Last week, Democrats were challenged with a simple question:
Does the American government exist to protect American citizens — or illegal aliens?
They refused to stand.
Today’s episode connects the dots between border policy, national security, Iranian nationals released into the U.S., sanctuary cities, and the broader geopolitical reshuffling following U.S. military action against Iran.
We examine:
Over 1,200 Iranian nationals reportedly released into the U.S. under Joe Biden
Over 2 million known “gotaways” at the southern border
A former member of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps allegedly released in Minneapolis
The role of sanctuary policies
The global fallout from U.S. strikes and the strategic implications for Russia, China, oil markets, and the dollar
Plus: Is this Iraq 2.0 — or something very different?
Opening Tease (On-Air Hook)
If the first duty of government is to protect its citizens…
why won’t some leaders say so out loud?
And how many unknown individuals crossed the border while Washington looked the other way?
Key Topics Covered
🇺🇸 State of the Union Showdown
Challenge issued by Donald Trump:
American safety or illegal immigration?
Reaction from Democratic lawmakers
🚨 Border Security Numbers
1,272 Iranian nationals reportedly released
Zero releases under prior Trump administration policies (per cited figures)
2+ million “known gotaways”
Vetting concerns with adversarial nations
🏙 Sanctuary City Flashpoint
Case involving alleged former IRGC member in Minneapolis
ICE detainers and local compliance debates
🌍 Global Chessboard Shift
Reaction from Russia and China
Oil market implications involving Iran and Venezuela
Petrodollar dynamics and currency impact
Strategic positioning in the Middle East
⚔ Military Strategy
No large-scale ground invasion signals
Emphasis on air power and high-tech capability
Avoiding Iraq/Afghanistan-style nation building
Comparison to past conflicts like Fallujah
Signature Soundbite
“You can’t vet someone from a regime that won’t even take your call.”
Core Argument Presented
This episode frames the issue as a national security vulnerability created by:
Border overwhelm
Inconsistent enforcement
Sanctuary policies
Adversarial nation infiltration risks
It also argues current military operations are strategic deterrence and geopolitical restructuring — not occupation or regime-driven nation building.
Debate Questions for Listeners
Should border policy factor in geopolitical conflict risks?
Are sanctuary policies creating national security blind spots?
Is this a short-term strike — or a long-term realignment of global power?
📞 Call or Text: 800-905-0989
Sound off and join the debate.