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I Believe  

I Believe

Governance and Philosophy in America A Top 10 Apple Philosophy Podcast

Author: Joel K. Douglas

Governance and Philosophy in America A Top 10 Apple Philosophy Podcast joelkdouglas.substack.com
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Language: en

Genres: Government, Philosophy, Society & Culture

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The Throw
Monday, 16 March, 2026

The day before we started bombing, Iran agreed to stop stockpiling nuclear material.The day before.We bombed them anyway.This is a piece about what strength actually means. And what we do now.Act I. The PlaygroundThe morning sun, warm on the blacktop. The yard smelled like cut grass and rubber. Beyond the kickball diamond, a basketball hoop with a chain net and monkey bars where the younger kids hung upside down. Row of swings with pebbles worn smooth underneath. The bases painted on the blacktop in faded white, and the outfield ran long to the fence where the grass was patchy from a thousand sneakers. It was the kind of yard where everything important happened in twenty minutes.The game was kickball. Rules whatever the kids said they were.No ref. No umpire. Just the blacktop and the chalk lines and the fence around the yard and twenty kids who wanted to play. Fair or foul, safe or out. They argued and settled it themselves. Someone would storm off. They always came back. The game was the thing that mattered, and everybody knew it.There was a big kid. When he was a 4th grader, his class had won the school kickball tournament. They had beaten even his sister’s 5th-grade class, and he would probably remind her forever.Now he was a 5th grader. He could kick the ball over the fence, and everybody knew it. He didn’t need to prove it every time. He just played. He knew that when the game was orderly, he got to play more. They only had a twenty-minute recess twice a day. There was no time for kids to both argue and play kickball. So he played straight. The game moved along. The teams stayed even and the little kids got their turns at the plate. He was the best player out there and the game was better because of him.Sometimes there was trouble. A kid would shove another kid off the base. A kid would bring something to the yard that didn’t belong there. And everybody looked at the big kid. Not because someone told them to. Because that is what happens when you are the biggest kid out there. You don’t get to decide whether that responsibility is yours. It just is.And the big kid would step in. He’d get between the two kids and he’d sort it out and the game would go on. Nobody questioned it. That was the deal. They didn’t have enough time to argue and play. You are the biggest, so when it matters, you act. And when you act right, everyone respects you. Not because they fear you. Because you earned it.The big kid won most games. But he didn’t win them by hitting people. He won them by being the kid everybody wanted on their team. The kid who held the game together. The kid who could kick it over the fence but didn’t need to every time. His power was obvious and because it was obvious he didn’t have to use it. The game moved faster when he kept it quiet.One day, the 3rd grader mouthed off. Kicked rocks at him. This kid mouthed off a lot, and most of the other kids didn’t love it. Today, maybe the call was bad. Maybe it wasn’t. It was the kind of thing that happened every day on the blacktop, and every day the kids sorted it out.Today, something was different in the big kid. He had been out there every day. He sorted out the fights and kept the teams even and stepped in when the little kids needed him and nobody ever thanked him for it. The game went on because of him and the game always went on. Some days he was tired of being the reason. Some days he just wanted to kick the ball and not carry the whole yard on his back. The 3rd grader mouthed off. A small thing, but today the big kid felt something hot and simple rise in his chest. For a half second, he held the ball and knew. He knew what the right thing was. He had done the right thing a hundred times. Walk away. Let it go. Be the big kid who doesn’t need to prove it. He knew. But knowing wasn’t enough. Not today.He took the ball, and he threw it hard into the little kid’s face.Then the game stopped. No more kickball.Not because the kids were afraid. The big kid was always the biggest. That was never the question. The question was whether he would play straight. And now they knew.The 3rd grader sat on the blacktop with blood on his lip, and the other kids stood there. The blood tasted like copper, and the kid didn’t cry. He pressed his hand against his mouth. Looked at it, and then he looked away. Not at the big kid. Not at anyone. He got up and walked to the fence and stood there with his back to the yard.He would remember. Not the pain. The pain was already gone. He would remember that he was small and the big kid was big and the big kid chose to do it anyway.Something had changed that you could not change back.The big kid was still the biggest. He could still kick it over the fence. But nobody wanted to play with him now. Not because he was strong. Because he had shown them what he would do with it.The game didn’t end that day. The kids came back the next morning because kids always come back. But it was different. The little kids played careful. They watched the big kid and they kept their distance and when the calls were close they didn’t argue. The game went on but the game was worse. Smaller. A game held together by fear instead of respect.The big kid was still out there. He was still the best player on the blacktop. But he had traded something he couldn’t get back.Or maybe he could. Maybe the game wasn’t over. Maybe the little kids would come back when the big kid gave them a reason to. Not with another throw. Not by being the biggest. But by playing straight again, morning after morning, until the yard remembered what it was like before.It would not feel like winning. But it was the only way the game could be good again.Act II. Diplomacy ‘With’ Other MeansThe playground is a metaphor. But the game is real.For eighty years, America kept a game going that most of the world depends on. We keep shipping lanes open in the Persian Gulf so that oil moves and economies run. We keep a Navy in the South China Sea so trade routes stay free.We built alliances across Europe and the Pacific because stable partners make stable markets and stable markets make Americans prosperous. We are the big kid on the global blacktop, and when we play straight, the game works.This is not generosity. This is strategy. When we invest in the security of our partners, we invest in the conditions that benefit the American people. The sailors on destroyers in the Gulf aren’t there for Iran or Saudi Arabia or Kuwait.We are right to be there. We are right to protect the American people. We are right to maintain the architecture that keeps the world’s economy from collapsing into chaos. That is not imperialism. It’s the big kid stepping in when someone gets shoved off the base. That is what strength is for.Another wrinkle. The point of business is to increase profits. That’s how markets work. Should an oil company sell oil to Americans for less when the global market commands a higher price? No. No business would. No business should. The oil man isn’t cheating you at the pump. He’s responding to the market, and the market is responding to supply, and the supply is responding to what happens in a narrow waterway on the other side of the world.When the Strait of Hormuz is open, oil flows. When oil flows, the price at your gas station reflects a stable global market. Even though it’s on the other side of the world, when the Strait closes, supply shrinks, and the price goes up. Not because anyone decided to punish you. Because that is what happens when the big kid stops playing straight, and the game falls apart.You felt it at the pump this month. You will feel it in groceries next month, and in airfares the month after that.Your kitchen table is connected to the playground. It always has been. We just don’t think about it until the price tells us.The question is not ‘whether’ America should be strong. The question is ‘how’ we should be strong.The most famous line about war has been misquoted for two centuries. You’ve probably heard it said, “War is politics by other means.”Yep, that’s wrong. Or at least a lazy translation.The original, written in German, says that war is diplomacy “with” other means. Not “by.” With.Diplomacy is our main effort. We combine other means, including force, to strengthen it. But force alone lacks the power of diplomacy. Even if we try and kill every person we believe to be an adversary, force has a narrow effect. Only diplomacy lasts.America’s Founders didn’t need a Prussian general to understand this. They made one of our six national goals to “provide for the common defense.” Not attack. Not war. Defense. Diplomacy is the main effort of defense, with other means only when diplomacy alone cannot protect the American people. Force exists in support of that effort, not instead of it.In modern American thought, this concept has two parts.First, patient diplomacy is the primary instrument of American power. Economic partnership. Political engagement. Measures short of war. Military force is a supporting effort, necessary in some cases, dangerous when it becomes the main effort. The greatest example is the reconstruction of Europe after World War II. That effort didn’t drop a single bomb. It rebuilt a continent. It took years. It was tedious and expensive and nobody made a movie about it. It created stable markets that made America prosperous for generations, and it worked better than any weapon we have ever built.Second, none of that matters if you can’t defend it. Diplomacy without credible military strength is just talk. The world watched the Soviets blockade Berlin, detonate a nuclear weapon, and back an invasion of South Korea all within two years. Diplomatic efforts only work when the other side believes you will act. Without capability, patience is just weakness with better manners.America needs both pieces.Diplomacy carries the load, with military capability in support.Military strength must be robust enough to make diplomacy credible.Neither piece would endorse force that undermined alliances we built. Neither would use force instead of diplomacy that was already working.Neither would recognize what we did on February 28th.In the weeks before the strikes, the United States and Iran were engaged in indirect nuclear negotiations, mediated by Oman. The day before the strikes, Oman’s foreign minister announced a breakthrough. Iran had agreed to never stockpile enriched uranium and to full verification by the International Atomic Energy Agency. Iran had agreed to irreversibly downgrade its enriched uranium to the lowest level possible. The foreign minister said peace was within reach. The American envoy was skeptical. We will never know who was right, because we started bombing the next day. For months, the Iranian regime had been fracturing from the inside. Beginning in late December 2025, the largest protests since the 1979 revolution swept across all 31 provinces. The economy was collapsing. Freefall and mayhem. The regime’s own security forces killed thousands of protesters. By January 2026, the Islamic Republic was at its weakest point in 47 years.Diplomacy had produced a breakthrough.The regime was breaking from within.Iran had agreed it would not pursue nuclear weapons.We were at a point of maximum strength.Time was on our side.And then, instead of letting diplomacy force the internal fractures to spread, we chose to act with overwhelming force from the outside. On February 28th, the United States and Israel launched nearly 900 strikes in twelve hours. We killed the Supreme Leader and his family. We announced that regime change was our objective.We did not use force with diplomacy. We used force instead of diplomacy.A catastrophic waste of strategic advantage.At a moment of great American strength, we threw it away. We chose weakness.We took the ball, and we threw it into the little kid’s face.And the game stopped.Within days, the regime that had been fracturing consolidated. Protests that had been shaking the government from inside went silent. Mojtaba Khamenei, the dead Supreme Leader’s son, a hardliner with deep ties to the Revolutionary Guard, a man whose mother was killed in our strikes, became the new Supreme Leader. The IRGC pledged to obey him until their last drop of blood. The Iran that was ready to break apart rallied around a wartime flag.Our allies who depend on us to keep the game going took missiles they didn’t ask for, in a war they didn’t choose. Russia pledged unwavering support for the new Supreme Leader. China opposed any targeting of him. The global order we made began to fracture along exactly the lines our adversaries wanted.We didn’t weaken the regime. We unified it. We didn’t advance our interests. We handed our adversaries the grievance they needed to consolidate power for generations. We didn’t play straight. We threw the ball.And now the yard is different.Act III. What Do We Do Now?Iran cannot have nuclear weapons. That is not negotiable. It is not partisan. It is a legitimate interest of every American and most of the world. The big kid is right about that.Iran’s regime is brutal. It killed thousands of its own people in January. It sponsors violence across the Middle East. It threatens our allies and attacks our servicemembers. None of this is in dispute. There will be no sympathy.But being right about the threat does not make us right about the response.We violated our Constitution on February 28th. Some argue that the President didn’t consult Congress. That’s important, but not the main argument.The deeper violation is that even if Congress had authorized force, the action itself doesn’t achieve what the Constitution means by defense.Diplomacy is the main effort. Force supports diplomacy when diplomacy alone cannot protect the American people. That is the order.To act in the common defense, you must first exhaust the tools of defense. Iran was not an immediate threat to the American people. Diplomacy was not exhausted. Diplomacy had produced a breakthrough. The day before the strikes, Iran had agreed to never stockpile enriched uranium and to full international verification. The regime was fracturing from within. We abandoned the effort at the moment it was producing results.The purpose itself was unconstitutional.We did not defend the American people on February 28th. We created conditions that will threaten them for generations.We do not know today the full effects of this war. And if we can’t find a way to deescalate, it may just be getting started. But we know some things.Iran is not just a state. Its leaders speak for a faith, and nearly two billion people heard the bombs. When you strike Iran, you are not just striking a government. You are striking at something woven into an identity that reaches far beyond its borders. The consequences of that do not fit into a neat damage assessment.In the long run, America’s involvement in the Middle East destabilizes the region for future generations. We have watched it happen for fifty years. We watched it in Iraq. We watched it in Afghanistan. We are watching it now.Iran will respond. The pattern of attacks have names. Beirut. Khobar Towers. The USS Cole. These are already written. We just gave Iran a generational grievance to fuel it.And every time it happens, our temptation will be the same. Hit back hard, show strength, make them pay. And every time we give in to that temptation without discipline, we feed the cause. Iran is a cause as much as a state. Its identity believes suffering means legitimacy. The more crudely we respond, the more clearly we play the part they wrote for us.The 3rd grader is standing at the fence with his back to the yard. The blood is already dry. He is not thinking about today. He is thinking about every day after this. And he will remember that he was small and the big kid was big and the big kid chose to do it anyway.So what do we do now?We return to the Constitution. We strive to achieve our six national goals. We must tie every national effort directly to a national goal. Justice. Union. Order. General Welfare. Liberty. In this case, the common defense. Diplomacy as the main effort. Force in support. Not the other way around.We lead with diplomacy. Maintain credible force in reserve. We hold the line on Iran’s nuclear ambitions through sustained diplomatic pressure backed by the credible threat of force. The only approach that has ever produced lasting results.We define our own interests. We support our allies without becoming them. Defense first. Diplomacy as the main effort. Force serves diplomacy. That is the constitutional order, and it is the right one.We accept that Iran will provoke us in the future. They are a slow, patient, determined adversary with a long memory. We must meet their determination with our own. Not impulse. Not escalation. Disciplined patience. The kind of patience that rebuilt a continent after World War II. The kind that won the Cold War without firing a shot.The big kid is still the best player on the blacktop. The game is damaged, but it’s not over. The little kids are watching. They are deciding whether the big kid is the one who threw the ball, or the one who held the game together for all those years before.When diplomacy is working, it is our strength. To abandon it when our adversary is weak is folly.May God bless the United States of America. Get full access to I Believe at joelkdouglas.substack.com/subscribe

 

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