
A person sits in shallow water as cargo and commercial vessels are anchored in the Strait of Hormuz off Bandar Abbas, Iran, Monday, June 8, 2026. (Amirhosein Khorgooi/ISNA via AP)
Something has to give in Iran. I believe that it was President Trump himself who said we are being “tapped along” by whomever it is who is calling the shots in that beleaguered country.
Tapping the west along is a well-worn tactic for the criminal theocrats who run Iran. They have been doing it for nearly half a century. Tapping the Obama administration along got them an airlift of pallets of euros and Swiss francs to the tune of the equivalent of about $400 million courtesy of the United States Air Force. Part of that deal was that Iran would curtail its enrichment of uranium. They did no such thing.
So, we can’t be tapped along. This thing needs to come to an acceptable conclusion.
Iran wasn’t always the theocratically-controlled despotic hellhole that it is now. Throughout history Iran was known as Persia. It was only in 1935 that Reza Shah Pahlavi, then the country’s ruler (and the father of the Shah of Iran that we all remember from 1979), asked governments around the world to start calling the country Iran.
Unlike the dark, totalitarian misery that is today’s Iran, Persia was an enlightened, accomplished society. We can credit Persia with modern algebra and the word, “algorithm.” Ancient Persia was the home of astronomer, mathematician and poet Omar Khayyam (“A Jug of Wine, a Loaf of Bread – and Thou”).
Perhaps as much as any society, it was Persia that showed the world how to govern a large, diverse civilization through administration, infrastructure, tolerance, and cultural sophistication rather than through oppressive coercion.
All to say that the 90 million people who live in Iran today are the heirs of a rich, vibrant culture that has been suppressed by the theocratic thugs who took over the country in 1979.
President Trump is therefore reluctant to reduce the country to a pile of smoking rubble, though he can easily do so. Reducing Iran to the levels of devastation visited upon Europe in World War II would certainly neutralize the threat that Iran has posed to the civilized world for nearly 50 years. But it would simultaneously impoverish the Iranian people for a generation or more and perhaps create the circumstance for the rise of a regime that’s even worse than the one we have now.
But it may come to that whether we and President Trump like it or not. For the sake of the developed world on the macro level, and for the sake of our own domestic politics on the micro level, we must bring the business in Iran to an end.
The threat it has posed for nearly a half century must be decisively neutralized and the Strait of Hormuz must be open to the free passage of maritime commerce. Prior administrations going back to Jimmy Carter have been “tapped along” by Iran. But we can be tapped along no longer.
A decisive outcome in Iran may come at a horrendously painful price. But whatever the price, it must be paid.
And right soon.
SMITH COUNTY – A woman who admitted to killing a Tyler man in 2017 was given a 20-year prison sentence on Thursday. According to court documents, Jakysia Rodgers, who was recently charged with capital murder in the shooting that killed Joshua Alon McGee, 22, on August 11, 2017, entered a guilty plea to the lesser charge of murder on Thursday. After that, Rodgers received a 20-year sentence. She was already serving a 20-year sentence for an unrelated aggravated assault charge in 2024 prior to the capital murder indictment.
TYLER – There are confirmed reports of a two vehicle accident on Highway 110 and Grande Blvd in Tyler. At this time, traffic is slow, but moving. You might consider taking an alternate route and watch out for emergency personnel. At this time, there are no reported injuries.



LONGVIEW — As a proposed expansion to Toll 49 takes shape, contractors and officials have presented changes and adjustments at the North East Texas Regional Mobility Authority (NET RMA) meeting on Tuesday, after East Texans’ voiced concerns for safety. At Longview’s Mod Cobb Convention Center, locals gathered for the NET RMA’s public information meeting to hear about the expansion project, which would stretch from State Highway 110 to US 271 and give drivers another option for traveling east from Tyler.
JACKSONVILLE — The annual Jacksonville Tomato Festival is back for its 42nd year this Saturday, set to take over downtown with festivities. The festival will run from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. and continues the debate on whether a tomato is a vegetable or a fruit, according to our news partner KETK. The event is set to feature a variety of attractions for all ages in the heart of Jacksonville, including a car show, farmers market and more.
MARSHALL – The Marshall Police Department is investigating a fatal two-vehicle crash Wednesday afternoon at East End Boulevard South.
JACKSONVILLE – The faith-based nonprofit Highway 69 Mission announced on Monday that it will be permanently closing at the end of this summer.
PARIS (AP) – As travelers prepare to set off on summer trips, scorching temperatures lie in wait.
TYLER – Residents may notice some unusual city employees gathering information this summer to enhance safety on trails and sidewalks. Daxbot robots will collaborate with Kimley-Horn to gather accessibility data for pedestrian facilities in Tyler’s public rights-of-way and trails beginning on June 10. These robots can yield to humans. The city of Tyler states that they only gather data about pedestrian infrastructure. Personal data is not stored by the robots.
SMITH COUNTY – Tyler residents will be able to vote in this year’s mayoral election between candidates Stuart Hene and John Nix.