There are wars fought for dominance. There are wars fought for survival. And then there are wars that end… because the bill arrives before the victory. Welcome to the ceasefire between the United States, Iran, and Israel— a deal that looks less like triumph… and more like a system quietly pulling the emergency brake. 1. The “Superpower” With 13 Coffins — and a Running Meter Let’s begin with the human cost. 13 American service members killed Hundreds wounded Thousands of lives shattered across the region But this time, the tragedy comes with something unusually visible: A price tag ticking in real time . Nicholas Kristoff In his New York Times column, called it: “The $1.3-million-a-minute war.” Let that sink in. $1.3 million per minute $1.87 billion per day $16.5 billion burned in just 12 days This wasn’t a war. This was a financial hemorrhage with missiles attached. And the justification ? Still… unclear . 2. War by the Minute: When Missiles Beco...
There are humiliations that happen in private—quiet, survivable, deniable. And then there are humiliationsîjjr staged like theater. Scripted. Filmed. Uploaded. Accidentally, of course. The Court Jester of Power At a White House Easter luncheon, turned governance into stand-up comedy. The punchline? . Not his policies. Not his strategy. Not even his judgment. Just… him. “If it doesn’t happen, I’m blaming JD Vance. If it does happen, I’m taking full credit.” The room laughed. Because in this administration, accountability is a joke—and the joke always lands on the same person. The Price of a Soul, Marked Down One reader captured it with surgical precision: “As his political fortunes dim, his soul has become a depreciating asset.” It’s not just an insult. It’s an economic model. A man once marketed as an intellectual—author, critic, thinker—now reduced to a fluctuating liability in the marketplace of power. Buy high on principles. Sell low on ambition. Li...