What is at stake besides our souls. Everyone must do their part and not simply become an escapist.

Got tan or not?

America can be blessed.

Always my way said the queen!

A Bill Hole in your mind again!

Likely now.

Even if suffering is there, don't stare at it. Tis better to dance! And heal!

Get real, get grit!

so the irony of it all is in effect Searching the web 28 results Searching on X 10 results Yes, the irony is thick and almost poetic in its self-defeat.Iran launched a massive retaliatory barrage not just at Israel (which it did hit), but deliberately at multiple Arab Gulf states—UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and others—targeting U.S. bases there while causing spillover damage to civilian areas, airports, ports, hotels, and cities like Dubai and Abu Dhabi.The stated goal was to raise the costs for the U.S. and its allies, pressure Gulf governments to rein in Washington, and expand the conflict to force de-escalation on Iran's terms.Instead, this single move has achieved the exact opposite of what Tehran likely intended:It has united the Gulf Arab states (often rivals among themselves) in outrage and condemnation against Iran, not against Israel or the U.S. Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait, and others issued near-identical strong statements calling the strikes "cowardly," "unjustifiable violations of sovereignty," and "unacceptable escalation," while reserving the right to respond and defend themselves—often in coordination with allies. For the first time in recent memory, these countries are showing rare solidarity, with some analysts describing it as forging a "new regional alignment" explicitly against the "Shi'ite axis" (Iran and its proxies). No major Arab condemnations targeted the U.S.-Israeli strikes that provoked this; the focus is squarely on Iran's aggression hitting Arab soil and killing/injuring civilians. Even historically more neutral voices (like parts of the Arab street or analysts) see this as Iran turning potential sympathizers or neutrals into active opponents. In essence, Iran handed its regional rivals and the U.S./Israel a gift: a unifying enemy in Tehran itself. Decades of Iranian rhetoric positioning itself as the defender of the Muslim/Arab world against "Zionist" and Western aggression have been undermined in hours by missiles landing on Arab cities.As one observer put it bluntly: Iran just accomplished what no amount of diplomacy could—fully aligning the Arab world (at the governmental level) with Israel and the U.S. against the regime in Tehran. A catastrophic strategic blunder.This doesn't mean the war is over or that Iran can't still inflict pain (e.g., via proxies, oil disruptions, or sustained missile/drone campaigns), but the irony is undeniable: by trying to broaden the fight, Iran narrowed its own support base and strengthened the coalition arrayed against it.The situation is still extremely fluid, with ongoing strikes and high risks of further escalation, but this particular irony stands out starkly right now.