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This week the Republican Party at long last stood up to Trump. What did it take? Trump backing primary opponents of two of their own in the Senate, resulting in both losing, and another in the House. Trump’s $1.776 billion (yes, note the patriotic reference in dollar amount) so-called “anti-weaponization” fund hit roadblocks in the Senate, leading that body to adjourn for Memorial Day weekend, as did the House to avoid a vote that would have required Trump to get Congressional approval to continue his war of choice in Iran.
Trump, by all accounts, is losing the Iran War. Although the three-month old war has been stalled for weeks, Trump used the pretext of an “imminent” deal as an excuse to skip his son’s wedding on Saturday. This seemed odd enough when his schedule showed him heading to his Bedminster golf course on Friday, but when rain was predicted, he instead returned to the White House where he spent the weekend claiming to be close to a deal, then backing off, then claiming to be close again, and so on. Trump also spent his weekend continuing his ample use of Truth Social to spread unhinged, AI-generated images and videos, at all hours of the day and night. Trump visited Walter Reed this week for his fourth medical exam since returning to office, raising continued concerns about his health, after which he again refused to give accurate information on the reason for the visit.
This week the fourth Trump cabinet member was pushed out, and for the fourth time, notably, it was a woman, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard. Her diminished role, as well as Marco Rubio being a place holder as National Security Advisor, and Trump’s gutting of the National Security Council, led many experts to question if Trump’s shrinking circle of increasingly solely loyalists and yes men had led to his ill-advised and poorly planned Iran War. As NYT columnist Thomas Friedman put it:
Now, and forever, Iranians will know that we know that Tehran can shut off the world’s most important oil tap anytime it wants. This new source of leverage for the Iranian regime is priceless.
Trump’s failure to anticipate this is no accident. It is because he thinks he knows everything — when he doesn’t at all.
By Amy Siskind4.7
388388 ratings
This week the Republican Party at long last stood up to Trump. What did it take? Trump backing primary opponents of two of their own in the Senate, resulting in both losing, and another in the House. Trump’s $1.776 billion (yes, note the patriotic reference in dollar amount) so-called “anti-weaponization” fund hit roadblocks in the Senate, leading that body to adjourn for Memorial Day weekend, as did the House to avoid a vote that would have required Trump to get Congressional approval to continue his war of choice in Iran.
Trump, by all accounts, is losing the Iran War. Although the three-month old war has been stalled for weeks, Trump used the pretext of an “imminent” deal as an excuse to skip his son’s wedding on Saturday. This seemed odd enough when his schedule showed him heading to his Bedminster golf course on Friday, but when rain was predicted, he instead returned to the White House where he spent the weekend claiming to be close to a deal, then backing off, then claiming to be close again, and so on. Trump also spent his weekend continuing his ample use of Truth Social to spread unhinged, AI-generated images and videos, at all hours of the day and night. Trump visited Walter Reed this week for his fourth medical exam since returning to office, raising continued concerns about his health, after which he again refused to give accurate information on the reason for the visit.
This week the fourth Trump cabinet member was pushed out, and for the fourth time, notably, it was a woman, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard. Her diminished role, as well as Marco Rubio being a place holder as National Security Advisor, and Trump’s gutting of the National Security Council, led many experts to question if Trump’s shrinking circle of increasingly solely loyalists and yes men had led to his ill-advised and poorly planned Iran War. As NYT columnist Thomas Friedman put it:
Now, and forever, Iranians will know that we know that Tehran can shut off the world’s most important oil tap anytime it wants. This new source of leverage for the Iranian regime is priceless.
Trump’s failure to anticipate this is no accident. It is because he thinks he knows everything — when he doesn’t at all.

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