The Mahablog

Politics. Society. Group Therapy.

The Mahablog

No, Donald, “We” Don’t Have All the Cards

I was in the middle of writing a post about Trump and Iran when I saw this:

Link to article.

Multiple scientists who serve on an independent board established to guide the nation’s nearly $9 billion basic science funding agency were terminated from their positions Friday by President Donald Trump.

Members of the National Science Board, which helps govern the National Science Foundation, were dismissed in a message from the Presidential Personnel Office thanking them for their service, according to screenshots shared with The Washington Post: “On behalf of President Donald J. Trump, I’m writing to inform you that your position as a member of the National Science Board is terminated, effective immediately.”

No reason was given. There’s no indication they will be replaced. Now on to the main topic:

Trump must be a dreadful poker player, if indeed he has ever played poker. He’s the sort who would draw a third six and go all-in.

So today he pulled this:

President Trump said Saturday he called off plans for U.S. envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner to travel to Pakistan for Iran peace talks. He cited wasted time and confusion over Iran’s leadership, adding, “we have all the cards.”

“I just cancelled the trip of my representatives going [to] Islamabad, Pakistan, to meet with the Iranians,” the president wrote on Truth Social. “Too much time wasted on traveling, too much work!”

“Besides which, there is tremendous infighting and confusion within their ‘leadership,'” he said. “Nobody knows who is in charge, including them. Also, we have all the cards, they have none! If they want to talk, all they have to do is call!!!”

No, moron, “we” don’t have “all the cards.” They have the Strait of Hormuz. That is at least a straight flush, if not a royal flush. And after wasting so much ordnance to no good effect I’m not sure we even have a full house any more. More like a ten-high straight, at best. And heaven forbid anyone on your team actually did some work to clean up the mess you made. I keep reading Iran believes it can absorb more pain than the U.S. can, so don’t hold your breath waiting for them to call.

The Associated Press reports that Trump says Iran presented new offers 10 minutes after he canceled US team’s trip. The link goes to a video I  haven’t watched. I doubt Iran presented anything. See Maziar Motamedi at Al Jazeera, Trump claims on Iranian concessions trigger questions, rejections in Tehran. This was published about a week ago, but it makes a point I don’t think most people are getting.

United States President Donald Trump’s announcements about securing major concessions from Tehran have riled supporters of the Iranian establishment, prompting rejections and clarifications from the authorities.

Several current and former senior officials, state media and the Islamic Republic’s hardcore backers expressed anger, frustration, and confusion after the US leader made a series of claims, with days left on a two-week ceasefire reached on April 8.

Trump on Friday said Iran and the US would jointly dig up the enriched uranium buried under the rubble of bombed Iranian nuclear sites, and transfer it to the US. He claimed Iran had agreed to stop enriching uranium on its soil.

He also said the Strait of Hormuz had been opened and would never be closed again, while the US naval blockade of Iran’s ports remained in place, and sea mines were removed or were in the process of being removed.

Iran promptly denied all of that. The Strait, which may have been tentatively opened, was promptly closed again. Trump was lying his ass off. This may be a tactic he used in real estate deals, but it doesn’t work in international relations. And as I’ve said before, I  honestly think what he’s trying to do is will what he wants to happen into reality. If he wants it enough and says it forcefully enough, it must come true.

It’s probably just as well Kushner and Witkoff aren’t going back to the talks. I’ve read the Iranians seriously don’t like them anyway. I don’t believe there can be any resolution between the Trump Administration and Iran. A lot of people are in for a lot of hurt until Trump can be forced to back off and let someone else engage with Iran in peace talks. And I don’t know how that will happen.

Update: Josh Marshall:

It all comes back to the foundational fact that Trump lost control of the situation and lost the conflict itself in the first days. Everything since has simply been an effort to ignore or bluster through or deny that fact. Trump wants out of the war so he’s not willing to use the level of force that might prevail over the Iranian blockade. The Iranian leadership sees that just as clearly as everyone else. And as he waits he and the global economy sustain damage. He’s stuck and since he won’t recognize that fact the conflict and the massive damage to the global economy continues, even if the scale of the fighting, for the moment, doesn’t.

Also — here’s an update from Mother Jones on Trump’s plan to reinstate firing squads to carry out the federal death penalty. Someone agrees with me that they just get off on brutality.

We Haven’t Hit Bottom Yet, Folks

I did not know until today that RFK the Lesser rejects germ theory — “the unquestionable scientific idea that specific pathogenic microbes cause specific diseases,” it says here.

As Ars Technica reported last year, Kennedy wrote about his germ theory denialism explicitly in his 2021 book The Real Anthony Fauci. In it, Kennedy maligns germ theory as a tool of pharmaceutical companies, scientists, and doctors to promote the use of modern medicines. Instead of accepting germ theory, Kennedy promotes a concept akin to the discarded terrain theory, in which diseases stem not from germs, but from imbalances in the body’s inner “terrain.” Those imbalances are claimed to be caused by poor nutrition and exposure to environmental toxins and stressors. (In his book, Kennedy erroneously labels this as “miasma theory,” but that is a different theory that suggests diseases derive from breathing bad air, vapors, or mists from decaying or corrupting matter. The idea was supplanted by germ theory, while terrain theory was never widely accepted.)

There is something seriously wrong with that man. He should probably be in some kind of sheltered or assisted living situation where he can be monitored. I’m serious.

And then I read that Trump is bringing back firing quads for federal executions. Trump is a big believer in executions, apparently. There is no data anywhere showing that the death penalty deters crime.

A new study of more than three decades of FBI homicide data by the Death Penalty Policy Project has found that, after 1,600 executions, the public and police are actually safer in states that don’t have or have recently abolished the death penalty. And, among the death penalty states, the public and police are safer in states that currently have official moratoria on executions or have rarely executed anyone.

Moreover, the states that are now most actively carrying out executions are among the least safe for the public and the most dangerous for police. They have failed to execute their way into violence prevention. From a public safety perspective, the death penalty has been a pointless exercise in cruelty.

The death penalty persists not because it deters crime, but because some people just really want to execute other people. I also understand the DoJ is proposing to expand “death penalty eligible offenses.” Oh, goody.

I understand Witkoff and Kushner are on their way to Iran for new talks. No mention of J.D. Vance. And do see Iran War Has Drained U.S. Supplies of Critical, Costly Weapons by Eric Schmitt and Jonathan Swan at the New York Times. Trump is squandering our national arsenal of weapons at an alarming rate. Trump also seems to have grown bored with the war and doesn’t want to talk about it.

At The New Republic, see Malcolm Ferguson, Trump’s Latest Truth Social Rampage Proves He’s Hanging On by a Thread. A sample:

Just after midnight, Trump reposted a message from the Border Patrol union calling on “extreme leftist advocate” Senator Chuck Schumer to resign over his recent comments in which he said “nobody respects” ICE or Border Patrol. Just one minute after that, Trump delusionally reposted a random allegation that former President Obama staged a “seditious conspiracy” to overthrow the U.S. government in 2016. He then made four more posts about how Obama and Hillary Clinton should be charged with treason. This was all before 1:00 a.m.

I really am an American history nerd. We’ve had some presidents who were struggling with sub-optimal mental states during their tenure. Franklin Pierce, for example, lost his only child who hadn’t died in infancy — an 11 year old son — in a train accident shortly before his inauguration. He seemed under a cloud and drank too much during his single term. He is blamed tor pushing the nation toward secession and Civil War. In spite of being a northerner he supported slavery and thought the abolitionist movement was dangerous radicalism.  But from all I have read about him he doesn’t seem to have been even half as irrational as Donald Trump.

Trump vs Reality

Heather Cox Richardson writes that the wheels are coming off the MAGA bus. CNN reports that the bottom could be falling out in Trump’s polls. The Virginia redistricting referendum passed yesterday. It was close, as polls predicted. But I wonder if it would have passed before Trump decided to go to war with Iran. Ultimately Congress has to ban gerrymandering, both political and racial, and maybe that can happen after 2028, But for now I’m glad to see Dems put up a fight.

Update: See Greg Sargent at The New Republic, How Trump Accidentally Handed Dems Their Big Win in Virginia.

What’s going on with Iran is just a bleeping mess. I understand Iran is seizing ships in the Strait of Hormuz and the U.S. is still blockading ports. No talks are going on, last I heard. And I don’t believe Trump and his so-called negotiating team and cabinet flunkies are capable of straightening this mess out.

Do see David Graham, The Aides Keeping the President in the Dark. The Wall Street Journal reported a few days ago that Trump had to be kept out of the room where aides were tracking the efforts to locate and rescue missing airmen. And he had to be kept out of the room because he was hysterical and screaming at everyone and basically just getting in the way. I take it Trump is one of those people who flies off the handle when told bad news. So his aides just don’t bring him bad news, because they’re afraid of his temper. He’s given highly, um, curated news. So he doesn’t know what’s going on, yet he’s in charge of it. “But if the president can’t handle reality, the problem is ultimately with him—not with the information he’s receiving,” Graham writes.

And support for impeaching Trump is growing; see Elliott Morris at Strength in Numbers.

Shifting gears a bit — Pentagon Pete has decided that U.S. military personnel needn’t bother about getting an annual flu shot. So let’s hope a war doesn’t start during flu season.

We’re seizing this moment to discard any absurd, overreaching mandates that only weaken our war-fighting capabilities,” Hegseth said in a video posted to his social media channels. “In this case, this includes the universal flu vaccine and the mandate behind it.”

Hegseth said that under a new policy, soldiers would be able to take the vaccine if they believed it was in their best interest, billing it as an effort to “restore freedom and strength to our joint force.”

“But we will not force you, because your body, your faith and your convictions are not negotiable,” he said.

What the actual bleep. This is from The Hill:

He called the flu shot requirement part of “absurd, overreaching mandates that only weaken our warfighting capabilities.” 

“Our men and women in uniform were forced to choose between their conscience and their country, even when those decisions posed no threat to our military readiness,” Hegseth said of the previous guidelines. “The notion that a flu vaccine must be mandatory for every service member everywhere in every circumstance at all times is just overly broad and not rational.”

Has Hegseth never had the flu? Maybe he did but was too drunk to notice. And the guy who did his Bible study by watching Pulp Fiction has suggested that mandatory vaccines are somehow anti-Christian. The only denominations that discourage vaccines are Christian Science and Dutch Reformed Congregations, and even with those folks it’s not an outright ban.

Personally, I think people who are such pathetic weenies that having to get a flu shot weakens their warfighting capabilities shouldn’t be in the military. And, again, would you rather they got the flu?

I read some letters my Grandpa wrote when he was serving in World War I. While he was still in training somebody in his barracks came down with the measles, and the whole unit was quarantined. It delayed their deployment. (Grandpa had already had the measles, but he wasn’t happy about being cooped up in the barracks.) If vaccination rates fall too low in the military it really could get in the way of deployments. Duh.

Do see George Washington’s Woke Vaccines by Thomas Lecaque at The Bulwark. General Washington mandated smallpox “vaccines” for his troops during the Revolution. The “vaccine” of his day was primitive and genuinely dangerous. Science hadn’t discovered germs yet. But it was known that people who survived smallpox never got it again. So doctors took pus from an active pustule of an infected person, and then inserted that pus into the skin of a non-infected person via a small incision. With luck you’d get a mild case of smallpox that didn’t kill you.

Serious reactions to today’s flu shots are extremely rare. And as Lecaque points out, military personnel are also required to get several other vaccines. Why is Pete singling out flu?

Speaking of measles, I recommend Measles Took My Daughter. This Is What I Want Everyone to Know. by Rebecca Archer in the New York Times (gift link). Measles is much more dangerous than people assume it is. And flu can be dangerous, too. I hate anti-vaxxers.

See also CDC won’t publish report showing covid shots cut likelihood of hospital visits.

Finally, I recommend Quinta Jurecic at The Atlantic, DOJ’s First ‘Weaponization’ Report Is a Bust. The DoJ’s report is on “abuses of the criminal justice process” under the Biden administration.

The report focuses on prosecutions of anti-abortion demonstrators convicted for preventing patients from entering abortion clinics. In the working group’s telling, the Biden administration “unfairly targeted” anti-abortion Christians under the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act, which, much as its name suggests, prohibits blocking entry to facilities that provide reproductive health care. “No Department should conduct selective prosecution based on beliefs,” Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche—who stepped into the role after Trump fired Bondi earlier this month—said in a statement about the working group’s findings. CBS reported that the Justice Department had fired at least four prosecutors involved in pursuing those FACE Act cases.

The anti-abortion wackadoos don’t just block access. Some of them have entered clinics during working hours and directly interfered with patient care. And over the years hundreds of abortion clinics have been set on fire, firebombed, and vandalized, and abortion clinic personnel have been assaulted and even shot dead a few times. But according to Trump’s people, trying to protect abortion clinics and their personnel and patients is anti-Christian bias. Right.

This Is Hopeless

Just noting quickly that the U.S. has seized an Iranian cargo ship while preparing for talks. This is from the New York Times:

A U.S. Navy destroyer on Sunday attacked and seized an Iranian cargo ship that defied an American blockade of Iran’s ports, President Trump said, posing a fresh threat to the fragile cease-fire that is set to expire this week.

Mr. Trump announced the attack hours after a White House official said the U.S. was dispatching a high-level delegation including Vice President JD Vance to peace talks in Pakistan, even as Iranian state media said Tehran had not yet agreed to a meeting.

What is the bleeping point? Does Trump still think he can bully Iran into whatever it is he’s asking them to do? The Strait was open, but Iran closed it again because of the U.S. Navy blockade.

Update: The story thus far — Late last week it appeared that tensions with Iran were at least de-escalating a bit. There was a cease fire of sorts, although Israel wasn’t abiding by it. Iran said the Strait of Hormuz was open. There was opportunity for more negotiation for whatever Trump wants from the situation, which changes by the hour. But he probably could have gotten something that he could call a win. Things might have settled down, albeit with Iran in a much stronger position than before and continuing to control the Strait of Hormuz.

Well, bleep that. Trump had to escalate the situation for no discernible reason. The U.S. blockade of Iranian ports continued, so Iran closed the Strait again. The U.S. attacked and seized an Iranian cargo ship. and now Iran says talks are off. Al Jazeera:

Islamabad, Pakistan – Iran has signaled that it has no plans to send negotiators to Islamabad for a new round of talks with the United States, threatening Pakistan’s plans for multiday negotiations between the warring nations less than 48 hours before a fragile ceasefire is set to expire.

Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei said on Monday Washington had “violated the ceasefire from the beginning of its implementation”, citing the US naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz since April 13, and the overnight capture of an Iranian container ship by the US military as breaches of the truce as well as international law.

He warned that if the US and Israel launched aggression again, Iranian forces “will respond accordingly”, while reaffirming that Tehran’s 10-point proposal, submitted before the first round of Islamabad talks, remained its basis for any negotiation.

“The US is not learning its lessons from experience,” Baghaei said, “and this will never lead to good results.”

The enormous majority of U.S. voters would have been content with gas prices coming back down as a “good result.” Now gas prices are shooting up again. And after this I don’t see Iran opening the Strait again until the U.S. completely withdraws. Which Trump/Hegseth won’t want to do, because that would be an admission of defeat. I suspect we’re at an impasse that could last a while.

Paul Krugman writes that if the Strait remains closed for very much longer — say, another three months — we’re looking at a global recession. It’s already hit Asian countries very hard. See The Forces of Scarcity Hitting Asia May Soon Spread Across the World in the New York Times. It could be a lot like the inflation-inducing shortages during the Covid pandemic, just without the masks and social distancing. And, of course, the entire world will blame the U.S.

Way to go, Donnie.

Snatching Even More Defeat from the Jaws of Defeat

So the Strait of Hormuz is closed again, I take it. It was open, but as I write this on Saturday evening it’s closed. Iran has fired on some tankers that were underway, thinking they were safe. And this happened because the United States is continuing to blockade the shipping lanes. Why are we blockading the shipping lanes? I have no idea. And the Wall Street Journal is running a headline saying the U.S. is preparing to board Iran-linked ships. I can only read the first paragraph —

The U.S. military is preparing in coming days to board Iran-linked oil tankers and seize commercial ships in international waters, according to U.S. officials, expanding its naval crackdown beyond the Middle East.

Why are we doing that? Maybe the WSJ explains it behind the paywall. It makes no sense to me.

Paul Krugman complains that Trump can’t even surrender right.

When you’re losing a war, but it’s not an existential defeat, your country, your government can continue pretty much as before. Aside from the humiliation, there’s a well-established technique, which is to declare victory and pull out. But it appears that Trump can’t even pull that off. …

…The United States has started imposing a blockade on Iran, which hurts the Iranians. It does give them a reason to seek a deal, but only if they get something out of it. So if allowing ships to start carrying oil and LNG and fertilizer and helium out of the Gulf allows them to sell their own oil again and to import food, which apparently is an important issue for Iran, then that’s a deal that can be done. It will, in practice, be a strategic defeat for the United States, but something that the Trump administration could try to spin as a victory.

But in order to get that, you have to actually deliver on that deal. You can claim that you’re winning and that they’re surrendering, not us, but you have to actually deliver on the deal. What Trump tried to do was to say, great, they’re opening up the strait, but meanwhile, we’re going to continue our blockade. And also, they have promised that we can have the uranium, which they had not.

That doesn’t work. It’s just basic logic. Why would the Iranians agree to a deal if they don’t get a lifting of the US embargo, don’t get their ability to sell oil and their ability to import food back? If that’s what’s going to happen, then you might as well keep the strait blocked. So what was this supposed to be? What was the idea? What was the thinking?

Krugman wonders if Trump is able to face the reality that he screwed up and lost a war. I suspect he can’t. IMO the continuing blockade only makes sense if Trump seriously thinks he can still entirely bend Iran to his will if he is just badass enough. He can’t admit he lost.

This is from Politico, published yesterday — Trump keeps claiming victory in Iran. Our new poll shows voters aren’t buying it.

New results from The POLITICO Poll show that support for military action is weak — just 38 percent of Americans back the strikes — and views remain largely unchanged from the days following the joint U.S.-Israel strikes, even as the administration has now had weeks to make its case.

This was predictable. And I don’t see anything happening that will improve public opinion. The best thing for Trump would have been to just accept Iran opening the Strait and withdraw, and maybe try to keep talking to them about the uranium. And then hope that by the midterms voters will have other things on their minds. But no. And more and more voters are finally realizing that Trump is nothing but a big bag of l’excrément, as the French might say.

Elsewhere — you’ve probably heard about the bombshell exposé of Kash Patel at The Atlantic. Here’s a gift link — The FBI Director Is MIA by  Sarah Fitzpatrick. Patel is threatening to sue.

See also Trump seeks ‘resolution’ of his $10bn lawsuit against IRS, spurring concern at Al Jazeera. Yeah, he still expects the IRS to just give him $10 billion. Because he wants it.

About the Incompetence

I can’t say I understand the new 10-day cease fire and how it came about. Trump seems to want to take credit, but I doubt it had anything to do with him or his crack[ed] “negotiating” team of Vance, Kushner, and Witkoff. Iran says the Strait of Hormuz is open for shipping, but Trump says his blockade of Iran is still in force. Whatever. Josh Marshall is calling it a massive strategic win for Iran.

There are also reports that the sailors and troops stationed near Iran are not getting enough to eat.

One image shows a single dreary tortilla alongside a lump of what looks to be pulled pork or chicken. The other shows two horrid-looking slabs of meat alongside a pile of sliced carrots.

And the food is starting to run low. Dan F., a former Marine whose daughter is serving aboard the USS TripolitoldUSA Today that his daughter reported no fresh produce, low stock of hygiene products, and rationing of all non-perishable food.

For the normally hyper-competent U.S. military to fail at basic logistics is pretty shocking. I blame Pentagon Pete. He may have fired too many key people because they happened to be Black or women.

Speaking of incompetence, do read What I Saw Inside the Kennedy Center by Josef Palermo at The Atlantic. Palermo spend ten months working in the Kennedy Center for the Arts after Trump took it over. Palermo was hired to organize art exhibits in the Center. But most of the people Trump brought in to run the Center, including the head guy Richard Grenell, apparently have no interest or background in the arts and got their jobs because they were politically connected. Grenell wasn’t even there much of the time, although he must have been drawing a fat salary. The incompetence Palermo describes is staggering.

See also Donald Trump’s Incompetence Is Costing Him the Country by Matt Bai at Rolling Stone. I hope it’s not behind a paywall; I think RS gives you a few freebies. It does seem to me that people in the U.S. are catching on to what a total vacuum Trump really is. The rest of the world had it figured out awhile back. And of course it isn’t just Trump; his cabinet is incompetent also. Trump doesn’t understand what competence is, I don’t think.

Paul Krugman notes that “The long-running University of Michigan index of consumer sentiment just hit its lowest point ever recorded.” Ever recorded, mind you. And Krugman questions why that would be true, as the economy has been worse. After considering what some other economists have said, Krugman says “I believe that the current extremely negative sentiment is a result of Americans’ correct sense that they have been lied to.”

Trump is still telling people that the economy is booming and they should be grateful to him for it. I take it there is growing skepticism.

Is Anybody Actually Governing?

Trump has a sad.

This is a crazy person

[image or embed]

— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) April 16, 2026 at 4:09 PM

Yep, some federal judge is not letting Trump build his ballroom

A federal judge set new limits on President Donald Trump’s planned White House ballroom, saying construction could proceed only on an underground portion of the project deemed necessary by the military, and not on the 90,000-square-foot aboveground addition that Trump has eyed to entertain VIP guests.

“National security is not a blank check to proceed with otherwise unlawful activity,” U.S. District Judge Richard Leon wrote Thursday. He said the Trump administration could also take steps to secure the construction site to make it safe for people on the White House grounds, to protect the structural integrity of the building and to shield the underground work.

Also, too:

Leon chastised the Trump administration for its “incredible, if not disingenuous” interpretation of his order last month to halt work on Trump’s planned $400 million project until the president obtains authorization from Congress.

The judge’s original orderallowed the White House to do further construction to ensure “the safety and security of the White House” after officials said work on an underground emergency bunker was necessary to protect the president, his family and his staff.

Trump argued that Leon’s order allowed him to keep building the ballroom, too, citing his plans to add bulletproof glass, bomb shelters and other security features to the building.

Trump destroyed the old White House underground bunker when he destroyed the East Wing. The judge is letting him build a new and improved underground bunker, but not the ballroom.

The feud with the Pope continues. Trump is now claiming that Pope Leo said Iran could have nuclear weapons. Of course, he said no such thing. Leo has put out a new statement saying that “our Father’s heart is not with the wicked, the arrogant, or the proud.” Did you have anyone in mind, Your Holiness?

Speaker Mike Johnson and Vice President J.D. Vance have both made fools of themselves presuming to lecture the Pope on theology. See also Pope James David Vance the First by Tom Nichols at The Atlantic.

Perhaps  Trump ought to be worried that feuding with the Pope could cut into his support among Latinos. But never fear; Texas Republicans have a plan. See Josh Kovensky at TPM, Inside Texas Republicans’ Effort to Make the Midterms About Islamophobia.

Powerful officials like Gov. Greg Abbott (R) and Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) have made targeting Islam and the Muslim community a priority. Abbott has singled out a Dallas-area mosque with ambitious expansion plans, the East Plano Islamic Center (EPIC), while Paxton has followed up with investigations into EPIC as he promises to fight “Sharia law.” 

Local activists cast their fight against Islam as a crusade to preserve the Christian America that they know and love. Several of them told TPM that Islam poses a threat to their future. They’re not only echoing messaging from national politicians about the threat of Islam; they’re acting on it. 

“This has national potential,” Vinny Minchillo, a Republican consultant based in Plano, Texas, told TPM. “If you are a Republican candidate, you would like to not be talking about the economy right now. So this gives you an opportunity to control the debate and move it from economy to problems with Islam. That’s something you are gonna want to do.”

The population of Texas is less than 2 percent Muslim, and nearly all the Muslims in Texas live in the Dallas and Houston areas, I understand. And I have yet to meet anybody hysterical over “Sharia law” who knows what it even is. But yeah, the economy is going to hell and everybody is pissed at Trump, so let’s get the yahoos afraid of Muslims. And if some of the yahoos burn down the mosques, that’s just too bad, isn’t it?

Maybe Trump Will Just Go Away

I’m just writing something brief to let you know I haven’t disappeared. Among other things I had an ophthalmology appointment today and my vision is still blurry, but it’s cleared enough to see what I’m writing now.

More evidence that Trump has entered a cornered animal phase — see ‘Honeymoon is over now’: Trump turns vicious after another ally turns on him — drops brutal low blow and questions if her own people even like her.

Trump has now turned on his European ally, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, after she, like many, chastized him publicly. He angered religious leaders and lawmakers after posting an AI-generated image of himself appearing like Jesus Christ on Truth Social, including Pope Leo XIV.

Meloni, 49, took issue with the president repeatedly blasting the Pope for saying the “delusion of omnipotence” is triggering America’s military conflict with Iran. She called Trump’s verbal attack on the Chicago-born pontiff “unacceptable.”

According to EuroNews, Meloni further defended Pope Leo by adding, “The pope is the head of the Catholic Church, and it is right and normal for him to call for peace and to condemn all forms of war.”

The feud with the Pope is turning into a big deal. Trump responded,

“It’s [she] who’s unacceptable because she doesn’t mind that Iran has a nuclear weapon and would blow up Italy in two minutes if they had the chance,” Trump told the Italian daily.

“Do Italians like the fact that your prime minister isn’t giving us any help to get oil?” he asked. “Do people like her? I can’t imagine. I’m shocked by her. I thought she was brave, but I was wrong. She’s no longer the same person, and Italy will never be the same country again. Immigration is killing Italy and all of Europe.”

He’s one to talk about whether people like her. Trump’s approval numbers have sunk below 40 percent in most polls. And that’s in the U.S. You should see what they think of him in Europe.

I’ve gotten to be a big fan of Tom Nichols, who writes for The Atlantic and some other places. Something he wrote:

Why was Trump angry with Pope Leo? For the same reason that Trump ever gets mad at anyone: The Holy Father dared to criticize him. Last week, the president of the United States posted an expletive-filled threat—on Easter Sunday, no less—to destroy the ancient civilization of Iran. His supporters wrote this off as a clever gambit to bring an end to the war (which it has not). Leo called the threat “unacceptable,” blasted the “delusion of omnipotence” that led to the war, and said: “Enough of the idolatry of self and money! Enough of the display of power! Enough of war!”

If Trump is going to have a screaming fit every time some prominent person criticizes him, he will be having a whole lot of screaming fits from now on. The other world leaders are over any notion that they have to be nice to him for diplomacy’s sake.

The latest on the war front is that Trump is saying that the war in Iran is “close to over.” Of course it isn’t over, but this is so Trump. He got himself into a mess he doesn’t know how to fix, so he’s basically willing it away. It’s like when he kept saying that Covid was going away when it barely had gotten started, and he continued to say that it would just go away as millions died. Now he’s trying to will the war to go away.

Anyway, do see Donald Trump messed with the wrong pope by Christian Paz at Vox. This is not a feud Trump can win. Soon he’ll be saying the Pope is going to evaporate, somehow.

Amateurs

Update: Orbán concedes to Magyar’s Tisza after projections show opposition winning two-thirds majority!

The peace talks collapsed in less than 24 hours. Usually negotiations of that nature go on for days, weeks, months even. Now Trump has ordered the U.S. Navy to blockade the Strait of Hormuz.

“Effective immediately, the United States Navy, the Finest in the World, will begin the process of BLOCKADING any and all Ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz,” Trump posted Sunday on Truth Social, his social media site. The president also said he had instructed the Navy to interdict all ships that have paid a toll to Iran for traversing the strait, calling Tehran’s expanded control of the waterway “EXTORTION.”

Is there anyone on the planet not named Trump who thinks this is a good idea? I very much doubt it. We’ll be lucky if the moron doesn’t stumble us into World War III.

Trump has also claimed that  “massive numbers” of empty tankers are heading to the U.S. to fill up on oil and gas. He seems to think this is a good thing. But reality and Trump are rarely in the same ball park, so we’ll see if anyone can actually locate these tankers in any real-world sense.

Regarding the negotiations that failed, I saw this on BlueSky yesterday.

.Witkoff and Trump have also made millions through a cryptocurrency deal with Abu Dhabi last year. I suspect Abu Dhabi has some opinions about what’s been going on in the Strait of Hormuz.

Needless to say, no sane nation would send the likes of Kushner and Witkoff to these negotiations. On top of which, the Daily Beast reported this yesterday:

Vice President JD Vance and the president’s son-in-law Jared Kushner appear to be pushing completely different demands in nuclear talks with Tehran, just a day before negotiations are set to resume.

Vance is insistent that Iran have zero uranium enrichment capacity, while Kushner and special envoy Steve Witkoff had recently floated a softer deal in which the U.S. would supply Iran with uranium for civilian use, according to Fox News. …

… Tehran has already indicated it would prefer to deal directly with Vance over Kushner and Witkoff, reflecting deep distrust after earlier talks collapsed, according to CNN.

Regarding Vance, Josh Marshall wrote this yesterday

I’m no Trumper. I hate what they represent. But I can occasionally appreciate their approach to ritually humiliating their own. In this vein it’s sort of a nice touch that they’ve made JD Vance – who’s been leaking to basically every news outlet that will listen that he was 100% against this war and it’s totally not his fault – own it outright, wrap himself in it really in Pakistan.

Chef’s kiss as they say.

And while that was happening, Trump and his bleeping Secretary of State Marco Rubio were at some pro wrestling match in Miami. While the talks were collapsing.

This is not the way a responsible nation handles a sensitive international crisis. If I were Iran, I wouldn’t trust anything coming out of this administration, either.

Meanwhile, I’m guessing the Veep is spending his free time reading and re-reading the 25th Amendment.

Now for something completely different — I suppose I should say something about Eric Swalwell. I take it he’s pretty much toast. The sexual assault allegations against him appear to be credible, since multiple women came forward and multiple staffers have resigned from his gubernatorial campaign. if such allegations were entirely out of character I doubt the staffers would have resigned.

I remember being way underwhelmed by Swalwell during the 2019 Democratic presidential candidate debates. I gave him the “Mr. Obnoxious Award” after one debate. More recently he’s been on MSNBC quite a bit and seemed to be fighting the good fight. But it’s better this came out now than later, I suppose. I haven’t been paying much attention to the gubernatorial campaigns in California and have no idea how this will impact the election.

Cornered Animal Time?

Trump may have entered the wounded, cornered animal phase of his second term. Everything he’s touched in his second term is a damn mess — the economy, foreign policy, the bleeping White House and grounds. He’s even managed to make the Iranian regime stronger and the U.S. look weak and stupid — and friendless. Europe Is Done With Appeasing Trump writes Serge Schmemann at the New York Times:

There was a time when Mr. Trump’s stream of insults, falsehoods, expletives, threats and malice would have raised questions among foreign leaders as to whether Mr. Trump was being deliberately obnoxious to achieve a goal — say, to get European allies to pay more for NATO, or as a variant on the “madman theory” strategy devised by President Richard Nixon to convince rivals that the president was dangerously unpredictable. They tried to appease Mr. Trump with praise and pomp, hoping to steer him in a more productive direction.

But more than a year into Mr. Trump’s return to the White House, the Europeans, and much of the world, have concluded that no amount of bowing or scraping will win more than fleeting approval from him. The barrage of tariffs that opened the second Trump administration, aimed indiscriminately at friend and foe; the brazen demands that Denmark cede Greenland to the United States, and now the absence of any consultation with European allies before joining Israel in an attack on Iran that has affected the entire world, have erased any illusion among most Europeans that Mr. Trump is anything but an unpredictable, vindictive and uncontrollable danger. …

… Even Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni of Italy, one of Mr. Trump’s closest European allies, distanced herself from his seemingly unprecedented threats to Iran this week. “It is crucial to clearly distinguish between the responsibilities of a regime and the fate of millions of ordinary citizens,” she said. That effectively left Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orban, as Mr. Trump’s most loyal ally in Europe, which explains why Vice President JD Vance was dispatched to prop up Mr. Orban in advance of an election on Sunday that he may well lose. Mr. Orban’s stance on the Iran war, however, is unclear, especially after The Washington Post reported on Wednesday that Hungary offered to help Iran in 2024 after Israel caused thousands of pagers belonging to Hezbollah, Iran’s Lebanese proxy, to explode.

Trump doesn’t consult. He doesn’t get prior approval. He just jumps in and does what he wants to do in the moment. It’s how he’s always functioned. I’ve said it before, I’ll say it again — he’s never had a real job. He worked for his father, who ran the Trump company as an autocrat, and when Donald took over he ran the company the way his father ran it, making all the decisions alone. It really is just a small family business even though it owns a lot of real estate in several countries. He’s never been part of a business with a multi-level organizational structure responsible for diverse enterprises and product lines. And he’s too stupid to conceptualize what that’s even like. So he’s focused on remodeling the White House and paving over the Rose Garden and putting up stupid giant triumphal arches. He’s even trying to take over some municipal golf courses in the D.C. area to turn them into high-end Country Club-type golf courses. Nobody needed the President of the United States to take over municipal golf courses. Those were the courses for people who can’t afford Country Clubs.

It’s too bad Americans can’t get health care, but that’s not his problem. Let the states do that. He’s got to fight wars and build his ballroom and upgrade golf courses. And watch Fox News. Oh, and write epic Truth Social posts lashing out at former supporters who oppose his war in Iran.  He’s very busy.

So, yeah, he doesn’t really comprehend what his job is. He probably doesn’t appreciate how badly he’s screwing up.

Jonathan Rauch and Peter Wehner write in the New York Times,

It has been clear for a long time that President Trump is a person with a disorganized mind and a disordered personality. What the past few months and especially the past few weeks have brought into focus is how his pathologies have cascaded downward and outward through his administration. They have become institutionalized. The reason the administration so often does not act coherently is that it cannot. The world faces something new and baffling and frightening in Mr. Trump’s second term: a psychotic state.

And may I add, putting Trump in charge of the U.S. military is a bit like butting children in charge of the candy store. It’s become Trump’s favorite toy. And it’s why he wants to pump ghastly amounts of money into it to the detriment of everything else except his remodeling projects,  See Josh Marshall, The New Defense Budget.

You probably heard about the Pentagon meeting that sent a threat to Pope Leo if he doesn’t stop criticizing Trump. Da Pope from Chicago ain’t intimidated. I wrote about it at Patheos and also explain what the Avignon Papacy was and why it was a big deal.