Lost the Plot, Holding the Matches
As Trump escalates abroad, the warnings grow louder that this is no longer politics as usual but something far more dangerous.
Good morning! Donald Trump appears to have wandered so far off the map that even the map would like to file a restraining order. Start with Iran, where Trump is once again trying to conduct foreign policy like a casino boss banging on the roulette wheel because the ball didn’t land where he wanted. The New York Times lays out the collision plainly: Trump demands instant surrender, instant optics, instant applause, while Iran plays the long game, drags out details, and treats delay as a weapon in itself. That mismatch would be dangerous enough with a normal president, but with Trump, it becomes terrifying, because he keeps approaching nuclear diplomacy as if it were a televised eviction notice. The piece describes him boasting that Iran had already “agreed to everything,” only to be publicly contradicted, then veering back into maximal threats about obliterating infrastructure if he doesn’t get the deal he wants. It paints a White House team operating with more swagger than substance, less like serious negotiators and more like men who think a complex nuclear file can be closed with the same mentality used to slap gold trim on a Manhattan condo lobby.
If that weren’t enough nightmare fuel, The Guardian’s live updates show that Trump is still publicly treating the ceasefire like a minor inconvenience that interrupted his favorite hobby: threatening to bomb things on television. Asked whether he wanted to extend the ceasefire, he said no. Asked about renewed attacks, he effectively shrugged and suggested bombing would be a “better attitude.” He is also doubling down on threats against Iranian bridges and the electrical grid, because somewhere along the line the presidency became an open-mic night for war crimes. Even the supposed diplomacy is wrapped in chaos: mixed signals about talks in Pakistan, vague accusations that Iran violated the ceasefire “numerous times,” maritime seizures, blockade enforcement, shadow fleets slipping through Hormuz, and the steady sense that everyone is one tantrum away from regional catastrophe. The whole thing feels less like statecraft than a drunken uncle at Thanksgiving who has found the launch codes and thinks he is “just asking questions.”
Which brings us to one of the most chilling documents in the pile today: Bandy Lee reading from a letter she says was co-authored with Jeffrey Sachs and sent to congressional leadership urging immediate action to strip Trump of access to war powers and nuclear weapons. Read that again. Not “maybe we should keep an eye on him.” The letter argues that Trump exhibits a “dark triad” of traits, narcissism, Machiavellianism, and psychopathy, and warns that when people with that profile are cornered, “They escalate.” The argument is that his behavior has crossed into a zone of acute public danger, that his observable conduct fits a pattern of escalation under pressure, and that Congress has both the constitutional tools and the moral obligation to act before catastrophe becomes irreversible. Whether one agrees with every element of the letter or not, its basic force is impossible to ignore: this is an attempt to recast Trump’s rants and threats not as more background noise from the orange foghorn, but as a formal emergency warning. The authors essentially say that a man openly threatening to destroy a civilization may not simply be reckless, but psychologically unraveling in real time while still holding command over the most destructive arsenal on Earth. Their conclusion is blunt: “We urge you to act without delay.” History flashing a giant red hazard sign and begging someone to unplug the machine.
If you think the moral rot stops with Iran, Gaza is right there to remind us that cruelty in this administration is never just blunt-force trauma. Sometimes it shows up wearing a suit and carrying a logistics proposal. The Financial Times reports that Trump’s so-called “Board of Peace” has been discussing arrangements with DP World over managing supply chains and infrastructure for Gaza reconstruction, including warehousing, tracking systems, security, port development, and even a free-trade zone. After the bombs and starvation and displacement, the next step in the great humanitarian vision is to hand the ruins over to consultants with a PowerPoint deck titled “New Gaza: Now With Port-Led Economic Ecosystem.” Palestinians are still trapped in devastation. Reconstruction has barely begun, and goods remain restricted. Yet outside actors are already circling the carcass with clipboards, talking about privatizing services and building the commercial skeleton of a future Palestinians themselves may not meaningfully control. Gaza is being treated as a future logistics park that just needs the right operator, the right tracking system, the right monetization model, the right stack of contracts. Colonialism with barcode scanners. Ethnic cleansing with a supply-chain dashboard.
The obscenity is that all of this is dressed up as “peace.” The Board of Peace, the secure and traceable aid pipeline, the futuristic hub, the investment vision, the trade platforms. It is the same trick these people always pull: brutal domination first, branding exercise second. Destroy the place, control the crossings, decide who eats, delay rebuilding, and then unveil a gleaming redevelopment fantasy as though you are doing the survivors a favor. Palestinians are not being offered liberation in this scheme. They are being offered managed dependency with a prettier logo.
Down in Mexico, another little detail slipped into the news cycle that should have everyone sitting up a bit straighter. President Claudia Sheinbaum is demanding explanations after U.S. personnel died in connection with an operation in Chihuahua, saying Mexico’s federal security cabinet had not been informed. The public line is still full of denials and euphemisms, support, training, coordination, no joint ground operations, nothing to see here, please keep moving, but that the Mexican president is publicly saying her federal government was not aware tells you the smoke alarm is not going off for no reason. This is how norms erode: first the quiet collaboration, then the denials, then the constitutional ambiguity, then suddenly we are all supposed to accept that U.S. personnel being involved in anti-cartel operations on Mexican soil is just another Tuesday. Nothing says “stable regional partnership” quite like finding out about foreign security involvement after people are dead and everyone starts arguing over which layer of government forgot to mention it. It is the sort of thing that usually appears in the opening act before a much uglier sequel.
This is where all the threads start to braid together. Trump’s foreign policy is not chaotic in random ways. It is chaotic in revealing ways. Crises become opportunities for domination theater. Negotiations turn into loyalty tests. Humanitarian catastrophe gets repackaged as a business opening for well-connected operators. Legal limits are treated as nuisances to be trampled, dodged, or rebranded. Meanwhile, warning signs from allies abroad, from diplomats, from psychiatrists, from basic human decency disappear into the churn and are waved away as just more noise.
The noise is the point now. Overload people with absurdity; make every day too outrageous to process. Threaten to bomb bridges before breakfast, talk stablecoins over the rubble of Gaza by lunch, get caught in murky cross-border security messes by dinner, and trust that the public will be too exhausted to connect the dots. Think of it as governance by blitzkrieg and brain fog. Instead of coherence, the strategy is exhaustion.
Still, the pattern is there if you squint through the smoke. Trump is behaving less like a president managing converging global crises and more like a collapsing ego trying to force the world to mirror back its own fantasies of strength. Iran must yield immediately. Gaza must be remade for someone else’s profit. Mexico must quietly absorb whatever security overreach Washington feels entitled to attempt. Congress must watch, the media must normalize, and everyone else must pretend this is just one more rough news cycle instead of an increasingly obvious descent into imperial delirium.
Before I wrap up, thank you all for the kindness you’ve shown me. My uncle ascended to a higher plane yesterday, and although my heart is heavy, I’m grateful that his suffering has ended. I’m holding close the belief that he will find my dad, his older brother, and pass along how much I love him and miss him. There is real comfort in imagining them together now, both free from pain, both finally at peace.




Mary, your eloquence sustains me through this dark period in our country. Thank you for continuing to enlighten and inform us as you work through your loss.
Thank you again for connecting the dots so well. When Trump is defied, his rage escalates to maximum retribution. Unleashing a nuclear bunker buster on a target or two in Iran, because their leaders are not bending to his will, is fully consistent with who he is. Apparently, the President has sole authority over a decision to use the nuclear arsenal.