This episode was a classic “big picture to local politics to cultural weirdness” Monday. We dug into the fast-moving U.S. operation against Iran and the debate over what powers the president has versus Congress—acknowledging why some people are wary, but also arguing the case that after decades of Iran using proxies (Hamas, Hezbollah, Houthis, etc.) to kill and threaten Americans, patience isn’t the same thing as “justification.” We walked through what lawmakers like Lindsey Graham and John Kennedy are publicly signaling (heavy strikes, no ground invasion), talked about how media coverage seems to fixate on collateral narratives (like an oil refinery or a desalination plant) while ignoring the evil of the regime itself, and why we think this is designed to be decisive—not another years-long half-commitment.
Then we shifted to Idaho and the political theater closer to home: Tim Walz showing up for Idaho Democrats (and the question of what the ROI possibly was), plus the ongoing frustration with bills dying “in a drawer” at the legislature—especially E-Verify—while certain lawmakers or PACs run glossy, careful-worded ads claiming they’re tough on illegal immigration. We also hit a couple culture moments that feel like parody but aren’t: the State Department “queering the map” explanation, and the LA Marathon controversy where people stopping at mile 18 could still be labeled “finishers.” Our take: celebrate effort, sure—but don’t rewrite reality. Words mean things, and “finisher” is one of them.
**Highlights**
– Why the Iran operation is being framed as fast, surgical, and regime-focused—not a ground war
– The “maps are too heterosexual” / “queering the map” moment and why it struck us as forced compliance, not inclusion
– Idaho politics: Tim Walz visit, legislative bills dying in drawers, and PAC messaging games around E-Verify/immigration
– LA Marathon “finishers” at mile 18—participation trophies for grown-ups, and runners calling it out
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