critics call it escalation. I call it clarity. The doctrine is simple: if you sit at the top of a regime that spills blood at home and abroad, you are not untouchable. Power does not come with immunity. It comes with risk.

I can already hear the counterargument. “This will make him a martyr.” Maybe. Authoritarian systems love martyrs. They print posters. They stage funerals. They wrap coffins in flags. But martyrdom doesn’t fix a collapsing currency. It doesn’t lower unemployment. It doesn’t bring back the dead. Fear can glue a regime together, but glue cracks under heat.

The real question is whether this doctrine restores deterrence. For years, the Middle East has been a slow burn. Rockets from Gaza. Missiles in Lebanon. Drone strikes. Cyberattacks. Everyone testing lines. Everyone denying responsibility. A gray war with red consequences.

Now the line is bright.

When the United States and Israel struck leadership targets across Iran, it wasn’t just about one man. It was about changing the math. If leaders believe they can orchestrate violence through proxies without personal cost, they keep doing it. If they believe the cost might reach their own doorstep, they pause. Maybe only for a moment. But in geopolitics, a moment can shift history.

I’m not pretending this is clean. It isn’t. War never is. Innocent people suffer in every conflict. That truth doesn’t vanish because I favor strength. But there’s another ugly truth: weakness invites aggression. After the 2011 withdrawal from Iraq, Iran’s influence there expanded. After years of hesitant red lines in Syria, the battlefield filled with foreign fighters and militias. Power vacuums do not stay empty. They get occupied.

Trump’s approach has always been blunt. Tariffs, sanctions, strikes. He believes in projecting unpredictability. Netanyahu operates with similar instincts. In a region where hesitation is read as fear, they are betting that decisive action speaks louder than ten summits.

Is it risky? Of course. Iran has missiles. It has proxies. It has networks that can lash out in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, even beyond. The Strait of Hormuz handles about 20 percent of global oil consumption. A serious disruption there would rattle markets overnight. Oil prices spike. Shipping insurance surges. Panic spreads.

But here’s the hard truth I keep coming back to: the old approach wasn’t exactly peaceful. Under Khamenei’s 35-year rule, Iran’s economy deteriorated, dissent was crushed, and regional conflicts multiplied. We weren’t living in harmony. We were living in managed tension. A slow bleed.

The Trump–Netanyahu Doctrine rejects the slow bleed. It says deterrence must be personal. It says regime leaders who authorize crackdowns and fund militias are not abstract figures. They are decision-makers with addresses.

Some will accuse me of cheering assassination. I’m not cheering death. I’m acknowledging consequence. If you order security forces to “put rioters in their place,” and thousands end up in graves, you have chosen your path. If you oversee a system that jails journalists, executes dissidents, and exports weapons to destabilize neighbors, you are not a misunderstood reformer. You are a hard man in a hard system.

The doctrine’s supporters argue that strength shortens wars. Its critics argue that it widens them. Both sides have history on their side. The 1986 US strike on Libya after the Berlin discotheque bombing was followed by years of relative quiet from Muammar Gaddafi. On the other hand, the 2003 invasion of Iraq unleashed chaos that lasted decades. History is not a straight line. It’s a maze.

So where does this leave us?

It leaves us in a tense, fragile moment. Iran’s leadership must now decide whether to escalate or recalibrate. Regional actors are watching. So are China and Russia. Deterrence only works if the other side believes you are serious. On February 28, seriousness was not in doubt.

I stand with Trump and Netanyahu because I believe credibility matters. In international politics, promises mean nothing if they are never enforced. If a regime can bankroll violence, crush protests, and inch toward nuclear capability without fearing direct consequences, it will keep pushing.

But I’m not blind to the stakes. The doctrine could backfire. It could ignite retaliation. It could harden factions inside Iran who thrive on confrontation. Power plays are never guaranteed wins.

Still, I keep returning to one image: protesters chanting in the streets of Tehran, risking prison or death, shouting for change. For them, the old status quo was not stability. It was suffocation. If a decisive strike shifts the balance even slightly against the machinery that crushed them, then maybe the gamble has logic.

In the end, the Trump–Netanyahu Doctrine is not about elegance. It’s about leverage. It says peace is not achieved by pleading with men who rule through fear. It says sometimes the only language a regime understands is force. Speak softly and carry a big stick was not poetry. It was policy.

Now the stick has been swung. The world waits to see who blinks.

 

As a side note for regular readers, I have also written many titles in my Brief Book Series, now available on Google Play Books. You can also read them  here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

 

No Tears for a Tyrant: Why Khamenei Faced the Music at Last

 


Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei ruled with bullets, buried thousands, and called it order. Now he’s dead. No tears. Just consequences. Tyrants who drown nations in blood eventually choke on it.

I don’t mourn dictators. I don’t light candles for men who light fires under their own people. When I heard that Ali Khamenei was dead on February 28, at age 86, I didn’t blink. I didn’t sigh. I didn’t whisper a prayer. I said what many people were already thinking: it’s about time he faced the music.

Let’s call this what it is. Ali Khamenei ruled Iran for 35 years. That’s longer than many monarchs. He wasn’t elected in any real sense of the word. He inherited power in 1989 after Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini died, and he tightened his grip year after year. Presidents came and went. Parliaments argued. But the real power sat in one room, under one turban, behind one cold stare.

And when the people rose up, he crushed them.

Late last year, protests erupted in Tehran over the collapsing rial. Iran’s currency has been battered for years by sanctions, corruption, and economic mismanagement. By early January, protests had spread to all 31 provinces. That’s not a small riot. That’s a nation screaming. What did Khamenei say? He warned that “rioters must be put in their place.” That’s dictator language. That’s code for blood.

When his warning didn’t scare people back into silence, he gave the order to crush the uprising by any means necessary. In the weeks that followed, security forces killed at least 7,000 people. Activists say the real number may be more than 36,500. Even if we take the lower number, 7,000 is not crowd control. It’s a massacre. It’s a slaughterhouse.

And this wasn’t the first time.

In 2019, protests over fuel price hikes swept Iran. Amnesty International reported that security forces killed at least 304 people in just a few days. Other human rights groups put the figure much higher. In 2022, after the death of Mahsa Amini in morality-police custody, protests exploded again. Hundreds were killed. Thousands were arrested. Teenagers were shot in the streets. Women were beaten for showing their hair. Judges handed down death sentences like parking tickets.

This is the regime some people want me to cry over? There’s no way I will grieve for that garbage!

Khamenei didn’t just oversee repression. He built the machine that made it possible. He controlled the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, a force that is not just military but economic and political. He controlled the Basij, a paramilitary group with about 1,000,000 members, tasked with enforcing ideological discipline. That’s not a neighborhood watch. That’s a million-strong intimidation squad. He also controlled the Guardian Council, a 12-member body that vets candidates for elections. If you don’t pass their filter, you don’t run. That’s how you rig a system without calling it rigged. Even when a moderate like Mohammad Khatami won the presidency in 1997, Khamenei clipped his wings. Real power stayed put.

Some will say he was a complex man. He studied in Qom. He liked Victor Hugo’s “Les Misérables.” He translated Sayyid Qutb into Farsi. Fine. A tyrant who reads novels is still a tyrant. A wolf in a library is still a wolf.

He survived an assassination attempt in 1981 that left his right arm paralyzed. Some will frame that as tragedy. I see irony. A man who survived violence went on to preside over decades of it.

Under his watch, Iran’s economy sank. The rial collapsed. Youth unemployment soared. Sanctions tightened, partly because of the regime’s nuclear ambitions and regional aggression. Instead of opening up, Khamenei doubled down. He poured resources into proxy groups across the Middle East. Hezbollah in Lebanon. Militias in Iraq. Support for Bashar al-Assad in Syria, where more than 500,000 people have died since 2011, according to UN estimates. Iranian fingerprints are all over that battlefield.

So when President Donald Trump declared Khamenei dead after the February 28 bombing campaign began, and when Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stood firm beside him, I didn’t flinch. I know some people will call it escalation. I call it consequence.

Trump denounced Khamenei as uniquely evil. That word makes people uncomfortable. But tell me what word fits a man who orders the killing of thousands of his own citizens for protesting a currency collapse. Tell me what word fits a leader who keeps his country isolated for more than 30 years, squeezes dissent, and fattens foundations that control billions in assets while ordinary Iranians struggle to buy bread.

Khamenei controlled bonyads, so-called charitable foundations that expanded into construction, mining, and other sectors. They paid no tax. They faced little competition because sanctions blocked foreign companies. That’s not charity. That’s a shadow economy. It enriched the regime while the rial burned. And let’s not pretend he was some ceremonial figure. He played institutions against each other like chess pieces. The army against the Revolutionary Guard. The president against the Majlis. He made sure all roads led back to him. Supreme leaders serve for life. That’s a lifetime appointment with no review board.

Over time, he grew more unpopular. Protesters in recent months openly chanted for his death. Think about that. In a country where dissent can get you jailed, tortured, or killed, people were shouting for the supreme leader to die. That’s not casual anger. That’s desperation.

So when news broke that he was gone, I imagined some quiet rooms in Tehran where people exhaled. Maybe they didn’t celebrate in the streets. Fear doesn’t vanish overnight. But I doubt many tears were shed.

Some will say killing a head of state sets a dangerous precedent. Maybe. International politics is not Sunday school. It’s rough, messy, and full of shadows. But there’s also this: when a leader has the blood of thousands on his hands, he cannot expect a soft landing. You reap what you sow.

I stand with Trump and Netanyahu on this one. Not because I enjoy war. Not because I cheer bombs. But because I refuse to romanticize a regime that murdered its own people. If a government slaughters 7,000 of its citizens in weeks, possibly 36,500, that government forfeits the moral high ground. It forfeits sympathy.

Khamenei grabbed power and held it at bloody cost. He outmaneuvered rivals. He expanded his office. He embedded loyalists everywhere. He survived plots and purges. He lasted 35 years. But even iron grips rust.

In the end, he faced the music. No violin played. No choir sang. The man who told rioters to be “put in their place” has now been put in his. History is not always kind, but it is often blunt. And on this blunt fact, I am clear: when a ruler builds a throne on bodies, he should not be shocked when the floor gives way.

 

For readers interested in a separate line of thought, the titles in my “Brief Book Series” are available on Google Play. Read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

 

 

Thursday, February 26, 2026

America at the Brink: When Ideology Pulls the Trigger on Public Health

 

When ideology hijacks public health, children pay the price. Vaccines saved millions. Undermine them, and diseases America buried will rise again—fast, ruthless, and unforgiving.

I have seen what preventable disease looks like up close. It doesn’t argue policy. It doesn’t post opinions. It just spreads. It moves from one coughing kid to another like gossip in a small town. And when it lands, it lands hard. That’s why I don’t play games with this topic. Ideology is a serious danger to America. Not theoretical danger. Not academic danger. Real danger.

Take Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. The man hates vaccines like poison and rejects orthodox medicine as if it’s some cartel scheme. Whatever ideology is driving him down that road, it is not neutral. It is not harmless. It is not an intellectual exercise. It is a live wire in the hands of the nation’s top health official. And when you hand a live wire to someone who distrusts the grid, sparks fly. I’m not interested in polishing language. If a Health Secretary weakens confidence in vaccines, people will get sick. That’s not fearmongering. That’s arithmetic. Let me break it down the way the numbers break it down.

Before vaccines, America buried kids at a rate that would shock us today. Around 1900, nearly 18% of children died before age 5. Measles infected 3 to 4 million Americans every year. Between 400 and 500 died annually from that one disease alone. Polio paralyzed more than 15,000 people each year in the early 1950s. Summer meant swimming pools and ice cream for some families. For others, it meant iron lungs and funerals.

Then science stepped in and did what ideology never could: it produced results.

After the measles vaccine arrived in 1963, cases fell by more than 90% within a decade. Deaths dropped by more than 99%. Polio was eliminated from the United States by 1979. From 1994 to 2023, routine childhood vaccines prevented an estimated 508 million illnesses, 32 million hospitalizations, and more than 1.1 million deaths in this country. Let that sink in. 1.1 million children who grew up instead of being lowered into the ground.

That is not a conspiracy. That is a scoreboard.

Now fast-forward. Vaccination rates are slipping in parts of the country. In some communities, kindergarten coverage has dropped below the 95% level needed for strong herd immunity against measles. Once you dip below roughly 90% to 92%, outbreaks stop being rare and start being predictable. In 2023, measles cases in the United States topped 1,200, the highest in decades. That wasn’t bad luck. That was physics. The virus found gaps and ran through them.

And now the top health official in the country questions the very tools that built that wall. You want to talk freedom? Fine. But freedom without facts is just recklessness in a nice suit. I’ve heard the arguments. “Medical freedom.” “Big Pharma.” “Government overreach.” I’m not allergic to skepticism. I’m allergic to pretending that viruses care about your political identity.

Severe vaccine reactions are rare, often fewer than 1 in 1 million doses for many vaccines. Measles, on the other hand, infects up to 90% of unvaccinated people exposed to it. That’s not ideology. That’s basic biology. If I told you there was a 90% chance your house would catch fire without a smoke detector, and you still ripped it off the ceiling because you don’t trust the manufacturer, that’s not bravery. That’s negligence.

When a Health Secretary downplays vaccines, even subtly, it changes behavior. Parents hesitate. Doctors feel political pressure. Exemptions climb. A 5% drop in vaccination coverage in a nation of 330 million means millions more vulnerable people. And infectious diseases love nothing more than a crowd.

Who wins in this scenario? I’ll tell you who doesn’t. The newborn who’s too young to be vaccinated but relies on herd immunity. The kid with leukemia whose immune system can’t handle a measles infection. The elderly grandmother whose body doesn’t bounce back the way it used to. They don’t get to debate ideology. They just take the hit. We’ve seen what happens when vaccination systems falter. In parts of Europe during the 2010s, measles cases surged into the tens of thousands after misinformation campaigns eroded trust. Hospitals filled. Deaths returned. It was a brutal reminder that disease doesn’t stay defeated just because we declared victory once.

Back in 1947, when smallpox appeared in New York City, officials didn’t hold panel discussions about personal narratives. They vaccinated more than 6 million residents in less than 1 month. The outbreak stopped. That’s what decisive public health leadership looks like. Not vibes. Not podcasts. Action.

Now imagine the opposite. Imagine a steady erosion of trust from the top. Imagine CDC guidance reshaped to align with ideology instead of data. Imagine routine immunization rates sliding year after year. Measles eliminated in 2000, then reestablished. Polio imported and spreading in under-vaccinated communities. Schools closing. ERs crowded. Politicians arguing while nurses work double shifts.

I don’t have to stretch my imagination. The cracks are already visible. Here’s the ugly truth: public health is boring when it works. You don’t see the disease that didn’t happen. You don’t mourn the child who never got infected. Success is invisible. Failure is not.

Ideology, on the other hand, is loud. It promises clarity. It offers villains and heroes. It turns complex biology into a morality play. But microbes don’t care about morality. They exploit weakness. They multiply in confusion.

When I look at the historical record, I don’t see a debate. I see a pattern. High vaccination rates equal low disease. Falling vaccination rates equal rising outbreaks. It’s as simple and as brutal as that. So yes, I’ll say it again without dressing it up: ideology in charge of public health is a loaded gun. And when the Health Secretary Kennedy Jr. questions the science behind vaccines, he is pointing that weapon at the most vulnerable Americans. Children. The elderly. The immunocompromised. People who didn’t sign up for a culture war but will pay the price for one.

My strategic takeaway is not complicated. Defend evidence-based medicine like your family’s future depends on it. Because it does. Hold leaders accountable when they drift from established science. Demand transparency, yes, but also demand competence. Pay attention to local vaccination rates. Support pediatricians and public health workers who are trying to keep the levee intact.

America beat polio. We drove measles to the edge of extinction. We cut childhood mortality dramatically over the last century. We did not do that with slogans. We did it with science, scale, and discipline. If we let ideology run the show now, we won’t just rewrite policy. We’ll rewrite hospital charts. And this time, the ink will be written in fever spikes and ICU admissions.

Viruses don’t negotiate. They don’t compromise. They don’t care who you voted for.

If we forget that, they will remind us.

 

For readers interested in a separate line of thought, the titles in my “Brief Book Series” are available on Google Play. Read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Don’t Ban Teenagers from Social Media: Prohibition Failed Before. Don’t Repeat It With Your Kids

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