Thursday, June 19, 2025

The Antiwar Trump Was Always a Myth

The bipartisan consensus demanding war with Iran has left Americans opposed to war with little political representation.


June 18, 2025

As Donald Trump considers a U.S. war with Iran and the Pentagon builds up military forces in the Middle East, I find myself returning, oddly, to a question posed by Leo Tolstoy: “How many men are necessary to change a crime into a virtue?” He wondered this in his 1894 treatise on Christian nonviolence, The Kingdom of God is Within You, paraphrasing a pamphlet by Christian anarchist and abolitionist Adin Ballou: “One man may not kill. If he kills a fellow-creature, he is a murderer. If two, ten, a hundred men do so, they, too, are murderers. But a government or a nation may kill as many men as it chooses, and that will not be murder, but a great and noble action.”

I first encountered this passage last April, six months into Israel’s genocide in Gaza. At that point, the war felt like it had been going on for a lifetime; in hindsight, it had barely started. Now, more than 130 years after Tolstoy wrote his treatise, I’m struck by how political leaders still treat war as not just inevitable, but virtuous, good.

“We’re in the midst of one of the greatest military operations in history,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a video statement released June 13, shortly after Israel began carrying out a series of airstrikes in Iran. Purporting to address the Iranian people directly, Netanyahu continued, “As we achieve our objectives, we’re clearing the path for you to achieve your objective, which is freedom. …Your light will defeat the darkness.”

This is pure propaganda. Israel’s attack on Iran was an act of naked aggression, not one of humanitarian concern. While the first wave of airstrikes targeted Iranian nuclear facilities, in less than a week, Israel has hit an Iranian state broadcaster and killed more than 200 civilians. Netanyahu claims the military action was preemptive, yet there is no evidence that an Iranian nuclear strike was imminent, or that Iran even has a nuclear weapon, or is capable of producing one soon. Meanwhile, officials in the U.S. and Israel have pointed to regime change as the ultimate goal.

The U.S. is, in many ways, already involved in a war against Iran, sending money and weapons to Israel and shooting down Iranian missiles. But Israel is now requesting that the U.S. directly partake in its military offensive — a move that 60 percent of Americans oppose, according to a recent poll. We know that additional U.S. military intervention would be disastrous; time and time again we’ve seen how war destabilizes entire regions. During the 2016 presidential primary, Trump himself railed against George W. Bush for invading Iraq in 2003 and said the former president had lied about Saddam Hussein’s weapons of mass destruction. Prior to that, in 2011, Trump lambasted Obama’s foreign policy, claiming the then-president would start a war with Iran in order to get reelected — “because he has absolutely no ability to negotiate. He’s weak and he’s ineffective.”

This type of rhetoric enabled Trump to paint himself as the antiwar candidate on the campaign trail, from 2016 to 2020 to 2024, drawing a contrast between himself and both war hawk Democrats and the neoconservative wing of his own party. Now, the MAGA movement is splintering over whether the U.S. should join Israel in attacking Iran. Representing the GOP hawk flank, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina) urged Trump to go “all in” on an attack on Iran. Far right political commentator Tucker Carlson, however, rebuked the warmongers for abandoning a commitment to “America First” — comments that incited a fiery social media response from Trump.

“Somebody please explain to kooky Tucker Carlson that, ‘IRAN CAN NOT HAVE A NUCLEAR WEAPON!’” Trump wrote on Truth Social. In a follow up post, he continued, “AMERICA FIRST means many GREAT things.”

MAGA’s Iran schism, and the president’s foreign policy decisions thus far, make clear that the antiwar Trump was always a myth. The fact is that, contrary to public sentiment, there is still no great political representation for people in the U.S. who are actually antiwar and trying to do something about it through policy or legislation. Aside from a few progressives in Congress, Democrats have either stayed silent or backed the idea of a U.S. offensive in Iran. And MAGA’s “America First” stance is not a viable alternative for antiwar voters, nor does it challenge the root of the issue.

Let us not forget that it was Trump who in 2018 unilaterally withdrew the U.S. from the Iran nuclear deal.

That’s because Carlson and other MAGA isolationists — including Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Georgia), who has spoken out against a potential direct U.S. strike on Iran — are not opposing a possible war from a place of humanitarian concern or an expressed belief in the Iranian people’s right to self-determination. “I’m really afraid we’re watching the beginning of the end of the American empire,” Carlson told Steve Bannon on the War Room podcast. This type of “antiwar” stance is boldly in service of imperial violence, not opposed to it.

As Trump attempts to appeal to both factions of the MAGA coalition, U.S. and Israeli officials have provided conflicting statements about the degree of U.S. knowledge and involvement before Israel’s attack. This deception is seemingly part of the strategy: The president can pay lip service to diplomacy all he wants, but that does not change the facts on the ground. On June 16, Trump called on the 10 million citizens of Tehran to “immediately evacuate” — an impossible feat, and one that stands at odds with his gestures toward a peaceful way out of the current conflict.

While the Trump administration initially focused on calling for a diplomatic resolution, let us not forget that it was Trump who in 2018 unilaterally withdrew the U.S. from the Iran nuclear deal. In that agreement, negotiated by Barack Obama and several other world leaders in 2015, Iran consented to limiting its nuclear program and expanding international inspections in exchange for the easing of some economic sanctions. After the U.S. withdrew from the agreement, Iran then violated its terms, beefing up its uranium enrichment activities. U.S.-Iran relations further deteriorated in January 2020, when Trump authorized the drone strike assassination of Iranian major general Qasem Soleimani and threatened to strike Iran’s cultural sites.

As Murtaza Hussain wrote in The Intercept in 2021, “In place of a diplomatic arrangement, the Trump administration waged a campaign of economic pressure, sabotage, and assassinations targeting Iranian leadership.” But unlike the 2015 nuclear deal, these tactics failed to actually curb Iran’s nuclear program, which has continued to advance in the ensuing years, even as U.S. sanctions cause great humanitarian harm.

In light of these diplomatic failures, what has Democratic leadership had to offer? Not much. Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-New York) and House Minority Leader Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-New York) have stayed mum since Trump ordered the evacuation of Tehran, though they released statements expressing “ironclad” support for Israel after the initial June 12 airstrikes. In fact, they’ve both urged Trump to respond more belligerently to Iran in the first place. Earlier this month, Schumer attacked the president for “folding” on nuclear talks; in February, Jeffries told reporters, “We can’t take our foot off the gas pedal until Iran is brought to its knees.” Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pennsylvania), meanwhile, has explicitly called on the U.S. to escalate its involvement, writing that Israel should “keep wiping out Iranian leadership” and the U.S. “must provide whatever is necessary — military, intelligence, weaponry — to fully back Israel in striking Iran.”

Axios reports that only a few Senate Democrats have publicly supported a resolution, introduced by Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Virginia), that would limit Trump’s ability to wage war with Iran. Per the U.S. Constitution, only Congress, not the president, has the power to declare war, though the White House has often circumvented this rule in practice. Kaine said that his war powers resolution simply underscores the Constitutional requirement that war with Iran be explicitly authorized by Congress, and Reps. Thomas Massie (R-Kentucky) and Ro Khanna (D-California) introduced a similar bipartisan resolution in the house on Tuesday. On Monday, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont) introduced the No War Against Iran Act, backed by seven Democratic senators, which would “prohibit the use of federal funds for any use of military force in or against Iran absent specific Congressional authorization.”

It’s a shame that these attempts do not have more widespread support and as such are unlikely to rein in the Trump administration. Still, it is not too late to chart a diplomatic course forward. We must not stop calling on our elected officials to do better, to commit to new ways of challenging U.S. complicity in this war, to demand an arms embargo on Israel and an end to military cooperation with Israel’s war crimes. I’ll return, now, to Tolstoy, again paraphrasing Ballou: “Gather the people together on a large scale, and a battle of ten thousand men becomes an innocent action. But precisely how many people must there be to make it so? That is the question. One man cannot plunder and pillage, but a whole nation can. But precisely how many are needed to make it permissible?”


'Insecure men are dangerous': Analyst says Trump may declare war due to 'sad-boy feelings'

President Donald Trump observes a military demonstration at Fort Bragg, North Carolina on Tuesday, June 10, 2025, during a visit to commemorate the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army. (Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok)
June 18, 2025 |
ALTERNET

President Donald Trump has apparently approved attack plans against Iran though has so far stopped short of officially giving the order, according to the Wall Street Journal. And one columnist thinks whether the president of the United States gets the nation involved in another foreign war could be decided by Trump's self-esteem.

In a recent op-ed for USA TODAY, columnist Rex Huppke posited that Trump's recent actions could be attributed to the world's most powerful man having a crisis of self-confidence. Huppke argued that the commander-in-chief's deployment of U.S. military personnel to the nation's second-most populous city ended in an anticlimactic fashion, and his sparsely attended military parade didn't move the needle either.

According to the columnist, a new foreign war is just part of "the quest to quench this man’s insecurity," opining that even being among other foreign leaders at the G7 summit in the Canadian Rockies didn't do enough to satisfy his ego.

Huppke pointed out that that Trump left the G7 summit before its official conclusion under the pretense that he had to return to Washington to address the escalating tensions in the Middle East between Israel and Iran after the former carried out a series of strikes on the latter. However, the USA TODAY columnist observed that Trump's response "seemed to largely involve posting unhinged comments on social media, bizarrely advising residents of Tehran to evacuate and, despite claiming the United States isn’t involved in Israel’s ongoing attacks on Iran, boldly proclaiming: 'We now have complete and total control of the skies over Iran.'"
"Trump is proving, as if we needed proof, that insecure men are dangerous," Huppke wrote after declaring that Trump's "sad-boy feelings will always override what's best for America."

"They act impulsively, with no focus beyond soothing their own tender feelings," he continued. "Dispatching troops against American citizens didn’t make Trump feel big. A military parade didn’t make him feel big. He didn’t feel big around other world leaders at the G7 summit, so he left and did some online hollering and saber-rattling.

"And now? We wait to see if our capricious president needs to drop a bunker-busting bomb on Iran to feel big," he added.

Click here to read Huppke's full op-ed in USA TODAY.


Ted Cruz Suggests US Is Involved in Israeli Strikes on Iran, Despite US Denials

“We are carrying out military strikes today,” Senator Cruz said in an interview.

By Sharon Zhang , 
June 18, 2025

Sen. Ted Cruz attends a Senate Foreign Relations Committee confirmation in Dirksen building on March 25, 2025.Tom Williams / CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

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Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) was caught stumbling to answer basic questions about Iran and the U.S.’s role in Israel’s war in an eye-opening interview airing Wednesday, despite his full-throated support for overthrowing the Iranian government and deeper U.S. involvement in the fighting.

In clips of the interview with far right provocateur Tucker Carlson posted on social media on Tuesday, the senator alarmingly suggests that the U.S. is, in fact, already heavily involved in Israel’s strikes on Iran.

“We are carrying out military strikes today,” Cruz said. “I said we — Israel is leading them, but we’re supporting them.”

This directly contradicts what federal officials have said about the U.S.’s involvement. The State Department has said that Israel’s strikes are “unilateral,” and directed all embassies and consular posts to reiterate that claim in a cable, CBS reported on Sunday. The cable instructed officials to emphasize to their respective host governments that the U.S. “is not involved in Israel’s unilateral action against targets in Iran and did not provide tanker support.”

This position has not changed in recent days, as the strikes have intensified and President Donald Trump openly mulls becoming more deeply involved in the war. Numerous Trump administration spokespeople claimed on Tuesday that any reports of the U.S. participating in Israeli strikes in Iran are “not true.”

“American forces are maintaining their defensive posture, and that has not changed. We will defend American interests,” said spokesperson Alex Pfeiffer on Tuesday.

The U.S. military is already involved in the conflict. Officials have been open about the U.S.’s defensive positions in helping to strike down missiles fired at Israel.

However, direct U.S. involvement in conducting strikes on Iran, as Cruz suggests is happening, would be a major escalation of the war. Cruz’s statements potentially suggest that the U.S. is actually directly aiding in the bombings, as the Senate is privy to classified information about the military not available to the public.

“You’re breaking news here,” said Carlson. “This is high stakes, you’re a senator. If you’re saying the United States government is at war with Iran right now, people are listening!”

It’s possible that Cruz is suggesting deeper U.S. involvement to push the Trump administration into striking Iran, as many conservative lawmakers have done in recent days — in hopes of pushing the dangerous pipe dream of regime change in Iran.

“I think it is very much in the interest of America to see regime change,” Cruz told Fox News on Sunday. “I don’t think there’s any redeeming the ayatollah.”

Despite his confidence that he could install a better government in Iran, earlier in the interview, Cruz is caught unable to even name basic facts about Iran’s population.

“I don’t know the population,” Cruz says.

“You don’t know the population of the country you seek to topple?” Carlson asks, incredulously. “How could you not know that?”

In a follow up, Carlson says, “okay, what’s the ethnic mix of Iran?”

Cruz hesitates, then says, “they are Persians, and predominantly Shia,” he says, tellingly naming a religious sect rather than an ethnicity. When Carlson asks what proportion of the population is Persian, Cruz becomes incensed.

“I’m not the Tucker Carlson expert on Iran,” Cruz says sarcastically, his voice raised.

“You’re a senator who’s calling for the overthrow of the government!” Carlson exclaims in response.

The exchange highlights a rift among the right over the U.S.’s role in the Middle East. Carlson’s interview circulated widely online for exposing Cruz’s blasé ignorance of the country he wants to wage war against.

However, Carlson, who has consistently allied with white supremacists, himself owes much of his career to the figures who peddled the lies that led to the Iraq War. Early on, Carlson was a proponent of the U.S.’s invasion, and only changed his mind later because of racist beliefs that Iraq and Afghanistan aren’t “worth invading” because “the people aren’t civilized.”

This is, as commentators have noted, a drastically different approach to anti-interventionism from the left’s anti-war and anti-imperialist foundations. And yet, Carlson’s interview caught attention online as the right has sought to capitalize on genuine anti-war sentiment among the public that’s been completely dismissed by the Democratic Party.

CHRISTIAN ZIONIST RAPTURE
Huckabee Suggests Trump Should Nuke Iran, Follow Guidance From “Heaven”

The evangelical pastor and ambassador to Iran told Trump he “will hear from heaven” with guidance about the war.

By Sharon Zhang , 
PublishedJune 17, 2025

The U.S.' new ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee holds a note given to him from President Donald Trump to be placed in the cracks of the Western Wall, the holiest site where Jews are allowed to pray, during Huckabee's visit to the holy site in the old city of Jerusalem on April 18, 2025.Gil Cohen-Magen / AFP via Getty Images


U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee has suggested to President Donald Trump that he should use a nuclear bomb against Iran, urging Trump to listen to the voice he will “hear from heaven” and follow its guidance in making decisions about Israel’s war on Iran.

In a post on Truth Social on Tuesday, Trump posted a screenshot of the lengthy text he says was sent to him by Huckabee, an evangelical and Christian Zionist who Trump praises as a “Great Person!”

In the text, Huckabee says Trump’s current decision on whether or not to involve the U.S. further in attacks on Iran is akin to the decision President Harry Truman faced in 1945 — when Truman dropped two atomic bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, killing hundreds of thousands of innocent people in Japan and decimating the cities.

Huckabee further says that he seeks not to persuade but to “encourage” Trump. “God spared you in Butler, PA to be the most consequential President in a century — maybe ever,” Huckabee writes. “No President in my lifetime has been in a position like yours. Not since Truman in 1945.”

The rambling message is extremely ironic, considering that Huckabee is suggesting that Trump should use a nuclear bomb against Iran in a war that was started by Israel to supposedly target Iran’s nuclear weapons program, though most of the targets and casualties so far appear to be civilian.

Huckabee also urges Trump to listen to “HIS voice,” an apparent reference to God, saying that Trump “will hear from heaven” about the issue.

Like many evangelical Christians in the U.S., Huckabee is a Christian Zionist who subscribes to the belief that Israel must dominate Palestine in order to bring about the end-times prophecy and second coming of Jesus Christ. Christ would then rule over Israel in the new age, where all people worship Christ or get eliminated and condemned to hell.

Some Christian Zionists have outright preached that Israel must claim dominance over enemies like Iran, who will try to destroy Israel as it pursues total control over Palestine. Huckabee has been heavily criticized for his erasure of the occupied West Bank, which he refers to as Judea and Samaria, and for saying once that there is “really no such thing as a Palestinian.”

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina), who has spent over a decade urging the U.S. to enter into a war with Iran, praised Huckabee’s text, saying it is “spot on.”

“It is now time to end this terrible chapter in the Middle East and start a new chapter,” said Graham, seemingly referring to an old neo-conservative fantasy of regime change in Iran.

The text, seeking to stoke Trump into using extreme force against Iran, comes at a fragile moment as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is openly urging Trump to attack Iran, lending Israel even more support on top of the current defensive backing from U.S. military assets.

Similarly to Trump’s statement on Tuesday brushing aside the U.S. intelligence community’s assessment that Iran isn’t pursuing a nuclear weapon, Huckabee’s invocation of a higher purpose echoes President George W. Bush’s bizarre reasoning for starting the Iraq War. Just months after the U.S.’s invasion initially began, Bush reportedly told an Israeli-Palestinian summit that he was “driven with a mission from God.”

It’s unclear what Trump’s next move will be. He has repeatedly said that his goal is to force Iran to capitulate on his administration’s demands for a nuclear deal. “COMPLETE SURRENDER,” he wrote on Truth Social on Tuesday.

Trump has said that he may be sending Vice President J.D. Vance or his Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff to conduct negotiations. According to sources cited by Axios, the president was reportedly considering striking Iran ahead of a meeting about the war with his national security team in the White House Situation Room on Tuesday.



Workers Most Likely to Lose Medicaid Can’t Rely on Employer-Based Coverage



In a recent CNBC interview, Sen. James Lankford (R-OK) said the people who lose Medicaid coverage under the Republican-backed “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” will merely transition to employer-sponsored health care: “It’s not kicking people off Medicaid. It’s transitioning from Medicaid to employer-provided health care. So yes, we’ve got 10 million people that are not going to be on Medicaid, but they then are going to be on employer-provided health care.”

What Senator Lankford clearly doesn’t understand is that those most impacted by the Medicaid cuts he supports are often workers in industries that are less likely to offer employer-based coverage and have more volatile employment and hours. Only 47 percent of workers in the restaurant industry have employer-based coverage and 54 percent in the construction industry. The majority of those 10 million workers Senator Lankford referenced won’t be able to ‘transition’ to employer-provided insurance – it simply does not exist.

The Medicaid cuts proposed in the GOP budget bill as it currently stands would cut nearly 2 million restaurant workers from Medicaid, which is a whopping 21.8 percent of the industry as a whole. This is more than all of the restaurant workers in the state of California (1.4 million in April 2025). The construction industry would lose the second most Medicaid beneficiaries (1.5 million). The workers that would be most impacted by these cuts are from across the economy, from construction to grocery stores to home health services to hotels.

Notes.

1. Author’s calculations of March 2024 Annual Social Economic Supplement of the Current Population Survey.

2. Current Employment Statistics from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

This first appeared on CEPR.

Emma Curchin is the Domestic Outreach and Research Assistant at the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

Our Free Enterprise System Comes Through Again: The Trump Store


Image by Natilyn Hicks.

For MAGA consumers who are looking for a great shopping experience, especially those who gain pleasure by further enriching Donald Trump and his family, nirvana is just a click away at the TRUMP Store, “the official retail website of The Trump Organization.” It offers MAGA shoppers numerous commodities they presumably dream of possessing. However, I hope the president is aware of problems, really nasty problems, with some of what is being sold that embody characteristics that are contrary to his supposed values and principles.

On the homepage, one is greeted in the left corner by the name TRUMP in gold letters. The description accompanying many products indicates they are made in America. However, for many other items, there is no information as to where they were produced. Could much of what is sold at the TRUMP Store imported adding to our trade deficit?

At least one product being offered is identified as not having been produced in the U.S. A. The potential consumer is informed that the Chicago 3D Ornament is “A perfect 3D replica of the Trump International Hotel & Tower” and is “Handmade in Europe.” You read that correctly—handmade in Europe! Could those running the Trump Store not find anyone living in our great country who could make this ornament? Or, have deep state infiltrators (who are against putting America first and seek to embarrass Trump) hacked the store site? A true MAGA patriot should pray that new Trump tariffs will bring about the demise of the market for this import.

Click hats. Recently, the first one offered, shockingly, was not a red MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN hat, but a red hat with TRUMP 2028. A wearer can show that they are already thinking of our great future. And this hat only costs $50 unlike the red MAGA hat with white lettering going for $55.

Next to the TRUMP 2028 hat is a “special edition” $55 hat with the lettering MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN, not in white letters, but pink letters. Click on it to learn that it is a “special edition Valentine’s Day MAGA hat” that provides one with “a great way to surprise your loved one” without designating the gender of your loved one. Does that mean that the store approves of a woman providing a man in her life with a hat with unmanly pink MAGA lettering? Would a manly man be happy receiving such a gift?

What may excite some is that MAGA hats are now available in “a variety of show-stopping colors.” There are pink ones, green ones, blue ones, yellow ones (that might remind one of the Malvina Reynolds song Little Boxes). However, if you want the plain one in white with blue letters that include 45-47 on one side, an American flag on the other and TRUMP on the back, “due to high demand,” you will have to wait 2-3 weeks for it to ship as is the case for the Green Apple version, but, thank goodness, not the one in white with gold lettering.

Those seeking a “bargain” can buy a hat with TRUMP on the front for just $38 described as a “Raised Trump Flag Mesh Back Hat.” However, unlike the previously discussed hats, there is no indication that they were made in America.

A Few Other GREAT Products—Even Some for Kids

There is much more to the Trump store than hats. For men, among what is available are bottoms, footware, outerware, polos, and tshrits. The bottoms consist of only three choices; sweatpants, joggers, and pjs with the “TRUMP embroidered logo at left upper thigh.” Sad to write that pj bottoms are only available in the size XS. PJs for all larger or more robust MAGA fans are unavailable (perhaps sold out) including size XXXL. Though the pjs are listed as being for men, they are offered in “unisex sizing.” Have multicultural radical gender-neutral Marxist anarchists infiltrated the staff of this great big beautiful online store?

The previous search might prompt one to look for pjs for women. Here one can find Stars PJ Pants made of “high quality organic cotton” with the “TRUMP embroidered logo on [the] left leg”–not the right leg!! There was also no indication that these organic pjs, presumably produced by radical hippie environmentalists were made in America nor that they came in unisex sizes, but the only size currently available, the biggest one, was XL.

Another pj for women is a Trump Signature Long Pajama Set costing $175 described as having “luxurious comfort and understated elegance…breathable, lightweight and velvety soft poly blend silk with detailed white trim and Trump embroidery.” They are made of 96% polyester and 4% spandex. Unclear is if any of the polyester contains silk. Should the Federal Trade Commission get involved to see if there is some false advertising about silk in the product? Sadly, this outfit only comes in sizes s, m and l that some might find discriminatory against our smaller and larger lady, or even men, MAGA friends who want to jump into them.

Among other products offered include GULF OF AMERICA hats, t-shirts, and a plush Trump airplane selling for $40 and described on the site:

“This adorable plush toy is inspired by the Trump 757 jet, the crown jewel of the fleet that takes the Trump family around the world in comfort. A perfect gift for kids of all ages, inspire little ones’ creativity to take flight with a toy that allows them to dream up any trip around the world.”

Kids, including young teens, would likely be overwhelmed with joy to have this “perfect gift” that has on its side TRUMP in what appears to be gold letters.

A caring parent might soon not be able to buy 30 dolls for the little one. The Trump store may help one to at least partially overcome this deprivation. Go to Collections, then Golden Age of America, then Trump kids. There you will find three Teddy Bears for sale including one that may fill every child’s dream, a Spa Teddy Bear wearing a bathrobe with a golden TRUMP logo. It is described as a “relaxed little fellow [that] makes a memorable gift for any age and a wonderful keepsake!”

To avoid disappointing one’s child, don’t promise to buy the teddy bear with a knitted red sweater with TRUMP on it—described as an “adorable Trump teddy bear [that] will prove to be a treasured companion, memorable gift, and wonderful keepsake for any age.” It is currently unavailable. That might be because it is not made in America. However, teddies with a blue or white sweater with TRUMP on the front are both available.

The kids section does not offer a sand pail that is found elsewhere on the store site that, of course, has the name TRUMP in white on it “for your little adventurers… [who can] Get ready to build a big sandcastle!” The pail with a white handle and white shovel comes in red or blue (which might remind one of Democrats).

Another noteworthy product under the Trump kids section is a “GIANT Trump Chocolate Gold Bar” weighing 2.75 pounds selling for $68 reduced in price from $86, perhaps to help reduce the rate of inflation. Will its consumption help Make America Healthy Again?

And if you seek to walk off any weight gain from consuming this chocolate bar, you can buy some Trump 45 red sneakers for $225.  They are a “limited edition knit sneakers…With crisp red knit, American flag, and striking gold ’45’ (recognizing Trump’s Presidency), [that] stand out in the crowd and [allows one to] take on the world with confidence and style!” Wow!

Will the Trump store soon feature a collection of Elon Musk products? In the meantime, one can find them by visiting the Space X store or Tesla store.

If you want to save money purchasing Trump store products, try Amazon where you can find a red MAGA hat for $47 which is $8 cheaper than the Trump store price. Is Jeff Bezos trying to put the Trump store out of business with this unpatriotic price cutting act? Should he be locked up, and should Amazon be taken over?

Thanks to the online TRUMP store, MAGA shoppers will likely find shopping not just more meaningful and greatly satisfying, but exhilarating. Others may find the inconsistency in what Trump espouses and the values embodied in what is being sold consistent with his narcissism, hypocrisy, and greed.

Rick Baum teaches Political Science at City College of San Francisco. He is a member of AFT 2121.