Sunday, March 15, 2026

Women's History Month

 

Her name was Irena Sendler. She was a Polish Catholic social worker in Nazi-occupied Warsaw. And what she did, quietly, every single day, between 1942 and 1943, is almost impossible to fully absorb.

When the Nazis sealed the Warsaw Ghetto in 1940, they packed more than 400,000 Jewish men, women, and children into just 1.3 square miles of the city. They rationed roughly 200 calories of food per person per day. Disease spread through the overcrowded streets. Deportations to the Treblinka death camp began in the summer of 1942. The ghetto was not just poverty behind a wall — it was a death sentence being carried out in slow motion.
Irena had a pass that let her walk in and out. On paper, she was an infection-control nurse checking for typhus. In reality, she was memorizing faces, learning layouts, and building a network of people willing to risk their lives.
She began by smuggling what she could — food, medicine, money, false documents. Then she started smuggling children.
She knocked on doors deep inside the ghetto and asked the most unbearable question any parent could ever be asked: will you give me your child? She could not promise they would survive. She could only promise that if they stayed, they would almost certainly die. Some parents said yes. Some said no. Some changed their minds at the last moment, taking their children back, and later Irena would learn they had all been killed together.
The children who said yes were smuggled out in remarkable ways. Infants were hidden in wooden crates, wrapped tight to muffle any sound. Older children were hidden in sacks, in trunks, in the back of trolleys beneath loads of goods. Children who could recite Christian prayers in unaccented Polish were led through a church that sat on the ghetto's edge. Some walked through the old courthouse, which had entrances on both the ghetto side and the free side of the city. Some were guided through the sewers in complete darkness, their small hands holding the hands of strangers who whispered to them in the dark.
Each child who made it out was given a new name. A new identity. Forged papers. A new family, a convent, an orphanage, or a private home where they would wait out the war as someone else entirely.
But Irena understood something that no one had thought through: if these children survived, they would one day need to know who they truly were. Their parents — if any survived — would need a way to find them. So she did something extraordinary. She wrote down every detail. Each child's real Jewish name. Their new false identity. The names of their parents. The address where they were hidden. She wrote it all on thin slips of tissue paper, sealed them inside bottles, and buried them beneath an apple tree in the garden of a trusted friend.
She was not just saving lives. She was saving identities. She was keeping a promise to a future she couldn't be certain would ever arrive.
On October 18, 1943, the Gestapo came for her.
A woman at a laundry used as a resistance drop-off point had been arrested and, under torture, had given up Irena's name. Nine soldiers arrived at her apartment. As they came up the stairs, Irena threw a package containing the list of children's names out of the window to a friend waiting below, who hid it in her clothing and slipped away. The Gestapo found nothing.
What they did find was Irena.
At Pawiak Prison — a place from which almost no one emerged alive — they beat her for weeks. They broke the bones in her legs and feet, crippling her for the rest of her life. They demanded the names of her co-conspirators, the names of the hidden children, the addresses. She gave them nothing. Not a single name. Not a single address.
She was sentenced to death.
On the morning of her scheduled execution, the members of Żegota — the underground Polish network that had supported her work — bribed the guard assigned to carry out the sentence. He led her out of the prison, released her, and told her to run. Her name was then listed publicly among those executed. Officially, Irena Sendler was dead.
She spent the rest of the war in hiding, using a false identity, continuing to help where she could.
When the war ended, she returned to that garden. She dug up the bottles. The tissue paper had survived. The ink had survived. Almost all the parents of the children Irena saved had died at the Treblinka death camp. Life in a Jar But the names in those bottles allowed hundreds of children to reclaim their heritage, their families' history, and their truth — to know who they had been born as, even if the world that had given them those names was gone.
Irena Sendler lived to be 98, passing away in Warsaw on May 12, 2008. She never sought recognition. When people called her a hero, she shook her head. "Let me stress most emphatically that we who were rescuing children are not some kind of heroes. That term irritates me greatly. Heroes do extraordinary things. What I did was not an extraordinary thing. It was normal."
She said she could have done more. That the regret of not doing more would follow her to her death.
And she left the world with a truth that still cuts through everything:
"Every child saved with my help is the justification of my existence on this Earth, and not a title to glory."
One woman. Tissue paper. Bottles under a tree. And 2,500 souls who were given tomorrow — and given back their names.

Morning Reflections

 


Saturday, March 14, 2026

 





My Recipe Box- Moist Coconut Flour Chocolate Cake with Ganache

March 2026 - Toronto ON

We loved this cake and it is a bonus, that it is gluten free.
I've included/added my changes. 

This recipe particularly annoyed me, as I had to keep flipping up and down the screen for the measurements, so I have added them in the instructions.
I also didn't really care if it was vegan, so made those changes as well.
I have included metric measurements as well, as I prefer metric.

I included the recipe for the chocolate ganache as well, up front, as you should make that first so it has time to cool and thicken.





GANACHE
Servings: 1.5 cups (enough for a single layer 8 or 9-inch cake)
Personally, I think this is too much ganache for one cake! I would divide it in half.

Ingredients
5 ounces (140 g; about 1 cup) coarsely chopped 65-75% bittersweet chocolate or chocolate chips
¾ cup (170 g) full-fat unsweetened canned coconut milk 
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
pinch fine sea salt


Instructions
Make the Ganache
NOTE - don't do what I did the first time, don't add the chocolate into the coconut milk at the same time! This could cause it to split. When I realized my mistake, I just cooked it on a very, very low heat until the chocolate melted.

Place the chopped chocolate in a medium heatproof bowl.
Combine the coconut milk, vanilla, and salt in a small saucepan and set over a medium flame. Heat, swirling occasionally, until the coconut milk is hot and steamy, just below a simmer, 2-3 minutes.
Pour the hot coconut milk mixture over the chopped chocolate. Let sit 1 minute, then whisk gently until the ganache is silky-smooth. Whisk gently so as not to incorporate too many air bubbles into the ganache; they don’t look as pretty as smooth ganache!

Rest the Ganache
Cover the bowl tightly (or pour the ganache into a jar with a lid) and let cool to room temperature, at least 30 minutes and up to 24 hours. If you’re in a hurry, pop the ganache in the fridge for 5 minutes, stir, then repeat once or twice until the ganache is firm enough to hold a soft shape when dropped from a spoon.

To Pour or Swirl
Depending on how firm the ganache is, you can either pour it over your cake if it’s more loose. Or if the ganache is more thick and firm, you can swirl it over your cake.
For Piping
For piping ganache, let it set for several hours and up to 24 hours. Scrape it into a piping bag fitted with a large star tip and squeeze out any air pockets. Pipe it onto your baked goods. If the ganache is cold and hard to squeeze, gently massage the bag in your hands to warm and soften it up.
To add shine
If the ganache looks dull or matte, hold a creme brulee torch 8 or so inches away and wave it over the ganache to make it shiny. Take care not to burn the delicate chocolate.
Storage
Ganache will keep at cool room temperature for an additional day; after that, store it in the fridge to be on the safe side.




CAKE
 Ingredients

Wet Ingredients
2 large eggs (about 100 grams out of the shells)
¼ cup + 2 tablespoons (78 g) neutral oil (grapeseed, sunflower, avocado, or mild olive oil)
¾ cup (240 g) maple syrup (preferably dark colored)
½ cup (115 g) well-combined full-fat canned coconut milk (see note)
2 tablespoons (30 g) water
2 teaspoons vanilla extract

Dry Ingredients
½ cup (50 g) cocoa powder 
¼ cup + 3 tablespoons (46 g) coconut flour
¼ cup (30 g) tapioca flour
1 ½ teaspoons baking powder
¼ teaspoon baking soda
½ teaspoon fine sea salt


Instructions
Prepare Things
Make the ganache and let it sit at room temperature to thicken while you make the cake, at least 30 minutes and up to 24 hours in advance.

Position a rack in the center of the oven and preheat to 350ºF.

Rub the sides and bottom of an 8-inch round springform pan or cake pan with oil. I used the spray canola oil.

(Note that because the top of the baked cake is a little sticky, it’s easier to remove the cake from a springform pan so that it doesn’t have to be inverted.) Line the bottom of the pan with a round of parchment paper cut to fit. 
If you don't have an 8-inch round pan, I didn't, you can easily use an 8-inch square pan.


Make the Batter

In a large bowl, combine the eggs and oil (¼ cup + 2 tablespoons (78 g)). 
Whisk until smooth and emulsified. Whisk in the maple syrup (¾ cup (240 g)), then the coconut milk (½ cup (115 g)), water (2 tablespoons (30 g)), and vanilla (2 teaspoons).

Place a medium mesh strainer over the bowl (or over a separate bowl if it's easier) and sift in the cocoa powder (½ cup (50 g)), coconut flour (¼ cup + 3 tablespoons (46 g)), and tapioca flour (¼ cup (30 g)) with the baking powder (1 ½ teaspoons), baking soda (¼ teaspoon), and salt.
I just mixed in the dry ingredients, without a mesh strainer.

 Whisk the flours into the wet ingredients until very smooth. If there are some lumps in the batter, let it sit for a minute or two, then whisk again. The batter will start out very thin, but it will thicken up as the flours begin to absorb moisture.
As with all gluten free flours, you need to let it sit for quite some time.

Pour the batter into the prepared cake pan and smooth the top.

Bake

Bake the cake until the top is puffed with some cracks, the edges pull away from the sides of the pan, and a toothpick inserted near the center comes out with moist crumbs, 25-35 minutes.
Place the cake on a wire rack and let cool completely.
In the case of my oven, I baked it for an extra 10 minutes.

Finish
Once the cake has cooled, loosen the edges of the cake from the pan using a small, offset spatula. If you used a springform pan, release the sides of the pan. Use a small offset spatula to pry the cake away from the parchment paper and slide the cake onto a serving plate. If you used a solid cake pan, turn the cake out onto a plate and peel away the parchment, then place the cake right side-up on a large plate or serving board. The top will get funky but we’re going to cover it in ganache so no worries!

Make sure the ganache is cool enough to hold a shape; it should mound softly when dropped from a spoon. Swirl or spread the ganache over the cooled cake. If the ganache is softer, it will pour down the sides of the cake. If it’s more thick, it will hold a soft shape when swirled over the top of the cake. Whatever happens is good!

Serve right away, or chill for 20 minutes or so until ready to serve (it’s easier to cut when the ganache has chilled). For the cleanest slices, cut the cake into wedges using a large, sharp chef's knife dipped in hot water and wiped clean between cuts. The cake is best served at room temperature to soften the ganache.

Nonsense



 BREAKING: Marco Rubio becomes the first person to ever cross the Delaware river in a Florsheim shoe.


BREAKING: Donald Trump sends Marco Rubio on a secret mission into the Strait of Hormuz, to see if a safe route through the thousands of mines the Iranians submerged there can be established - in one of the Florsheim shoes he gave him.










Donald Trump is an absolute disaster by Heather Delaney Reese


At 6:20 PM last night, Donald Trump picked up the phone and made a phone call from the White House that sent shock waves through not just the country, but the entire world. Over the next 45 minutes, he rambled incoherently, told millions of Americans that immigrants are genetically inferior, admitted he has no exit strategy for the war he started other than waiting until he “feels it in his bones,” confessed he doesn’t even know whether the leader of the country he’s bombing is dead or alive, snapped at his friendliest interviewer for quoting his own words back to him, and then, in the middle of all of it, he started talking about how he buys dress shoes for his cabinet members because he doesn’t like when they wear sneakers. It was another reminder of just how vulnerable the entire planet is with someone like him in charge; a man with no plan, no clarity, no impulse control, and no business being anywhere near the decisions that determine whether people live or die. This is what happens when the most dangerous and least qualified person on earth is the President of the United States of America.
During the call, which was recorded to air this morning on the Brian Kilmeade Show on Fox News Radio, Kilmeade brought up a series of violent attacks across the country, including a shooting at Old Dominion University and a vehicle ramming at a synagogue near Detroit. These are real acts of terror on American soil. And when Trump was asked about the people responsible, he didn’t talk about intelligence failures, or radicalization, or the fact that his administration has been gutting the FBI and DOJ of the very counterterrorism experts trained to stop these attacks. Instead, he said this:
“They’re sick people... Others, they just go bad. Something wrong, there’s something wrong there. The genetics are not exactly... they’re not exactly your genetic.” That is the President of the United States, on a phone call from the White House, broadcast to millions of people, telling a white interviewer that the people committing violence in this country don’t share “your genetics.” He separated human beings into genetic categories.
This is a dog whistle. This is eugenics. This is the same framework that sorted human beings into “desirable” and “undesirable” in the early 20th century. The same language that underpinned forced sterilization programs in the United States, programs that targeted Black, Indigenous, disabled, and immigrant communities for decades before Nazi Germany adopted the model and industrialized it. When a head of state begins classifying people by their DNA, publicly, casually, on friendly media, that is not a slip. That is a signal. And every white nationalist watching heard it clearly.
HuffPost’s headline was “Trump Appears To Endorse Eugenics.” The New Republic went with “Trump Tells White Reporter Immigrants Don’t Have ‘Your Genetics.’” NBC, Raw Story, and Yahoo News all ran separate pieces on just this one quote. Because once a president starts telling the public that certain people are genetically inferior, history has shown us exactly what comes next. Every single time.
But the genetics comment wasn’t even the most dangerous thing he said. It was just the most disgusting. The most dangerous part came when Kilmeade asked him a simple, direct question that any wartime president should be able to answer without hesitation: when will you know the war is over?
Trump’s response: “When I feel it... I feel it in my bones.” Kilmeade followed up. Asked if it would be a joint decision, if his advisors would weigh in. Trump said he has “great people,” named a few, and then added: “I convince them all to, let’s do it my way.”
And there it is. No benchmarks or conditions for victory. No timeline or consultation with Congress, which never authorized this war in the first place. No metrics for success. And no definition of what “over” even means. Just one man, sitting in the White House, telling the country that American service members will keep fighting and dying in a war until something in his body tells him it’s time to stop.
And while he was saying that, we learned that all six American service members aboard the KC-135 refueling plane that crashed in western Iraq on March 12 were confirmed killed. That brings the total to 13 American service members who are no longer with us because of his “excursion,” which is what he actually called the war once again during the interview, and roughly 140 more have been wounded.
And it’s not slowing down. On Friday, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth approved a request to deploy 2,500 additional Marines from the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit, along with the USS Tripoli, to the Middle East. If this war is going as well as the administration claims, if we are “way ahead of schedule” as Trump keeps insisting, then the obvious question becomes why thousands of additional troops are suddenly being sent into the region. Marine Expeditionary Units are not symbolic deployments or political theater designed for headlines. They are built to conduct ground operations, amphibious landings, and direct combat missions, which means that while their deployment does not guarantee a ground invasion is imminent, it absolutely means the military wants that option firmly on the table, and that is an escalation no matter how the White House tries to frame it.
But the most revealing moment of the entire interview came when Kilmeade asked Trump directly about the possibility of seizing Kharg Island, Iran’s most critical oil terminal. Trump did not dodge the question or laugh it off as speculation. Instead, he erupted. He called the question “foolish,” told Kilmeade that he “shouldn’t even be asking it,” and said only a fool would answer something like that publicly. And yet the question itself is the part that should stop you cold, because Kharg Island is not something that comes up casually in conversation. It handles roughly 90 percent of Iran’s crude oil exports. You do not ask about it unless someone has told you it is under consideration.
And Trump’s reaction was not the reaction of a man surprised by a wild guess. It was the reaction of a man furious that something he believed had been shared privately was suddenly being said out loud, on the air, to millions of people. He tried to wave it off, insisting it was “not high on the list,” but only hours later he posted on Truth Social claiming that the United States had “totally obliterated every MILITARY target” on the island. Which tells you everything you need to know. It was never off the list. The war is escalating.
When Kilmeade brought up the growing opposition to the war, including from veterans in Congress like Senator Mark Kelly, Trump didn’t engage. He didn’t try to explain his strategy or defend the mission. He attacked. Called Kelly “not a smart person,” “terrible,” and “a pathetic guy.” Then said, “You follow him into a grave.” Mark Kelly is a decorated combat veteran and a former astronaut. He has risked his life for this country in ways Donald Trump cannot even comprehend. And Trump called him pathetic because he dared to question a war that has no plan.
Then, instead of circling back to anything that mattered, Trump started bragging. “I’ve rebuilt the military into the strongest military in the world by far,” he said. “I built it.” Then he drifted into talking about the border wall. Then immigration. Then he said it again: “I had to take an excursion. We had the greatest economy in history. We do, we still do. Oh, this will bounce right back.” In one breath, he called the war a temporary excursion from a great economy, and in the next, claimed we still have one. But the American people aren’t buying any of it. Polling released this week from Quinnipiac shows 53% of registered voters oppose this military action. Only 40% approve. And 74% oppose sending ground troops into Iran. The country doesn’t want this war. And the man running it has no plan to end it other than a feeling in his bones.
Then Kilmeade asked Trump if he believes the Supreme Leader of Iran is still alive. And Trump said: “I think he probably is. I think he’s damaged, but I think he’s probably alive in some form, yeah.”
In some form. He’s bombing a country and he doesn’t know if its leader is dead or alive. This is the man making life-and-death decisions for our troops, and he can’t answer the most basic question about the enemy he’s fighting. That tells you everything about how this war is being run. It isn’t being run. There’s no one at the wheel. And because nothing about this presidency operates with any seriousness at all, he started talking about shoes. The President of the United States went on to tell Brian Kilmeade that he’s been buying Florsheim dress shoes for his cabinet members because he doesn’t like it when they wear sneakers. “It’s a gift from Donald Trump,” he said. In the third person.
Photos show Rubio and Vance wearing the shoes. And Rubio’s shoes are clearly too big. But he and the others wear them anyway, because they are that afraid of him. They won’t even tell the man the shoes don’t fit. And maybe that’s the most honest picture of this entire administration. Powerful men walking around in shoes that are too big, given to them by someone who didn’t bother to get the size right, too scared to say a word. The shoes don’t fit. The war doesn’t fit. The presidency doesn’t fit. And everyone around him just keeps pretending they do.
And it just kept getting worse. He also admitted that Putin is helping Iran. Kilmeade asked him directly and Trump said, “I think he might be helping them a little bit, yeah, I guess.” This is the same Putin he still talks to. The same Putin he’s protected at every turn. Russia is helping the country our troops are fighting and dying against, and the president doesn’t care because his relationship with Putin matters more to him than the lives of American service members. Under any other president, that admission would have triggered hearings by morning. Now it barely makes the news because there’s just too much chaos and corruption.
Trump said on the call that we still have “the greatest economy in history.” He said it would all “bounce right back.” But you can’t bounce back from something you’re still making worse by starting a war that’s driving up the cost of everything. He’s not living in the same country the rest of us are. He’s living in the version he invented on that phone call. And the distance between his version and reality is getting people hurt.
And all of this is happening while the country is under active threat, not just overseas, but right here at home. This week alone, there were three separate acts of ideologically inspired violence on American soil. A naturalized citizen from Sierra Leone, previously convicted of providing material support for ISIS, opened fire at Old Dominion University in Virginia. In Michigan, a naturalized citizen from Lebanon who had lost four family members in an Israeli airstrike just days earlier plowed a vehicle into a synagogue where 140 children were inside the preschool. The FBI called it “a targeted act of violence against the Jewish community.” And in New York City, two teenagers built improvised explosives and brought them to Gracie Mansion during a protest in what authorities described as an ISIS-inspired attack. On top of that, the Justice Department seized four websites that were being operated by Iran to call for the killings of dissidents. Not overseas. Here. And reports surfaced about the possibility of Iranian one-way suicide drones capable of reaching California.
Trump seems to believe that because there’s an ocean between us and Iran, we’re untouchable. That he can launch strikes on the other side of the world, the same way he did in Venezuela, the same way he threatened Greenland, and there won’t be real consequences here at home. But that has never been true, and it’s even less true now. The threats aren’t hypothetical. They’re active. Sleeper cells have always been a risk in this country, but a war like this is exactly the kind of trigger that activates them. We are not isolated. We are not safe just because we’re far away. And the very agencies that are supposed to be tracking these threats are being hollowed out by the man who created the danger in the first place.
And when Trump was asked about these attacks on the Kilmeade call, he didn’t talk about how his administration is taking the threats seriously and is dedicated to keeping us safe stateside. Instead, he deflected. He called the attackers “demented people” and said, “I don’t worry about it, because if you did, you wouldn’t be able to function,” before saying “we’ll watch them very carefully” but offering nothing concrete. And when asked how he learned about the drone threat, he said the report came from Gavin Newsom, then spent his time mocking Newsom’s learning disability. “He has learning disabilities, so I don’t know, maybe he doesn’t know,” Trump said, laughing. Then added this about the possibility of Newsom running for president in 2028: “President can’t have learning disability. If you have that, that’s not a good thing.”
And that moment may have been the clearest illustration of the entire call. The irony of Donald Trump commenting on anyone’s mental fitness is beyond staggering. This is a man who can barely complete a coherent thought on his best days. Who falls asleep during his own cabinet meetings. Who just spent 45 minutes on the phone drifting from eugenics to shoes while the country faces real, active threats that he couldn’t even be bothered to take seriously.
By now, most of us understand exactly what we heard on that phone call. It wasn’t policy or strategy. And it certainly wasn’t leadership. It was a man openly embracing racial hierarchy while admitting he has no plan to end a war he started, no understanding of the threats facing this country, and no control over the words coming out of his own mouth. The danger is no longer hypothetical. It’s here. And naming it clearly for those who are still refusing to see it is the first step toward stopping it.
So what do we do? We start by being very clear about what we just heard. When a president of the United States tells a white interviewer that certain people don’t share “your genetics,” that is not politics. It is the same framework that was used to rank human beings as superior and inferior in the early twentieth century, the framework that led to forced sterilization laws in more than thirty American states before the Nazis adopted it and took it to its logical end. That is the language of extermination. And every time a leader has used it, it was never just words. It turned into policy and law. It was violence carried out by the state against people who had been told they didn’t belong. It didn’t start with camps. It started with classification. It started with a leader telling a country that some people were less than others because of their blood. That’s where we are right now. And if we don’t name it clearly, loudly, and without hesitation, we become complicit in what comes next.
We register every single person we can to vote. We don’t wait. We don’t assume someone else is handling it. We do it ourselves, one person at a time. Because every vote matters. And if you need proof of that, look at what just happened in Boca Raton, Florida. Andy Thomson was just elected mayor by a margin of five votes. Five. That’s one family. One conversation with a neighbor who wasn’t planning to vote because they thought their vote wouldn’t matter. That is the difference between the country we want and the one they are building.
The midterms continue to be our greatest hope to stop this. If we flip Congress, we take back oversight, the power to authorize or end wars, and the ability to hold this administration accountable for everything it has done. Without that, they control everything through the next presidential election, including what happens after the votes are counted.
But tonight, even after everything I just wrote, I want to end with something that gave me real hope. For months, Trump and his allies have publicly attacked Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell for refusing to lower interest rates. In January, U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro issued grand jury subpoenas targeting him directly, using a probe into the Fed’s building renovation as the pretext. And today, Chief Judge James Boasberg in Washington quashed those subpoenas. He didn’t just rule against them. He found that there was no factual basis for a criminal probe. That the subpoenas were a pretext to pressure the Federal Reserve into lowering interest rates. That after more than one hundred public attacks on Powell by Trump and his allies, this was retaliation and not law enforcement.
And then he wrote a sentence that every American needs to hear: “The Government has offered no evidence whatsoever that Powell committed any crime other than displeasing the President.” That is a federal judge looking at the full force of this regime’s legal machinery and saying: no. This is not justice; this is a vendetta. And I am stopping it.
He released the ruling publicly. He broke it down so clearly and so thoroughly that there was nowhere for the administration to hide. He didn’t pick a political side. He picked the side of the law. And the Constitution held.
The courts are holding. Not because the system is invincible, but because there are still people inside it who believe in their oath. Judges who are willing to stand up, put their names on a ruling, and tell this administration that the law still means something. The tools are still there. People with power are still pushing back. This is why I still have hope for America. And you should, too.
I’ll see you tomorrow,
Heather



JAKE THE MUSS vs TRUMPSTEIN: When You Piss Off the Wrong Island




JAKE THE MUSS vs TRUMPSTEIN: When You Piss Off the Wrong Island

You know what nobody in history has ever said? "Let's go pick a fight with the Kiwis, that'll end well."

Nobody. Not ever. Because people who’ve met New Zealanders understand something fundamental about them. They’re the nicest people on Earth right up until they’re not. And when they’re not? Brother. Go rent Once Were Warriors. Go watch Jake the Muss sitting in that pub, quietly drinking his beer, minding his own business, and then some dickhead says the wrong thing and suddenly furniture is airborne, teeth are on the floor, and grown men are climbing out bathroom windows. That’s not a movie scene. That’s a cultural documentary. That is the Kiwi emotional spectrum: chill, chill, chill, chill, ABSOLUTE CARNAGE.

And right now? Forty-four thousand Kiwis just got told their flights are cancelled because some spray-tanned reality TV host with the sexual ethics of a bonobo and the strategic intelligence of a house brick decided to bomb the country that controls the Strait of Hormuz.

Let me explain this to the Americans in the room, because I know geography isn’t your strong suit. It’s fine, your schools are funded by property taxes in neighbourhoods you can’t afford, I get it. The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow little chokepoint where TWENTY PERCENT of the world’s oil squeezes through every single day. It’s like the bottleneck on the M1 at peak hour except instead of Commodores it’s supertankers, and instead of road rage it’s naval mines and Iranian speedboats packed with explosives.

And Donald John Trump looked at that situation and said: “Yeah, bomb that.”

BOMB. THAT.

That’s like looking at the only bridge out of your town during bushfire season and going “reckon I’ll set that on fire.” That’s like seeing ONE power cable keeping the lights on in your entire street and thinking “bet I can hit that with an axe.” This man saw a chokepoint that the entire global economy depends on and thought “I should start a war right next to it, that’ll definitely go well, I’m very smart, people tell me I’m smart all the time.”

And who’s paying for it? Is it Trump? Is it his mates at Mar-a-Lago? Is it the defence contractors who are literally popping champagne corks right now?

No.

It’s Nana. In Tauranga. Trying to fly to Auckland to see her grandkids.

It’s a grandmother in the Bay of Plenty who’s never heard of the Strait of Hormuz, couldn’t point to Iran on a map, has absolutely zero opinion on Middle Eastern geopolitics, and just wanted to see little Aroha’s school play. FLIGHT CANCELLED. Sorry love. Donald Trump needed a wartime presidency to keep the Jeffrey Epstein client list out of the news cycle and your $89 return to Auckland was the collateral damage.

Jet fuel was sitting at US$85 a barrel. Normal. Predictable. Boring. Now it’s $170. DOUBLED. In weeks. Iran’s defence minister is on television saying the world should prepare for US$200 a barrel. Iraqi security officials are reporting explosive-laden boats ramming fuel tankers. TWO DRONES landed near Dubai International Airport this week. Dubai! The busiest international hub on Earth! Planes are being evacuated in Bahrain. Middle Eastern airspace is being closed faster than Trump’s browser history when Melania walks in the room.

Air New Zealand’s CEO Nikhil Ravishankar had to go on morning television, look the nation in the eye, and say the word “unprecedented.” That’s CEO-speak for “we are completely fucked and I’m contractually obligated to not say that.” He told New Zealand that fuel has overtaken labour as their single biggest cost. Let that land for a second. An airline, whose entire business model is paying people to fly planes, is now spending more on fuel than on the people. The crack spread, that’s the premium to refine jet fuel from crude, is sitting at US$75. That’s not a margin. That’s a mugging.

Domestic flights up $10. Short haul up $20. Long haul up $90. And Ravishankar, bless him, actually said: “Even in these unprecedented times, there’s a limit to what we can pass on to our customers.” Because unlike the tangerine wrecking ball in the Oval Office, he actually gives a shit about the people affected by his decisions.

The airline has suspended its earnings guidance. You know what that means? That means the accountants at Air New Zealand looked at their spreadsheets, looked at the oil price, looked at the spreadsheets again, looked at each other, and said: “We literally cannot tell you what’s going to happen. We have no idea. The numbers don’t make sense anymore because one lunatic in America has broken the global energy market.”

And it’s not just Air NZ. Qantas is hiking fares. SAS is hiking fares. Thai Airways is hiking fares. Japan Airlines is down. Cathay Pacific is down. The US government just revised its average jet fuel price forecast UP by 37 percent. That translates to an extra US$11.6 BILLION in fuel costs for just the four biggest American carriers. Eleven point six billion. That’s not a rounding error. That’s a mid-sized country’s GDP.

But here’s my favourite detail. Here’s the one that should be on the front page of every newspaper on Earth.

Air Chathams.

You know Air Chathams? Course you don’t. Nobody does. Air Chathams is a tiny little airline that flies to the Chatham Islands, which is a rock in the Pacific Ocean, 800 kilometres off the east coast of New Zealand, so far from anything that they have their OWN time zone. Population: 600 people. And some sheep. And probably some seabirds who are equally pissed off.

Air Chathams had to put out a formal statement saying their fuel costs have risen significantly due to the war in the Middle East.

SIX HUNDRED PEOPLE. On a ROCK. In the middle of the PACIFIC OCEAN. On the other side of the PLANET from Iran. They’ve got their own TIME ZONE. They are as far from the Middle East as it is physically possible to be while still being on dry land. And they are paying more for fuel because Donald Trump wanted to play soldier.

That’s the reach of this stupidity. That’s the blast radius of this ego. It went through the Persian Gulf, across the Indian Ocean, past Australia, past New Zealand, another 800 kilometres into the Pacific, all the way to a rock with 600 people and a landing strip, and it STILL hit them in the wallet.

You couldn’t write this. If I pitched this to Netflix they’d say “nah mate, too unrealistic. Audience won’t buy it. A game show host starts a war to cover up his mate’s sex trafficking ring and it cancels flights to an island most people haven’t heard of? Come on.”

AND IT GETS WORSE.

The IEA, the International Energy Agency, just agreed to release 400 million barrels from strategic reserves. Largest coordinated release in history. They’ve NEVER done anything this big. And New Zealand, sweet little New Zealand, population 5 million, clean and green, minds its own business, contributes nothing to global conflict, HAS to chip in. Six days of their own fuel supply. Their Finance Minister Nicola Willis had to pull senior ministers into an emergency meeting. Their Associate Energy Minister Shane Jones went on television and said they’re monitoring the situation “very, very closely.”

“Very, very closely.”

That’s politician for “we are bricking it at a molecular level but the comms team said we can’t cry on camera.” That’s the New Zealand government equivalent of Jake the Muss going real quiet at the dinner table. When Shane Jones says “very, very closely” twice, that’s two “verys” away from someone getting a hiding.

Because here’s the thing about Kiwis. They’re not Australians. Australians will tell you to get fucked before you’ve finished your sentence. Kiwis? Kiwis absorb it. They take it. They’re polite. They’re patient. They’ll offer you a beer and a feed. They’ll say “sweet as, bro” while the pressure builds. And builds. And builds.

And then the table flips.

And Donald Trump is sitting at that table right now. Sitting there in Mar-a-Lago with his well-done steak and his ketchup and his Big Mac wrappers, completely insulated from every single consequence of what he’s done. He doesn’t fly Air New Zealand. He doesn’t fly commercial. He doesn’t fill up his own car. He doesn’t know what jet fuel costs. He probably thinks the Chatham Islands is a resort chain. I mean look at the bloke. He can’t even get his Coppertone face right. He looks like someone tried to colour-match a leather couch to a tangerine and gave up halfway through. The spray tan has a more consistent foreign policy than he does.

His defence contractors are making billions. Raytheon’s laughing. Lockheed Martin’s laughing. The oil companies are swimming in cash. And Nana in Tauranga is rebooking a bus.

A bus.

In 2026.

Because one country away from the most important oil chokepoint on Earth, a man who raw-dogged a porn star while his wife was home with a newborn, who rode on Jeffrey Epstein’s plane, who has the impulse control of a toddler with a lighter, decided that dropping bombs would make people forget about the client list.

You want to know what happens when you piss off a Kiwi?

You remember that scene? Jake’s sitting there. The whole pub goes quiet. Someone made a mistake. And Jake doesn’t yell. He doesn’t threaten. He just stands up. Slowly. And everyone in the room knows. EVERYONE knows what’s coming.

That’s 5 million Kiwis right now. That’s 44,000 cancelled passengers. That’s 600 people on the Chatham Islands. That’s Nana. That’s the whole Pacific. Standing up. Slowly.

Cook the man some eggs?

Nah, mate.

Jake’s standing up. And Trumpstein? He should be looking for the exit. Because the table’s about to flip. And there’s not enough ketchup in Mar-a-Lago to clean up what’s coming.

Most days... I wish Jake would give him a tap on the shoulder. Just a gentle one. A Kiwi hello. See how that spray tan holds up.



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