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Twenty-one miles. That is the width of the Strait of Hormuz at its narrowest point — a sliver of water between the Omani coast and the Iranian shore that serves as the jugular vein of the global economy. Approximately one-fifth of all the oil consumed on Earth every single day passes through that channel. Natural gas from Qatar feeds the power grids of Europe and Asia. Tankers carrying fuel for hospitals, factories, and heating systems in dozens of nations transit those waters continuously. And in March 2026, Iran tried to shut it down.
Iran's Revolutionary Guard declared the Strait "closed." Iranian drones and missiles struck oil tankers, set fire to a fuel storage facility at Kuwait International Airport, hit a QatarEnergy oil tanker with a ballistic missile, and halted LNG production at some of the world's largest facilities. Saudi Arabia shuttered the King Fahd Causeway. Stock markets in the Gulf suspended trading. Global energy prices spiked. In a matter of days, Iran demonstrated exactly what it had always threatened: that it was willing to hold the world's energy supply hostage to avoid accountability for its own aggression. The Biden years gave us a preview of what Iranian emboldening looks like. Year after year of nuclear negotiations, of sanction waivers, of looking the other way as Iranian oil revenues funded Hezbollah and the Houthis. The result was a regime that grew more confident, more aggressive, and more dangerous with each passing year. When America signals it will not act, Iran acts. That is not a theory — it is a track record. Republicans understand something the globalist left refuses to accept: energy is not just an economic issue. It is a national security issue, a geopolitical weapon, and the foundation of every other element of modern civilization. When Iran mines the Strait of Hormuz, it is not just spiking gas prices — it is threatening to starve hospitals of generator fuel, to freeze manufacturing across Asia, to create the conditions for political instability in a dozen countries simultaneously. An adversary with that kind of leverage over the world economy is not a regional nuisance. It is a strategic threat of the first order. That is why the Trump administration's response was correct, and why the bipartisan Washington establishment's instinct to "de-escalate" would have been catastrophic. Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer — to his credit — allowed American forces to use British bases to strike Iranian targets threatening the Strait. France announced naval escort operations. Dozens of nations that depend on that waterway for their economic survival were quietly grateful that someone was willing to act. The Strait of Hormuz is not Iranian territorial water. It is an international waterway protected by international law, and any nation that attempts to close it by force is committing an act of war against the entire global trading system. There is also a domestic energy dimension to this story that deserves far more attention than it has received. American energy independence — the product of the shale revolution and years of deregulation championed by Republican administrations — is the single most important strategic asset the United States developed in the last two decades. Because of American oil and gas production, the United States is far less economically vulnerable to Hormuz disruptions than it was in 1973 or even 2005. That independence was not an accident. It was the result of policy choices: opening federal lands to drilling, streamlining pipeline permitting, resisting the green lobby's demands to kneecap domestic production in the name of climate ideology. The lesson of the Hormuz crisis is the same lesson Ronald Reagan tried to teach and every Democrat since has tried to unlearn: weakness invites aggression. Energy dependence creates leverage for adversaries. The countries of Europe — many of which spent the last decade shutting down nuclear plants and blocking domestic energy development in pursuit of green utopias — found themselves economically exposed and strategically helpless when Iran moved. America was not helpless. America acted. Securing the Strait of Hormuz is not optional. It is not someone else's problem. It is the kind of thing that only a nation with the military capability and the political will to use it can accomplish. Fortunately, for the first time in years, America has both.
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For over a decade, the DACA debate has been used as a political cudgel — a way for Democrats to accuse Republicans of heartlessness while avoiding the harder question they never want to answer: what is the rule of law worth if it can be suspended indefinitely by executive decree? The Board of Immigration Appeals' recent ruling — that DACA status alone is not sufficient grounds to avoid deportation — is not a cruel act. It is a necessary one. And it reopens a debate that Congress has dodged for far too long.
Let's start with the basics. DACA — Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals — was created by President Obama in 2012 not through legislation passed by Congress, but through executive action. Obama himself had said publicly, on multiple occasions before issuing DACA, that he did not have the constitutional authority to do so unilaterally. Then he did it anyway, because the legislative path was hard and the political payoff was immediate. That original sin has haunted the program ever since: built on shaky legal ground, subject to reversal by any subsequent administration, and incapable of providing the permanent certainty its recipients deserve and need. Republicans have never been monolithic on DACA's merits as a matter of human policy. Many conservatives feel genuine sympathy for individuals who were brought to this country as children, who have grown up here, who speak English, who pay taxes, and who have known no other home. The argument for some form of legal relief for that narrow population is not without weight. But sympathy for individuals does not make an unconstitutional executive action valid, and it does not excuse the refusal of Congress to address the underlying issue through the only legitimate vehicle available: legislation. The Board of Immigration Appeals' ruling does not deport anyone. It establishes a legal precedent: that DACA status, which was never a grant of legal immigration status in the first place, cannot by itself halt removal proceedings. That is legally correct. DACA was always explicitly described as "deferred action" — a temporary, discretionary pause, not a pathway to any permanent status. The Obama administration said so when it created the program. Courts have said so repeatedly. The only people pretending otherwise are Democratic politicians who found it more useful to keep DACA as a perpetual grievance than to actually solve the problem through legislation. That brings us to where the responsibility actually lies. Congress has had over a decade to pass the Dream Act or some version of comprehensive immigration reform that would address this population. It has failed to do so — not because Republicans categorically refused to discuss it, but because Democrats repeatedly chose to use DACA as a campaign issue rather than a legislative opportunity. When Republicans offered deals — border security in exchange for a DACA fix — Democrats walked away. They preferred the issue to the solution. The Trump administration's enforcement actions are not targeting law-abiding citizens. They are restoring the principle that immigration law means something — that the rules apply, that enforcement is not optional, and that the executive branch cannot simply decide which laws it will enforce based on political convenience. Nearly 300 DACA recipients have been arrested since Trump took office, the majority with criminal records or other aggravating factors. The idea that enforcement of immigration law is inherently cruel ignores the reality that open, unenforced borders carry their own human costs — in crime, in wage suppression for working-class Americans, and in the fundamental unfairness to legal immigrants who waited years to come here the right way. The solution is not complicated, even if it is politically difficult. Congress should pass legislation — narrow, targeted, and paired with meaningful border security measures — that provides a defined path for long-term DACA recipients with clean records while ensuring that future administrations cannot simply wave a magic wand and create new protected classes at will. That is what a functioning republic does: it writes laws, debates them, and passes them. It does not govern by executive memo and then act outraged when the next administration reads the memo differently. The DACA reckoning is not an ending. It is an overdue invitation to Congress to do its job. The question is whether Democrats are finally willing to legislate — or whether they would rather keep the wound open for another election cycle. There is an old saying that has guided American foreign policy at its finest: speak softly and carry a big stick. Theodore Roosevelt understood it. Ronald Reagan understood it. And Donald Trump, whatever his critics may say, understands it better than any president of the modern era. The unfolding ceasefire negotiations with Iran are not a sign of weakness or retreat — they are proof that the strategy is working exactly as intended.
Let's review the bidding. Before the strikes of February 28, Iran was an emboldened, nuclear-threshold state openly defying the international community. It had Hezbollah launching rockets into Israel from Lebanon, Houthi rebels mining the Red Sea, Iraqi militias killing American soldiers, and its own ballistic missile program advancing by the month. Diplomatic engagement — the Obama administration's preferred tool, culminating in the disastrous JCPOA — had produced nothing but a more confident and better-funded regime. Sanctions had bitten, but not broken. Iran had learned to absorb pressure because it never faced consequences it could not survive. That calculus changed on February 28. Within weeks of the initial strikes, mediators from Pakistan, Turkey, and Egypt were scrambling to find a venue where Iranian officials would even agree to sit across from American counterparts. That is a fundamentally different posture than the one Iran maintained for the previous decade, when it routinely ignored U.S. overtures or used talks as cover to advance its nuclear program. On April 21, President Trump announced a further extension of the ceasefire at the request of Pakistan, pending submission of an Iranian proposal. Read that again slowly: Iran — the same regime that, weeks earlier, had vowed the "complete destruction" of Gulf military infrastructure — was now submitting proposals and asking for more time. This is what negotiating from a position of strength looks like in practice. The mullahs are not coming to the table because they suddenly developed a love of peace. They are coming because they have no better options. Compare this to the approach favored by the foreign policy establishment — the think-tank set that has spent the last decade warning that any military action against Iran would trigger World War III, unleash regional chaos, and permanently destabilize the Middle East. Those same voices predicted catastrophe after the killing of Qasem Soleimani in 2020. The catastrophe never came. Iran blustered, lobbed a few missiles that conveniently missed, and backed down. The pattern has repeated itself: Iranian bluster is a negotiating tactic, not a strategic commitment. When the cost of escalation becomes real, the regime blinks. Now, some legitimate questions deserve honest answers. What are America's ultimate objectives, and how will we know when they are achieved? The Trump administration has articulated a clear framework: denuclearization, dismantlement of the IRGC's external terror apparatus, and a government in Tehran that is not actively at war with its neighbors and American forces. These are achievable goals — particularly now that the regime's top military and intelligence leadership has been eliminated and its conventional forces badly degraded. Critics on the right have raised concerns that any ceasefire amounts to letting Iran off the hook before the job is fully done. That concern deserves respect. A negotiated settlement that leaves Iran's nuclear program intact or allows the IRGC to reconstitute itself under new leadership would be a strategic failure, not a victory. The administration must resist pressure — from European allies, from Gulf states worried about their own economic exposure, and from war-weary factions in Congress — to declare success prematurely. The leverage America holds right now is enormous. It should not be squandered at the negotiating table. But the fundamental principle holds. Trump did not rush to the ceasefire table from a position of desperation. He went there having already achieved more in weeks than his predecessors managed in decades. Iran's supreme leader is dead. Its navy has been reduced. Its oil revenues have been disrupted. Its proxy networks have been thrown into disarray. If Iran now wants to talk, it is because it has finally learned the lesson that American weakness refused to teach: there are consequences for killing Americans and threatening our allies. Peace through strength is not a slogan. It is a doctrine — and right now, it is working. For decades, American presidents talked tough about Iran. They imposed sanctions, issued warnings, drew red lines, and watched as the Islamic Republic crossed every single one without consequence. They funded proxy wars, smuggled weapons to terrorist groups across the Middle East, seized oil tankers, and bankrolled Hezbollah and Hamas — all while the international community wrung its hands and called for "dialogue." That era is over.
On February 28, 2026, President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu did what no Western leader had the courage to do before them: they acted. In a coordinated strike of historic proportions, U.S. and Israeli forces eliminated Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei — the architect of four decades of Iranian-sponsored terror — along with his defense minister, the head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, and dozens of senior regime officials. In one night, the command structure of the world's foremost state sponsor of terrorism was dismantled. The left-wing media immediately went into overdrive. "Unprovoked," they cried. "Reckless," the usual suspects in Congress shrieked. But let's be clear about what was actually unprovoked: the October 7 massacre. The assassination of American soldiers by Iranian-backed militias in Iraq and Syria. The Houthi attacks on commercial shipping. The repeated drone strikes on U.S. bases across the Gulf. The Iranian-designed weapons killing Israeli civilians. The regime's relentless march toward a nuclear weapon. If that is what "peace" looked like with Iran, Americans should be grateful for this war. Iran's retaliation was swift and predictably vicious. Ballistic missiles rained down on Israel. Drones struck American embassies and military installations across Bahrain, the UAE, and Saudi Arabia. Three American service members were killed — and their sacrifice must never be forgotten. But here is the crucial difference between this administration and its predecessors: when Americans died, Trump did not hold a press conference and promise a "measured response." He sank an Iranian warship. He bombed Kharg Island, Iran's key oil export hub. He deployed Marines, amphibious assault ships, and additional strike groups to the region. He made clear that America would not blink. Critics will argue this destabilizes the Middle East. But what exactly was stable about the previous arrangement? A nuclear-threshold state openly funding terrorism on seven fronts, choking global shipping lanes, and assassinating dissidents on foreign soil — that was the "stability" the foreign policy establishment was so desperate to protect. Real stability comes from deterrence, and deterrence requires credibility. For years, America's credibility in the region had been hollowed out. Not anymore. The strategic logic of this operation is sound. Iran's supreme leader is dead. His son and successor, Mojtaba Khamenei, inherits a fractured regime, a battered military, and a population that — in cities across the country — took to the streets to celebrate. The IRGC's command structure has been decapitated. Iran's navy has been reduced. Its air defenses have been pounded. Its oil export infrastructure has been crippled. For the first time in a generation, the regime is fighting for its survival rather than projecting power abroad. Some will ask: what comes next? That is the right question. The Trump administration has been clear that the goal is not permanent occupation or nation-building — the catastrophic follies of previous decades. The goal is denuclearization, the dismantling of the IRGC's terror apparatus, and a government in Tehran that does not spend its people's money on rockets pointed at American allies. Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian has already reached out, suggesting diplomatic engagement is possible. That is precisely how strength works — it creates openings that weakness never could. The American people should be proud of their military. The men and women who executed these strikes with precision and professionalism represent the finest fighting force in human history. And they should feel reassured that for the first time in a long time, they have a commander-in-chief who gives them clear objectives, backs their mission, and does not apologize for American power on the world stage. History will not remember this as the day America started a war. It will remember it as the day America ended one — the long, grinding, asymmetric war that Iran had been waging against the free world for forty years. It just took a president with the spine to finish it. Public safety is one of the most basic responsibilities of government. If people cannot safely walk their streets, open their businesses, or send their children to school without fear, then little else in society works the way it should. That is why many Republicans argue that stronger policing and consistent law enforcement funding are not just policy preferences. They are necessary foundations for a stable and prosperous community.
For decades, local police departments have served as the first line of defense against crime. Officers respond to emergencies, stop violent offenders, investigate theft, and protect neighborhoods during moments of crisis. When departments are properly staffed and funded, they can respond quickly, build relationships with residents, and prevent crime before it escalates. When they are stretched thin, response times grow, investigations stall, and criminals become more emboldened. In recent years, debates about policing have grown increasingly intense. Some activists have pushed for cutting police budgets or redirecting funding away from traditional law enforcement. While concerns about accountability and training deserve serious discussion, reducing resources for police departments risks creating consequences that many communities cannot afford. Republicans tend to approach the issue from a practical standpoint. Law enforcement agencies cannot do their jobs effectively without adequate funding. Departments need trained officers, modern equipment, forensic tools, and updated technology to investigate crimes and keep communities safe. Budget cuts often mean fewer officers on patrol, less training, and reduced investigative capacity. When departments lack manpower, officers are forced to cover larger areas with fewer resources. This can lead to slower response times and reduced community engagement. In contrast, well funded departments can assign officers to neighborhood patrols, school safety programs, and community outreach efforts. These proactive approaches help build trust while also deterring criminal activity. Another reason many conservatives support stronger law enforcement funding is the impact crime has on working families and small businesses. When crime rises, it is often lower income neighborhoods that suffer the most. Families who cannot afford private security or to relocate depend heavily on local police for protection. Small business owners, who operate on tight margins, are especially vulnerable to theft, vandalism, and organized retail crime. Stable policing helps create the conditions where businesses can grow and jobs can flourish. Safe neighborhoods attract investment, support tourism, and encourage local entrepreneurship. When communities feel secure, they are more likely to spend time in public spaces, shop locally, and participate in civic life. Republicans also emphasize the importance of supporting the men and women who serve in law enforcement. Police officers face difficult and sometimes dangerous situations on a daily basis. They are asked to make quick decisions under pressure while protecting both victims and bystanders. Ensuring that officers receive proper training, mental health support, and competitive pay is essential for maintaining a professional and capable force. Investing in policing does not mean ignoring accountability. In fact, stronger departments can often implement better training, body camera programs, and oversight systems. These tools help maintain transparency while giving officers the resources they need to perform their duties responsibly. Technology also plays an increasingly important role in modern policing. From improved forensic laboratories to data driven crime analysis, new tools allow investigators to solve cases more efficiently and prevent crime patterns before they spread. Federal and state funding can help local departments adopt these technologies and stay ahead of increasingly sophisticated criminal networks. Border security and interstate crime are additional concerns frequently raised by Republicans. Criminal organizations often operate across state lines, making cooperation between federal, state, and local law enforcement essential. Funding helps support task forces, information sharing systems, and joint operations that target trafficking, drug distribution, and organized crime. Ultimately, the debate over policing comes down to priorities. Republicans generally argue that public safety must come first. A society that invests in law enforcement is investing in the well being of its citizens, the stability of its neighborhoods, and the vitality of its economy. Strong communities are built on the confidence that laws will be enforced fairly and consistently. When people trust that their government will protect them from violence and crime, they are free to focus on building businesses, raising families, and contributing to their communities. For many conservatives, supporting strong policing is not about politics. It is about recognizing a simple truth: safe communities are the foundation on which opportunity, prosperity, and freedom are built. |
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