Remember when the chief indictment of Donald Trump was that he was an isolationist? He never was. He was never a racist, either—though that charge will cling to him forever in the minds of those who need him to be one. Now he stands revealed as an interventionist. So which label sticks? The West is at war with Iran, with the opening strikes delivered by Israel and the United States. Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei is dead, along with dozens of the regime’s top elites. The Arab world has mobilized. The United Kingdom has entered the fight. Anti-war protests are already swelling in American streets; their dominant current is anti-Israeli. Yet this time something is different: pro-regime-change forces are also in the streets across the West—and inside Iran itself. The Persian lion is roaring.
I have written extensively on the Islamic Republic of Iran on this platform. (See Who’s Responsible for Iran’s Theocratic State? Israel and the Existential Threat of a Determined Iran; Iran, Nukes, and the Realities of Military Power: A Constitutional Perspective; US Strikes Iran’s Nuclear Facilities; Facing Down Evil.) I confess that my opinion on Iran has been troubled. On one hand, I oppose regime-change wars—they nearly always devolve into quagmires, and their moral justification is often tenuous. On the other hand, I sympathize deeply with the Iranian people, who have endured nearly half a century under theocratic authoritarianism. I have also pondered America’s failure to intervene earlier in other crises, most notoriously the rise of Nazism in Europe. When a nation possesses the power to end tyranny, should it not wield that power to liberate the oppressed? And in Iran’s case, what of its aggression against the United States and our ally Israel, the region’s bulwark of reason? At what point does that demand retaliation? How long should the United States tolerate a monstrous entity like the Islamic Republic?
As noted, much of the energy on the streets today is driven by a hatred of Israel. I recently opened the Google newsfeed to find a distressing headline from The Times of Israel: “For 1st time, Gallup poll shows Americans more sympathetic to Palestinians than to Israel.” Overall, 41 percent of Americans sympathize more with the Palestinians, and 36 percent sided with Israel, with the rest undecided or saying they favored both or neither. Digging into the crosstabs, 65 percent of Democrats sympathized with the Palestinians and only 17 percent with Israel. Younger adults—those 18 to 34—have become especially sympathetic toward the Palestinians. The poll also found, for the first time, that middle-aged Americans, those 35 to 54, expressed more sympathy for the Palestinians than the Israelis—a reversal from only last year. Americans over 55 remain more sympathetic toward Israel, but that gap has narrowed as well. Meanwhile, 57 percent of US adults favor the establishment of an independent Palestinian state in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, even though there is no historical reason that the lumpenproletariat of the Arab world should have a country.
Pondering these numbers, I suppose a historical counterfactual: World War II ending in a ceasefire that preserved fascist rule in Europe. The Nazis were not defeated. No denazification occurred. Then I imagined that, decades later—at the same relative distance from that war as we are today from Israel’s founding—polls showed that most Americans, except those old enough to remember the conflict, were more sympathetic to fascist states than to the Jewish national cause. Such a result seems remote, but in light of Gallup’s findings, the improbable becomes possible.
Those who loathe Israel would rationalize such a situation as validating their claim that Zionism is analogous to Nazism—that the situation of the Palestinians in the Middle East parallels the situation of the Jews in Europe. But, as I have shown on this platform, the dynamic in the Middle East is the reverse: it is Hamas that parallels the Nazis; clerical fascism has taken the place of secular fascism. More accurately, the clerical species has been morally elevated by those who call normal and sane people Nazis; clerical fascism has always threatened the Jews. (See Jew-Hatred in the Arab-Muslim World: An Ancient and Persistent Hatred; Why the Israel-Gaza War Is Not Seen Like World War II—and What That Reveals About the Present Situation.) 2025: The Year in Review and Notes on the West’s Islamic Problem; Is the Red-Green Alliance Ideologically Coherent?; “Free, Free Palestine!”)
The predictable objection to my counterfactual is that, given American public opinion and democratic constraints, earlier entry into what would become WWII was politically unrealistic. We were in an isolationist mood then; WWI had taken much out of us. Why should Americans lose more lives for the sake of Europeans who, at this point, were establishing a pattern of belligerence? Pearl Harbor was the decisive event that made full mobilization possible. But by then, the devastation of the war was terrible, and millions of lives were lost.
Reflecting on this a day ago on social media, I rhetorically asked whether people remembered when the world used to say, “Never again?” The Islamic Republic has ruled Iran for 47 years. Imagine putting up with Hitler for 47 years. Hitler was in power for 12 years. That was too long. I anticipated another objection: “You can’t compare the Islamic Republic to Nazi Germany!” Maybe at scale. But the Islamic Republic is authoritarian and violently repressive. It is the most fascistic state on the planet.
One need only check the inventory of fascistic traits to determine this. The Islamic state possesses the authority to veto candidates and override legislation it finds objectionable. Security forces and Islamic courts suppress political opposition and protests. Iran makes extensive use of the death penalty, carrying out large numbers of executions each year—including hundreds annually in recent years, often without due process. Ethnic and religious minorities suffer imprisonment and property confiscation. The state enforces an Islamic framework. The Guidance Patrol (or the morality police) oppresses gays and women.
At the center of the system is (or at least was) the Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, an unelected authority who exercises sweeping control over a vast military and intelligence apparatus, the judiciary, key government appointments, and major national decisions involving foreign policy and war. “But doesn’t Trump also enjoy these powers?” Yes, but Trump was elected. This is why we must put up with him (even if Democrats don’t want to). But why did the West put up with Ali Khamenei for 37 years? And why did we put up with the man who came before him, Ruhollah Khomeini?
The Islamic Republic is an instantiation of clerical fascism—the worst instantiation of it in the modern period (Hamas is a lesser instance of clerical fascism). If the regime falls, Iranians will be liberated from an oppressive authoritarian nightmare. And the world will see a significant threat to freedom and safety evaporate—presuming the West finishes the job. There can be no ceasefire. “Never again” should mean something (it should have meant something in the Gaza war). Yet Democrats (not all but most) are dropping statements all over social media condemning Trump for joining with Israel to remove the Islamic regime.
What moral authority do Democrats have anymore? They watched as the Islamic Republic slaughtered tens of thousands of Iranians who rose up in the millions in more than 187 cities across all 31 provinces in December 2025, an uprising likely inspired by the wake of Operation Midnight Hammer in June of last year, in which the United States degraded Iran’s capacity to develop a nuclear weapon. Democrats objected to this, too. It’s as if they have found affinity with the slogans Marg bar Amrika and Marg bar Israel, and the 1983 law forcing Iranian women to cover their hair. Indeed, Ruhollah Khomeini describes the hijab as the “flag” of the Islamic movement and the imposition of Sharia. Does this explain the left’s tolerance for Sharia in the West?
I have documented on Freedom and Reason that, going back to the 1970s, the left, corrupted by postmodernism and Third Worldism, has viewed Iran as a bulwark against democracy and nationalism, which they reject. Never forget that, during the Iranian Revolution, Islamist forces led by Ruhollah Khomeini formed an alliance with a wide range of left-wing and secular groups to overthrow Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi. The Red-Green Alliance we see today carries forward the spirit of the Islamic Revolution. (See Foucauldian Seductions: Busty Lemieux and the Hijab; Woke Progressivism and the Party of God; 2025: The Year in Review and Notes on the West’s Islamic Problem; Is the Red-Green Alliance Ideologically Coherent?; “Free, Free Palestine!”)
One might think that the turn against Israel in the West illustrates how historical distance can reshape public moral perception, and that this is how we might, at first blush, entertain my historical counterfactual. But historical distance cannot explain the shift we see in the polls on the question of respective sympathy. I doubt that a majority of Americans would ever come to sympathize with National Socialism over time (not consciously, in any case). Rather, the shift in sympathy is the work of propagandists who move from a deep anti-semitism fed by the myth that Jews in Israel are “white settler colonialists” who have displaced an imagined indigenous population in Palestine. The reality is that Palestinians are a disfavored group in the MENA region. Arab support for Palestinian statehood has always been more about antipathy towards the Jewish state—and finding a place where Palestinians can be kept away from the rest of the Arab world.
The charge of white settler colonialism (which has led some Jews to deny their whiteness) is a cover for antisemitism. Jews do not deserve a state in the mind of the progressive, especially in Israel, the nation established on the territory where Jews have dwelled for millennia. Indeed, it is the Jews who are indigenous to this land, and their culture and religion comprise the foundation (however perverted and devolved by the latter) of Christianity and Islam. Modern Israel is the world’s only Jewish-majority state. It exists as a small sovereign country amid a wide arc of Muslim-majority nations, including Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, and Saudi Arabia, as well as the Palestinian territories of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank (which Israel should annex). Jews have been forced into the space by widespread antisemitic sentiment in the Arab world.
The religious landscape of this region has not always been what it is today. In late antiquity and the early medieval period, many of these lands were predominantly Christian under Byzantine rule, before gradually becoming Muslim-majority in the centuries following the Arab conquests. In these times, Jews lived continuously across these societies for millennia—as minorities in cities such as Aleppo, Baghdad, and Cairo—central to commercial, cultural, and intellectual life until the upheavals of the twentieth century led most of these ancient Jewish communities to disappear.
The present map reflects not only contemporary political realities but also the outcome of profound demographic and religious transformations over time. And this would have been Europe’s fate had it not been for the Knights Hospitallers and other Christians who took up swords to drive the Muslims from the West (the subject of my next essay). But the threat of Islam remains, as we can see by the Islamization of Europe’s major cities—and even in cities in the United States. It is hoped that the toppling of the Islamic state in Iran and a US President prepared to defend Western Civilization will weaken Jihad and contain the Muslim threat to humanity. Perhaps even the people of the Muslim world will seek to throw off the yoke of clerical fascism altogether and de-Islamize their lives.
If you still don’t believe that the corporate media is globalist propaganda, then you don’t have your head in the real world. Here is CBS news producers telling a reporter not to cover the rallies praising Trump and Israel for liberating the Iranian people. This is not just about avoiding reporting news favorable to the President. There’s a reason why such news must be buried or spun. Trump represents the reclaimation of the American Republic in the face of transnational elite desire. The nation-state is an obstacle to elite ambitions to establish a new world order based on corporate power. Islam is a weapon global elites wield to weaken Western nations. The fall of the Islamic regime in Iran emboldens the masses to more broadly reject Islam. It stirs the nationalist spirit. The corporate media is the propaganda arm of the project to degrade American greatness. This is the more serious threat readers of this platform need to understand. Muslim migration and Islamization are not merely organic phenomena. They are instruments of the agenda to extinguish human freedom.











