Many good, hard-working American citizens — veterans, taxpayers, moms and dads who’ve buried sons and daughters, and everyday folks just trying to keep the lights on — are exhausted. They look at our country’s military engagements overseas and say, “Enough. No more forever wars.”
I hear them. I respect their fatigue. They’ve watched trillions of dollars vanish into sand, seen flag-draped coffins come home, and wondered why America keeps bleeding while our own borders stay wide open and our cities crumble. Their frustration is real. Their desire for peace at home is honorable. As a legal immigrant who arrived with nothing in 1987 and swore allegiance to this flag in 1992, I understand the longing for a nation that puts its own people first.
But here’s where we must be honest. The phrase they keep repeating — “forever wars” — deserves a closer look.
What “Forever Wars” Really Means
The term “forever wars” (or “endless wars”) exploded in popularity after 9/11. It describes the long, grinding fights in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Yemen, and beyond — operations that stretched for decades with no clear victory parades, no defined finish lines, and no obvious benefit to the average American family. Critics on both the right and the left use it to argue:
- These conflicts cost too much in blood and treasure.
- They create more enemies than they kill.
- They enrich defense contractors while draining the heartland.
- America should just come home and stay home.
Presidents from both parties have promised to end them. Candidates still campaign on it. And millions of citizens nod along, tired of what feels like permanent entanglement.
I get the slogan. It’s catchy. It feels like common sense.
But slogans are not truth. And this one misses the deeper reality.
This Grateful Immigrant’s Take — Step by Step
Step 1: Good and Evil do not take vacations. Evil is not a temporary policy problem you can “end” with a tweet or a withdrawal date. Evil is ancient, relentless, and patient. It wears new masks — communism yesterday, theocratic terror today — but its goal never changes: to enslave the free, to crush the grateful, and to replace light with darkness. The moment you pretend evil can be negotiated away or ignored until it “goes away,” you have already lost.
Step 2: America did not choose this fight — Evil chose us. On 9/11, radical Islamists did not attack us because we were in their backyard. They attacked us because we exist as a free, grateful, God-blessed nation. The same is true of Iran’s regime today. They chant “Death to America” not because we occupy them, but because our very existence as a shining city on a hill exposes their tyranny. You don’t end that by leaving the field. You end it by standing firm.
Step 3: “Forever wars” is the wrong diagnosis. The real problem has never been that America stayed too long. The real problem is that America often fought with one hand tied behind its back — nation-building instead of decisive victory, political correctness instead of raw strength, half-measures instead of total commitment. When we fight to win — quickly, prudently, and without apology — the wars are short. When we fight to manage or appease, they become “forever.”
Step 4: Good vs. Evil IS forever. This is the part polite society doesn’t want to say out loud. The battle between Good and Evil did not start in 2001 and will not end tomorrow. It is the permanent condition of a fallen world. From Cain and Abel to the American Revolution to the fight against Iran’s death cult, free men and women have always had to choose: stand and fight with gratitude and spine, or retreat and watch evil grow.
That choice never expires.
Step 5: True allegiance demands permanent, prudent, pragmatic action. This is where my three pillars come in.
- Accountability: We must hold evil regimes accountable — no more excuses, no more pallets of cash, no more “strategic patience.”
- Assimilation: America’s enemies must assimilate to civilized norms or be removed. They do not get to import their theocracies or ideologies here.
- Allegiance: Every grateful citizen — immigrant or native-born — owes permanent loyalty to the country that gave us freedom. That loyalty is not negotiable when evil knocks.
Practiced permanently, prudently, and pragmatically — that is how a grateful nation stays free.
Step 6: Authority is not the issue — Moral clarity is. We can argue semantics about carrying out the battle: timing, resources, strategy, prudence. But make no mistake—we are the good ones. There is no moral equivalence here. Moral equivalence is a tool used to hamper us, to create false symmetry between defenders of liberty and those who sponsor terror, hang dissidents, stone women, fund proxies to murder innocents, and vow our destruction. Equating America’s reluctant but necessary defense with the evil of Iran’s theocracy is not wisdom—it’s surrender disguised as sophistication.
For the crowd quick to cry “Where’s your congressional authority?” or “This violates the Constitution,” let’s set the record straight: The President operates under Article II as Commander-in-Chief, with inherent power to defend the nation and its interests against imminent threats. This authority is as old as the Republic—no full declaration of war required for every defensive or limited action.
The War Powers Resolution of 1973 (passed post-Vietnam to check endless entanglements) requires notification to Congress within 48 hours and a 60-day clock (plus 30-day withdrawal) unless Congress authorizes or declares war. Yet presidents of both parties have relied on Article II for swift, decisive strikes without prior approval—because evil doesn’t wait for hearings.
- Obama ordered the 2011 Libya intervention without upfront congressional authorization, citing Article II and national interests. He expanded drone strikes across Yemen, Somalia, Pakistan—hundreds without new votes.
- Recent administrations used Article II (and stretched 2001/2002 AUMFs) for strikes against Iran-backed militias.
- These aren’t anomalies—they’re precedent. Limited, prudent actions to neutralize threats fulfill the oath to protect and defend.
The selective outrage over “authority” often aims to paralyze our side while excusing inaction. When the President acts to eliminate a regime’s nuclear ambitions or command structure plotting against Americans and allies (as in the recent decisive operations against Iran’s theocracy that eliminated the Supreme Leader), it’s not overreach—it’s duty.
No moral equivalence. We are the good ones. True gratitude means acknowledging our power, right, and duty to act decisively when evil forces our hand.
Final Word from a Grateful Immigrant
So when you hear “forever wars,” remember this: The war against Evil is indeed forever. The only question is whether America will fight it with the same grateful, unapologetic spirit that built this nation—or whether we will tire, retreat, and hand the future to the forces of darkness.
I chose allegiance in 1992. I choose it still. I will never apologize for wanting the Good to win—permanently.
What about you, fellow American?
Are you ready to stop calling it “forever wars”… and start calling it what it really is?
The eternal fight between Good and Evil.
And as long as there is breath in this grateful immigrant’s body, I will stand on the side of Good—with spine, with gratitude, and with total allegiance to the greatest nation on earth.
God bless America. And may He give us the wisdom and courage to finish what Evil started.
| Metric | Score (0–10) | Quick Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Accountability | 8 | Accepting Responsibility |
| Assimilation | 7 | NA |
| Allegiance | 8 | Protecting Citizens |
| Permanently | 8 | Acted for future security |
| Prudently | 8 | Acted with ALL available info |
| Pragmatically | 8 | Took what was available |
| Total | 47/60 | Verdict: Mixed |
Because of President Trumps’ actions on Iran, my scorecard for my country improved from 45 out of 60 to 47/60.
– The Grateful Immigrant from St. Paul, Minnesota
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