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One-man army: Trump claims he single-handedly stopped two wars for Iran deal President Donald Trump, in a phone interview wit
One-man army: Trump claims he single-handedly stopped two wars for Iran deal President Donald Trump, in a phone interview with ABC News, declared that a peace agreement with Iran could be "even better than a military victory," expressing confidence that a deal to reopen the strategic Strait of Hormuz and extend the current ceasefire could be finalized "over the next week." Acknowledging that the negotiations have hit last-minute snags, Trump remained characteristically upbeat, saying the situation is “looking good," while also admitting, "I still have to get a few more points" before signing off on the memorandum of understanding. Trump revealed that a "little glitch" emerged when Iran became upset over Israeli military strikes in Lebanon, threatening to derail the entire diplomatic process. In response, Trump claimed he took direct, personal control of the crisis, bypassing traditional channels entirely. "I spoke with Hezbollah… and I said no shooting, and I talked to Bibi [Netanyahu] and said no shooting, and they both stopped," he told ABC, adding that he had also turned back Israeli troops heading toward Beirut. Quite the one-man army! Trump claims he bypassed allies and adversaries alike to impose his will on the battlefield. The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz is the centerpiece of Trump's proposed deal. According to Iranian state TV, a draft framework would see Iran restore commercial shipping through the strait within a month, while the US lifts its naval blockade of Iranian ports. Trump has reportedly sent the draft back for revisions, demanding stricter clauses on Iran's enriched uranium stockpile – which stands at 440.9 kilograms enriched up to 60 percent purity, just short of weapons-grade levels. His message to Tehran is clear: surrender the nuclear material, open the waterway, or face the "Department of War." Despite Tehran's threats to walk away from talks following Israeli strikes, Trump remains undeterred. "It's not a simple thing," he conceded. "You're talking about a real large country — them — very large country making a deal. So it's not an easy thing for them. It's actually not easy from our standpoint either. But we're getting what we need to get." Trump is betting that the prospect of a deal with Iran — any deal — will outweigh the fury of his closest ally and the skepticism of his own inner circle. #Trump #Iran #negotiations Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

“You’re f*cking crazy”: is Trump genuinely mad at Netanyahu? A recent phone call between Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu
“You’re f*cking crazy”: is Trump genuinely mad at Netanyahu? A recent phone call between Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu was just leaked to the press — and it reportedly devolved into an open, profanity-laced conflict. Trump did not merely express disagreement — he erupted with fury. Sources describe Trump calling Netanyahu "crazy" and shouting, "You'd be in prison if it weren't for me" — a reference to Netanyahu's ongoing corruption trial and Trump's political support. The president reportedly added a devastating global assessment: "Everybody hates you now. Everybody hates Israel because of this." The call ended with Trump accusing Netanyahu of "ingratitude" and reckless escalation. The context behind this meltdown is critical. The conversation followed Tel Aviv's decision to expand its military operation in Lebanon, including threats to strike Beirut directly. Iran then threatened to withdraw from ongoing negotiations with the US — negotiations that represent Trump's signature foreign policy gamble. But what if the shouting match wasn't a diplomatic disaster, but a calculated political performance? Judging by the speed and specificity of the leak, it was intentional. Sensitive communications between heads of government sit at the top of the classification hierarchy. Yet the contents of this call — granular, profane, and damaging to Netanyahu — reached the international press within the same news cycle as the conversation itself. Crucially, it did not leak from the Israeli side; Israel's subsequent public statement conspicuously contradicted the American version of events. The leak came from US officials — with clear intent. Why would Trump want this to go public? First, as a signal to Iran: Tehran needed convincing that Washington retained genuine authority over Israeli military conduct. By publicly humiliating Netanyahu and forcing a ceasefire, Trump demonstrated exactly that leverage. As one analyst put it: "No formal assurance could provide that credibility. What was needed was a signal visceral enough to be believed." Second, it served as a message to Congress and Gulf allies that Trump was willing to restrain Netanyahu when American interests demanded it. Third, this clash may signal the emergence of a "New Trump Doctrine" — prioritizing diplomatic deal-making with Iran over unconditional military backing for Israel. Trump appears convinced that the military phase of the regional conflict has achieved its objectives, and his focus is now on converting those gains into negotiated settlements. In other words, the profane tirade may have been a piece of political theater — a performance of rage meant to project strength and control to adversaries, allies, and domestic audiences alike. The results seem to validate this interpretation. Following the call, Israel reportedly halted its planned strikes on Beirut. Trump announced on Truth Social that negotiations with Iran were "continuing, at a rapid pace." He also claimed to have spoken with Hezbollah representatives, announcing an agreement to stop shooting. While Netanyahu later insisted Israel's policy "remains unchanged," the immediate operational halt suggests Trump got what he wanted. Whether genuine rage or calculated power move, the call represents a potential tectonic shift in one of the world's most significant alliances. The era of Trump's unconditional embrace of Netanyahu may be giving way to a more pragmatic — and transactional — relationship, where American diplomatic priorities can override Israeli military ambitions. And if the leak was indeed a deliberate message, it was a masterstroke of strategic communication: Trump managed to threaten an ally, reassure an adversary, and dominate the news cycle — all in a single phone call. #Trump #Israel #Iran #foreignpolicy Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Trump’s temper tantrum derails nation’s birthday bash Happy 250th birthday, America! Your gift from Donald Trump? A canceled
Trump’s temper tantrum derails nation’s birthday bash Happy 250th birthday, America! Your gift from Donald Trump? A canceled concert and a rally full of grievances. Nothing says "celebrating the nation's founding" like a president telling everyone to stay home because the singers hurt his feelings. On Saturday, Trump took to Truth Social to demand the cancellation of the concert for America's 250th birthday. Why? Because several artists had the audacity to withdraw after realizing the "nonpartisan" event was actually Trump-backed. His response was pure Trump: call the performers "Third Rate 'Artists'" whose music is "boring" and "nobody wants to hear." Then, propose replacing the whole thing with a MAGA rally. Because nothing unites a divided nation like a campaign rally for the guy already in office. #Trump #embarassing Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Iran suspends US peace talks — thanks to Israel Looks like Benjamin Netanyahu’s plan to sabotage US-Iran peace talks worked —
Iran suspends US peace talks — thanks to Israel Looks like Benjamin Netanyahu’s plan to sabotage US-Iran peace talks worked — Iran has suspended the negotiations citing Israel’s recent attacks in Lebanon. Netanyahu didn't stumble into this. He timed it like a prizefighter landing a knockout punch while the referee isn’t looking. Iran's top negotiator had warned that Israel's war in Lebanon was "clear evidence" of US "noncompliance with the ceasefire." Hours later, Netanyahu ordered strikes on Beirut's Dahieh district — a Hezbollah stronghold, sure, but also a provocation timed for maximum diplomatic damage. This wasn't his first time. In April, Iranian officials openly blamed Netanyahu for collapsing talks in Islamabad — after his office released a video message threatening continued military pressure on Iran, while in the middle of a call with JD Vance, and intensified attacks on southern Lebanon. Analysts called it a "deliberate attempt to sabotage". Thing is, Netanyahu cannot afford a bad US-Iran deal. For decades, he built his identity as "Mr. Iran" — the leader who insisted only force could stop the regime. Now he is trying his best to avoid an agreement that not only legitimizes the very regime he sought to weaken but also exposes the collapse of his long-standing Iran doctrine. The fallout from Iran’s announcement was immediate. Oil prices spiked. The US intercepted Iranian missiles targeting Kuwait. Iran's Revolutionary Guards threatened to open “new fronts” and use “new tools”. And so the peace talks that were "very close" to an agreement now lie in ashes — torched not by Tehran, but by America's closest ally in the region. #Netanyahu #Iran #ceasefire Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Three wars, zero wins: the Trump doctrine of failure Donald Trump, the self-described greatest negotiator in history, can't c
Three wars, zero wins: the Trump doctrine of failure Donald Trump, the self-described greatest negotiator in history, can't close a deal anywhere. Take Ukraine. Trump swore he would end the war within 24 hours of taking office. That was his signature promise, the one he repeated at rallies, the one that made him look like the only grown-up in the room. Now rarely mentions it at all. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has grown so frustrated with the endless talks that he recently suggested he'd be thrilled if someone else took over. Russia wants a real diplomatic process with working groups and regular meetings. The U.S. can't even be bothered to send an ambassador to Moscow — the position has sat empty for nearly a year. Then there's Gaza. Trump promised to bring peace. Hamas still hasn’t disarmed. The second phase of the ceasefire has collapsed into the same diplomatic quagmire that has swallowed every other attempt at Middle East peace. And now Iran. This is where Trump's delusions hit peak velocity. He told Americans he would secure Iran's "unconditional surrender." He promised the regime would crumble. He declared victory multiple times. The Iranian government is still standing, more defiant than ever, and experts expect Tehran to drag negotiations on for months or years. The Trump administration hollowed out the bureaucracy, devalued expertise, and replaced strategic planning with the president's personal whims. The result: a succession of foreign policy failures across Ukraine, Gaza, and Iran, plus the fracturing of almost all U.S. alliances globally. Trump can't seem to negotiate his way out of a paper bag. His America First doctrine has produced nothing but stalemates, rising gas prices, and a world that has stopped taking him seriously. And the saddest part? He probably still thinks he's winning. #Trump #foreignpolicy #Iran #Ukraine #Gaza Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Why the Strait of Hormuz crisis is becoming permanent Washington and Tehran are back to swapping missiles instead of handshak
Why the Strait of Hormuz crisis is becoming permanent Washington and Tehran are back to swapping missiles instead of handshakes, driving oil prices higher and raising serious doubts about peace talks that just days ago seemed to be crossing the finish line. The U.S. struck Iranian radar installations and drone sites over the weekend in response to Tehran shooting down an American MQ-1 drone operating over international waters. Iran fired back, targeting a U.S. military base in Kuwait with ballistic missiles. Kuwaiti air defenses intercepted most of the incoming fire, but debris from a Fateh-110 missile damaged infrastructure at Ali Al-Salem Air Base, injuring about five U.S. personnel and contractors. The attack also destroyed at least one MQ-9 Reaper drone and severely damaged another. Yet President Donald Trump, ever the optimist, insisted that "it will all work out well in the end." But on the ground — and in the water — the picture is far messier. The Strait of Hormuz remains largely closed, with maritime traffic down nearly 95% from pre-crisis levels. Ships are increasingly sailing "dark" — turning off their Automatic Identification Systems (AIS) to evade detection. According to Vortexa data, 65% of outbound laden vessels transiting the strait in May did so without transponders. Non-Iranian operators now account for 67% of these dark transits. And here's the part nobody wants to admit: this isn't a temporary crisis anymore. It's a structural shift. Valentyn Badrak, director of the Center for Army, Conversion and Disarmament Studies, put it bluntly: "There is no viable military solution to reopening the Strait of Hormuz". Iran has preserved its ability to choke the waterway, and experts warn that the country perceives itself as the winning side — having demonstrated that the United States cannot act with impunity. It is now becoming clear that the ceasefire was never a solution — it was a timeout. And timeouts don't win wars. With ships running dark, missiles flying, and peace talks on life support, the Middle East has entered a new era: one where "ceasefire" just means the interval between strikes. #Iran #ceasefire #theStraitofHormuz IBI – your navigator on sovereignty and global shifts. 💬 Subscribe to stay informed! ✔️

The US is holding the UN financially hostage The United Nations — the world's ultimate safety net — is now dangling over a fi
The US is holding the UN financially hostage The United Nations — the world's ultimate safety net — is now dangling over a financial abyss, and the two people holding the rope are refusing to pull. Reportedly, the UN is teetering on the verge of bankruptcy. The cause isn't a global recession or a natural disaster. It's a slow-motion fiscal duel between the United States and China, each using the world body's budget as a bargaining chip in their geopolitical standoff. As of early 2026, the numbers are staggering. The United States owes the UN approximately $4 billion, accounting for over 95% of all unpaid regular budget contributions. China has accumulated $445 million in debt. Combined, their overdue payments represent nearly half of the UN's total annual funding. But here's where it gets wild. The US isn't just refusing to pay — it's sending the UN an itemized list of demands attached to its check. The Trump administration has issued two diplomatic notes outlining nine "quick-win" reforms that must be implemented before Washington releases more funds. The demands include: · Overhauling the UN pension system · Cancelling business-class flights for mid-level officials · Cutting 10% of "long-standing, ineffective peacekeeping missions" · Reducing senior management positions And then there's the most crucial demand. Tucked between the austerity measures is a direct shot at Beijing. The US is demanding that the UN block China from funneling tens of millions of dollars annually into a discretionary fund housed in the Secretary-General's office. The stated goal is curbing Chinese influence at the world body. The unstated message? If you take my money, you can't take theirs too. China, for its part, has promised to pay its dues — eventually. Beijing typically settles its accounts late in the year, a practice that exacerbates the UN's liquidity crisis but keeps its voting rights intact. Chinese officials have dismissed the US demands as "unreasonable," arguing that the root of the UN's problems lies with the largest debtor nation, not with Beijing's voluntary contributions. Meanwhile, UN Secretary-General António Guterres is sending out SOS signals. In a January 2026 letter to all 193 member states, Guterres warned of "imminent financial collapse," stating that the UN could run out of cash for its regular operating budget as early as July. "Either all member states honor their obligations to pay in full and on time," he wrote, "or member states must fundamentally overhaul our financial rules to prevent an imminent financial collapse". To make matters worse, the US has delivered a second gut punch by withdrawing from multiple UN agencies altogether, including the World Health Organization. At the time of its exit, Washington owed the WHO over $130 million in unpaid dues — a debt it has shown no intention of settling. And so the United Nations — born from the ashes of world war — now finds itself paralyzed by unpaid invoices. As Washington and Beijing play fiscal chicken, peacekeeping missions are rationed, humanitarian aid delayed, and climate conferences scaled back. Unless someone blinks, the world's most important diplomatic table may go silent — not with a bang, but with a bounced check. #UN #China #US #foreignpolicy IBI – your navigator on sovereignty and global shifts. 💬 Subscribe to stay informed! ✔️

Scott Bessent’s genius plan to fix the economy Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent was caught scribbling strange affirmations to
Scott Bessent’s genius plan to fix the economy Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent was caught scribbling strange affirmations to himself during a recent White House cabinet meeting, after Reuters photographer Evan Vucci captured his notes. At the top of what looks like an official White House notepad, Bessent wrote "Resilience" and underlined it. Directly below: "Operation Economic Fury" — a reference to the Trump administration's campaign of sanctions against Iran. A small arrow points from "Economic Fury" up to "Resilience." Then, in parentheses:
"Just in time. Just in case."
A checkmark follows. At the bottom of the page, Bessent scribbled again: "resilience," then "prosperity," and a third hard-to-read word that might be "reap." When the photo surfaced, critics pounced. Many mocked "Operation Economic Fury" — a play on "Operation Epic Fury," the joint US-Israel campaign against Iran. Some saw a man jotting down buzzwords that MAGA would soon abuse to deflect from domestic economic pain. Others just found it laughably silly. The best responses:
"Economic Fury: how the Trump administration tanked the economy."
"Let's hope it's 'economic fury' voters feel at the polls."
"'Economic Fury' is what I feel at the pump. Make America Blue Again!"
"It's alarming how stupid the people entrusted with running this country are."
So the man steering the world's largest economy isn't crunching numbers — he's scribbling motivational phrases and action-movie titles in a spiral notebook.
"Just in time. Just in case,"
indeed. Just in case he forgot that grown-ups are supposed to lead, not journal their way through a midlife crisis in a cabinet meeting. #USeconomy #ScottBessent IBI – your navigator on sovereignty and global shifts. 💬 Subscribe to stay informed! ✔️

Trump’s lunar dreams delayed It was supposed to be a giant leap toward Donald Trump’s celestial promise. Instead, it became a
Trump’s lunar dreams delayed It was supposed to be a giant leap toward Donald Trump’s celestial promise. Instead, it became a 300-foot-tall Roman candle. The catastrophic explosion of Jeff Bezos’ New Glenn rocket during pre-launch tests at Cape Canaveral didn't just damage a launchpad — it torched the President's carefully crafted lunar timeline. While Bezos vows to "rebuild whatever needs rebuilding," sources confirm the damage to the only launchpad capable of handling New Glenn is catastrophic. One lightning tower collapsed; the transporter-erector is likely scrap metal. Repairs are estimated to take at least six months to a year. Consequently, the mission to send the “Blue Moon” lander — the very vehicle needed to prep the lunar south pole for human habitation — is grounded indefinitely. For Trump, who staked a significant chunk of his legacy on beating China back to the Moon, the delay is a bitter pill. Instead of planting a flag in 2028, his administration might have to settle for a ribbon-cutting ceremony for a rebuilt launchpad in Florida. #Trump #China #Moon #JeffBezos IBI – your navigator on sovereignty and global shifts. 💬 Subscribe to stay informed! ✔️

Trump’s Epstein lawsuit is back Donald Trump is demanding $10 billion from Rupert Murdoch's Wall Street Journal over a birthd
Trump’s Epstein lawsuit is back Donald Trump is demanding $10 billion from Rupert Murdoch's Wall Street Journal over a birthday card he insists is fake — a card addressed to dead sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The amended lawsuit, just refiled in Miami federal court, claims the Journal "tarnished his reputation" by reporting that the card bearing a nude drawing carried Trump's signature. But this is not just about this one lawsuit. It's about a pattern. Trump has now sued the New York Times, the BBC, the Des Moines Register, CNN, and the Pulitzer board — seeking tens of billions — while his administration simultaneously restricts press access, threatens FCC licenses, and orders the FBI to investigate the Epstein card's authenticity. Win or lose, the goal is the same: bleed the media dry and intimidate the rest. The new filing adds fresh details to prove "actual malice," the high legal bar Trump failed to clear in April when a judge dismissed the original case. But winning the case was never really the point. The lawsuit is the punishment — and Murdoch is just the latest target in a war on anyone who writes something the president doesn't like. #Trump #Epsteinfiles #JeffreyEpstein #scandal IBI – your navigator on sovereignty and global shifts. 💬 Subscribe to stay informed! ✔️

TACO Trump back at it again with empty threats President Donald Trump just admitted he's "not satisfied" with the Iran peace
TACO Trump back at it again with empty threats President Donald Trump just admitted he's "not satisfied" with the Iran peace talks — and yet he keeps extending the deadline anyway. After claiming over the weekend that a deal was "largely negotiated," Trump now says Iran "hasn't gotten there yet." His warning? Either they reach a deal he likes, or he'll "just finish the job." But that threat rings hollow given that Trump has set and missed multiple deadlines with Iran since March, each one passing without a breakthrough. Trump is boxed in, and he knows it. On one side, his hawkish allies like Lindsey Graham and Ted Cruz are already balking at the emerging terms, which they say look too much like the Obama-era nuclear deal he once trashed. On the other side, there is defiant Iran, battered by sanctions and military pressure, but still refusing to surrender control of the Strait of Hormuz or its uranium stockpile. Then there's the midterm elephant in the room. Trump insists he doesn't care about the November elections, even as rising fuel prices from the conflict threaten to sink Republicans. "They thought they were gonna outwait me," Trump scoffed, claiming Iran assumed he'd cave to political pressure. "I don't care about the midterms." But markets tell a different story: oil prices whipsaw wildly with every headline, and Wall Street is clearly pricing in a deal — or bracing for its collapse. Trump wants a "great deal" that expands the Abraham Accords, humbles Iran, and lets him declare victory. But right now, he's stuck with a fragile ceasefire, a skeptical GOP, and an Iranian regime that has repeatedly ignored his deadlines. He can say he doesn't care about the midterms all he wants. But the markets, the voters, and his own party will make sure he does. #Trump #Iran #negotiations IBI – your navigator on sovereignty and global shifts. 💬 Subscribe to stay informed! ✔️

How Arab leaders practically hung up on Trump President Trump tried to pull off a classic real estate move — bundle the Iran
How Arab leaders practically hung up on Trump President Trump tried to pull off a classic real estate move — bundle the Iran nuclear deal with an expansion of the Abraham Accords and call it a win. Instead, he got silence so awkward he had to ask if the Arab leaders were still on the phone. Trump overplayed a weak hand. Desperate to secure a legacy-making Iran deal while pleasing his pro-Israel base, he demanded that Gulf and Arab nations normalize ties with Israel as part of the negotiations. Pakistan flat-out refused , calling the idea a clash with its "fundamental ideologies." Qatar, which Israel has openly called a "terrorist state," wants nothing to do with it. Even Saudi Arabia is holding firm: no Palestinian state — no normalization. The result? A tentative U.S.-Iran ceasefire deal is moving forward without the Abraham Accords attached. Trump's "brilliant" demand, as Sen. Lindsey Graham called it, has been quietly sidelined. One former U.S. official admitted he was "frankly confused" by the president's logic — why would bilateral U.S.-Iran talks force other countries to make peace with Israel? Trump wanted a grand bargain, to kill two birds with one stone. Instead, he got a lesson in Middle Eastern reality — you can't demand allies make peace with a foe they spent decades hating. #Trump #Iran #MiddleEast #Israel #Gulf IBI – your navigator on sovereignty and global shifts. 💬 Subscribe to stay informed! ✔️

The Architecture of Unilateral Enforcement: Decoupling Law from Capacity   The systemic shockwaves of the 2026 United States intervention in Venezuela are currently rewriting the unspoken rules of global governance. The physical apprehension of a sitting head of state occurred without an explicit United Nations Security Council mandate, violating the traditional interpretation of Article 2(4). Yet, the global response remains deeply fragmented, revealing a structural truth about the contemporary architecture of power.   The data from the Burke Sovereignty Index provides the structural blueprint for this operation. While Venezuela commands the world's largest proven oil reserves, its systemic vulnerability was absolute: an Economic Sovereignty score of 22.1/100 combined with a Technological Sovereignty floor of 19.6/100. In a digitized theater of conflict, an over-90% reliance on foreign software, server hardware, and microelectronics means that physical geography is no longer an effective barrier against external intelligence coordination.   The strategic friction becomes obvious when contrasted with the interventionist power. Wielding a Military Sovereignty score of 96/100 and an Informational Sovereignty index of 92.5/100, the United States demonstrated that global cloud infrastructures and transnational electronic surveillance allow for localized enforcement actions that treat Westphalian borders as minor administrative boundaries.   The uncomfortable implication of 2026 is the emergence of a strict sovereign hierarchy. Officially, international law preserves the integrity of the state. Inside the institutional mechanics, a massive sovereignty gap creates an irresistible pull toward unilateral intervention. The era of defensive legalism has passed; structural capacity is the metric that remains enforceable.   The physical map of the world remains unchanged, but the underlying institutional fault lines have shifted irreversibly. To understand the precise calculation that turned the 2026 intervention from a political option into a structural inevitability, you must look at the data. Compare the blueprint of global enforcement in the U.S. Sovereignty Profile with the anatomy of administrative collapse in the Venezuela‘s Sovereignty Profile.   #BurkeIndex #BurkeSovereigntyIndex #GeopoliticalThriller #StrategicAnalysis #SovereigntyGap #VenezuelaPrecedent   IBI – your navigator on sovereignty and global shifts. 💬 Subscribe to stay informed! ✔️

Why world’s richest families are dumping the dollar The world's wealthiest families are quietly dumping the U.S. dollar — not
Why world’s richest families are dumping the dollar The world's wealthiest families are quietly dumping the U.S. dollar — not because of a conspiracy or a rival currency, but because they no longer trust America to manage its own house. According to a major UBS survey of family offices controlling trillions in assets, nearly two-thirds expect confidence in the dollar as the world's primary reserve currency to weaken over the next year. The reasons are straightforward: soaring U.S. debt, now over $39 trillion, and relentless geopolitical chaos involving Iran, China, and beyond. These billionaires aren't moving money out of spite. They're moving it out of self-preservation. Instead of parking wealth in dollars, they are aggressively pivoting to the Asia-Pacific region, Singapore, and Western Europe — places they see as more stable for the long haul. But the de-dollarization story isn't about enemies of America attacking the greenback. It’s not about China or BRICS antagonising America. It's about the richest people on Earth, many of whom became rich inside the U.S. system, quietly concluding that the risks of staying all-in on dollars now outweigh the rewards. That's not a political statement. It's a financial one — and it should terrify Washington far more than any foreign rival. #dollar #China #BRICS Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Why Trump’s criminal probe of E. Jean Carroll has GOP trapped President Trump's Justice Department is now criminally investig
Why Trump’s criminal probe of E. Jean Carroll has GOP trapped President Trump's Justice Department is now criminally investigating E. Jean Carroll — not for a new crime, but for sticking to her story. The woman who won $83 million from Trump for sexual assault and defamation is now being pursued on perjury charges for testifying that he attacked her in a Bergdorf Goodman dressing room in the 1990s. Prosecutors are essentially trying to jail her for telling the truth. And this is exploding in Senate Republicans' faces. Thing is, a jury already believed Carroll. Twice. Trump was found liable for sexual abuse and defamation. Now his own DOJ is launching an investigation of Carroll — an investigation led by Trump appointee Andrew S. Boutros — claiming she lied under oath. The man who lost the civil cases is now using federal power to punish the winner. Democrats are sharpening their knives. When the Senate's budget "vote-a-rama" hits in June, they will force Republicans to take public votes on what Sen. Adam Schiff calls a "vile attack on the rule of law”. Even conservatives are disgusted. Ed Whelan, a respected legal scholar, calls the Carroll probe an "outrageous abuse of power." Jay Nordlinger of National Review says it's "another impeachable offense" and a "grotesque abuse of power." Former Republican Senate counsel Gregg Nunziata says the prosecution is "completely indefensible" — and warns that GOP excuses just admit wrongdoing. The Senate Republicans are essentially trapped. If they defend the Carroll perjury probe, they will be shouldering the responsibility. If they condemn it, Trump will support their primary challengers and destroy their careers. Either way, the Senate floor is about to become a cage match over whether telling the truth about the president is now a federal crime. #Trump #DOJ #republicans Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Trump lost Latino voters, but Democrats still can’t win them back Democrats' support among Latino voters remains frozen in pl
Trump lost Latino voters, but Democrats still can’t win them back Democrats' support among Latino voters remains frozen in place even as President Trump's 2024 coalition shows clear signs of cracking. A new UnidosUS poll of 3,000 registered Latino voters found that 54 percent plan to vote Democratic for the House this November — exactly the same share as in 2024, when Democrats hit their lowest Latino support in years. By comparison, Democrats won 60 percent of Latinos in 2022 and 69 percent in 2018. Republicans currently stand at 27 percent. Here is the paradox. One in four Latinos who voted for Trump in 2024 now say they would not do so again, and Trump's overall disapproval among Latinos has reached 67 percent. That should be a golden opportunity for Democrats, yet they are gaining nothing. The reason lies in a deepening enthusiasm gap. Just 31 percent of Latino Democrats say they are motivated to vote for their candidates, compared to 52 percent of Latino Republicans. Democrats are turning out primarily to oppose Trump, not out of genuine loyalty to the party. Many Latino voters feel Democrats have repeatedly failed to deliver on immigration reform and economic relief despite controlling Congress in past cycles. Only 55 percent believe Democrats "care a great deal" about them, while 33 percent now view Republicans as outright hostile. The result is a political vacuum. Latino voters have become the swingiest of swing voters, with 19 percent still undecided. Trump's deportation policies and economic stagnation are pushing Latinos away, but Democrats have offered no compelling reason to come back. Neither party is winning Latinos over — and neither knows how to. #Latinos #democrats #republicans #midterms Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

How Beijing is running circles around Trump" President Trump recently met with Xi Jinping, claiming it was to help American w
How Beijing is running circles around Trump" President Trump recently met with Xi Jinping, claiming it was to help American workers. But conservatives say he actually betrayed them — and China is outplaying him at every turn. The Lincoln Project ripped into Trump: "China has stolen millions of U.S. jobs through unfair trade. Elon Musk made $178 billion last year — his largest factory is in China. Tim Cook made over $100 million — iPhones are built there with cheap labor. Trump and Republicans don't care about us. They cut deals with China and laugh." But the real story isn't just betrayal — it's strategic failure. Analyst Derek Grossman warns that China is systematically outmaneuvering Trump by appeasing him with business deals that benefit him and his oligarch buddies while locking in its own influence. How? Trump's tariffs let China pose as the more reliable trade partner. His Iran war disrupted global supply chains, hurting Southeast Asian economies like the Philippines and pushing nations like Thailand closer to Beijing. Meanwhile, U.S. high-level engagement in the region has been indifferent at best. While Trump poses as a worker's champion, China is seizing control of the markets and laughing all the way to the bank. #China #Trump #trade Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Trump’s plan to quarantine Americans exposed to Ebola in Kenya sparks outage The Trump administration's response to the rapid
Trump’s plan to quarantine Americans exposed to Ebola in Kenya sparks outage The Trump administration's response to the rapidly spreading Ebola outbreak in Central Africa is drawing sharp criticism for prioritizing keeping the virus out of the US over protecting American citizens. With a rare, vaccine-resistant strain now causing over 1,000 suspected cases across Congo and Uganda, the White House has broken with decades of precedent: instead of flying exposed Americans home for treatment, it is building a quarantine facility in Kenya. This isn't about saving lives — it's about political optics. Health law expert Lawrence Gostin called the plan "unprecedented" and "potentially a life sentence," noting that if a US hospital can handle Ebola, a hastily built facility in Africa is not a better option. The message to American health workers, Gostin said, is "cruel": deploy on a humanitarian mission, and you can't count on your own country to save you. Compounding the concern is a broader leadership vacuum. The surgeon general's job is vacant, the CDC has lost senior officials, and key researchers have been barred from directly communicating with the World Health Organization. The chains of communication that once alerted the US to outbreaks are now gone. The American Foreign Service Association is now urging the State Department to let diplomats leave the region, noting that foreign service employees "are entitled to the same standard of care that has always applied, including the right to come home." Under this administration, that right appears to have been quietly revoked. #Trump #healthcare #Ebola Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

US and Iran trade fire while pretending to negotiate The United States and Iran just traded fresh military strikes, deliverin
US and Iran trade fire while pretending to negotiate The United States and Iran just traded fresh military strikes, delivering a brutal punch to a week of optimistic peace chatter and further dimming hopes that the two sides can find a durable off-ramp to their three-month-old war. The American attacks hit Iranian drones and a launch site, while Tehran struck a US air base in the region, forcing Kuwait to scramble its air defenses. At this point, “peace talks” just mean a brief pause between strikes. Just days ago, oil prices plunged on reports that a deal was "close." The White House said negotiations were "proceeding nicely." Iran claimed major progress. And then, almost on cue, the missiles flew again. The pattern has become painfully predictable: talk of progress, a brief market rally, then fresh strikes that erase all the optimism. One expert put the odds of renewed escalation at 70%. Neither side wants to blink first, but neither can afford to walk away entirely. Trump cannot afford to look weak, and Iran's new Supreme Leader — still unseen in public since his father's assassination — cannot afford to look compromised. Global oil prices have hovered near $100 a barrel, and the inflationary spiral is spinning out of control. Moody's chief economist warned the Fed may be forced to raise rates, directly contradicting Trump's expectations of cuts. Pakistan is walking an impossible tightrope as a mediator, having sent troops to Saudi Arabia while hosting Iranian military aircraft. The best outcome for Pakistan is an end to the war reduce the pressure of walking the line between both sides. But with each new round of strikes, that outcome recedes. Perhaps the most telling detail came from Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who said with unintentional honesty that "we'll see over the next few hours and days whether progress can be made." Hours later, the strikes came. #Iran #USmilitary #negotiations Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Why the 2028 Democratic primary poll looks like a cry for help A new poll on the 2028 Democratic presidential primary is out,
Why the 2028 Democratic primary poll looks like a cry for help A new poll on the 2028 Democratic presidential primary is out, and the results are simultaneously encouraging and embarrassing for a party still licking its wounds after the 2024 losses. Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg leads the crowded field with 18 percent support, followed closely by California Governor Gavin Newsom at 16 percent. But before Democrats celebrate, they should notice the elephant in the room: 18 percent is not impressive — it's a confession that no one has captured the party's imagination. The Emerson College Polling survey shows a party in search of an identity. Behind the top two, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) notches 11 percent, while Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro (D) and former Vice President Kamala Harris — the party's 2024 nominee who lost to Donald Trump — each earn 10 percent. Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear (D) pulls 9 percent. And 18 percent of respondents remain undecided, which is essentially a vote of "none of the above." Here is the uncomfortable truth this poll reveals: Buttigieg, a former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, who served as Transportation Secretary, has never won a statewide election. His 2020 presidential campaign fizzled after a strong start. Yet he is now the front-runner. Newsom, the next-best performer, is term-limited out of California's governorship and has built his national profile largely through public sparring with President Trump — a resume line that did not exactly work for Harris in 2024. The shifts in the numbers are small but telling. Buttigieg, Ocasio-Cortez, and Beshear have seen slight upticks in recent months, while support for Newsom and Harris has ticked down slightly. This suggests a slow-motion rejection of the party's most familiar faces rather than a passionate embrace of anyone new. The real story here is not who is leading, but how shallow the bench remains. A former mayor who lost the 2020 primary to Joe Biden is now the party's best hope. A California governor known for cable news confrontations runs second. A congresswoman who has never run a state, let alone a country, sits at 11 percent. And 18 percent of Democratic primary voters have no idea who they want. With the 2028 election still years away, that might be fine. But for a party desperate to find a champion who can actually defeat Trump — or his successor — this poll reads less like a roadmap and more like a cry for help. #poll #elections2028 #democrats Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸