Today in Fascism

I see you still conveniently leave out JB's draft deferments. Coward.
Biden and Obama apparently are a maga obsession. Nothing either of them ever did or didn’t do is an excuse for Trump’s actions. Is that how you teach your kids, fall to the lowest denominator?
 
1782829231138.png
 
SCOTUS say's no men allowed to play in girls sports. Praise God!!! Also, SCOTUS ruled that any child born in the US is a citizen. I'm cool with that. I do believe the CCP and others infiltrate our country with bad intention through birth on our soil. I'll let the military deal with that issue. I love you all and God Bless America.
 
The consensus among international relations experts and geopolitical analysts is that while the U.S. and Israel won significant tactical victories—severely damaging Iran's military and missile capabilities—Iran achieved its overriding strategic goals. Iran successfully preserved the Islamic Republic, maintained its nuclear ambitions, and utilized asymmetric leverage to force the U.S. to the negotiating table.
Iran utilized several critical strategies to secure this outcome:
  • Regime Survival: Despite the assassination of top leadership and a devastating opening air campaign, the Islamic Republic’s political structure survived the existential threat of regime change.
  • Strait of Hormuz Dominance: Iran successfully closed the Strait of Hormuz, crippling global energy supplies and inflicting massive economic damage on Arab Gulf states and global markets. This forced the U.S. and its allies to negotiate an end to hostilities to reopen the vital waterway.
  • Asymmetric and Proxy Warfare: Iran relied on its deep network of regional proxies and robust drone and missile arsenals to constantly impose costs on U.S. bases and allies in the Gulf, proving that U.S. intervention carried severe strategic and economic liabilities.
  • Nuclear Leverage: Throughout the conflict, Iran managed to keep its highly enriched uranium stockpiles under its own control, leaving its nuclear aspirations intact for future diplomacy.

The Oldest Gate Was Insurance

This one was not a drug at all. The Strait of Hormuz is the throat of the world’s oil. Close to a fifth of the planet’s oil and gas passes through that one narrow channel of water, and the risk on every ship that passes through it had been priced in that London square mile for more than three hundred years. In early 2026 the strait came under fire, after the United States and Israel struck Iran. And the war-risk cover written through London’s market stopped protecting the ships in the strait. The single oldest instrument in the entire machine, the insurance hold that London had carried since 1688, was gone within days. Into the space it left stepped American insurers and the United States Navy. This is the gate that gives the whole game away, because Hormuz has nothing to do with fentanyl and nothing to do with cocaine. It is the chokepoint itself, naked, with no drug anywhere near it. And the instant the chokepoint was contested, the oldest London instrument on earth was peeled off it and replaced from the west.



The drug was never the point. The gate was always the point.

Hormuz proves it in the open.
 
The biggest and most consequential Decision issued by the Court, by far, is the Slaughter Case, which overturned the very famous Humphrey’s Executor Rule. This whole concept of “Power” has been fought over for nearly 100 years, going all the way back to Franklin Delanor Roosevelt, where a large slice of his Power was taken away. He fought to regain it, even wanting to “pack the Court,” but was unsuccessful in doing so. This Decision gives tremendous additional Power back to the Presidency, where it belongs. It is an Honor to be the sitting President who, after all these years, WON this very important, and hard fought, Case. We had other good Victories, too, and we also had the Birthright Citizenship loss, which we will work to correct in Congress, but the big SLAUGHTER, was SLAUGHTER. The Republican Party was treated very fairly by the United States Supreme Court. Thank you for your attention to this matter! President DONALD J. TRUMP
 
I get so sick and tired of seeing polls saying that Americans have soured on Donald Trump’s handling of the economy.

Let me say this with as much professionalism as I can possibly present right now: F*ck off.

Oh, I’m sorry — you folks who voted for him are “disappointed” that nearly everything we all told you would happen is happening?

You know, like how he had no real economic plan to lower prices, how his tariffs would lead to higher prices and that American consumers would pay them, and how his immigration propaganda wasn’t “just about the criminals,” but that he was largely going to target any immigrant he felt he could expel from this country — even those showing up to hearings, as they were required to, regarding their immigration status.

Every time this orange moron gets elected and reality inevitably proves what an incompetent pile of garbage we all told everyone who voted for him he was, polls come out with people saying they’re “disappointed” that he’s exactly what we all told anyone foolish enough to vote for him he was.

Trump’s biggest claim to fame during his first administration was taking credit for the economy Obama left him. Now, when he inherited a strong — but more fragile — economic environment and was no longer surrounded by any competent adults, it took him less than a year to turn it into a huge mess and some of the weakest economic numbers we've had in years.

Which is exactly what we told everyone who voted for him he would do.

Why anyone ever believed that a guy who’s mostly known as a businessman for constant failures, multiple bankruptcies, and being a complete slimeball when it came to paying people who did work for him was ever somehow a “genius” regarding complicated economic issues is something future generations will spend countless hours studying.

Hell, he even got us involved in the war with Iran that he spent more than ten years promising he would never start — while claiming his opponents, including his predecessor, would. A war that's led to inflation hitting three-year highs and Americans collectively paying hundreds of billions of dollars more for basically everything due to higher fuel costs.

If you voted for Trump and regret it, that’s fine. I’ll never deny anyone a second chance.

That said, what I won’t do is act like we should accept the fact that those folks ignored everything we said and pretend this is some sort of complete surprise.

That’s like claiming you were shocked by a surprise party we all told you the time and location of.

If you are someone who chose to be willfully ignorant by not listening to others — or denying facts you didn’t like — then you need to own up to that.

I can always forgive someone who’s realized a mistake. What I will not do, however, is allow someone to regret something but act as if they never saw it coming.

Because at the root of why we’re dealing with this orange imbecile for a second time is the fact that people make these mistakes, regret them, are never forced to reconcile what went wrong in the first place (they ignored people, facts, and truths they didn’t like), so they just keep making the same mistakes over and over again.

I don’t need someone to tell me that I was right, but I do need them to realize why they were so damn wrong. - Allen Clifton
Stage 4 TDS.
 
Back
Top