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Trump’s Loyalty Test Shocks NATO
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Trump’s Loyalty Test Shocks NATO

As President Trump lands in Turkey for a tense NATO summit, allies are being told that American protection now comes with a bigger price tag and a political loyalty test. Story Snapshot Trump arrives in Ankara for a NATO summit focused on a sharp jump in defense spending and new industry deals. The summit comes as Trump links U.S. security guarantees to how much allies spend and whether they back his Iran war strategy. Fact‑checkers say several of Trump’s Iran claims are false, deepening doubts about his judgment and honesty. Anti‑NATO protests in Turkey and talk of canceling future summits show growing anger at elites on both sides of the Atlantic. Trump’s Arrival in Ankara and the Stakes of the Summit President Donald Trump has arrived in Ankara, Turkey, for a two‑day NATO leaders’ summit held at the Beştepe Presidential Compound, with meetings scheduled for July 7 and 8. The gathering brings together 32 heads of state and government to review how well allies are meeting a new target to spend about 5% of their national economy on defense and related programs. Trump has pushed this higher spending for years, saying Europe must carry more of the load if it wants continued American protection. His brief trip is framed as a test of whether allies will match U.S. efforts and “reciprocate” for America’s security commitments, especially as the United States wages war against Iran. For many ordinary citizens on both the right and the left, this looks less like shared defense and more like a bill from distant elites who never ask what taxpayers can afford. On paper, NATO officials describe the Ankara summit as a chance to turn earlier promises into “concrete results” through higher investment, more weapons production, and ongoing support for Ukraine. NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte calls this part of a “defense industrial revolution,” with “tens of billions” of dollars in new defense contracts expected. For defense firms and lobbyists, this is a major victory. For workers facing inflation and squeezed wages, it can feel like proof that global institutions move faster to fund weapons than to fix broken schools, crowded hospitals, or rising energy costs. That sense feeds the belief, across party lines, that the system serves the well‑connected first. Transactional Security and Trump’s Iran Narrative Trump has long treated NATO not as a family of nations with shared values, but as a deal where U.S. protection is something to sell. He has repeatedly said he might not honor the alliance’s core pledge—Article 5, the promise to defend any ally that is attacked—if partners do not spend enough on their militaries. At past summits, he even invited Russia to “do whatever the hell they want” to countries that miss spending targets. This year, Trump’s team is openly framing the summit as a way to pressure allies to back the U.S. war against Iran, going beyond NATO’s own mutual defense rules. That posture worries many Europeans and Americans who fear leaders are turning life‑and‑death security ties into leverage for short‑term political gain. At the same time, several of Trump’s most dramatic claims about the Iran war have been proven false. He boasted that the United States had sunk the entire Iranian navy, but military reporting shows U.S. forces destroyed nine Iranian naval ships, not the full fleet of about 159 vessels. He suggested Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei had been killed, yet news outlets and footage from Tehran confirm Khamenei remains alive. He also claimed Iran was using Tomahawk cruise missiles, even though experts say those weapons are made for the U.S. military and there is no evidence Tehran possesses them. PolitiFact found his statement that the U.S. had wiped out “100%” of Iran’s military power to be untrue, as Iran continued to launch drones and missiles. When a president bends facts this far, it feeds the common fear that the people in charge are not honest about war, money, or risks to ordinary families. Rising Turkish Role, Public Protests, and Summit Fatigue Turkey’s status inside NATO is central to this year’s summit. Once viewed with suspicion for buying a Russian air defense system and clashing with Western‑backed Kurdish forces, Turkey is now seen as a key weapons producer and host to major alliance meetings. Turkish leaders are using the summit and the parallel NATO Summit Defense Industry Forum to showcase their growing defense industry and political weight. Trump has hinted he is arriving with a “big gift bag” for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, possibly including the offer of dozens of advanced F‑35 fighter jets. Such deals underline how much profit and power swirl around these events, even as many citizens struggle to pay for basics at home. In the two weeks before leaders arrived, anti‑NATO protests spread across Turkish cities including Istanbul, Ankara, and Izmir. Labor unions and civil society groups marched against rising military budgets and NATO’s expansion, arguing that more weapons spending will not solve daily problems like low pay, expensive housing, and economic inequality. Their message sounds familiar to many Americans and Europeans who feel ignored by political elites. While Trump’s base may cheer his tough talk on allies and Iran, and liberals may warn about his threat to collective defense, people in both camps often agree on one point: the system keeps asking them to sacrifice, while insiders build careers and contracts around endless security crises. NATO Contemplates Fewer Summits as Trust Erodes Behind closed doors, some NATO governments are asking if they should even keep holding annual summits. Reporting based on six diplomatic sources says the alliance is weighing a return to less frequent meetings to avoid more public clashes with Trump in his final year in office. Leaders have met every summer since 2021, but officials are now considering skipping a summit altogether in 2028 and moving toward gatherings every two years. Some say this would let them focus more on “real defense” and less on summit drama. Others worry it is another sign that trust among allies—and between voters and their governments—is wearing thin. Trump’s confrontations with NATO chiefs did not start in Ankara. Earlier meetings, from Brussels to The Hague, were shaped almost entirely around keeping him engaged and preventing explosive scenes. European leaders flattered him, raised spending targets, and shortened agendas, all in hopes of avoiding a public meltdown that could shake markets or embolden rivals like Russia. Those tactics delivered big defense budgets but left deeper questions unresolved: How much should European taxpayers pay? Will the United States really show up if a smaller ally is attacked? And who, if anyone, is speaking for citizens who feel crushed between foreign threats abroad and economic struggles at home? As this summit unfolds in Turkey, those questions hang over the proceedings far more than any staged photo of leaders standing together. NOW: Epic moment as Air Force One is WHEELS DOWN with President Trump aboard in Turkey, for the NATO summit 47 has his team ASSEMBLED on board: Rubio, Hegseth, Bessent and more First time the new Air Force One is overseas! pic.twitter.com/8N46Aebfpz — Eric Daugherty (@EricLDaugh) July 7, 2026 For American readers, the Ankara summit is not just a far‑off diplomatic event. It is a window into how their own government now talks about power. Trump is telling allies that U.S. help is conditional on their spending and loyalty, even as he faces credible fact‑checks on his war claims and anger from protesters who see NATO as part of a failing global elite. Whether one leans conservative or liberal, it is hard to miss the pattern: big promises, bigger price tags, and very few voices asking how ordinary people will carry the load. The danger is that, amid the speeches and deals in Ankara, the core idea that free nations should stand together in defense of their citizens gets replaced by something colder—a marketplace where security is traded like any other commodity, and where regular families are just another line on the bill. Sources: youtube.com, abcnews.com, en.wikipedia.org, nato.int, washingtonpost.com, apnews.com, militarytimes.com, reuters.com, facebook.com, politifact.com, nato.usmission.gov, brookings.edu, americanprogress.org

Birthright Bombshell Shakes MAGA Agenda
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Birthright Bombshell Shakes MAGA Agenda

The central irony of the current Supreme Court is that the same Roberts Court long criticized as the “Trump Court” has now produced some of the most consequential limits on Donald Trump’s presidency, exposing how structurally the Court oscillates between enabling and constraining executive power rather than simply favoring or opposing any one man. Key Points The Roberts Court first expanded Trump’s immunity and narrowed checks like nationwide injunctions, helping define what many called a “Trump Court.” Later decisions, including Trump v. Barbara and the IEPA tariff ruling, sharply curtailed Trump’s power, reaffirming birthright citizenship and limiting unilateral economic emergencies. These rulings turn on deeper doctrines: the Citizenship Clause, the major questions doctrine, and the separation of powers between Congress and the presidency. Media narratives of a Court “for” or “against” Trump obscure a more durable story about institutional drift toward stronger executive power punctuated by rare, significant pushbacks. From Roberts Court to Trump Court: How We Got Here To understand why recent decisions on birthright citizenship and tariffs feel so momentous, you have to see them against the backdrop of a two‑decade transformation of the Court under Chief Justice John Roberts. When Roberts took the center seat in 2005, he sold himself as an umpire calling “balls and strikes,” a conservative institutionalist rather than a partisan warrior. Over time, however, the Court he leads has become widely regarded as the most conservative since the mid‑twentieth century, reshaping campaign finance, voting rights, abortion, and administrative law in ways that often align with Republican priorities. The “Trump Court” label crystallized in 2024, when Roberts authored Trump v. United States, holding that presidents enjoy absolute criminal immunity for “core” constitutional acts and presumptive immunity for official acts more broadly. That opinion did not just benefit Trump in concrete prosecutions; it entrenched a robust conception of the unitary, insulated executive, altering the litigation landscape for any future president. Around the same time, Roberts steered rulings on ballot access (Trump v. Anderson) and criminal charges related to January 6 (Fischer v. United States) that, taken together, shielded Trump from key legal threats and signaled a Court unusually protective of his political fortunes. It is against that record that journalists began speaking of “how the Roberts Court became the Trump Court,” emphasizing not only outcomes but timing—decisions arriving just in time to shape an election or foreclose a criminal trial. The Court’s emergency or “shadow docket” amplified those perceptions: a stream of terse orders, often unreasoned, repeatedly advantaged Trump’s administration, from immigration to environmental regulation. For critics, the pattern looked like institutional capture; for defenders, it reflected a principled skepticism of constraints on the presidency. Either way, the Court’s reputation as a conservative ally to Trump was well‑earned before the citizenship and tariff cases ever arrived. Birthright Citizenship: Trump v. Barbara and a Constitutional Line in the Sand Executive Order 14160, issued on Trump’s first day back in office, sought to reinterpret the Fourteenth Amendment’s Citizenship Clause by excluding children born in the United States to parents “unlawfully” or only temporarily present. In substance, it attempted to undo the rule dating back to United States v. Wong Kim Ark (1898), which held that virtually all children born on U.S. soil, regardless of parental citizenship, are citizens, subject only to narrow exceptions such as foreign diplomats. This was not a marginal adjustment; lawyers warned it would deny citizenship to hundreds of thousands of children and create a subclass of U.S.-born noncitizens with no clear legal status. In Trump v. Barbara, decided June 30, 2026, Roberts wrote for the Court that the executive order could not stand. The opinion returned to first principles: the Citizenship Clause’s text—“All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens”—contains no reference to the immigration status of parents. Drawing heavily on Wong Kim Ark, Roberts concluded that the Amendment incorporated common‑law jus soli: if you are born here and subject to the nation’s laws, you are a citizen, irrespective of whether your parents are undocumented, on student visas, or here as tourists. That holding was not unanimous; it reportedly commanded only a bare majority on the constitutional question, with some justices willing to resolve the case on statutory grounds or executive overreach alone. Justice Alito’s dissent warned that keeping birthright citizenship intact preserves “a powerful incentive to enter or remain in this country illegally,” reflecting a long‑standing conservative critique that citizenship by birth undermines immigration enforcement. Trump himself denounced the decision as “too bad for our country,” insisting the Clause was meant for descendants of enslaved people, not “Chinese billionaires” exploiting “birth tourism.” The problem for that counter‑narrative is evidentiary. Neither Trump nor his allies have produced forensic analysis of the 1866 debates or ratification history that contradicts the Court’s reading. Historical scholarship overwhelmingly supports the view that Congress intentionally adopted broad language, rejecting proposals to limit citizenship to children of citizens. In other words, the Roberts opinion did not innovate; it restored the doctrinal baseline and declared that a president cannot, by executive order, rewrite a constitutional rule entrenched for more than a century. Seen through the “Trump Court” lens, Trump v. Barbara is striking precisely because the same Court that expanded presidential immunity is willing to draw a hard constitutional line when a president tries to strip rights from a disfavored class. It is a reminder that ideological conservatism, even coupled with institutional sympathy for executive power, does not automatically translate into deference when core constitutional text and precedent point the other way. Tariffs and the Major Questions Doctrine: Reining in Emergency Economic Power The second major defeat for Trump’s agenda came through a seemingly technical dispute over the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEPA). Historically, IEPA has allowed presidents to regulate economic transactions with foreign entities during declared national emergencies. Trump attempted to use IEPA to impose sweeping tariffs, framing them as necessary measures in economic conflicts with China, the UK, Japan, and others. In a 6‑3 decision summarized in media as a “massive blow to Trump’s agenda,” the Court held that IEPA does not authorize the president to unilaterally impose tariffs at this scale without explicit congressional approval. The majority grounded its reasoning in the major questions doctrine—a now central feature of the Roberts Court’s administrative law jurisprudence. Under that doctrine, when an agency or president asserts power of “vast economic and political significance,” courts demand clear congressional authorization rather than relying on vague or capacious statutory language. Applied here, the doctrine means that emergency economic powers cannot silently swallow Congress’s traditional control over tariff policy. Justice Gorsuch’s concurrence drove the point home: the major questions doctrine is not an anti‑Trump rule; it is a structural safeguard for legislative deliberation, warning Congress that if it wants to delegate decisions of this magnitude, it must do so openly and specifically. Duncan Levin, a former federal prosecutor, framed the ruling as a classic separation‑of‑powers case rather than a personal rebuke to Trump, connecting IEPA’s 1970s origin to post‑Watergate efforts to cabin unilateral presidential action. The dissent, led by Justice Thomas, argued that invoking major questions here unduly constrains emergency powers Congress plainly meant to be flexible in crises. He saw tariffs as within the historical heartland of executive foreign‑affairs authority once Congress has opened the door. Justice Kavanaugh, though in agreement on the outcome, warned about the practical “mess” the decision creates, from refunding billions in already collected tariffs to the destabilizing effect on ongoing trade agreements. The Court remanded with instructions to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, ending this litigation but leaving future IEPA cases possible, a move critics see as wary avoidance of a fully theorized boundary on executive economic power. Still, the operative fact is that a Court long criticized for empowering Trump has now declared that he cannot remake global trade by unilateral proclamation under a Cold War emergency statute. In the same term that saw the Court reinforce presidential immunity, it also insisted that Congress—not the president alone—must own the political cost of sweeping tariff regimes. Shadow Dockets, Universal Injunctions, and the Court’s Mixed Record on Trump These headline defeats for Trump sit atop a more complicated procedural landscape. In Trump v. CASA, decided in 2025, the Court held that district courts lack authority to issue “universal” nationwide injunctions blocking federal policies for nonparties. Justice Barrett’s majority opinion traced the history of equity back to the English Court of Chancery and concluded that injunctions traditionally bind only parties before the court; nationwide orders halting federal policies everywhere lack a historical pedigree and exceed statutory authority under the Judiciary Act of 1789. On one level, CASA was about remedy, not rights: the Court expressly did not decide whether Trump’s birthright citizenship order was constitutional. On another level, it significantly shifted litigation terrain in Trump’s favor. By curtailing nationwide injunctions, the Court made it harder for challengers to secure broad relief quickly, forcing them into more complex class actions and creating room for executives to “give it a try” even if a policy is ultimately struck down. Combined with the shadow docket’s pattern of emergency stays and unexplained orders, CASA fed the narrative of a Court procedurally enabling Trump even while occasionally checking him on the merits. This mixed record is what makes the Roberts Court hard to reduce to a simple partisan tool. On immunity, injunctions, and emergency stays, the Court has strengthened the presidency in ways that served Trump’s immediate interests. On citizenship and tariffs, it has reaffirmed constitutional and statutory limits, sometimes over vehement conservative dissents, and in the birthright case, over Trump’s explicit political campaign against a longstanding understanding of citizenship. The Roberts Court vs. the Trump Court: What the Contrast Really Shows Talk of a “Roberts Court” versus a “Trump Court” presumes there are two different institutions: an older, cautious conservative Court and a newer, Trump‑aligned version that supplants it. The evidence points instead to a single Court wrestling with two enduring tensions. First, how far to push a long conservative project to weaken the administrative state and strengthen presidential power. Second, how to reconcile that project with constitutional text and precedent that sometimes demand limits even when a Republican president is in the dock. Roberts himself sits at the fulcrum of that struggle. He has authored opinions that expand executive immunity, narrow structural checks like nationwide injunctions, and favor deregulatory outcomes—moves that objectively benefited Trump. Yet he also wrote Trump v. Barbara, the decision that stops Trump from unilaterally redefining who counts as an American at birth. Seen together, those rulings are not schizophrenic; they illustrate a coherent, if contestable, vision of constitutional order: a powerful presidency, insulated in its official acts, but unable to shred core constitutional guarantees by decree. For citizens trying to make sense of the Court’s trajectory, the lesson is sobering. The same doctrinal tools that check Trump on tariffs today can limit a future president’s climate policies tomorrow. The reaffirmation of birthright citizenship is a durable victory for a broad, inclusive reading of the Fourteenth Amendment; the immunity decisions are durable shifts toward a less legally accountable executive. To describe this as simply pro‑ or anti‑Trump misses the point. The Roberts Court is building a constitutional architecture in which presidents are harder to prosecute, harder to stop through broad injunctions, yet still bound by certain textual and historical lines. Whether that architecture serves the country well will depend less on Trump than on how future presidents wield the powers the Court has preserved for them—and how willing the Court remains, when those powers are abused, to remember that the Constitution, not the occupant of the Oval Office, ultimately defines the limits. Sources: motherjones.com, youtube.com, constitutioncenter.org, supremecourt.gov, facebook.com, bbc.com, harvardmagazine.com, harvardlawreview.org, law.cornell.edu

Housing Squeeze Blamed On The Wrong Thing
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Housing Squeeze Blamed On The Wrong Thing

Immigration research today paints a far more nuanced picture than partisan slogans suggest: unauthorized inflows can strain local housing and safety-net resources, yet the best evidence shows they have not “brutalized” the U.S. economy and that recent slowdowns are driven more by falling immigration than rising border crossings. Key Points Unauthorized immigrant worker flows modestly lower labor income per capita and reduce local government transfers, while clearly raising rents and home prices in constrained housing markets. These same inflows increase local employment roughly one-for-one without significant wage declines, and at the national level higher immigration has boosted GDP growth with little effect on inflation. Net unauthorized immigration turned negative in 2025; economists now link weaker output and employment growth to declining inflows, not to an alleged uncontrolled surge. Fiscal impacts diverge: unlawful immigrants are more likely to be a net drain on state and local budgets, but total immigration substantially raises federal revenue and long-run output. What the Dallas Fed study actually found about unauthorized workers The recent Dallas Fed working paper that sparked headlines about “Biden’s open borders” is a detailed empirical analysis of unauthorized immigrant worker flows (UIWF) from 2011 through the early 2020s, based on administrative microdata. It asks a narrow but important question: when undocumented employment rises in a local area, what happens to jobs, pay, housing, and transfers for the people already there? The authors find several distinct effects. First, UIWF increases local employment approximately one-for-one—each percentage-point increase in unauthorized worker flows translates into about the same increase in total employment—without significant declines in average local wages. That combination implies composition effects: more low-wage workers pulling down average labor income per capita, even though prevailing wage levels in the market do not collapse. Second, the paper identifies a clear housing channel. A 1 percent increase in UIWF relative to initial employment raises local house prices by roughly 2.2 percent and market rents by about 1.4 percent, with little immediate expansion of housing supply. In other words, more workers—and the households that come with them—bid for essentially the same stock of homes and apartments. In markets where construction is slow or constrained by zoning, that demand shock shows up quickly in higher prices and rents. Finally, the study reports a statistically significant reduction in government transfers, both in total and per capita, associated with higher UIWF. That effect is consistent with more people working and drawing less on unemployment insurance or other safety-net programs, but in per-capita terms it means fewer dollars in transfer income flowing to local residents. Why “brutalization” rhetoric overstates the case These Dallas Fed findings largely contradict the most extreme political narrative—the claim that unauthorized immigration has “brutalized” the economy through widespread wage suppression and runaway inflation. On wages, the authors are explicit: they do not find significant declines in local wage levels when UIWF rises. This result aligns with decades of labor-market research showing that immigration’s impact on native wages is small, typically in the low single digits and often statistically indistinguishable from zero. There are distributional effects—low-skilled natives in specific sectors may face more competition—but the aggregate pattern is of modest pressure rather than a broad collapse in earnings. On inflation, Dallas Fed economists evaluating national data conclude that unexpected increases in net unauthorized immigration raise output growth for about two years with an inflation response “close to zero.” Immigration expands labor supply and production capacity at least as much as it boosts demand, rendering the net effect slightly deflationary in some macro models. The rhetoric of “invasion” tends to treat any upward movement in prices as caused by immigrants. Yet in the housing market, where the Dallas Fed paper does find a sizable price effect, supply constraints are a decisive part of the story. The authors and independent analysts stress that limited housing supply—tight zoning, slow permitting, underbuilt rental stock—magnifies the impact of additional demand, regardless of its source. Evidence from other periods reinforces this point: home prices soared in 2020–2021 even as immigration plummeted, underscoring that broad monetary conditions and structural housing shortages can drive affordability problems without any help from border flows. Local strain versus national growth: the split economic story To understand how a single phenomenon can raise rents and lower average income in some places while boosting GDP nationwide, it helps to separate three levels of analysis: local distribution, national macroeconomy, and public finances. Locally, the Dallas Fed paper shows the classic pattern of a demand shock into an inelastic housing market and a labor-force shift toward lower-wage, higher-employment equilibrium. Existing residents who rent and rely on transfers can feel squeezed: their housing costs rise faster than their incomes, and aggregate transfer flows per person fall. Homeowners and employers, by contrast, often benefit. Home values climb; businesses gain a deeper pool of willing workers. At the national macro level, the consensus among mainstream economists is unambiguous: immigration is a net positive for growth. The Dallas Fed’s analysis of the recent surge in overall immigration (legal and illegal) attributes roughly 0.1 percentage points of additional annual GDP growth between 2022 and 2024 to higher inflows. The Congressional Budget Office projects that greater immigration between 2024 and 2034 will raise GDP by $8.9 trillion relative to a lower-immigration baseline. Brookings researchers, looking specifically at 2025–2026, estimate that the recent shift toward negative net migration will shave 0.2–0.3 percentage points off GDP growth in 2025 and up to 0.3 points in 2026. In other words, the economic drag now emerging is tied to fewer immigrants, not more. Public finances introduce a third layer. Manhattan Institute modeling finds that the average legal immigrant is a large net fiscal contributor, paying roughly $350,000 more in taxes than they receive in benefits over their lifetime, while the average unlawful immigrant imposes a net cost of about $80,000. That distinction matches a broader body of work showing that immigrants strengthen the federal budget over time but can strain state and local budgets, particularly in education and health care for low-income families. Has Biden’s border policy “brutalized” the economy? The specific charge that Joe Biden’s “illegal alien invasion” has brutalized the U.S. economy does not survive contact with the data. First, the timeline cuts against the premise. New Dallas Fed estimates show that net unauthorized immigration turned negative in early 2025, with net flows around –89,000 by mid-year. Brookings reaches a similar conclusion, estimating total net migration of –295,000 to –10,000 for 2025, with continued negative flows likely in 2026. That means the period when critics argue the economy is suffering most from unauthorized immigration is in fact a period of declining, not rising, inflows. Second, wage and employment patterns are the opposite of “brutalization.” Unauthorized worker flows are associated with higher employment and no significant wage collapse in local markets. Nationally, the immigration surge of 2022–2024 coincided with strong job creation and above-trend GDP growth, to which immigration contributed rather than detracted. Third, inflation dynamics do not match the narrative of immigrants driving a cost-of-living crisis. Dallas Fed economists explicitly find that positive shocks to net unauthorized immigration have almost no effect on inflation, even as they raise output. Studies of past waves of immigration likewise show that increases in the foreign-born share have, if anything, slightly deflationary implications because younger, working-age immigrants expand supply more than demand. Where unauthorized immigration does create measurable burdens is in the housing market and in certain public budgets—especially in high-immigration metros with slow construction, and in states and localities that shoulder education and uncompensated care costs. Analysts from the Center for Immigration Studies, FAIR, and Republican policy groups argue that illegal immigration imposes tens of billions annually in net costs on taxpayers through schooling, healthcare, and welfare benefits tied to mixed-status families. Even here, though, Dallas Fed and CBO work suggest those local burdens coexist with—and are partly offset by—stronger national growth and higher federal revenues. Housing affordability: real pressures, but not a single-cause crisis The strongest empirical link between unauthorized immigration and everyday hardship is in housing. The Dallas Fed paper estimates that immigration accounted for roughly 30 percent of home price growth and 20 percent of rent increases in the average market studied during the recent boom, with the remainder driven by broader demand and short supply. Testimony before Congress and independent studies reach similar conclusions: adding millions of people to the country, many of them concentrating in a limited set of metros, drives up rents and reduces affordability relative to wages in those areas, particularly for U.S.-born renters with stagnant incomes. But causality here is layered. Sunbelt metros like Atlanta and Nashville, highlighted by Bloomberg, have seen rents and home prices climb 60 percent or more since 2019, squeezing the middle class; much of that pressure stems from internal migration, corporate relocations, and investment booms rather than border crossings.[Rising Inflation video summary] Housing markets respond to aggregate population and income growth, not the legal status of that growth. Policy choices amplify or dampen these pressures. Restrictive zoning, height limits, and slow permitting turn normal demographic change into a scarcity crisis. Conversely, allowing more construction—especially multi-family units near jobs—can absorb both native and immigrant inflows without unsustainable price spikes. The Dallas Fed findings on UIWF are best read as a warning about the cost of treating housing as a fixed asset in the face of rising demand. They do not imply that stopping unauthorized immigration alone would restore affordability; without reforms on the supply side, any demand shock—whether from native-born movers, tech workers, or retirees—will produce similar strain. What the evidence suggests for policy Taking the research as a whole, several policy implications emerge. First, macroeconomic performance and fiscal health depend more on the level and composition of immigration than on its mere legality. Legal, working-age immigrants with moderate to high education levels are powerful engines of growth and net fiscal contributors; unauthorized immigrants also expand GDP but are more likely to be net drains on state and local budgets. Second, abrupt efforts to drive net migration deeply negative—through enforcement that cuts both legal and illegal inflows—risk slower employment growth, weaker output, and reduced consumer spending. Recent projections of breakeven monthly job growth as low as 50,000, potentially turning negative, are rooted in precisely such declines in inflows. Third, if the goal is to reduce genuine hardship among native-born workers and renters, targeting housing supply, wage enforcement, and legalization may be more effective than broad-brush restriction. The Center for American Progress estimates that legalizing undocumented workers could raise their annual wages by about 10 percent in the short run and over 30 percent in the longer term, with small positive spillovers to other workers. Stronger labor standards and interior enforcement against employers who exploit unauthorized workers can limit undercutting of wages without shrinking the labor force. Finally, the public debate itself would benefit from a clearer distinction between localized fiscal and affordability problems—which are real—and sweeping claims of national economic “brutalization,” which the best available evidence does not support. Immigration, including its unauthorized component, creates winners and losers; responsible policy aims to preserve the growth benefits while addressing concentrated costs, rather than denying one side of the ledger altogether. Sources: townhall.com, swacca.org, keranews.org, dallasfed.org, facebook.com, frbsf.org, cfr.org, migrationpolicy.org, youtube.com, aeaweb.org

Crypto Spying Plot Snags American Student
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Crypto Spying Plot Snags American Student

In the case of Eli Levon, a 21‑year‑old American yeshiva student in Jerusalem, you see in miniature how modern espionage has migrated to messaging apps, cryptocurrency, and low‑tech “missions” that look banal to outsiders but sit squarely inside the long covert conflict between Israel and Iran. Key Points Israeli prosecutors have formally indicted American citizen Eli Levon on charges of contacting Iranian intelligence and providing information that could aid an enemy. The indictment alleges he answered a Telegram “job” ad, then photographed sites in Jerusalem and carried out simple dead‑drop style tasks in exchange for roughly $1,300 in cryptocurrency. This pattern matches a broader wave of Iran‑linked espionage cases inside Israel, many built around social media contact, small payments, and basic tradecraft rather than Hollywood‑style spying. The case sits within a decades‑long, reciprocal landscape of espionage allegations among Iran, Israel, and the United States, where public evidence rarely goes beyond indictments and official claims. The Allegations Against Eli Levon: What Prosecutors Say Happened According to Israeli reporting on the indictment, Eli Levon is a 21‑year‑old American citizen who had been studying at the Mir yeshiva, a major Haredi institution in Jerusalem’s ultra‑Orthodox Mea She’arim neighborhood. Prosecutors in the Jerusalem District Court charged him with two core offenses: “contact with a foreign agent” and “providing information that could benefit an enemy,” both classic formulations in Israeli law for espionage‑related conduct. The picture that emerges from the charge sheet is not of a seasoned operative deep in a military program, but of a young civilian who, while visiting the United States in late 2025, allegedly responded to a job advertisement on the Telegram messaging app. The indictment says that a person using the handle “Sina” engaged him through Telegram, offering paid tasks in exchange for photos and videos. Israeli authorities describe “Sina,” and later “Alexander/Alecsander,” as agents working on behalf of Iranian intelligence services, making Levon’s cooperation legally tantamount to working for an enemy state. Prosecutors allege that Levon carried out several assignments in late 2025 and early 2026. These include photographing the Jerusalem Central Bus Station from multiple angles, documenting a specific building in the historic Bukharan Quarter (Bukharim neighborhood), and transmitting the images with geolocation data to his handlers via Telegram. In one operation, he is accused of leaving a cigarette pack containing a note reading “the work is done” at Hadar Mall—a classic “dead drop,” where a message or item is left in a prearranged spot rather than handed over directly. Another task, according to one account, involved concealing a USB flash drive wrapped in a 50‑shekel note at a restaurant, hinting at an attempt to move digital data in a way that would be difficult to trace back to sender and recipient. Across these missions, the indictment claims Levon received approximately $861 in cryptocurrency from “Sina” and about $518 from “Alexander,” for a total around $1,379 (roughly NIS 4,225). The State Attorney’s Office has asked the court to keep him in custody until the legal process concludes, underscoring that they view the matter as serious national‑security conduct rather than minor wrongdoing. Espionage in the Age of Apps and Crypto: Mechanism and Tradecraft Taken in isolation, photographing a bus station or leaving a cigarette box in a mall looks harmless. Intelligence services, however, often begin by tasking low‑profile, low‑risk missions that establish trust, test reliability, and map the recruit’s habits before asking for more sensitive material. The Levon indictment, like several other Iran‑related espionage cases in Israel, illustrates how this plays out in the ecosystem of encrypted messaging apps and digital currencies. On the communication side, the Telegram app is central. It offers encrypted channels and the ability to create pseudonymous accounts, making it attractive for both ordinary users and intelligence operatives. In multiple Israeli cases, including a Tel Aviv resident arrested on suspicion of spying for Iran and another defendant from Tiberias, the alleged initial contact was via Telegram, often under innocuous usernames like “Career Path.” In the Levon case, “Sina” and “Alexander/Alecsander” are the presumed handler identities, providing a layer of plausible deniability if accounts are traced. Money moves through cryptocurrency wallets rather than bank transfers or cash pickups. Prosecutors emphasize that payments were made in crypto precisely to “obscure their traces” and make it harder for security services to follow the financial trail. This detail recurs in other indictments: a Tel Aviv suspect reportedly received “thousands of shekels worth of cryptocurrency” for photographing sites and missile impact locations, and another case involved tens of thousands of shekels routed via digital wallets. The amounts are modest, yet they matter; small payments are less likely to raise flags in traditional banking systems and align with the operational logic of recruiting opportunistic amateurs rather than high‑value insiders. The missions themselves—photographing public sites, filming streets, leaving notes or small objects in specified locations—are rudimentary tradecraft. They do not require special access, which means a recruit can perform them without raising suspicion among friends or employers. But they can still feed an intelligence picture: repeated photos of transportation hubs, for instance, help map security patterns, camera placement, crowd flow, or potential chokepoints that might be relevant to planning future attacks or sabotage. Using dead drops in commercial spaces further reduces the risk that a handler will be directly observed meeting a source. A Broader Pattern: Iran‑Linked Espionage Cases Inside Israel Levon’s indictment is not a one‑off story; it fits into a discernible pattern of Iran‑related espionage activity that Israeli authorities say they have been dismantling over the past several years. Israeli media and official statements describe a series of arrests involving citizens allegedly recruited via social media, offered relatively small sums of money or cryptocurrency, and tasked with photographing or documenting specific sites. In one case, a 30‑year‑old Israeli, Denis Liakhov, was indicted after an Iranian agent purportedly contacted him on Telegram and asked him to film streets and residential buildings in Petah Tikva and to inquire discreetly about vehicles at a car dealership in Netanya, again with payment in cryptocurrency. Another investigation uncovered a Tel Aviv resident who allegedly contacted Iranian officials on his own initiative, then photographed sites including the Tel Aviv Museum and a missile impact location, receiving thousands of shekels in crypto and using numerous SIM cards to maintain contact. Earlier, Israeli authorities reported arresting 27 Israelis across 13 alleged espionage cells linked to Iran, with one group of seven defendants accused of conducting around 600 missions focused on military bases and other sensitive facilities. In military contexts, one suspect associated with the Iron Dome air‑defense system reportedly provided “major intelligence” and faced charges that could lead to a life sentence, while a second did little more than post pro‑Iran graffiti. These cases vary dramatically in seriousness, yet they share a core architecture: Iran‑linked handlers, digital communication, modest financial incentives, and an emphasis on using ordinary citizens’ access and mobility. From an intelligence perspective, this is cost‑effective. Recruiting a network of low‑level sources across a city or country can generate granular situational awareness without relying solely on high‑risk penetrations of military or intelligence agencies. From a legal and political perspective, each case also demonstrates to domestic audiences that authorities are actively countering hostile activity, reinforcing the message that Iran is waging a covert campaign against Israel. The Reciprocal Landscape: Espionage Claims Among Iran, Israel, and the U.S. To understand the significance of Levon’s case, it helps to place it in the wider landscape of espionage allegations between Iran, Israel, and the United States. Over the past two decades, Iran has repeatedly announced the arrest and prosecution of individuals accused of spying for the CIA or Israel’s Mossad. These episodes range from claims of breaking up spy rings and detaining dozens of alleged agents to executions of supposed dual‑spies. Iranian officials, for example, have said they detained 30 people across the country on charges of espionage for the U.S. and Israel, portraying some as “operational or media mercenaries.” In another widely reported case, Iran’s intelligence ministry claimed to have arrested 17 Iranians working as CIA spies, some of whom were sentenced to death as “corruptors on earth.” Western governments, including U.S. officials, often respond by questioning the credibility of these announcements, highlighting the absence of publicly verifiable evidence and, at times, contradictions in Iranian reporting. On the other side of the ledger, U.S. and Israeli institutions have documented their own concerns about Iranian espionage operations and covert attacks. Analysis of espionage‑related cases in the U.S. shows Iranians among those prosecuted for sanctions violations, unregistered foreign‑agent activity, and more traditional intelligence work. Commentary on Iran’s “covert war” describes a pattern of plots and operations abroad, some partially substantiated, others contested, underscoring how intelligence accusations and narratives themselves become tools of statecraft. This reciprocal dynamic matters because, in most of these cases—including Levon’s—the public does not see the underlying evidence beyond what prosecutors choose to include in an indictment or what intelligence services disclose in broad strokes. The legal process determines guilt or innocence; the public conversation is built largely on allegations, official statements, and media summaries rather than forensic detail. That does not mean the charges are false, but it does mean that, from a reader’s perspective, what is “known” is structurally filtered through governments’ communication strategies. A Young Religious Student as Alleged Spy: Social and Legal Implications Levon’s profile—young, American, studying in a Haredi yeshiva—adds layers that resonate in both Israeli and diaspora Jewish communities. Yeshiva students are generally understood as focused on religious study rather than political or military matters, and the ultra‑Orthodox world often occupies an ambivalent position in Israeli security debates: strongly attached to Jewish identity, yet not uniformly aligned with the state’s nationalist ethos. A case in which a Haredi American is accused of spying for Iran, even for relatively small sums of money, therefore disrupts some stereotypes about who might become entangled in hostile intelligence activity. Legally, the charges he faces are serious. “Contact with a foreign agent” in Israeli law criminalizes knowingly communicating with someone representing a hostile state or organization, while “providing information that could benefit an enemy” targets the transmission of data, even if the information itself is not classified in the usual sense. In practice, photographing transportation hubs, documenting urban sites, or leaving coded messages can fall under that rubric if prosecutors can persuade a court that the tasks were part of an organized effort conducted on behalf of an adversary. For an American citizen, an espionage conviction in Israel has further implications. It may affect future movement, consular relations, and how U.S. agencies view similar recruitment patterns involving foreigners overseas. But the heart of the case remains domestic: Israel’s security apparatus is signaling that even low‑dollar, low‑visibility cooperation with Iranian operatives through social media is intolerable and will be treated as espionage, not merely cyber‑enabled petty crime. Eli Levon, 21. He studied at Mir yeshiva in Jerusalem. Israeli prosecutors charged him with spying for Iran after he allegedly gathered intelligence for cryptocurrency. Israel criminalizes those who refuse its war machine. [Source: Middle East Eye] — Voice Of Oppress (@voiceofoppre) July 4, 2026 What This Case Tells Us About Modern Espionage The Levon indictment highlights several broader truths about contemporary intelligence work. First, the barrier to entry for becoming a useful source has dropped. A smartphone, a messaging app, and a willingness to perform small tasks can be enough for an adversary to start testing and using a recruit, especially in open societies where most infrastructure and public spaces can be freely observed. Second, the technical tools—encrypted apps, cryptocurrency, disposable SIM cards—are widely available and inexpensive. That democratization of tradecraft means intelligence services may favor broad, shallow networks of semi‑amateur sources alongside their traditional, deep penetrations. It also complicates law‑enforcement work: the same platforms that protect dissidents’ privacy also shelter hostile intelligence activity. Third, in an environment of chronic tension like that between Israel and Iran, each individual case forms part of a wider narrative of threat and resilience. Iran points to its capture of alleged CIA or Mossad assets as evidence of vigilance; Israel and its allies cite espionage indictments and foiled plots as proof that Tehran is actively targeting them. The truth of any single case is adjudicated in court, not in headlines. Yet the accumulation of similar stories, with consistent patterns of communication and payment, suggests that the underlying phenomenon—a persistent covert contest—is real, even if the public sees only its shadow. Sources: military.com, timesofisrael.com, theyeshivaworld.com, vinnews.com, wanaen.com, ground.news, cnn.com, x.com, yahoo.com, israelnationalnews.com, facebook.com, caspianpost.com, brookings.edu, youtube.com, bbc.com, cato.org

Legal Loophole Keeps ‘Dead’ Carrier Alive
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Legal Loophole Keeps ‘Dead’ Carrier Alive

The real story behind the Navy’s “11 carriers” is not a simple headcount, but a tension between what the law demands on paper and what the fleet can genuinely put to sea. Key Points Federal law hard-codes a floor of 11 operational aircraft carriers in Title 10 of the U.S. Code. The Navy extended the life of USS Nimitz into 2027 to avoid dipping below that legal minimum before USS John F. Kennedy is delivered. Critics argue Nimitz is effectively a non-deployable, end‑of‑life hull being counted to satisfy statute rather than real readiness. This dispute sits inside a long tradition of using extensions and legal definitions to reconcile carrier numbers with industrial limits and global demands. What the Law Actually Requires Carrier arithmetic in Washington starts with a statute, not a spreadsheet. Title 10 of the U.S. Code, in the section that governs naval combat forces, states that the Navy “shall include not less than 11 operational aircraft carriers.” That language is not advisory. It is a congressionally imposed floor intended to ensure the United States can maintain global presence—Pacific, Europe, Middle East—without leaving major regions uncovered when ships rotate through maintenance or training. This legal requirement has history. Congress once set the floor at 12, then allowed it to drop to 11 when USS John F. Kennedy (CV‑67) was decommissioned, and later granted temporary waivers when the fleet briefly fell to 10. The existence of waivers underscores the statute’s force: without explicit legislative relief, the Navy is not supposed to operate below that threshold. That is why the timing of retirements and new deliveries becomes a political and legal problem, not just a logistics issue. Why Nimitz Was Extended Instead of Retired USS Nimitz (CVN‑68), commissioned in 1975, is the oldest nuclear carrier in U.S. service and has already exceeded the roughly 50‑year design lifespan associated with the Nimitz class. The Navy’s original plan was to retire her in May 2026 after more than five decades at sea. Construction delays on Ford‑class follow-ons, particularly USS John F. Kennedy (CVN‑79), disrupted that plan. Congressional Research Service timelines and Navy reporting place Kennedy’s delivery into 2027, not 2026. Faced with a looming gap—Nimitz gone, Kennedy not yet delivered—the Navy did something it has done before: it extended a carrier’s service life. In March 2026, Navy officials confirmed that Nimitz’s inactivation would be pushed to March 2027, explicitly “in line with carrier John F. Kennedy’s delivery,” so the fleet would not drop below 11. USNI News and other outlets describe this as a deliberate alignment of decommissioning and new hull delivery, a classic force-structure maneuver designed around a statutory minimum rather than a tactical desire to keep a venerable ship at sea. The extension is not merely an accounting trick on paper. It triggers real-world steps: Nimitz begins a final deployment, then a transit toward her ultimate decommissioning site, including a homeport shift to Norfolk, Virginia. Those movements are part of the inactivation and defueling pipeline, but they keep the ship in commission and available for at least limited operations until the date Congress and the Navy have effectively synchronized. Counting “Operational” Carriers Versus Deployable Carriers The word that drives this entire debate is “operational.” In statutory language it appears as a modifier to the carriers Congress requires. In public discourse it is often assumed to mean “ready to deploy at full combat capability.” The Navy’s internal usage is more nuanced: a carrier can be in commission and part of the operational inventory even while in deep maintenance, training, or transit. In practice, the United States almost never has 11 carriers ready to fight. Analyses of carrier cycles describe a “rule of thirds”: at any given time roughly a third of the carrier force is deployed, a third is in work-ups and transit, and a third is in maintenance or overhaul. That pattern, reflected in historic Proceedings discussions from the early 1980s, shows 12 carriers in commission but only about four deployed, with the others cycling through training or extended yard periods. The structure is deliberate; the law’s floor of 11 is set to make sure that, even with this rhythm, the Navy can still surge four to six carriers when global crises demand it. From that perspective, Nimitz’s status through early 2027 matters less than whether she is legally in commission and available for some level of service, and more than whether the overall inventory stays at 11 until Kennedy can join. The statute does not distinguish between a carrier on station in the South China Sea and one completing its final transit toward defueling; it simply demands that both be part of a roster that never falls below the mandated minimum. The Counter-Argument: A Carrier That “Will Never Deploy Again” Critics challenge this logic by focusing on the real-world condition of Nimitz herself. Commentary and video analysis highlight that her reactors are burning fuel loaded more than 25 years ago and are “nearly depleted,” framing the ship as a platform approaching the limits of its nuclear endurance. National Interest and other outlets argue that, in practical terms, the ship will likely remain close to port and will “probably remain in port” until decommissioning, making her status more symbolic than operational. One widely circulated breakdown claims that of the 11 carriers the government lists, five “cannot move, cannot launch, and cannot fight,” and that Nimitz’s decommissioning date has been pushed back even though “she will never deploy again.” The thrust of that criticism is clear: if a carrier is effectively a museum piece in its final year, counting it toward a legal floor is a fiction about readiness, not a description of usable combat power. There is a kernel of truth here. The Navy does not publicly release detailed operational certification documents for individual carriers, and nothing in the available record definitively shows Nimitz cleared for full-spectrum deployment across the extension period. The absence of those records fuels speculation that the extension is primarily about legal compliance. At the same time, critics generally do not grapple with the statutory language or with the Navy’s explicit, on‑the‑record rationale that the extension was aligned with Kennedy’s delayed delivery to keep the number of carriers above 10. History: Extensions and Counting Practices Are Not New To understand why this dispute is more structural than scandalous, you have to look backward. The U.S. has been managing carrier numbers through extensions, conversions, and phased retirements for decades. During the Cold War, conventionally powered carriers underwent Service Life Extension Programs (SLEP) that pulled them out of normal rotations for years while they were modernized, yet they remained “in commission” for counting purposes. Naval historians note that carrier inventories have long blurred the line between truly deployable ships and those that are technically counted but operationally constrained. In World War II, Langley—America’s first carrier—had been converted into a seaplane tender; it no longer fit the functional profile of a fleet carrier but sat inside debates about how many “carriers” the Navy had. More broadly, the evolution of carriers includes many hulls converted from other types or relegated to training and experimental roles, yet still present in the inventory tally. Seen through this lens, the Nimitz extension is not a novel legal loophole. It is a contemporary instance of a pattern in which Congress sets a number, the Navy manages a complex fleet through maintenance and modernization cycles, and the public argument oscillates between legal status and combat readiness. The difference now is that social media and video commentary accelerate and amplify skepticism in a way that Proceedings articles and specialist debates once kept mostly inside professional circles. Industrial Base, China, and Why the Number 11 Feels Tight The reason this argument feels more urgent today is that the margin between statutory minimum and strategic demand has narrowed. Analysts describe the United States as an “11‑carrier navy in a 15‑carrier world,” meaning the fleet is sized for a level of global obligation that increasingly strains sailors and hardware. China is projected to field up to nine carriers by the mid‑2030s, expanding its ability to contest sea control in the Western Pacific and beyond. At the same time, the U.S. industrial base for nuclear-powered carriers is concentrated in a single yard, Newport News Shipbuilding. That yard must juggle new construction and the massive Refueling and Complex Overhaul (RCOH) process, which can consume a carrier for roughly 2,100 days—nearly six years—taking it off the deployment board while still keeping it in the “operational” count. Supply-chain constraints, specialized labor requirements, and budget pressure make it difficult to accelerate schedules when delays occur. When a ship like Kennedy slips, there is no second yard waiting to pick up the slack. From Congress’s perspective, the floor of 11 is meant to hold the line against those pressures. From the Navy’s perspective, extending Nimitz is a pragmatic response to a bottleneck: keep the old ship counted long enough for the new ship to arrive, then retire the legacy hull. From critics’ perspective, it exposes the fragility of a system that can be knocked off balance by a single delayed delivery and must rely on near‑end‑of‑life platforms to remain legally compliant. Where the Real Problem Lies: Law, Readiness, and Transparency So is the Navy “counting a ship that may never sail again” to obey the law? In a narrow legal sense, yes: Nimitz’s extension is explicitly tied to maintaining the statutory minimum until Kennedy joins the fleet, and the ship’s age and reactor status make it unlikely she will be used for heavy deployments in that final year. That is not a secret; it is the logic of the decision. The deeper issue is not that the Navy is cheating the law, but that the law itself measures inventory, not readiness. A carrier undergoing RCOH or completing its last transit to the breakers is counted the same as one surging into a crisis zone. The statute was designed that way because Congress cannot realistically micromanage readiness cycles. Yet that design means the public hears “11 operational carriers” and reasonably imagines 11 fight‑ready ships, when the planners know that, on a good day, half that number can be put to sea quickly. For a 40‑plus reader watching this unfold, the takeaway is not that carrier numbers are fake. It is that numbers in law and numbers in practice answer different questions. The law’s 11 speaks to minimum structural capacity. The critics’ six speaks to immediate fight‑tonight readiness. Both are valid metrics; both leave something out. What will matter over the next decade—especially as China’s fleet grows and U.S. budgets tighten—is whether Congress, the Navy, and the public can talk honestly about that gap without mistaking necessary legal maneuvering, like the Nimitz extension, for bad faith. Sources: 19fortyfive.com, facebook.com, breakingdefense.com, stripes.com, reddit.com, nationalinterest.org, news.usni.org, navaltoday.com, en.wikipedia.org, navy.mil, instagram.com, govinfo.gov, jstor.org