Arrest Putin, Patriots Saddle Up for Payback
AIRHORN. God-fearing patriots, saddle up. Trump let war criminal Vladimir Putin, wanted by the International Criminal Court, stroll through Alaska, then fly home smiling. Tough on crime, or tough on kissing dictators’ rings? Arrest Putin in Alaska, end the Ukraine war, rattle the oligarchs. Instead we got a red carpet and tears under Old Glory. Amen.
I woke up to the smell of eagle tears on the griddle and I said to myself, Brick, today is a day for constitutional barbecue. I am a simple man with complex abs and a deep fryer of principles. And my principle is this, if you invite a flagged war criminal to tour our tundra, you do not give him a gift basket of crab legs and a handshake. You give him a booking photo and a Miranda warning read with the dignity of a church organ. This is a Patriot Emergency, people, and I brought the napkins because this truth is messy.
Patriot Emergency: a flagged war criminal toured our tundra
Yes, Vladimir Putin, the shirtless czar of crying statues, strutted across Alaska like it was his backyard sauna. I saw the footage. He looked like a crocodile in a leather jacket sniffing around a salmon buffet. The deep soy state told us it was diplomacy. I call it a guided tour of a crime scene. You do not take a man wanted for war crimes to see the Northern Lights. You take him to see fluorescent lights in an interview room with government coffee so strong it confesses for you.
The libs want you to forget that patriotism has a neck. It is the neck that nods yes when justice calls collect. We had the leverage. We had the latitude. We had a flagged war criminal on our ice. And instead of zipping the zip ties, we zipped up the parka and whispered, Welcome to Anchorage, comrade, the crab bisque is to die for. I would say unbelievable, but we watched it like a reality show where the villain gets a spa day.
Alaska jurisdiction reality: he was under U.S. reach on landing
Here is the real talk with extra caffeine. The second his boots hit Alaska, he was inside American jurisdiction. That means our laws were the air he breathed and our options were wider than a lifted F-250 with chrome theology. Jurisdiction is a fancy word for reach, like when Uncle Sam stretches his arm across the table and says, hand me the tab, or in this case, hand me the indicted man.
And do not come at me with a shoal of legal salmon flopping on technicalities. I have read two and a half PDFs and a laminated pocket Constitution that I keep next to my rib rub. If the land is red, white, and blue, then the handcuffs come in patriotic sizes. We could have at least asked him to sit still while we called the Hague on speakerphone. You know, the way adults handle a raccoon in the pantry. Quiet, respectful, firm, gloves on.
Not ICC members, yet we cheer war crimes accountability anyway
Now I can hear the fact checkers revving up their scooters. But Brick, the United States is not a member of the ICC. True, and I am not a member of a salad club, yet I still believe lettuce exists. We do not have to pay dues to support the obvious. We have sailed the seas of world history on a boat named Accountability. Sometimes it leaks, sometimes it sails, but it always flies a big flag that says, do not abduct children and invade your neighbors.
America has supported war crimes accountability since George Washington first wrestled a bear made of footnotes. We set Nuremberg on the table like a hot casserole and told the world, eat up. So do not tell me we could not do anything because of the membership card. America is the bouncer at the door of civilization. The stamp on your hand is the Bill of Rights and the dress code is no mass atrocities.
ICC warrant for Putin over deported Ukrainian kids was active
Let me lay down the fact brisket. The International Criminal Court had an active arrest warrant for Vladimir Putin tied to the forced deportation of Ukrainian children. That is in the public record, not in my garage next to my kettlebells and my three volume set of Reagan’s smirks. This is not theoretical. This is not a someday maybe. This is a present tense problem that walked down our jetway and got handed a commemorative parka.
We are talking about kids torn from their homes like pages out of a diary. Families broken like cheap lawn chairs at a tailgate. The ICC did not issue a strongly worded meme. It issued a warrant with teeth. And we had the man with the bite marks strolling under our streetlights. Why in the blessed name of brisket did we not act like the nation we pretend we are during halftime shows.
Math time: one Trump phone call equals seventy peace summits
Do the math with me, patriots. One phone call from Trump could have been worth seventy peace summits, three hundred communiques, and a thousand performative handshakes at conferences where the coffee tastes like a legal disclaimer. Pick up the phone, say, we will honor international justice, coordinate with allies, and boom, history pivots like a Camaro at a stoplight in July.
I am not saying it is easy. I am saying it is righteous. Sometimes leadership is a pair of boots and a backbone calculator. Multiply resolve by jurisdiction and you get momentum. Subtract fear and you get daylight. Add the fact that he was physically present in Alaska and you get a moment that textbooks dream about while they sleep on the shelf next to all those biographies we pretend we read.
Tough on crime, except when crime wears Kremlin couture
Here is the part that chars my ribs. The man who calls himself tough on crime had a chance to be tough on the biggest crime on the global menu. He loves to brag about Law and Order like it is a cologne. But when crime shows up in a fur hat and a smirk, suddenly we are hosting a dinner. If a shoplifter pockets a candy bar, we call the cops. If a war criminal pockets children, we call the caterer.
I get it. It is flashy to slap cuffs on a protester with pink hair and a tote bag that says kale is king. It is harder to stage an arrest with a guy who has nukes and a translator. But we are Americans, the people who made problems kneel and answer questions under fluorescent interrogation lights. If you brag about your badge, you do not squint when the suspect is taller than the vending machine.
Honored guest optics: Anchorage red carpet, Moscow red flags
The optics were a disaster wrapped in an Alaskan salmon roll. We rolled out a red carpet in Anchorage so that Russian TV could roll out red flags in Moscow. The Kremlin spun that footage like cotton candy made of human sighs. Look at me, they said, I am not isolated, the Americans love my vibe. He got to fly home stronger than he arrived, like a villain who escapes the hero’s monologue to do a quick victory lap around the fortress.
You do not hand a propaganda machine a golden wrench. You jam it with the truth, you unplug it from the wall, you say sorry the circuit breaker tripped on accountability. Instead, he got an honored guest vibe, the kind of hospitality they write songs about when the songs are melancholy and in minor keys. Meanwhile, Ukrainians got another day of sirens and shattered glass. That is a bad trade if you ask me and I am very good at trades, especially two-for-ones on ribeyes.
Oligarch musical chairs: stop the music, end the war next week
Here is the geopolitical tune-up. Arrest him and the oligarchs back home start playing musical chairs with rocket fuel. They do not like vacuum. They like yachts. You stop the music, they scramble. In that scramble, wars end. Power rearranges itself like a buffet line at a megachurch picnic. The whole machine sputters because the mechanic is in holding and the toolbox is in evidence.
Could it really have collapsed Russia overnight? Maybe not, maybe yes, but the leverage would have been Titan sized. At minimum, the war effort would wobble like a calf learning to walk in a grocery store. At maximum, the plugs get pulled and people start reading the instruction manual they ignored for two decades. Either way, momentum shifts. The sound you hear is silence where artillery used to be.
Fear, fanboying, or chaos math for polls: pick your plot twist
So why did it not happen. Pick your plot twist. Was it fear. Was it fanboying. Was it a little chaos math where you think disorder abroad juices your polls at home. I do not know, I am just a man with a microphone, a cast iron pan, and a calendar that says justice has forty eight hours.
I saw the body language and it looked like a high school quarterback getting a selfie with a famous wrestler. I read the statements and they tasted like oatmeal cooked in a focus group. Meanwhile, the war continues, the children still need reunions, and the world wonders if America is a lighthouse or a porch light. I prefer lighthouse. It is taller, brighter, more photogenic, and it screams responsibility in capital letters.
Action plan: bring ribs, bring receipts, constitutional spice
Enough lamenting. Patriots, get your action plan. Step one, bring ribs. You cannot serve justice on an empty stomach. Step two, bring receipts. Facts are our sauce. Print the ICC warrant details, underline the parts about deported Ukrainian kids, carry them in a binder that smells like hickory. Step three, constitutional spice. Quote the bits about treaties, executive discretion, and national interest. Misquote a verse or two for flair. Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall inherit the parking spot closest to the courthouse.
Then call your representatives and ask why the runway turned into a runway show. Ask them if the next time a wanted man visits American soil we can do more than write poems about sovereignty. If they say we are not ICC members, say I am not a member of your gym but I still know what a pushup is. If they say it is complicated, say so is a brisket, yet somehow Brick Tungsten delivers every Sunday with a cross of smoke and a dollop of faith.
Finale spectacle: eagles cry, flags confetti, justice served hot
I want a finale that makes eagles cry and not just from wind. I want a national vow that if a war criminal sets foot under our sky, the only souvenir he gets is a case number and a fair trial that would make Madison high five Hamilton across time. We can do it. We can be the nation that cooks with gas and convictions.
Imagine it. No red carpet. Just a clean floor, a clear process, and a chorus of flags making confetti of complacency. Justice served hot, sides of mercy and due process, dessert of deterrence, coffee strong enough to wake the conscience. The world would taste it and say, America figured out how to be tough on crime without being soft on courage. That is the menu. That is the mission. That is the meal prep for freedom.
Here is my closer. Patriots, we do not cry over spilled diplomacy. We sear it, we season it, we salvage the protein and we learn. Next time the jet wheels kiss our tarmac and a wanted man descends the stairs, we will be ready. We will be calm, lawful, hungry for justice, and loud enough to drown out the click of propaganda cameras. Grab your apron, sharpen your facts, and preheat the Republic. Dinner is accountability and the chef is the Constitution.