Categories
Update

The Treason Question

“Tucker Carlson has claimed he is facing potential criminal charges,” explains a Newsweek report,  “stemming from his conversations with people in Iran after U.S. government agencies ‘read my texts.’

Posting on X, the former Fox News host said the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) was preparing “a crime report” to the Department of Justice (DOJ) on the basis that he was “acting as an agent of a foreign power” by conversing with individuals from Iran. Carlson denied these alleged claims.

”Tucker Carlson Facing ‘Foreign Agent’ Charges, He Says—’They Read My Texts’,” Newsweek (March 15, 2026).

The administration faces increasing pressure to do something about Tucker, but also increasing criticism. When Fleur Hassan-Nahoum, an Israeli trade official, tweeted that “Tucker Carlson should be arrested and tried for treason,” she got blowback, not least from Glenn Greenwald:

Who the f**k are Israelis to dictate that American journalists should be arrested and prosecuted for “treason”?

As always, these Israelis are not alone. They have a horde of loyalists in the US echoing this.

By “treason,” they mean: speaking and reporting critically on Israel.

But Hassan-Nahoum got some X support from Meghan McCain:

Secretly communicating with an enemy of the United States during an active war conflict makes you a traitor in my book.

Full stop.

Clayton Morris, of the Redacted podcast, responded with historical context:

The last time the US declared war was June 1942. There’s no declaration of war. Full stop.

So, for full historical context, note that the last time a U.S. president imprisoned war critics outright was in World War I, when Woodrow Wilson’s war machine

closed down about 75 newspapers and magazines, prevented the distribution of specific issues of many more, and put journalists on trial in federal courts. This entire operation was managed from the landmark Washington building that would become, 100 years later, the Trump International Hotel.

Adam Hochschild, “America’s Top Censor — So Far,” Mother Jones (September-October 2022).

While Donald Trump has said the war in Iran is almost over, we will see how long it drags on. We may also see that, when push comes to shove, the administration will go so far as to imprison its critics, such as Tucker Carlson.

Tucker Carlson’s discussion of the alleged case against him:

Categories
Thought

Will & Ariel Durant

Civilization exists by geological consent, subject to change without notice.

Will & Ariel Durant, The Lessons of History (1968). This pronouncement is often attributed — with grave authority — to Will Durant alone, cited as from a 1946 Ladies Home Journal article, “What Is Civilization?” This appears to be incorrect: read the article, it’s excellent; but the apothegm is not to be found there.

Categories
Today

Julius & George

March 15 was “the Ides of March” in the Roman calendar. On that date in 44 BC, Julius Caesar, Dictator of the Roman Republic, was stabbed to death by a handful of prominent senators.

On the same date in AD 1783, General George Washington eloquently entreated his officers not to support the Newburgh Conspiracy. His plea was successful: the threatened coup d’état never took place.

Categories
Update

Hormuz, the Chokepoint

“The Strait of Hormuz has been effectively shut with Iran attacking vessels and its Supreme Leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, vowing to keep it blocked,” Roshneesh Kmaneck summarized yesterday, at Firstpost. “This has led to panic about the supply of oil and natural gas. Countries are now scrambling for alternative routes. But experts note that none of the options can replace the oil normally shipped through the critical Gulf chokepoint.”

Roughly 20 percent of global petroleum production is in jeopardy. While Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates can work around the obstruction using a pipeline, Iraq and Kuwait and other major users of the passage cannot:

Share of the petroleum cargo passing through the Strait of Hormuz, by country.

Rep. Tim Burchett’s comment, quoted by Paul Jacob on this site yesterday, remains of course completely unaffected by the addition of other countries’ supplies passing through the region. “How much oil does America get from Iran? Zero.” Well, North America gets about 2.5 percent of all of the Hormuz-squeezed oil (not exactly zero, but close). Regardless, the economics of supplies and demands worldwide still contribute to the determination of gas prices in America.

And Burchett remains a bonehead. No update required on that.

Categories
Thought

Karl Kraus

Analysis is the beggar’s need to explain how riches come to be; whatever he doesn’t possess must have been acquired by swindle; the other merely has the fortune; he, fortunately, knows.

Karl Kraus, arguing against Sigmund Freud’s psychoanalysis of Michaelangelo, as quoted in The Portable Curmudgeon (1987), Jon Winokur, editor.
Categories
Today

The Truce of Ulm

The Truce of Ulm was signed in Ulm, Baden-Württemberg, on March 14, 1647, between France, Sweden, and Bavaria. This treaty was developed after France and Sweden invaded Bavaria during the Thirty Years’ War.

Categories
free trade & free markets national politics & policies political economy

Stupid About Greed

Tough times. You encounter a politician. He takes your side on an important issue. He speaks eloquently and with apparent sense. But then switch the subject and suddenly he blurts out such stupidities that you wonder about his sanity, the state of the nation’s education, the very meaning of life itself.

Well, not that last one.

Let’s turn the page in our anti-hymnal to Representative Tim Burchett (R.-Tenn.). I’ve quoted him. He’s given off detectable glimmers of hope. Yet now he (in the words of an enthusiastic twitterer) “exposes the price of gas increasing in America has nothing to do with the Iran war.”

But what does he say?

“How much oil does America get from Iran? Zero.”

True enough. But so what? 

Our president’s un-declared war has resulted in conflagrations of oil wells and a cessation of petroleum transportation through the Strait of Hormuz. But while acid rain descends upon Iranians, it’s gas prices that concern Americans. And Burchett is disgusted.

“That’s how much this is a scam,” he said. “And these oil companies, shame on ’em. They’re using this opportunity to make record profits once again.”

We’ve heard this logic before. 

“It’s greed!”

No, it isn’t. Sure, I’m no economist — but I understand that the market for petroleum products is a worldwide one, and if supply collapses on the other side of the world, it’s going to affect prices over here. We may not buy from Iran, but folks elsewhere do, and when they cannot get what they need, they’ll go to competitors, and world prices will be bid up.

To avoid this natural process, we’d have to simultaneously decrease demand. And how would Burchett do that? 

The first casualty of a price hike is common sense.

Not here, though, for this is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.


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Categories
Thought

Joe Sobran

Nothing creates more awkwardness than saying things people can’t afford to admit they agree with. Disagreement is manageable. It’s agreement that wreaks havoc. If people disagree, they’ll debate you. If they secretly agree with something, but are furious with you for saying it, then they’ll try to shut you up by any means necessary. As Tom Stoppard puts it, ‘I agree with every word you say, but I will fight to the death against your right to say it.’

Joseph Sobran, “How I Was Fired by Bill Buckley,” Center for Libertarian Studies (1994).
Categories
Today

Planets & Moons & More

1781 — William Herschel discovered Uranus.
1809 — Sweden’s King Gustav IV Adolf was deposed in the Coup of 1809, a political result of the disastrous Finnish War with the Russian Empire.
1814 — The Congress of Vienna declared Napoleon an outlaw following his escape from Elba.
1930 — News of the discovery of Pluto was announced by the Lowell Observatory. Then called the Ninth Planet, it was the result of a long search for “Planet X,” a theorized planet influencing the orbit of Neptune, the ice giant planet beyond Uranus. Clyde W. Tombaugh had discovered it the month before, on February 18. In 2006, in a grand gesture of logomachy, the International Astronomical Union demoted Pluto to “dwarf planet.” Pluto and its moons — Charon; Styx; Nix; Kerberos; and Hydra — are also now officially considered “trans-Neptunian objects.”
1969 — Apollo 9 returned safely to Earth after testing NASA’s $2.29 billion Lunar Excursion Module, overseen by Grumman.

Categories
Second Amendment rights

The Island of Dispossessed Guns

As a gun owner in Rhode Island, you may think that no matter what wacko state laws legislators impose to make it harder to buy weapons, at least you’ll remain secure in your right to the arms you’ve already legally purchased.  

Not so. Bearing Arms alerts us to the fact that two bills pending in the state legislature jeopardize your right to keep your already owned — lawfully obtained— firearms. One bill does so immediately. The other paves the way for follow-up legislation that does so immediately.

H8073 “updates” a bill passed last year that banned the sale of “assault weapons” — a kind of weapon that is clearly the opposite of those used to soothe and caress. Current “assault weapon” owners were grandfathered in. Having bought their “assault weapons” when it was legal to do so, owners wouldn’t have to give them up. 

But that was last year. Now, if H8073 becomes law, Rhode Islanders will have to turn in those weapons or face penalties like up to ten years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000.

Looking at the bill, you see a reference to restrictions on “manufacture, sale, and purchase of prohibited firearms” crossed out and replaced by reference to restrictions on “manufacture, sale, possession, and purchase” of same. Just a quick fix.

Another bill, H7755, would impose onerous training-certificate and waiting-period requirements for new handgun purchases. You would not need to comply to keep handguns you already have . . . unless the wording is ever changed.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.


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