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Culture War Roundup for the week of June 15, 2026

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The deal is crafted so they actually don't get any of that until the final agreement; it is also crafted to appear as though they get that beforehand; #11 is particularly deceptive in this manner. What they get immediately is an end to the blockade and permission to sell oil during negotiations.

Then I sincerely hope that the final agreement doesn't come to pass. You can't trust these guys as far as you can throw them, and no assets whatsoever should be unfrozen for them under any circumstances as long as they continue to be the #1 source of terrorism in the Middle East. There better be some teeth behind the "no nukes" part of the deal, or this is worse than the JCPOA.

The $300 billion not being taxpayer funded is great, but that's still $300 billion going towards the terrorist capital of the world.

The important thing for the US is the nuclear material. Terrorism in the middle east -- outside of shooting at ships in the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf/Strait of Hormuz/Gulf of Oman -- honestly, isn't a huge US problem. It's more of a problem for Israel. I expect the final agreement will say that Iran won't support terrorist groups in Lebanon and Israel won't attack Lebanon, and that part of the agreement will last about 5 minutes before it is violated.

That was my (very rough, uninformed) understanding of the famous Obama Iran deal - good for Iran, good for the United States, bad for Israel. So naturally Israel has leapt at every chance it can get to sabotage it.

I am waiting for the "only Nixon could go to China" moment, translated into the current situation as "only Trump could abandon Israel."

Trump has the unique opportunity to forge a reasonably lasting peace with Iran and getting them to abandon "death to America" and nuclear materials in exchange for completely abandoning Israel. It might get some bipartisan support, and it would be politically impossible for a democratic president and most republican presidents.

In this way, Trump could legitimately claim to have put America first, and I would admit that he secured an excellent deal. He would get a lot of heat for it, but I think it would slide right off him and he would be able to sell it to the public as a win.

I don't put any faith in Trump to take advantage of good opportunities he has, but in the abstract I would say, at least, that a re-ordering of American alliances in the Middle East seems like a good idea.

Part of what's baffling about the current situation is that, in pure geo-strategic terms, there is no particularly compelling reason for Iran and the United States to hate one another. Neither is there a particularly compelling reason for Israel and Iran to hate one another. Neither is there a very good reason for the United States to be ride-or-die with Israel.

In some ways it's quite sad - historically Persia has been relatively friendly to Jews, at least by the standards of the region. The current hatreds in the region are almost entirely post-WWII. The Americans supported the British with the Mossadegh coup back in the 50s, and then bungled responses to the revolution in 1979, and there's lingering hatred from that even though there isn't a very good reason today why America and Iran can't get along. If the Americans can be good friends with the Saudis, well, the Iranians certainly aren't any worse than the Saudis, morally speaking. At times the Iranians have signalled willingness to cooperate as well - didn't they offer to be supportive with regard to America's invasion of Afghanistan, right up until Bush declared them 'Axis of Evil', unnecessarily making enemies?

As regards Israel, it's partly symbolic - Iran has ambitions of being (and tries to present itself as) the de facto leader of the Islamic world, and because there is incredibly strong grassroots sympathy for Palestine in the Islamic world, presenting themselves as champions of the Palestinian cause is good for that. (Meanwhile potential rivals like the Saudis undermine themselves by slowly normalising relations with Israel.) Obviously the hatred is partly sincere as well, but my point is that the conflict between Iran and Israel is largely not over material interests.

And of course for the last leg, it is pretty unclear what America gets out of its alliance with Israel. The Israelis do not seem like very good allies. I cannot blame Israel for prioritising Israeli interests first, or taking the best deal they can get, but there certainly seems to be room for America to ask for more out of the arrangement, or failing that, to scale back their support for Israel.

Iran needs to oppose Israel's existence as a state to harness Islamic street credibility, the survival of Shia theology in a Sunni dominated world may depend on it at this point.

As for America's support for Israel, it's largely due to entrenched jewish capture of US media, cultural, and financial institutions. Not as a deliberate act, but as a consequence of typical jewish high-IQ, educational attainment, and preference for high prestige, high status employment. US jewish elites are uniquely vulnerable to Israeli propaganda to support them at all costs. In turn, the US gets strongly nudged to support Israeli political ambitions.

The question of sources of credibility is an interesting one - it hasn't stopped, for instance, Saudi Arabia from cooling its hostility to Israel. But then the Saudis have alternative sources of Islamic legitimacy, from their role as Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques. Governing/protecting the Hejaz provides a kind of de facto legitimacy, whereas the Iranians have to fight a bit harder to establish their credentials, especially since, as Shia, it's harder to be accepted by the Sunni-majority Islamic world.

In the US, I don't like the phrase "entrenched Jewish capture", which I think sounds a bit too conspiratorial or pejorative, even though I think it is true that American support from Israel clearly has a lot to do with the facts that there are a lot of Jews in America, American Jews are a disproportionately successful and well-represented demographic, and Jews have extremely high levels of support for Israel. I don't think this is malevolent or in any way democratic bad faith, particularly because American support for Israel is substantially a result of American Jews successfully convincing other Americans to support Israel. (Notably as of these 2024 polls, Protestant support for Israel, at 66%, is very close to Jewish support for Israel at 73%.) It's not a case of Jews covertly manipulating America into doing something most Americans oppose. They convinced most Americans of something, and then America did it. That is democratic politics working as intended!

Yeah, entrenched jewish capture is not the most neutral term. Jewish sociocultural dominance might work, but doesn't grasp how integrated jewish ideas are into law, philosophy, etc. of the US.

On jews convincing americans to support Israel willingly, this is generally true except for the most recent Trump backed excursion into Iran. There was no buildup period to gain broad public support for a sustained conflict against Iran, just Netanyahu convincing Trump to start the hostilities himself.