
July 14, 2026 will mark my thirteenth wedding anniversary with my wife.
When people decide to get married, and live as one, there are many things that must be agreed upon so the nuptials can move forward smoothly. What will our streaming services be. What side of the bed will you sleep on. Who is in charge of the remote control. The number of decorative pillows that are allowed on the bed. The definition of late. The consequences of episoding ahead when watching a series. What t-shirts must be donated to charity or thrown away.
You know. The important stuff. And I was prepared for all that. Didn’t care who would get their way in any of those conversations. None of them mattered. Happy wife, happy life was the mantra of the day.
However shortly before our wedding, Elaine came to me and said in her Carioca-infused English “You know my darling, there is one more thing that you must agree to otherwise there can be no marriage.”
Sensing a very serious conversation I earnestly replied “What my love? What is so important to you that I must agree to it.”
With a very stern and beautiful expression on her face she replied. “ My darlingo you must support Brazilian soccer with all your heart. You must love Botafogo, my team, the team of my ancestors, and cheer loudly until you have no voice for “Verde-Amarela,” the yellow and green, the Brazilian national team.”
My response? Quickly, easily, and without hesitation, yes. Why not, I thought. No skin off my back. And they are the five-time World Cup champions. Pelé used to play in New Jersey.
As often happens when one makes a decision without completely thinking it through I didn’t fully understand the consequences of my agreement.
My first hint of how serious a vow I had taken was during the 2014 World Cup in Brazil. Brazil had cruised through the qualifying rounds and faced Germany in the semi-finals. We were at home, in front of 60,000 fans, what could possibly go wrong? Only everything. The Germans scored five goals in the first 29 minutes. But it only took three goals for my wife to turn to me and say “Turn off the television. We will never speak of this again.”
As I complied with her request I asked “What was the announcer referring to when he mentioned ‘Uruguay and the Maracanazo’?” My beautiful, kind, loving wife shot me the most hateful look of our marriage and wagging her left index finger said “We don’t talk of that either” and stormed out of the room. It was only after a Google search that I realized the pile of poop I had stepped into. Brazil was playing at home at Maracanã, perhaps the most venerated football stadium in Brazil if not the world. All they needed to earn their first star was to tie with Uruguay. Then with nearly 200,000 maniacal Brazilian football fans in attendance Uruguay scored a goal. According to legend the silence that enveloped Maracanã in that moment was so deep that you could hear a mouse fart. Seventy-six years later it remains an open wound. (Doubt me. Bring it up with a Brazilian soccer fan. See how fast you get Cachaça thrown in your face.)
I have observed my promise to my wife for the last thirteen years. Over time I have learned the history of each of the stars on the team’s jersey. Learned the names and the legends behind the Brazilian greats like Zico, Garrincha, Ronaldo, Ronaldinho, and of course Pelé. I now bleed yellow and green and was totally prepared for this year’s World Cup, especially considering the canaries were training just a few miles from my home. I got the gear. Two hats, a jersey for me and one for Rosie. I vowed to practice FIFA fitness. To walk or StairMaster all of Brazil’s games when possible.
“Vai Brazil!”
And then a funny thing happened on the way to the StairMaster.
I had braced for a month of solitary suffering. Me, Rosie, two hats, and a hemisphere of guilt if Brazil so much as conceded a corner. What I had not braced for was my own country falling in love right in front of me.
The United States — loud, divided, perpetually online — got happy. Uncomplicatedly happy. About soccer. The sport we spent forty years promising to care about eventually. It turned out all we needed was the rest of the planet showing up on the doorstep with drums.
Consider the Scots. Brazil put three past them and sent the Tartan Army home early, which by every known law of football should have produced a fortnight of mournful bagpipes. Instead they did the unthinkable. They adopted England. England. The Auld Enemy. The one team a Scotsman would sooner surrender a kidney than support. And there they were, kilted and hoarse in an Atlanta bar, roaring for the Three Lions as though the shirts were their own. Eight centuries of grievance, dissolved by one tournament and a generous happy hour. Somebody hand that trophy the Middle East portfolio.
The Dutch do not attend a World Cup so much as repaint it orange. They travel with a vintage double-decker — De beroemde Oranjebus, the Famous Orange Bus, a vehicle with more stamps in its passport than most ambassadors — park it at the head of a parade, and walk. The Oranje Fanwalk, they call it. A mile of orange humanity singing and dancing down the middle of Kansas City, streets closed, police shrugging, the whole spectacle a dead ringer for a Chiefs Super Bowl parade except everyone is invited — including the supporters of the team they are about to play. One Tunisian gentleman marched the entire route in orange and pronounced the Dutch the finest people on earth. They were playing his country that night. That is the World Cup in a single sentence. Your opponent dances you to the stadium.
High in the stands — and on the escalators, and in Times Square, and, I am reliably told, on the floor of the Norwegian parliament — sit the Norwegians, who have given the world the gift of Ro. They came back from a twenty-eight-year exile with Haaland, Ødegaard, and a chant. They sit as though manning a longboat, seize a pair of imaginary oars, and heave together to a drumbeat, booming Ro! Ro! Ro! It means row. It also means calm. Peace. Quiet. So a horde of face-painted descendants of actual Vikings took a raiding song and turned it into a hymn for serenity, then performed it on a moving escalator in Boston’s South Station, which is the most Norwegian sentence I will ever write. Their parliamentary speaker loved it so dearly that he made the entire legislature grab phantom oars and pull as one. Picture our Congress agreeing even on the direction of a boat.
And then there was the part I never saw coming: my own country. Walk through any host city this month and America quietly shows you what it has always been — a technicolor melting pot, every block turning out to greet the team from the land of its grandparents. Flags I had never seen, draped over shoulders I pass every day. A Senegalese drum line in one borough, a Croatian choir in the next. Mexico turning somebody else’s stadium into a home game. Ghanaians and Iranians and Koreans and Colombians, neighbors all year and, for ninety minutes, ambassadors. The country did not split along those lines. It came outside to wave at them.
And nobody melted the place like Cape Verde. Ten islands. Half a million souls. Smaller than the city you are reading this in. They walked into their first World Cup and flatly refused to lose — held Spain, held Uruguay, held Saudi Arabia. Their goalkeeper, a gentleman known as Vozinha, turned away seven Spanish shots with what looked like his bare hands and a clear conscience, and the smallest nation ever to reach the knockout rounds booked itself a date with Lionel Messi in Miami.
Which is where Congress comes in. Somewhere in the din it emerged that Vozinha’s mother had never once watched her son play in the flesh — and the very legislature that cannot pass a quiet Tuesday found itself, briefly and bipartisanly, moving to get the woman a visa. Let the record reflect it. The one thing the United States Congress could agree upon in the year of our Lord 2026 was that a goalkeeper’s mother from Cape Verde deserved to watch her boy stare down Messi. I’ll take it. Honestly, I’ll frame it.
But here is the best part. The genuine, glorious, undefeated best part.
For one entire month — on the television, at the bar, in the orange streets, on the Boston escalators — we did not have to talk about him.
You know the one. What’s-his-name. The fellow who tweets, tirelessly and at exhausting length, about the one subject he finds truly inexhaustible: himself. Unless its telling lies, calling women reporters stupid or blaming Obama for everything he has done wrong.
We were busy talking about the World Cup to talk about him. We were watching a goalkeeper’s mother get her visa, a Scotsman bellow “God Save the King,” a parliament pretend to row, and Vini Jr score 4 goals.
A month of relief from the Orange scourge. As it turns out, what it took was the rest of of the world — arriving on our doorstep, in orange, with drums, ro, ro, roiing, and screaming:
Vai Brazil.








The Trump Stability Index
A weekly composite of ten objective measures, each scored 1–10 and oriented the same way — 10 = steadiest, 1 = most chaotic. Every component is scored against his own trailing 8-week baseline. Version 1.0.
The Read. The inaugural number lands at 65 — Choppy Air. It’s propped up by an unusually quiet governing week on paper: zero executive orders, a court calendar whose losses didn’t land until the following week, and approval holding steady. What drags it down is the Iran messaging — a cluster of false or misleading claims and a documented reversal, denying a $300 billion reconstruction fund days before signing a memorandum that contained one. External theater over inward chaos is what kept it out of the red. Five of the ten components are provisional this week (marked *), pending feeds that settle over the coming days.
Welcome to the first Trump Stability Index.
I don’t normally like to print his name — he says it quite enough for all of us, and the world hardly needs another voice adding to the glut. But I’m making an exception, because some men spend a lifetime building a brand, and this is the rare case where the name truly belongs on the thing. His goes right on the masthead.
I built this Index to chronicle, in a sadly humorous way, the week-by-week deterioration of Daffy Don — and to commiserate with you over whatever we’ve all just lived through with the self-described very stable genius, who somehow manages to grow less stable and less genius by the news cycle. Consider it a weather report for the national nervous system.
One scheduling note: this is a trailing index, and deliberately so. The numbers need about a week to fully settle, so each Friday’s issue chronicles the week that ended the previous Thursday. We could fire them off raw and same-day — but unlike the current administration, we prefer to get our facts straight before we broadcast them to the world.
If you’ve got thoughts on how to sharpen it, send them along. The Index, unlike its subject, is a work in progress — which means it’s actually capable of improvement.
Below is a breakdown of how the whole thing works.
The Component Key — what each label measures
The snarky label rides the public chart; the formal definitions in the methodology doc (v1.0) govern any challenge. A critic gets pointed to the definition, not the joke.
The Stability Scale — what each level means
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