Well, folks, here we are again, starring in the never-ending soap opera called “Geopolitical Kabuki Theater.” Once again, the United States has tiptoed into the Middle East with all the grace of a bull in a china shop, this time with a focus on Iran—not that anyone’s keeping count, as these overseas escapades have become as routine as pumpkin spice lattes in October. And no, nobody’s suggesting we’re at the gates of World War III—just deploying combat ops in Iran to keep things interesting on a slow news day. The goal? Protecting the American people from imminent threats, because nothing screams security quite like playing whack-a-mole with foreign leaders every other year.
Meanwhile, the critics are out in full force, clutching their pearls and squealing about imperialism. But for those keeping score at home, it’s merely another drive-by bombing, folks, not a grand boots-on-the-ground spectacle like those we remember from the early 2000s. So, let’s all take a deep breath and imagine, if you will, an America where military confectionery doesn’t leave a sour taste in the public’s mouth every few months. It’s like déjà vu, really; threats from Iran are trotted out as consistently as sequels in the Fast & Furious franchise—close to nuclear apocalypse one minute, then poof, nothing.
Now, if defense contractors could take a moment from their celebratory high-fives and smell the domestic roses, they’d notice a country in disarray. Bridges rust, roads crack like old vinyl records, and hospitals look like they’ve seen better days. Yet, war funding flows like champagne on New Year’s Eve. Meanwhile, Ben Shapiro and company can’t stop wagging fingers at anyone reluctant to roll out the red carpet for more military misadventures. But remember, real patriots concern themselves with matters closer to home, such as the 30 million undocumented folks shaking things up here—not the intricacies of Israeli foreign policy.
Speaking of Israel, here comes the award-winning performance of the decade: the pro-Israel lobby conducting Congress like a maestro. For years, whispers suggest they own the place, lock, stock, and barrel, granting foreign aid like candy on Halloween. But heaven forbid anyone demands to hit the pause button and focus on American dilemmas first. All those roads to repair, tunnels to shore up, and hospitals to modernize won’t fix themselves. Yet, when our tax dollars take a jet-setting tour to the Middle East, it’s business as usual.
Meanwhile, let’s talk about grifting 2.0 as Professor Jordan Peterson moonlights as a Middle Eastern military strategist rather than focusing on his day job. Encourage regime change, he suggests with the same confidence as if he’s critiquing missed crustaceans. But hey, far be it from the good man to prioritize America’s long-neglected political and social foundation. Nah, much easier to write senators from the comfort of a high-backed chair rather than advocating to fill the potholes right in front of his house. It seems that as long as influential voices churn out narratives from safe behind keyboards, the show will merrily roll on. So, rack up those spectacle points and keep the popcorn handy. After all, in the pantheon of political theater, the next act is always around the corner.






