By Howie Katz
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Published by an old curmudgeon who came to America in 1936 as a refugee from Nazi Germany and proudly served in the U.S. Army during World War II. He is a former law enforcement officer and a retired professor of criminal justice who, in 1970, founded the Texas Narcotic Officers Association. BarkGrowlBite refuses to be politically correct. (Copyrighted articles are reproduced in accordance with the copyright laws of the U.S. Code, Title 17, Section 107.)
By Howie Katz
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Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth spent over $93billion of taxpayer money this past September on expensive foods, musical instruments and technology
Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth spent over $93billion of taxpayer money this past September, including huge expenses on expensive foods, musical instruments and technology.
The cash splashing came ahead of what's referred to as 'Amazon Prime Day' for government agencies, as they must spend the remainder of their yearly budgets or lose the funds by September 30.
Hegseth's 'use it or lose it' outlay amounted to $93.4 billion in September of 2025 on grants and contracts, the most any agency has spent in a single month, according to government watchdog Open the Books.
Over half of that amount - $50.1 billion - was doled out in the final five working days of the month alone.
The goal was to spend up the remainder of the Pentagon's fiscal year budget of $849.8 billion as set by the Biden administration.
Much of the money was spent on food, as in September alone, the Pentagon bought over $2 million in Alaskan king crab.
They also spent $15.1 million on ribeye steaks, $6.9million in lobster tail, $1million in salmon and $26,000 for sushi preparation tables.
The 'surf and turf' meal is considered a significant predictor of battle for troops, with Military.com claiming the foods are often a 'precursor to deployments, combat operations, or extended missions.'
The Pentagon also didn't skimp on desert spending, with $124,000 for ice cream machines and $139,224 on donuts.
A huge chunk of the cash was spent on information technology and telecommunications, amounting to $5.9 billion.
At least $5.3 million was spent at the Apple Store alone, including 400 brand new iPads at $315,200.
Some of the stranger buys include $98,329 on a Steinway grand piano for the chief of staff of the Air Force's residence and $21,750 on a custom flute from Muramatsu.
For whatever reason, the Pentagon grabbed $3,160 worth of stickers of children's television characters like Paw Patrol and Dora the Explorer.
Another big expense was on furniture for various Defense Department facilities, which totaled $225.6 million during last September, less than the Obama administration regularly spent but more than Joe Biden.
Among the largest purchases was $60,719 in chairs from Herman Miller, with another $12,540 spent on fruit basket stands.
Notably, while Trump has stressed buying American products, at least $6.6 billion in spending was done with foreign governments and companies.
Some of the stranger buys include $98,329 on a Steinway grand piano
The Pentagon spent $21,750 on a custom flute from Muramatsu
The total spend was an increase of 18 percent from 2024, when the Pentagon spent $79.1 billion in September.
The money tracked does not include salaries for Pentagon staffers and only tracks money given to outside entities and governments.
Senate Minority leader Chuck Schumer confirmed the expenditures and called Hegseth 'a true grifter.'
'Hegseth spent $93 billion in one month – roughly the cost of extending the ACA tax credits for THREE YEARS,' Schumer said on social media.
'But instead of lowering American’s healthcare costs, Hegseth used millions of taxpayer dollars on fruit baskets, Herman Miller recliners, ice cream machines, Alaskan King Crabs, and a Steinway & Sons grand piano.'
Many liberals were angry about the spending, with Gavin Newsom even suggesting there had been fraud.
'Hey Nick Shirley … any insight here?' he asked, referencing the conservative influencer who investigated fraud perpetrated by Minnesota daycare owners.
Mike Weily of Govly, which works with federal contractors on AI purchasing, coined the idea that September 30 of every year is Washington's 'Amazon Prime Day.'
Senate Minority leader Chuck Schumer confirmed the expenditures and called Hegseth 'a true grifter'
'If a government agency doesn't spend its allocated budget funds over the course of the fiscal year, they no longer have access to those funds in the next year,' he said.
'The loss of their surplus funds, combined with the threat of a decline in future funding, is a recipe for serious fear amongst government agencies. Hence why they hit the panic button in August and September to spend.'
The Daily Mail has reached out to both the Pentagon and the White House for comment.
This year, the Pentagon has a budget passed by Congress of $839 billion.
Pentagon spending has come into focus of late after Donald Trump and Hegseth carried out strikes on Iran.
The Trump administration has frequently been pressed over how much these operations have cost.
The Department of War provided a breakdown of assets and targets from the first 72 hours of Operation Epic Fury; however, government officials have not disclosed the exact cost of the military activity.
The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a bipartisan research institution in Washington, analyzed DOW fact sheets, Congressional Budget Office estimates, and statements from government officials to provide an estimate of wartime costs for the operation thus far.
The Pentagon grabbed $3,160 worth of stickers of children's television characters like Paw Patrol and Dora the Explorer
At least $5.3million was spent at the Apple Store alone, including 400 brand new iPads at $315,200
The study concluded that the US has spent around $3.7 billion, or $891.4 million a day, on wartime efforts in the first 100 hours of Operation Epic Fury.
The most significant expense comes from munitions. CSIS estimated that the US spent $3.1 billion on munitions alone, none of which were budgeted for.
Combat losses and infrastructure damage totaled $359 million, which was not previously budgeted for by the DOW.
Lastly, operations and support costs totaled $196.3 million, including $18.3 million that was already included in the DOW's budget.
These estimates indicate that the DOW spent approximately $3.54 billion in unbudgeted funds during the first 100 hours of the war in Iran. Congress passed a $900 billion defense budget last year.
Fairfax County Commonwealth’s Attorney Steve Descano, dubbed by critics as 'America's worst prosecutor', is facing backlash after dropping murder charges against a string of suspects in separate cases
A George Soros-funded prosecutor is facing backlash for his soft on crime approach which has seen violent and sexual criminals released back onto the streets where they have gone on to allegedly reoffend.
Fairfax County Commonwealth’s Attorney Steve Descano has been dubbed by critics as 'America's worst prosecutor' for his work in Virginia.
Last week, illegal migrant Abdul Jalloh, 32, who was known to the police, was charged with the murder of Stephanie Minter, 41, who was found stabbed to death outside a bus stop.
Jalloh has an extensive rap sheet with more than two dozen arrests, including several for malicious wounding.
A Freedom of Information Act request by Fox5 found that police repeatedly warned Descano's office to keep the repeat offender behind bars, saying they feared he could strike again at any moment.
Despite the police's pleas, Jalloh was not held on charges as Descano's office said they did not have victim cooperation to keep him.
Descano also came under fire after his office failed to prosecute registered sex offender Richard Cox for allegedly exposing himself in a women's locker room in 2024.
Months later, Cox was accused of doing so again in a high school girls' locker room and other locations.
Descano's office also came under scrutiny for accepting the insanity plea put forward by the killer of charity CEO Gret Glyer, 32, who was shot dead in June 2022 as he slept in bed next to his wife Heather (seen with their two young children)
A spokesman for the prosecutor's office told abc7 that 'prosecutors were not involved in this particular case' as it was a misdemeanor and Cox was not being represented by a lawyer.
The family of murdered CEO Gret Glyer also hit out at Descano after his office accepted an insanity plea from his murderer.
Joshua Daniel Danehower, 37, killed Glyer as he lay in bed next to his wife in June 2022.
Danehower had briefly dated Glyer's wife and became obsessed with her to the extent that he created a chilling planning document how to kill him.
The document, which he titled 'The Plan', revealed the meticulous detail that Danehower had gone to in plotting the killing, including changing his clothes right after shooting Glyer before getting onto a highway 'as soon as possible.'
Ahead of his trial, a judge accepted Danehower's insanity plea put forward by prosecutors, which will allow him to avoid jail time and be housed in a mental health facility with a chance at release at a yearly review.
'There was a premeditated nature to his crime. The killer planned the attack with a step-by-step procedure of how he was going to both kill my brother and get away with it,' his sister Gizan Glyer said.
'He admits to this and yet he's using his mental health problems as an excuse to avoid any punitive punishment for his crimes, and that is not right.
'When there is no punishment for a premeditated murder, there's no hope in the criminal justice system.'
Joshua Daniel Danehower, 37, admitted to fatally shooting Glyer, but officials presiding over his case sparked anger from the victim's family by accepting a not guilty by reason of insanity plea
Last week, illegal migrant Abdul Jalloh, 32, was charged with the murder of a 41-year-old woman - and it emerged that Descano's office had been warned not to release him on previous arrests before the alleged killing
In a statement following the plea, the Commonwealth of Virginia said: 'The Glyer family’s hurt and disappointment is completely valid and more than understandable.
'Our clinical expert had previously found the defendant to be legally insane at the time of the offense, which now makes two independent experts who have reached that conclusion; these findings mean the Commonwealth would be unable to meet our burden of proof at a trial.
'Individuals who are found to be legally insane are remanded indefinitely to a Virginia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services facility.'
The prosecutor's office faced more scrutiny after it dropped a second-degree murder charge against Robert Reed, who was accused of murdering a homeless man at a bus station last summer.
Reed was arrested after he was seen wearing similar clothing to the wanted suspect at the scene.
Descano's office said Reed was released when DNA testing came back inconclusive. It also cited a lack of witness cooperation in the case.
The Commonwealth attorney also dropped murder charges against Helena Little, a woman accused of murdering her 79-year-old mother.
Police said a caretaker found Little's mother stabbed to death inside her apartment, and Little was arrested days later.
Stephanie Minter, 41, was allegedly stabbed to death on February 23 by Jalloh who has a string of violent crimes to his name
In a hearing on March 4, a judge determined that Descano's prosecution did not provide enough probable cause to move forward with a trial.
Descano's office said in a statement after Little was released, 'This is part of the judge’s role in the criminal justice system.'
In the cases of Little and Reed, the prosecutor's office said it stood by its decisions, saying in a statement: 'Both cases were handled by experienced Deputies in our office.
'We remain bound by the facts of each case, available evidence, and the rules of the American legal system.'
In the case of Jalloh, Descano's office admitted that the career criminal was well known to law enforcement before the alleged attack that killed Minter.
In a statement, the office said Jalloh had previously been convicted and served jail time for a 2023 malicious wounding charge.
'Unfortunately, the defendant in this case also had a history of selecting victims with no fixed address – some of the most vulnerable members of our community.
'In multiple cases, we were unable to move forward with prosecution because victims could not be located or contacted,' the office said in part.
Descano's office also recently dropped a second-degree murder charge against Robert Reed, who was accused of murdering a homeless man at a bus station last summer
Descano's judgement again came under scrutiny after murder charges were dropped against Helena Little, a woman accused of murdering her 79-year-old mother inside her mother's home last November
The concerning track record led the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) to brand 'America's Worst Prosecutor' earlier this year.
Descano took more than $650,000 from organizations backed by left-wing billionaire Soros to help fund his election bid, according to AEI.
The Daily Mail has contacted Descano's office for comment.
A protestor accidently set himself on fire while burning an American flag during an anti-ICE demonstration in Portland, Oregon on Saturday night
A protester accidentally set himself ablaze while burning an American flag outside of an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility in Oregon.
The unidentified demonstrator was seen engulfed in large orange flames in a Portland street as spectators screamed on Saturday night.
The long-haired man, dressed in dark pants and a hoodie, jumped around in the street, trying to fan the flames off of him in the liberal-run city.
He eventually put the flames out as he appeared to brush off the frightening incident after raising his hands in the air and smiling.
After stomping the last bit off himself, a person was heard saying: 'What an idiot, what a f***ing idiot!'
Another person then approached him, appearing to check on the man, before someone else quickly ran up to him to brush off a leftover ember on his pants.
It is unclear if he was injured or needed medical attention afterwards.
The incident comes as protestors across the nation have ramped up efforts to get federal agents out of their cities amid President Donald Trump's immigration crack down.
night
The unidentified man fanned the flames off himself as bystanders screamed and watched on in horror
As the fire burned, someone was heard shouting: 'Put him out! Put him out!' before the man appeared to pull burnt clothing scraps off his body and onto the pavement.
He then left the scene, as another man stepped on the flames burning on the ground. Someone else then came by to spray some kind of extinguishing agent on the fire.
The Portland Police Department told the Daily Mail they have seen the video circulating online, but because 'numerous calls for service' come through from the area 'each and every night,' the agency cannot look at every incident that takes place there.
The Daily Mail contacted the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for comment.
Portland is the latest American city to be targeted by Trump's administration, which has promised to crack down on Democratic-run, or sanctuary cities.
Just last month, Keith Wilson, the city's mayor, told ICE agents to 'resign' and ordered the agency to leave the city after a young girl was tear-gassed along with other 'peaceful protesters.'
Demonstrators at an 'ICE out' protest outside an immigration facility were struck with the chemical agent, along with pepper balls and rubber bullets.
An Instagram video showed a little girl crying as she attempted to recover after federal agents deployed tear gas.
'It burns,' the young girl appeared to say.
He eventually got most of the fire off of him as he appeared to brush off the frightening incident after raising his hands in the air and smiling
After he left the area, another man came in and doused the burning flames with some kind of extinguishing agent
The girl, who appeared to be a preteen, was seen wearing a pink shirt with butterflies as a protester doused her eyes with water.
'Good job, spit it out,' someone said as the girl appeared distraught.
Wilson echoed the words of Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, who has spoken out against ICE in his city, especially following the deaths of two American citizens, Renee Good and Alex Pretti.
'To those who continue to work for ICE: Resign. To those who control this facility: Leave,' Wilson said in a statement.
When immigration officials were in the Minnesota city and following Good's death, Frey told them live on-air to 'Get the f*** out of Minneapolis.'
Several protestors have burned the American flag during demonstrations as a way to express their anger, but back in August, Trump signed an executive order that would see people punished for doing so.
In 1989, the Supreme Court ruled that burning the American flag during a protest is a protected form of free speech.
The practice became popularized years before, during the heated Vietnam War riots.
Trump's bold new order directs the Department of Justice to prosecute individuals who 'desecrate' the flag, along with detaining and deporting immigrants who are accused of flag burning.
Just last month, Keith Wilson (pictured), the city's mayor, told ICE agents to 'resign' and ordered the agency to leave the city after a young girl was tear-gassed along with other 'peaceful protesters'
Trump signed an executive order in August that would see people be punished for burning the American flag
'If you burn a flag, you get one year in jail, no early exits, no nothing,' Trump previously declared in the Oval Office.
'My administration will act to restore respect and sanctity to the American flag and prosecute those who incite violence or otherwise violate our laws while desecrating this symbol of our country, to the fullest extent permissible under any available authority,' Trump's order reads.
Attorney General Pam Bondi is directed to review all cases where the flag has been burned and find what other charges could be brought forward.
There is no dispute about the basic facts of this war. A vast majority of Iranian citizens are fed up with the rule of the ayatollahs, want lives of freedom and liberty, and cannot understand why the brutal regime has devoted decades to the illusion of destroying Israel instead of ensuring the welfare of its own people.
The same is true in Lebanon, perhaps even more so. Lebanon's entire government, both the president and the cabinet, along with a large majority of the Lebanese public, do not want the war with Israel to continue. They do not accept the absurd claim that Israel has territorial ambitions in Lebanon, and they are convinced that Hezbollah, since its founding 44 years ago, has brought the country nothing but a chain of disasters and destruction.
Israel is now fighting simultaneously against the Iranian regime and its most dangerous terrorist proxy in Lebanon, Hezbollah. But this is a war shaped by three unknowns that no one can yet predict or solve.
The first unknown: What is the precise Archimedean point at which the intensive strikes by the US and Israel will bring about the collapse of the regime in Tehran? When will the moment come when Revolutionary Guard members lay down their weapons, scatter in all directions and the Iranian public floods the streets to seize power and establish a free, democratic and life-seeking state?
As the war enters its second week, that moment has not yet arrived. Missile launches continue, a new leader has been chosen and official statements from the regime keep appearing as usual.
The second unknown: What is the Archimedean point at which Hezbollah will be so exhausted that the Lebanese Armed Forces will gather the courage to move against it and disarm it?

So far, that has not happened either, even though the Lebanese government has declared that the organization is operating outside the law and threatening Lebanon's sovereignty and independence, and has instructed the army to act.
The army, which includes many members of the Shiite community, still fears confronting Hezbollah. Chief of Staff Rudolph Haikal reportedly suggested in a closed government meeting that officials should "open dialogue with Hezbollah about handing over its weapons" rather than storming its positions.
The decision by Lebanon's military court last night to release Hezbollah operatives on $20 bail after they were detained at checkpoints with rocket launchers showcases the weakness of the central government.
The third unknown: What is the Archimedean point at which US President Donald Trump will decide, under pressure from domestic opponents of the war, from soaring oil prices, from dwindling weapons supplies or from other considerations, to declare that Iran has been defeated, that victory has been achieved and then withdraw the armada?
Such a scenario, which is not entirely imaginary, would leave Israel alone with three open fronts: Iran, Lebanon and Gaza, the last of which almost forgotten by now. Of the three, the Hezbollah front is the most dangerous and troubling.
Before the war began, Trump, the most Israel-friendly US president, was the one who restrained Israel both in Gaza and in Beirut. Now American involvement may also be required to help Israel finish the job in Lebanon.
"Roaring Lion" cannot end without the full and complete removal of the Hezbollah threat to residents of northern Israel and the opening of a real, not imaginary, possibility of a peace agreement with the Lebanese government and its eventual entry into the Abraham Accords.
Donald Trump said Democrats opposed US-Israel strikes on Iran for political reasons.Ten days after the beginning of the U.S.-Israeli air offensive against Iran’s terrorist regime, the ultimate outcome of the joint campaign remains uncertain. Iran’s government and military have largely been decapitated, with the country’s ability to inflict terror on the region drastically reduced. Further damage has been done to its ballistic-missile and nuclear programs. Yet it’s still unclear if the theocratic tyranny in Tehran will fall, as both America and Israel want and expect.
What is clear is the focus of the opposition. Its campaign primarily revolves around one issue—and it isn’t the Jewish state.
That comes despite attempts by right-wing and left-wing antisemites to advance the big lie that the United States was forced or led into the conflict by Jerusalem. Many of the war’s critics from both ends of the political spectrum are united by their antipathy for Israel, plain and simple. Common threads also tie the opposition when it comes to their disinclination to holding the Islamic Republic accountable for its behavior to arguments attempting to delegitimize Israel’s war on Hamas after the Palestinian Arab terror attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.
But as critiques of the Iran war start to harden, it’s obvious that Israel’s role as America’s partner in the conflict is not the main factor driving the opposition.
A partisan divide
Opinion polls taken during the war’s first week made one thing obvious. The decision to strike Iran appears to be opposed by a majority of Americans.
A deep dive into the numbers finds that the main driver of opinion on the conflict is partisanship. An overwhelming majority of Republicans, as high as 84% in an NPR/Marist poll, are in favor of military action against Tehran, while 86% of Democrats and 61% of independents are against it. That led to an overall result of 56% against the war and 44% in favor of it. When asked what they think about Iran, 70% of Republicans perceive Iran to be a major threat to the United States; however, only 27% of Democrats see it that way.
Once Obama made support for the nuclear accord a litmus test of personal loyalty to him, it materially contributed to the decline in Democratic support for Israel.
The roots of that disagreement can be traced back to the debate over former President Barack Obama’s appeasement of Iran that culminated in the 2015 nuclear deal. As late as 2013, most congressional Democrats were quite hawkish when it came to efforts to stop Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons and punishing it for being the world’s leading state sponsor of terror. But once Obama made support for the nuclear accord a litmus test of personal loyalty to him, his party dutifully fell in line. That also materially contributed to the decline in Democratic support for Israel. The people and government of the Jewish state were, for good reasons, appalled by a document that would have guaranteed that a country committed to their destruction would have eventually acquired a nuclear weapon.
As much as that decade-old argument about a failed diplomatic attempt, as Obama put it, to allow Iran “to get right with the world,” set up the current divide about how to deal with Iran, that isn’t what is determining opinion about the conflict. And while the post-Oct. 7 surge in antisemitism and hostility to Israel is connected to the debate about Trump’s decision, it doesn’t entirely explain it.
It’s really all about Trump.
Disapproval of the war is different from the debate about Israel that has been simmering for the last 30 months.
The willful refusal to acknowledge reality with respect to the genocidal Palestinian war to wipe out the Jewish state isn’t the same thing as the critique about battling Iran. Many around the world bought into the gaslighting in which Hamas and its allies were depicted as the victims, rather than the Israelis who were attacked. The fact that they had started a war with unspeakable atrocities and the largest mass slaughter of Jews since the Holocaust wasn’t so much rationalized as simply disbelieved. It was soon followed by a willingness to buy into Hamas propaganda that claimed Israel’s war of self-defense was a “genocide.” A lot of that had to do with the influence of toxic ideologies that falsely claimed that Israelis and Jews were “white” oppressors who were always in the wrong, and that Palestinians were “people of color” who were always their victims.
While there is some superficial comparison of attitudes about the war against Iran to the one against Hamas, outside of the extreme left, the anti-war argument isn’t centered on a disingenuous attempt to transform the ayatollahs and their minions into Third World victims of racism, as is the case with the “pro-Palestine” crowd.
What it all boils down to is a belief that anything done by this president has got to be misguided and manipulative.
The Putin comparison
A classic example of how this works was a so-called “news analysis” published by The New York Times on March 8, which tried to make the argument that the U.S.-Israel strikes on Iran were analogous to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Even if the article by former Times Moscow bureau chief Anton Troianovski had been framed as an opinion piece (which it is, despite the “analysis” label and its layout in the newspaper’s news section), it was absurdly argued and devoid of context or sense. Its only point was to paint Trump as no different from Putin.
Whatever one thinks about the Russia-Ukraine battle or the U.S.-Israel operation against Tehran, simply put, there is no comparison between these two events. A longstanding dispute between Ukrainian nationalism and Russian imperial ambitions dates back to the tsarist era. Ukraine was not a nuclear or terror threat to Russia—or any other country. Its government was not driven by a messianic belief in its right to impose a particular religion on the world. It was also not building missiles and seeking to acquire nuclear weapons to destroy another nation, as was the case with Iran’s attempts to eliminate Israel.
Having relentlessly promoted the Russian collusion hoax for years, only to see it eventually exposed as a partisan conspiracy theory, the Times is still seeking to revive belief in the notion that Trump is a fascist thug, not unlike Putin.
This article is a particularly egregious example of journalists having no shame about letting their Trump Derangement Syndrome affect their work. But even a dispassionate look at most of the liberal mainstream media’s war coverage shows that it has more in common with how they treated the Russia collusion hoax than their coverage of Oct. 7, and the multipronged war that followed.
The consistent theme that colors arguments about Trump’s right to authorize U.S. airstrikes, America’s relations with allies, his statements about the war and uncertainty about its outcome is the belief that the specifics about the threat from Iran are not as important as the liberal detestation for the president. The point being: If you’ve spent the last decade believing that he is a fascist, neo-Nazi authoritarian, then it doesn’t really matter if the position he’s taken is one that all of his 21st-century predecessors have essentially endorsed, though he is the first to act on it.
Interestingly, even many of Trump’s most vociferous critics at outlets like the Times and elsewhere aren’t trying to whitewash the Iranian regime, even though many of them were cheerleading for appeasement of them during the Obama and Biden presidencies. Most agree that the government that slaughtered tens of thousands of its own people in January and that engages in international terrorism is awful and at least a potential threat to the United States.
And so, even if the war is being waged in defense of American interests and global peace—and Iran’s leaders are murderers who have been waging an Islamist terrorist war on the West for the past 47 years—they simply cannot get behind any initiative undertaken by the Trump administration.
Let’s concede that reasonable arguments can be made about the limits of presidential power and the fact that wars are no longer preceded by declarations passed by Congress. There are also reasons to doubt whether an American push for regime change will work in even the worst of countries. Nor can anyone be sure that a change would lead to an improvement over the current situation, though it’s hard to imagine anything worse than the Islamic tyranny that has existed in Iran since 1979.
The ‘fascist’ argument
The debate about the war isn’t so much about those concerns as it is one rooted in the belief that Trump is simply beyond the pale and must be opposed at all times and at all costs.
His opponents relentlessly doubled down on the “fascist” argument throughout his first term and during his time out of office—and continue to do so, despite his triumphant return to the White House after winning the popular vote and the Electoral College in 2024. While the anti-Trump “resistance” narrative was quiet for a while after the resounding defeat of former Vice President Kamala Harris, it has returned with a vengeance. Discussion of the war on Iran is only the latest manifestation of it.
Some of it can be understood as an automatic backlash to a president who is unlike any of the men who preceded him. As one Washington Post article conceded, Trump’s conduct as a war leader isn’t very different from the way he operates at other times, so it’s hardly surprising that reactions to his Iran policy would not change.
Like the situation in Israel and many other democracies, 21st-century democracy in America is the function of a bifurcated society in which left and right no longer read, listen or watch the same media. They essentially avoid each other on social media or in any other places where public discourse takes place. And with politics now playing the role that religion used to have in most people’s lives, it’s no wonder that partisan divisions have hardened into inflexible beliefs on which no compromise is possible.
Trump’s unorthodox style still grates on his opponents and delights his supporters. The former still seems unable to grasp that his political rise was powered by the failures of both Republican and Democratic Party leaders to cope with new challenges, and by the arrogance and contempt of Obama and the credentialed elites he led toward much of the American electorate.
On Iran, as on other issues, such as illegal immigration and the deindustrialization of America, Trump is merely confronting a longstanding problem that his predecessors helped create and then ignored. The same was true of his approach to Israel, where he swept aside establishment thinking with respect to decisions like moving the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, and declining to let Palestinian intransigence get in the way of his 2020 Abraham Accords.
No credit given
The refusal to give him credit for that diplomatic achievement was proof of the belief among his supporters that even if he cured cancer, his opponents wouldn’t applaud. Ending the appeasement of Iran and taking decisive action to ensure that it can no longer threaten America and the West is not quite the same thing as curing cancer. Still, the tone of critiques of his decision is not dissimilar to the way his peacemaking efforts have been dismissed by those who now oppose the war.
They blame him for not making the case for war while simultaneously refusing to acknowledge the arguments he has made justifying military action. They accuse him of acting on an authoritarian whim. However, the long buildup to the offensive, along with the last attempts the administration made to get Iran to come to a diplomatic agreement, makes it obvious that the decision was the result of a long, deeply considered process. Faulting him for failing to build bipartisan support for his policy ignores the fact that his opponents have no interest in playing the role of loyal opposition; instead, they forge ahead as a “resistance” to a presidency they believe is inherently illegitimate.
They’re also ignoring the clear evidence, as retired U.S. Army officer and military expert John Spencer points out, that the doom-and-gloom predictions of Trump opponents about the war are misguided. While nothing is certain, to date, the strategy employed by both the United States and its Israeli ally seems to be working, and those of the Iranian government are failing. Success isn’t guaranteed, but there is no reason to think it is another Iraq or anything like the disaster Trump-haters are sure is in the works.
Both left-wing hysteria about alleged Trumpian authoritarianism and the antisemitic conspiracy mongering of right-wing opponents of the war, such as far-right podcaster Tucker Carlson, should be seen for what they are. Most of what passes for anti-Iran war arguments aren’t about the actual situation on the ground and are fundamentally unserious.
That arguments about Iran, Islamist terror and the war to destroy Israel have been largely overridden by those about Trump is frustrating to those who see these issues as transcending politics. The struggle to resist Iran’s Islamist terror shouldn’t be bound up with the derangement that Trump inspires in his opponents.
Israelis are dodging missiles shot by the Islamist regime and its terrorist auxiliaries, while Iranian civilians weigh whether a renewed struggle to overthrow their tyrants is worth the risk. While that is happening, we in the United States ought to be able to have an open conversation about these subjects. That dialogue should not be determined by feelings toward the president; rather, it should focus on the clear threat the Islamist regime poses to the West and the United States.
At the moment, that doesn’t seem possible. Yet Iran-war critics need to take a breath. They need to stop thinking about whether U.S. failure in the war will help the Democrats in the midterms and start focusing on a subject that ought to unite Americans, rather than divide them.
By Bob Walsh
Jason Hughes, 40, died on Thursday after a group of students from North Hall High School draped rolls of toilet paper on his property. He tripped into the road and was hit by a car after he went outside to greet them
The math teacher who was killed by a student's car was excited to greet the five pranksters outside his home, but he slipped on wet concrete and fell into the street before being run over, according to a family member.
Jason Hughes, 40, died on Thursday after a group of students from North Hall High School, Georgia, draped rolls of toilet paper on his property as part of a 'prank war' that is known as a tradition in the community.
The father-of-two ran outside as it happened, but when the students frantically drove away, one of them, Jayden Ryan Wallace, 18, struck and killed the beloved educator, police said.
On Monday, Jason's brother-in-law confirmed he was happy to see the teens, and there was no 'confrontation' between them, a statement shared by family friend Erick Erickson on X read.
'Jason knew the students were coming and he was excited and waiting to “catch them” in the act,' he said. 'It had been raining and he accidentally slipped and fell into the road in front of the vehicle as they were driving away and was hit.'
According to weather reports, it was dark and wet around the time of the incident.
Jason, who has been remembered as a cherished mentor in town, would not have wanted the students to face charges over the accident, Richard Hughes, his brother, told the Daily Mail.
'He would hate this for everyone involved,' Richard said, adding that his brother was an 'amazing' father, brother, son, husband and teacher.

'He was a servant till the day he died. He served his community and everyone around him,' he added.
His brother's comments come after Jason's wife, Laura Hughes, who also teaches math at the high school, asked for charges against all five teens to be dropped.
Along with Wallace, Elijah Tate Owens, Aiden Hucks, Ana Katherine Luque, and Ariana Cruz, all 18 years old, were all arrested and charged in connection with the accident.
Wallace was arrested at the scene and charged with first-degree vehicular homicide, reckless driving, criminal trespass, and littering on private property.
As of Sunday afternoon, Wallace was set free on a $11,080 bail. His first court appearance is scheduled for April 1, according to arrest records reviewed by the Daily Mail.
His four friends were also arrested and charged with criminal trespass and littering. They are no longer in custody, and it is unclear when they are due in court.
After hearing about the charges against the students, Laura said: 'This is a terrible tragedy, and our family is determined to prevent a separate tragedy from occurring, ruining the lives of these students,' the New York Times reported.
'This would be counter to Jason's lifelong dedication of investing in the lives of these children,' she added.
Ana Katherine Luque (left) and Ariana Cruz (right), both 18, were also arrested and charged
Elijah Tate Owens (left) Aiden Hucks (right) were two of the five pranksters. The 18-year-old's were also arrested and charged
She echoed other family members' sequence of events, stating that her husband did not run out to reprimand the group for the annual prank tradition, but he was only 'excited and waiting to catch them in the act.'
She added that the students and Hughes loved each other, and her family fully 'supports getting the charges dropped for all involved.'
His brother-in-law also mentioned that their family 'fully supports getting the charges dropped for all involved.'
'This is a terrible tragedy, and our family is determined to prevent a separate tragedy from occurring, ruining the lives of these students,' he added.
Just hours before tragedy struck, the school district gave a grave warning to students to 'refrain from participating in activities that may cause harm or destruction'.
'Parents and students, as we approach the eagerly awaited spring prom season, we want to take a moment to address an important matter regarding the conduct of our junior and senior students,' the Hall County School District wrote on Facebook on Thursday around 1pm.
'In previous years, some pranks during prom season–sometimes referred to as Junior/Senior Wars– have gone too far, resulting in damage to property.
'We urge all students to refrain from participating in any activities that may cause harm or destruction to school or personal property.
On Monday, Jason's brother-in-law confirmed he was happy to see the teens, and there was no 'confrontation' when he ran out of the home to greet them that rainy night
Jason, who has been remembered as a cherished mentor in town, would not have wanted the students to face criminal charges over the accident, his brother Richard Hughes told the Daily Mail
Images from previous pranking years posted on social media show the Hughes' home covered in toilet paper - decorating their barren tree and driveway
'It's essential to recognize the serious consequences that can arise from engaging in destructive behavior,' the district added.
It's understood that Hughes' home was a target - considering that the kids got two 'points' if they pranked the home of a teacher.
But if the students were 'caught' by a teacher while doing a prank, they would have points deducted.
This may possibly explain the quick getaway that the five kids were trying to make when Hughes was run over.
Images from previous pranking years posted on social media show the Hughes' home covered in toilet paper - decorating their barren tree and driveway.
Iranians gather at Enqelab Square to show support for the newly appointed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei in Tehran
Iran may be activating sleeper cells outside of the country, according to an alert that was intercepted by the US.
The encrypted communications, believed to have come from inside Iran, was sent as an 'operational trigger' for 'sleeper assets,' according to ABC News.
Sleeper cells are agents or terrorists planted in countries who blend in with normal civilians until they are needed to carry out an attack.
The message was transmitted across multiple countries shortly after Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was obliterated in a joint Israeli-US airstrike in Tehran on February 28. His son, Mojtaba Khamenei, has since been named the new Supreme Leader.
The Daily Mail exclusively revealed in August an extensive passport scheme with Iranian forces coming to the west through Venezuela and setting up sleeper cells in America's backyard.
Fears of such activity has only heightened across the US in the last week that covert agents laying low in America may be triggered to retaliate after the war in Iran erupted.
The war has entered its second week with the US and Israel now feuding after Israeli forces blew up Iran's oil depots in a blitz that shocked the White House over fears the move would anger Americans because of a surge in gas prices.
Preliminary signals analysis has led the US to believe the message was 'likely of Iranian origin,' and was sent to 'clandestine recipients,' who have a passcode.
Because the message had 'international rebroadcast characteristics' American intelligence believes its likely that it could be for sleeper cells. There was no operational threat tied to a specific location, the outlet said.
Fire breaks out at the Shahran oil depot after US and Israeli attacks
According to the outlet, the alert's nature was similar to that which imparts instructions to 'covert operatives or sleeper assets' without the use of the internet.
The transmissions could 'be intended to activate or provide instructions to prepositioned sleeper assets operating outside the originating country,' the alert said, per ABC News.
In an exclusive interview with the Daily Mail, former DHS senior adviser and Secret Service supervisor Charles Marino said the nation is facing a 'convergence' of threats – from Iran-aligned lone wolves to potential sleeper cells.
'Is it possible you have 10, 15, 20 people in the country that are part of a cell that then go out and carry out simultaneous or near-simultaneous attacks? Yes,' Marino said.
He warned that terrorists seeking maximum carnage would likely target 'soft' venues: crowded events, such as concerts and sports matches, public spaces and mass gatherings.
Among the looming concerns is the upcoming World Cup, designated a National Special Security Event. The tournament will draw massive crowds and global attention – precisely the type of stage extremist groups crave.
And just months back, Jonathan Gilliam, counterterrorism analyst and former FBI agent, told the Daily Mail that the probability of Iranian attacks on US soil is now 'high' following the June strikes.
'Over the past four years it's been much more likely for [Iran] to develop relationships with Venezuela and get people here, get them in place, and get them supplied and ready to go,' Gilliam said.
On Sunday, a seventh US service member was confirmed to have been killed in the war. Six others were honored in a dignified transfer ceremony on Saturday
The violent US-Israeli war against Iran in the Middle East raged on Monday.
A seventh US service member, Sergeant Benjamin N. Pennington, of Glendale, Kentucky was killed in the war, the Department of War announced on Monday.
President Trump attended the first dignified transfer ceremony for the six other soldier's who were killed in the Iran war previously.
The six Americans who were killed on March 1 were Army reservists with the 103rd Sustainment Command based out of Des Moines, Iowa.
Nicole Amor, 39, Cody Khork, 35, Declan Coady, 20, Robert Marzan, 54, Jeffrey O'Brien, 45 and Noah Tietjens, 42, died in the conflict.
The latest comes as a US and Israel summit was scrapped on Monday after Israel targeted Iran's oil depots in a blitz that shocked the White House and marked the first open disagreement between the allies since the war began.
Trump's envoys Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff canceled their planned trip to Israel for a meeting with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday. Neither the US nor Israel provided a reason for the summit's cancellation.
Thirty Iranian fuel depots were obliterated over the weekend with apocalyptic images showing fires leaping into the sky, huge columns of smoke, and black oily rain falling from the sky.
White House officials were stunned by the scale of Israel's bombardment and concerned that images of burning oil would anger Americans facing increased gas prices - up to $3.4 per gallon on average compared to $2.9 before the war started.
Trump's two-week war with Iran led to oil prices spiking near $120 per barrel before falling back on Monday morning to $103
'The president doesn't like the attack. He wants to save the oil. He doesn't want to burn it. And it reminds people of higher gas prices,' a Trump adviser told Axios.
An Israeli official said the message from the US was stark: 'What the f***'.
The pressure campaign against Iranian oil reserves mounted as the US Navy attacked three regime ships in the Persian Gulf on Monday, with G7 leaders discussing the release of emergency fuel reserves to quell market fears.
Trump's two-week war with Iran led to oil prices spiking near $120 per barrel before falling back on Monday morning to $103. The Wall Street Journal noted that the war is on the verge of sparking one worst global energy crisis since the 1970s.
A new Daily Mail/J.L. Partners poll found the President's approval now stands at 44 percent, down four points since last week and marking the lowest rating recorded in Daily Mail tracking to date.
The Israel Defense Forces justified the strike, claiming the oil depots are used by the Islamic regime to 'fuel different consumers including its military organs.'
This is a breaking news story.