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The New Neo

A blog about political change, among other things

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Open thread 6/18/2026

The New Neo Posted on June 18, 2026 by neoJune 18, 2026

Posted in Uncategorized | 5 Replies

Update on tech stuff here

The New Neo Posted on June 17, 2026 by neoJune 17, 2026

First of all, I finally got a new computer. It takes me a while to get used to tech change, and this is no exception. The good part is that it’s much faster than my old one, which was geriatric. But there are still glitches to be ironed out, plus the usual steep learning curve for me with tech stuff. It’s a Lenovo Yoga, by the way, for those who are curious.

I’ve also been working on the “too many requests” problem, as well as other issues that have plagued the blog for while. Basic cleanup. I’ve changed certain things and it seems to have helped, but time will tell. Let me know if you’ve been having problems.

Posted in Blogging and bloggers | 8 Replies

Trump on the Iran Deal [scroll down for important UPDATE]

The New Neo Posted on June 17, 2026 by neoJune 17, 2026

Here are some statements, for what they’re worth:

President Donald Trump dismissed “false” media claims that the U.S. will be party to a $300 billion fund for Iran, as leaked versions of the initial agreement allege that the regime will receive billions of dollars worth of “cash sweeteners” just to sign a “Memorandum of Understanding” (MoU) on Friday.

“President Donald Trump says the agreed deal with Iran is not final,” BBC reported Wednesday. “Speaking at the G7 summit in France, he adds that the US will “go back to dropping bombs” if he does not like the final agreement.”

The president also rejected the $300 billion fund claim, calling it “false.” “People can invest if they want. I mean, what am I going to do — say nobody’s ever allowed to invest? We’re not investing. We’re not putting up ten cents,” he told reporters.

I’d say it’s about 50/50 that any agreement will be signed at all and released on Friday. Of course, that’s a pretty safe bet; you sort of win either way, because you’ve really predicted nothing except that it will be one or the other.

UPDATE 5:40 PM:

Just a few moments after I wrote and posted the above, I saw that there’s been a briefing from the White House on the deal. It says basically what I wrote yesterday, strangely enough, which was this:

At any rate, it sounds like the agreement is just an agreement to ease pressure on Iran in order to have some future negotiations. Why? Is this mainly a temporary measure about oil prices?

About today’s White House briefing:

“We’re not going to be taking their word for anything,” a senior U.S. official said when asked about “compliance” for Iran’s adherence to the deal, particularly when it comes to nuclear development, adding that the U.S. will “work very closely with the International Atomic Energy Agency [IAEA].”

Some provisions: a ceasefire (already in effect anyway, I would say), some blather about “mutual respect” (absurd, I would say, but typical diplospeak), more negotiations for 60 days for a “final” deal (which can be extended, so is basically meaningless), opening Hormuz – and the rest of it is mostly just things that might happen in a final agreement. A wish list, as it were.

What will happen more immediately is this:

The United States of America undertakes, but immediately upon the signing of this MOU, and until the termination of sanctions, the U.S. Department of Treasury will issue waivers for the export of Iranian crude oil, petroleum products and derivatives and all associated services including banking, transactions, insurances, transportation, etc.

There’s also this, which is somewhat opaque as to when it would happen:

The United States of America undertakes to make fully available for use, the frozen, or restricted funds, and assets of the Islamic Republic of Iran upon the implementation of the MOU, the United States of America and the Islamic Republic of Iran will usually agree on the procedures related to the relief of these funds during the negotiation. Such funds, whether retained in the original accounts or transferred, government may be fully usable for payment to any ultimate beneficiary designated by the Central Bank of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

The opaque part is whether this happens right away or is contingent, like so much of the rest, on further agreement.

It’s about what I expected, and I still find it troubling. It also still seems to me to be a way to get oil prices down in order to help the economy and the midterms. It seems to me to signal weakness, and since it depends on Trump’s now-uncertain readiness to go back to war if things don’t work out, that signal seems like an invitation to Iran to declare it has made the US capitulate. And in this case I think Iran would be correct.

I’ve written a great deal about Iran, both in the past and recently, and I’ve always seen it as an intractable problem. The Iranian government will stop at nothing – literally nothing – to stay in power. Our resolve does not include all-out war or boots on the ground. Modern technology and targeted bombings can only do so much.

ADDENDUM:
Professor Jacobson at LI says it more bluntly than I, but I’m in agreement with him:

It’s an embarrassment and sell out of our national interests. And that’s the nicest thing I can say about it. No reason to sugarcoat it. We went from sweeping military success to capitulating because Iran threatened to destroy the world economy and drive energy prices higher.

What a shame.

One of the many reservations I had about Trump at first, and have retained right along, is Trump’s mercurial nature and his loose-cannon tendencies. This can go either way; he’s unpredictable. Sometimes he’s rock-solid and sometimes he says or does things that make a person cringe. He is never completely reliable. The explanation for what is happening now with this deal – and the cause of my own uneasiness since the negotiations and ceasefire phase began – is not clear. But I agree that it has to do with economics. I would add, however, that Trump’s narcissistic desire to make a deal is probably some part of it. I’ve expressed that fear before: that the idea of himself as dealmaker extraordinaire would cause him to make a bad one. This seems to be that bad one, unless there’s a whole lot that I’m missing.

Another thing that has made me more and more uneasy as time has gone on is that Vance has become more visible as spokesperson compared to Rubio. This did not, and does not, bode well.

At the moment, this appears to rank up there with Biden’s retreat from Afghanistan – or worse. I hope I’m overreacting.

Posted in Iraq, Trump, War and Peace | 46 Replies

In the UK, there has been widespread child sacrifice on the altar of diversity and tolerance

The New Neo Posted on June 17, 2026 by neoJune 17, 2026

Yes, we already knew some of what is revealed in the recent report issued by British MP Rupert Lowe on the so-called “rape gangs” that exploited British girls for decades. To illustrate, note that I wrote my first post on the subject in 2015, and in it I quoted this:

The sex-trafficking ring in Rotherham may well be the worst in the West ever, or so one would hope. British officials have now identified at least three hundred suspects in a crime syndicate that raped and trafficked underage British girls for years, while local police ignored signs and clues for years…

It was already known that the perps were almost exclusively what the Brits call “Asian men” – in this case, Pakistani – and the victims were underage white girls, mostly poor and often neglected. So, what’s new?

It’s the stunning scope of the abuse and the extent to which the system of police and social services, tasked with helping the girls, ignored or often exacerbated the problem. The initial abuse was really only the first step for many of these girls and families.

The numbers are staggering. A summary:

Here are eight essential quotes from @RupertLowe10’s Rape Gang Inquiry.

1) This was a nationwide, not merely local, phenomenon.

“…that this was never a series of isolated local failures. It was a coordinated, nationwide pattern of organised child sexual exploitation that repeated in town after town, city after city, from the far north to the south coast.”

2) The scale was enormous, more than anyone dared to think.

“The scale of the crimes committed is staggering. It has been previously established that, at the very least, 250,000 young white girls have been subjected to repeated rape, gang rape, trafficking, torture, pregnancy, forced Islamic conversion, and lifelong trauma. The true number is probably higher.”

3) As has been reported, the vast majority of perpetrators were Pakistani Muslims.

“In court records and official inquiries, around 87% of those convicted in these group-based child sexual exploitation (‘CSE’) cases bore distinctively Muslim names… Dr. Taj Hargey, an imam with the Oxford Islamic Congregation, believes the true proportion of gang members who are Muslims to be around 95%.”

4) Vulnerable girls were targeted using a consistent method.

“Organised networks of perpetrators built coordinated operations that transported victims between locations, supplied them with drugs and alcohol, recorded abuse for distribution and blackmail, and passed girls between multiple adult men.”

5) The police, and other institutions, knew what was happening and ignored it.

“Police forces ignored repeated reports, criminalised victims instead of perpetrators, destroyed evidence, and allowed known rapists to walk free on bail. Social care services undermined protective parents, placed children in trafficking hubs inside children’s homes, closed cases despite clear indicators of exploitation, and retaliated against whistleblowers. The NHS recorded genital injuries, multiple sexually transmitted infections in children as young as 13, pregnancies caused by rape, and suicide attempts, yet discharged victims back to their abusers without safeguarding referrals or trauma care. Schools observed older men collecting girls at the gates, heard disclosures of rape on school premises, and responded by excluding victims rather than protecting them.”

6) Those in these institutions did so because they were afraid of being called ‘racist’.

“Political correctness, fear of accusations of racism, and fear of losing electoral support from certain demographics have taken precedence over the protection of British children.”

7) Parts of the foster and orphan care system became exploitation hotspots.

“Children’s homes became trafficking hubs where staff failed to stop older men collecting girls at night. Local authorities often returned children to unsafe homes and placements despite repeated disclosures of grooming… Social care across England systematically enabled organised grooming and the rape of children. Children’s services, local authorities, foster carers, children’s homes, and independent units repeatedly returned vulnerable children to known risk.”

8) Multiple offenders explicitly linked their treatment of these girls with their own religious and cultural beliefs, and the girls’ white ethnicity.

“They were taken to houses, flats, restaurants, and hotels where they were raped repeatedly by groups of men, tortured, filmed for blackmail, and told they were “white trash” or “kuffar” who merited punishment.”

I haven’t read the actual report; it’s over 200 pages long. It can be found here, if you care to wade through it. I assume that summary hit the most salient points, but I hope to read the report soon or at least skim it heavily. In the meantime, here are some of my thoughts and questions (the full report may answer some of the questions, however):

(1) Was this multi-culti virtue-signaling run amok, or some even greater evil on the part of British authorities?

(2) Note that there were whistleblowers, so not everyone was a cowardly enabler. But there were “retaliations” against whistleblowers, and this almost certainly had what in the law biz is called a “chilling effect” on further whistleblowing.

(3) What finally changed and resulted in the news coming out?

(4) And what of Starmer? This tweet mentions that Starmer himself let off 13,000 of the perps.

(5) Will there be any further consequences now, or will the whole thing be a case of, “we’ve aired it and it’s time to move on”?

Some quotes from the report can be found at Ace’s. Here are some:

The behaviour is deeply tied to tribal structures prevalent in parts of Pakistan, Afghanistan, the Middle East, North Africa, and Somalia:

– Family honour is primarily vested in the conduct, modesty, and virginity of girls and women. Strict codes require obedience, covering, and restricted interaction with outsiders. Breaches within the community trigger severe sanctions, including honour killings or collective retaliation by male clan members.

– When the target is a non-Muslim girl — particularly White British girls perceived as unguarded, dressed in Western styles and lacking male protectors — the risk calculation shifts. No retaliation is expected from the girl’s family or community, so some young men feel emboldened to treat her as property and then approach, assault, groom, share among the group, and sell her services.

– This proprietorial view of women escalates into organised networks that traffic girls across regions. Impunity fuels the cycle: initial assaults without consequences create a perception of Britain as a place where such behaviour carries no risk, turning vulnerable girls into commodified products.

I would say it wasn’t just a perception of Britain as a place where such behavior is risk-free. The perception was correct for a long long time.

More:

While the foundational system is tribal rather than purely religious, Islamic elements provide ideological justification, communal shielding, and strategic expansion. Perpetrators sometimes hide actions from families, mosques, and imams because the behaviour brings disgrace to the community. Yet remorse toward British victims is limited because non-Muslim girls are not viewed as fully human individuals deserving protection, but as unprotected outsiders available for abuse without moral consequence. This fosters widespread silence within affected communities.

The Inquiry evidence points to a fundamental clash of worlds. Across the West, our historic respect for the individual has, thanks to mass immigration, been overpowered by the more primitive attitudes that prevail elsewhere, according to which group membership matters first and foremost. The elite obsession with diversity has invited the latter to take advantage of the former. Scare-words like ‘Islamophobia’ and ‘racism’ have been deployed to exploit the good will of Western host societies, paralysing investigation and enforcement.

Again, there’s nothing really new there – except for the scale of the horror. And horror it was.

There’s also the class issue; these girls were not from rich families. They were disposable, according to the politicians, sacrifices to the need not only to virtue-signal as a non-bigot, but to get the votes of the growing population of “Asian” voters.

I see no indication that the present government in Britain will change anything, and I’m not even sure that a replacement on the right would do much. Democrats here are fully capable of similar enabling, although I don’t think the problem here is anything like it was across the pond. Here it seems to take the form of winking at massive fraud and theft of government largesse, and the red cities and states are not immune.

What a terrible mess.

NOTE: In 2008 I wrote two posts on cultural and moral relativism. I believe this one is particularly apt. An excerpt:

But somehow the idea that we cannot, and should not, judge other cultures at all has taken hold in recent years; not just in anthropology but in the West as a whole, and especially in our school system. The proper name for this is moral relativism, as opposed to cultural relativism. This phenomenon is a combination of a decline in our own previous attitude of celebration of Western civilization—and an emphasis instead on its sins, its mea culpas—combined with a romantic Rousseauvian attitude toward the other, of which the “noble savage” is a familiar subset.

One of the reasons that judgment of other cultures has been nearly abandoned is that one of our highest values has become that of tolerance. But tolerance was only meant to mean that we not look down on others merely because of the fact that they are different from us. It does not mean we need to tolerate their destructiveness, their hatred, or their intolerance—the latter of which should always define the limits of “tolerance,” or tolerance would become a value that would lead inevitably to its own contradiction and destruction.

Posted in Law, Men and women; marriage and divorce and sex | Tagged Britain, Islam | 20 Replies

Open thread 6/17/2026

The New Neo Posted on June 17, 2026 by neoJune 17, 2026

The show must go on:

Posted in Uncategorized | 8 Replies

More on the Iran deal – maybe

The New Neo Posted on June 16, 2026 by neoJune 16, 2026

I continue to be disheartened as news like this comes out. I try to wait for the actual unveiling on Friday – and even after that, to see how it plays out in reality, which is the most important thing of all.

But how can this possibly be reassuring? Is it even correct, though? It’s based on Israeli sources, and I imagine Israel knows quite a bit, but who are those sources and what is their agenda?

Anyway, here’s some of the story:

Newly revealed details of the secretive US-Iran MOU lay out that it would extend the cease-fire to Lebanon, allow Iran to manage the Strait of Hormuz, temporarily waive Iranian oil sanctions and establish a pathway toward a comprehensive peace agreement, Israel’s Channel 12 reported Tuesday.

The framework, which would serve as the basis for broader negotiations between Washington and Tehran, outlines commitments on nuclear issues, sanctions relief, maritime security and the eventual withdrawal of American forces from the region.

Channel 12 is called both mainstream and center-left, but the NY Post reporting the story is on the right.

At any rate, it sounds like the agreement is just an agreement to ease pressure on Iran in order to have some future negotiations. Why? Is this mainly a temporary measure about oil prices?

There are 12 points listed at the article, but the points were revealed by Axios. That doesn’t automatically make them wrong. But we’ve had so many articles and supposed revelations of this type that have turned out to be wrong, and so I refuse to believe the report until the official word comes out.

Trusting Iran on anything seems like a fool’s errand to me, however.

I hate reading articles like that. But my Inbox is bombarded with them, with titles like “worst deal ever.” I remind myself that we still don’t know. But all the reports resemble each other, and so I wonder if that’s because they’re based on the real thing.

Posted in Iran, War and Peace | 53 Replies

News roundup

The New Neo Posted on June 16, 2026 by neoJune 16, 2026

(1) Trump turned 80 on Sunday. Whatever you may think of him, he’s doing pretty darn well physically for 80. USA Today marks the occasion with an article purporting to say “what happens to your body at 80.” Bodies age at different rates, and we can all observe that quite easily. Well, guess what? That’s what the article says, too. Fancy that.

(2) On Trump’s birthday, there was this event at the White House, although it wasn’t billed as a birthday celebration for Trump but rather one for the US:

Mixed martial arts fighters squared off on the White House South Lawn for UFC Freedom 250, culminating in a main card fight between Georgian-Spanish Ilia Topuria and American Justin Gaethje for the undisputed UFC lightweight championship. Gaethje defeated Topuria. The main card streamed on Paramount+, which is owned by Paramount Skydance, the parent company of CBS News.

Despite the threat of storms, thousands turned out to watch the fights, which took place in an eight-sided cage beneath a massive canopy known as “The Claw.”

Not my cup of tea. But I heard commentary saying the matches were very exciting. The left was not happy about any of this. Trump delights in confounding snobs.

(3) Hillary Clinton blames Biden for the 2024 debacle. I have to say she’s not wrong, but it wasn’t Biden alone – he had plenty of help, and Kamala Harris was a terrible choice as his replacement:

Hillary Clinton said former President Joe Biden’s decision to seek reelection in 2024 was a “terrible mistake,” arguing that Democrats could have defeated President Donald Trump had he stepped aside earlier and opened the field to a competitive primary.

Maybe Hillary thought she would have won that primary.

But the Democrats had the chance to “open the field” to a competitive nomination process; not a primary, but a convention. They chose a Kamala Harris coronation instead.

(4) Ukraine has fully autonomous killing drones.

(5)Terrible crash of B-52 Stratofortress kills 8 at Edwards Air Force Base:

This sad loss at Edwards Air Force Base stands as a heavy reminder of the risks carried by those who defend our nation.

God bless the eight crew members who were dedicated to duty.

Posted in Uncategorized | 18 Replies

It turns out the SPLC was in bed with Nazis – literally

The New Neo Posted on June 16, 2026 by neoJune 16, 2026

Well, allegedly anyway:

A top Southern Poverty Law Center official is accused of helping funnel $1.2 million in donor money to an informant in the National Alliance white supremacist group — who was also allegedly her lover.

The Department of Justice filed a superseding indictment against the SPLC accusing it of funneling donor cash to hate groups they were then telling donors they were fighting. …

Based on the details in the June 2 superseding indictment, “Employee-2” is believed to be Heidi Beirich, a 58-year-old fascism expert who was the director of intelligence at the Alabama-based anti-extremism nonprofit between 2012 and 2019.

The indictment alleges Beirich was very close to the informant known only as “F-9” who “infiltrated the neo-Nazi organization National Alliance.”

“[Beirich] was also in a romantic relationship with F-9. During this relationship, [Beirich] and F-9 shared a house and two bank accounts,” the indictment alleges.

It’s been clear for a long time that the SPLC is nothing more than an effective tool to spread anti-right propaganda by classifying even benign and mainstream people and organizations on the right as far-right hate groups. That allowed the left and MSM to refer to those groups that way, citing the SPLC as though it was some sort of objective judge. The SPLC traded on its name, among other things, which was a form of virtue-signaling: Southern Poverty Law Center.

But what we only learned fairly recently is that the SPLC was actively stirring up extremist racist groups and paying them to cause trouble, in the form of “informants” who were highly active in racist endeavors. And now we have this cozy couple, which at this point comes as no surprise.

Posted in Finance and economics, Race and racism | 6 Replies

Open thread 6/16/2026

The New Neo Posted on June 16, 2026 by neoJune 16, 2026

Have people gone stark raving mad?:

Posted in Uncategorized | 28 Replies

Hating Elon Musk; hating Boomers

The New Neo Posted on June 15, 2026 by neoJune 15, 2026

Though shalt not covet is one of the Ten Commandments. When I was young I didn’t quite understand what “covet” meant, although later on it was explained to me that it had to do with envy. It didn’t occur to me yet that the prohibition had political repercussions, although as I’ve gotten older I realize that of course it does.

Churchill knew:

“Socialism is the philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy.” —Perth, Scotland, 28 May 1948, in Churchill, Europe Unite: Speeches 1947 & 1948 (London: Cassell, 1950), 347.

“The inherent vice of capitalism is the unequal sharing of blessings. The inherent virtue of Socialism is the equal sharing of miseries.” —House of Commons, 22 October 1945.

Now that Elon Musk has become a trillionaire, the already-virulent hatred for him has increased, and people aren’t shy about showing it. For example, we have this from Hasan Piker:

Trying desperately to sound profound, the current darling of the Left [Hasan Piker] began: “Meritocracy is a lie. Lying is OP [gamer slang for “overpowered”]. And money is fake. This story that we are watching unfold in front of us is a great example of all three of those classic Hasan Minhaj tropes that I advance over and over again. Okay?

He continued:

Elon Musk is a f***ing failure and yet, in spite of his failures, because he lucked into a, uh, initial — because he happened to be at the right place at the right time, he has failed upwards with his endless wealth. He’s a horrible person, an unbelievably insecure person, and yet he’s the richest person on the planet. Right? We know he doesn’t f***ing work hard because he tweets all the goddamn time.

This is what passes for thought these days from an “influencer.” Piker himself benefited from nepotism, so it’s especially ironic that he’s down on Musk as just happening “to be at the right place at the right time,” as though it was pure chance and there was no thought or agency involved at all.

This type of thinking seems to appeal to a lot of people, though. Some of those people also hate Boomers for living so long and not giving them their stuff quickly enough; I wrote about that sentiment in this previous post, and to a lesser extent in this one.

It’s hard to overestimate the rage towards Boomers felt and expressed by a lot of commenters (or bots? or paid shills?) online. You can see some if it in the comments to this piece at City Journal, which refers a book by Yale law professor Samuel Moyn entitled Gerontocracy in America: How the Old Are Hoarding Power and Wealth – and What to Do About It. Although City Journal’s readers are generally somewhat to the right (at least, that’s been my impression in the past), the article is sometimes favorable to Moyn’s book although it critiques it as well.

The comments there are mixed; some defend the Boomers and there are also examples of the Boomer-hate I’ve been talking about. See this, for example:

So you trust the boomers who bequeathed the world yawning income inequality and the housing crisis more than the generation tasked with fixing it?

You shall know them by their fruits and the boomer fruit has been poisonous.

They are the first generation in the history of the world whose children have shorter lifespans than they do.

They are destroyers of the world, both literally and figuratively.

They are the weak men who create hard times.

Is this a real person? Hard to say, but I see such sentiments often online. Here’s a typical response from a Boomer:

Boomer here.
You whiners just can’t wait to put another socialist government in power; one that, once all of us Boomers are dead, will rob you of the trillions in hard-earned wealth we’re leaving you.
We worked for our money. Try it, you might like it — and it will be a new experience for many of you.
In the meantime, quit whining about what we Boomers have. Get your own. You can begin by not being silly, wasteful people. Starbucks and designer foods have never been necessary. Neither is a 60″ TV screen.

I did a search on whether Boomers actually had more wealth than previous senior generations. Here’s Google AI’s reply, for what it’s worth:

The Numbers: The typical (median) household headed by a Baby Boomer boasts a net worth of $432,200 (in 2024 dollars). In contrast, households headed by older adults in 2001 (Silent Generation) had a median wealth of $335,900, and those in 1983 (Greatest Generation) had $185,300 in their 50s, 60s, and 70s.Historical Luck: Boomers entered the housing and equity markets just before two massive, 40-year asset appreciation cycles. They purchased homes at younger ages and significantly lower prices than younger generations, allowing them to ride decades of compounding real estate and stock market growth.

Historical Luck: Boomers entered the housing and equity markets just before two massive, 40-year asset appreciation cycles. They purchased homes at younger ages and significantly lower prices than younger generations, allowing them to ride decades of compounding real estate and stock market growth.

The Education Divide: While college-educated Boomers possess vastly higher wealth than previous generations, Boomers without a college degree have median net worths similar to, or even lower than, their predecessors of the same education level.

Unequal Distribution: The “wealthiest generation” title is heavily skewed by the top echelons. The top 10% of Boomer households control the lion’s share of the generation’s collective wealth.

One of the main articles cited for some of those statistics is this from Pew

Posted in Uncategorized | 52 Replies

Iran now, Iran then

The New Neo Posted on June 15, 2026 by neoJune 15, 2026

You can read all about it – supposedly. The most common point of view is that the Iran Deal which Trump has negotiated is the worst thing ever. Some say no, it’s not; it’s okay although not fabulous. Trump himself hypes it to the skies, of course.

Take your pick, because at the moment we simply don’t know.

As I wrote over the weekend, I have a bad feeling about this deal. But I freely admit I simply don’t have enough reliable information to know if that feeling of foreboding is based on anything other than the present uncertainty and my own tendency to pessimism.

So I’ve decided to re-post something I wrote in June of 2008 – back when Bush was still president – and recently rediscovered. The rest of this post consists of that essay, which you can also find here. It was called: “The problem of pre-emptive strikes against evil empires: how to deal with Iran?” Note the question mark.

Here’s the post:

Michael Ledeen writes in the WSJ about the problem the Allies had in recognizing, taking seriously, and then mobilizing against the danger represented by the Nazis prior to WWII.

He likens this inaction to the current muddled response of the West to Iran, and locates the problem in our presumption that people and regimes are generally the same (like us, that is), are basically good rather than evil, that anti-Semitism still thrives, and that there is a tendency towards inertia and inaction in democracies.

Although I certainly think Ledeen’s points are well taken, I think he’s leaving out some important factors that also militate against the West doing anything against Iran until some unequivocal and terrible step is taken by that country. The problem is that we don’t see many good options against Iran. Continue reading →

Posted in Iran, War and Peace | 21 Replies

Open thread 6/15/2026

The New Neo Posted on June 15, 2026 by neoJune 15, 2026

Posted in Uncategorized | 11 Replies

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