Sunday, June 7, 2026

Rejected at Home, Desired Abroad: Why Some American Men Believe the Best Wife Lives Overseas

 What if the biggest threat to America's dating culture isn't technology—but men quietly leaving the game and taking their dreams overseas? The dating war has gone international. Men are changing countries, women are changing expectations, and the battle over love, money, and control is just beginning.


America’s dating market has gone  global. Josh got tired of losing in America's dating game, boarded a plane to Thailand, and found a fiancée whose name is Suda. Millions now shop globally for jobs, goods, and spouses. The internet did not just globalize business; it turned romance into an international marketplace.


Many average American men believe dating apps became digital casinos where a small group wins most of the attention. Feeling locked out of the game, some stopped competing altogether and moved abroad. When the rules look rigged, people change tables.


This is not a new invention. After World War II, nearly 100,000 American servicemen married foreign women. Yesterday's war brides have become today's passport bros. The plane changed. The destination changed. Human nature did not.


Money Is the hidden matchmaker. A man earning $75,000 in America may feel ordinary. In parts of Southeast Asia or Latin America, he can live far above average. Love may be in the air, but money is often in the driver's seat. The wallet frequently arrives before Cupid.


The real attraction may be power. Historians  warns that large income gaps can create unequal relationships. Some men say they want traditional wives; critics say they want control. That argument fuels the controversy. For some passport bros, the romance is the headline, but power is the subtext.


An update for those who follow my work: My Brief Book  Series titles 

are now available on Google Play Books. You can also read it here on 

Google Play or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.






Why Are Men Fleeing America to Find Wives?

 


American men are fleeing the Western dating market, taking their money and marriage plans overseas. If this trend keeps growing, the real question is not who is leaving—but why. When average men find more respect, affection, and marriage prospects abroad than at home, the dating market has a problem nobody wants to discuss honestly.

A funny thing is happening in America. The world's richest country is producing men who are buying one-way tickets to Thailand, Vietnam, Colombia, Brazil, and the Philippines because they cannot find the kind of wife they want at home. Forget Hollywood romance. Forget the dating coaches. Forget the therapy podcasts. These men have decided that if the fish are not biting in one pond, they will try another lake.

Welcome to the age of the passport bro.

The media likes to paint these men as predators hunting for submissive women in poor countries. Their supporters paint them as pioneers escaping a broken dating market. Both sides are selling a story. The truth sits somewhere in the middle, smoking a cigar and laughing at everybody.

Take Josh, an American who got tired of dating in the United States and moved to Thailand. There he met Suda, his Thai fiancée. In one viral video, she kneels on the floor clipping his nails. The clip spread across social media like gasoline meeting a lit match. Some men watched it and sighed, "Finally, a woman who cares about her man." Some women watched it and nearly swallowed their phones. Welcome to modern gender warfare.

The passport bro movement did not fall from the sky. It grew out of frustration. Lots of frustration. Tinder promised romance. Hinge promised relationships. What many men got instead was a digital casino where the house always wins. Swipe. Rejected. Swipe. Ignored. Swipe. Ghosted. Repeat until your self-esteem resembles roadkill.

Many studies of online dating have found that attention tends to cluster around a relatively small percentage of highly attractive users. In plain English, a handful of men are eating steak while everybody else is fighting over breadcrumbs. For many average men, dating apps feel less like romance and more like applying for a job that already has an internal candidate.

That frustration has become rocket fuel for the passport bro movement.

But dating apps are only part of the story. The deeper issue is that America has changed. During World War II, millions of women entered the workforce. The genie came out of the bottle and never went back in. Women gained economic independence. Good for them. But every social revolution creates winners and losers. Some men adapted. Others did not. Some women embraced the new order. Others quietly wished certain old traditions had survived.

Now the chickens have come home to roost.

Many young Western women say they want equality. Many young Western men say they are tired of being told that equality means paying all the bills while getting none of the authority their grandfathers had. Whether that complaint is fair or not is another discussion. The point is that millions of men believe it.

And beliefs move markets.

A recent Ipsos survey across roughly 30 countries found that more than 50% of Gen Z men believe women's rights have gone far enough. Around one-third believe wives should obey their husbands. Those numbers would have sounded shocking in a university sociology class 10 years ago. Today they are warning lights flashing on the dashboard.

Then comes the money.

Money is the elephant in the room. Everybody sees it. Nobody wants to admit it is there.

A man earning $75,000 a year in America may feel financially average. The same man in parts of Southeast Asia can suddenly live like a local king. His apartment is bigger. His savings grow faster. His lifestyle improves. His dating prospects multiply. Suddenly, he is not competing against a surgeon with a six-pack and a yacht. He is the yacht.

Some passport bros openly admit this reality. Justin, one of them, said he does not mind dating a poor woman because he is more likely to get traditional gender roles. That statement may sound ugly, but at least it is honest. Honesty is rare in modern discussions about dating. Most people wrap their motives in pretty words and hope nobody notices.

Critics accuse passport bros of exploiting women. Sometimes they have a point. If a relationship exists mainly because one partner has money and the other needs money, let's stop pretending Cupid is running the show. The accountant is.

History is full of such arrangements. After World War II, nearly 100,000 American servicemen married foreign women. Mail-order bride businesses existed long before TikTok influencers started ranking countries like products on Amazon. The passport bro phenomenon is not new. It is an old story wearing a new suit.

But the critics also have a blind spot. They often assume the women involved are helpless victims. That assumption can be just as insulting as the stereotypes they claim to oppose.

Consider Jewel Clyte, the Filipina girlfriend of passport bro Austin Abeyta. She has said she has no desire to move to America. That ruins one of the favorite talking points thrown around by critics. Not every woman dating a foreign man is hunting for a green card. Some are hunting for financial stability. Some are hunting for a better partner. Some are simply making a practical decision.

And practical decisions have always played a role in marriage.

Love is wonderful. So is paying rent.

The uncomfortable reality is that many of these relationships are transactions mixed with affection. He gets admiration, loyalty, and traditional family values. She gets financial security, stability, and opportunities she may not have had otherwise. It may not sound romantic, but neither is a mortgage. Yet millions sign one every year.

The real controversy is not that passport bros exist. The real controversy is what they reveal. They expose cracks in the modern dating market that many people would rather ignore. They expose the growing divide between what some men want and what many women want. They expose how economic inequality can shape romance. Most of all, they expose the fact that globalization has entered the bedroom.

The old saying goes that money cannot buy love. Maybe. But it can buy a plane ticket to Bangkok, Manila, or Medellín. And right now, thousands of Western men are betting that the odds of finding love—or at least something that looks close enough to it—are better there than back home.

Whether they are finding wives, buying fantasies, escaping reality, or simply trading one set of problems for another depends on who you ask. But one thing is certain. When men start leaving the country to find spouses, that is not a dating story. That is a social alarm bell ringing loud enough to be heard across oceans. And judging by the growing number of passport bros boarding international flights, a lot of people are hearing it.

 

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, or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

Saturday, June 6, 2026

The Billion-Dollar Question Scientists Keep Dodging: We Can Reach Mars, But We Still Can't Stop a Hurricane?

 


Hurricanes and tornadoes keep killing people and destroying billions in property. The shocking question: Why are we still predicting these monsters instead of trying to stop them? We can land robots on Mars, yet every hurricane season we still run from wind. Is nature unbeatable—or have scientists simply never made stopping storms a priority?

Every year, humanity performs the same tired ritual. A hurricane shows up. A tornado joins the party. Houses fly away. Cars become airborne. Trees snap like toothpicks. Politicians hold press conferences. Scientists hold conferences. Insurance companies hold their breath. Then everyone nods solemnly and says, "Well, that's nature."

Nature? No. Let's call a spade a spade.

Hurricanes and tornadoes are serial offenders. They have been mugging humanity for centuries. They show up uninvited, wreck neighborhoods, kill people, empty bank accounts, and disappear before the bill arrives. If a criminal gang caused this level of destruction every year, governments would declare war on it. But because the criminals are made of wind and water, we shrug our shoulders and call them "natural disasters."

The word "natural" doesn't make the funeral any less real.

Look at the recent scorecard. Hurricane Helene tore through the southeastern United States in 2024, killing more than 250 people and causing nearly $79 billion in damage. Entire communities looked as if they had lost a boxing match against a heavyweight champion. Weeks later, Hurricane Milton arrived and piled on tens of billions more in damage. Milton did not come alone. It brought tornadoes with it, because apparently one disaster was not enough. Florida neighborhoods were chewed up and spit out like sunflower seed shells.

Before that, tornado outbreaks ripped through states such as Kentucky, Mississippi, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Texas. Homes disappeared. Schools were flattened. Businesses became piles of lumber and twisted metal. Families spent decades building what a storm erased in minutes.

And here is the question that nobody seems willing to ask loudly. Why are we still playing defense? Seriously.

We can land spacecraft on Mars. We can guide rockets through millions of miles of empty space and place them on a planet that looks like a giant rusted baseball. We can build artificial intelligence that writes essays, translates languages, and beats grandmasters at chess. We can create missiles that can hit a target thousands of miles away. Yet when a giant spinning cloud starts heading toward Florida, our grand strategy is still, "Pack your bags and leave."

That's not victory. That's evacuation. Imagine if this logic were applied elsewhere.

A burglar keeps breaking into your house every year. Instead of stopping him, you install better cameras. Then you proudly announce, "Good news! We can now predict exactly when the burglar will arrive."

Wonderful. Now stop him, will you?

That is exactly where we are with hurricanes and tornadoes. We predict them with astonishing accuracy. We can tell you where they are going. We can tell you how fast they are moving. We can estimate how much damage they may cause. But stopping them?  Apparently that idea gets treated like science fiction.

I am not buying it. Human history is one long graveyard of "impossible" things. Flying was impossible until it wasn't. Reaching the Moon was impossible until it wasn't. Talking to someone on the other side of the planet through a device in your pocket was impossible until it wasn't.

The impossible has a funny habit of becoming boring. So why should hurricane control be different?

Scientists correctly point out that hurricanes contain enormous amounts of energy. Fine. Nobody is arguing with physics. But the answer does not have to be brute force. Nobody is suggesting building a giant fan in the Atlantic Ocean and plugging it into an extension cord.

Think differently. Hurricanes feed on warm ocean water. Cut off the food supply and the beast weakens. Could future technologies cool strategic areas of ocean water? Could floating systems reduce heat transfer? Could atmospheric engineering interfere with storm development before the hurricane reaches monster status?

What about tornadoes? Scientists know the ingredients that help create them. Warm moist air. Cold dry air. Instability. Rotation.

Fine. Then why isn't there a Manhattan Project for disrupting tornado formation? Why aren't thousands of drones being developed to target developing storm cells? Why aren't governments investing billions into atmospheric intervention technologies instead of merely studying destruction after it happens?

Every year we spend fortunes rebuilding what storms destroy. What if some of that money went toward preventing the destruction in the first place? Of course, critics will say weather modification could have unintended consequences. Fair point. A treatment can have side effects. That doesn't mean you refuse to search for a cure. Imagine if doctors had adopted that attitude.

"Heart surgery is risky, so let's never attempt it."

"Vaccines might have complications, so let's stop researching them."

"Spaceflight is dangerous, so let's stay on Earth forever."

Progress has always involved risk. The question is whether the risk is worth taking. When hurricanes are causing tens of billions of dollars in damage and taking lives year after year, I would say the answer is obvious.

The uncomfortable truth is that storm prevention has never enjoyed the glamour of space exploration. Mars gets documentaries. Hurricanes get weather reports. One inspires wonder. The other gets treated like an annual tax imposed by nature.

But tell that to the family whose house was ripped apart. Tell that to the business owner who watched a lifetime of work disappear under floodwater. Tell that to the parents standing in the rubble of what used to be their neighborhood. They do not care that a rover found interesting rocks on Mars. They want the monster stopped.

Maybe I am wrong. Maybe hurricanes and tornadoes truly cannot be neutralized, weakened, redirected safely, or prevented from forming. Maybe they will remain undefeated forever. But I have a hard time believing that a species capable of reaching the Moon, exploring Mars, splitting atoms, decoding DNA, and building artificial intelligence has reached the end of its imagination when it comes to wind and rain.

Frankly, I suspect the problem is not capability. The problem is priority. Humanity has spent decades learning how to predict the punch. Maybe it is time we started learning how to throw one back.

 

This article stands on its own, but some readers may also enjoy the titles in my “Brief Book  Series”. Read it here on Google Play or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

Friday, June 5, 2026

The Hormuz Heist: How Iran Turned the World’s Oil Highway into a Mafia Toll Booth

 


Iran's rulers turned the world's oil highway into a toll road. If nobody stops it, today's Hormuz shakedown could become tomorrow's global blueprint for economic blackmail.

I am tired of hearing people dance around this issue as if they are walking barefoot through broken glass. Let us call a spade a spade.

In this ongoing U.S.-Israel-Iran war, which began in February 2026, one of the strategies adopted by the remnants of Iran's ruling regime has been to effectively close the Strait of Hormuz and allow passage only to ships willing to pay tolls or obtain special permission. The result has been exactly what any sane person would expect. Oil flows have been disrupted. Shipping costs have climbed. Insurance rates have shot through the roof. Energy markets have become nervous wrecks. Businesses have paid more. Consumers have paid more. Entire economies have paid more.

That is not diplomacy. That is not strategy. That is a shakedown.

If a gang blocked the only bridge connecting several cities and demanded money before allowing trucks to pass, nobody would call it foreign policy. Everybody would call it extortion. Yet when a government does essentially the same thing in one of the world's most important waterways, some people suddenly develop a vocabulary problem.

The Strait of Hormuz is not some forgotten creek behind a farmer's barn. It is one of the most important maritime chokepoints on Earth. Roughly 20% of the world's oil trade passes through it. It is the artery through which much of the economic blood of Asia, Europe, and other regions flows. Block that artery and the patient starts gasping. That is exactly what has happened.

Oil markets hate uncertainty. Shipping companies hate uncertainty. Investors hate uncertainty. Consumers hate uncertainty. The moment tankers started facing restrictions and threats, the economic ripple effects began spreading across the globe like cracks in a windshield. And here is where the story becomes even uglier. Officials associated with Iran's murderous regime have reportedly signaled that they want this arrangement to continue even after the war ends. Think about that for a second. The argument is no longer merely about wartime measures. The objective increasingly looks like turning a vital international waterway into a permanent cash register.

In other words, a global toll booth run by people who do not own the road. A pirate with a necktie is still a pirate.

Some defenders of Tehran's actions claim that Iran has a right to control what happens near its coastline. Nice try. International law says otherwise.

The specific law at issue is the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, commonly known as UNCLOS. Under Part III of UNCLOS, ships enjoy the right of transit passage through international straits used for international navigation. Article 38 establishes that right. Article 44 prohibits states bordering such straits from hampering transit passage. The principle is simple enough for a middle-school student to understand: countries cannot arbitrarily block or tax international traffic moving through vital global waterways.

You do not get to build a toll booth in the middle of the world's shipping lane simply because geography dealt you a lucky hand. If that principle collapses, chaos follows.

Suppose Egypt decides tomorrow that every vessel crossing the Suez Canal must pay whatever random amount Cairo demands. Suppose Turkey decides to do the same in the Bosporus. Suppose Denmark does it in the Danish Straits. Suppose Indonesia starts inventing fees for ships moving through the Malacca Strait. The result would be a global maritime circus. Trade routes would become hostage routes.

Every government sitting next to a strategic chokepoint would suddenly discover a new addiction to easy money.

The world abandoned that logic centuries ago for good reason.

Historically, civilizations prosper when trade routes remain open and predictable. They suffer when those routes become hostage to political blackmail. The Barbary pirates learned that lesson the hard way. So did countless rulers who tried turning commerce into a hostage negotiation.

The formula never changes.

Extortion works until someone stronger gets tired of paying.

What amazes me, however, is not Iran's behavior. Governments throughout history have attempted to exploit strategic geography. Human greed is not exactly a new scientific discovery. What amazes me is the reaction—or lack thereof—from those who have the most to lose.

China receives a massive share of the oil moving through Hormuz. Asian countries collectively receive nearly 90% of the crude oil transported through that waterway. Europe also depends heavily on stable energy markets. If Hormuz sneezes, their economies catch a cold.

Yet where is the outrage? Where is the urgency? Where is the determination? The silence is deafening. It is almost like watching a man stand calmly beside a burning house while arguing that fire is a complicated issue requiring further study.

No. The house is on fire. The issue is not complicated. The world's most important energy highway is being treated like a neighborhood parking lot controlled by a street gang. China should be furious. India should be furious. Japan should be furious. South Korea should be furious. Europe should be furious. Instead, much of the world appears content to let America carry the burden while they continue calculating profits, issuing statements, holding conferences, and organizing diplomatic tea parties.

There is an old saying: everyone wants to go to heaven, but nobody wants to die. Today, everyone wants free navigation through Hormuz, but too many countries seem unwilling to shoulder the costs and risks required to guarantee it.

That approach is shortsighted. The stakes are larger than oil. The stakes are larger than Iran. The stakes are larger than this particular war. The real question is whether international waterways belong to the international community or to whichever government happens to have missiles positioned nearby.

That question matters because precedents have a nasty habit of spreading.

If the world accepts that a government can effectively charge passage fees in a major international strait, then every ambitious strongman around the globe will start taking notes. Some people collect baseball cards. Others collect bad ideas. Authoritarian governments are often enthusiastic collectors of bad ideas.

The Iranian people are not the villains in this story. Ordinary Iranians are not deciding maritime policy. They are not collecting tolls from tankers. They are not sitting in command centers drawing up plans to squeeze global trade routes. Many of them have suffered enormously from war, sanctions, economic hardship, and political repression.

The issue is the ruling establishment and the decisions it has made. And those decisions have transformed one of the world's most important waterways into something resembling a protection racket.

I keep hearing people describe this situation using sanitized language. "Maritime leverage." "Strategic pressure." "Regional influence." Give me a break. When somebody blocks a road and demands payment, it is called extortion. When somebody blocks an international waterway and demands payment, it is still called extortion. A wolf wearing a tuxedo is still a wolf.

The Strait of Hormuz is not Iran's private driveway. It is not Iran's personal ATM machine. It is not Iran's family business. It is a critical international waterway that helps power the global economy. The longer the world tolerates this nonsense, the more expensive the bill becomes. And as every shopkeeper knows, the longer you feed a stray cat, the more convinced it becomes that it owns the house.

 

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, or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

The House Approves War Power Resolution. Congress to Tehran: “Don't Worry, We've Got Your Back”

 


Congress just sent Tehran a dangerous signal: when America's enemies push harder, some politicians want America to pull back. If Iran wins that gamble, the next crisis could be far worse. While Iran's rulers chant "Death to America," Washington politicians are fighting Washington. America's enemies are watching, smiling, and calculating their next move. If Tehran sees weakness in Washington, America may be inviting the very disaster these politicians claim they are trying to prevent. Appeasement has a long and ugly history.

The House vote was 215-208. Democrats and a handful of Republicans joined forces to pass a war powers resolution aimed at limiting President Donald Trump's ability to continue military action against Iran. The moment the vote passed, cheers reportedly erupted in the chamber.

Cheers? That image sticks in my head like a bad song.

America is confronting a rogue  regime that has spent nearly half a century chanting "Death to America," funding anti-American proxies, arming militants, threatening U.S. allies, and pursuing nuclear capabilities that have terrified governments from Jerusalem to Riyadh. Yet some politicians in Washington looked at that regime and apparently decided that the real danger was not Tehran but the White House.

I keep asking myself a simple question. What exactly are these people smoking?

Iran's ruling clerics have never hidden who they are. They are not shy. They are not subtle. They do not send Hallmark cards to America every Christmas. Since the Islamic Revolution of 1979, the regime has built an entire political identity around hostility toward the United States. The slogan "Death to America" did not fall from the sky. It became a ritual.

Yet every time pressure is applied to Tehran, somebody in Washington rushes onto the field waving a white flag and yelling, "Wait! Let's protect the feelings of the Mullahs!"

If political irony were oil, America would never need the Strait of Hormuz. Supporters of the resolution insist that they are defending the Constitution. Fine. Congress has constitutional authority regarding war. Nobody disputes that. But let's stop pretending that timing does not matter. Imagine a police officer wrestling an armed criminal to the ground and somebody runs over shouting, "Before you handcuff him, let's have a procedural debate!" That is what this looks like to many Americans.

The defenders of this vote say they oppose war. Wonderful. Most Americans oppose unnecessary war. I oppose unnecessary war. The graves at Arlington are already crowded enough. Iraq taught painful lessons. Afghanistan taught painful lessons. Nobody with a functioning brain wants endless wars.

But opposing war and helping America's enemies are two different things. The distinction matters. Iran is not Norway. Iran is not New Zealand. Iran is not a misunderstood exchange student who simply needs a hug and a scholarship.

This is the same regime that has supported Hezbollah for decades. Hezbollah has been responsible for attacks that killed Americans and targeted American interests. This is the same regime that has backed Hamas, whose October 7, 2023 attack on Israel killed approximately 1,200 people and helped ignite a regional firestorm. This is the same regime that American intelligence agencies and multiple administrations have watched closely because of concerns over nuclear ambitions.

Those are facts. Not talking points. Not campaign slogans.

Facts.

So when I hear politicians arguing that America should tie its own hands while confronting Tehran, I naturally wonder whether they understand how this sounds outside the Beltway bubble.

Imagine being an Iranian hardliner sitting in Tehran. You turn on the television. You watch members of Congress fighting the White House. You watch lawmakers trying to restrict military options. You watch Americans publicly signaling division. Do you panic? Or do you smile? I suspect the smiles in Tehran were wider than the smiles in the House chamber.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio made a point that deserves serious attention. He warned that Tehran could interpret congressional restrictions as evidence that America's hands are tied. That is not some wild theory. That is how adversaries think. They constantly look for weakness, hesitation, division, and confusion.

History is full of examples. The dictators of the 1930s constantly tested democratic governments. Every sign of hesitation invited another demand. Every sign of weakness encouraged another gamble. A shark does not stop swimming because it smells blood. It swims faster. No, Iran is not Nazi Germany. History is not a photocopier. But the lesson remains. Aggressive regimes often interpret restraint as opportunity.

Then there is the nuclear question. This is where the entire debate becomes even more bizarre. Do these politicians want Iran to possess nuclear weapons? I assume the answer is no. Then what is the plan? Seriously. What is the plan? Hope that the Ayatollahs wake up one morning and decide they no longer want nuclear capabilities? Hope that decades of anti-American ideology suddenly vanish? Hope that Hamas, Hezbollah, and every other Iranian-backed militant group decide to become birdwatching clubs?

Hope is not a strategy. Hope is what people do when they forgot to study for an exam. Nations require something stronger than hope. They require deterrence.

The economic arguments being used by supporters of the resolution are equally strange. They point to higher gasoline prices. Fair enough. Americans hate high gasoline prices. I hate high gasoline prices. But what helped create those pressures? The Strait of Hormuz. Iran's ability to threaten shipping routes. Regional instability. In other words, Tehran helps create the fire, and some politicians want America to put away the fire hose.

That is not strategy. That is performance art. At times, Washington resembles a circus where the clowns have seized control of the tent and are now lecturing the audience about fire safety while juggling gasoline cans.

The most troubling part of all this is the message being sent to America's friends and enemies alike. America's allies watch these votes. Iran watches these votes. China watches these votes. Russia watches these votes. Terrorist organizations watch these votes. Everyone watches. And what they see is a superpower arguing with itself while a hostile regime enjoys a front-row seat.

The supporters of this resolution may genuinely believe they are protecting democracy. They may genuinely believe they are preventing another costly conflict. I am willing to grant them that. But good intentions do not magically produce good outcomes. The road to disaster has always had excellent marketing.

At the end of the day, I do not believe these politicians literally support the Ayatoallahs. I do not believe they are secretly chanting "Death to America." I do not believe they are carrying Hamas membership cards in their wallets.

What I do believe is that they owe Americans an answer to a brutally simple question: If the blood-thirsty rulers of Tehran are celebrating your actions, if America's enemies are benefiting from your message, if the regime that has spent decades cursing America sees advantage in what you are doing, then why exactly are you doing it? Because from where I sit, it looks less like standing up to President Trump and more like handing the Mullahs a gift basket, a thank-you card, and a coupon for future concessions.

And that is a question every voter should remember the next time these politicians start talking about patriotism.

 

This article stands on its own, but some readers may also enjoy the titles in my “Brief BookSeries”. Read it here on Google Play or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

China’s Solar Kings Are Going Broke: Not Even Bombs in Iran Can Save Them

 


China conquered the solar world, then flooded it with too many panels. Now bankruptcies are spreading, jobs are vanishing, and not even war in the Middle East can stop the collapse. Simply put, the world's solar superpower is choking on its own success. Factories keep producing, demand is weakening, and a brutal reckoning is racing toward China's green-energy empire.

When American bombs started falling on Iran, plenty of people expected China’s solar bosses to start counting money. Oil prices jumped. Energy markets trembled. Governments suddenly remembered that depending on unstable regions for energy can be a dangerous game. Common sense seemed to point in one direction: more demand for solar panels.

But common sense and reality often sleep in different bedrooms.

China’s solar industry is not celebrating. It is bleeding. The Gulf war may have boosted solar exports for a moment, but a man with cancer does not become healthy because somebody gives him an aspirin. The disease remains. China’s solar sector has become a victim of its own greed, its own success, and its own inability to stop building factories that the world no longer needs.

For years, China’s solar industry was the darling of investors, politicians, and environmental activists. It was presented as the future. It was the poster child of green capitalism. It was supposed to prove that industrial policy could conquer the world.

In one sense, it worked. China now produces more than 80% of the world's solar panels. It dominates supply chains from silicon processing to finished modules. It crushed competitors in Europe. It battered rivals in America. It overwhelmed manufacturers across Asia. The dragon ate the entire buffet. Now it is suffering indigestion.

The problem is brutally simple. China can manufacture more than 1,000 gigawatts of solar panels every year. The entire world installed roughly 600 gigawatts in 2025. Think about that for a moment. China’s factories can produce almost twice as much as the global market currently absorbs. That is not a business strategy. That is industrial insanity.

For years, local governments threw money around like drunken sailors on shore leave. Cheap loans flowed freely. Cheap land was handed out. Subsidies rained from the sky. Every province wanted its own solar champion. Every executive wanted another factory. Every investor wanted another growth story. Nobody wanted to ask the uncomfortable question. What happens when everybody builds and nobody buys?

Now the answer is arriving with the subtlety of a baseball bat. Bankruptcies are spreading across the industry. More than 40 Chinese solar firms have already been bankrupted, acquired, or pushed off stock exchanges since 2024. Thousands of workers have been shown the door. Roughly one-third of the workforce at China’s five biggest solar companies has disappeared through layoffs.

That is not what victory looks like. That is what a firing squad looks like.

The cruel joke is that China’s biggest customer has always been China itself. For decades, the country's enormous appetite for electricity helped absorb the flood of solar panels pouring from factories. But even that engine is beginning to stall.

China installed solar power so rapidly that many power grids can no longer cope. Across deserts, mountains, and rooftops, dark panels stretch toward the horizon like an army occupying conquered territory. The problem is not producing electricity. The problem is finding somewhere for it to go. Solar panels produce power when the sun shines. Human beings, unfortunately, insist on using electricity at night as well.

Coal plants can be switched on and off. Solar panels cannot negotiate with the sunset. The result is waste on a staggering scale. During the first two months of the year, about 9% of China's solar-generated electricity simply went unused. A year earlier, the figure was 6%. The trend is moving in exactly the wrong direction. Imagine owning a bakery where nearly 1 out of every 10 loaves gets thrown into a dumpster. Then imagine investors calling that a growth industry. That is the absurdity facing solar manufacturers today.

The industry's defenders insist that batteries will solve everything. Maybe they will. Battery costs continue falling. Energy storage technology continues improving. New transmission lines are being built. But reality has a schedule of its own. Factories can be built in months. Power infrastructure often takes years.

Solar companies are running out of time.

Then there is the problem nobody likes discussing publicly: solar panels have become a commodity. One looks much like another. Any technological breakthrough gets copied faster than gossip at a family reunion. Companies slash prices to gain market share. Rivals slash them further. Everybody races to the bottom. The result has been one of the nastiest price wars in industrial history. Many panels are now selling below production costs. Imagine walking into a store where every product loses money every time it leaves the shelf. That is essentially the business model facing large sections of China's solar industry today.

Yet the bad news does not stop there. The rest of the world has started fighting back. For years, politicians in Washington, Brussels, and New Delhi watched Chinese manufacturers flood global markets with dirt-cheap products. Local competitors collapsed. Factories closed. Jobs disappeared. Eventually governments responded the way governments always respond when domestic industries are threatened.

They reached for tariffs. The United States tightened restrictions on Chinese solar imports. Europe became increasingly suspicious of Chinese dominance in critical infrastructure. India erected barriers to protect its own manufacturers.

This should surprise nobody. A country cannot spend years crushing competitors and then act shocked when those competitors seek protection. If you spend years kicking the hornet's nest, do not complain when the hornets finally fly out.

China's solar industry is discovering that economic domination comes with political consequences. That is why the Gulf war changes far less than many people think. Yes, higher energy prices make renewable energy more attractive. Yes, some countries in Africa and Southeast Asia are buying more Chinese solar panels. Yes, exporters have enjoyed a temporary boost. But a temporary boost cannot fix a permanent imbalance.

The industry's real problem is not demand. It is oversupply. The world simply does not need as many panels as Chinese factories can produce. That is why the current crisis feels different from previous downturns. In earlier slumps, demand eventually caught up. This time, analysts are openly questioning whether the world will ever absorb all the capacity China has built.

That is a frightening thought. An industry constructed on endless growth has suddenly collided with the possibility that growth may no longer be endless. No executive likes hearing that story. No investor likes hearing it either.

The only realistic lifeline may come from technology. New perovskite solar cells could eventually push efficiency above 30%, compared with roughly 22% to 24% for many conventional panels today. If those technologies become commercially viable, they could create a new investment cycle and generate fresh demand.

But technological revolutions do not arrive because executives need them. They arrive when science is ready. And science does not care about quarterly earnings reports.

So here we are. American bombs are falling in the Middle East. Oil markets are shaking. Energy security has become a global obsession once again. Under normal circumstances, this should be the moment when China's solar giants celebrate. Instead, many are fighting for survival. That tells us everything we need to know.

The biggest threat to China's solar empire is not Iran. It is not America. It is not Europe. It is not tariffs. The biggest threat is the mountain of solar panels China built for a world that no longer needs that many. The industry's leaders spent years believing sunlight would never set on their empire. Now they are learning a hard lesson that every boom eventually learns.

When everybody is digging for gold, the first people to go broke are often the ones selling the shovels.

 

This article stands on its own, but some readers may also enjoy the titles in my “Brief BookSeries”. Read it here on Google Play or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

Only 6 Years Left: The Coming Social Security Cliff and the Politicians Watching It Happen

In just 6 years, Social Security could hit a financial wall. The question is no longer whether a reckoning is coming, but who will pay for it. America once rescued Social Security through bipartisan compromise. Today’s political warfare may leave the fund to collapse first and force a crisis later. 


America’s giant safety net is tearing apart. In 1940, more than 150 workers supported each Social Security retiree. Today, fewer than 3 workers support each beneficiary. Longer lives and lower birth rates have flipped the math, turning a once-overflowing fund into a shrinking reservoir.


The countdown clock is already ticking. The trust fund peaked at $2.8 trillion in 2017 and has since lost about $400 billion. If Congress does nothing, the fund is projected to run dry around 2032–2033, triggering automatic benefit cuts of about 23% for retirees.


America solved this crisis before—but in a different political age. In 1983, Republicans and Democrats joined forces to rescue Social Security by raising the retirement age and expanding taxes. Today, congressional polarization is at its highest level in modern history, making a similar deal far harder.


The fix is surprisingly small, but the politics are explosive. Some experts say modest changes—such as raising the payroll tax from 12.4% to 12.6% and gradually increasing retirement ages for higher earners—could stabilize the system. Yet 71% of Americans want Social Security spending increased, not trimmed.


If leaders keep kicking the can down the road, taxpayers may get the bill. America already ran a budget deficit of nearly 7% of GDP in 2025. Without reform, Washington may rely on even more borrowing, leaving younger generations to carry debts created by promises made decades earlier. A stitch in time saves nine, but Washington often waits until the house is on fire before reaching for the bucket.


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, or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.








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