Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Rabbi Shmuley Boteach on The Threat of Iran To America

An excellent column by Rabbi Shmuley, who is usually always right.  Unfortunately, the antisemites and the Israel-haters won't bother to read this. 

I can remember Netanyahu warning America about Iran's nuclear threat in an address to Congress in 2015 --  when Obama was President -- and nobody heeded his words then, either.

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This war isn’t about Israel-it’s about America. The United States does not need Israel to tell it that Iran is a threat. The evidence is written in blood-American blood-spilled over decades of unprovoked aggression. 

Opinion, by Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, 3-24-26

"One of the most persistent and dangerous lies circulating in today’s political discourse is the claim that any American confrontation with Iran-especially under President Donald Trump-is somehow a war “for Israel." It is a falsehood repeated so often that it has begun to calcify into conventional wisdom, echoed by media figures and political commentators who should know better, and some who simply don’t care whether it is true.

"Let’s say it plainly: this is not Israel’s war. It never was. It is America’s war-forced upon it by nearly half a century of Iranian aggression, bloodshed, hostage-taking, and ideological hatred directed first and foremost at the United States. 

"The Islamic Republic of Iran did not begin its hostility toward America because of Israel. It began in 1979, the very moment the Ayatollahs seized power, long before any modern American president could be accused of acting at Israel’s behest. From day one, the regime defined itself through hatred of the United States, branding it “the Great Satan" and making confrontation with America a central pillar of its revolutionary identity.

"The first act of this new regime was not against Israel. It was against America.

"In November 1979, Iranian revolutionaries stormed the U.S. Embassy in Tehran and took 52 American diplomats and citizens hostage for 444 days. This was not a minor incident. It was a declaration of war in all but name. American citizens were paraded blindfolded before cameras, humiliated, threatened, and used as bargaining chips by a regime that had barely come into existence.

"That single act should have permanently dispelled any illusion about Iran’s intentions. But it was only the beginning.

"Throughout the 1980s, Iran orchestrated and supported attacks that directly targeted American lives. The 1983 bombing of the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut, carried out by Iranian-backed Hezbollah, killed 241 American servicemen. That same year, the U.S. Embassy in Beirut was bombed, killing dozens more. These were not isolated events. They were part of a deliberate strategy by Tehran to drive America out of the Middle East through terror.

"Iranian fingerprints are found on decades of bloodshed.

"During the Iraq War, Iranian-backed militias supplied sophisticated roadside bombs-explosively formed penetrators-that killed and maimed hundreds of American soldiers. These weapons were not improvised in caves; they were engineered, funded, and distributed by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. American families buried their sons and daughters because Tehran made a calculated decision to wage proxy war against the United States.

"Even outside conventional battlefields, Iran has pursued Americans relentlessly. It has plotted assassinations on U.S. soil, including a brazen attempt to kill the Saudi ambassador in Washington, D.C., using a cartel hitman-an operation traced directly back to Iranian operatives. It has kidnapped Americans abroad, including journalists, academics, and tourists, holding them as leverage in geopolitical negotiations.

"This is not ancient history. This is a continuous pattern of behavior spanning more than four decades.

"And yet, despite this overwhelming record, a chorus of voices insists on reframing any American response to Iran as somehow being done “for Israel."

"Among the loudest of these voices are media personalities like Tucker Carlson, Candace Owens, Nick Fuentes, and even Megyn Kelly, who have either directly or indirectly advanced the narrative that American policy toward Iran is driven by Israeli interests rather than American ones.

"This is not just wrong. It is dangerously misleading.

"It suggests that the United States lacks agency, that its leaders are somehow manipulated into conflict by a foreign ally. It erases decades of Iranian aggression against Americans. And perhaps most insidiously, it echoes a deeply troubling historical trope-that Jews or Israel are secretly controlling global events for their own benefit.

"But the facts are stubborn.

'Iran does not chant “Death to Israel" alone. It chants “Death to America" with equal fervor, often placing America first. Its leaders have repeatedly declared their intention to bring about the collapse of the United States as a global power. This is not rhetorical flourish. It is ideological doctrine.

"The Iranian regime’s ambitions extend far beyond Israel. It seeks regional dominance and, ultimately, global influence. It funds and arms terrorist organizations across the Middle East-Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad in Gaza, the Houthis in Yemen-all of which have targeted American interests directly or indirectly.

"When American ships are attacked in the Persian Gulf, when U.S. bases in Iraq and Syria come under rocket fire, when American personnel are wounded or killed, these are not Israeli concerns. They are American ones.

"And then there is the nuclear question.

"A nuclear-armed Iran is not merely an Israeli problem. It is a global catastrophe waiting to happen-but first and foremost, it is an existential threat to the United States.

"The idea that Iran would reserve its most devastating weapon for Israel while sparing America defies both logic and history. The regime has consistently demonstrated that its hatred of America is foundational, not incidental. If given the capability, there is every reason to believe that Iran would view an attack on a major American city-New York, Washington, or Los Angeles-as the ultimate act of revolutionary triumph.

'This is not alarmism. It is a sober assessment of a regime that has spent decades declaring its intentions openly.

"The Ayatollahs are not rational actors in the Western sense. They are driven by a messianic ideology that glorifies martyrdom and envisions a world reordered under their interpretation of Islamic governance. Their pursuit of nuclear weapons is not simply about deterrence. It is about power, prestige, and the ability to reshape the global order.

'To pretend otherwise is to ignore everything they have said and done since 1979.

"Critics who claim that confronting Iran is about protecting Israel miss the central point: America is protecting itself.

"No sovereign nation can tolerate a regime that has repeatedly killed its citizens, attacked its interests, taken its people hostage, and openly calls for its destruction-while simultaneously racing toward nuclear capability.

"If anything, the real question is not why America confronts Iran, but why it has taken so long to do so decisively. 

"The narrative that this is “Israel’s war" serves only one purpose: to delegitimize American action and to shift blame away from the true aggressor. It allows commentators to posture as anti-war while ignoring the war that Iran has already been waging against the United States for decades.

"It also has a corrosive domestic effect. By framing U.S. policy as being driven by Israel, it feeds suspicion, division, and, ultimately, antisemitism. It suggests that American Jews or the State of Israel are dragging the United States into conflicts that are not its own.

"Nothing could be further from the truth.

"The United States does not need Israel to tell it that Iran is a threat. The evidence is written in blood-American blood-spilled over decades of unprovoked aggression.

"This is not about foreign entanglements or misplaced loyalties. It is about national security in its most fundamental sense.

"Iran has been at war with America since 1979. It has simply been a war fought in shadows-through proxies, terror attacks, cyber operations, and ideological warfare. The question now is whether America is willing to recognize that reality and respond accordingly.

"History teaches a clear lesson: regimes that declare their intentions and act on them should be taken at their word. The cost of ignoring them is measured not in abstract policy debates, but in human lives.

"The biggest lie, then, is not just that this is Israel’s war. It is that America has a choice about whether to be involved.

"Iran made that choice for us nearly half a century ago. It’s time for America to finally neutralize the threat."

Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, widely known as “America’s Rabbi", is one of the world’s most recognized and influential Jewish voices. A bestselling author, award-winning columnist, global human rights advocate, and dynamic public speaker, he has dedicated his life to spreading Jewish values, defending the Jewish people, and championing universal human dignity. The international bestselling author of 36 books that have been translated into multiple languages and sold millions of copies worldwide, his writings are known for their boldness, accessibility, and unapologetic defense of morality in the modern age. In 2000, Rabbi Shmuley became the only rabbi to win The Times of London’s prestigious “Preacher of the Year" competition, and remains the record-holder to this day. He has also been honored with the American Jewish Press Association’s highest award for excellence in commentary, cementing his reputation as one of the foremost Jewish communicators in the world. Follow him on Instagram and X @RabbiShmuley.

"Four Truths About COVID"

All I can say, as one who lived through the worst years of the pandemic, is that I'm extremely grateful for the measures that were taken to protect us until the COVID vaccine was produced through Operation Warp Speed.

COVID was a novel virus that was killing people, and nobody knew why, except that it was contagious. Desperate times called for desperate measures, as the saying goes, and I had no problem with the lockdown, or the other ways to keep people from infecting one another; or masks. It all made perfect sense to me. The day I was able to sign my father up for the vaccine for those over 75 was one of the happiest days of my life - that was January 2021. In April 2021, I stood in line for three hours to get my own vaccine, and it was well worth it. 

Of course now, six years later, everyone can criticize all they want. But 2020-2021 were nightmare years, and my positive attitude helped me get myself and my father through them. I still wear a mask, I still get my COVID vaccines, I'm still cautious, and I wouldn't have it any other way.

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Four truths about covid that have become clouded over time. In the early days, the virus posed a graver threat to people and the health care system, Trump embraced lockdowns he now blasts, and the benefits of vaccines were oversold.

March 22, 2026

"Unlike in a hurricane or war zone, much of covid’s toll happened out of public view, inside the crowded hospitals where people died on ventilators, often without families by their side in the early months. Frustration built among millions of Americans who were largely stuck at home and required to wear masks at stores as kids learned via Zoom because of an invisible threat. Glimpses came through in the haunting stream of ambulances in empty New York City streets or images of overflowing morgues.

“These are traumatic experiences, and in many ways the ways we deal with it is to forget and move on,” said Ziyad Al-Aly, a physician-scientist and senior clinical epidemiologist at Washington University in St. Louis who treated covid patients and has been extensively researching the long-term consequences of the virus. “A lot of Americans don’t really remember those days, but we lived each one of them.”

"This disconnect has led to misconceptions years later, according to public health experts. Hindsight, the distance of time and the now endemic nature of the virus have allowed certain myths about the pandemic to emerge. But these are some of the truths of covid, which killed more than 1.2 million Americans, that medical professionals and health experts want to remember.

Lockdowns served a purpose

"That stretch of spring 2020 when society came grinding to a halt with businesses and schools closed, gatherings banned, and church services suspended has sometimes been dismissed as a fruitless economic disruption, as the virus continued to rage for years.

"But these actions were not about eradicating covid. Remember the phrase “flatten the curve”? It meant spreading out the inevitable cases over time, avoiding a massive spike that would overwhelm hospitals — not bringing them down to zero.

“The point of this is, instead of a spike of the curve, to delay and flatten that curve with the hope that you can keep the utilization of resources to be within the health care system’s capacities,” then-Health Secretary Alex Azar said in a March 15, 2020, press briefing that previewed plans for mitigation.

"Doctors, nurses and others who were frontline medical professionals at the time lament that the public does not recall or appreciate what they faced as they confronted a deluge of patients with a disease they had never seen before and with a shortage of personal protective equipment to keep themselves safe.

"New York City emerged as an early hot spot and a warning sign. At its peak in the week of March 29, more than 1,500 covid patients were hospitalized per day and roughly a third were dying.

“I remember walking into the hospital in March and April 2020 and feeling like I was walking into the apocalypse,” said Craig Spencer, then a physician in the emergency room at Columbia University Medical Center.

"Nationwide, the health care system did not become as overwhelmed as feared in spring 2020, which experts have attributed in part to mitigation, hospitalization rates being lower than expected and measures to increase bed capacity. Hospitals became more strained in the next two winters, including the massive omicron wave of 2021-2022 that caused milder illness but sparked record hospitalizations and staffing shortages as record numbers of Americans became sick.

"There is robust debate on which restrictions were imposed and for how long — especially school closures. The phrase “follow the science” for policymaking was an oversimplification because science cannot offer a clear road map for navigating trade-offs, science communications experts and public health experts have acknowledged. Covid raged around the world, including in China with its draconian “zero covid” strategy, and countries experienced different consequences and benefits from their decision-making.

Covid was not just the flu

"These days, the experience of getting covid is far more mundane for most Americans (though still worrisome for the elderly and immunocompromised). But in the early days, the threat to younger Americans was far greater for people not considered high-risk today.

"In 2020, SARS-COV-2 was a novel virus unlike other coronaviruses that have long circulated. It was so alarming because people’s bodies were not trained to fight it and doctors were not trained in how to treat it. Symptoms and complications were more unpredictable and far-reaching than with other respiratory viruses.

"Seniors were the ones always at highest risk of death, and they are overwhelmingly the ones who still die from the virus. But at least 275,000 who died of covid were under the age of 65, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data. Covid was not as severe as feared in children, but the death toll of more than 1,600 is also higher than fatalities from other diseases that prompted aggressive public health responses to spare children from preventable death.

“Folks who either got it and it was really mild or got it and they were asymptomatic are looking at what happened in 2020 compared with them and their experience and think nothing has changed, it’s always been just a cold,” said Jessica Malaty Rivera, an infectious-diseases epidemiologist. “But we can thank hybrid immunity between vaccines and infection for the reason why mortality rates are lower than they were in 2020.” 

"Covid has often been dismissed on social media as just the flu or a common cold. It was not true in the first several years of the pandemic when covid proved far more transmissible and virulent. Now covid is becoming more like the influenza as vaccination and prior infection have bolstered immunity. The CDC estimates that 45,000 died of flu last respiratory virus season, more than double the covid death toll. But experts don’t know whether it will stay that way or whether more virulent variants will emerge.

Vaccines were sold as preventing infection

"People often vent that they were infected with coronavirus despite being vaccinated, and others are quick to retort that the vaccines were never meant to prevent infections and instead were designed to protect against severe disease.

"But the early messaging about vaccines did focus on covid vaccines as a way to keep you from getting covid. Officials often stressed the importance of vaccines to achieve “herd immunity” to stop the spread, until it became clear that vaccinated people could still be infected and spread the virus.

"The coronavirus vaccines were initially effective at preventing sickness outright. During trials, the Pfizer and Moderna mRNA vaccines were found to be more than 90 percent effective in preventing disease. A study of 4,000 frontline workers found that in the first three months of the vaccine rollout, two doses reduced the risk of infection by 90 percent.

"Then the virus started mutating to bypass the first-line immune defenses, making it easier to infect the vaccinated, who still carried additional immune protection to reduce the severity of illness.

"President Joe Biden in July 2021 said “you’re not going to get covid if you have these vaccinations” as the delta variant surged. That wasn’t true: Infections among the vaccinated were no longer rare in the delta surge, which forced CDC officials to acknowledge a need to change vaccine messaging.

"Malaty Rivera said the benefits of immunization were oversold to Americans who should have received a clearer message that vaccines are an imperfect tool best combined with other measures to reduce risk, such as masking.

“And so they feel betrayed,” she said. “You made me feel like the vaccine was going to open up my life again. You made me feel the vaccine was going to give me the freedom to not get sick.”

Trump has changed his tune on covid

"Supporters and allies of President Donald Trump often assail the public health response to covid as overreaching.

"The White House overhauled the covid.gov site that once offered resources for information on testing, treatment and vaccines to criticize the handling of the pandemic — including under Trump’s watch. It says “prolonged lockdowns caused immeasurable harm to not only the American economy, but also to the mental and physical health of Americans, with a particularly negative effect on younger citizens.”

"It was under Trump that the federal government recommended social distancing and business closures. The president himself spent months “issuing conflicting messages and dismissing the threat of the virus, even as his health advisers warned him the worst was yet to come,” concluded “Nightmare Scenario: Inside the Trump Administration’s Response to the Pandemic That Changed History,” based on extensive reporting by Washington Post journalists Yasmeen Abutaleb and Damian Paletta.

"In a January 2021 report, the Trump White House touted how the administration “implemented strong community mitigation strategies” and “released guidance recommending containment measures critical to slowing the spread of the virus.” The March 16 guidance described as “the president’s coronavirus guidelines for America” called for closures of schools and venues where people congregate once the virus starts transmitting in communities.

“A lot of the strictest things happened when Trump V 1 was in power,” said Malaty Rivera, who also volunteers for the organization Defend Public Health, which advocates against Trump administration health policies.

"White House spokesman Kush Desai said in a statement that the Trump administration “issued commonsense guidance” when “everyone was in the dark about the nature of covid” before it adjusted its approach as new evidence emerged.

“After an abundance of evidence made clear that the economic, social, and psychological effects of universal school and other lockdowns far outweighed any possible reductions in covid transmission and mortality, the Trump administration and various GOP-led states accordingly adjusted and called to lift mandates, opting instead for more targeted measures to protect vulnerable populations,” Desai said. “Blue states chose to ignore this evidence, and doubled down on destructive lockdowns as well as blanket vaccine and mask mandates that tanked their economies and sabotaged the development of a generation of children.”

"Now scientists and anti-vaccine activists who rose to prominence as covid contrarians hold federal health positions after voters restored Trump to the office they once ousted him from in part because of how he handled the pandemic.

"Trump has focused his covid messaging on blaming the pandemic for foiling a good economy under his watch and revisiting the virus’s origins. Covid.gov now promotes the “lab leak” theory that SARS-COV-2 originated from Chinese experiments, even though the assessment of federal agencies and scientists is split.

"Kristin Urquiza, who co-founded Marked by Covid to memorialize the victims of the pandemic after losing her father in 2020, said she is frustrated by what she sees as the Trump administration downplaying the consequences of covid.

“Covid was one of the most horrific events that has ever happened to me and to my community,” said Urquiza, who has struggled to gain traction for a national covid memorial in Washington, D.C. “Part of the reason why we are so committed to it is to remember our loved ones but to spare others from the horrific experience we lived through.” 

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Rabid Attacks Against Jews -- in London

If this were the 30s and 40s, and these were Nazis, there would have been condemnation at the horror of it. But because these Jew-hating terrorists are Muslims, they get a pass.  I just don't understand how even after September 11 and October 7, these savages still get excused and protected.

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From Tom Slater, Editor of Spiked, 3-23-26:

The Golders Green ambulance attack reveals the depths of the new Jew hatred.The anti-Semites aren’t even pretending to hide behind Gaza anymore. 

"Ambulances set on fire because they are run by a Jewish charity. The anti-Semites aren’t even trying to hide behind Gaza anymore. Truly, theirs is a movement that loathes Jews just as much as it loathes life. 

"Around 1.30am this morning, four ambulances were set ablaze in Golders Green, the heart of Jewish north London. They belonged to the Hatzola charity, which has been helping the ill and injured residents of the area, Jewish and non-Jewish alike, since 1979.

"CCTV footage shows three suspects, clad head to toe in black, approaching the ambulances. They were parked next to a synagogue. Cylinders on the vehicles exploded, shattering the windows of nearby flats. 

"Right now, all we have is this grainy video footage to go on – motives are too early to establish. But I dare say we can make some educated guesses.

"The Golders Green fire attacks come after a man named Jihad al-Shamie slashed at worshippers at a Heaton Park synagogue during Yom Kippur last October; after two foreign-born ISIS fanatics were locked up last month for plotting to gun down as many of Manchester’s Jews as they could; and after two Iranian men were charged a few days ago with spying on London’s Jewish communities on behalf of the Islamic Republic.

"The butchers of Tehran were sending their henchmen after Jews in Britain – and across Europe – long before American and Israeli bombs began falling on the Ayatollah, his missile sites and the IRGC earlier this month. More than 20 potentially Iran-linked plots have been disrupted in Britain over the past two years. 

"A new Islamist group calling itself Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamia, apparently spawned from the Islamic Republic’s terror networks, has also entered the stage. Last week, it claimed responsibility for explosives attacks on a synagogue in Belgium, a Jewish school in Amsterdam and a synagogue in Rotterdam.

"Meanwhile, an ambient Jew hatred fouls the air everywhere. Anti-Semitic incidents in Britain, as recorded each month by the Community Security Trust, are double where they were before Hamas’s pogrom in 2023 emboldened the nation’s Jew-hating scumbags. 

"It’s in our schools, where Jewish MPs are having visits cancelled due to the fury of the ‘pro-Palestine’ mob. It’s in our universities, where ‘Put the Zios in the ground’ has replaced ‘Be Kind’ as the slogan du jour. It’s on our streets, where Islamists glorify Israel’s jihadist enemies while know-nothing progressives giggle with titillation.

"There’s almost a grim division of labour. While radical Islamic mobs threaten, maim and take Jewish life, activists, students and perma-students launch Jew hunts on university campuses – targeting Israeli academics – or smash up Jewish-owned businesses, using bogus connections to Israeli defence firms as a pretext.

"The sewers may have burst in Britain after October 7. But anyone who had been paying attention could see this coming. The Kent synagogue smashed up eight times in 10 years. The random attacks on doddery Jewish men. That convoy that drove around Finchley Road in north-west London in 2021, shouting ‘Fuck the Jews’ and ‘Rape their daughters’ from loud-hailers.

"We’ve been told since Brexit that a new 1930s is upon us. Apparently, British voters politely asking for more democratic clout and better border control constituted a terrifying descent into Nazism. All the while, those menacing Britain’s tiny Jewish community – smaller in number than British Sikhs – were rendered invisible.

"Smashed shops, firebombings, murder – purely because they are Jews. I don’t know how many echoes of history need to ring out, how much broken glass needs to rattle on the ground, before the anti-fascists rouse from their slumber. Or realise they’ve slipped on to the other side.

"Muslim anti-Semitism, in particular, has been lent cover by all the usual idiots and cowards. Despite anti-Semitic attitudes being stubbornly higher among British Muslims, despite Islamic extremism being the biggest terror threat we face by a country mile, every political discussion must at some point pivot to the spectre of the ‘far right’.

"Given you could now fit the actual far right in the back of an Uber XL, this requires smear tactics and spectacular mental gymnastics – like when Gary Neville responded to the Heaton Park killings by bemoaning the blokes putting Union flags on lampposts, or when Green MP Hannah Spencer blamed the 2017 Manchester Arena bombing on the ‘division’ generated by Reform UK.

"The arguments are almost too stupid to rebut. Apparently, Jihad al-Shamie only decided to lunge at Jews with a knife because he was made to feel ‘unwelcome’ by the sight of our national flag, and Salman Abedi only blew up girls at a pop concert because he stumbled across one of Nigel Farage’s old speeches to the European Parliament.

"These are just the more low-wattage attempts to defend the indefensible. Jew hatred is back. But our rulers cannot compute it, let alone fight it. For that would require ditching their comforting ideologies, their identitarian blinkers, their deranged Israelophobia. It would mean accepting that they are part of the problem."

Your Local Epidemiologist-The Dose, 3/24/26

Goodbye flu season, hello Spring bugs, like norovirus, polio travel headlines, and breakthrough measles cases.

By Katelyn Jetelina and Hannah Totte, MPH

Flu season is winding down just as spring kicks off, which is great news if you have travel plans. Less great: other bugs are already moving in to fill the void.

This week we’re covering what that means for you, plus why the polio travel headlines were scarier than the actual risk, what breakthrough measles cases reveal about how vaccines work, and two recalls worth checking before you head out. Good news at the end, as always and a reading recommendation if you find yourself stuck in a TSA line.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​


Disease “weather” report

Goodbye flu season. Nationwide, the number of people with fever, sore throat, or runny nose (collectively known as “influenza-like illnesses”) is nearly back to below the epidemic threshold. In other words, flu season is behind us. A few states are still seeing high levels, but they too are on their way down.

Source: FluView; Annotated by Your Local Epidemiologist

Was this the “super flu” season many feared? Earlier this year, a notable mutation raised concerns that this could be a particularly bad season. Looking back, cumulative hospitalizations were worse than average, but not record-breaking.

Source: FluView; Annotated by Your Local Epidemiologist

Spring brings another set of bugs

That said, not all runny noses and prolonged coughs will be avoided, as some common colds, as well as the family of RSV viruses, are at their peak.

Norovirus (the stomach bug behind diarrhea and vomiting) also continues to climb. The number of people testing positive is not necessarily abnormal—it’s within levels seen in previous years and, thankfully, lower than last year, when a new strain triggered a notable surge. Norovirus season typically winds down by April, so we should be peaking soon.

Source: NREVSS; Annotated by Your Local Epidemiologist

What this means for you: Norovirus is extremely contagious. If you have the stomach bug, use a separate bathroom in your house. Hand sanitizer doesn’t kill this bugger, either. Soap and water are your best bet after touching hotel door knobs or elevator buttons, for example.

Measles has historically been tightly coupled with school calendars. Because of spring break travel, we usually see an acceleration of case counts in March and April. But relative to everything else you worry about, in general, this is still very rare. The latest U.S. tally for 2025 is 1,524 measles cases.

  • Utah is experiencing the most rampant spread right now. This is in part is due to a large sporting event held in February 2026. South Carolina and Arizona are on the mend.

  • In the Americas, all eyes are on Mexico, which has an enormous amount of cases (7,584) just this year. Guatemala is also a new hot zone with 1,718 cases this year.

What this means for you: If you’re traveling to these places, make sure you’re up to date on your MMR vaccine. If you have an infant under 1 year old, you may want to reconsider travel plans or get them vaccinated early.

Coming in April: As we move into spring, the disease weather report will expand to cover ticks, mosquitoes, allergies, and heat-related illnesses. Stay tuned!


Food (and drug) safety alerts

Children’s ibuprofen recall. Nearly 90,000 bottles of Strides Pharma Children’s Ibuprofen Oral Suspension (100 mg/5 mL., berry flavor, 4 oz.) have been recalled. The product was distributed nationwide and may be on shelves at CVS, Target, and similar retailers.

  • Why? Complaints of a gel-like mass and black particles in the bottles.

  • How bad is this? No cases of serious adverse events have been reported so far; this warning is a precaution. Specifically, FDA classified this as a Class II recall (not its most dangerous). For context, FDA’s recall classification system has three tiers: Class I (reasonable probability of serious harm or death), Class II (possible temporary or reversible harm), and Class III (unlikely to cause harm but still violates regulations).

  • How to check your bottle: Look for lot numbers 7261973A or 7261974A with an expiration date of January 31, 2027. These are typically stamped on the bottom or side of the bottle.

  • What to do: If your child took it, call their pediatrician. Before tossing it, many retailers accept returns on recalled products. You can also contact Taro Pharmaceuticals directly for reimbursement.

Raw cheddar cheese is linked to E. coli. The FDA has linked Raw Farm brand raw cheddar cheese to seven E. coli infections across California, Florida, and Texas. Four of the seven cases are in children aged 3 or younger. Two people have been hospitalized. If you have this, toss it.


Breakthrough measles cases at Utah hospital

A Utah Health Action Alert recently flagged that vaccinated health care workers who contracted measles and came to work, not realizing infection was possible despite their vaccination status. The story has been circulating on social media and raises some important questions worth unpacking.

The MMR vaccine works extremely well, but no vaccine is perfect. A vaccinated person is 35 times less likely to get measles than someone who is unvaccinated. Breakthrough infections do happen, though: roughly 3 out of every 100 fully vaccinated people can get infected. The vaccine’s primary job is to prevent serious illness, hospitalization, and death. Preventing infection altogether is a bonus.

Expect to hear more breakthrough cases, and don’t read them as a sign of vaccine failure. When a virus circulates at levels the U.S. hasn’t seen in more than 30 years, more people will be exposed, and more breakthrough infections follow. This is inevitable.

Exposure level matters. A health care worker treating an infected patient is essentially walking through a viral cloud. Antibodies can neutralize the virus, but an overwhelming exposure can sometimes outpace them.

Even when breakthrough infections occur, serious illness remains uncommon. Data confirms that vaccination significantly reduces the risk of severe complications, even among people who become infected.

Breakthrough cases can spread the virus, but this also appears to be rare. The first documented case of a fully vaccinated person transmitting measles was during a 2011 New York outbreak. Out of 88 close contacts, only 4 became infected. An older study found no viral shedding among asymptomatic or mildly ill vaccinated patients, though that research needs replication with more sensitive modern tools.

Many people have a lot of really great questions about immunity against measles. Here are the top 10 we’re hearing from YLE.

10 FAQs on MMR and Measles Protection

·
March 14, 2025
10 FAQs on MMR and Measles Protection

With measles cases rising across the country, I’ve been getting a lot of questions (especially after that Hannity interview yesterday)! Here are your top 10 answered.


Good news

  1. U.S. smoking rate drops below 10% for the first time (and researchers are stepping up). Cigarette smoking among U.S. adults fell into single digits: 9.9% in 2024. This is massive progress, given that in 1965, the rate was 42.4%. This analysis was published by a researcher. Normally, the government’s Office on Smoking and Health would analyze and publish these results. But after federal cuts removed this office, outside researchers are filling the gap.

  2. How you think about aging appears to shape how you actually age. The power of the mind! A new Yale study followed 11,000+ adults aged 65+ over 12 years and found that 45% showed measurable improvement in cognitive function, physical function, or both. People who held more positive beliefs about aging were significantly more likely to improve.


Question grab bag

I’m headed to Iceland soon. Do I need a polio booster? I thought there was a travel warning about this.

The short answer: No.

What you saw in the news was a case of media misinterpretation, not a new travel warning. And Iceland isn’t on the notice list. Here’s what happened:

The CDC has maintained a global polio notice since 2022. This is a notice (not a warning), which is an important distinction. A notice is meant to provide information to promote safe and healthy travel, not to discourage travel to a destination.

The recent media frenzy was triggered by a fairly mundane internal fix: someone at the CDC noticed a discrepancy between the list of countries named in the notice and the countries shaded on the accompanying world map. When they corrected that mismatch, the page got a new date stamp, and the media interpreted that timestamp as a brand-new advisory. It wasn’t.

Some places on the notice list, including the U.K. and Germany, do fall under the “you can get a booster” category. But the actual risk is genuinely very low for most travelers because:

  1. The polio vaccine is 99% effective against paralytic disease. Immunity in anything can wane over time, but in general, this vaccine is believed to provide lifelong protection.

  2. Detections in places like the U.K. and Germany has largely been through wastewater surveillance, meaning public health agencies are detecting trace evidence of the virus in sewage systems rather than seeing widespread illness.

  3. Normal tourist activities face a very low risk. If you’re traveling to an affected country and plan to spend extended time in a close community setting, it could be worth a conversation with your doctor. A booster would top off your protection by triggering a recall response, so you reach very high antibody levels before you encounter the virus in the real world.

Countries where poliovirus has been detected within last 13 months; Source: CDC

Recommended reading for that TSA line

As many of you know, I’ve been partnering with MAHA grassroots over the past year on several projects. But, I will be honest, it’s often felt like a one-way street: Listening but not being heard. That was until last week, when I read something by Aaron Everitt, who is an acquaintance and MAHA star, about his positive experience at a public health conference. It was incredibly refreshing and felt like a big win. This country has a lot of work to do. Read it below.

Besides The Revolution
Why MAHA Needs Public Health
Wednesday morning, I headed down to Denver International Airport to board a plane bound for Washington. We were on the front end of the power outage that turned the nation’s second busiest airport into a scene from a market in Marrakesh, but we made it out just in time. I’m not usually thankful for a flight on Frontier — their terminal is the worst one …
Read more

Bottom line

Spring is approaching, the bugs are changing, and as always, knowing what to watch for is half the battle for staying healthy and enjoying spring.

Love, YLE

Monday, March 23, 2026

New COVID BA.3.2 Variant: A New Lineage

This is from CIDRAP 3-23-26:

New COVID variant with immune escape potential confirmed in US, 22 other countries
News brief, Today at 3:58 p.m.
Mary Van Beusekom, MS

"The highly mutated SARS-CoV-2 BA.3.2 variant, which has been reported by at least 23 countries as of February 11, has been detected in nasal swabs collected from four US travelers, clinical samples from five patients, three airplane wastewater samples, and 132 wastewater surveillance samples from 25 states, per a study published last week in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

"First identified in a respiratory sample in South Africa in November 2024, the strain has roughly 70 to 75 substitutions and deletions in the gene sequence of its spike protein relative to the JN.1 variant and its descendant, LP.8.1, the antigens used in the latest COVID-19 vaccines. 

“BA.3.2 represents a new lineage of SARS-CoV-2, genetically distinct from the JN.1 lineages (including LP.8.1 and XFG) that have circulated in the United States since January 2024,” wrote the authors, led by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) researchers. The CDC uses digital public health surveillance to monitor SARS-CoV-2 variants around the world.

30% prevalence in 3 European countries

"Detections of BA.3.2 began rising in September 2025. The first US identification of the strain was on June 27, 2025, through the CDC’s Traveler-Based Genomic Surveillance program in a person traveling to the United States from the Netherlands. 

"From November 2025 to January 2026, weekly BA.3.2 detections increased to about 30% of sequences in Denmark, Germany, and the Netherlands. The first US instance of BA.3.2 in a clinical specimen was documented on January 5, 2026. As of February 11, the strain’s prevalence among 2,579 total genetic sequences in national surveillance collected starting on December 1, 2025, was 0.19%.

“Because many countries have limited genomic detection and surveillance capacities, these detections likely underrepresent the actual geographic extent of spread,” the researchers wrote. “Phylogenetic analyses have identified the emergence of two BA.3.2 sublineages (BA.3.2.1 and BA.3.2.2), indicating ongoing viral evolution.”

"As BA.3.2 mutations in the spike protein could reduce protection from a vaccination or infection, “continued genomic surveillance is needed to track SARS-CoV-2 evolution and determine its potential effect on public health,” they added.

"Peace" With Iran?

I don't like this at all. 

Why isn't Israel part of the "peace talks" with Iran along with the United States? I'd rather have Netanyahu and his people help negotiate any deal than have Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner. Israel has been dealing with attacks from Iran longer than we've been dealing with Iran, and they know a lot more than we do. Israel must be included, and they must be treated with the respect they deserve as our great ally. 

I don't trust Iran as far as I can throw them, and I'd rather destroy that regime once and for all; have trustworthy inspectors make sure they have no more missiles and launchers; make sure they reopen the Strait of Hormuz; and bring Reza Pahlavi in to give the decent Iranian people some stability.

I understand that Trump is under enormous pressure from many sides due to the mid-term elections; the Democrat shutdown; terrorist attacks at home; the attacks on ICE; rising antisemitism; and the owners of huge, expensive SUV gas-guzzlers whining that they can't afford the rising cost of gasoline.  But he needs the best people advising him right now,  and I'd rather he finish the job in Iran while we and Israel have the momentum, than fall for more Iranian lies and have to come back again in a year with more bombers.

---------------------------------

As Trump steers away from war with Iran, Israel rediscovers cost of riding with him

For third time in a year, the president wants to cut a deal that ends fighting before Israel is ready. Now Netanyahu has to make sure regime truly cannot get to the bomb, and that Hezbollah doesn’t get off the hook as well

By Lazar Berman 3-23-26

The White House has repeatedly sounded a simple but effective message: Trust the plan.

The slogan — with ostensible origins in the QAnon conspiracy theory movement — has been applied to a range of issues. In January, the Labor Department posted a photo of US President Donald Trump saluting, with the caption Trust the Plan. Trust Trump.

After prominent antisemitic podcaster Tucker Carlson visited the Oval Office in January, a White House official told Jewish activist Shabbos Kestenbaum, “Just trust the plan.”

It was also the approach that Israelis took toward the president on most issues. Trump and his advisers — especially top envoy Steve Witkoff — might occasionally have said things that confused Israel and even undermined its interests, but they trusted that he was a president who could distinguish good from evil, and was not about to be pushed around by Iran and friends.

Trump’s decision to unleash an all-out bombing campaign against Iran alongside Israel seemed to confirm the wisdom of putting trust in the US leader. Sure, Trump might have engaged in direct talks with Iran, but, they reasoned, he saw right through their attempts to prevaricate and delay and embarked on a war that could damage him politically because he knew it was right.

Trust the Plan.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu certainly acts like he fully trusts Trump. In a press conference last week, he lauded “the wisdom and the courage of President Trump’s decision, and his leadership, and the fact that we’re working together.”

“America is not fighting for Israel. America is fighting with Israel for a common goal: to protect our future, to protect civilization against these barbarians,” Netanyahu said.

They might not be fighting together for long.

After delivering a seemingly unequivocal deadline to Iran to open the Strait of Hormuz on Saturday, Trump seems to have equivocated.

In a bombshell announcement Monday, Trump revealed that his administration has been engaged in “productive” talks with Iran regarding a “complete and total resolution” of hostilities, leading him to postpone his pledge to bomb Iran’s energy sites.

He followed that up by claiming that the US had effectively achieved “regime change” in Iran because so many of its leaders are dead.

Israelis who had trusted the plan now fear there is no plan and wonder if Trump can still be trusted.

It seems that Jerusalem was caught off guard by the announcement from the mercurial president.

As of 4:30 p.m. Israel time, hours after Trump dropped his bombshell, Netanyahu and his office had yet to formulate a public reaction. Just the day before, the IDF said Israel expects to fight for “several more weeks” to achieve its goals in Iran, indicating that even if it knew the US was talking to Iran, it did not think the negotiations would go anywhere.

“This was always a possibility,” said Israel’s former ambassador to Washington, Michael Oren.

There are precedents over the past year for Trump accepting a hasty deal that solves nothing in order to extricate himself from a situation, even if it leaves others in the lurch.

In May, Trump came to a surprise deal with the Houthis in Yemen that simply returned the situation in the Red Sea to the status quo before the seven-week-long bombing campaign. The agreement ended attacks on US vessels, but allowed the Houthis to keep shooting at Israel and others using the waterway.

Israeli officials told Hebrew media outlets at the time that Washington did not give Jerusalem advance notice of the announcement, and that Israel was surprised by it.

That deal, not surprisingly, was negotiated by Witkoff and brokered by Oman.

At the end of the 12-day June war, Israel promised to “forcefully strike the heart of Tehran” in reaction to an attack that broke the fresh ceasefire. Trump’s response was to berate Israel and publicly force it to turn its planes around.

With the war weighing on Trump’s political prospects and his economic agenda, his domestic allies had been pushing for an exit strategy. At the same time, key US partners in the Middle East, such as Turkey, had stepped up efforts to find a diplomatic way out of the fighting, creating a ramp that could work for Trump, even if not for Israel.

“I’m worried,” said American Enterprise Institute senior fellow Danielle Pletka.

“There will be a temptation to pull an Obama and run for the hills prematurely,” she said, referring to the 44th US president. “On the one hand, the president has the right principles and goals, on the other, he’s facing internal and external pressure to allow the regime to continue, to punt the problem to another president.”

Now Netanyahu has to clarify whether it can still strike Iran, and whether Trump is insisting that Iran stop firing at Israel during the five-day period he set aside for talks.

Netanyahu also has to do all he can now to ensure that Israel’s core interests — stopping Iran’s nuclear program, its production of ballistic missiles and its support for Hamas and Hezbollah — are addressed in a potential ceasefire agreement.

He also has to keep his eye on Lebanon. There is a distinct possibility that Iran will insist that its strongest proxy, Hezbollah, survives as well.

Even though Israel is gearing up for a major ground operation against Hezbollah, which has resisted disarming under a previous ceasefire deal, Trump could overrule those plans as well. The same Middle Eastern allies who have been pushing Trump to stop the war in Iran are also trying to forestall an Israeli invasion of Lebanon.

“We have no choice with Iran, but with Lebanon, we can’t,” said Oren. “Lebanon is an existential issue.”

The US-Israel alliance, like the relationship between Trump and Netanyahu, reached new heights with the joint campaign against Iran. But it came with a clear price.

As long as Israel crafted a plan with Trump, it was never really Israel’s plan at all.