Follow the Money. Watch ICE. Understand What Comes Next. Markets manipulated. Airports militarized. Elections in the crosshairs. This is not chaos — it’s a strategy.

Follow the Money. Watch ICE. Understand What Comes Next.
Markets manipulated. Airports are militarized. Elections in the crosshairs. This is not chaos — it’s a strategy.

Lev Parnas
Mar 23

The Market Manipulation Happening in Plain Sight

Let’s start with what too many people are still ignoring.

We are watching real-time market manipulation—not speculation, not theory—reality.

You’ve seen this before.

Earlier this year, I warned you about the on-again, off-again tariffs and how every announcement, every reversal, and every so-called “decision” created spikes and drops that insiders could predict—and profit from.

And they did.

Now we’re seeing it again — and today may have been one of the clearest examples yet.

Donald Trump came out and made a statement suggesting that tensions with Iran were easing, that there were discussions, and that things were moving in a different direction.

Within hours, Iran publicly denied that any such conversations were even happening.

Let that sink in.

Two completely conflicting narratives — and yet the market had already reacted.

This is exactly what I’ve been warning you about.

These statements are not random.

They are not careless.

They are calculated.

Because when you move markets with words — when you signal escalation one day and de-escalation the next — you create volatility.

And volatility creates opportunity.

Opportunity for who?

The insiders.

The people who know what’s coming before it’s announced.

The people positioned to profit off every swing.

This is not diplomacy.

This is not strategy.

This is manipulation.

And I’m telling you — based on everything I’ve seen and everything I know — this is being done intentionally.

We’ve already seen reports of individuals tied to Trump’s inner circle making moves tied to geopolitical developments, even positioning themselves ahead of potential conflict scenarios.

Think about how dangerous that is.

People making money off the threat of war.

And while I’m not here to defend the Iranian regime — they are political actors with their own agenda — we’ve now reached a point where their denial is more consistent than the messaging coming from the White House.

That should concern every single one of us.

So I’ll ask again:

Who is making the money?

Who knew this statement was coming?

Who positioned themselves before the market moved?

Because this is happening in plain sight.

And once you see it—you can’t unsee it.

Because what you’re seeing with the markets — the manipulation, the messaging, the control — is not happening in isolation.

It’s part of a broader pattern.

The same tactics being used to move money are now being used to move people, to create fear, and to test power in real time.

And nowhere is that more clear than what we saw today.

ICE in Airports: Not Security—Intimidation

Now let’s talk about what we saw today.

Because today wasn’t just another headline.

Today was the official beginning of ICE presence inside our airports.

And I want to be very clear about something:

ICE is not there to help travelers.

ICE is not there to speed up lines.

ICE is not replacing TSA.

ICE is not checking you in.

ICE is not improving security flow.

ICE is there to intimidate.

They are roaming terminals.

They are targeting people.

And we have already seen the first disturbing incidents—including a mother being taken away in front of her child.

This is not about efficiency.

This is not about safety.

This is about power and fear.

And if you’re paying attention, you already understand what this is building toward.

Because this doesn’t stop at airports.

We’ve seen ICE expand into cities.

Now we see ICE in airports.

The next step is obvious:

ICE at voting locations.

ICE around elections.

ICE as a tool of suppression.

This is not speculation.

This is a pattern.

War Talk vs. War Reality

Now let’s connect this to what’s happening globally.

You’re hearing talk about peace.

You’re hearing talk about ending wars.

But I want you to do what I always tell you:

Watch the actions — not the words.

Because while the administration talks about stopping conflict:

Over 2,500 Marines have been deployed from San Diego

A request for $200 billion in military-related funding is on the table

Tensions continue to escalate in the region

The Strait of Hormuz remains under threat

These are not signs of de-escalation.

These are preparations.

And again—every move like this has market consequences.

Oil. Defense. Energy.

And every spike creates opportunity.

Opportunity for who?

The same insiders.

The same circle.

The same people getting richer while Americans struggle.

Gas prices go up.

Families fall behind.

Workers go unpaid.

And yet somehow, the same group keeps winning.

Every time.

This Isn’t Chaos—It’s a System

What you’re witnessing is not disorganization.

It’s not incompetence.

It’s a system.

A system where:

Fear is used to control

Markets are used to enrich insiders

Government power is used to intimidate

And truth is buried under constant noise

And the most dangerous part?

They are betting that you will get used to it.

That it will feel normal.

Americans Furious Over TSA Shutdown, Republican Senator Admits it is Trump’s Fault, Major Potential Market Manipulation Over Iran

Americans Furious Over TSA Shutdown, Republican Senator Admits it is Trump’s Fault, Major Potential Market Manipulation Over Iran

Aaron Parnas
Mar 23

There is a significant amount of news to cover. Republicans are now openly acknowledging that the ongoing government shutdown—impacting agencies like the TSA—persists because Donald Trump has instructed them not to negotiate with Democrats, placing responsibility squarely on him.

At the same time, serious concerns about potential market manipulation are emerging after traders placed massive oil bets shortly before Trump’s announcement regarding Iran. Meanwhile, ICE has detained a woman at San Francisco International Airport, and Markwayne Mullin is facing renewed scrutiny over a newly surfaced video.

According to the Financial Times, traders placed about $580 million in oil futures bets roughly 15 minutes before a social media post by Donald Trump about Iran talks, which later caused oil prices to drop sharply. The unusual timing of the trades, along with a spike in trading volume, raised questions about whether some investors anticipated the announcement. After the post suggested progress in U.S.–Iran discussions, crude prices fell while stock markets, including the S&P 500, rose. However, Iran’s parliament speaker later denied that any negotiations had taken place.

GOP Senator John Kennedy says Republicans rejected a Democratic deal to fund DHS (including TSA) because Trump opposed any agreement, stating, “The Democrats offered to open up everything but ICE. Ted and I said, “Okay, let’s accept their offer… That way DHS is back open.” Senator Thune submitted that to Trump; he said, ‘No.’ No deals with the Democrats.’ So, we’re back to square one.”

Republicans have rejected a Democratic bill to fund the TSA for the eighth time today:

The White House is delaying DHS funding negotiations until Senator Markwayne Mullin is confirmed as Homeland Security Secretary, believing he should participate in talks. Meanwhile, negotiations to end the DHS shutdown remain stalled, with Trump opposing a deal unless Republicans’ elections bill is passed. Some GOP senators are attempting to meet with Trump to discuss funding options, including partial funding plans. The ongoing standoff risks prolonging the shutdown to a record length.

ICE officers arrested two members of a family at San Francisco International Airport due to a longstanding deportation order, with officials saying one person resisted during the detention. Authorities described the incident as isolated and not part of broader immigration enforcement at the airport. The arrests were also unrelated to plans to deploy ICE agents at airports to assist TSA staffing shortages. Local officials emphasized that airport operations were unaffected and that local law enforcement was not involved in the immigration action.

Donald Trump claimed the U.S. had “productive” talks with Iran and suggested a potential deal to end the conflict, even extending a military deadline. However, Iran denied any direct or indirect negotiations, contradicting Trump’s statements. The situation remains volatile, with ongoing military strikes and rising tensions across the region. Diplomatic efforts may be happening indirectly through third-party countries, but no confirmed talks have taken place.

According to Politico, the Trump administration is exploring Iran’s parliament speaker, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, as a potential negotiating partner or future leader as it seeks a diplomatic path to end the conflict. Officials say they are still “testing” multiple candidates and have not committed to any one figure. The effort reflects a shift toward negotiations amid ongoing war and economic concerns, including oil markets. However, skepticism remains about whether Iran would cooperate or accept U.S. influence over its leadership.

Trump appeared to shift blame for the war onto Pete Hegseth, saying: “Pete, I think you were the first one to speak up. You said, ‘Let’s do it.’”

According to CBS, U.S. intelligence indicates Iran has placed at least a dozen naval mines in the Strait of Hormuz, raising concerns about global oil shipping. The development comes amid heightened tensions and ongoing conflict, with the U.S. targeting Iranian mine-laying capabilities. Trump has paused military escalation while claiming potential diplomatic progress, though Iran denies direct talks. The situation is impacting global markets and fueling concern over energy supply disruptions.

U.S. intelligence officials reportedly believe it is unlikely the war will achieve key goals like overthrowing Iran’s regime or permanently eliminating its nuclear threat, according to a Washington Post report.

The USS Tripoli, USS New Orleans, and about 2,200 Marines from the 31st MEU are set to arrive in the Middle East on Friday—timed with the end of Trump’s 5-day delay and market close, per the Wall Street Journal.

Trump dismissed criticism by reframing the conflict, saying Democrats call it a “war” while he describes it as a “military operation.”

Trump suggested a vague and controversial plan for controlling the Strait of Hormuz, saying it could be “jointly controlled” by him and a future Iranian leader, adding, “Maybe me. Maybe me. Me and the next ayatollah, whoever that is… There will also be a serious form of regime change. Look at Venezuela.”

Past remarks by Senator Markwayne Mullin describing physically disciplining his children and threatening his daughter’s boyfriend have resurfaced amid scrutiny over his fitness to lead DHS. He openly endorsed spanking and recounted detailed stories of punishing his children, drawing criticism about his temperament. The controversy adds to prior incidents, including a near physical altercation during a Senate hearing and comments appearing to justify violence. Lawmakers are now debating whether his behavior is appropriate for overseeing federal law enforcement agencies.

An Air Canada regional jet collided with a fire truck on a runway at LaGuardia Airport, killing both pilots and injuring dozens of passengers and crew. The crash appears to have involved a possible air traffic control error, with recordings suggesting the truck was cleared to cross before being told to stop. Passengers described a chaotic, terrifying scene but credited the pilots with slowing the plane and saving lives. Investigators are now examining the incident, including potential communication failures and human error.

Early reports suggest a lone air traffic controller, managing both air and ground traffic, may have been overwhelmed before the deadly LaGuardia crash involving a plane and fire truck. The situation was complicated by a separate emergency involving another aircraft, creating a cascade of coordination challenges. Audio recordings captured the controller admitting “I messed up” after the collision. The incident highlights concerns about system strain and staffing pressures in air traffic control.

Trump joked about fighting Elvis, asking if he could win, and was told the singer “would’ve been respectful enough to let you win.”

Fatal plane crashes, overstressed controllers, and endless security lines reveal a system teetering on the brink of failure.

Fatal plane crashes, overstressed controllers, and endless security lines reveal a system teetering on the brink of failure.

David A. Graham (The Atlantic)
Staff writer

Kludgeocracy

The American commercial-aviation system is a modern marvel. On any day of the week, a passenger can get to and from nearly any two cities of decent size and to destinations on five other continents, for a relatively affordable price and with exceptional safety.

Or at least all of that was true until recently. Today, the system seems near collapse.

Travelers around the country are facing long security lines: two to three hours at New York airports, three in Atlanta, two in Houston. Checkpoints are staffed by the Transportation Security Administration, which is part of the Department of Homeland Security. DHS has not been paying TSA workers since Valentine’s Day because of a partial government shutdown.

Meanwhile, at New York’s LaGuardia Airport, one of the nation’s busiest, all flights are paused until at least this afternoon after an Air Canada jet collided with an airport fire truck on a runway, killing two pilots and injuring dozens of other people. Nearly 1,000 flights leave from or arrive at LGA every day, and hundreds have been canceled.

A closure at LaGuardia puts pressure on other airports in the area, and they might not be prepared to handle any redirects. This morning, reports of smoke in the air-traffic-control tower at Newark Liberty International Airport, just across the Hudson River from New York City, caused a brief ground stop. Officials determined the problem was a burning smell in an elevator and reopened the tower, but this is only the latest sign of how broken Newark airport is. Last week, an Alaska Airlines plane nearly crashed into a FedEx plane on a runway at Newark, missing by just 300 to 325 feet, after pilots were instructed to avoid a collision. And earlier this month, a Singapore Airlines plane clipped the wing of a Spirit Airlines jet while pushing back from a gate. Last spring, air-traffic controllers lost the ability to track planes at Newark for two brief intervals, causing such stress that some of them took leave.

Each of these situations had its own specific causes, but what unites them is years of disinvestment capped by political dysfunction. Modern air travel was a classic postwar American triumph: a big, complicated system built with lots of money and careful tracking. Deregulation of the airlines in the 1970s made flying cheaper and more widely available. A careful, iterative process of safety regulation culminated in a 16-year period, from 2009 to 2025, when no U.S. airline had a fatal crash.

Yet the system was quietly eroding from within. For many passengers, the most visible sign was the deterioration of airports themselves. In 2014, then–Vice President Biden said that LaGuardia resembled “some third-world country.” Although LGA has since been renovated, other, more essential parts of the system have continued to get worse.

The federal government has been trying to run air traffic control on the cheap for decades, which has resulted in staffing shortages and badly outdated equipment. Many towers are operating below recommended capacity. After the outages last spring, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy panned the infrastructure used to keep fliers safe. “We use floppy disks. We use copper wires,” Duffy said. “The system that we’re using is not effective to control the traffic that we have in the airspace today.” Yet despite warnings from airlines and regulators, successive congressional sessions and presidential administrations have failed to fix the problem. The FAA has also seen what’s known as “regulatory capture.” Cozy relationships with Boeing, for example, helped problems with the 737 MAX escape notice until a pair of fatal crashes abroad in 2018 and 2019.

More recently, the FAA abruptly closed the El Paso, Texas, airport in a standoff with the Defense Department over laser weaponry. The FAA appears to have made the move as a desperate step after its safety worries weren’t taken seriously. The ploy worked: the FAA drew attention to its concerns, and the airport reopened, but in any functional administration, this would have been resolved behind closed doors much earlier.

When an army helicopter and an American Airlines jet collided near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport last January, President Trump immediately jumped to blame DEI, a claim as nonsensical as it was repellent. Following multiple investigations, the FAA has changed some rules to prevent a similar incident, but Congress couldn’t agree on an air-safety bill that offered broader fixes.

A different sort of political dysfunction has snarled passenger experiences. TSA is charged with keeping travelers safe, not from aviation failures but from threats of violence. While its approach has often been more security theater than essential, as Atlantic editor in chief Jeffrey Goldberg reported in 2008, some screening is necessary. But DHS is unable to pay agents for this work because of the partial shutdown. Following the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, Democrats have demanded reforms in exchange for funding the department, and neither they nor Trump have been willing to budge. TSA agents, who are not well paid in the first place, have not received paychecks since February, and the situation seems to have hit a breaking point in the past few days. (Some airports have begged people to donate gift cards or food for TSA agents.)

Over the weekend, Trump said that he would “move our brilliant and patriotic ICE agents to the airports, where they will do security like no one has ever seen before, including the immediate arrest of all illegal immigrants who have come into our country, with heavy emphasis on those from Somalia.” (DHS has moved funds so that ICE agents, unlike TSA, are being paid.) Administration “border czar” Tom Homan has since said that ICE won’t be doing screening but will take on other, unspecified roles. The administration has insisted that border security is an emergency, so pulling agents off their jobs to do something else seems odd. More broadly, the administration is deploying ICE agents outside of their training in a dubious attempt to ease a political crisis created by ICE agents who have been deployed outside of their standard role in Minnesota. Trump said today that he would deploy the National Guard to assist if ICE agents could not alleviate wait times.

The ICE deployment is a particularly extreme example of what the political scientist Steven M. Teles has dubbed “kludgeocracy,” in which the government reaches for short-term, improvised solutions while resisting real reform. “‘Clumsy but temporarily effective,’” Teles has written, “also describes much of American public policy. For any particular problem we have arrived at the most jerry-rigged, opaque, and complicated response.” The U.S. aviation system has been held together by such patches for years, but the kludges may finally be failing.

COLD-BLOODED CRETIN Trump is once again trying to talk his way out of the latest violent episode in his miserable life

COLD-BLOODED CRETIN
Trump is once again trying to talk his way out of the latest violent episode in his miserable life

D. Earl Stephens ✍️
Mar 23

After singlehandedly closing the Strait of Hormuz, destabilizing the entire world, and bringing about needless death and destruction, I see Donald Trump contemplating surrender to Iran.

Of course the man with the “best words” is not putting it quite that way this morning, because the man with the “best words” was working overtime, hands flailing away while playing his invisible accordion, as he tried his best to talk his way out of a catastrophic mess that was entirely of his own doing.

After a weekend of golf and bragging to guests on the patio of Mar-a-Lago about the size of the engine in his diesel-powered golf cart, Trump bloviated in that spoiled-snot, idiotic way Monday morning that at some point during his weekend of leisure we had “very strong talks” with Iran.

Really, pal? “Very strong talks?”

Oh, well, if they were “very strong,” I guess that does it, and we can all relax now and get on with our lives.

Can we finally stop giving this supersonic moron a pass for his diarrhea of the mouth and making up conversations that never happened? This has been going on for the better part of a decade, and we really need to circle back and decide again. We have had more than enough of this and simply have to get back to expecting more from a president.

Trump opens his big, fat mouth, random words just fly out of it, and the press reports them unchallenged and almost completely without context.

I wrote the book on it several years ago and finally surrendered myself because it was clear as day too many Americans were just fine with having a complete dumb shit for a president.

I am way past sick and tired of these Americans, but more on that for another day.

Trump is a stupid idiot and is not only incapable of deep thought but any thought. He is a hyena with a reusable “get out of jail free” card, who has been led around by his ridiculous, painted orange nose his entire miserable life through failed businesses, marriages, and now presidencies.

Only hours before telling the world about his fictional “very strong talks” with Iran, he was asked about the horrific collision at LaGuardia Sunday night, and he said this: “They made a mistake. It’s a dangerous business. That’s terrible.”

“They made a mistake.”

This is the nuclear-powered idiot who casually thrust the world into an unnecessary, intentional, catastrophic mistake that we will all be paying for for years, long after he is blessedly gone.

He has no idea what he is doing.

Let me try that again:

HE HAS NO IDEA WHAT HE IS DOING.

This needs to be said over and over again.

He is a failure of a man who lost this stupid, senseless war the minute it started.

Thousands of human beings are needlessly dead, among them school children and members of our military, both of whom he could care less about. He treats them all like so many Big Macs to be devoured to feed his endless appetite for chaos and affirmation he never got growing around people who loved him so much they just couldn’t wait to kick him the hell out of their cavernous mansion because it wasn’t big enough to keep them all separate and from killing each other.

And when the real fighting started, he chickened out of that, too, because service to himself is more important than service to his country. Trumps don’t love this country; they feed off it.

None of them serve.

So Trump is surrendering today after his “very strong talks” because last week Iran used small, cheap weapons to blow up energy complexes in Qatar, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia. This is easy as pie and was never given any consideration from the dry drunk and human oil slick, Pete Hegseth, who is leading a military that, as a veteran, I still believe deserves so much better.

The longer Trump’s idiotic, unnecessary war goes, the more damage will be inflicted on these gas and oil reserves that have a disgraceful and outsized impact upon world order.

If only there were cheaper, safer options to oil out there …

For its part, Iran has denied there were any talks at all this weekend, much less “very strong” ones, and will be content to wait out Trump and all those invisible voices in his head until he has extinguished every bad option on his supersized menu.

Here is the statement they posted on social media:

“No negotiations have been held with the U.S. Fake news is used to manipulate the financial and oil markets.”

This was a senseless war, started by a complete sociopath and failure of a man, whose second term in office has been an authoritarian disaster area, and we will pay through the nose for both of these things for many years to come.

Like this barbaric regime itself, nothing good was ever going to come out of this sad chapter of American history.

But since very strong words carry the day in America these days, here are a few more: Trump and his bloodthirsty regime can all go straight to hell.

TWO PILOTS DEAD AT LAGUARDIA AS TRUMP BLOCKS TSA FUNDING The Narativ | Know Sooner

TWO PILOTS DEAD AT LAGUARDIA AS TRUMP BLOCKS TSA FUNDING
The Narativ | Know Sooner

Zev Shalev
Mar 23

1. ✈️ JET HITS FIRETRUCK
An air traffic controller cleared a fire truck onto an active runway at LaGuardia last night and then tried to take it back. Ten times he screamed, “Stop.” Too late. Air Canada Express Flight 8646 slammed into the Port Authority vehicle at 93-105 mph on landing. Both pilots killed. Forty-two injured. The controller’s own words on the recording: “I tried to reach out to stop them. We were dealing with an emergency earlier, and I messed up.” He was juggling two emergencies at once—a United flight had aborted takeoff with a sickened crew—because that’s what happens when 40% of FAA terminals are understaffed. LaGuardia is closed until at least 2 PM today. Five hundred flights canceled. The NTSB and Canadian investigators are launching parallel probes. Meanwhile, the TSA is quietly sharing passenger manifests with ICE multiple times a week—names, photos, and flight details—turning airports into immigration dragnet zones. Congress will demand answers about the crash. The answer is on Trump’s desk.

2. 🚨 TRUMP BLOCKED SENATE DEAL TO FUND TSA
And here’s the context for that crash. Second-longest government shutdown in American history and counting. Fifty thousand TSA agents screening your bags unpaid. Call-out rates climbing. Lines growing. The FAA can’t hire fast enough—40% of terminals are understaffed—and Congress won’t fund the agencies that keep planes from hitting trucks. Yesterday, Thune brought Trump a deal: fund all of DHS except ICE, reopen the TSA, and end the lines. Trump killed it on Truth Social—no deal unless Democrats pass the SAVE Act first. He’s holding airport safety hostage to a voter suppression bill. The Senate has failed four times to reach 60 votes. Only Fetterman crosses the aisle. Democrats tried a procedural gambit Saturday to fund the TSA alone—Republicans voted it down 41-49. Easter recess starts March 30. If they leave without a deal, this stretches past 60 days. Two pilots are dead because a controller was juggling two emergencies alone. That’s not an accident. That’s a budget line. Trump is to blame.

3. 💣 TRUMP IN GHOST TALKS WITH IRAN
Trump blinked. His 48-hour ultimatum to Iran—reopen the Strait of Hormuz or we hit your power grid—expired today. Instead of strikes, he posted about “very good and productive conversations” with Tehran. One problem: Iran says there are no talks. “There is no dialogue between Tehran and Washington,” their Foreign Ministry stated flatly. Oman says it’s mediating. Markets surged on hope. But Iran is still enriching uranium, the strait is still closed, and the U.S. just bought itself five days of ambiguity. Friday is the new deadline. Watch whether ships move or just tweets.

4. ⚖️ THE TRUMP FAUXMOCRACY
The Supreme Court is hearing arguments that could kill mail-in ballot grace periods in 18 states. The RNC is challenging Mississippi’s own Republican-passed law allowing ballots postmarked by Election Day to arrive five days later. Only the three liberal justices appear sympathetic. Military voters overseas get hit hardest. A June ruling reshapes November. Meanwhile, the SAVE Act, requiring proof of citizenship to register, is being debated in Congress simultaneously—Justice Jackson called it out from the bench this morning. Two fronts, one target: fewer voters.

5. 🤖 AI: TRUMP STEALS ALL ORIGINAL WORKS
Trump’s AI framework preempts every state AI law in the country. Copyrighted training material: legal. Developer liability: shielded. California, Colorado, Illinois — overridden in one stroke. Tech gets everything it lobbied for.

6. 🗿 COLUMBUS RETURNS TO THE WHITE HOUSE
A 13-foot replica of the Columbus statue torn down in Baltimore in 2020—rebuilt with pieces of the original—installed on the White House grounds this weekend. Fenced off from the public. They also put the Confederate Albert Pike statue back up.

THE PATTERN
Trump is rolling out the spring from hell. Deadly skies directly tied to his policy decisions, an endless war he can’t end with “ghost talks,” a fauxmocracy with impossible voter registration, and the theft of all copyrighted material. I can’t wait for the Easter Egg Roll, brought to you by META. The regime is bought and sold for. Two pilots are dead.

Trump Separated 11,000 US-Born Children from Their Parents Trump backs down from Iran threat, rejects plan to fund TSA, ICE agents flood over a dozen major airports

Trump Separated 11,000 US-Born Children from Their Parents
Trump backs down from Iran threat, rejects plan to fund TSA, ICE agents flood over a dozen major airports

Raw America
Mar 23

Trump backed down from his 48-hour ultimatum to Iran this morning, posting on Truth Social that the two countries have had “very good and productive conversations” and that he is pausing military strikes for five days. Meanwhile, his administration has separated at least 11,000 parents of U.S. citizen children from their families through deportation. ICE agents are now deployed at the nation’s airports, including the world’s busiest, conducting immigration enforcement while TSA workers go without pay. And it turns out Trump was offered a clean plan to fund TSA and end the airport chaos, and said no.

CNN and CBS are running cover for a war that has killed 13 Americans and sent oil past $114 a barrel. The FCC chair is threatening to pull broadcast licenses from any outlet that doesn’t fall in line. David Ellison is weeks away from controlling CNN on top of CBS. The people who own the cameras have decided what the cameras will show.

Trump Blinks on Iran. Backs Down From 48-Hour Ultimatum.
On Saturday, Trump threatened to “obliterate” Iran if it did not open the Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours. Iran responded by warning it would “irreversibly” destroy critical infrastructure across neighboring countries. Markets went into a tailspin. Oil hit $114 a barrel. European stocks entered correction territory. Gold fell more than 8 percent. Silver tumbled 10 percent.

By Monday morning, the tone had changed completely. Trump posted on Truth Social in all caps that the two countries had engaged in “very good and productive conversations” and that he was pausing military strikes against Iranian power plants and energy infrastructure for five days. The post contained multiple typos, including “PLEASE” instead of “PLEASED” and “WITCH” instead of “WHICH.” Trump deleted it within minutes and reposted a corrected version.

Iranian authorities have not confirmed any talks with the United States.

The five-day pause ends at the close of markets on Friday, giving Trump the weekend to regroup. Analysts say the reversal reflects a president who backed himself into a corner with an ultimatum Iran was never going to meet. “It is highly unlikely that Tehran will agree to Trump’s terms on such an accelerated timeline under the threat of attack,” one oil market researcher said. “Iran is clearly able and willing to match any escalation.”

The climb-down also comes as Trump’s war has become deeply unpopular. A Reuters survey of more than 1,500 adults found 59 percent disapprove of the conflict, with only 37 percent in support. A separate poll found independent approval of Trump’s handling of Iran sliding from 30 percent to 24 percent in a single week. The head of the International Energy Agency warned of a “major, major threat” to the global economy, saying “no country will be immune to the effects of this crisis if it continues.”

Trump spent weeks threatening annihilation. On Monday morning he was posting typo-filled announcements about productive conversations. The markets are not fooled. The question now is whether the five-day pause is the beginning of a real off-ramp or another deadline that will come and go.

This is the kind of story that corporate media is already spinning as a diplomatic breakthrough. It is not. It is a president in political and economic trouble, buying himself five days. Raw America will be here all week covering what actually happens. If you want that coverage to continue and you want it to stay independent, please become a paid subscriber today. The link is right below this story.

At Least 11,000 Parents of U.S. Citizen Children Have Been Separated by Trump’s Deportation Push
In the first seven months of Trump’s second term, ICE detained at least 11,000 parents of children who obtained birthright citizenship, according to an analysis of ICE data. If that pace has continued into 2026, the number may have roughly doubled, amounting to more than 50 U.S. citizen children being separated from their parents every single day.

Trump is deporting approximately four times as many mothers of U.S. citizen children per day as the Biden administration did. Under Biden, about 30 percent of mothers arrested by immigration officials were eventually deported. Under Trump, that figure has jumped to around 60 percent, meaning a majority of these mothers will not return to their families after being detained.

The shift is not accidental. When Trump returned to office, the internal guidance document governing how ICE handles detained parents was quietly revised. A line advising agents to treat immigrant parents in a “humane” manner was removed. Language was added making clear the directive “in no way limits the ability of ICE personnel to make enforcement decisions.”

More than half of detained fathers of U.S. citizen children and about three-quarters of detained mothers had only minor convictions in the U.S., such as traffic or immigration-related offenses. The administration has repeatedly said it is targeting the “worst of the worst.” The data says otherwise.

The White House’s official guidance to parents facing deportation is to either leave the country with their U.S. citizen children or designate someone else to care for them. The children in these cases are American citizens. They were born here. They have the same rights as any American child. The administration’s position is that their parents should self-deport and take them along or leave them behind.

ICE Is Now at Airports. And they are doing immigration enforcement.
Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport, the busiest airport in the world, confirmed Sunday that ICE officers would be deployed there Monday. Airports across the country reported security line wait times reaching up to three hours over the weekend as TSA employees worked without pay for the third time in six months. More than 300 TSA agents have quit. Absentee rates hit 11.5 percent last Friday, the highest recorded since the shutdown began.

Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens said federal officials indicated the ICE deployment was “not intended to conduct immigration enforcement activities.” Border czar Tom Homan said something different on national television the same day. Asked directly whether ICE agents would conduct immigration searches while stationed at airports, Homan said: “We do immigration enforcement at airports all the time. So is that going to change? It’s not going to change.”

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries was direct about what that means for passengers. “The last thing that the American people need is for untrained ICE agents to be deployed at airports all across the country, potentially to brutalize or, in some instances, kill them. We’ve already seen how ICE conducts itself.” Federal agents shot and killed two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis in January.

Homan acknowledged Sunday that the details of the airport operation were still being worked out in emergency meetings. When a reporter suggested that planning an operation in 24 hours might mean it was not well thought out, Homan responded, “How much of a plan does it take to guard an exit?”

That is the answer from the man overseeing the deployment of armed federal agents into the nation’s airports. The mayor of Atlanta says no immigration enforcement. The border czar says enforcement never stops. Someone is not telling the truth, and the people caught in the middle are the millions of Americans trying to catch a flight.

Trump Was Offered a Plan to Fund the TSA. He said no.
Here is the part of the airport chaos story that has not gotten nearly enough attention on corporate media. Senate Majority Leader John Thune presented Trump on Sunday with a proposal that would have funded all agencies under the Department of Homeland Security, including TSA, with the single exception of ICE. It would have ended the paycheck crisis for TSA workers and relieved the airport lines immediately.

Trump rejected it, according to multiple sources. He told Republicans to stay in Washington and keep fighting with Democrats over full DHS funding and a voter ID bill called the SAVE America Act.

Trump has spent days on social media explicitly blaming Democrats for the chaos at airports. He has deployed ICE agents to manage a staffing crisis he could have resolved with a phone call. The plan to fund the TSA was on the table. He looked at it and said no.

The airports are not a crisis Trump is trying to solve. They are a political stage he is trying to use. TSA workers missing their paychecks, passengers waiting three hours in security lines, ICE agents conducting immigration enforcement at the nation’s busiest terminals: all of it is the direct result of a president who was handed a solution and chose the chaos instead.

Here is where we are. The FCC is threatening broadcast licenses over war coverage. CBS is being rebuilt by a billionaire with an agenda. CNN is about to fall into the same hands. The outlets that should be holding this administration accountable are being bought, defunded, and restructured into compliance one by one.

Raw America is still here.

No Kings Day is Coming. But, Does it Matter?

No King’s Day is coming. But Does It Matter?

John Pavlovitz
Mar 23

This Saturday is No Kings’ Day.
More than 3,000 protests are planned throughout every state in the U.S., as well as hundreds of cities around the world.

If last year’s events are any indication, close to ten million people could be in attendance.

We can safely make some predictions about what will happen. This weekend:

The National Mall will be overrun by a massive, ebullient mob of radical woke leftists: families, schoolteachers, ministers, parents, grocery store clerks, college students, business owners, grandparents, and toddlers on shoulders.

City streets all over this nation will be lined with exuberant, sign-waving throngs of joyfully defiant human beings loudly declaring their shared disdain of a wannabe dictator.

Local parks will explode in a kaleidoscopic display of disparate humanity, converging to declare their solidarity and their collective rejection of authoritarianism.

Republican lawmakers’ offices will be surrounded by a spirited show of fierce resistance from pissed-off, fed-up constituents demanding accountability.

And, based on my previous experience, there are some guarantees I’ll make:

The vibe will be glorious.

The chants will be on point.

The sign game will be strong.

The love will be tangible.

It will be soul-stirring.

It will be goosebump-inducing.

It will be off-the-charts beautiful.

And if that is all that happens, it also won’t make a damn bit of difference.

We’ve already had two massively successful No Kings Day events, and as cathartic and encouraging as they were, things here are far worse than they were then.

The constitutional crises are piling up.
We’re immersed in unnecessary and unwinnable wars halfway across the world.
This administration’s disregard for legality and morality is escalating.
The complete Epstein files are still concealed, the monsters within them still evading their reckoning.

ICE is still ravaging our communities with impunity and with taxpayer funding.
And our traitorous, cognitively decimated, sociopathic Predator-In-Chief has become more unstable, more violent, and more unhinged than before.
We’re a hair’s breadth from full-on fascism.

The last No Kings Day protests didn’t stave off the chaos that is now here, and they won’t prevent what this regime has planned unless we all do more than show up on Saturday.

Rallies and protests are powerful, important things.

They are a necessary visual reminder that we’re not alone.
They help provide a sense of agency in dark days, to help our minds right-size the threats that seem so towering and so beyond our reach.

They give us a chance to stand with a chosen community and be a tangible response to the things that burden us.
They connect us with people we live, work, and study alongside and give us the chance to forge partnerships and build coalitions.

Rallies and protests are awe-inspiring, breathtaking moments.

But rallies and protests don’t save democracies.

They can’t craft legislation, and they won’t protect endangered people.
Rallies alone won’t jettison corrupt leaders from their well-fortified perches of power.
They can’t reach into the labyrinthine hallways and cloistered rooms where those charged with protecting us decide our fates.
Protests can’t tip the scales of our political process back toward balance.
They will not reject would-be dictators.

Please hear me: attending a No Kings protest for a few hours isn’t nothing, but it is the easiest possible ask of us as Americans.

Our efforts on Saturday don’t matter even a little bit to Trump and his sycophantic gaggle of ghouls. Like so many times before, they will simply allow us to have an afternoon where we all feel a false sense of power, blow off steam, and then largely return to our lives currently in progress, while they continue to dismantle our Republic largely unabated.

We need to remember that transformative activism is found in sustained movements, not in soothing moments, and we need to find our place in the messy and local battles throughout this nation until we actually strike fear into the oppressors and oligarchs and upend the new order they are constructing where we are truly powerless.

The only way this Saturday will really mean something is if we make meaningful connections with our neighbors while we’re there, if we connect with organizations in our communities, if we sign up to work the polls or lobby our lawmakers or contribute to campaigns, or if we find a place to do the daily, unglamorous, incremental work of resisting fascism.

For No Kings Day to matter, it cannot be a landing pad; it must be a launching pad.

Yes, Saturday afternoon is something.

But Monday morning is everything.

ICE Agents Run from Photographers at Airports, Trump Rejects Deal to Fund TSA, Supreme Court Signals Mail-In Ballot Crackdown

ICE Agents Run from Photographers at Airports, Trump Rejects Deal to Fund TSA, Supreme Court Signals Mail-In Ballot Crackdown

Aaron Parnas
Mar 23

ICE agents have now been deployed to fourteen airports across the country, and reports indicate they are actively trying to avoid being photographed or recorded. At the same time, Trump has rejected a deal that would fund FEMA, the Coast Guard, and TSA, and is instead demanding the Senate pass the SAVE Act as a condition to fund TSA. Meanwhile, the Supreme Court appears poised to back limits on mail-in ballots that arrive after Election Day, a move that could significantly reshape voting rules nationwide.

Conservative Supreme Court justices signaled skepticism toward counting mail-in ballots that arrive after Election Day, questioning whether such practices undermine confidence in elections. The case centers on a Mississippi law allowing ballots postmarked by Election Day to be counted later, with a ruling that could reshape voting rules nationwide ahead of the midterms. The debate reflects a broader push by Trump and Republicans to restrict mail-in voting, while liberals on the court warn it could disrupt long-standing election practices.

According to NBC News, a proposed deal to reopen key parts of the Department of Homeland Security—while leaving ICE funded separately—was discussed as a way to ease airport chaos and long TSA lines, but was rejected by Trump. The standoff has stretched on for over a month, with hundreds of TSA agents quitting and major travel disruptions continuing nationwide. The fight underscores a broader political battle over immigration enforcement, with both parties digging in as the shutdown drags on.

Trump says he plans to tie Homeland Security to voter ID requirements, calling for photo identification and proof of citizenship to vote, while urging lawmakers to stay in D.C. over Easter to pass it, framing it as “one for Jesus.”

Video shows ICE agents running from photographers while continuing patrols at JFK Airport in NYC, as massive TSA security lines grow at airports across the U.S., adding to the chaotic scene.

Video shows an ICE agent shining a flashlight directly into journalists’ cameras while patrolling JFK Airport in NYC, appearing to obstruct or interfere with media coverage.

Video shows a woman yelling “ICE Out Now!” at agents patrolling Newark Airport, while another person is seen thanking them and shaking their hands—highlighting a sharp divide in reactions.

Video from San Francisco International Airport shows ICE agents forcibly restraining a crying woman in front of her child, sparking outrage online and protests from bystanders. A California state senator condemned the incident as “terrorizing,” while officials described it as an isolated enforcement action. The footage has intensified backlash over immigration enforcement tactics in public spaces. Additional context: the incident happened the night before new DHS deployments, and the agents involved were not part of Trump’s plan to send ICE to airports or assist TSA; SFO was also not among the airports included in that rollout.

Iran is threatening to fully shut down the Strait of Hormuz and strike regional infrastructure if the U.S. follows through on plans to attack its power plants, escalating the already volatile conflict. The standoff has pushed the war into a dangerous new phase, with global oil flows disrupted and critical infrastructure on both sides now in the crosshairs. As casualties rise and tensions spike, the risk of wider regional and economic fallout continues to grow.

Iran’s parliament speaker pushed back on claims of U.S. talks, insisting no negotiations have taken place and accusing Trump of spreading “fake news” to manipulate financial and oil markets.

Israel’s finance minister said the country should push its border with Lebanon up to the Litani River, as Israeli forces bomb bridges and destroy homes in southern Lebanon during an escalating offensive. According to Reuters, the remarks mark the clearest signal yet from a senior official of potential territorial ambitions amid the fight against Hezbollah.

Politico is reporting that as the U.S.-Iran war disrupts global energy markets, oil executives and foreign officials are pressing the White House for a clear timeline, warning that uncertainty is fueling chaos. The near-closure of the Strait of Hormuz has sent oil prices soaring, triggered fuel shortages abroad, and raised fears of wider economic fallout. With markets rattled and allies uneasy, the central question dominating high-level talks is simple: “When will it end?”

A top FEMA official has claimed in past podcast appearances that he was “teleported” miles away—including to a Waffle House—remarks that resurfaced in a CNN report examining his background. The official, now in a senior disaster response role, has also promoted other fringe theories, drawing scrutiny over his appointment. Federal officials dismissed the comments as taken out of context, but the revelations have raised concerns about credibility inside a key emergency agency.

Trump claimed the U.S. is “the only country” with mail-in voting and called it “mail-in cheating,” but that’s false—many countries, including Canada, the U.K., Australia, Germany, and Switzerland, all allow some form of voting by mail.

Jeff Webb, a major figure in cheerleading and mentor to Charlie Kirk, has died at 76 after a freak pickleball accident that left him with a fatal head injury. His influence spanned from building Varsity Brands into a multibillion-dollar company to shaping conservative media circles and mentoring rising political figures. Tributes from allies highlight his impact on both sports and conservative activism, underscoring the unusual circumstances of his sudden death.

NBC has confirmed that a California Republican sheriff running for governor seized over 650,000 ballots to investigate alleged election discrepancies, claiming a potential 45,000-vote mismatch. State officials pushed back, calling the probe unprecedented and based on unfounded claims already explained as human error. The move escalates tensions over election integrity as broader investigations and political battles over past elections continue nationwide.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio is set to testify in a criminal trial involving his former roommate, ex-Rep. David Rivera, who is accused of secretly lobbying for Venezuela’s government. Prosecutors allege Rivera took millions to push Maduro’s interests in Washington, using political connections to try to influence U.S. policy. The case is highly unusual, marking one of the rare times a sitting Cabinet official takes the stand in a criminal trial.

Lawmakers from both parties introduced a bill to crack down on prediction markets like Polymarket and Kalshi, aiming to ban sports and casino-style betting disguised as financial contracts. The move comes as these platforms explode in popularity and face growing scrutiny over gambling risks, insider trading concerns, and regulatory loopholes. The proposal would bring the fast-growing industry under tighter control by closing what critics call a “backdoor” into unregulated betting.

 

What Happened to Trump…and Why It Explains Everything Happening Right Now The forces that shaped him didn’t stay in the past: they grew with power, fueling the cruelty and chaos now hitting your wallet, your safety, and America’s place in the world…

What Happened to Trump…and Why It Explains Everything Happening Right Now
The forces that shaped him didn’t stay in the past: they grew with power, fueling the cruelty and chaos now hitting your wallet, your safety, and America’s place in the world…

Thom Hartmann
Mar 23

When a gentle, thoughtful, holy man like Pope Leo XIV denounces what Trump has done by killing thousands in an illegal and unnecessary war of choice — he called it a “scandal to ​the whole human family” yesterday — the world knows our president has descended into something truly and profoundly evil.

There’s a single through-line connecting everything happening to us right now, and it all has to do with the damaged, broken, deranged man in the White House.

— Our gas prices spiking toward six dollars a gallon and above.
— Masked, anonymous, unaccountable thugs brutalizing brown and Black people, immigrants and US citizens alike, and murdering or killing almost a hundred human beings since Trump was sworn in as they build hundreds of massive concentration camps across the US.
— Trump’s tweets yesterday implying that Democrats may be their next occupants, calling members of the party “America’s greatest threat after Iran” much as Hitler did just before throwing members of opposition parties into camps in Germany in 1933/1934.
— Our grocery bills creeping higher every single week, with price explosions and famine coming as the world runs low on fertilizers now blocked in the Strait of Hormuz.
— TSA officers working without a paycheck snarling our security lines while food banks quietly open at our nation’s airports to feed those unpaid agents and their families.
— American soldiers and innocent civilians dying in an unconstitutional, unauthorized-by-Congress, internationally illegal war crime against a country that posed no imminent threat to us, with not a single ally on the planet willing to stand beside us, as over 20 countries have now been drawn in creating an eerie echo of WWI.
— And now, in one of the most breathtaking acts of strategic self-destruction in American history (it’s almost as if Putin is orchestrating the entire thing), we’re literally paying Iran and Russia billions of dollars every day to kill our men and women in uniform.

That throughline isn’t bad luck or complicated geopolitics: it’s one sick, sick man.

A man forged by a brutal, loveless father who raised his children with contempt instead of care. And a mother who was never there.

A man mentored by Roy Cohn — the most psychopathically ruthlessly and amoral mob-affiliated political fixer of the twentieth century — who taught him that reality is whatever you assert it to be if you say it loud enough and repeat it often enough, that you should never admit fault, never apologize, and always attack.

A nepo-baby who’s moved through seventy-nine years of life without ever once having to genuinely live with the consequences of his decisions, because there was always more inherited money to paper over the wreckage, more creditors to stiff with an army of lawyers, more gullible Republican marks to con, more toady sycophants to exploit, more people so simply in awe of his wealth or afraid of his bullying that all they can do is tell him what he wants to hear.

As I detail in The Last American President: A Broken Man, a Corrupt Party, and a World on the Brink, Fred Trump didn’t raise a president. He raised a wounded child who never grew up emotionally, but learned as an adult to use naked brutality to weaponize his own psychopathy. Who delights in the deaths and killings of others, who loves to watch people’s homes and cities blow up as if he were a ten-year-old playing a video game.

And now that man has control of the most powerful military in the history of human civilization and gleefully running roughshod over the guardrails against such power abuses that our Founders and Framers wrote into the Constitution.

Consider what this man has done to America and the world in just the past year:

He launched the largest U.S. tariff regime since 1932 (which provoked the Republican Great Depression), a chaotic, impulsive, constantly-shifting wall of taxes on our own imports that Harvard economists say have raised retail prices on clothing by more than 17 percent, building materials by more than 10 percent, and on household goods across the board.

The Tax Foundation calculates it as an average tax increase of $1,500 per American household this year (it was more last year). Walmart — not even remotely a progressive institution — reported that inflation on the general merchandise they sell has shot up more than three percent last quarter and said explicitly that Trump’s tariffs drove it. Goldman Sachs economists found that tariffs pushed inflation up by half a percentage point in 2025, and JPMorgan warned that what businesses have been absorbing is now getting passed to you, the consumer, rapidly.

Your grocery bill isn’t going up because of supply chains or some imaginary “global force.” It’s going up because a lifelong grifter who’s never read an economics textbook or the Constitution decided that tariffs were a display of strength, and strength is the only currency the wounded man raised by Fred Trump — a man once arrested at a Klan rally — has ever trusted.

He’s also used tariffs and threats of tariffs to intimidate countries into giving him gifts, bribes, and help for his boys to make billions in crypto and to build foreign hotels and golf courses in the most blatant corruption of the White House since the Republican Teapot Dome scandal (and Albert Fall was a piker compared to Trump and his family).

Then there’s the illegal war he conspired with Kushner, Netanyahu (and perhaps Witkoff’s buddy Putin) to wage against Iran. On February 28th, without a declaration from Congress, without a single NATO ally willing to join us, without any nation on Earth signing on, without going to the United Nations, and without any provocation or attack on America or American interests, Donald Trump lied our military into launching an assault on Iran falsely claiming they were about to attack the US.

This was not a targeted strike like the earlier effort to knock out their nuclear enrichment facilities: this is an actual war. A war that’s now killed at least 13 American service members and seriously wounded more than 200 (and those are the official numbers, which former military officials are already calling deeply under-reported). And thousands of innocent civilians.

A war that has effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, through which 20 percent of the world’s daily oil supply flows, sending Brent crude to $112 a barrel — up more than 80 percent since January — and pushing retail gas prices up nearly a dollar a gallon, with United Airlines cutting 5% of their flights because they’re already planning for oil to hit $175 a barrel (the result of the destruction of oil facilities by Iranian retaliation) and stay there through at least 2027.

He’s the first Western leader since Adolf Hitler to launch military attacks against multiple countries in rapid succession, without legislative authorization, without genuine self-defense justification, and without a single meaningful ally. That’s not hyperbole or hysteria on my part: that’s the actual series of events compared with very real history.

And the Republican Party — the party that once claimed to stand for constitutional government and congressional authority over declarations of war — has largely fallen silent or, in the case of bloodthirsty fools like Lindsay Graham, cheered on what may well become World War III.

To deal with the oil price explosion his illegal war created, the billionaire who runs Trump’s Treasury Department has now lifted sanctions on Iranian oil currently at sea, freeing up roughly 140 million barrels worth over $14 billion to the government of Iran: the government whose forces are killing American troops right now.

At the same time, Trump’s also quietly lifted sanctions on Russian oil, handing Vladimir Putin — whose drones have been raining down on Ukrainian civilians for years and whose intelligence is helping Iran kill American troops — a financial windfall that European allies called a “betrayal” and that the Kremlin greeted not with thanks but with a demand for more.

An Israeli policy analyst at the Institute for National Security Studies said it plainly to NBC News: “The U.S. is funding a war against itself.”

Senator Richard Blumenthal called it “sickeningly, shamefully stupid.” Former NSC spokesman Tommy Vietor called it “the biggest, dumbest concession ever given to Iran by the US.” Even Republican Congresswoman Nancy Mace posted: “Bombing Iran with one hand and buying Iran oil with the other.”

It’s like the old definition of insanity: we’re paying Russia and Iran — simultaneously — while Americans in uniform bleed and die at their hands in the theater of war that Donald Trump created without permission, without allies, and without a plan.

The families of those 13 dead Americans know that. The 200-plus wounded know that. The families of thousands of dead Middle Eastern families know that. And every American paying five dollars a gallon or more is quickly figuring it out.

This is what a lifelong grifter does when he’s never experienced real consequences for his actions in his entire life.

Not when he bullied people at prep school, not when he used a phony bonespurs X-ray to get out of serving in Vietnam, not when he cheated on every one of his three wives, not when he was accused of raping underage girls with Jeffrey Epstein, not when he ripped off his customers and refused to pay his vendors, not when he bankrupted dozens of companies including two casinos where he was busted for money laundering (who does that??), not when he lied his way into office, not when he solicited Russia’s help to win the 2016 election, not even when he tried to overthrow our democracy on January 6th 2021.

He acts. He declares victory. And when reality pushes back he always finds someone else to blame and then figures out a scheme to monetize the mess.

When Trump kept insisting throughout the first weeks of the war that we’d “won,” even as U.S. bases burned in Baghdad, he wasn’t lying strategically; he was doing the only thing his psychology has ever equipped him to do: bullshit his way through a crisis and wait for the sycophants around him to pick up the pieces.

There have always been people so in awe of his wealth and power that they’re willing to do what he wants no matter how bizarre or destructive: that’s the lesson his mentor Roy Cohn taught him that’s never left him. He’s left a trail of them — people broken by their association with him — behind him; just look at the folks who served in his first administration who’re now looking at financial ruin and even prison.

Meanwhile, here at home, the TSA has been going without pay since February 14th. Over five weeks. These are the men and women who show up every single day to keep weapons off our planes, and they’re sleeping in airport parking lots because they can’t afford the gas to drive home.

A food bank opened at Pittsburgh International Airport to feed federal employees who’re not getting paid. At major hubs like Boston Logan, Newark, Chicago O’Hare, Seattle-Tacoma, and Atlanta the lines are brutal, the sick-call rates are skyrocketing, and at least one senior TSA official warned this week that some airports may have to shut down entirely if the impasse doesn’t break.

Senate Democrats have put clean, standalone bills on the Senate floor to pay TSA officers — and only TSA officers, nothing else — six separate times. No tricks. No riders. No conditions beyond “pay the people keeping our airports safe.”

Six times, Republican senators — by name, Bernie Moreno of Ohio, James Lankford of Oklahoma, and Eric Schmitt of Missouri — walked to the floor and blocked them. Every single time.

The Republican argument is that Democrats won’t vote to fund the entire DHS, including ICE. What they aren’t saying is why Democrats won’t do that: because ICE agents have been operating without visible identification, hiding their faces behind masks, busting into American homes without warrants, and murdering American citizens in the streets with absolutely no accountability.

Renee Good, Alex Pretti, and others dead at the hands of masked goons who refuse to identify themselves and then flee the scene.

Democrats aren’t blocking TSA funding because they’re playing politics: they’re refusing to write a blank check for an agency that a federal judge — a Bush appointee who clerked for Antonin Scalia — found had violated court orders in 96 cases in 74 different situations in January alone.

Republicans are choosing to let TSA officers go without pay rather than agree to require ICE agents to wear a name badge or take off their masks. That’s the actual choice these ghouls have made in service to the madman in the White House.

That’s what’s happening in the United States Senate right now, in plain sight, while a psychopathic man hits little balls around at his shabby golf motel and posts to his failing, Nazi-infested social media site about his imaginary 100 percent approval rating.

This is what the death knell of a republic sounds and looks like when it’s torn to shreds from the inside. Complete with the upcoming gold coin bearing his face, like he thinks he’s Julius Caesar.

Armed, masked, anonymous stormtroopers (Stephen Miller says, “We are the Storm!”) and massive military vehicles with chemical weapons in the streets of American cities, and the steady, deliberate dismantling of every norm and institution and guardrail that stood between a wounded, entitled, pathologically dishonest man and unchecked power handed him by six Republicans on a corrupted Supreme Court.

The tariffs gutting working families. The illegal war with no consultation of Congress or the American people or our closest allies. The sanctions lifted on Iran and Russia to cover for the oil-price chaos the war created. The federal workers going without pay while Republicans block the bills that would help them.

All of it driven by the compulsions of one pathetic man who was broken in childhood, finished off by Roy Cohn, and handed the keys to American democracy by a political party that decided racism and raw power mattered more than our country.

Democracy doesn’t survive with mere passive observation: it requires enough people showing up in the streets, on social media, in the media, and at the ballot box to refuse to let it die.

The No Kings Day march is March 28th. Find your nearest event at indivisible.org and get out there. The general strike is May 1st: go to generalstrikeus.com, pledge now, and then call someone you know and ask them to do the same.

Donald Trump caught in stunning lies surrounding Iran War as he also claims ownership over TSA Airport delays

Donald Trump caught in stunning lies surrounding Iran War as he also claims ownership over TSA Airport delays

Ethan Wolf
Mar 23

Donald Trump just made one thing painfully clear: the chaos Americans are living through right now is not some random accident. It is the direct result of his decisions.

As the Department of Homeland Security shutdown drags on, TSA agents have now gone without pay for weeks. Americans are feeling it everywhere. Airport security lines are exploding. Delays are piling up. Frustration is rising. Families trying to travel are getting hammered by the consequences of a political stunt that Trump could help end, but refuses to.

And now we know why.

According to the latest reporting, Senate Republicans had a path to ease the crisis. There was a proposal on the table to fund the rest of DHS and deal with ICE funding separately later through reconciliation, where Republicans would not need Democratic votes. In other words, there was a way to stop the bleeding, keep the government functioning, and get TSA and other DHS agencies the resources they need.

Trump said no.

That means this shutdown belongs to him.

Instead of ending the madness, Donald Trump chose dysfunction. He chose chaos. He chose to keep Republicans in Washington fighting over DHS funding and his extreme SAVE America Act, which is his latest anti-voting legislation instead of letting the government function. He could have taken the off-ramp. He could have helped bring this mess to an end. Instead, he decided that political theater mattered more than the people stuck waiting in endless TSA lines and more than the workers being forced to do their jobs without pay.

This is what Trump leadership always looks like in the end: cruelty, incompetence, and unnecessary chaos for everybody else.

And as if that were not enough, Trump is now doing the a similar dance on the global stage.

Early this morning, energy markets moved sharply after Trump suggested there was a possible path toward reducing hostilities with Iran. That mattered because investors believed there may have been real discussions happening behind the scenes that could calm the situation and lower the risk of broader regional escalation.

Trump’s suggested reduction of hostilities was based off a comment he made suggesting the United States and the Iranian regime held discussions on lowering the temperature of the conflict. There was only one problem though.

Iran flatly said those talks never happened.

Let that sink in (and share this madness with your friends).

Trump went out in public and suggested there were negotiations underway that could help bring down tensions and stabilize energy costs. Iran’s response was essentially: that is false. That did not happen.

This is not a small mistake. This is not a misunderstanding. This is the President of the United States playing games with war, global energy markets, and the truth itself.

And the most dangerous part is that none of this appears to be driven by strategy. It looks like another attempt by Trump to manipulate the political environment around him, lower pressure on himself, and create the illusion of control where none actually exists.

That is not leadership. That is recklessness.

If Trump wants the country behind him during a dangerous international conflict, then he has a responsibility to explain what his goals are, what the strategy is, and why the American people should support it. Instead, he has done the opposite. He has offered no serious explanation, no coherent objective, and no meaningful effort to persuade independents or Democrats that he knows what he is doing.

He expects blind loyalty while delivering confusion and dishonesty.

At home, he owns the DHS shutdown. Abroad, he is muddying the waters around a potential war with Iran through statements that are immediately called into question. In both cases, the pattern is the same: create chaos, dodge accountability, and force everyone else to clean up the mess.

Americans deserve better than a president who treats government like a hostage situation and foreign policy like a PR exercise.

Donald Trump owns this shutdown. He owns the airport chaos. And if he is lying about negotiations tied to a possible wider war, then he owns that too.

This is what failed leadership looks like in real time.