It's absolutely untrue to say that influencers who moved to Dubai are afraid to leave only because then they may have to pay taxes. It underrates how many of them are also afraid to go somewhere that extradites

seen from Australia

seen from Italy
seen from China
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from Romania

seen from Mexico
seen from Thailand
seen from China
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Italy

seen from Italy
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Brazil

seen from Russia
seen from United States

seen from Italy
seen from Ireland
seen from United States
It's absolutely untrue to say that influencers who moved to Dubai are afraid to leave only because then they may have to pay taxes. It underrates how many of them are also afraid to go somewhere that extradites
Tony Pentimalli
The Silence Was Never the Lesson
James Stewart and Henry Fonda gave America a beautiful story about friendship, but in 2026, too many people are dragging that story out like a permission slip for cowardice.
Stewart was the conservative Republican. Fonda was the liberal Democrat. Both were Hollywood royalty, two of the most beloved actors America ever produced, and their faces meant something to people: decency, grit, conscience, and the ordinary American trying to do right. They were young actors together before they became legends, roommates before they became stars, and friends for half a century. After one ugly political blowup, they reportedly made a choice that sounds almost impossible now. They stopped talking politics. They built model airplanes, flew kites, played practical jokes, and kept the friendship alive by keeping the country outside the room.
That is a lovely story until people try to turn it into a gag, which is exactly what happens now when someone brings up Stewart and Fonda like they just solved the whole problem. See, they were on opposite sides and still stayed friends. Why can’t we do that anymore? Why does everything have to be political? Why can’t people just agree to disagree?
Because we are not arguing over model airplanes, the top tax rate, or whether government should be a little bigger or a little smaller. There is a difference between arguing over the New Deal and arguing over whether a president can treat courts like suggestions. There is a difference between disagreeing over spending and disagreeing over whether a frightened man should be grabbed outside an immigration court. One is politics. The other is whether the law still protects anyone who does not have money, power, or the right last name.
Stewart and Fonda do not deserve to be mocked for protecting their friendship. Their bond was real, their history was real, and their private deal belonged to them. Their silence was a private truce between two men who knew each other deeply, not a national order to shut up while power gets cruel.
The Stewart-Fonda model only works when both sides still share the same moral floor, which does not mean both people agree. It means neither person is cheering while the floor gets ripped out from under somebody else. It means both people still believe human beings are human, courts matter, violence is wrong, elections count, facts are real, and power has limits. Inside that world, silence can be mercy. Outside that world, silence becomes cover.
That is the difference between their America and ours. Their friendship survived by taking politics off the table. In 2026, politics is the table. It is the courthouse, the immigration hearing, the student visa, the government file, the surveillance database, the judge fired for not bowing low enough, the worker dragged from a van, the asylum seeker told due process is now for other people, and the citizen told to swallow all of it and call it just another disagreement between friends.
The cruelty is not just being shouted at rallies anymore. It has been turned into machinery, written into orders, pushed through agencies, defended in court, funded by Congress, blasted through media, and then normalized by neighbors who still want to be treated like decent people at dinner. You cannot agree not to discuss politics when politics decides who gets a hearing, who gets a warrant, who gets dragged away, and who gets punished for fighting back. Kilmar Abrego Garcia was wrongly deported to El Salvador despite a court order protecting him from removal there, and when he challenged it, a federal judge later threw out the criminal case against him after finding the prosecution was retaliatory and politically motivated. That is not normal politics. That is a machine. Once cruelty becomes a machine, silence is not neutral. Silence becomes oil.
We do not owe anyone the Stewart-Fonda deal when the price is pretending this is normal. Friendship should not require moral amnesia, and family peace should not require civic surrender. The hard part is that these are not always strangers. Sometimes they are people who held your kids, stood at your wedding, buried your parents, or showed up when you needed them. It would be easier if cruelty always wore a stranger’s face, but it does not. Sometimes it sits across the table, asks for another cup of coffee, and tells you not to make everything political.
Everyone knows this person: the uncle who swears he does not hate anyone, then votes for people who promise to make whole families disappear; the old friend who says politics has gotten too mean, but only after the cruelty lands on someone else; the neighbor who wants credit for being kind in private while backing brutality in public. They want the warm hug of friendship after throwing hard punches with their vote. They want politics to be sacred when they cast the ballot and off-limits when you ask what the ballot did.
That is not friendship. That is moral dry cleaning.
Silence does not just hurt the people being targeted. It changes the person keeping quiet. You swallow the first objection, then the second, then the third. You laugh around things that should have stopped the room cold. You become fluent in avoidance. Eventually, you are not keeping peace anymore. You are training yourself to live with lies.
Not every relationship has to be burned to the ground. There is still room for patience, love, and people who are confused, scared, misled, or slowly finding their way back from the poison they were fed. There still has to be a line, and the line is human dignity. Friendship is not bigger than humanity. We can admire Stewart and Fonda’s friendship without worshiping their silence.
Some friendships are worth saving. Some silences are not. When a friendship asks you to make peace with cruelty, it is no longer asking for grace. It is asking for surrender.
*Tony Pentimalli is a political analyst and commentator fighting for democracy, economic justice, and social equity. Follow him for sharp analysis and hard-hitting critiques on Facebook and BlueSky @tonywriteshere.bsky.social
Pete Buttigieg is starting his Nevada campaign by trying to woo culinary union workers, pointing out that Sanders’ Medicare for All would strip them of their popular union health care while his “Medical for All Who Want It” would allow them to keep it.
Love to see it.
Biggest mistake Pete, Amy and Biden can make is focusing solely on each other and leaving Sanders alone.
The most important report on child poverty in years is finally out.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez vs Ben Shapiro
Honestly, watching conservatives flip their shit that Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez isn’t dropping everything she’s doing to debate Ben Shapiro (to the extent that it would be an honest debate) is hilarious.
AOC is in the middle of a public election for Congress, dealing with Democratic backstabbing and sabotage in NYC, and is currently campaigning for multiple other progressive candidates. Right now she’s in Hawaii helping push Kaniela Ing to win his own primary on Saturday.
She’s on TV every week, sometimes everyday, sometimes more than once a day. She’s giving primetime interviews with CNN. She’s headlining rallies side-by-side with Bernie Sanders, the presumptive Democratic 2020 Presidential nominee. She took down the 4th ranking Democrat in Congress. Fox news is trying to push her as the face of the Democratic Party for the next 50 years, and you think you’re on her level?
She’s above your paygrade, Ben.
You don’t even have a degree in economics, Ben. You’ve got a PoliSci degree and she studied Economics and International Relations.
And the fact that conservatives are flipping out because AOC isn’t going to a debate (which takes at least a week to prep for and stops almost any direct action she’d be doing) a relative nobody or go on news stations that literally nobody knows about is funny.
Let’s throw in some good old-fashioned “But she’s ugly!” too.
Toss in some deliberate and blatant misrepresentation of what AOC says because nobody, not Ben Shapiro (noted intellectual who doesn’t even know basic economic concepts), nor apparently the entire right-wing, knows what a simile is.
They’re really just continuing to prove her right.
The gas tax is bad, and there's a better way forward.
In other news, jackasses are proposing turning every road into a toll road to save our crumbling infrastructure rather than; say; actually fucking raising taxes on the fucking super-rich like they did in the 50s when the original infrastructure-boom was.
BECAUSE LORD KNOWS WE CAN’T DO THAT, THEY MIGHT CUT OFF OUR CAMPAIGN DONATIONS, GOTTA FUCK OVER THE WORKING PEOPLE! WELCOME TO CAPITALIST HELL Y’ALL!
Seriously tho, fuck the policy wonks proposing this, I hope they get fired. Lord knows people like them have done enough damage to this country as it is...