Winners and Losers and Donald Trump

Alan Zendell, July 7, 2026

Athletics can teach us a lot about human nature and the almost indefinable qualities that distinguish winners from losers. Anyone who follows team sports has probably experienced one of those rare moments when an entire team is “in the zone” together. Watching the results of that synergy is among the most exciting and inspiring things we ever get to see, a group of very talented people all performing optimally, the resulting whole far exceeding the sum of its parts.

The 1969 miracle New York Mets and the 1980 U. S. Men’s Olympic hockey team come to mind as prime examples. So do the U. S. Women’s Soccer teams that won four world cup championships. Did those teams perform over their heads or did they simply achieve the collective mental state that seemed to approach telepathy and enhance everyone’s performance?

The thing about being in the zone is that while it’s an incredibly powerful if impossible to define phenomenon, it’s also extremely fragile. Every coach knows that. When a team is flying high we all jump on the bandwagon expecting them to overachieve, and if nothing breaks that spell, they often do. But sometimes, all it takes is one critical, unexpected thing to go wrong, and the team that has been functioning like a well-oiled machine disintegrates into a disorganized rabble of wasted talent.

One of the most memorable examples occurred in the 1986 World Series. With the Los Angeles Dodgers poised to clinch the Series victory in the bottom of the tenth inning of game six, a shocking, unforced error by the usually reliable Bill Buckner allowed the Mets to achieve yet another miracle, come-from-behind victory. With their mojo shattered, the Dodgers never stood a chance in game seven.

Is that what happened to the U. S. Men’s soccer team in Seattle last night, or was it something else? We’ll hear a lot from shocked fans and sports analysts about that. I’m no expert in soccer, to which my years of coaching kids’ soccer will attest, but I’m certain that I know more about the rules and tactics of the game than Donald Trump does. His typical arrogance, asserting to the media that he didn’t think the play by U. S. star striker Folarin Balogun that earned him a red card wasn’t a foul demonstrated a couple of things: Trump’s ignorance and his ability to create a catastrophe that affected millions (maybe billions) of people just by opening his mouth.

Trump’s remark was both absurd and inappropriate, but when has that ever stopped him? Of course a foul was committed. We all saw it. The issue was whether it was intentional with intent to injure Balugon’s Bosnian opponent. Almost everyone who witnessed the play in slow motion replays, which seems to be about half of all the humans on Earth, thought it wasn’t, but the only person who really mattered, the FIFA referee, thought it was.

Referees often make bad calls, but teams and fans live with them. We moan and complain about the injustice. We move on, as do the affected athletes, but Trump, in his bull-in-a-china-shop style could not. Just as he has used the power of his office to corrupt almost everything he touched, he used it to corrupt something soccer fans around the world held sacred.

FIFA’s struggles with arrogance and corruption are well known, but the players who train incessantly for world cup play know that going in. The American team, which had been riding their own high throughout the tournament, were working hard to adjust to having to play a powerful Belgian team without Balugon. Many expert commentators, understanding “the zone” phenomenon still gave them a chance of winning…until Trump put his thumb on the scale.

Trump loves to create chaos. He believes his ability to throw wrenches into the works is one of his most effective talents, and he never cares much about the collateral damage he causes as long as he gets his way. He got his way this time, easily turning FIFA president Gianni Infantino to the dark side as he has many others.

This time, the collateral damage was huge. He infuriated the entire soccer world and placed our men’s team in an untenable situation. The person on the hot seat was their coach, Mauricio Ponchitino. I feel for him more than anyone. If he played Balugon in the match against powerhouse Belgium, the outcome would forever be stained by Trump’s involvement. If he benched Balugon, which I believe he should have done, he would have upset millions of American soccer fans, but he would have preserved the integrity of the team’s reputation.

Beyond that, I believe the team would have risen to the level of play they had displayed throughout the tournament. Americans and their athletic idols have always thrived on being underdogs, and playing competitively with a revamped lineup would have earned Ponchitino and his team the respect of the entire world. Instead, the controversy broke the magical bubble and killed the zone effect. The result was a team of individual stars who seemed completely out of sync with each other. Their disarray was embarrassing and painful to watch, but it wasn’t the fault of Balugon, his teammates, or his coach. The blame for this debacle lies entirely with Donald Trump.

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A Terrible Week in Trump’s America

Alan Zendell, July 6, 2026

I have to believe that not only Americans, but people everywhere who have admired America in the past spent the week cringing, maybe even shedding a tear for what Trump is turning this country into. He made an embarrassing mockery of our nation’s 250 anniversary. Everything he did was crass, vulgar, and entirely self-serving. And since our national celebration was to have been centered around the White House and our national mall, the dominant images were:

  • the algae-clogged reflection pool, which was incompetently repaired by a Trump-favored no-bid contactor who charged the government nearly ten times more than they bid, and has now been given a second one to repair the damage they did. I wonder if they’ll get a third contract if they screw this one up. (Maybe they’re onto something.)
  • the missing East Wing of the White House which Trump illegally demolitioned
  • the former rose garden, now paved over for another Trump vanity project
  • the disgusting papier mache arch, made even more horrifying watching it deteriorate like a rotting corpse
  • the remaining traces of the martial arts caged fights that were Trump’s birthday present to himself (paid for by tax dollars.)

Then there was the national state fair for which Trump illegally transferred funds donated to support the nonpartisan Independence celebration that Trump tried to co-opt. But when entertainers who’d signed up withdrew claiming they’d been misled into thinking they would be part of the real celebration, and it was clear that Trump was using it to further divide the nation, the strangest thing happened. No one showed up. When the crowd-size-obsessed Trump viewed aerial footage of the mall he was so furious, he deleted the images from all White House communications.

I and many of you are old enough to remember our nation’s bicentennial celebration of July 4,1976. The president was the very conservative Gerald Ford – I mean a real conservative who cared more about the Constitution and the general welfare of every American than his own enrichment. Ford was inclusive, asking the country to come together to recover from the damage done by Vietnam. Ford’s address to the nation that day was made before a million people at Independence Hall, Philadelphia. His message stressed three things: the need to preserve our self-government, protecting our personal freedoms, and national unity.

Compare that to what Trump did. He went to Mount Rushmore where he projected an image of himself next to the faces of George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson, and Theodore Roosevelt, which are carved into the mountainside. Trump, who isn’t fit to kiss their feet, announced to the world that he was the greatest president of all time, after which he attempted to paint successful Democratic Socialist candidates as Communists trying to destroy our country. It’s notable that people are finally getting wise to Trump. Most people, hearing him try to outdo the disgraced Senator Joseph McCarthy, yawned, understanding that this was just another example of his desperation over the midterm elections.

When Trump reprised his rant over the Save America Act, he was perhaps more honest than he intended. He said that if the Act, which is intended to suppress the votes of people who disapprove of him, wasn’t passed they would lose the presidency forever. In typical tortured Trump logic, what he meant was that MAGA Republicans could only win another election if he was able to rig it.

Destroying America’s celebration wasn’t enough for Trump. He had to stick his corrupt nose into America’s chances in the World Cup soccer matches. In the Americans’ win over Bosnia-Herzegovina, their star striker, Folarin Balogun was given a red card for stomping on the ankle of an opposing player. That meant Balogun left the game with almost forty minutes remaining in the second half forcing his teamto play a man short, and was banned from playing in today’s match against Belgium.

Most of us who watched the game, and most commentators thought the red card ruling was overly harsh. Slow-motion replays showed the contact was clearly accidental, and certainly not with intent to injure. But FIFA referees are generally unassailable, and the call stood.

Today, Trump is bragging that it was his intervention with FIFA that got the call reversed, for which he expected to be cheered by all Americans. Instead, most of us are sickened by Trump’s intervention. Whether the original call was wrong Trump’s action assured that if America defeats Belgium and moves on in the tournament, their success will be tinged by what most of the world is outraged over.

Trump’s intervention was the worst possible thing he could do to the reputation of the U. S. Men’s Soccer team. If they go on to win the World Cup, their victory will have the stink of cheating and political corruption, although the team itself had nothing to do with Trump’s action. England suffered the loss of one its starters due to receiving a red card in its defeat of Mexico. If England accepts its fate without a challenge, anything the Americans achieve will be forever tainted.

The only good news in all this is that our incompetent, demented president seems to have expended all of his good will with American voters. As he heads to the NATO summit where his feet will be held to the coals over his failure to support Ukraine and his attacks on Iran which cost Europe dearly, I have never been more embarrassed for our nation.

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Trump’s Corruption and Conflicts of Interest

Alan Zerndell, July 3, 2026

As we celebrate our 250th Fourth of July, we seem to be traversing a long, slow inflection, one which I believe historians will view as the transition from Trump/MAGA mania back to common sense and respect for our laws and Constitution. It’s fair to say that the great majority of Americans are shocked that it’s taken this long.

But cults are hard to stamp out, and this one, sponsored by the Heritage Foundation and a weird coalition of racists, xenophobes, poorly educated people who’ve been left behind by everyone else’s prosperity, and of course the greedy billionaires who wish to create an American oligarchy may be as hard to recover from as the cult of greed that made slavery acceptable. Killing that one almost destroyed our country.

That we’re at this juncture points to the massive fraud and corruption of the president, his family, and his hangers-on who hope to scoop up the coins he tosses to maintain their loyalty. Even the dimmest of Trump’s supporters are smart enough to realize something’s wrong when alarm bells are going off all around them, and they’re getting louder and more frequent.

Trump’s Iran war made it harder for people to live their lives without falling into debt, as millions were still struggling to adapt to the theft of their health care benefits by the MAGA Congress that needed its money to assure billionaires could avoid paying ttaxes. As lie after lie is obliterated by facts and what we can all see with our own eyes, now that it has been revealed that Trump’s corruption added more than $2.4 billion dollars to his personal wealth, everyone who has to live on hamburger instead of steak feels it personally.

After eighteen months of the most corrupt administration anyone can remember and Trump’s total focus on rigging the midterm election and completing his vastly unpopular vanity projects, his base is beginning to crumble. Trump has been stealing hundreds of millions of dollars directly from his most loyal supporters with his cries of being victimized by witch hunts and appeals for donations, but this week’s legally required disclosure of Trump’s 2025 income has produced dead silence from his base.

If you wonder why the same people who’ve been drinking his Kool-Aid and cheering everything he did since 2015 are now either silent or quietly backing away, maybe it’s because of what Trump told a New York Times reporter last January. When asked how he responds to accusations of corruption and conflicts of interest, he said, “I found out that nobody cared.” The most shocking thing about that statement was that it was true. I doubt that Trump has ever spoken more truthfully. When I heard it, I immediately translated it from Trump speech to basic English: “as long as no one’s watching, I’m going to steal everything I can lay my hands on.”

Another thing that’s coming clear that should have been obvious when MAGA’s Project 2025 was released, was that the entire focus of Trump’s second term has been an attempt at a bloodless coup. Not that millions of lives wouldn’t have been lost as a result of the madness of RFK Junior’s health decrees, the inability to obtain health care for more than twenty million American families, and a FEMA so decimated by firings that it cannot respond to most natural disasters – but we only notice civilian casualties when they’re riddled with bullets fired by an authoritarian regime suppressing open rebellion.

The only places where people still march in lockstep to Trump’s orders are those where he has been able to install loyalists in positions from which they can’t be easily removed. Everywhere else, the cracks are widening, and once his base realizes how they’ve been had, when they hear Trump brag, as he did yesterday, that he’s always been great at making money, so why stop now, when they can’t pay to repair the truck their job depends on, they’re going to wake up with anger that will not be assuaged by Trump’s smooth talking. And I doubt that his base believes making money is the same thing as theft and grift.

Think about how his base will react when they learn that Trump’s $2.4 billion in income, most of which arose from serious conflicts of interest, was enough to pay for the Obamacare cost sharing subsidies he canceled. The subsidies’ total cost to the government was $1,100 per recipient, so Trump’s very questionable income alone could have paid to restore the health premium subsidy to more than two / million Americans. Think about what that says about the massive scale of Trump’s corruption.

I don’t know how to assign a dollar value to my vote, but apparently, with the Supreme Court’s help, we’re about to learn that MAGA billionaires (and one newly minted trillionaire) are about to spend the operating budget of a small city to try to buy it. Even the MAGA base has to be outraged.

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A Very Dangerous Time for America

Alan Zendell, June 29, 2026

The next four months are going to be stressful and dangerous for America. Regardless of anything he says, President Trump is desperate to control the midterm elections which are now eighteen weeks away. If he maintains his majorities in Congress, he will be able to do irreversible damage to our country. If he doesn’t he will be a frustrated, angry lame duck, but he might be even more dangerous, then. If the midterms change the balance of power in Congress, we’re in for two years of tantrums and specious lawsuits over rigged elections.

Trump’s mental illness is on display daily. The more he loses the worse that will get, and the Supreme Court, today, handed him a stinging loss, upholding state laws that allow mail-in ballots to be counted after election day as long as they’re postmarked on time. They also refused to void a five million dollar judgment against him for sexually assaulting E. Jean Carroll, and they’re widely expected to deny Trump’s claim that would overturn the 14th Amendment guarantee that anyone born in the United States is a citizen.

The fact that the Senate pulled back its vote on the War Powers Resolution means that nothing is restraining Trump’s erratic behavior and postings on social media. His latest threat to annihilate Iran is another of his childish rants. They only make negotiations more difficult – have you ever tried to reason with a five-year-old having a tantrum? If an equitable peace agreement is ever reached it will be because the negotiators on both sides tune Trump out. None of his attempts to intimidate Iran have had any effect, because they know the war is extremely unpopular among American voters, as is Trump himself.

It’s hard for diplomats, legislators, and average Americans to predict what might happen next when our president’s words rarely have anything to do with reality. By now we’re used to the lies, insults, and delusional fantasies, but all that accomplishes is teaching us it’s best to ignore him. When people ask me to predict what he’ll do next, I usually say it’s impossible to know because Trump is driven by his ego, his greed, and his rage that everyone hasn’t fallen worshipfully in line whenever he speaks. At this moment, it’s harder than usual.

The problem is that Trump’s desperation to hold onto and increase his power is obvious to everyone, everywhere. The Congress knows, Iran knows, our Gulf allies know, and Israel knows. So do Europe, Russia, and China. And then there’s damage to our economy and the price of gas.

Iran seems to believe Trump would never resort to restarting the war, as do many home-grown pundits. They reason that only a quarter of us supported it from the outset, and the frightening speed at which we are dissipating our military resources makes any kind of massive assault irresponsible, not least because it’s now clear to everyone that only a D-Day style ground invasion or the use of a nuclear weapon can achieve Trump’s goals. Common sense would argue that neither of those has any chance of occurring, but when was the last time anything Trump did conformed with common sense?

The problem I see is that Trump has truly painted himself into a corner with no clear way out. His own party screams that he’s sabotaging the November election by focusing on a lost war and a series of vanity projects, but they’ve been doing that for months with no effect. My question is what is more likely to push Trump over the edge and down the rabbit hole, giving up his ego-driven need to dominate everyone and act rationally or being defied by an enemy he despises and seriously underestimated.

In the game of outrageous rants and threats, Iran’s are more credible. Their attacks on our bases in the Gulf States continue and our allies in the region fear the destruction of their oil wealth. The whole region is basically mercenary, pledging allegiance to the highest bidder. My fear is that in the end, Trump’s rage at being constantly outmaneuvered may eventually drown out all the other crazy voices in his head.

We know how he loves to order the military into battle, and it wouldn’t surprise me if one day he simply cracks and orders an all-out assault on Iran. If that happens, who’s going to stand in his way? Every senior military officer knows that if they do anything but march in lockstep, Pete Hegseth with simply fire them. And even if the Senate realizes their error and quickly reverses themselves, once the fighting re-starts in earnest it will be too little too late. The only way to stop him at that point would be to exercise the 25th amendment, but that takes time, and in the midst of total warfare anything could happen.

It’s really hard to see how anything good can come of this.

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Days of Reckoning

Alan Zendell, June 21, 2026,

The concept of a day of reckoning is universal in Judeo-Christian and Islamic cultures. We’re taught since childhood, and we grow up believing that we will eventually be held accountable for our actions.

It hasn’t always turned out that way, however. Donald Trump is especially adept at stymying the legal process. He was convicted of ninety-four felonies prior to the 2024 election, but armed with the Supreme Court decision that a sitting president cannot be prosecuted for pretty much anything, there’s no doubt that a principal reason he ran again was to avoid sentences being imposed on him.

The courts held all that in abeyance during the 2024 election campaign, and Trump spent a fortune on lawyers skilled at delaying legal proceedings. If he could delay them until after the election and he won, he could use (misuse?) the Department of Justice to quash all his indictments and convictions, and that is exactly what happened.

No doubt, Trump feels invincible. He has a captive majority in both houses of Congress and a Supreme Court that will not get in his way unless he commits egregious constitutional violations like his tariff policy. Trump advocates the idea that it’s better to apologize than ask permission, though in fact he never does either. He knows the adage that possession is nine tenths of the law and he uses it constantly.

The philosophy of Project 2025 was for Trump to attack relentlessly on all fronts whether his actions were legal or not and dare everyone else to stop him. That worked very well for him until the Court’s decision on tariffs, but that defeat didn’t deter him at all. The assaults on voting rights, immigrants, and the social net that tens of millions of Americans depend on, including health care and food stamps, continue unabated. And with the skyrocketing costs of the Iran war, that will only get worse.

In Trump’s mind, assuring that wealthy Americans pay no taxes and rebuilding the capabilities of our military are much higher priorities than the basic needs of American citizens. Given his track record throughout his life, does anyone doubt that in the four plus months until the midterm elections he will pull every dirty trick and underhanded stunt he can to maintain his Congressional majorities? As time grows tighter, he can jam up both his opposition and the courts.

It’s clear to everyone but his most rabid supporters, and many of them too, that Trump is becoming more unhinged and irrational every day. What kind of leader posts the nonsense he does on social media in the midst of negotiations to end a dangerous and costly war? What kind of leader ignores his expert advisors and allows his actions to be completely dominated by his ego and mental illness?

It’s extremely clear that as of today, the winners of Trump’s Iran War were Iran, China, and Russia; the losers: the United States and, by far, Israel, which has squandered whatever good will it had with Europe and seriously eroded American support. It’s also extremely clear that Trump has severely hurt our economy and most of the established trade and economic policies world-wide.

He is despised by a large majority of Americans, and he is mocked by most national leaders while they praise and appease him to his face. His administration doesn’t even make an effort to hide either its corruption or its pre-occupation with things like the reflecting pool and Trump’s lust to have the biggest ballrooms and the tallest arches in the world, while plastering his name on every building and institution he can get away with.

The question for Congress and American voters is simple. With the election approaching fast and the certainty that Trump will create all the chaos he can before then, can his day of reckoning be delayed any longer? Can our republic and Constitution survive anything but an immediate all-out effort to stop him before he can do any more damage?

How do we do that? First, all the millions of Americans who are burned out on Trump’s antics need to grow a pair and re-engage. Not doing so is exactly what Trump wants, it’s how he wins. If you live in a swing district currently held by a Republican, or even if you don’t, focus on one that is and make a lot of noise at town halls, on social media, and by communicating directly with your representative’s Chief of Staff. Make it crystal clear that if they continue to choose blind loyalty to Trump and party over their constituents, they will be fired on election day.

Write to news outlets, call in to talk radio shows, interact with influential podcast hosts. Exercise your right to free speech and guarantee your right to vote while you still have them. Every day we delay joining the final battle for control of Congress, and by implication, to control and muzzle Trump, increases the chances that the 2026 election will be the last real election we ever participate in.

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Obama vs Trump : Class vs Crass

Alan Zendell, June 19, 2026

The opening of the Obama Presidential Center, yesterday, was in stark contrast to the daily spectacle of our current president going mad in the White House. It was the Obamas (Michele and Barack) at their best and classiest. They never mentioned Donald Trump, instead relying on media commentators to remind their audiences that Trump wasn’t invited, although Presidents Clinton, Bush, and Biden and their wives were highly visible in the crowd.

I was ambivalent about Obama’s presidency. When the former president burst on the scene as a relatively unknown, highly charismatic orator, I was conflicted. He was obviously brilliant, but I fundamentally don’t trust charisma. As Trump showed us, it can be negatively hypnotic like a cobra’s, leading to things like cults and MAGA. Except for his career-making keynote address at the 2004 Democratic Convention, Obama was a complete stranger in 2008. It wasn’t until John McCain picked Sarah Palin as his running mate that I decided to vote for Obama. 

When he won, I like millions of other Americans felt a surprising elation. It wasn’t about  Obama as much it was the sense that by electing him, America had demonstrated we had matured as a nation. In a single populous wave of inclusiveness, we compensated for decades of slavery, Jim Crow laws, segregation, and racism in general. Unfortunately, that turned out to be only an illusion, as the forces of darkness and exclusionism simply went underground to prepare for the coup that Trump has spent his second term attempting to execute.

I thought some of Obama’s policies as president were mistaken, but the one thing he always got right was preaching love instead of hate, equal opportunity instead of elitism, courtesy and empathy over profanity and tone-deafness. Obama’s was an honorable presidency that treated opposing voices with respect and gentility. He never accused Republicans of either treason or stupidity, never openly molested or disrespected women.

One of the happiest experiences of my life was watching the victory celebration in Grant Park in Chicago after the 2008 election. There was no ego on display, no obsession with crowd sizes, no accusing everyone else of cheating. And after all the verbal abuse Obama has taken from Trump, the most impressive thing about yesterday was that the celebration of the Obama Presidential Center was as classy, positive, and inclusive as the 2008 celebration at Grant Park.

It was a reminder of what we always thought of as presidential dignity, of which there has been no sign in Trump’s White House. Where Trump is obsessed with the word “I,” Obama stresses “We.” While Trump goes out of his way to make enemies so he can play the martyr game, Obama always talks about cooperating and working together. It’s not a coincidence that on the same day as the Obama celebration, a poll was released showing that 57% of Americans view Obama favorably while only 30% have a positive view of Trump.

This is one of those moments when I imagine how historians will view this period twenty years from now. I can hear them all screaming, “How the Hell could America have let this happen? How could we have allowed this egomaniac to completely upend our way of life while running the most corrupt, incompetent administration anyone can remember?”

There are signs that yesterday’s Obama celebration is part of a changing trend, that Americans have had enough of hate-mongering and  divisiveness, of the barely hidden racism and misogyny that characterizes the Trump administration. The massive celebration in New York on the same day that brought literally millions of New Yorkers of every race, color, gender, and religion together to share in the joy of the NBA Knick’s victory was another sign that we’ve had enough of the lies, crudeness, and self-serving policies intended to further enrich Trump and his supporters while average Americans struggle to pay for health care, energy, rent, and food.

We’ve seen the same trend in special elections around the country in which MAGA Republicans have been repeatedly upset by Democrats. Trump continues to hold enormous sway among his own party, but even when the candidates he backed in the primaries won, turnout was low, while voters in Democratic primaries showed excitement and eagerness. Trump and his supporters have set the stage for a historic repudiation in the midterm elections, but that’s only half the game.

To defeat Trumpism, the Democrats are going have to convince people that they can do a better job of governing. They have to present a unified message of hope and inclusion, something they have failed at miserably during the last few cycles. Victory for the great majority of the American people is there for the taking if the Democrats can stop bickering among themselves and prove to Americans that they can be trusted to put the people’s needs first.

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Trump, the G7, and a 60 Day Reprieve

Alan Zendell, June 15, 2026

Anyone but a delusional narcissist like Donald Trump would be mortified. If he were anyone but Donald Trump I would feel empathy for him. Imagine you were in his shoes, heading for a G7 meeting with France, Canada, Germany, the UK, Japan, and Italy. Ignore the formal courtesies and congratulations on achieving a “deal” with Iran, the other leaders despise him and understand full well what a failure his war with Iran has been and how much that has diminished his power and influence.

Trump has spent seventeen months poisoning America’s relationship with all of those countries, and in response, Germany described us as a declining nation, Canada shifted its economic future toward Europe and Asia, Italy accused us of starting an unnecessary war, and the UK government is on the verge of collapse over it. While Trump does a victory lap, everyone else is being very careful to avoid awakening the elephant in the room.

The so-called deal with Iran is simply a sixty-day reprieve from a war which has been a horrific disaster. Every other G7 leader understands that Trump began the war with three objectives, the elimination of Iran’s nuclear threat, bringing down the regime controlled by the ayatollahs and Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, and destroying Iran’s offensive military power. None of those objectives has been achieved, and it’s unlikely that any of them will be.

Iran’s massive arsenal of missiles and drones is still largely intact, the regime is now totally under the control of the IRGC, and Iran has consistently insisted that it will not give up its right to enrich uranium. The only thing the memorandum of understanding that extends the ceasefire for sixty days accomplished, assuming its signing isn’t derailed before it happens, was re-opening the Strait of Hormuz which was open to shipping from every nation before Trump ordered the attack.

In other words, as of today, the war has accomplished nothing strategically except burying Iran’s enriched uranium under tons of rubble that can easily be cleared, and Trump’s boast that his “deal” is better than Obama’s is pure fiction. The war cost thousands of lives, a large percentage of which were civilians. Some sources estimate the number of deaths at more than 17,000 with several times that many injuries. We’ve lost aircraft, our bases in the Persian Gulf have sustained billions of dollars in damage, and we’ve dangerously reduced our supply of strategic weapons, which will take hundreds of billions of dollars and years to replace. And that doesn’t count the collateral damage to our economy and to America’s social safety net and tax structure. Someone has to pay for this debacle.

Oil will flow again, gas prices will gradually come down, but as always happens in an oil crisis, profiteering, refinery startups and repairs to oil resources damaged during the war will keep them high for many months. One thing that may have been permanently damaged by the Iran war is America’s support for Israel.

Trump is making Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu out to be a pariah. But that’s typical Trump. Four months ago, Trump and Netanyahu were best buddies, and it didn’t take much flattery on the latter’s part with dreams of a brilliant legacy for Trump to convince him to attack Iran based on evidence of imminent danger that has since been shown to be wrong.

Now, when Netanyahu’s agenda has diverged from Trump’s, he’s treating him the same way he treated everyone in Congress whom he considered disloyal. I don’t know whether Israel’s continuing attacks on Hezbollah are warranted or necessary, but all Trump can see is disloyalty to him. We can all see the fallout, however. Anti-semitism is increasing at a rapid rate in North America and Europe, and polls have shown a sharp decrease in Americans’ sympathy for Israel. Not exactly the legacy Bibi promised his friend Donald.

The destruction and death of a failed war are not the only things Trump is bringing to the G7. There’s also the image, broadcast to anyone on Earth willing to pony up $8.99 to watch it, of Trump’s obscene, tasteless notion of how to celebrate America’s 250th anniversary. According to Donald Trump, a nation that throughout the twentieth century was a beacon of hope for the world, a place that welcomed their huddled masses and offered succor to people fleeing tyranny and death is now a nation of martial arts fanatics. Is that the image we want to project of who we are to the rest of the world?

Of all of Trump’s despicable antics, turning the south lawn of the White House into a combat zone may be the most offensive. And that’s before we note that it was a for profit event that netted millions for UFC and Paramount, which is now owned by Trump ally David Ellison. And who footed the bill for the profits to Trump’s friends? The American taxpayers, who spent $60 million to put on the event.

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Regime Changes

Alan Zendell, June 13, 2026

2026 may be remembered more for regime changes than anything else, assuming the wrongheaded war with Iran doesn’t erupt into something much larger and more dangerous. The latter possibility seems frighteningly more likely than it did when Donald Trump realized the war wasn’t going to achieve his goals, but instead was threatening the midterm elections, and declared a cease fire in April. The revelations that Trump was seriously considering putting troops on the ground in Iran to extract that nation’s enriched uranium and invading and occupying Kharg Island, combined with Iran appearing to have no intention of giving up its right to enrich uranium makes everything tenuous.

It’s taking weeks to finalize a memorandum of understanding that would start the clock on sixty days of final negotiations to end the war, and it’s clear that the only thing definitive about the proposed MOU is restoring the Strait of Hormuz to normal operations. But even that isn’t a return to the pre-war status quo, as Iran’s hardline leaders say they intend to control the Strait and charge fees for traversing it.

That position reflects the unpleasant reality that Trump achieved one of the two non-negotiable goals he announced when he ordered the initial attack on Iran, but like most of Trump’s promises, it didn’t turn out the way he intended. He got the regime change he demanded, but he replaced a theocratic regime led by Ayatollah Ali Khomeini, with a secular regime nominally headed by his son but totally under the brazen control of the IRGC, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Iran expert Stephen Erlanger said in today’s New York Times, that the elder Khomeini, who died in the first attack on Tehran, “had for years banned the production of a nuclear weapon and always worked to avoid a joint Israeli-American attack,” while the younger generation of hardliners who replaced him “no longer feel [the] same constraints.” There is no doubt that the regime change Trump catalyzed has worsened the situation in the region and the prospects for a lasting peace.

Trump achieved a regime change in Venezuela, which was really more of a snatch and grab operation by highly trained American Special Forces against a defenseless country that couldn’t even protect its president. While Trump has claimed this was a brilliant military and diplomatic victory, it was mostly about stealing Venezuela’s oil resources. Trump has repeatedly voiced  his desire to enrich his family and billionaire donors with oil from both Venezuela and Iran.

For months, Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio have talked about regime change in Cuba. It’s impossible to know whether they can pull that off, even with Cuba’s economy on life support, because there is no transparency about any of the administration’s plans, but my guess is that Iran will drag out negotiations until just before our midterm elections, and given Trump’s pre-occupation with vanity projects – keeping his name on the Kennedy Center, building his obscene victory arch and ballroom – Cuba will be turn out to be just an afterthought.

All of which brings us to two potential regime changes that Trump never intended. The coming months will see a long-awaited political reckoning for Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Netanyahu has been under indictment for fraud and bribery since 2019. He has technically been on trial since 2020, but has successfully used his office to delay the proceedings. He also tried to force Israel’s Supreme Court to void his indictment but was rebuffed.

Most Israelis blamed Netanyahu for failing to prevent the attack by Hamas that triggered Israel’s virtual destruction of Gaza, and Israelis’ frustration over the virtually constant state of war from then until the current war with Iran and Hezbollah forced Netanyahu to schedule national elections for September or October. Stay tuned for what could be a decisive regime change in Israel, especially if he and Trump are unable to force real concessions about Iran’s nuclear program.

And finally, the regime change three-fourths of Americans hope and pray for. Donald Trump’s abject failure at governing and his attempts to grab power and undermine our Constitution have made him the most unpopular, hated president in the modern era. His obvious attempts to restrict voting in blue states, gerrymander red states, and install an incompetent loyalist as Acting Director of National Intelligence to rig the election in Trump’s favor, have made a Democratic takeover of the House in November inevitable. And since polling shows that even Trump’s best demographic, blue collar non-college graduates, are abandoning him in droves, control of the Senate is in play as well.

I’m confident that Trump’s full court press to control the election will fail. The last twenty-six months of his term will be spent as a frustrated, totally unhinged lame duck, assuming he completes his term, if his own party doesn’t wind up impeaching him. Not exactly the regime change we desperately need, but close enough to salvage our democracy and restore balance to our place in the world.

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The Full Cost of the Iran War

Alan Zendell, June 10, 2026,

We wake up every morning hoping to learn that our president has finally reached the initial stages of a deal to permanently end the fighting around the Persian Gulf and neighboring countries. Every day that goal seems more tenuous, and today, Donald Trump, who has claimed for weeks that he’s in no hurry to make a deal with Iran, accused that country of dragging its feet and threatened to attack its energy infrastructure to punish them.

Yesterday, he ordered an attack on a reservoir, denying potable water to a nearby town. That sounds like a tone deaf escalation of the fighting and possibly a war crime.

Trump himself is the greatest obstacle to a deal. His social media posts, his daily self-contradictions, his obvious lack of respect for Iran’s negotiators, and his wild threats make already difficult negotiations nearly impossible. Every day this continues, Trump and Congressional Republicans grow more desperate about the midterm elections, and everyone else bears the costs of the war.

Some of those costs are transparent, while others, perhaps the bulk of them are not. The Apache helicopter that Iran took down this week will cost $120 million to replace. Our brilliant military was able to rescue the crew, but even rescue missions cost a fortune. That Apache helicopter we lost cost $10,000 per hour to fly, and an F35 fighter costs $40,000 per hour.

We know about the downed Apache because it was too visible to cover up, but we have no idea, how many of our aircraft have been damaged or destroyed on the ground by Iranian strikes. We have little or no information about the cost of repairing the damage done by Iranian missile attacks on our bases in allied countries in the Persian Gulf, likewise the human cost of casualties on those bases.

We’ve heard various estimates of the alarming rate at which our munitions are being expended. That includes expensive precision missiles and bombs, and the defensive missiles that comprise Israel’s Iron Dome and the defensive batteries protecting all of our bases that are within each of Iran’s missiles and drones. Add it all up. New aircraft, new missiles and drones, reconstruction of damaged buildings and aircraft runways, and the injuries and stress on our troops from having to be constantly on alert for incoming missiles. We could be looking a nearly a trillion dollars in recovery costs when this is all over, just to return our military to the level of preparedness it enjoyed before the war.

To those costs, we must add the disruption to the American and world economies. We complain about four dollar plus gasoline, but Europe and Asia are facing far greater increases in energy costs, and some of our allies, (South Korea, Japan, the Phillipines,) are dangerously close to running out of oil.

The skyrocketing cost of fertilizers as a result of this war increases the price of food and raises the specter of shortages and famines, all of which is exacerbated by Trump killing USAID. The costs, taken together, are staggering, and they’re still rising, largely out of sight of most Americans.

These costs will re-ignite the guns or butter debate we seem to have every generation. How are we going to pay to restore the economy and our military preparedness – Trump asked Congress for $350 billion, today – while millions of Americans are losing their health care, their social security benefits are being threatened, and the social safety net seems to be cut back more each month. Where will the money to pay for all this come from with Trump’s permanent tax cuts on the wealthy in place?

In addition to financial costs, there are other significant costs that can’t be quantified in dollars and cents. The war has severely damaged our relationships with Europe, and Trump has weakened our response capability in the western Pacific so badly it’s almost an invitation to China to threaten Taiwan. Our prestige and the perceptions of America by foreigners are all suffering from this war, too. The number of European and Asian touurists visiting America and spending money here has already dropped significantly compared to before Trump’s second term.

Perhaps most significant is risk, whose cost is unknown. As Trump writhes trying to find a path out of the cul-de-sac he’s trapped himself in, his options for ending the conflict shrink. The last few days have seen attacks by United States forces and Iran on each other accelerate, threatening the tenuous peace negotiations. When Trump runs out of possible exit ramps, our greatest risk is that he will wildly escalate the war out of fury and frustration that things didn’t turn out as he wanted them to.

The chances of the Iran war spiraling out of control grow every day that our incompetent president allows it to continue. But let’s not let Congress off the hook. If our representatives grew a pair and stood up to Trump, this war could be history before summer’s end.

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I Call the Shots!

Alan Zendell, June 9, 2026

If ever there were an epithet that described Donald Trump, it’s the title of this piece. Our arrogant, rude, egotistical president has a desperate need to be in charge, or at least to have all of his sycophants tell him he is. That mostly worked for him until he entered politics. And therein lies the fundamental flaw in his assertion, in 2015, that what America needed was a successful businessman to run the country.

There are multiple flaws in that argument. One is the questionable suggestion that Trump is a successful businessman. Making money is not the only criteria for reaching such a conclusion. Other things, like the respect and admiration of peers and subordinates, the sense that the person in charge possesses a moral center and compassion for the people whose labors are what is actually making the business successful are more important. By those measures, Trump is anything but a model of success. The level to which people who have worked for or with him despise and distrust Trump is remarkable.

In business, a hated leader is tolerated as long as they’re making money for their partners and investors. When profits turn into losses or businesses run into severe protests or legal challenges, corporate boards and shareholders are ruthless. Presidents and CEOs find out quickly that they’re as replaceable as soiled underwear. Corporations don’t worry about fairness, ethics, or the approval of the masses. Make enough enemies and lose your edge, and you’re gone.

It doesn’t work that way in government. In a well-functioning republic, no single individual can maintain the kind of control Trump craves indefinitely. Screw up as badly as Trump does, anger and insult people indiscriminately, and let everyone see his total lack of compassion, and eventually they’ll topple him. It took all of Trump’s first term, which ended in the debacle of the January sixth insurrection at the Capitol, for that to sink in.

But few people are as driven by greed and power-lust as Trump. He spent all of Joe Biden’s presidency plotting to overthrow our rules-based system and undermine our Constitution. That meant accepting the support of right-wing extremists who would prefer that America be a white male Christian oligarchy. In their arrogance, the Heritage Society, which wrote Project 2025, presented it to Trump as his only path to becoming the all-powerful president he dreamt of being, believing with enough money and chutzpah, they could slip their agenda past a sleepy, disengaged electorate and execute a political coup before anyone realized they’d been mugged.

The probability that Project 2025 would succeed was never high, but with an opposition party that constantly tripped over itself and an army of well-financed influencers, this was the best chance the plotters would ever have. For more than a year, Trump and his cronies ran roughshod over everyone, aided to a great degree by a supportive Supreme Court. But as almost often happens when narcissistic leaders, encouraged by their yes-people overreach, Trump’s delusions crashed headlong into reality.

Trump found out that he couldn’t call the shots on tariffs, and even a Republican party cowed by the fear of being primaried wouldn’t stand for the creation of a Nazi-like government police force. Even their craven self-interest had uncrossable red lines, and when Trump’s power-grabbing attempts to neutralize Congress got personal, he learned he was not invincible.

But the die had already been cast for the midterm elections. Independent voters who had swept him into office in 2024 abandoned him in droves, which caused Trump to trigger a gerrymandered redistricting war among the states. But any gains he made as a result weren’t nearly enough to offset approval ratings dropping toward 30%. Thus, as many people predicted he would when his prospects became desperate, he started a war with Iran, or more accurately, he allowed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to manipulate him into starting one.

Trump obviously thought he could control Netanyahu, and he assumed, in spite of warnings by people in his administration who knew better, that he could bully Iran into a quick surrender. It turned out, however, that Trump couldn’t call the shots against people who were as driven and determined as he was. For Trump, this war is about bravado and showing the world how tough he is. For Israel and Iran, however, it’s about long-term survival, which is a far more powerful motivating factor. Neither Israel nor Iran is about to adopt Trump’s agenda, nor is either willing to let him call the shots.

Trump has crashed into the consequences of his own mental illness and incompetence. When one of his business ventures failed, the collateral damage was limited to places like Atlantic City, New Jersey. But when an arrogant president who is also the Commander in Chief of the world’s most powerful military fails so spectacularly, we all pay a huge price.

We’re going to be paying for Trump’s failures for many years to come. So far, the world’s enmity toward America has been focused on Trump, but it’s clear as he inflicts damage on everything he touches, that if Congress doesn’t take back its constitutional power, the nation that everyone once revered will become a pariah.

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