Americans Support Iran Campaign

Featured image Or they did, anyway: this Rasmussen survey was conducted March 8-10 and published on Monday: The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone and online survey finds that 61% of Likely U.S. Voters say that, based on what they know, the military operation against Iran has been successful so far, including 35% who consider it Very Successful. Twenty-nine percent (29%) don’t consider the Iran war successful so far, including 12% who see »

Remembering the Shutdowns

Featured imageThe international covid shutdowns were among the worst public policy disasters (or crimes) of modern times, and yet there has been no accountability. In the Telegraph, Daniel Hannan sums up the effects of the shutdowns on Britain: “Six years on, the Covid lockdowns are still ruining our lives.” Was there truly a legal argument about whether a Scotch egg counted as a meal? Were we actually offered guidance on the »

When hell was in session

Featured imagePower Line reader John Flenniken worked as a crew member on the 2000 film Prisoners of Hope, capturing the testimony of former American prisoners of war in North Vietnam. Among them are Leo Thorsness, author of Surviving Hell, published and kept in print by Encounter Books, and Porter Halyburton, author of Reflections on Captivity, published and kept in print by the U.S. Naval Institute. Among other former POWs featured in »

United States v. Harvard

Featured imageAssistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon and others under her supervision have sued Harvard over the university’s “toothless non-response to the ongoing relentless antisemitic on-campus discrimination.” Ira Stoll covers the lawsuit for the Washington Free Beacon and links to the 44-page complaint posted online here by the Department of Justice. We have all witnessed the almost unbelievable nonfeasance of the Harvard administration in the face of the torment of Jewish students. »

The Week In Pictures: Gayatollah Edition

Featured imageAs the “endless” conflict in Iran neared third weeks old, it continued to dominate the news and, to a large extent, the memes. Reports of a gay Ayatollah prompted a great deal of meme-merriment. Of course there was other news: the Democrats’ shutdown of DHS continued, freedom for Cuba glimmered on the horizon, Chuck Norris died. Allegedly. And, finally–Happy St. Patrick’s Day! Oh wait, one more thing–reportedly there was some »
Image

Blue Flight Continues Apace [Updated]

Featured imageThe most important contemporary phenomenon for our politics and, perhaps, for the future of our country is the ongoing sorting of our citizens into red and blue states. The dynamic is pretty simple: people are leaving blue states for red states, with the single exception of those whose first priority is lavish welfare benefits, who therefore seek out blue states. This might seem like a terrible deal for the blue »

Australian PM Driven Out of Mosque

Featured imageAustralia’s left-wing Prime Minister Anthony Albanese visited that country’s largest mosque this morning. You might expect Australian Muslims to show a little humility following the Bondi Beach massacre, but no: Albanese was met with protests and denunciations: He is a simple man https://t.co/lZfeyHfCQR — Elon Musk (@elonmusk) March 20, 2026 Albanese tried to put a positive spin on the event, calling it “incredibly positive.” Apparently some members of the mosque »

Proof

Featured imageStar Tribune Washington reporter Sydney Kashiwagi reported in the paper’s March 17 Morning Hot Dish newsletter: Zeroing in on Omar once again. Trump especially fixated on Omar during his announcement [of a fraud task force], elevating the unproven claim that she married her brother and committed immigration fraud and is thus “here illegally and she’s a congresswoman.” Trump urged Vance and members of the task force to look into the »

Spring can really hang you up the most

Featured imageAs a break from the news of the day I’m taking the liberty of reposting this tribute to a great song with an unusual story behind it. Since I first wrote this 20 years ago, YouTube has become a resource that allows me to fill out the story. Stretching back from Ella Fitzgerald to Fran Landesman to T.S. Eliot and Geoffrey Chaucer, this is the bare-bones version of the tale: »

Wanted: Magic Batteries

Featured imageWind and solar are intermittent energy sources, dependent on the weather. Where I live, solar panels produce electricity around 14% of the time. Wind turbines produce electricity less than half the time. So how can these be viable sources of energy? That is, primary sources on which an economy can depend for baseload power, not expensive and irrelevant add-ons. The answer from liberals is always “batteries.” Batteries will store electricity »

With a little help from their friends

Featured imageThe Iranian people are helping to create the conditions necessary to support their liberation from the vile mullahcracy. The Wall Street Journal reports today in a page-one story: Ali Larijani, Iran’s top security official, strolled confidently in dark sunglasses and a black coat Friday through a rally of regime loyalists in central Tehran. It was his first public appearance in a war in which he was a known target. “Brave »

Another one bites the dust

Featured imageFrom the New York Post, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps spokesperson Ali Mohammad Naini has been killed in ‌strikes ⁠launched by the US and Israel, ⁠Iranian state TV reported ⁠Friday. Naini, also the agency’s deputy of public relations, was assassinated just days after Israeli forces eliminated the clerical regime’s de-facto leader, Ali Larijani, and its anti-protest enforcer Gholamreza Soleimani. I’m enjoying the recurring theme, Hours before his death, Naini insisted »

Inside Temple Israel

Featured imageUnless you watch the CBS Evening News, you missed the report taking viewers inside Temple Israel and the damage done by family guy Ayman Mohamad Ghazali. As I say in the linked post, the family guy had mass murder on his mind. In the event, thanks to what seems like divine intervention, the damage he did was limited to the security officer who stopped him and to the building itself. »

Family guy

Featured imageThe photo of Ayman Mohamad Ghazali all but shrieks, “Don’t Cry For Me, New York Times.” The Times, however, wanted it known that the guy with mass murder on his mind — the mass murder of Jewish children at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield, Michigan — was just a grieving family guy. He was grieving the loss of his Hezbollah brother and wanting to contribute to the cause in his »

An Optimistic Take On Iran

Featured imageYesterday, Glenn Reynolds wrote on Substack about the Iran campaign: The attacks on the Islamic Republic of Iran are going almost comically well. Where before Iranian leaders used to mock the “Great Satan” as a pitiful helpless giant, now most of them are dead. The ones left alive are, well, comically begging “don’t drone me, bro!” like Iranian President Mazoud Pezeshkian, hilariously pictured below. During yesterday’s Intelligence Committee hearing, one »

Tales from the “lost and found”

Featured imageOnce again, I had the opportunity today to directly observe the inner workings of the world’s most expensive “lost and found” operation, conducted at taxpayer expense by the U.S. federal district court for Minnesota. Even though ICE itself has wound down Operation Metro Surge in the state, a handful of missing property reports linger on from already-closed habeas corpus cases where the corpus (the former ICE detainee) has long ago »

Quote of the day

Featured imageWell, it’s a longie but a goodie. Matthew Hennessey is the editor of the Wall Street Journal’s Free Expression newsletter. He is a pereceptive gentleman with a sense of humor to boot. Hennessey writes in this morning’s edition (links and emphases omitted): * * * * * This is one of those things to which you hesitate to call attention, for fear of ruining it.   A UC Berkeley Institute »