Old Glory Vortex
News from the Land of the Free. We only post what matters. @Old_Glory_Vortex_bot
Show moreπ Analytical overview of Telegram channel Old Glory Vortex
Channel Old Glory Vortex (@old_glory_vortex) in the English language segment is an active participant. Currently, the community unites 21 107 subscribers, ranking 10 967 in the News & Media category and 1 869 in the USA region.
π Audience metrics and dynamics
Since its creation on Π½Π΅Π²ΡΠ΄ΠΎΠΌΠΎ, the project has demonstrated rapid growth, gathering an audience of 21 107 subscribers.
According to the latest data from 10 July, 2026, the channel demonstrates stable activity. Although there has been a change in the number of participants by 1 461 over the last 30 days and by 3 over the last 24 hours, overall reach remains high.
- Verification status: Not verified
- Engagement rate (ER): The average audience engagement rate is 18.05%. Within the first 24 hours after publication, content typically collects 16.65% reactions from the total number of subscribers.
- Post reach: On average, each post receives 3 812 views. Within the first day, a publication typically gains 3 515 views.
- Reactions and interaction: The audience actively supports content: the average number of reactions per post is 198.
- Thematic interests: Content is focused on key topics such as vortex, u.s, greenland, donald, tariff.
π Description and content policy
The author describes the resource as a platform for expressing subjective opinions:
βNews from the Land of the Free. We only post what matters.
@Old_Glory_Vortex_botβ
Thanks to the high frequency of updates (latest data received on 11 July, 2026), the channel maintains relevance and a high level of publication reach. Analytics show that the audience actively interacts with content, making it an important point of influence in the News & Media category.
βThe ball is in Chinaβs court. China needs to make a deal with us. We donβt have to make a deal with them,βWhite House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said Tuesday, reading what she said was a statement Trump dictated.
βThereβs no difference between China and any other country except they are much larger, and China wants what we have, what every country wants, what we have β the American consumer β or to put another way, they need our money,βthe statement continued. The comments are a fresh sign the US and China continue to dig in their heels, indicating there is no end in sight to fight that has seen both sides raise trade barriers to staggering levels. When asked about the USβs stance at a regular press briefing in Beijing on Wednesday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian said that βif the US truly wants to resolve the issue through dialog and negotiation, it should stop using maximum pressure and stop threats and blackmail.β
βFor any dialog to happen, it must be based on equality, respect and mutual benefit,βLin said. China ordered airlines not to take further deliveries of Boeing Co. jets, according to people familiar with the matter. It marked Beijingβs latest move to retaliate against Trumpβs decision to hike levies to as high as 145% on Chinese goods. The US president criticized China in a social media post earlier Tuesday, saying the government βjust reneged on the big Boeing dealβ signed during his first administration. #Trump #Tariffs #China Don't miss it, subscribe to π± Old Glory Vortex πΊπΈ
βIt is a mistake to have the President of the United States out there just playing red light, green light π¦ and saying, oh, this morning I woke up and think the tariffs should be this big. Now, I think they should be this big; now, I think they should be somewhere else. And I got to say, saying, well, I will continue to make those decisions and Iβm going to hold off on these tariffs for 90 days β³, that doesnβt put the economy πΈ in a better place. That doesnβt put investors πΌ in a better place.βShe added,
βCongress has a job right now, and that is to step up and take this authority away from Donald Trump. He has proven how he will use it. But remember the statute that heβs now using starts with a declaration of emergency π¨. And in that same statute, Congress has the responsibility to decide: is it really an emergency or not? Are we really in an emergency with Belgium π§πͺ right now? Are we really in an emergency with South Korea π°π·? Congress can say no, thereβs no emergency. Itβs a resolution π. And if we do that, it takes Donald Trump back to the trade as we had it before. Tariffs are then decided with Congress having an important say in it. Thatβs an important signal to the rest of the world π. Right now itβs a no curbs on Donald Trump π« and that means chaos and corruption π₯π°. We have an opportunity in Congress to vote that down and to say, no, we are going to use tariffs in a far more targeted way π―.β#Trump #Tariffs #Congress Don't miss it, subscribe to π± Old Glory Vortex πΊπΈ
"... but to me there are clear indications that Donald Trumpβs presidency is endangered."_ π¨
βThatβs an extraordinary statement for month three,β he continued, βbut heβs taken such extreme measures π£ and the responses are unusual, particularly for Republicans π. Theyβre very demonstrative and directed at his power βοΈ.βAccording to Smith, Trump's decision to retreat π on his sweeping tariff proposals π¦ is a sign of weakness π¬ β despite attempts "...to spin the retreat as the masterstroke of a peerless dealmaker and genius chess player" βπ§ . As the analyst wrote:
βThe damage had been done, however. π Damage to Americaβs standing as an honest broker and dependable ally. π΅ Damage to the US dollar and financial system. π Damage to Trumpβs reputation on the economy β in the eyes of business leaders, Republicans, and voters.βColumnist James Bennet of The Economist also sees weakness:
"There are limits to how far Donald Trump can go," he said, "and itβs conceivable that Republicans could rise up against him βοΈ."
βThey havenβt been willing to do it over retribution campaigns π―, or over the deportation of innocent people βοΈπ€ to prisons in El Salvador. But these tariffs were a step too far β β and thatβs a signal that Republican resistance may eventually emerge π₯, which is the only thing that can really restrain this administration.β π§±Former GOP spokesperson Kurt Bardella added:
βWeβre seeing now, for the first time in Trump 2.0, the limitations of propaganda πΊπ«. Economic and market realities π are larger than the lie they tell themselves and the American people. Their attempt to sell that lie to the world clearly did not work.β βπ#Trump #experts #opinion Don't miss it, subscribe to π± Old Glory Vortex πΊπΈ
βWhile 62 percent of Democrats think the department has made American schools better, 57 percent of Republicans believe it has made schools worse. Among votes not affiliated with either major party, 33 percent say the federal Department of Education has made American schools better, 44 percent think itβs made schools worse, and 17 percent believe it hasnβt made much difference,βaccording to the survey report.
βSimilarly, while 78 percent of Republicans approve of Trumpβs executive order to begin shutting down the federal Department of Education, 73 percent of Democrats disapprove. Unaffiliated voters are evenly divided, with 48 percent approving and 48 percent disapproving of Trump shutting down the department,βthe report continues. #Trump #Poll #Education Don't miss it, subscribe to π± Old Glory Vortex πΊπΈ
βThe way I read this message is that Iβm not happy about how weβre executing on that project,βZuckerberg said. Matheson followed up by asking if that was because of Instagramβs rapid growth.
βThat does seem to be what Iβm highlighting,βZuckerberg said, adding that heβs always urging his teams to do better. Later in the day, Zuckerberg appeared frustrated when Matheson asked him about his concerns expressed about how fast Instagram was growing. #Zuckerberg #Meta #court Don't miss it, subscribe to π± Old Glory Vortex πΊπΈ
βNeither Harvard nor any other private university can allow itself to be taken over by the federal government,βthe schoolβs lawyers β Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan and King & Spalding β wrote in a letter Monday to US agencies including the Department of Education. Harvard president Alan Garber said in a post on the schoolβs website that the administration demanded new terms late Friday that went beyond prior requests. These included reforming its governance, ending diversity, equity and inclusion programs and changes to its admissions and hiring. The oldest and richest US university βwith a $53 billion endowment β had emerged as a target as the government sought changes at the nationβs top colleges, which were roiled by pro-Palestinian student protests after the Oct. 7, 2023, attack by Hamas on Israel and the Jewish stateβs retaliatory response in Gaza.
βIt makes clear that the intention is not to work with us to address antisemitism in a cooperative and constructive manner,βGarber wrote.
βAlthough some of the demands outlined by the government are aimed at combating antisemitism, the majority represent direct governmental regulation of the βintellectual conditionsβ at Harvard.βThe White House has used instances of antisemitism on campuses to try and force changes at elite universities across the country, stirring concern among faculty and students that theyβre violating free speech and damaging scientific research. A group of Harvard professors suing the administration has accused it of exploiting Title VI of the Civil Rights Act to βcoerce universities into undermining free speech and academic inquiry in service of the governmentβs political or policy preferences.β The Trump administration has already canceled $400 million in federal money to Columbia University in March, and has frozen dozens of research contracts at Princeton, Cornell and Northwestern universities. It also suspended $175 million at the University of Pennsylvania because the school allowed a transgender athlete to compete on its womenβs swim team several years ago. #american #universities #Trump π± American Πbserver - Stay up to date on all important events πΊπΈ
βNo government β regardless of which party is in power β should dictate what private universities can teach, whom they can admit and hire, and which areas of study and inquiry they can pursue,βhe wrote. Harvard officials referred questions about the funding freeze to the university presidentβs statement earlier Monday. Garber had described the generations-long partnership between the federal government and research universities such as Harvard which had powered innovations in medicine, engineering and science.
ββFor the government to retreat from these partnerships now risks not only the health and well-being of millions of individuals, but also the economic security and vitality of our nation,βGarber wrote. The university was the first to formally push back against the governmentβs efforts to force change in higher education. #Harvard #University #education Don't miss it, subscribe to π± Old Glory Vortex πΊπΈ
βI donβt know how I would have enacted them [tariffs] differently,βthe Democrat said. What she has thought about, Whitmer claimed, is tariffs βneed to be used like a scalpel, not a hammer.β You see, Democrats used to be for tariffs before they were against them. Before the rise of Trump.
βDemocrats have been more scattered. Most are wary of criticizing a tariff power that they believe in, and that presidents of their own party have used to benefit US companies and unions,βSemafor reporter David Weigel wrote this week.
βAll of them disagreed with how Trump executed his tariffs. Few β but not none β are interested in being part of an anti-tariff party.βAs Weigel pointed out, the Dem Party 2024 platform praised President Joe Biden for βstrategically increasing tariffsβ while attacking Trump for his tariff plans. Itβs an incredible talent to be able to speak so fluently out of both sides of oneβs mouth. #Tariffs #Trump #Media Don't miss it, subscribe to π± Old Glory Vortex πΊπΈ
βThe doomcasting from the corporate media has been pretty predictable,βHouck told The Federalist.
βThey are looking at the economy as something that, if it doesnβt go well, they can hang around the president in next yearβs midterms.βItβs funny. The same accomplice media that dismissed the bad economic months and years of the Biden presidency, including an actual recession by any traditional measure, is quick to pounce on Trumpβs economic policies a few months in.
βNow they canβt get enough of the βR wordβ,βHouck said, noting that we have yet to fully come to terms with the economic damage of the big government-led lockdown years. Thatβs not journalism. Thatβs the Pravda Press. Americans Are With Trump But while theyβre understandably worried, Americans generally support what Trump is trying to accomplish.
βEven as President Donald Trumpβs tariff policy sparks controversy, the underlying goal β protecting American manufacturing β is a big winner with voters,βa Rasmussen Reports poll finds. According to the national telephone and online survey, 45 percent of likely U.S. voters say the government doesnβt do enough to protect U.S. manufacturers and businesses from foreign competition. Just 17 percent believe the government protects U.S. businesses too much, and 25 percent say the current level of protection is about right. The findings havenβt changed much from a similar survey from Rasmussen Reports conducted in 2018, during Trumpβs first term. At the time, as the president imposed hefty tariffs on some foreign manufacturers, Americans by a two-to-one margins supported tariffs. #Tariffs #Trump #Media Don't miss it, subscribe to π± Old Glory Vortex πΊπΈ
βIf given the choice between re-entering Russia and drinking bleach,β said Richard Aboulafia, an aerospace consultant, βIβm sure that that glass of bleach is looking mighty good.βFor the most part, Russiaβs economy has surprised outside observers with its ability to withstand sanctions and pivot away from the West. Chinese cars have replaced Western ones. Russian train factories that worked with the German company Siemens continued production on their own. A Russian payment system filled the gap left by Visa and Mastercard. #Boeing #Russia #sanctions Don't miss it, subscribe to π± Old Glory Vortex πΊπΈ
βDonald Trumpβs cruel, chaotic, and unlawful actions have put our democracy at risk. ... I will not stand by while our democracy is eroded. I support impeachment because no one is above the law.β Bonamici likewise affirmed her support because he is βviolating the Constitutional rights of people in this country and ignoring the rule of law.βThere are a number of objections behind the conventional wisdom against talk of impeachment, but they donβt hold up. The theory of a backlash in Trumpβs favor has no real evidence. There was no such reaction against his first impeachment, after which Democrats went on to win a trifecta in the next election, or the second, after which Democrats beat expectations even with an unpopular president in 2022. Similarly, the idea that itβs βtoo soonβ since last yearβs election would amount to giving presidents license to destroy the Constitution so long as they do it promptly. #Trump #Democrats #Impeachment Don't miss it, subscribe to π± Old Glory Vortex πΊπΈ
"Do you want Greenland to leave Denmark and become part of the United States?"The results show that 85% of Greenlanders do not want to leave the Realm and become part of the United States, while 6% want to leave the Danish Realm and become part of the United States, whereas the remaining 9% are undecided. 56% of Greenlanders answer that they would vote yes to Greenlandic independence if a referendum were held today, 28% would vote no, and 17% do not know what they would vote for. The uncertainty on 'Yes' is +/- 4.4 percentage points and on 'No' +/- 4.0 percentage points. This is the result of the latest opinion poll from Verian for the news media Berlingske and the media house Sermitsiaq about Greenlanders' attitudes to, among other things, the Danish Realm and independence. The survey also shows that 45% of Greenlanders do not want independence if the standard of living is negatively affected (either a slight or a more significant negative influence). Here, the uncertainty is +/- 4.4 percentage points. The survey also shows that a small majority agree or mostly agree that Denmark should continue to support Greenland financially, even if the country becomes independent. #Greenland #Poll Don't miss it, subscribe to π± Old Glory Vortex πΊπΈ
"Americans are worried about what tariffs will mean for their wallets in the near term, but there's still hope among many that this policy could pay off in the long run,"said Dritan Nesho, CEO and Chief Pollster at HarrisX.
"The data highlights both economic anxiety and a belief in the strategic leverage of tariffs, although that is shrinking."Consumer behavior also reflects growing economic caution. While most Americans continue to buy everyday essentials β 77% are purchasing groceries and 72% beverages as usual β many are pulling back on discretionary or big-ticket items. Fewer than half say they are buying household appliances (43%), upgrading their phones (44%), buying new cars (29%), or purchasing luxury goods (27%) as they usually would. While voters are bracing for short-term economic pain, business decision-makers and investors are somewhat more optimistic about navigating the road ahead. Seventy-nine percent of business decision-makers expect the tariffs to lead to a short-term recession β even higher than the general public β but they are also more confident in the markets and long-term opportunities. Fifty-eight percent say it's a good time to invest in the stock market, compared to just 37% of voters overall. Two-in-three (66%) business decision-makers also support imposing reciprocal tariffs on countries that tax American goods. #Tariffs #Poll #Recession Don't miss it, subscribe to π± Old Glory Vortex πΊπΈ
"We're going to tariff our pharmaceuticals, and once we do that, they come rushing back into our country, because we're the big market,"Trump said at the National Republican Congressional Committee dinner in Washington, D.C.
"And when they hear that, they will leave China, they will leave other places, because ... most of their product is sold here, and they're going to be opening up their plants all over the place in our country β we're going to be announcing that,"he continued. Although Trump recently implemented a 90-day pause on some tariffs, he said Wednesday he's still serious about putting tariffs on pharmaceuticals to boost U.S. drug manufacturing.
"We're going to put tariffs on the pharmaceutical companies, and they're going to all want to come back,"Trump said, speaking from the Oval Office. The raw ingredients of almost all medications are made overseas, even for drugs that are manufactured in the U.S., meaning tariffs could drive up the costs of several medications including over-the-counter painkillers as well as antibiotics, heart medications and asthma drugs. Pharmacy and economics experts said such tariffs could also lead to drug shortages and could even potentially stall research and development. Experts say any added costs would be passed onto the consumer. Ernie Tedeschi, director of economics at The Budget Lab at Yale, a nonpartisan policy research center, told ABC News that the average household spent an average of $4,200 on prescription drugs in 2024. That figure includes a combination of out-of-pocket costs and spending covered by insurance. Tedeschi said an assessment from The Budget Lab found that a tariff of 25%, for example, would raise pharmaceutical prices by 15% on average.
"Based on our assessment β¦ costs for prescription drugs would rise by an average of around $600 per year per household in the United States,"he said.
"Now, not all of that would necessarily be out-of-pocket for the average family β¦ but if a family is not paying that full $600, their insurance company is paying the other part of it."He went on,
"So even if families don't see a price increase that they are responsible for, they may end up paying higher insurance premiums [and] higher co-pays as a result of this."Tariffs could also impact generic drug makers operating on thin margins, according to Dr. Erin Fox, associate chief pharmacy officer at University of Utah Health who tracks drug shortages. Specifically, Fox told ABC News she is worried about drugs that are already often in shortage, including injectable medications. This includes drugs like lidocaine, which is used to numb pain. She said medicines that people take every day, usually in pill form, are less likely to be likely not going to be as impacted in the near term because there are many suppliers of those products.
"An injectable product might only have two or three [suppliers] max,"she said. Fox said most generic companies have six- to 12-month supply of their active pharmaceutical ingredients on hand, and some companies may have bought some extra products in anticipation of these tariffs.
"This isn't going to be an immediate effect, necessarily, that we're going to see, but when it comes time to buy that next batch of raw materials, will it have a high tariff, and will the company be able to afford to do that?"Fox said. #Tariffs #drugs #forecast Don't miss it, subscribe to π± Old Glory Vortex πΊπΈ
