It’s hard to scroll through the news or social media these days without seeing more violence, more division, and more chaos. The world feels like it’s on edge—whether it’s wars overseas or rising tension here at home. We’re living in a time where truth is blurred, and people are more focused on fighting each other than fixing real problems.
And then yesterday happened—Trump vs. Elon. Two powerful voices clashing on a public stage.
Say what you want about Elon, but when it comes to the future of this country, he’s not wrong for raising concerns. The national debt is out of control. We’re borrowing from the future and leaving the bill for the next generation. While politicians point fingers and chase headlines, Elon is one of the few actually sounding the alarm and offering ideas—whether you like his delivery or not.
Trump may have his base, but we can’t ignore facts. The country is bleeding money, and someone needs to speak up about it. Elon did.
It’s time we stop picking sides like it’s a football game and start backing the people who are at least trying to address the real issues. Debt. Security. Innovation. The future.
If we keep ignoring the warning signs, we’re going to wake up in a country we don’t recognize anymore.
Strange how Kash Patel and Todd Blanche can look at seashells on a beach and decided to dig further but see emails with grown men discussing raping kids and decided that there's nothing there.
POTUS is laying out two courses of action—a negotiated settlement, or a major escalation.
There is a third option, and he should take it: recognize there is no way to force a positive outcome and simply leave.
The region is not ours to fix. President Reagan chose this path in Lebanon in ‘84, withdrawing U.S. forces after the Beirut barracks bombing once it became clear the mission’s stabilization goals could not be met, effectively ending direct American military involvement and avoiding a deeper quagmire and long-term entrenchment in the region.
A negotiated settlement is unlikely to work or be taken seriously by the Iranians unless we make concessions on the enrichment issue. As we saw yesterday in the SOH, the IRGC is empowered to act without the consent of the civilian leadership, so it’s likely they won’t honor any deal reached.
A major escalation will lead to a very destructive outcome for Iran, the region, and eventually the U.S. If POTUS chooses brute force and targets civilian infrastructure, we will create another generation of radicalized Iranians who will rally around the regime and escalate the war by any means possible.
If POTUS opts to strike the civilian infrastructure, declare victory, and then leave, we will only further erode our standing in the world, the petrodollar, and eventually our status as the world’s reserve currency holder. We need to get out now.
Don’t double down on failure. Avoid the sunken cost trap, leave now, and put America’s interests first.
.@POTUS: "We had a ridiculous Washington restriction — the so-called 'Diesel Exhaust Fluid' requirement... Today, we're announcing new guidelines drastically limiting these ridiculous DEF rules, saving farmers and consumers billions and billions of dollars."
I would like to offer to pay the salaries of TSA personnel during this funding impasse that is negatively affecting the lives of so many Americans at airports throughout the country
BREAKING: "We didn't tell anybody about [Iran] because we wanted surprise. Who knows better about surprise than Japan? Why didn't you tell me about Pearl Harbor?" - President Trump