March 18, 2026
Notes

Caught My Eye: Trump, the Bomber, and the Blowback

A homemade explosive device is thrown toward police during an anti-Muslim protest outside Gracie Mansion in New York City, March 7. Photo: REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz

A round‑up of pictures that cut through the spin and highlight the fallout, from Iran to the home front.

By Michael Shaw

When the Fuse Comes Home

Trump insists that the Iran War keeps Americans safer at home. The picture says otherwise.

Last week outside Gracie Mansion, Emir Balat, an 18‑year‑old Turkish American now charged in federal court as an alleged ISIS‑inspired attacker, hurled this homemade explosive toward police during a March 7 rally organized by far‑right influencer Jake Lang to protest Muslim public prayer.

The confrontation reveals how Trump’s securitized politics and the post–Iraq War climate of suspicion have spilled over from distant battlefields onto American streets. All that imported warfare boils down to a single gesture: Balat’s hand gripping the taped-up explosive, with the fuse already burning.

Cartoonists, Save Us

Artwork: Doug Chayka. Via Coverjunkie.

The Iran War, Drawn in the Margins

In this not-normal, parallel universe, photojournalists—and just as much, if not more, the cartoonists—are the most straightforward storytellers we have. This cover reduces Trump’s Insta-war to a game he believes he can rearrange at will: disconnect here, flip a switch there, walk away from the chaos.

You don’t need one more text piece to explain the Iran War. The art already does. It You don’t need another piece of writing to explain the Iran War. The art already does. It demonstrates how impossible these wars are to compartmentalize, even as Trump treats them like a game of three-card monte.

They Think We’re That Blind

Cartoon by Tom Toro, New Yorker, February 19, 2026

You know I’m taken with those New York Times “Opinion posters.” This one resonates with Toro’s cartoon. The message is blunt—there is always something to see, especially when power claims there isn’t.

Everything He Touches

“Trump Will Destroy Washington if It’s the Last Thing He Does” is mainly about the illegal demolition of the East Wing and the fantasy White House ballroom. But the bigger picture is that his Midas touch reduces everything and everyone—save for himself and his fellow grifters—to rubble. While Iran might be the headline, the damage spreads through every institution he touches.

Eco Disaster, By Design

Smoke rises after a reported strike on Shahran fuel tanks in Tehran, Iran, March 8. Photo: Majid Asgaripour/WANA

Trump and Netanyahu aren’t just bombing distant oil fields. They’re attacking locations in and around Tehran, poisoning the air and the people forced to breathe it. The strikes turn fuel depots into sources of toxic weather—acid rain, lingering smoke, long‑term health risks—while the president continues to urge them to ‘step up.

Walking the Wing

The RAF Fairford airbase, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran

A member of the US Air Force walks on the wing of a B‑1 Lancer bomber at RAF Fairford. Photo: Toby Melville/Reuters

Posted in multiple ‘photo of the week’ galleries, it reads like a challenge. Against that peaceful, almost pastoral backdrop, the airman is walking the plank—only the plank is a bomber wing. It hints at a war without a plan, escalation as muscle memory.

A Perfect Photo for the Age of Resistance

US President Donald Trump salutes during a dignified transfer at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, Saturday, March 7. Six US Army Reserve soldiers were killed on March 1 in an Iranian drone strike in Kuwait. Photo: Julia Nikhinson/AP

This scene dominated the news cycle due to the breach of protocol—the hat worn at a transfer ceremony for soldiers killed in this war. But this image by Julia Nikhinson goes layers deeper. The hat alone carries heavy symbolism—“USA,” stamped with 45–47, collapsing Trump’s two terms into a single project and folding the country into himself.

Then there are his eyes.​

Closed, they can appear prayerful, holding a sense of sanctity in the weight of the moment. But they also reflect what we’ve observed for years: a man blind to his own responsibility for this war, of the fate of the troops, and of the consequences that follow from his actions. The photograph captures both readings at once and leaves the judgment to us.

On the Home Front

President Donald Trump at Coose Steel Corporation in Rome, Georgia, on Thursday, February 19, 2026. Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok

Gestures on the Economy

This photo, along with the one below, are White House photographs, folks. The hokey dance looks like flailing, with everything else falling apart. For an image promoting tariff magic and spiking gas prices to a worried country, it’s telling there isn’t another American in sight.

Hectorer-in-Chief.

People arrive before President Donald Trump speaks at Verst Logistics in Hebron, Ky., Wednesday, March 11, 2026. Photo: Jon Cherry/AP

The “Welcome, Mr.. President” banner stretches over a crowd waiting and waiting. In their posture and the tension in their bodies, the phrase becomes both a question and a demand. They’re not just waiting for dear leader; they’re waiting for results.

Measles Crisis Still Raging in the Dark

Do you remember my July post contrasting the tragic photo a vaccine-denying mother took of her suffering children with the empty propaganda of JFK, Jr., and the mindless stock images that illustrate countless health stories?

Eight months later, we’re facing a real crisis. The country is close to losing its measles-free status, as defined by the World Health Organization. Still, stock photos of microscopic viruses and close-ups of vials and syringes continue to dominate.

But look a little further, and the images grow darker.

Parkside Pediatrics providers Chandler Hash, left, and Nathan Heffington assess a patient with measles symptoms in Spartanburg, South Carolina, on Friday. Photo: Juan Diego Reyes/For The Washington Post.

There is an increasing number of photos like this: PPE-clad healthcare workers making home visits, working from pop-up clinics, conducting exposure assessments, and administering vaccinations linked to school outbreaks.

Makayla Skjerva, a 14‑year‑old from Cavalier, North Dakota, was airlifted to a Minneapolis hospital after developing severe complications from measles and other infections, despite being vaccinated; she is immunocompromised and still in recovery. Courtesy of Ashley Skjerva

Makayla lies unconscious, but the tattooed eyes on the arm gripping her hand stare straight at us, refusing to let us see a softened version of this outbreak. In my earlier measles post, I argued that images of real families in crisis are almost entirely absent from coverage, even as Trump’s HHS and RFK Jr. flood the zone with photo ops, sympathy tours, and vaccine “both‑sidesing” to minimize the damage of their own anti‑vax crusade. This frame joins those two tracks: a child bearing the burden of disinformation, and an accusatory gaze that pierces through the plywood signs, syringe stock shots, and carefully staged scenes meant to hide how serious things really are.

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Michael Shaw
See other posts by Michael here.

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