On bounced rent cheques and teary-eyed excuses
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
19th Century Thinking and Butterflies
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
Wars of Choice
I have too many friends cheering on this war. Mostly supporters of Israel.
I get it. Israel has been in a de facto state of war since its founding—attacked or threatened from all sides. My Israeli friends are tired of being on the defensive. It feels good, for once, to take the initiative. To demonstrate strength.
With Iran, it’s long been a war through proxies—the dirtiest kind of war. So they say: bring it into the open. Get it over with. The regime is vulnerable, the timing is right—do it now, on our terms.
It makes sense—but only if you win.
And in this case, there’s really only one definition of “win”: regime change. Not just any regime change, but one that produces a more moderate government—one willing to abandon the revolutionary project and rejoin the international community.
That’s a lot of “ifs.” A lot has to go perfectly. It's the equivalent of drawing a royal flush from a deck of 52 playing cards. Wars have a way of going sideways—not just sideways, but in every terrible direction at once.
We’re seeing that happen now, in real time.
That’s part of why I never cheer for war, and I’m not cheering for this one.
The first reason is obvious: death and destruction. It’s always the most vulnerable—on both sides—who pay the highest price.
But there are times when war is justified. As a last resort. Which begs the question; how do you know when it’s a last resort?
Self-defense is the clearest case. If you’re attacked, you have no choice but to defend your sovereignty and your people.
Another case is when good-faith diplomacy has been exhausted—when there’s an unbridgeable impasse. War becomes, however tragically, a means of resolving a political dispute.
A preemptive war can sometimes be justified if it is genuinely defensive—if there is a credible, imminent threat.
But “wars of choice” are, by definition, not last resorts. They are elective. And calling them that is often a euphemism for something morally indefensible and legally unjustifiable.
That’s why the claim that the U.S. had to strike Iran preemptively—because of an imminent attack on American assets—matters so much. If that claim is false, then the justification collapses.
Another argument was that Israel was going to act regardless, and the U.S. needed to move first.
But that doesn’t hold.
If Washington was concerned about being targeted, it could have objected and stayed out. If Israel proceeded anyway, the U.S. could have maintained distance. If Iran then chose to respond by striking American targets, a U.S. response would clearly fall under self-defense.
More likely, Iran’s response would have been calibrated—symbolic, as we’ve seen before—precisely to avoid escalation.
That’s not the path that was taken. The U.S. chose to go to war.
That decision is not equivalent to Israel’s. If the goal was to support Israel, there were many ways to do so that did not involve sending bombers.
Monday, March 23, 2026
The Crossroads
No, Vladimir Putin does not have kompromat on trump. That’s not why trump consistently sides with him.
The explanation is much simpler: Trump idolizes Putin. He wants to be him.
Putin represents a kind of power trump has always admired—personal, unconstrained, untouchable. By many accounts, Putin is also extraordinarily wealthy, perhaps the richest man in the world. Trump has always been driven by that same obsession with wealth and status. Over the past decade, it’s become increasingly clear that Putin is not just a counterpart in trump’s mind, not just a model, but someone who provides trump with narcissistic supply, a drug trump needs to feel good about himself. It's that powerful.
In February 2022, just over four years ago, Russia invaded Ukraine. The expectation in Moscow was clear: Kyiv would fall in days, Zelensky would flee, and the Ukrainian government would collapse.
It didn’t happen.
Instead, the war dragged on. Ukraine defended itself with remarkable resilience. Zelensky emerged as one of the defining leaders of this moment. And Russia paid a staggering price in lives and resources, by some estimates an astounding 7,000 to 8,000 casualties per week.
How did Putin get it so wrong?
The answer is simple. He was working with a distorted version of reality.
Putin surrounded himself with loyalists who told him what he wanted to hear. They painted a picture that confirmed his assumptions and filtered out inconvenient truths. That is the Achilles’ heel of authoritarian systems. We saw it with Joseph Stalin. We saw it with Adolf Hitler. Over time, reality stops reaching the top.
Something similar—though not identical—is happening with trump.
He, too, has surrounded himself with people who reinforce his instincts rather than challenge them. That’s how he’s ended up in an unwinnable situation.
Yes, Benjamin Netanyahu likely played a role, pressing him to act and framing the moment as urgent. But that’s only part of the story. Trump was already predisposed toward confrontation with Iran. He’s spoken about it repeatedly. This isn’t new.
And now, once again, he’s backed himself into a corner, as he always does.
In trump’s mind, the instinct is to act like his idol—to double down, to project strength, to never retreat. But the United States is not Russia. Trump is not Putin. And now we're witnessing reality asserting itself.
The U.S. is at a crossroads.
On one side are regional allies and partners who expect follow-through and don’t want to be left exposed. On the other side are skyrocketing gas prices and rising costs, public anger, and a MAGA base that feels politically betrayed.
My sense is that trump will do what he often does: declare victory and walk away, leaving others to deal with the disasterous consequences. It would be the smart move, because the alternative would be catastrophic.
Then again—when has trump ever chosen the smart move?
Sunday, March 22, 2026
Learning from my mother-in-law
Friday, March 20, 2026
I'm Very Nervous
Back to publicly venting my anxiety.
I’m nervous.
I haven’t felt this nervous since October 7th, 2023—and this time it feels like it could get much worse.
It started a couple of weeks ago, when U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio appeared to throw Israel (and, by extension, Jews more broadly) under the bus by suggesting Israel forced the U.S.'s hand to preemptively attack Iran.
Then this week came the very public resignation of the Director of Counterterrorism, Joe Kent. He echoed that framing, saying there was no imminent threat to the United States from Iran, and explicitly blamed Israel and its American lobby for pressuring the U.S. into war.
Yesterday, Netanyahu made an unusual public statement about the war—something that, in itself, signals how serious the situation has become. It read as damage control. When asked about the Israeli attack on the South Pars gas field, he claimed Israel acted alone. That directly contradicted earlier statements from Israeli officials, who said the operation had been coordinated with the U.S. No one seems to believe him.
When asked whether Israel had “dragged” the U.S. into the war, Netanyahu deflected: “Does anyone really think someone can tell President Trump what to do? Come on.”
My answer: the most transparently transactional president in modern U.S. history? Ugh—Yeah, of course.
Iran responded to the South Pars attack by striking Qatar’s Ras Laffan Industrial City—the world’s largest LNG facility.
According to Michael Wolff, it’s no coincidence that trump quickly claimed he had no prior knowledge of the South Pars attack and urged Israel to stop targeting energy infrastructure. Wolff said trump got a call from Jared Kushner who warned that his Qatari patrons were extremely unhappy.
Which brings me back to the underlying dynamic. According to Wolff’s sources, many inside trump’s orbit believe Israel pushed him into this war.
Meanwhile, in the MAGA conspiracy ecosystem, the narrative is hardening: that Jews are pulling the strings—Kushner and Netanyahu are controlling trump.
The movement itself is splitting. On one side, a pro-Israel, pro-war faction, led by Jewish commentators Ben Shapiro, Mark Levin and Laura Loomer. On the other side, an anti-Israel, anti-war faction led by popular (Gentile) podcasters Tucker Carlsen, Megyn Kelly and Nick Fuentes that often frames the situation in openly antisemitic terms.
All of this is compounded by the lack of a clear, convincing justification for the war, and the absence of any real effort to rally international allies, and diffuse responsibility.
Add in the Epstein cover-up. Add the risk of pro-Iranian terrorism. Add the lingering global anger over Gaza.
It feels like all the ingredients are there, from both the far right and the far left, for antisemitism at a level we haven't seen in generations.
And that’s making me very nervous.
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
In the Miklat
CLICK HERE TO HEAR AUTHOR READ
for Kelp
I'm not in the miklat;
but I imagine
if I were in Jerusalem
with you,
I'd have my guitar
and you'd have yours.
Or if there was no time
because the alert
went off again at 3am,
and we dragged ourselves
down in pjs and slippers,
we'd at least
have our blues harps.
While we waited
for the all clear
we'd fill the silence
with Dylan and Cohen,
between tunes
debate
who was the better songwriter.
I'd tell you Dylan was a poser,
always wearing
someone else's costume,
while Cohen dug deep
into the darkness
of his own
emotional rubble.
When we got tired of that
I'd pull out
my bilingual copy
of Shirei Ahava
and we'd read aloud —
you first in Hebrew,
me next,
from the facing page
in English —
all the biblical allusions
lost in translation,
(hiding inside the words,
as it were),
milot miklat,
you'd joke alliteratively—
words of shelter
from the storm.
We'd listen
for the boom of a strike
above our heads
the crash of collapse,
and wonder
if ZAKA
had already been
dispatched.
The Big Picture
What you see always depends on what you are looking at.
Me, I'm a big picture guy, not someone who focuses on details.
Sometimes that's a good thing, sometimes it's not.
It's good because I tend not to sweat the small stuff.
It's bad for detail-oriented work, like writing or art-making, where getting the details just right matters so much.
Even before trump was first voted into office, from my big-picture perch I saw the potential for disaster.
Disaster because he was so obviously inexperienced, and so clearly temperamentally unfit to wield so much power.
Disaster because he had no appreciation for institutions or the international alliances he was inheriting.
Worse than indifference, his instinct seemed destructive. He appeared to want to tear down the foundations of American democracy and dismantle the network of alliances and organizations that had maintained global stability since the end of WWII.
The fact that he was new to the job — and not particularly competent or disciplined — limited the damage he could do in his first term.
Having experienced trump version 1.0, I never imagined Americans would choose him a second time. Especially after January 6th.
I was wrong.
It turns out Americans have very short memories.
The second term has confirmed my worst fears. This time, with a compliant and subservient Congress, he is largely unleashed to use the powers of the presidency according to his whims.
My sense was that his first priority in a second term — now that he understood the levers of power — would be to enrich himself, his family, and his friends.
And Americans would pay for it in spades.
The tariffs fit under that heading. So do the lawsuits against corporations, law firms, and universities aimed at extracting settlements. The “gifts” from foreign leaders. The cryptocurrency ventures. The project-fundraising grifts. The selling of pardons. And most recently, the war profiteering — seizing Venezuela’s oil and the kids launching a drone business.
The second priority would be the only other thing he truly craves: attention, fame, legacy.
Hence the constant television appearances, sometimes twice a day. Dominating headlines. Putting his name and face on prominent government buildings. Erecting monuments to himself — the ballroom, the victory arch. His obsessive pursuit of the Nobel Peace Prize.
But it also extends to more ominous gestures: the abduction of a government leader in Venezuela, the war with Iran, and talk of taking over Cuba or even Greenland.
Trump cares above all about appearing strong. His worldview is simple: might makes right.
And the more easily he can deploy the military, the easier it becomes to use it again.
Trashing international law, alliances, and global institutions is not really the goal.
It’s simply collateral damage in his pursuit of self-aggrandizement.
Most of the political arguments I end up having with people come down to a difference between looking at the big picture or the small picture.
People who focus only on Israel’s immediate security, for example, are happy with the war with Iran. They see weapons depots destroyed, military infrastructure damaged, leaders assassinated — and they count those as victories.
But that’s the small picture.
They’re looking at the battles, not the war.
They aren’t thinking about the broader ramifications for regional stability, for international alliances, or even for Jews living in the diaspora.
Big picture, bombs are replaceable. Leaders are replaceable. Even armies are replaceable.
What isn’t easily replaced is stability.
Or trust.
Or credibility.
Once those are gone, they take generations to rebuild.