A Moment Measured in Time, Not Impulse

When President Trump announced the cancellation of all meetings with Iran, while simultaneously urging Iranian protesters to persist with the promise that “help is on its way,” the move was widely read as abrupt and emotionally charged. Yet the deeper significance of the decision lies not merely in its tone, but in its timing. This…

Power Without Righteousness Is Not Strength

Yesterday’s closed-door briefing to lawmakers on U.S. actions in Venezuela did little to resolve the most troubling questions raised by the operation. If anything, it exposed a widening gap between executive power and moral clarity. Members of Congress emerged divided not merely over tactics or outcomes, but over first principles: who authorizes force, what limits…

Kasuwan-Daji, Moral Collapse, and the Cost of Delayed Judgment

The massacre at Kasuwan-Daji village in Niger State, where armed attackers reportedly killed dozens, burned the local market, abducted residents, and operated for hours with little or no immediate resistance, is not merely another tragic headline from Nigeria. It’s a stark exposure of what happens when violence becomes normalized and the state’s protective role erodes…

Covenant, Coercion, and the Moral Shape of Peace

Russia’s vow to adopt a “tougher” negotiating stance—issued after blaming Ukraine for an alleged attempt to attack Vladimir Putin’s residence—should be read less as a reaction to new facts and more as a deliberate reframing of the moral terrain. By asserting victimhood without transparent verification, Moscow seeks to shift the burden of legitimacy, recast itself…

Credibility, Authority, and the Cost of Confusing Power with Truth

The controversy surrounding Donald Trump’s response to Russia’s claim that Ukraine attempted a drone attack near a residence associated with Vladimir Putin is not merely about diplomatic tone. It’s about something more foundational: how authority is exercised, how truth is discerned, and how public power either restrains or amplifies deception in moments of global consequence.…

Diplomacy Without Moral Gravity

Yesterday’s negotiations between Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Donald Trump arrive at a moment of deep fatigue: military, political, and psychological. After years of war, there’s a natural hunger for an off-ramp, a framework that promises stability and relief from endless escalation. The talks are presented as pragmatic, results-oriented, and refreshingly unconcerned with ideological grandstanding. That tone…

When Government Authority Slips from Law into Moral Theater

The recent actions by Republican leadership in Texas and Florida aimed at the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) deserve more than reflexive applause or predictable outrage. They require sober analysis. Whatever one thinks of CAIR’s activism, rhetoric, or policy positions, the mechanism being used against it should trouble anyone who takes constitutional limits seriously. These…

Power, Persecution, and the Cross

Yesterday’s U.S. strike against Islamic State–linked militants operating in Nigeria, reportedly carried out with the approval and cooperation of the Nigerian government, landed with the kind of moral thud that foreign-policy decisions rarely avoid. President Trump framed the action in part as a response to violence that has included the targeting of Christians, a claim…

The “Golden Fleet,” Deism, and the Perils of Designing a World You Refuse to Govern

The U.S. Navy’s so-called Golden Fleet initiative sketches a vision that is at once ambitious and revealing. At the surface level, the story is about ships: numbers, readiness, industrial capacity, and the strategic anxieties of an increasingly dangerous world. But beneath the steel and spreadsheets lies a deeper question about how America understands power, responsibility,…

Andy Beshear, Political Moderation, and the Ancient Problem We Keep Pretending Is New

The quiet elevation of Andy Beshear as a potential future presidential contender tells us something uncomfortable but undeniable: America is starving for normalcy. Not perfection. Not revolution. Just leaders who sound like they inhabit the same reality as the people they govern. Beshear is being discussed as a possible Democratic standard-bearer precisely because he doesn’t…