Ladies & Gentleman, This will be my new "pinned" Tweet:
"Ice Ice Baby - Selena Gomez MS-13 Limited Edition" 🕺🕺🕺🕺🕺😄😄😆😅😂🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
from @JonCovering the BEST @X account known to Mankind! 🚀
Don't forget to "Like" & "Repost"... Boost my & Jon's account. ❤️
Thank You 👍
Victor Davis Hanson dissects how critics completely misread the Iran deal | Madison Colombo, Fox News
Historian Victor Davis Hanson called out critics of the newly signed U.S.-Iran preliminary agreement, arguing that they are misreading American leverage in negotiations.
Speaking on "Jesse Watters Primetime," Hanson disputed what he described as misconceptions about the deal and said the military conflict dismantled Iran’s infrastructure, leaving Tehran with no cards to play.
"They've suffered probably a half a trillion dollars to their nuclear military industrial complex that took them 50 years to build," Hanson said in response to what he called "unhinged" arguments that Iran is better off now than before the conflict.
The Trump administration’s memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Iran was released this week, laying out the terms of the deal reached by both parties for a 60-day ceasefire and a framework for negotiations.
The deal itself has drawn criticism from both sides of the political aisle, with critics arguing that it does not include aspects like an immediate dismantling of Iran’s nuclear infrastructure or the removal of enriched uranium stockpiles.
Hanson also pushed back against critics who have cited difficulties moving oil out of the region due to Iranian actions in the Strait of Hormuz.
"They keep saying, 'Well, the strait was open before, and now it was closed, and now we had to negotiate to get it open.' It was only open because they chose not to cause trouble," he said.
"They chose to not cause trouble because the last seven presidents said, 'We don't dare touch you. We're not [going to] interfere with your nuclear programs.'"
Hanson argued that sanctions on Iran and its oil distribution efforts have put pressure on the Middle Eastern nation and given the U.S. leverage.
"They think time is on Iran's side. Time is not on Iran's side," Hanson said, referencing the burden imposed by sanctions.
He suggested that Tehran is concerned about America's upcoming midterm elections and the nation's 250th anniversary.
Hanson argued that if the conflict goes past the midterms, Trump will be less constrained by electoral considerations.
"They are terrified that if he wins the midterms and the price of gas goes down, he's got a free hand, and he already has a free hand now," Hanson said.
"They are afraid that Donald Trump is [going to] drag it out because if he drags it out after the midterm, after the 250th anniversary, he's [going to] have a lot more options than he does now when he's worried about gas and the midterm. So the dynamic is all upside down. They are the ones that have the time clock."
https://t.co/RTJP5gH2Gk
"How does the country survive when one party seems to increasingly despise the country?"
Victor Davis Hanson analyzes recent reports that fewer Democrats are proud to be American.
On January 7, 2021 the media pronounced President Trump inert, kaput, zapped.
He was soon to be impeached a second time, and tried in the Senate as a private citizen.
Trump was written off by many grandees in his own party, libeled as a neo-Confederate insurrectionist, crashing in the Republican polls, and within months the target of 91 lawfare indictments in five civil and criminal courtrooms, and facing half-a-billion dollars in fines and a possible lengthy prison sentence.
Yet within two years, Trump was defiant as ever. He began criss-crossing the countries to massive rallies—between court appearances. He was soon crushing his Republican primary opponents, and convinced he could regain the presidency, despite two assassination attempts, the hatred of the frenzied Left, and loathed by the media, the universities, the corporate board rooms, celebrities, and most of the donor class.
No matter. Donald Trump staged the greatest comeback in American presidential history, won back the White House, and began launching the most sweeping counter-revolution in a century. Almost alone, Trump was determined to undo 100 years of the progressive take-over of our institutions, to marginalize the gloomy declinists, and to reboot the U.S. as the greatest economic, military, and political power in the world
How he arose from the ashes, crushed his opponents, and sought to restore America is the story of Counterrevolution: The Fall and Rise of Donald Trump and the MAGA Movement—a carefully documented account and analysis of what Trump’s adversaries did to him, why he survived, and how he has become one of our nation's most consequential and controversial presidents.
Pre-Order now
🚨 The House is voting this week on the new National Security / State Dept funding bill (H.R. 8595), which includes for the first time in US history a blanket ban on any NGOs or contractors using any funds for social media censorship activity. Here’s what’s new 🧵🧵🧵:
In 1776, a small group of patriots signed a document that defied an empire and changed the world. Salute to America on July 4th in Washington, DC will honor that heritage with world-class music, entertainment, and a record-breaking fireworks display. 🇺🇸
Follow @Freedom250 and get your FREE tickets: https://t.co/AvUG0i0k7a
USAID funded the Maidan Revolution in Ukraine in 2014 that directly led to the 2014-2022 Donbas War (15,000 killed) and the subsequent 2022 Russia-Ukraine War (300,000 killed). So did USAID supporters murder 315,000 people?
Riddle me this, @RoKhanna. If closing USAID could cause so many child deaths in Africa, why would the African Union's top diplomat in DC celebrate USAID's shutdown? Does she like dead babies? Is she ignorant? How else do you explain her arriving at the same conclusion as DOGE?
Mark Levin says Trump is betraying Israel
Tucker Carlson says Trump is betraying America
Clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right, here I am, stuck in the middle with you