Peace Through Strength — Strength, Deterrence and Iran
Posted By RichC on June 24, 2025
It looks as if my commentary is becoming a regular
righthand column thing over at TheHustings.news (based on the current news story).
Peace Through Strength — Strength, Deterrence and Iran
The debate over whether to strike Iran’s nuclear enrichment sites is now behind us, as Tehran has suffered a significant setback in its pursuit of weapons-grade material. The United States military displayed impressive precision and professionalism in carrying out the orders of our ever-engaged commander-in-chief.
For many, the choice seemed binary: Either act decisively to prevent a nuclear Iran, or risk facing a far more dangerous regime emboldened by atomic leverage. Those of us who lived through the Cold War remember the constant threat of nuclear conflict — and the relief that followed the Soviet Union’s collapse. Unfortunately, the decades since have seen the rise of new nuclear threats, with Iran chief among them.
It is reasonable to hope that the recent B-2 strikes will not only stall Iran’s nuclear ambitions but also serve as a strong deterrent to its leadership — discouraging future aggression toward Israel, Western democracies, and continued support for terrorist proxies.
America cannot afford to project weakness. Under President Trump, the United States demonstrated a clear willingness to apply maximum pressure — politically, economically, and militarily — without rushing into prolonged entanglements. Critics may still call for restraint, but history shows that appeasement has rarely tempered radical regimes.
President Trump’s doctrine of peace through strength provided a strategic roadmap: one where America leads from a position of resolve, not retreat.
Avoiding war is always preferable. But ignoring Iran’s nuclear ambitions invites far greater peril. While some hesitate to act, President Trump understood that decisive leadership today can prevent the devastating conflicts of tomorrow. — Rich Corbett
Adding a map posted on BrilliantMaps that does a pretty good job of illustrating the timeline of the United States air strike against Iranian nuclear sites on June 22md 2025, known as Operation Midnight Hammer.
Music Monday: A post from decade ago, but a poignant reminder
Posted By RichC on June 23, 2025
This content is restricted.
Archive: Summer week with our granddaughters was a success!
Posted By RichC on June 22, 2025
This content is restricted.
U.S. Strikes Iran’s Nuclear Sites: Escalation and Diplomacy in Focus
Posted By RichC on June 21, 2025
On June 21, 2025, President Trump announced U.S. airstrikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities—Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan—escalating the Israel-Iran conflict. Using B-2 stealth bombers and “bunker-busting” bombs, the U.S. targeted Iran’s nuclear core, following Israel’s week-long campaign that weakened Iran’s air defenses. Trump called the strikes “very successful” but urged peace, with a national address set for 10 p.m. ET.
Iran reported “limited damage” and claimed prior evacuation of nuclear materials. Experts caution that the strikes’ impact is unclear without damage assessments. Iran’s Supreme Leader warned of consequences, raising fears of retaliation against U.S. troops.
Despite the aggression, Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio push for diplomacy, though recent talks with Iran stalled. Egypt and Gulf states advocate de-escalation, while U.S. lawmakers are divided—some, like Sen. John Fetterman, support the strikes, while others, like Rep. Thomas Massie, demand a war-powers vote.
The strikes, aimed at halting Iran’s nuclear ambitions, risk broadening the conflict in a volatile region. The coming days will determine if diplomacy or further escalation prevails.
Source: Wall Street Journal, June 21, 2025, Live Coverage: Iran-Israel Conflict Latest News
Tech Friday: Less blogging but monitoring Linux server stability
Posted By RichC on June 20, 2025
Grok AI and I have become good friends over the past few weeks. I’ve been using artificial intelligence — with some success — in order to fix a few ongoing issues
with MDB and the Linux server that has served me well for the past decade or so.
No … I’m not updating or doing anything crazy yet … but have realized that most of the problems are from outdated PHP code, hodgepodge theme updates over the years and old outdated and unsupported widgets and plugin. In other words, change is going to have to happen in the future.
For now, things seem stable and I’ll forego updating Linux to the latest release, PHP 8.1 any further or doing anything radical until there is a “blog update” plan in place. Part of me wants to tackle theme writing, but the other “wisdom of age” part of me knows it would be wiser to work with a new updated theme. For now, keeping CPU and memory issues to a minimum is all I’m asking. 😉
Woodworking: Keep your fingers safe working on the Table Saw
Posted By RichC on June 19, 2025
As I have in the past, here’s another woodworking idea for a push block that keeps fingers safe and rides on the table saw fence. I my mind, I’m contemplating one that actually becomes a sliding fence for cutting thin strips for splines
that are all of the same size.
Summer is almost here. Maybe try some mother-daughter surfing?
Posted By RichC on June 18, 2025
Pulled this off of social media earlier this month and it made me smile. What a great way for a mom to introduce her daughter to a love of the ocean and surfing.
Dehumidifier problems: This time a warranty replacement. Ugh!
Posted By RichC on June 17, 2025
In the past, dealing with a older dehumidifier seemed as if replacing it was better than repairing it … or dealing with a warranty issue. But this time I’ve opted to fight for a replacement with the manufacturer — ANDTE (in China of course). 😉
That snidely comment aside, they were responsive and polite by email. A couple back and forth emails with proof of purchase, troubleshooting, etc … they shipped me a new one telling me it would take a week or so. It arrived last week, I unboxed and made sure it was upright to put the compressor oil in the bottom and waited the 24 hours before turning it on.
THEN it started … ugh! (and it’s not a diesel — video below as it is worth hearing) 😉 Back to the emailing back and forth again.
The saga continues.
Music Monday: John Cougar – “Ain’t Even Done With The Night”
Posted By RichC on June 16, 2025
A streaming station notification on my iPhone came up last week as a reminder that I haven’t listen to Pandora since walking the beach — I do miss that. Lately it has been far more convenient to tune in SiriusXM in the car or on my phone while connected to WiFi around the house. Since Brenda and I are on a US Mobile shared pooled data plan, we do try to limit our streaming on the carrier … therefore the beach walks were Apple Watch data (not pooled).
Anyway, an older 1980 John Cougar song popped up and I enjoyed it enough to make it a Music Monday song (BTW, “Cougar” was his stage name before bringing back “Mellencamp“). A glance at the Nothin’ Matters and What If Did album cover photo reminded me that “we” were all young once!
Here’s cut #2 from side one: “Ain’t Even Done with the Night.”
| John Cougar – “Ain’t Even Done with the Night” | 1980 |
Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee
- lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
- digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.




