June 24, 2026

01a Apocalyptic

Blurb:

Diversity, equity and inclusion efforts are still underway at Washburn University in Kansas despite a state law banning the ideology, according to two recently published undercover videos.

Both edited videos were released this month by Accuracy in Academia, a conservative watchdog group that has over the last year targeted numerous universities across Republican-controlled states with the same sting: catching employees admitting to undercover investigators that they are flouting anti-DEI laws.

At Washburn, located in Topeka, a video published March 18 centers on lecturer Craig Carter with the School of Applied Studies, who told an AIM investigator that employees were told to discontinue DEI but “to my knowledge, we didn’t do any of that here.”

“A lot of times we use other words for diversity,” he was recorded saying on AIM’s hidden camera, according to the group.

“We talk about inclusion, you know, and stuff like that. For the most part, we haven’t been… I mean, I haven’t changed anything that I say or do in the classroom,” Carter said.

Blurb:

Pro-lifers are often accused of opposing abortion solely for religious reasons. If you follow Secular Pro-Life on Twitter long enough, you will see tweets from pro-choicers claiming SPL is really a Christian group. Some pro-abortion people say that atheists like me who oppose abortion are closet Christians who have no reason for our views except for our (alleged) faith.

Pro-abortion people have also used this argument to discredit religious pro-lifers. Even when a religious pro-lifer relies solely on secular arguments, they almost invariably hear that they only oppose abortion because their religion tells them to.

Sometimes, though, it is pro-choicers who have religious beliefs that drive them to support abortion. Some people having abortions use their religious beliefs to justify their choices. Many times, these religious beliefs, and the excuses and justifications derived from them, sound absurd.

“Reiki master” and spirit guide claim baby is happy to be aborted

In a 2006 article in The Daily Mail by Natasha Pearlman and Jenny Nisbet called “Abortion: The Legacy,” one woman tells her abortion story and gives a good example of this.

Get the latest pro-life news and information on X (Twitter).

The article isn’t online, but you can read an excerpt here [https://clinicquotes.com/woman-says-her-baby-was-happy-to-be-aborted]. (Note: This link contains a graphic photo.)

The article quotes a British woman who was considering aborting her baby. She wanted advice, but says, “I felt there was no one else to turn to for impartial advice; all my family and friends were emotionally involved.”

So instead of turning to someone she knew, she contacted a woman who referred to herself as a “Reiki master and spiritual healer.”

This woman, like many new age practitioners, claimed to be in contact with a “spirit guide,” — a deceased disembodied spirit that helped her communicate with other spirits.

The women telling her abortion story asks the “Reiki master” to have her spirit guide connect with the spirit of her preborn baby. This is what the “Reiki master” says:

She said she had a very strong sense that the baby wasn’t 100 percent perfect and that he was happy to go to the other side but would be back again soon.

The woman said, “Immediately, I felt enormously relieved because I’d been feeling so guilty.”

Satisfied that her preborn baby was fine with being aborted and would return to her at another time, she booked her abortion appointment in a local hospital.

At the hospital, she says she “couldn’t bear” to look at the ultrasound. However, a nurse told her that her baby was a boy.

She was in her twelfth week of pregnancy, which means she was carrying a ten-week-old preborn child. (This is because length of pregnancy is counted as days from the last menstrual period, about two weeks before conception.)

As you can see from the ultrasound below, her child was already very developed.

 

The baby she aborted had had a beating heart for seven weeks. He had a brain that was giving off waves.   A baby at 12 weeks responds to touch and shows a startle reaction.

This woman’s baby was already right or left-handed. Not only did he have hands and fingers, he even had fingerprints.

In a first-trimester abortion, the powerful suction would have torn the child apart violently, limb from limb.

Despite her belief that her child was okay with being aborted, the abortion was hard for this mother. She says, “[T]he only way I got through the termination was knowing that the spirit of my foetus had forgiven me and that he was going to come back.”

There have been other cases where pregnant people have allegedly communicated with their preborn babies and gotten permission from them to have abortions.

Telling your baby he is loved – before you kill him

Consider the article “Conscious Abortion: Engaging the Fetus in a Compassionate Dialogue” by Claudette Nantel, which appeared in the Journal of Prenatal and Perinatal Psychology and Health [https://www.birthpsychology.com/wp-content/uploads/journal/published_paper/volume-35/issue-2/t4XGTAVq.pdf].

Nantel openly admits the humanity of preborn babies. She defines “fetus,” as “an unborn baby in its mother’s womb, at any time from conception to birth.”

Nantel quotes practitioners who work with pregnant people to help them communicate with their babies before they abort them.

She quotes family doctor G. McGarey suggesting that someone having an abortion should have “a heart-to-heart conversation with her baby in the womb, explaining how this is not a good time for her to raise a child, reassuring them that they are deeply loved.”

Most people don’t kill the people they love, but McGarey tells pregnant people that as long as the baby knows you love them, aborting them is fine.

Another practitioner, M. Axness, says women having abortions should communicate with the baby:

through prayer, imagination, art, letter, dance, song—a level of communication with the newly arrived being in their wombs through which they explain to the baby that it isn’t the right time for him or her to come and that it is necessary to separate.

While belief in telepathy isn’t exactly a religious belief, it is another belief and claim that science can ’t prove. It is, for this reason, quasi-religious.

Asking babies to consent to their abortions

HH Watkins has women with unwanted pregnancies ask the baby to consent to their abortion. The child, according to Watkins and Nantel, will then telepathically communicate to the mother that they agree to be aborted.

She instructs pregnant people to connect with their preborn babies, get their permission for the abortion, and then abort without guilt, knowing that their babies consented to be killed.

This process, Watkins says, leads the aborting person to have “a deeper sense of self, more respect for life, and positive feelings about a better-timed future pregnancy through the process of dialogue with their baby.”

Unsurprisingly, in all but one case, every time Watkins did this exercise with a pregnant person, the pregnant person “heard” their baby give permission for the abortion. Clearly, these people hear what they want to hear.

What about the one exception? Well, the woman had the abortion, anyway.

After getting the “answer,” of no, the woman says to her baby, “You don’t mean that?”

The thought that a child might not agree to be dismembered or poisoned was shocking to her.

Watkins recalls what the pregnant woman did next:

[She] continued the process of weeping and talking to the fetus at home until there was only silence in response. She concluded the fetus accepted her intended surgical intervention…

The surgical intervention was accomplished without complication, healing was rapid, and the client felt little or no remorse. She knew at all levels she had made the appropriate decision for herself.

Lives sacrificed to convey a message

Nantel gives another example of a woman who allegedly got her babies’ permission for abortions. This woman had three abortions. With the first, she didn’t attempt to communicate with the baby because, she says “I was much more centered on myself and my life circumstances than on the baby.”

She claimed to have had an “intimate relationship” with the other two babies, who agreed to be aborted.

The woman explains:

I never felt I was doing them harm. Just before the abortion for each of them, I asked the lady who showed me the ultrasound screen to give me five minutes alone with the baby before the intervention.

I spoke to each of them in a fluid, soft manner, more like saying, ‘Thank you, see you later…’ The ultrasound screen conversations were way of recognizing the relationship, expressing my gratitude…

It was so clear for me that these two children had not come to me saying, ‘Let me be born.’

She came to believe that her babies intended to teach her a life lesson through the pregnancy and subsequent abortions.

These babies helped me, and I acted on what they helped me with. I honored them. And they had a tremendous healing effect on the guilt and angst which I carried a long time during and after my first abortion.

The babies, she says, were “beings who were my equals, partners in learning.”

The universe sacrificing others on one’s behalf

I ran into this kind of thinking in a writing group I attended a few years ago. A woman at the meeting believed that everything in the universe worked for her benefit.

In keeping with the religious concept (often known as “manifesting,”) if one wants something, they just need to ask the universe for it. If they really believe that the universe will deliver, it will. If it doesn’t, of course, the person doesn’t have enough faith.

This woman told the group that she had done this, and several months later, her husband died. This, she said, was an answer from the universe, because it set her free to pursue her writing career full-time.

I wasn’t sure what was more shocking- the incredible self-centeredness of someone who believes the universe kills people for her benefit, or that the others in attendance were nodding in agreement. I left the group as quickly as I could and never went back.

The writer’s view was in keeping with the belief that the entire universe revolved around her and her alone.

(She did say that after her husband’s death, she communicated with his spirit, and he told her he was at peace with dying to promote her career. I guess that lets her sleep at night.)

Woman “channels her highest self” and determines her baby chose to be aborted

The last story comes from Anna Runkle, a Planned Parenthood worker who counsels women in abortion clinics. Her book In Good Conscience: A Practical, Emotional, and Spiritual Guide to Deciding Whether to Have an Abortion was written to help pregnant people decide whether to have abortions.

In the book, she tells the stories of several women. Once was a 40-year-old woman named Claudia.

Claudia explained how her preborn baby, whom she named Rose, communicated with her from the womb and told her having an abortion was okay:

I got into the car and sat there and [the baby] spoke to me. She says, ‘I am looking forward to having you be my mother, but I want you to know this is your decision and whatever decision you make is perfectly fine with me. If you choose not to continue this pregnancy, I will be waiting.’1

Claudia says, “I sat in the car and cried for about an hour, feeling very grateful and very sad at the same time.”2

She had her abortion, and about a month later, had a session with her “ministers.” She explains that “[i]n my practice, we channel our higher selves.”

While “channeling her higher self” (whatever that means) she got the following “message” from her aborted baby:

[T]he message that I received during this counseling was very similar to the reassurance that my child Rose had given me in the car. Ever since then, I have felt a full heart relationship with this being…the relationship has given me great comfort and has been a source of joy for me…

I also believe that souls choose to be born or to live a certain amount of time in the womb and then depart, or they choose to be aborted…

Given my agreement with my child, who is eternal, I did nothing other than delay her return to the earth by agreement with her.3

Clauda’s religious belief, which she holds onto despite a complete lack of evidence for it, is that her baby chose to be aborted and will return to live in the future. She even claims she has a “relationship” with the baby she had killed.

The level of religious delusion and cognitive dissonance here, and in the other examples, is astounding.

I am an atheist. As such, I don’t believe religious claims without evidence. I admit I don’t know everything. I may be wrong about the nonexistence of the soul and life after death.

But I am extremely doubtful that all these babies consented to their abortions.

Religious beliefs sometimes inspire people to do good and noble things. Other times, they act as excuses to justify atrocities. We’ve seen that with the 9/11 terrorists and with various religious wars throughout history. I would consider this another example.

Footnotes

  1. Anna Runkle In Good Conscience: A Practical, Emotional, and Spiritual Guide to Deciding Whether to Have an Abortion(San Francisco: Jossey–Bass Publishers, 1998) 46.
  2. Ibid.
  3. Ibid., 46-47.

LifeNews Note: Sarah Terzo covered the abortion issue for over 13 years as a professional journalist. In this capacity, she has written nearly a thousand articles about abortion and read over 850 books on the topic. She has been researching and writing about abortion since attending The College of New Jersey (class of 1997) where she minored in Women’s Studies. This article originally appeared on Sarah Terzo’s Substack. You can read more of her articles here.



from www.lifenews.com

Blurb:

Iran launched two missiles at the United Kingdom‘s base in Diego Garcia, missing but exposing greater missile capabilities than previously known.

After the U.K. announced it would allow the U.S. to use its bases for defensive strikes against Iran, Tehran launched two intermediate-range ballistic missiles at Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, over 2,000 miles away, U.S. officials told the Wall Street Journal. Both missiles missed, with one failing and landing in the sea and a U.S. Navy warship firing an SM-3 interceptor at the other, though it’s not known if the interceptor made contact.

The missile launches, though unsuccessful, are hugely significant, likely changing many countries’ calculus regarding Tehran.

Blurb:

 

House Democrats blocked legislation to establish a “Women’s History Museum” because of an amendment requiring the new institution to only honor real women, not gender-confused men.

“The Museum shall be dedicated to preserving, researching, and presenting the history, achievements, and lived experiences of biological women in the United States,” the bill states.

The legislation forbade the museum from depicting a “biological male as female.”

This drew the ire of members of the House Administration Committee, which considered the legislation yesterday, according to Representative Nicole Malliotakis (R-NY).

Blurb:

In the middle of a worship song on Sunday, the morning after Cuba’s electrical grid collapsed for a second time in six days, the preacher at Renewal in Christ Church in Havana said he had a message to share that came to him in a dream.

Sunlight splashed in through an open window to the right of the raised platform where he stood, as a battery-powered light affixed to the ceiling shone weakly over the pulpit. A row of desk fans, plugs dangling, lined the top of the concrete walls of the shadowed sanctuary.

Almost every plastic and metal chair was filled at this small evangelical church, built from two housing units along a block of row housing in East Havana, which, like most of the city on this morning, had no power.

“If you are thinking of giving up, don’t give up, keep going, keep going,” said Pastor Daniel Cisnero, sweat on his brow, eyes closed, his voice a shout.

“It’s not the time to give up, it’s the time to keep walking holding God’s hand.”

Blurb:

Members of Iran’s national women’s football team were greeted with a welcome ceremony upon their return to the Islamic Republic after several of the players had sought asylum in Australia.

“First of all we are so happy to be in Iran, because Iran is our homeland,” midfielder Fatemeh Shaban said.

People in the crowd waved flags, while some players held bouquets of flowers and signed what appeared to be miniature soccer balls. Iranian media had reported that the team returned Wednesday.

According to an investigation by Defending Education, a teachers’ union called “Minneapolis Families for Public Schools (MFPS)” has been coordinating an initiative to effectively help teachers organize resistance to ICE arrests of illegal aliens.

The “initiate” is called “TakeAction Minnesota.” On the website, they claim “We will teach and demonstrate resistance tactics that can be replicated elsewhere, leaving no community undefended. We hope to force an end to ICE’s unprecedented siege of Minnesota — and further the movement to abolish ICE altogether while we do it,”

Rhyen Staley, research director at Defending Education, stated “The teachers unions continue to prove they are rotten apples that only care about far-left street activism, to the detriment of educating children. Teachers and community groups should be dedicating time to improving learning outcomes for students, not creating strategies and lists of people to attempt to thwart law enforcement.”

Blurb:

How MN Teachers Union Funds ‘Front Group’ Trying To Abolish ICE – thefederalist.com

Anti-Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agitators in Minnesota operate as a “front group” for a state teachers union in the leftist campaign against immigration law, according to activist documents and federal records brought to light by Defending Education.

Minneapolis Families for Public Schools (MFPS), reportedly an “initiative” of TakeAction Minnesota (TAM), helps organize “Rapid Response Networks & ICE Watch” centered around neighborhoods and schools, the documents show, while TAM has partnered with other radical-left groups in events that involve student walk-outs and backed other leftist activism at schools.

“The teachers unions continue to prove they are rotten apples that only care about far-left street activism, to the detriment of educating children,” Rhyen Staley, research director at Defending Education, told The Federalist. “Teachers and community groups should be dedicating time to improving learning outcomes for students, not creating strategies and lists of people to attempt to thwart law enforcement.”

Blurb:

Baroness Monckton’s amendment (424) to overturn the extreme abortion up to birth clause 208 was rejected by Peers who voted 185 to 148 against it; and Baroness Stroud’s amendment (425) to reinstate in-person consultations with a medical professional prior to an abortion taking place at home was also rejected by Peers who voted 191 to 119 against it.

Amendment to overturn abortion up to birth clause rejected

Earlier this evening, Peers rejected amendment 424, which Baroness Monckton, along with other female Members of the House of Lords, tabled at Report Stage, that would have removed clause 208 from the Crime and Policing Bill.

Blurb:

Farm worker rights icon Cesar Chavez, who led the battle to unionize agricultural labor, is being accused of sexual abuse involving underage girls.

A report in The New York Times cited accounts from multiple women, several of whom were underage at the time, who were either intimidated or forced to have sex with Chavez.

The report led to calls for the legacy of the liberal icon to be reconsidered.

Blurb:

Russia has dispatched two tankers carrying oil and gas to Cuba as the island grapples with a deepening energy crisis exacerbated by a U.S. oil blockade, the Financial Times reported Wednesday.

The ships would be providing the Caribbean island nation with its first energy shipments in three months. Fuel shortages have pushed Cuba into one of its most severe economic crises in decades, with widespread blackouts and disruptions to basic services.

The Hong Kong-flagged tanker Sea Horse, which is believed to be loaded with around 27,000 tons of gas, is expected to arrive in Cuba in the coming days after diverting its course last month, Samir Madani, co-founder of maritime intelligence company TankerTrackers, told the FT.

A second vessel, the Russian tanker Anatoly Kolodkin, is carrying between 725,000 and 728,000 barrels of oil and is due to reach Cuba in early April, he said.

Blurb:

Senate Majority Leader John Thune is determined to continue missing opportunities, but wants you to know that it’s not his fault. In the latest scene of this farce, last week Thune swore that he would bring the SAVE Act to the Senate floor for a vote (like he already promised to do at the end of February) … but, since he doesn’t have 60 votes, he would be “very, very surprised” if it passed.

The word “saboteur” comes to mind.

The Republicans could easily end the “zombie” filibuster — a piece of Senate paraphernalia of no nostalgic or traditional importance — by lowering cloture (the procedure to end debate and actually vote on a bill) from 60 to a simple 51 majority with Vice President Vance ready to break any ties.

But it’s even easier than that. Several weeks ago, in Human Events, Connie Hair (Rep. Louie Gohmert’s chief of staff for more than ten years) wrote concerning the Senate misheva over SAVE:

The Senate’s Standing Rules have been dissected ad nauseam since the House took S.1383, a bill already passed by the Senate, gutted its text, replaced it entirely with the SAVE America Act, and returned it as a privileged message. That procedural posture matters. There is no need to “nuke” the filibuster lowering the cloture threshold from 60 votes to 51 to call up the bill (emphasis mine). Under the Senate’s existing rules, the message can be called up for debate. After the two-speech rule is exhausted or there is no one left wishing to speak, the bill is voted up or down by simple majority.

Blurb:

The Trump administration Department of Justice says women and babies whose lives and safety are threatened by popular abortion pills should have to wait until after U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s review of the popular abortion drug mifepristone to get relief.

The DOJ is redirecting its demands for a court-mandated pause on abortion pill lawsuits from the landmark Louisiana v. FDA case to take aim at Texas and Florida for challenging the FDA’s 2000 approval of mifepristone and subsequent expansions. It is under the Biden administration’s 2023 radical mifepristone permissions that anyone in any state can order mail-order pregnancy-ending pills and complete at-home abortions without medical oversight.

Blurb:

A Minneapolis health clinic run by Rep. Ilhan Omar’s (D-MN) sister received millions of dollars in taxpayer funding during the time the congresswoman served in both state and federal office, according to reports examining the funding history of the facility.

People’s Center Clinics & Services, located in Minneapolis’ Cedar-Riverside neighborhood, received $2.2 million in state funding through Minnesota’s 2017 capital budget, a measure Omar publicly supported while serving in the Minnesota House of Representatives.

Blurb:

Students and staff at colleges across the United States include relatives of Iran’s political elite, even as Iran’s leaders continue to oppose the United States in public rhetoric. According to reporting from The New York Post, children of senior Iranian officials have studied or taught at prestigious universities including the University of Massachusetts, Union College in New York and George Washington University in Washington, DC.The presence of these individuals in American academic institutions raises questions, given their family connections to the Iranian regime. Critics describe this as a striking contrast between Iran’s public hostility to US and the private choices of its elite to send their children abroad for education and careers.

Blurb:

Iran’s regime is being accused of sending a chilling message to its own people after reports that a 19-year-old wrestling champion was executed for protesting.

Saleh Mohammadi, a rising star in Iranian wrestling, was put to death Thursday in what activists say was a public hanging, despite warnings from the United States and pleas from members of the Iranian-American wrestling community.

Human rights advocates blasted the move as another brutal crackdown by the government tied to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Blurb:

As Iran’s military lobs missiles at former friends and longtime enemies, there is a vacuum at the top of its government, according to a new report.

Mojtaba Khamenei was selected to replace his father, Ali Khamenei, as Iran’s supreme leader after the elder Khamenei was killed in a Feb. 28 attack by Israel.

Mojtaba Khamenei has been reported as being wounded in the attack, with the degree to which he was injured varying greatly depending on the source of the report.

Blurb:

During the recently concluded “Two Sessions” annual legislative meetings, the National People’s Congress (NPC) passed a new “Law on Promoting Ethnic Unity and Progress” that many scholars and educators fear will threaten the survival of languages including Tibetan, Mongolian, and Uyghur, and further undermine cultural identity among non-Han communities in China. Strongly promoted by Xi Jinping and other CCP leaders, the law was passed with 2,756 votes (and just three opposing votes and three ⁠abstentions) and is scheduled to take effect on July 1 of this year.

It contains wide-ranging provisions that encompass education, housing policy, entertainment, and other areas. The law formalizes assimilationist policies including the strict promotion of Mandarin as the “national common language” in education and public affairs. Schools and universities will no longer be allowed to teach core subjects in languages such as Tibetan, Uyghurs, or Mongolian. It also contains language suggesting restrictions on freedom of speech and potential penalties for those outside of China who “engage in activities that undermine ethnic unity” or incite “ethnic separatism.”

Apparently, the FBI is still buying your location data from 3rd party providers, data that can be used to track you. FBI Director Kash Patel admitted to the practice in a Senate Hearing. He was asked by Senator Ron Wyden (R-OR) if the FBI was still engaging in the practice. Patel responded, “We do purchase commercially available information that is consistent with the Constitution and the laws under the Electronic Communications Privacy Act — and it has led to some valuable intelligence for us.”

Blurb:

FBI is buying location data to track US citizens, director confirms – techcrunch.com

The FBI has resumed purchasing reams of Americans’ data and location histories to aid federal investigations, the agency’s director, Kash Patel, testified to lawmakers on Wednesday.

This is the first time since 2023 that the FBI has confirmed it was buying access to people’s data collected from data brokers, who source much of their information — including location data — from ordinary consumer phone apps and games, per Politico. At the time, then-FBI director Christopher Wray told senators that the agency had bought access to people’s location data in the past but that it was not actively purchasing it.

The National Education Association recently held a training session called “Advocacy and Free Speech Rights for K-12 Education” that seeks to establish the oughtness of woke ideology as the oughtness of human life. This action is sectarian in nature, which is troubling given the nature of the organization. It is one of the largest teachers’ unions in America, with over 3 million teachers. The question is not if the organization crossed the line into political activism, but what, if anything will be done about it.

Blurb:

Teachers’ Union’s Far-Left, Anti-Trump Agenda Exposed in Leaked Training Session – slaynews.com

A major teachers’ union representing millions of educators in schools across America is under fire after a leaked training session revealed heavy political messaging targeting President Donald Trump and conservative policies, fueling concerns that classrooms are being used for far-left activism instead of education.

The National Education Association (NEA) is one of the largest teachers’ unions in the United States, with roughly 3 million members.

The NEA conducted a February 23 training titled “Advocacy and Free Speech Rights for K-12 Educators.”

The leaked material is now raising major concerns about teachers being used to indoctrinate children with leftist ideology.

Originally published March 13, 2026 for our weekly Issue of Mindful Intelligence AdvisorSubscribe to get weekly issues.

By Paul Gordon Collier, Editor

“Muzzling conspiracy gives conspiracy unearned truth. This is the power behind demagogues.” Paul Gordon Collier

“Then Absalom would say, ‘Oh that I were judge in the land! Then every man with a dispute or cause might come to me, and I would give him justice.’ And whenever a man came near to pay homage to him, he would put out his hand and take hold of him and kiss him. Thus Absalom did to all of Israel who came to the king for judgment. So Absalom stole the hearts of the men of Israel.” 2 Samuel 15:4-6

An image of an Islamist tossing an IED over the shoulder of a Progmerican protesting a white supremacist anti-Islamist rally captured three bad paths for this land to follow in this post-Trump land.

All three lead to the creation of priest-kings of hate. All three lead to the death of America for good. The Progmerican press emphasizes the white supremacist, while concealing or soft-pedaling the Islamists. The conservative press emphasizes the Islamists, while concealing or soft-pedaling the Islamists. The Islamists celebrate the terrorists.

The Progmerican press and conservative press are protecting their interests, none of which necessarily agrees with the ideologues they are de facto protecting. Both sides are protecting their audiences from questions they shouldn’t dare ask, like “are we becoming allies of ACTUAL Islamic terrorists?” or “do we ACTUALLY have a white supremacist problem among the right?”

By not asking the questions, they are only empowering the very enemies they think they are opposing. In one moment, competing anti-American interests crossed paths.

On March 7, 2026, Emir Balat, 18, and Ibrahim Kayumi, 19, were caught on video attempting to bomb an Anti-Islam protest with IEDs. They tossed one lit IED, failed to activate another one, and a third one found later turned out to be a dud. Had the two REAL IEDs gone off successfully, the likelihood of death would have been high, and severe life-altering injuries would have been almost certain.

The two IEDs were made with TATP (triacetone triperoxide), which is called “Mother of Satan.” It is an extremely “effective” explosive. That explosive material is mixed with nuts, bolts, and screws, all designed to maximize the effective kill range of the IED.

Authorities have determined this was a terror attack. Both men call it an ISIS-styled terror attack, with one, Balat, confessing he wanted an attack that would be bigger than the Boston marathon bombing. Fortunately, he didn’t get his way.

The attack took place just outside the new DNC Islamist NY Mayor’s home, Gracie Mansion. The Mayor, Zohran Mamdani, was quick to blame the “white supremacists” for inciting the attack in the first place.

Balat was born in Turkey and came over with his wealthy parents. Kayumi has a similar story, but he comes from Afghanistan. They both lived in Bucks County, PA before the attack.

A still-shot of the video of the moment one of the Islamists threw a lit IED captured the zeitgeist of our times. Right before the IED was thrown, leftist actor Walter Masterson was making a speech in support of open borders, in support of New York being for everyone.

The IED was thrown over Masterson’s shoulder, who had no idea how close he came to death. Masterson himself has come out afterwards continuing to support open borders.

The targets for the Islamist attack were the attendees of a protest called “Stop the Islamic Takeover of New York City, Stop New York City Public Muslim Prayer.” The primary driver of the event was MAGA influencer Jake Lang, who was also one of the pardoned J6 political prisoners. Lang appears to have organized multiple anti-immigrant and anti-Islamist rallies.

He is often referred to as a white supremacist and a Nazi by his detractors. There seems to be evidence he just might ACTUALLY fit the bill for such charges. For instance, Lang constantly talks about “white Christians” as opposed to ALL Christians, and he is constantly talking about securing a future for “white children” instead of “all children.”

I understand that merely believing the theory that Progmericans wish to brown America at the expense of white America does NOT make you a white supremacist, but Lang seems to go beyond that. He advocates for a “pro-white Christian America” and seems to advocate entangling the Kingdom of God with the state, something I vehemently oppose.

As a matter of fact, on April 10, 2026, our subscribers will get a digital copy of my essay, Fear of Suffering and Death, which attacks the very concept of mixing Christianity with the state.

Lang here serves as one potential path the liminal Presidency of Donald Trump could lead us to, while Masterson represents another.  Lang represents the hard right response to the existential threat of Progmerica, which ends up destroying Americanism every bit as much, as fast, and as hard as full-fledged Progmerica will.

Lang is the rare case of someone actually using REAL dog whistles of white supremacism. He is also one of those rare cases where someone is actually caught making a Nazi salute.

Masterson represents full-fledged Progmerica. This nation watches its women get raped, its children get plundered, all while it cheers on the invaders. These invaders were sponsored by the same people they were paid to rape, murder, pillage, and plunder Americans.

Masterson has embraced the “great cleansing” of his “great Satan,” which is us, we Americans (especially the whites), while Lang has embraced the “great cleansing” of his “great Satan,” us, the Americans (especially the non-whites) AND Progmericans (especially the whites).

While the Democrat Media emphasized the white supremacism of Jake Lang and referred to the Islamist attackers as “teenagers,” the “conservative” media has focused almost entirely on the Islamists in their stories, effectively de-emphasizing the white supremacist part of this story.

It is a foregone conclusion that the Democrat Media will use Jake Lang as the poster child for any individual or group expressing ANY ideas connected to Lang. The idea they most want to kill is the idea that they really are trying to end the white race in America. It is the question they themselves don’t want to be asked, “are we really trying to intentionally end a race’s very existence in this land?”

They know, deep down, the answer is yes, though if push came to shove, I expect most of them will blink before they fully throw in with the final solution for the white American. For now, most of them assume ending “whiteness” is merely ending the American republic, the Patriarchy, Christianity, and the nuclear family, not ending the ACTUAL white race itself.

The white devil is an overhyped monster with little to no real power in America today. Lang’s rallies, for instance, are all poorly attended. Yet, failure by the conservative media to emphasize the white supremacist element of this story as well COULD lead to rallies that are a little more well-attended.

Nick Fuentes, however, is another ACTUAL white supremacist (and now, apparently, Democrat Party supporter) that DOES have a significant audience already, largely because difficult questions cannot be asked.

Muzzling conspiracy gives conspiracy unearned truth. This is the power behind the demagogue. This is the power behind Nick Fuentes. The questions, the difficult questions that cannot be asked aren’t necessarily salient ones, or even any based in truth (though some might well be both), but that they cannot be asked at all has given them a power that works counter to the reason for oppressing the questions in the first place.

On the right, some of those difficult questions are “Is there a white supremacist movement growing from among us?” To that, I would say, my understanding of human nature, of history, would strongly suggest this would be a natural backlash to the anti-white ideology Progmerica represents.

But in America, we white Americans have bulwarks against sectarian temptations. We white Americans possess something most nations don’t have, and that is the core of our national unity, our belief in the inalienable rights of ALL men. This belief is shared by every American of every race, for it is THIS belief alone that makes us all American.

For most of the non-Progmerican whites, I would wager, the overwhelming majority think of America as the whole of all the parts it already has, and has to some degree from its inception, mainly its diverse beliefs and ethnicities.

This is a radical challenge for the human species, to be able to form a union around mutual respect of self-stewardship alone, no matter the race or the belief system of the other, so long as they are willing to operate under the same civil standards.

Humanity has organized around ethnicity mostly. It has organized around belief alone almost never. Even England was not merely bound by its contracts, it was also bound by its blood. The great question that remains unanswered is “Can humans form a non-biological ethne that allows for diversity of belief on the nature of being and valuing?”

America has the greatest opportunity to break down factional tribalism and sectarianism both biologically and ideationally. America has the opportunity, through her pre-existing values of “individual liberty,” to create a new ethne not formed through anything but mutual respect of one another’s liberty.

America has the opportunity to create a bridging standard that allows a wide swathe of belief systems to co-exist with one another so long as they do not support using coercion (from the state or corporate monopolistic power) to impose their beliefs on others. The only beliefs that can be imposed on Americans are the beliefs in individual liberty and self-stewardship for all American citizens.

Jake Lang calls his white supremacism MAGA, sullying both the American name and MAGA. The MAGA movement, as a whole, is not white supremacist, and this writer suspects the majority of them are true Americans, wanting to live in peace with ANY neighbor, so long as they are willing to live in peace with them as well.

Walter Masterson has rejected America altogether. As a white man, he represents a certain psychotic spirit of self-annihilation affirmed in his continued embrace of the people who just tried to kill him (and almost succeeded).

Fortunately, Lang doesn’t represent the majority of MAGA, but failure by conservative media to emphasize the white supremacist part of this story only empowers people like Lang himself, and even Nick Fuentes, who will both revel that the right doesn’t even dare ask the question, “do we have a white supremacist problem?”

The now iconic image of Masterson’s shoulder serving as the launching pad for an IED by an Islamist against an actual white supremacist rally serves as an indictment of the spirit of our land, a land that continues to support abortion openly and proudly.

Such a nation cannot hold on to the human in the other, which gives rise to sub-humanizing movements, all represented here, the Islamist, the Progmerican, and the Neo-Nazi, all three representatives of the potential paths we could follow after Trump goes away.

President Trump is the liminal figure, the representation of a nation unsettled on what it wants to be next, largely because it has so many new players (and not just among the recent and even not-so recent “imports” of humans).

Yet underneath it all is an answer that would fell all three, an answer this writer believes most of the people in this land want, the American Bill of Rights plumbline of the state restored, and the freedoms she creates extended to ALL who are willing to recognize the freedoms inherent in the other, even when they hate that same other.

Apocalpyse Iran: Iran's New Order and the Price the World is already Paying

Originally published March 13, 2026 for our weekly Issue of Mindful Intelligence AdvisorSubscribe to get weekly issues.

By Michael A. Cessna, Military Affairs Correspondent

“One has to look at the fundamental nature of the clerical regime in order to understand its true and ultimate intentions. Since its advent in 1979, the regime’s leaders – starting with Khomeini himself – set out to export their radical ideology to the region and beyond. The primary mission (raison d’être) of the regime is to convert other regimes to its own mold with the goal of establish a modern-day Islamic Shi’ite Caliphate. It is so stated and defined in its Constitution as well as that of the Pasdaran’s”Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi

INTRODUCTION

This report analyzes the critical risks the world faces through the Iran War and the problems of succession should the regime finally collapse. While missile and drone strikes continue to come out of Iran, it seems only a matter of time before the regime runs out of willing soldiers and munitions. Along the way, the world’s economy is at risk, and a victory over the regime is just the beginning of the struggles for the Iranian people.

THE DEATH OF THE SUPREME LEADER

On the morning of March 1, Iranian state media confirmed what U.S., and Israeli officials had already announced: Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was dead, killed in joint airstrikes on his Tehran compound on February 28. According to TIME Magazine and Al Jazeera, Trump administration officials stated that 48 senior Iranian leaders were killed in the strikes, which also killed members of Khamenei’s immediate family, including his daughter, son-in-law, three grandchildren, and daughter-in-law.

His wife died of her injuries on March 2. The operation, designated Operation Epic Fury, was the largest decapitation strike against a sitting head of state since the fall of Baghdad in 2003 — and far more successful in terms of immediate targeting. The Economist, as reported via the assassination summary, noted that a comparable effort to eliminate Saddam Hussein during the 2003 Iraq invasion had taken nine months.

The first question any business or investor had to answer after February 28 was not who would lead Iran next. It was whether the Strait of Hormuz would remain open. The answer, as of this writing, is functionally, no.

FROM SHAH TO AYATOLLAH TO EPIC FURY

Before we address the Strait crisis, let us answer this question: How did we get here?

It was the collapse of the Iranian Rial (IRR) which led to the massive protests. The Rial went from roughly IRR 48,000 to $1 USD in the first week of December to IRR 1.4 million to $1 USD on December 28th, 2025. This triggered purely economic protests, which erupted throughout Iran.

Decades of incompetence, corruption and incoherent policies having wrecked the Iranian economy to the point of utter disaster, opened the door for a swift transition to purely political protests openly calling for the complete overthrow of the regime.

Let’s go back further to see how we got to THIS point:

Iran (ancient “Persia”, from the Greek) appears in multiple places in the Bible — Isaiah 44:28, Isaiah 45:1, Ezra 1, and 2 Chronicles 36 — relating how the Persian king (or “Shah”) Cyrus the Great had liberated the Jews from the Babylonian Captivity, gave them their country back, rebuilt Jerusalem, then went on to help them construct the Second Temple.

However, Sassanid Persia was later consumed when Muhammad’s Jihad erupted out of the Arabian Peninsula in 632 A.D. This came at the end of a bloody 26-year long war between the Persians and the Eastern Roman Empire (a.k.a., “Byzantium”) following the assassination of the Emperor Maurice.

While neither empire should have fallen to what was effectively a glorified horde of bandits, both states had been so badly weakened by a quarter-century of warfare, they were unable to respond. As a consequence, they both fell apart internally when faced with the Muslim onslaught.

Throughout the next 1500 years, Iranian culture maintained itself underground, maintaining a clear and distinct non-Arabian psychology. But, with a combination of highly corrupt and destructive Arabian and Turkic rulers, by the turn of the 19th — 20th Centuries, the country was stagnating.

The end of World War One, and the upheavals of the collapse and division of the Ottoman Empire, led to a military officer — Reza Khan — being first named Minister of War by Parliament, then the same Parliament asking him to unseat the Qajar-dynasty Shah, and assume the mantle himself.

Leaving internal political maneuvering aside, Reza Khan assumed the throne as Reza I, taking the royal name of Pahlavi, after the language of his birth region. Although removed from power by Britain and the Soviet Union in 1941 (the two powers thought that Reza I was too friendly towards Hitler’s Germany), he was replaced on the throne by his young son, Muhammad Reza.

Muhammad Reza, although young, played his cards well, and led to the beginning of what he called the “White Revolution”: a massive modernization program of Iran that liberated women, enforced land reform in favor of a peasantry that had been little more than serfs, and brought in Western industrial expertise to build up a capable industrial base. Ultimately, the Shah began building a true military capability by the end of the 1960’s. All of this was funded by revenue from Iranian oil sales.

While much has been made about Muhammad Reza’s “brutality”, the actual record says otherwise.

Of course, the White Revolution outraged the traditional Shi’a Islamic clerical establishment — the sort who preach the virtues of living in grinding poverty, while living their private lives in the lap of high-tech luxury. This reactionary group was subsequently leveraged by support from the Soviet KGB, ultimately leading to the events of 1978-1979…which brings us to today.

THE LOOMING DANGERS OF THE WAR

The first week of Operation Epic Fury demonstrated what most analysts have long known: that the regime has built a military force thoroughly capable of killing civilians and scaring armed forces, but they pay little attention to actual warfighting.

The regime’s “strategy“ of barrage-firing drones and ballistic missiles at every nation in reach, including those states that have been “carrying water” for the regime for decades, has driven this point home decisively.

There is no path open for a regime victory in 2026, as long as Trump and Netanyahu hold their ground, and grind the radical — if not insane — regime’s forces into the ground. “Boots on the ground” are not only NOT REQUIRED, doing so in any context beyond tiny teams of special forces units would be catastrophically counterproductive.

While the idea of a massive ground commitment leading to a “forever war”, as happened in 2001 and 2003, is a legitimate fear based on national emotional trauma, it assumes that the Trump Pentagon cannot see past its own nose.

However, the people now running the Pentagon “cut their teeth” as mid-level officers during the “Global War on Terror”, and none of them want another 20-year quagmire. Operation Epic Fury aims to decapitate and dismember the regime’s military strength to the point where the unarmed Iranian populace can effectively rise up and eliminate the regime’s remnants on their own, opening the path for a transitional government, almost certainly lead by Muhammad Reza’s son, Reza II.

That’s all a nice rosy-looking picture, but underneath, lays some very grim dangers, including the Strait of Hormuz crisis, which is leading to the Sulfur Crisis, which has also exposed the British Navy crisis.

  1. THE HORMUZ SYSTEM SHOCK – The Strait of Hormuz is the world’s single most critical energy chokepoint. Kpler’s conflict analysis report documented from the opening days of the conflict that any meaningful closure, or even a sustained de facto closure driven by insurance withdrawal, triggers supply shocks across multiple commodity classes simultaneously.

That scenario materialized within 72 hours of the strikes. An IRGC commander confirmed on March 2 that the strait was “closed,” threatening to set ablaze any vessel that attempted to pass. At least five tankers were damaged, two personnel killed, and approximately 150 ships were left stranded.

The financial consequences were immediate and severe. Kuwait announced oil production cuts, and Iraq cut 1.5 million barrels per day as onshore storage filled. Brent crude logged its largest weekly gain in the history of the futures contract, surging by 28%.  By March 8, Brent had crossed $103 per barrel — the first time it had exceeded $100 in four years. U.S. retail gasoline prices jumped to a national average of $3.45 per gallon by March 9, up more than 51 cents in a single week.

J.P. Morgan’s commodities research team warned that production cuts could exceed 4 million barrels per day by the end of the following week if the strait remained closed, and that prices could exceed $150 per barrel if Gulf infrastructure continued to be targeted — an outcome that Qatar’s Energy Minister described as capable of triggering the collapse of world economies.”

While seeming hyperbolic on the surface, the IEA convened an emergency meeting of its 30+ member states, which collectively hold 1.2 billion barrels in strategic reserve, to discuss a coordinated release.

The disruption is not solely a crude oil story. Qatar’s state-owned Qatar Energy halted LNG production at its Ras Laffan and Mesaieed facilities after Iranian drone strikes. European natural gas futures jumped roughly 30% in a single session. Daily freight rates for LNG tankers surged more than 40%. Europe sources 12–14 percent of its LNG from Qatar through the strait. Japan, which imports roughly 70 percent of its Middle Eastern crude via Hormuz, activated emergency stockpile release procedures.

  1. THE SULFUR CRISIS – Lost in the crude oil headlines is a quieter but significant industrial exposure: sulfur. The Persian Gulf — and Qatar and the UAE in particular — accounts for a substantial share of global sulfur exports, most of it recovered as a byproduct of natural gas processing and refinery operations. Qatar alone is among the world’s top five sulfur exporters. That material moves through Hormuz.

Sulfur is not an abstraction. It is the feedstock for sulfuric acid, which is in turn essential to phosphate fertilizer production. A Hormuz closure extending beyond 30 days begins to bite into agricultural input supply chains that are already price-stressed in the post-2022 environment.

The Fertilizer Institute has previously flagged Gulf sulfur supply as a systemic vulnerability in global food security modeling. Phosphate producers in Morocco, the United States, and China all carry exposure to Gulf sulfur pricing.

A sustained closure would not produce immediate fertilizer shortages, but it would drive spot sulfur prices sharply upward, add cost pressure to the 2026 planting season inputs, and extend inflationary effects well beyond the energy sector into global food commodity markets.

As of March 10, the picture has shifted modestly. U.S. crude fell sharply on Tuesday after Energy Secretary Chris Wright incorrectly posted that the Navy had successfully escorted a tanker through the strait — a claim the White House immediately walked back.

Markets appear to be pricing in an eventual restoration of transit rather than a permanent closure. But the underlying supply disruption remains real. S&P Global’s head of crude oil research assessed that if reduced tanker traffic continues for another week, it would be “historic.” Beyond that, it would be “epochal.”

  1. THE ROYAL NAVY PROBLEM – One of the more disturbing subplots of Epic Fury’s opening weeks is what it has revealed about allied force posture — and nowhere more starkly than in Britain. Though it might not directly affect the outcome of the war, long-term it reveals the UK is a weak ally not just for the U.S, but for anyone relying on it.

It changes the geopolitical reality of the world in significant ways, ways that are most assuredly affecting the execution of the war and the booty carve-ups that are sure to follow, carve-ups that might leave the UK on the outside looking in.

It also reveals the U.S. as being the only legitimate naval power in the West, with the UK holding the second most powerful Navy in the West. This means the fundamental work of securing the Strait of Hormuz can only be accomplished through the U.S. The allied navies can only offer support,

On March 7, the UK Ministry of Defence announced that the aircraft carrier HMS Prince of Wales had been placed on five days’ notice to sail, a reduction from a prior notice period of ten to fourteen days. The announcement prompted immediate scrutiny of the Royal Navy’s actual capacity to act on that readiness posture.

The answer was uncomfortable. Navy Lookout put it plainly: the “immediate problem would be finding escorts.” Of the six Type 45 air defence destroyers, HMS Duncan required a maintenance period before any deployment. There was, in Navy Lookout’s assessment, “probably a single frigate… available to deploy.” The conclusion was direct: “If the UK can’t find or borrow escorts from somewhere, the Prince of Wales shouldn’t come.”

As of February 2026, only three of the six Type 45 destroyers were available for service, and just six of the eight Type 23 Duke-class frigates were assessed as capable of high-seas warfare. Only one of five Astute-class submarines was operational. Of a total fleet of 63 ships, roughly half were available for duty.

Former First Sea Lord Admiral Lord West described the situation as a “national disgrace.” HMS Queen Elizabeth, the Prince of Wales’ sister ship, remains in Rosyth undergoing a docking and certification period that is now several months behind schedule.

Britain has not been absent from the conflict, however. U.S. B-1 Lancer bombers have operated from RAF Fairford. British Typhoons and F-35s are conducting air defense operations over Jordan, Qatar, and Cyprus. HMS Dragon, a Type 45 destroyer, has been loaded and is preparing to deploy to protect RAF Akrotiri after drone strikes on the base.

However, her deployment was so delayed, and the ship was in such a visibly shabby condition, the image of the United Kingdom’s government — especially that of its Prime Minister — has taken a humiliating beating.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer has explicitly declined participation in offensive operations. But the carrier question crystallizes a broader structural reality: Britain retains the institutional architecture of a blue-water navy while operating closer to the practical capabilities of a regional one.

When allies look for an escort package to protect a 65,000-ton carrier in a hot theater, the answer — absent European partners providing the gap — is that the Royal Navy simply can no longer do it alone. That is a data point worth tracking carefully. The Hormuz crisis has a resolution pathway. The IRGC’s threat calculus, Mojtaba Khamenei’s institutional footing, and the structural readiness of NATO’s second-largest navy do not.

THE SUCESSION PROBLEM

ED. NOTE: Reports of Mojtaba Khamenei’s injuries suggest he might not be a factor for long in this war, but as of right now, these reports are unconfirmed. The nature of the process of picking the new leader, though, has revealed critical failures within the regime’s structures that suggest systemic collapse is inevitable at this point, whether the new supreme leader lives or dies.

1. THE SUCCESSION: DUEL FOR DYNASTIC CONTROL – On March 8, ten days after his father’s assassination, Iran’s Assembly of Experts named 56-year-old Mojtaba Khamenei as the Islamic Republic’s third Supreme Leader. The outcome was the product of institutional pressure rather than genuine deliberation.

According to Iran International, IRGC commanders applied sustained pressure on Assembly members through repeated contacts, and members described the atmosphere of the online voting session as “unnatural.” Eight members threatened to boycott a second electoral session over what they characterized as heavy IRGC interference. Objections were raised, discussion was cut short, and a vote was held.

The legitimacy questions are structural. Mojtaba holds only the mid-level clerical rank of hojjatoleslam — not ayatollah — a problem his father resolved in 1989 by having the constitutional requirement amended; a similar legal workaround is now expected.

State media responded to the announcement by effectively staging a rapid theological promotion, instantly referring to Mojtaba as “Ayatollah” — moving him from mid-ranking cleric to the summit of the religious hierarchy overnight.

What matters strategically is not his theology but his institutional base. Afshon Ostovar of the Naval Postgraduate School in California, author of a history of the regime’s Revolutionary Guards, assessed that whatever happens, “what is left of the regime is the IRGC. And the IRGC is going to be the last vestige remaining of the regime until the regime is overhauled, either within itself or by external forces.”

Mojtaba’s profile is consistent with that trajectory. He has deep ties to the IRGC dating to his service in the Iran-Iraq War, built networks within the security and intelligence apparatus, and has been widely associated with the violent suppression of the 2009 Green Movement.

The net result is an Islamic Republic that has accelerated its existing trajectory: clerical facade over a security state, with the IRGC now more dominant than at any point in the Republic’s history. The IRGC issued a statement pledging to “fully obey and sacrifice for the divine commands” of the new leader.

Its aerospace, ground, and naval forces released separate statements of support. One IRGC commander stated publicly that Iran retains the capacity to maintain “considerable attacks” for at least six months.

2. THE PAHLAVI FACTOR, REVISITED: THE DORMANT CLAIM GOES LIVE – The ruling dynasty of Iran before the 1979 revolution was the Pahlavi Dynasty, headed by Shah Muhammad Reza (1919-1980). As alluded to above, much has been written about the late Shah — that he was corrupt, brutal, a puppet of Western interests; that his SAVAK secret police were a byword for repression.

Those characterizations are, without exception, the wholesale inventions of the regime that replaced him, amplified by a Western media establishment that never examined its own credulity, or worse, actively colluded with the radical Islamic regime.

The Shah was the head of a functional Constitutional Monarchy — one that actually functioned as the concept is intended. His “White Revolution“ enacted genuine land reform, emancipated Iranian women, and drove real modernization.

He was a progressive at a level that should make modern Liberal-Progressives blush. The central irony of 1979 is that the Shah had personally commuted Ayatollah Khomeini’s death sentence — and Khomeini repaid him by engineering his overthrow. The anger that swept the Shah from power had less to do with SAVAK than with KGB-developed propaganda and the enduring truth that religion remains, as observed, the “opiate of the people”.

SUMMARY

When the end came, the Shah — dying of cancer — chose not to order his military to fire on his own people. That decision cost Iran forty-seven years of theocratic brutality. It was also, in its own way, correct. It is why his son has spent nearly five decades preparing for what is now, suddenly, no longer a distant prospect.

Reza Pahlavi II has maintained a singular and disciplined focus on the transition framework he has been developing since his father’s exile. Operation Epic Fury has not handed him a throne — but it has collapsed the institutional structure that made his return unthinkable. Khamenei is dead.

His son Mojtaba holds power on the point of IRGC bayonets, with questionable theological legitimacy and a population that was already in open revolt before the first air- and missile-strikes.

The Iranian Street, generally, and Tehran in particular, were chanting “Pahlavi Barmigardeh!” (“Long Live the Shah!”) before the direct fighting of February 28 commenced. The question now is whether the institutions of a post-IRGC Iran can be built fast enough, and with enough international backing, to give those voices something to vote for — rather than simply another security apparatus…

Because whoever wins, Iran’s water crisis is waiting in the wings.

FURTHER RESOURCES:

The Shadow Commander – Alan Eyre

Vanguard of the Imam – Marc Lynch

All the Shah’s Men – Ahsan Iqbal

Retargeting Iran – Stephen Kinzer

Blurb:

An Indiana trial court made a deeply troubling decision that abortion may be part of the right to religious exercise under Indiana’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act (“RFRA”). The March 5 decision reveals several problems with our current legal system, our understanding of what religion is, and how far we have come from the culture of the American founding era.

The lawsuit was filed by a couple of anonymous plaintiffs and a group called “Hoosier Jews for Choice,” who all allege that the Indiana law — which makes it a crime for doctors in the state to perform abortions in most cases — violates the plaintiffs’ religious exercise rights under the state’s RFRA.

At the outset, there are simply narrative problems left unchallenged by the court. For example, one of the plaintiffs “believes that, at least prior to viability, a fetus is a part of the body of the mother.” This is factually incorrect and is not a religious belief at all. Whether one calls an unborn child a “fetus” or a “zygote” or an “embryo,” it is scientifically not a part of the mother’s body up until some arbitrary point in time, such as “viability,” when it becomes something other than part of the mother’s body. From the moment of conception, the unborn child has DNA distinct from that of its mother. Religion does not entitle people to their own set of facts in this way.

Further, this argument leads to a disturbing slippery slope. There is no rational reason to proclaim that a “pre-viable” baby before a certain age is “a part of the body of the mother” and then becomes its own person separate from the mother at a later stage of pregnancy. This is completely arbitrary. If the court accepts this claim as a legitimate religious belief, I see no good reason why a different “religious” individual could not claim a religious belief that a nursing infant still attached to and dependent on his mother is also “a part of the body of the mother.” Is there a potential religious exercise right to kill a nursing newborn?

Blurb:

In recent years, as AI has begun to enter military planning and operational design, a persistent unease has surfaced among practitioners. Even with improved tools, increased tempo, and unprecedented access to data, plans continue to falter on integration, coherence, and a shared sense of direction. Marco Lyons’ recent War on the Rocks article on the perceived decline of operational art gives voice to this unease in a way that is both timely and important.

We do not know enough about the specific wargame, its constraints, or its internal dynamics to adjudicate these conclusions directly. What Lyons’ account nevertheless captures with clarity is a set of recurring difficulties that many practitioners recognize: fragmented campaigns, sequential decision-making, and a widening gap between planning activity and operational coherence.

Drawing on our experience teaching operational art and experimenting with planning, we share this concern. Yet Lyons’ observations may also point to something deeper: a tension between different ways of thinking about operations.

Blurb:

Iran’s state television published a threat on Wednesday saying the Islamic Republic would be attacking oil and gas infrastructure in Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates amid a new wave of strikes on its Persian Gulf neighbours and Israel.

Iran used some of its latest missiles to evade air defences and kill two people near Tel Aviv, as the war in the Middle East showed no signs of slowing.

The threat to oil and gas infrastructure resembled other attack warnings put out by Iran during the war, copying the style used by the Israeli military. Iran specifically threatened Saudi Arabia’s Samref Refinery and its Jubail Petrochemical Complex. It also threatened the U.A.E.’s Al Hasan Gas Field and the petrochemical plants and a refinery in Qatar.