So your three bartenders are back from overseas, but still a bit jet-lagged and struggling to keep up with the news. Was it a good week? The firing of Scott Pelley is certainly good news, as are the initial results of the California primary, where the energy and enthusiasm are clearly on the side of the outsider insurgent candidates. (Knock on wood: let’s see how the “vote counting” goes over the next several weeks in the “incompetent” Golden State.)

Not such a good week for John Bolton, nor for aesthetic sensibility, if the Obama library is any indication. Why does the left prefer brutalist ugliness? We have our suspicions. . .

Jewish Denial

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Change is a very sensitive topic among observant Jews, in no small part because the most common attack on traditional Judaism is to use history to show how much Judaism has changed. Pointing out that what we do today is not necessarily the same as what we did in yesteryear invariably calls today’s practice and customs into question, undermining observant practice.

Orthodox Judaism is deeply resistant to change, and, ironically enough, also for historical reasons: Those who consciously “modernize” Judaism never endure past a few generations at the most. All non-observant strains of Judaism have proven to be term-limited. Observant Torah Judaism is the only form of Judaism that has stood the test of time and that persists intergenerationally. So it resists both change and the assertion that there even is change!

John Yoo returns to usher in SCOTUS opinion season, joining James and Steve for some friendly debates on law, politics and, most controversially, a few matters of taste. For our democrats in the audience, we’ve got chatter on California vote counting and Alabama map battles. News from the UK reminds us that the royalists are in even worse shape, as authorities there prove to be as confused in dealing with controversial speech as they are with violence (the real kind). John Bolton’s deal with the DOJ and a couple of death penalty cases concentrate the fellas’ minds further on the subtleties, and unsubtleties, of hard justice. Thankfully, Scott Pelley’s bad week brings a much-needed restorative laugh, and the gang finds something to agree on as they count down to the semiquincentennial. That’s right: not even petty celebrities can rain on our Independence Day parade!

Sound this week: CBS Evening News anchor Tony Dokoupil says goodbye to Scott Pelley while Fox News’ Brit Hume finds it all amusing.

Quote of the Day: Robert Woodson (RIP)

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“The victimizer might have knocked you down, but it is the victim that has to get up.”

Until recently, I had not heard of Robert L. Woodson, Sr., the civil rights activist who just passed at the age of 89—or if I had, the memory is lost to me.  The WSJ had a piece by Jason Riley that started with this quote, and it immediately caught my attention.

John Bolton: Schadenfreude Edition

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At one time John Bolton played a useful role in American foreign policy. He was the tough guy willing to say and do what was necessary to advocate for American interests. He was willing to go to the UN and tell them to their faces what a useless pile of rubbish they are. But as time went on, he became nothing but a pompous blowhard who made his pronouncements with great force on television. He joined administrations, took copious notes, and then made millions writing exposés.

After the Mar-a-Lago classified documents raid, Bolton tut-tutted about Trump and his childish carelessness with classified material:

Innovation vs. Centralization (Competition within Empires, City-States and Corporations)

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I really like this version because it shows how many incredible people lived in two small eras of time.

I am starting to think that competing city-states work better than empires. If you placed all the scientific and intellectual advances of Greece against the advances of Rome, Greece would win. It’s not even close. That is amazing because the Roman Empire (which I think about every day) lasted for about seven hundred years longer and was many times larger in both population and area ruled than the glory days of ancient Greece.

Though election watchers generally have to make peace with selfish motives and unpleasant truths, there is more to democracy than the cynics would have you believe. Sean Trende is back for a chat on this theme as it applies to the much-discussed redistricting wars. In 2020, the Virginia Supreme Court tasked Sean to help draft the commonwealth’s congressional map—the very map that state Democrats unsuccessfully tried to replace this year. He and Henry talk through the labor involved in drawing fair lines, and the unique challenges of doing so in an age of partisan gamesmanship.

Plus, we had a primary bonanza on Tuesday! Henry rants through what we can glean from the results still trickling in from California, Republican Zach Lahn’s surprise victory in Iowa over his Trump-endorsed opponent, and a few more progressive insurgents breaking through establishment Democrats’ trenches.

The Quality Learing Center

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No, that is not a misprint. I just spent a few precious hours programming an additional garage door opener. For the last few years Mrs. Pessimist has driven a large SUV that could not fit into our garage because of the tall cabinets I had installed to hide all the junk that tried to drive us completely out of the garage. I used to look down on people who could not use their garage because they had accumulated too much junk. All of my essential garage junk is neatly stored in huge floor-to-ceiling cabinets. All was good in the world. I parked my old Honda CRV in one bay, and Mrs. Pessimist parked her golf cart in the other bay. She also parked her large SUV in the driveway.

My son needed a new car, so we gave him Mrs. Pessimist’s overly large SUV, and she bought a Lexus hybrid sedan. It was said to be compact. Compact, my a..! It was two feet longer than my old Honda SUV, but it managed to fit in our garage with two inches to spare on each end. No problem. I accepted my demotion from the garage to the driveway, but needed a garage door opener to bring groceries into the house and also stock the garage refrigerator that contains our essential libations.

Assistant Secretary for the Office of Elementary and Secondary Education Kirsten Baesler joins the podcast to discuss what “returning education to the states” looks like in practice. With Iowa and Louisiana receiving waivers to consolidate state activities funds and about ten more states in discussions with the U.S. Department of Education, we dig into the opportunities provided by the waivers and how the iterative application process is unfolding. We also cover Ed-Flex authority, interagency agreements, the cumbersome competitive grant process, and Assistant Secretary Baesler’s vision for transparency and assessments.

Trump’s K-12 Leader: Let’s Improve Assessment Without Sacrificing Accountability: https://www.edweek.org/policy-politics/opinion-trumps-k-12-leader-lets-improve-assessment-without-sacrificing-accountability/2026/05

Meet Congressman al Qaeda

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New Jersey’s 12th Congressional District is a gerrymandered Democrat-safe space.   It’s the district next door to me.  The Democratic primary was yesterday, and the winner will no doubt win the general election in November.  It’s designed that way.  Who will be the next Congressman replacing retiring Bonnie Watson-Coleman?  This one is a real prince.  His name is Dr Adam Hamawy, a controversial candidate who previously volunteered with an al-Qaeda-linked group and a former associate of the infamous “Blind Sheikh” Omar Abdel Rahman, who incited the World Trade Center bombing in 1993.  In the Sheikh’s 1995 trial, Hamawy testified on the Sheikh’s behalf.

I worked in Brooklyn, a block or two from the mosque where the Sheikh used to preach.  I can attest that if the blinds were open, you could see the black flag of jihad displayed on the second floor of the mosque.

Kara makes a triumphant return to the podcast after her chaotic maternity leave, ready to talk about the birth of her second daughter, Sloane. She and Bethany discuss life with two under two, and how life with two feels somehow harder than life with six.

Taxation: A Tale of Rival States

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Florida is probably going to end residential property tax (on the first 250k of value, growing to 500k of value), thus making the state an even more attractive place to live. DeSantis is cleverly proposing that new out-of-state purchasers will have to pay five years of property tax before they “graduate” into the tax-free category. I suspect that this will accelerate migration into Florida, as new buyers will want to get the clock started earlier rather than later. In short: invest now and reap benefits later.

Israel, a country run and populated by the world’s most brilliant fools, has taken exactly the opposite approach. The first ten years of Israeli tax residency come with zero tax on foreign-source income (though every dime must be reported). AND if you move in before the end of 2026, you are tax exempt for the first $250k of Israeli income, as well as for two years (tapering off to zero).

In this week’s episode of The Learning Curve, co-hosts Prof. Albert Cheng of the University of Arkansas and Alisha Searcy of the Center for Strong Public Schools speak with Leslie Hiner, Senior Advisor for Legal Policy at EdChoice, about the constitutional foundations and future of educational freedom in America. Hiner reflects on her distinguished career in law and public policy before examining the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decisions that have shaped the modern school choice movement. She discusses how Brown v. Board of Education’s promise of equal educational opportunity influenced later efforts to expand parental choice and educational access. Hiner then explores the significance of Zelman v. Simmons-Harris, Trinity Lutheran Church v. Comer, Espinoza v. Montana Department of Revenue, and Carson v. Makin, explaining how each expanded protections for families seeking religious and private educational options. She assesses the legal landscape following Carson, highlights key recent victories such as Loffman v. California Department of Education, and offers insights into the future of school choice litigation, educational tax credits, and parental rights nationwide. Finally, Hiner also examines current legal cases, including Hellman v. Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, and they could mean for the future of school choice in Massachusetts.

Public Art is Rubbish

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I often wonder – not enough to pursue it though – who pays for all those ugly statues outside big banks, big offices, etc. I thought it was mostly an American thing, but it’s common in Korea too. They’re usually quite abstract and, to my eye, quite shabby and ugly. I assume money is being laundered or the artist is well-connected.

When I go to work, I take a short pedestrian tunnel underneath the street. A few months ago, this tunnel was “beautified” (that’s what the promotional sign promised) by a paint job. Here’s part of one side. The walkway is too narrow to capture its full majesty.

Religious liberty is at the foundation of the American Idea – but how was it understood and protected at America’s Founding, and how what does this fundamental right look like today? Jeff and Dr. Vincent Phillip Munoz, of Notre Dame University, discuss the earliest state of religious freedom, and how it has evolved today.

Read the Virginia Declaration of Rights: https://teachingamericanhistory.org/document/virginia-declaration-of-rights-2/

Gerald Ford and the Challenges of the 1970s

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Today is Release Day for one of the most important books I’ve narrated: Gerald Ford and the Challenges of the 1970s by Yanek Mieczkowski.

This is the third book by Dr. Mieczkowski that I have recorded, so I know that he writes in an engaging and accessible manner. I know you will enjoy listening to it because I enjoyed reading it. You’ll learn without realizing that it’s happening, which is the best way. And there is a lot to learn. Yanek interviewed Ford himself several times before Ford’s passing, enough to feel the man’s warmth and friendliness. He also spent a lot of time with members of Ford’s staff and his friends, as well as people from the Nixon and Carter years. This is a remarkable work of scholarship.

Gerald Ford was a genuinely good man who has not gotten the credit he deserved. The Nixon resignation blew Washington to pieces. Ford’s calmness, trustworthiness, and understanding of how Washington worked were precisely what the country needed. The timing of the Nixon pardon was unfortunate, but eventually people understood that it was the right thing to do. The country needed to focus on inflation and the energy crisis rather than wasting time on Watergate. Ford was trusted by Democrat leaders in both houses to a surprising extent, so he was able to refocus the country on the true threats that it faced, even if policies to address them came after his too-brief administration.

We’re now only a month away from the July 4 semiquincentennial of the founding of our country, but there’s still time to acquire and read through some of the new books appearing to mark the auspicious occasion.

And one of the very best of the very large field of contenders is from Timothy Sandefur, whose day job is Vice President for Legal Affairs at the Goldwater Institute’s Scharf-Norton Center for Constitutional Litigation. His brand new book for the occasion is Proclaiming Liberty: John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and the Declaration of Independence.

Banned in Britain

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On December 3, 2025, a young British man, Henry Nowak, was murdered in Southampton, about 80 miles southwest of London. Henry was stabbed five times by Vikrum Digwa, a Sikh man. When police came upon the scene of the stabbing, they handcuffed Henry and ignored the young man’s pleas that he had been stabbed and needed help. The police dismissed Henry’s pleas altogether, believing that he had somehow insulted the Sikh man. Nowak died shortly after the police handcuffed him.

Some five months later, the video of the arrest and death of Nowak was finally released. The young man was celebrating his first semester at Southampton University, and his death while in police handcuffs has sparked outrage throughout Britain. The circumstance displays a stark example of Britain’s two-tier policing that turns a blind eye to rampant crime from supposed oppressed minority groups in Britain and instead targets law-abiding and peaceful Brits.

While several British outlets have reported on this murder and the police’s response to it, Mayar Tousi was informed that the British government has blocked his TousiTV report on it (though the video is still available for viewing outside the UK). The video below shows the police bodycam footage of the police response/non-response to the stabbing of Henry Nowak, as well as a very heated response from Tommy Robinson and a response from Reform Leader Nigel Farage.

To the Framers, happiness didn’t just mean fun. It meant the pursuit of a good life through hard work, discipline, and constant self-assessment. In Episode 2, National Constitution Center CEO Emeritus Jeffrey Rosen, attorney and author Timothy Sandefur, and Supreme Court advocate Alan Gura tell us what the “pursuit of happiness” meant, how that promise has been enshrined in the Constitution, and how the Supreme Court has all but gutted it in one of the most despised decisions of all time: The Slaughterhouse Cases.

Richard Epstein weighs in on war, deterrence, and the limits of modern military strategy. Drawing lessons from World War II, Vietnam, Gaza, and the current conflict with Iran, Epstein argues that wars are either fought to win or not fought at all. He contends that America’s fear of escalation, reliance on limited objectives, and preference for negotiated settlements have produced strategic drift rather than decisive victory. Professor Epstein also delivers a sharp critique of Donald Trump’s handling of Iran, defends the logic of unconditional surrender, and explains why he believes half-measures can be more dangerous—and more costly—than total commitment.

Ben can’t do pull-ups anymore, so it’s a great time to talk to Admiral William McRaven. The guys talk about the fine line between swagger and arrogance, the importance of clear communication, and the way McRaven built his teams of Navy Seals. Lots of conversation about failure as a teacher and McRaven’s top-5 must-read book recommendations.

Show Notes:

Remembering the 200th

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I’m so old that I was beyond childhood at our country’s 200th birthday. I was a young, cynical grown baby boomer who thought all the hoopla was a little overdone. We all watched just three TV networks back then (four if you counted PBS, which was new and not widely watched). The bicentennial was touted and celebrated by all four starting in January, and the hype slowly built to a climax on the 4th.

I spent the 4th at my folks’. They were hosting a block party, something they had never done before. The driveway was filled with picnic tables. The cleaned-out garage contained tubs of ice and soda, the keg, and our ping pong table masquerading as a red, white, and blue buffet table. The front yard had four or five grills operating.  

The Battle of Seven Pines. The Most Consequential Days of the Civil War. May 31 – June 1, 1862

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The Battle of Seven Pines (or Fair Oaks, depending on the account), part of the Peninsula Campaign, marks one of the most consequential days of the American Civil War.  Confederate Commander of the Army of Northern Virginia, Joseph E Johnson, was severely wounded.  Jefferson Davis appointed his own military advisor, Robert E Lee, as Johnson’s replacement.

The battle could have been, should have been, a resounding Confederate success.  Union General George McClellan was making a methodical push towards Richmond, moving east to west up the Virginia Peninsula, his army astride the Chickahominy River.  Three of McClellan’s five corps sat on the north bank.  Two Corps sat on the south bank.  What Southerners knew, which McClellan didn’t, was that the Chickahominy ran high in the Spring and the two corps on the southern side of the river were nearly isolated from the rest of the Union Army.  Meanwhile, all of Johnson’s strength was south of the river.  Johnson sought to concentrate his forces against the Union forces south of the river and destroy them before Union assistance could cross the river with support.  It was a solid idea.