The 2026 war in Iran has unleashed a cascade of damaging consequences. When the United States and Israel launched a high-intensity, pre-emptive “decapitation strike” against Iran on February 28, 2026, the calculated objective seemed straightforward: achieve swift regime change while preserving critical energy infrastructure—like the Kharg Island export terminal—for a future, Western-aligned government. Instead, the strategy has catastrophically backfired. Washington now finds itself locked in a grueling “Mexican standoff” with a resilient Tehran. Far from collapsing under the onslaught, Iran weaponized its asymmetric arsenal to survive the initial bombardment, emerging with a distinct strategic advantage that, for political reasons, U.S. military power cannot counter. The analysis that follows deconstructs the anatomy of this intervention, detailing how a single military campaign reverberated through the entire global network, driving up oil prices, reigniting inflation, destabilizing bond markets, and throttling global agricultural supply chains. The Oil Chokepoint Oil is at the heart of this crisis, as evidenced by the cascading impacts triggered by the largest energy supply disruption in history. In response to American and Israeli bombardment, Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz, choking off the transit of 20% of global crude. This instantly transformed a global oil surplus into a multi-billion-barrel deficit. Global inventories are depleting at a record pace, leaving import-dependent nations facing critical fuel shortages. The Macro Meltdown As a result of interrupted oil flows, the global economic floor is giving way. We are seeing market stagnation and surging costs as oil pushed well past $100 per barrel, a price that, even when the Straits reopen, could persist for years, according to OilPrice. The IEA warned that crude could climb over $250 per barrel this summer if the blockade continues. Consequently, nations worldwide are already cutting their GDP projections. Rising oil prices are driving Inflation. April Consumer Price Index (CPI) in the U.S. surged to 3.8%, driven by increasing fuel, food, and transport costs. Countries around the world are having to contend with higher inflation rates, nowhere more so than Iran, which is dealing with a domestic food inflation rate exceeding 115%. Driven by escalating geopolitical anxiety, global debt markets are flashing red as bond volatility is reshaping global credit. As systemic inflation fears mount, long-term borrowing costs across the G7 have hit a two-decade high, signaling a sharp recalibration of macroeconomic risk. The U.S. bond market remains hyper-reactive to war headlines, inflating the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield to 4.49% while the policy-sensitive 2-year yield has risen to 4.06% and the 30-year yield has pushed past 5%. A similar trend is taking place in Europe and Asia. Despite misplaced stock market euphoria, analysts warn global economies are sleepwalking into a recession. Humanitarian Catastrophe Beyond the balance sheets, the war is accelerating an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe. Iran’s closure of the Straits of Hormuz has choked off heavy nitrogen fertilizer and sulfur supply chains, threatening a 15% drop in global crop yields and setting the stage for a multi-year global famine by late 2026. Under the U.S.-enforced naval blockade, Iranian society is facing a crisis of survival. Wholesale supply shortages and skyrocketing food prices are making it impossible for families to afford basic nutrition. Tragically, at the exact moment international aid is needed most, surging global fuel and freight costs are forcing relief organizations to wind down their regional feeding operations. Eroding International Law and Multilateral Norms The unilateral, pre-emptive campaign launched by the United States and Israel against Iran has further eroded international law and weakened traditional multilateral norms, effectively creating a dangerous “permission structure” for other revisionist powers to justify their own territorial ambitions. By bypassing consensus-based security alliances and the United Nations to execute a high-intensity “decapitation strike” under the guise of national security, Washington has established a geopolitical precedent that undercuts Western moral authority. Authoritarian regimes can now weaponize this exact framework of pre-emption and localized escalation to normalize their own regional aggressions. Specifically, Moscow can point to the U.S.-led operation in the Middle East to further legitimize its ongoing war in Ukraine as a defensive necessity against external encirclement, while Beijing can reference the Western disregard for traditional sovereignty and international guardrails to rationalize naval blockades and eventual military intervention in Taiwan. The U.S. has yet again weakened the rules-based global order, creating an anarchic blueprint where raw military escalation becomes a universally permissible tool of statecraft. Conclusion: The Inescapable Bind Ultimately, Operation Epic Fury leaves the international community trapped in a permanent, highly destructive stalemate with no viable exit strategy. By attempting to solve a regional security threat through unilateral force, the United States has sparked crises across energy markets, global finance, and food supply chains while accelerating the breakdown of the rules-based international order. Washington can either withdraw without achieving the stated aims or they can expand the war. However, with a forthcoming midterm election and nearly two-thirds of the domestic electorate deeply anxious over war-driven fuel costs, the White House faces a political reality that prevents it from expanding the conflict. The architecture of this war provides a brutal, real-world case study in polycrisis dynamics. What was sold to a polarized public as a localized, surgical intervention has instead unleashed cascading economic and social consequences that will endure long after the Strait reopens.
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Wednesday, 27 May 2026
How the Cascade of Damaging Consequences from the War in Iran is Exacerbating the Global Polycrisis
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Monday, 25 May 2026
What's The Point of Working Hard Anymore?
What's The Point of Working Hard Anymore?A generation raised to believe in stability is now facing burnout, uncertainty and a future that feels increasingly out of reach.
With everything happening in the world lately, I can’t help but feel helpless sometimes. As a Gen-Z, there’s this lingering feeling that all the things we’re striving for might ultimately be pointless. We spend years studying, earning degrees, skills then search for jobs, build our businesses…only to sit there at the end of the day wondering: what’s the point of all this? No matter how much I save or how frugally I live, owning a house or building any significant asset of my own feels almost impossible. Especially with the way the world is moving economically, politically and environmentally. My generation doesn’t really have the luxury of daydreaming about how many children we want or where we’d like to retire someday. Most of us are too busy to survive the present. Because let’s be honest: with the salaries people earn today and the rising cost of even the most basic necessities, it’s overwhelming. The world is still largely run by people from a different generation. People who were able to establish their lives during a completely different economic reality. A time when having a college degree actually meant something rare. Something valuable enough to secure your place in society. Back then, education was often enough. Which is probably why it feels as though many of the people shaping today’s policies and economic systems are creating a world that benefits themselves far more than it benefits future generations.You can see this everywhere, from companies laying off hundreds of employees while executives continue receiving massive bonuses, jobs demanding years of experience for entry-level pay or entire industries replacing workers with cheaper systems in the names of “efficiency” while expecting younger generations to simply adapt. Housing prices continue to rise while salaries barely keep up with inflation, yet we’re still told that if we just “worked harder” or “saved better,” we’d eventually achieve the same stability previous generations once had. In the pursuit of cutting costs, companies reduce manpower, exploit shortcuts and hand opportunities to people with connections rather than competence. And in doing so, they slowly erode the opportunities that younger generations could have had. At the same time, our frustrations are constantly dismissed.
Gen-Z is often labelled as “lazy”, “entitled” or “unwilling to work,” when in reality, many of us are simply exhausted from trying to survive in an increasingly unstable world. By reducing an entire generation to those stereotypes, they make it even harder for young people to be taken seriously in workplaces, careers and society as a whole. “Go into the building and hand out your CV in person, that’s how you’d be able to capture their attention.” We did. So did a million other people. And in the end, our CVs still disappeared beneath alongside an endless pile of online applications for a single position. “Just get married and figure the rest out later.” Okay. So after somehow surviving burnout from juggling multiple jobs, finding time to date, meeting the right person and settling down, we’re also expected to afford a house or an apartment on top of everything else. Because where exactly are we supposed to live? Who’s paying the mortgage? What bout food, bills and daily necessities when many of us are already struggling just to sustain ourselves? And then comes the inevitable question: “When are you having kids?” Have you seen how expensive it is just to give birth to a child? Let alone raising one. All the costs, the time, the emotional labour…in an economy where event taking time off work feels impossible. And somehow, despite all of this, we’re still expected to remain optimistic. To keep smiling through burnout, instability and uncertainty, as though exhaustion itself is a personal failure rather than the natural response to the environment we were thrown into. I think that’s what older generations often fail to understand when they talk about Gen-Zs. It’s not that we don’t want to work hard. Most of us have spent our entire lives working toward something. Studying endlessly, building careers, starting businesses, learning new skills whilst trying to stay relevant in a rapidly changing world. But it becomes incredibly difficult to stay hopeful when every milestone that once symbolized stability now feels painfully out of reach.
A degree no longer guarantees security. A full-time job no longer guarantees comfort. Even rest feels like a luxury people have to earn.That is why so many people my age feel so lost. Not because we lack the ambition, but because we were raised to believe that hard work would eventually lead somewhere stable, only to realize in the long run that the rules have changed somewhere along the way. Still, despite everything, I don’t think Gen-Zs has completely given up. If anything, I think we’ve simply become more aware. More cautious. More realistic about the world we inherited. We question systems because we were forced to grow up watching them fail people in real-time. We speak openly about burnout, mental health and financial struggles because pretending that everything is fine no longer works. Maybe we are exhausted. Maybe we are anxious about our future. But that does not make us lazy. It simply makes us human. Sincerely, Cherie. Thanks for reading The Whiffler! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. The Whiffler is free today. But if you enjoyed this post, you can tell The Whiffler that their writing is valuable by pledging a future subscription. You won't be charged unless they enable payments.
© 2026 Cherie |
How the Cascade of Damaging Consequences from the War in Iran is Exacerbating the Global Polycrisis
The 2026 war in Iran has unleashed a cascade of damaging consequences. ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ...
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Dear Reader, To read this week's post, click here: https://teachingtenets.wordpress.com/2025/07/02/aphorism-24-take-care-of-your-teach...
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CALL FOR APPLICATIONS: AOM 2025 PDW ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ...





