Breaking Points with Krystal and Saagar - 4/8/26: Trump Fell For Bibi Lies Before War, Alex Jones Freaks On Trump, Ben Shapiro Meltdown, Professor Pape On Escalation
Episode Date: April 8, 2026Ryan and Emily discuss Bibi lied to Trump in cabinet meeting, Alex Jones freaks on Trump, Ben Shapiro meltdown over Ryan Iran reporting, Professor Pape says trap is not over. Robert Pape: https...://escalationtrap.substack.com/ Jeremy Scahill: https://x.com/jeremyscahill?s=20 To become a Breaking Points Premium Member and watch/listen to the show AD FREE, uncut and 1 hour early visit: www.breakingpoints.comMerch Store: https://shop.breakingpoints.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Well, yesterday, the New York Times dropped a massive story bylined by Jonathan Swan
and Maggie Haberman going through the kind of TikTok account leading up to the war and how
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu when he visited in mid-February, February 11th is
the date here, spoke to the president and laid out what he believed was a, the, the, how would we
describe this, Ryan, the likely case of scenarios should Trump launch another air campaign against
Iran? This was a big, big story. And I've seen some people saying, well, now we all trust the New York
Times again, because it's got some huge details about what different members of Trump's cabinet,
what different advisors were saying to him. If Jonathan Swan's byline is on a Trump story,
I mean, Maggie Haberman has obviously a lot of access as well, but if Jonathan's one's byline is on anything, I'm taking it very, very seriously.
I think they're both tremendous reporters, and they're very well-sourced, and they are the kinds of people that are going to get a story like this.
And the way these are, I haven't done inside the Situation Room ones, really, but like these Oval Office or like top congressional leadership stories are.
they're fun to do because once you get one person telling you what happened in the meeting,
it's so fun from there because then you go to everybody else.
Telephone.
And you're like, so this is what Vance says happened.
And they're like, and once you've got it, then everyone else comes.
And they're like, oh, okay, you already have it clearly, but you only have it from one perspective.
Let me tell you my perspective.
So that's clearly what happened here.
Somebody came to them and was like, here's what happened in these couple meetings.
and then they were able to go to everybody else.
And then they were obviously able to say,
do you have any notes?
Because they have some direct quotes in here.
Yes.
So let's roll.
I was going to say this is verbatim quotes.
And we'll start here with C2.
This is what happened.
So again, we're on February 11th.
The black SUV carrying Prime Minister Netanyahu
arrived at the White House just before 11 a.m.
The Israeli leader reports of times,
who had been pressing for months for the U.S.
to agree to a major assault in Iran,
was whisked inside with little ceremony.
out of view of reporters primed for one of the most high-stakes moments in his long career.
U.S. and Israeli officials gathered first in the cabinet room, then Mr. Netanyahu headed downstairs
for the main event, a highly classified presentation on Iran for Trump and his team in the situation room,
which was rarely used for in-person meetings with foreign leaders. I was really surprised by that detail,
Ryan. Mr. Trump sat down, but not in his usual position at the head of the room's mahogany
conference table, instead the president took a seat on one side, facing the large screens mounted along the wall.
Netanyahu sat on the other side, directly opposing the president. All right. So the story then goes on to report verbatim quotes from people throughout Trump's cabinet, which makes us wonder, I guess I can speak for both of us, Ryan, if somebody was operating off of a recording and it was impossible for people to deny these verbatim quotes.
I think notes.
Notes, possibly, yeah, that would make sense too. So here's general...
I don't think you're in there recording.
I would think not. I would think not. I would think not.
I mean, Trump can.
So this is a long quote, for example.
So this is from Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Dan Raisin-Kane, who says,
sir, this is, in my experience, standard operating procedure for the Israelis.
They oversell, and their plans are not always well-developed.
They know they need us, and that's why they're hard selling.
So this is Trump going around the room asking his advisors for their response to what they had heard the day before.
So this is the day after Trump is in a meeting with these advisors.
So you'll get a sense of who was in the room.
But February 12th, you have CIA head John Ratcliffe there.
Obviously, Dan Cain is in there.
Let's keep going through these quotes.
J.D. Vance says, according to the Times, you know I think this is a bad idea.
But if you want to do it, I'll support you.
John Ratcliffe, head of the CIA, quote, offered no opinion on whether to proceed,
but he discussed the stunning new intelligence that the Iranian leadership was about to gather
in the Ayatollah's compound in Tehran.
The CIA director told the president that regime change was possible depending on how the term
was defined.
Quote, if we just mean killing the supreme leader, we can probably do that.
And then we also go through Marco Rubio, who said basically, according to the times,
the Israeli assessment was bullshit.
Yeah.
So basically, yeah, so the Israelis, so Netanyahu said,
Netanyahu came in and made a hard,
his hard pitch was February 11th.
And he's, and he makes four points, right?
So the first point he makes is we can decapitate the regime.
And there was this meeting with Ayatollah's meeting above ground with a bunch of leadership.
So we can take him out.
He then says,
then degrade Iran's capacity to attack its allies.
Like, I mean, not its allies, our allies, the Gulf allies.
And they'll be so weak, they won't be able to block the Strait of Ramoos.
We will be able to overthrow the regime, and we will be able to replace them with a secular regime.
So those were the four things that Netanyahu claimed were possible.
So then they ask the CIA overnight to go over this stuff.
They come back the next day for this February 12th meeting, which you're talking about here.
That's when Rubio says, no, this is bullshit.
And then there's a February 26th meeting, by the way, which is where, so there's February 11th,
and that's in February 12th, and then February 26.
Let's linger on February 12th just a little bit, because that's where Ratcliffe also says,
he's the head of the CIA.
He's like, what do you think about this assessment from the Israelis that these four things are possible?
You know, CIA calls it Farsicle.
Yes.
Ratcliffe says they always do this.
Oh, no, Kane says they always do this.
Ratcliffe's like, yeah, no.
Like, nobody, like they didn't really think that this was accurate.
Now, CIA says, yes, can we kill the Ayatollah and top leaders?
Yeah, we can probably do that.
And the CIA seems to have botched a little bit our ability to stop them from attacking the Gulf allies.
So they were even wrong about that.
But the CIA was very clear.
you're not going to do a regime change. It's very unlikely.
And you're not going to replace them with a secular leader.
Even though, again, Netanyahu was telling Trump. And Trump, according to the story,
Netanyahu lays all this out and Trump says basically some version of sounds good.
Yeah. And then CI says, well, you can't actually accomplish that. And Trump says, well,
that's their problem. And the Times rights, it's not clear if he even meant regime change was
Israel's problem or the Iranian people's problem. Either way, Trump's like, all right, so actually
the thing you're saying you want to do, we can't actually do, but we can kill the Ayatollah?
All right.
So anyway, go ahead.
Well, no, let's flash forward to February 26, where, again, according to the Times story,
and we can speculate on the sourcing for it, obviously they're sourcing across the board
because they have, again, direct quotes from multiple meetings, but it's clear, with the
possible exception of Heggseth, utterly tepid reactions across the board from Trump's advice.
Nobody really, other than Hegseth, wants to do this, it seems like.
Yeah, nobody's excited about it.
Everybody is supporting Trump and making it very clear that they support Trump,
which is obviously cowardly, if you oppose staunchly.
Turns out it was important in Trump won to have people that would push back against him.
Good point.
Get these clowns in there who were against it but won't say it.
Plus Hegseth, and we get a war.
Right. So this February 26 meeting is Ratcliffe, Vance, Susie Wiles,
White House counsel, David Warrington, Stephen Chung, Caroline Levitt, and Dan Cain, Hegeseth, Rubio.
So president opens up the meeting.
They go around the room.
This is where J.D. says, you know, I think this is a bad idea.
But if you want to do it, I support you.
Susie Wiles says, if Trump feels he needs to proceed for America's national security, then he should go ahead.
Ratcliffe says, if we just mean killing the Supreme Leader, we can probably do that.
So it depends on how you define regime change.
White House counsel says it's, quote, a legally permissible.
option in terms of how the plan had been conceived by U.S. officials and presented to the president.
That's how the Times describes it and did not offer a personal opinion.
Stephen Chung apparently laid out the likely public relations fallout.
Quote, Mr. Trump had run for office opposed to further wars.
People had not voted for conflict overseas.
The plans were contrary to everything the administration had said after the bombing campaign
against Iran in June goes on to say, you know, that whatever decision Mr. Trump made would be the right one.
Caroline Levitt said it was his decision and that the press team would manage it as best they could.
Hagseth says they would have to take care of the Iranians eventually, so they might as well do it now.
They could run the campaign in a certain amount of time with a given level of forces.
Rubio says if our goal is regime change or an uprising, we shouldn't do it.
But if the goal is to destroy Iran's missile program, that's a goal we can achieve.
Everyone deferred to the president's instincts.
and Trump ended basically by saying, I think we need to do it.
And so good for them.
We did actually diminish Iran's missile supply because Iran blew up all its missiles in Gulf countries and in Israel.
Congratulations.
But you got them to fire off their missiles.
And yeah, the missiles blew up, but they blew up inside petrochemical plants, oil refineries,
at American military bases that are now uninhabited.
and hit hundreds, maybe thousands of sites, targets in Israel.
But did we actually destroy their ability to quickly reconstitute the missile supply?
Because, right.
Because a bunch of people ask that, too, they're like, well, hey boss, like, can't they just get more missiles?
Right.
Well, especially if they're charging for people to come in and out of Hormuz.
Every ship, you can buy a couple missiles or buy a ton of little drones.
And my understanding is that it's actually fairly, it's a relatively,
quick timeline for them to reconstitute their...
There are trains that run from China to Iran.
You just load the trains up.
Pay it for it.
Well, this is Eli...
Exactly, with the money they're making from Hormuz.
This is Eli Lake writing in the free press this morning, arguing...
No fan of yours.
Quote, in five weeks of war, although Eli was very opposed to the way Trump was talking about wiping out a civilization.
I do know this.
This is distant.
Very, very...
Cousin by marriage.
Yes. Quote, in five weeks of war, the regime has lost its Navy, most of its missile launchers, and a good chunk of its defense industrial base, along with the top tier of its political and military leadership. Add to this the damage already done to its nuclear program in last June's 12-day war, there are more than 900 pounds of uranium buried under the rubble of what used to be underground enrichment facilities. A year ago, Iran was on the brink of obtaining a nuclear weapon and the ballistic missiles to deliver it as far as Europe. Today, the regime's military has been reduced to a shell of itself.
That is, as Eli puts it in the headline, Trump's Madman Act delivering in Iran.
What say you, Ryan?
Excellent.
Go ahead.
Like, swallow that cope and let's end the war.
Good.
Whether Eli believes that or not, I have no idea.
I doubt it.
But let's just let him pretend to believe it and let all of his allies pretend to believe it.
And we'll just move on.
Yep, you won.
Good win.
Good job.
The New York Times also had this.
this point from the reporting that Tucker had been coming to the Oval Office, Tucker Carlson,
several times over the previous year to warn Trump that a war with Iran would destroy his presidency
and then a couple of weeks before the war began, according to Swan and Haberman.
Quote, Mr. Trump, who had known Mr. Carlson for years, tried to reassure him over the phone.
I know you're worried about it, but it's going to be okay because it always is,
is what he said when Tucker asked how Trump knew it would be okay.
Because it always is.
25th Amendment, man.
Ryan, so this was the Bullwark podcast with Tim Miller and Josh Gottheimer that you flagged,
which is interesting because to your point about swallowing the cope,
Chris Murphy was out, as you referred to it yesterday, it was on CNN playing a dangerous game,
is what you said.
So let's get to the Democratic response a bit.
Yeah, we'll have, we'll have, yeah, Murphy in a second.
Godheimer, so
watch this entire interview
or debate actually turns into between Tim Miller
and Godheimer
but as the New York Times
as Marco Rubio already said by the way
the timing of the war was driven by Israel
we now know that
Marco Rubio thought
the Israeli arguments for the war
were BS. That's a direct
quote from Rubio. That gives
color and context to Rubio
then blaming Israel.
for why we launched the war when we did.
Like that, you know, that, that helps us to understand
that that was not a kind of accident
or a Freudian slip or something.
It was, Rubio was not happy at that moment
that the war had started.
And that we had launched it.
On Israeli terms.
On Israeli terms that he considered to be bullshit.
Which gives new meaning to the quote
that he said about the imminent threat,
why we had to act because of the imminent threat
that was,
he said it was basically
the imminent threat was that we were threatened by Israel, making their attack. So Israel makes the attack,
and then it's going to blow back on the U.S., so that's why we had to act preemptively, because we knew.
So he said it would have had to have happened at some point, but the immediate precipitating factor was that Israel was going to move.
So we needed to move to prevent the blowback. That is interesting in light of Rubio calling Netanyahu's precipitating factor activity bullshit.
Yeah, and now we know that Netanyahu made this 90-minute hard stuff.
cell in the situation room on February 11th, and that precipitated the decision-making to go in.
So Miller asked Josh Gottheimer, who is consistently competes for not just Democrats' top
Israel defender, but maybe all in all of Congress.
So here he is.
Here's Tim Miller asking Godheimer if he's allowed to say that Netanyahu urged
the U.S. to go to war.
Now, given all we know, and Godhommer
will not give an inch. Here, it's D6.
One thing, like, we both are,
I'm concerned about the increasing anti-Semitism
in this country. I know you are, you've talked about it.
And I just, and, and so
it worries me,
like, I think that an average American
That's why I'm not on Pikes, that's why I'm not on Pikesh
showing on yours. Okay, we can talk about that next.
It worries, I think that an average American
would look at
this war that we're in
and say, I don't understand,
what our direct interest is.
It's costing me more at the pump.
Iran was,
we were not responding to a recent terror attack on us from Iran.
Obviously, Iran's been attacking us for a long time through proxies.
But like, if you're just an average American,
you're like,
I don't understand why we're doing this.
I hear that,
that Bibi Netanyahu was encouraging Trump to do it.
Like,
I don't think that it's crazy for regular people to look at this in this country and say,
okay,
and it seems like Israel was influencing us to get into
this war. And I don't know why we can't just say that. I think it creates distrust when we can't
just say what is true. Like that's just true. Tim, how do you know, but you're just asserting some to
what you just did is exactly what I have a problem. You are, you are basing something on like,
we have no facts that you know that you, that you, that you weren't in the room. I mean, you think
the New York Times is wrong. There was a February 11th meeting in the situation room. B.B.
was in the situation room. You don't think, you think that's, you think that's fake news? Do I think,
think the president and the prime minister have met and talked about Iran many times over the years,
like President Biden did with the prime minister, like President Obama did with the prime minister.
Going back to the beginning of time, do I think people have talked about these threats together,
our allies? Absolutely. Do I know what-
You didn't talk to any other allies? He didn't talk to Japan. He didn't talk to Europe.
Do I know, like, actually what caused the decision? No. And, and, you know,
By the way, the New York Times doesn't know.
And the only people who know were people who were like in the decision inner circle
about what actually made them make the decision.
It seems like BB was in the decision inner circle.
They planned it together.
When we have gone to, gone into other conflicts before, like, like Obama did, like Biden just did.
Like, do you think that he didn't have consultation with our allies?
Of course he did.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
I don't understand why people just won't, why we can't just say this.
Why we can't just say it's true?
There's a huge difference between saying somebody made us do it.
They pushed us into it versus saying, sure, we consulted with our allies and we thought it was the best for America's national security.
So I don't know, Emily.
I think that this stuff is over.
Like, that's just like psychedelic.
Like it's like the New York, like you can't even say that Netanyahu urged the U.S. to go to war when Netanyahu went to the situation room and gave a 90-minute hard
sell urging the U.S. to go to war. Like, Trump still has agency. Trump is to blame for taking
the man's advice. 100%. It is still a fact that Netanyahu, in February, spent 90 minutes in
the situation room with Mossad and the military commanders behind him on the screens, making the
case to war, and Trump bought the case. Like, that is a historical fact. To tell people that you can't
say that is just actually bizarre.
Oh, it's completely bizarre, but they're still doing it.
That's where, I mean, we've heard it how many times over the last month.
It's relentless.
And Josh Gottheimer, a Democrat is still doing it.
How many days into the war?
It's just absurd.
After Marco Rubio himself made this point, after multiple Trump advisors, Mike Johnson came out
and said what happened.
So, I mean, like, what are we doing?
Obviously, people like Josh Gottheimer know that public opinion is swinging in the wrong direction, and they're tripling down on making that situation worse.
Yeah. There's also, I think there's Godheimer's locked in. Like, this is, this is who he is. He's not changing.
You know, but that was just insane. Like, and we'll talk about some more of that interview in the next segment.
Because the whole thing is just Tim just like begging him to like be reasonable and Godheimer refusing.
Well, and to level with him.
Yeah.
Just to level it.
What's wrong with saying that Netanyahu went to this?
It's like urged him because he did.
Because again, for Israel, and I don't actually disagree with this.
For Israel, it's an existential question.
For Iran in this case, when you have the American president a nuclear power saying that it's an entire civilization on the line to never come
back again, that's existential. So nuclear war puts, nuclear weapons put countries around the world
in existential positions, which is one of the constantly in existential positions, which is one of
the realities of the last not even 100 years that we haven't quite reckoned with that has wreaked
havoc around the world, that is just the existence of nuclear weapons, puts countries in
existential threats constantly, and that creates paranoia. And the paranoia creates irrationality.
And that's where you have, I think, again, this tripling down over and over again on an irrational argument.
It's stemming from a paranoia.
And the paranoia itself might be irrational.
But again, it's coming from the fact that there are countries armed with nuclear weapons.
And that's around the entire world.
So it sounds like woo and silly, but it actually is really true.
It creates complete irrationality and paranoia in geopolitics.
And so for Netanyahu, it is, you're...
you're coming to the White House and making this case.
And I can look at that as an American who is just offended by the way we are treated by Netanyahu
and say, from his perspective, it's not the most insane thing in the world to try to go to Americans
into this war.
He thinks he's acting in his own interest.
Now, I don't think he's actually acting in his own interest, but he does.
And, you know, the country that has nuclear weapons, of course, is Israel.
and Israel spent the whole 1980s
arming Iran
to get them to fight their other enemy, Iraq.
And so my advice to Israel, if it wants to take it,
because they've taken their own advice for a very long time,
it doesn't seem to be going well for them.
Take mine.
Stop treating everybody around you as an existential threat
and try coexistence.
And also, if you can arm Iran in the 1980s,
why can't you just reach a peace deal with them now?
and just end the occupation
like stop expanding your territory
like become a real state
states have borders
like if you're
Israel has a right to exist
okay well then Israel should
is a state
like if you think you have a right to exist
then as a state be a state
stop being this weird thing that has no borders
it just keeps moving its borders
wherever it feels like that's not a state
I don't know what that is
it's not a state in the way we understand
understand it.
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I go beyond the headlines with the people building our future.
This week, an interview with one of the most influential figures in Silicon Valley,
OpenAI CEO Sam Alman.
I think society is going to decide that creators of AI products
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Speaking of irrational behavior, Ryan, let's move to the 25th Amendment, because there are plenty
of people on the right, interestingly enough, who were calling it yesterday on the brink of
potential total war, potential nuclear war, for Trump to be 25th Amendment.
Amendment did, if we convert that into a verb.
Now, Julian, your guy at Dropside, Julian's great worth of follow.
Julian Andrione has been collecting responses from members of Congress,
mostly Democrats, perhaps entirely Democrats here in this thread that he had on X,
Democratic members of Congress calling for Donald Trump to be pushed out via the 25th Amendment.
That saying, for example, he is unfit for office.
That's a common language.
Alhan Omar said, quote, this is not okay.
Invoked the 25th Amendment, impeach removed, this unhinged lunatic,
must be removed from office.
This is in response to the quote,
open the fucking straight, you crazy bastards post,
reasonable. Ed Markey said,
Donald Trump must be removed from office.
Not only is he waging illegal war,
he's threatening war crimes.
It goes on and on.
One person captured here in the thread
is former congresswoman,
Marjorie Taylor Green,
who is former congresswoman,
partially because she was starting
to break with Trump on foreign policy issues
in the summer
and in the fall.
Now, Marjorie Taylor Green knows Trump.
It's worth mentioning.
And I would venture to say knows Trump well.
It was on the campaign trail with Trump, was meeting with Trump, and has been fairly close to him for a long time.
She said, 25th Amendment, all caps, not a single bomb has dropped on America.
We cannot kill an entire civilization.
This is evil and madness.
This was in response to a post that this was yesterday.
Trump said, all whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again, that we have referenced several times here.
Meanwhile, as that was happening, let's move on to D2.
Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, both basketball posting, basketball maxing yesterday, Ryan.
Congratulations to Coach Dusty May, Barack Obama posts.
This team dominated the tournament from start to finish well-deserved go blue.
Bill Clinton, once again, the best college hoops teams proved there's nothing like March Madness
to get our drage dropping, our hearts raising, and our brackets busting.
Surely this was written by Bill Clinton, who could not even remember the last time he sent
an email in the Epstein deposition.
Speaking of our hearts racing, there's a potential nuclear war.
So if you got your bracket busted by two number one seeds in the finals, that's kind of funny.
Let's go on to, yeah, that's kind of funny.
Let's go on here to Alex Jones, though.
Meanwhile, you have Barack Obama and Bill Clinton basketball posting.
Alex Jones calling for the 25th Amendment.
This is some video of him saying that.
How do we 25th Amendment is asked?
The problem is to get the 25th Amendment's harder than impeachment.
You have to get two-thirds of the House and two-thirds of the Senate.
So what do we do?
Tackle Trump and let him pretend he's president and publicly report that he's going through a health issue and Vance takeover.
It literally needs to be something like that.
It's that bad.
I am in the twilight zone right now.
I am officially in the twilight zone right now.
And I'm sitting there watching Trump, wreck Maga, wreck the Republicans,
wreck the world economy, maybe wrecked the planet physically.
And then I'm just looking over at the Democrats,
smiling and giggling and everything else when they did nothing in Congress to block this.
Playing with fire, gambling again.
There should be a coalition of Republicans and Democrats, and they should vote in on the war powers and say you don't have it, and they should cut the damn funding of this.
My God, what's it going to take? Trump ending the world?
So Alex Jones, I also saw Candace Owens, Marjorie Taylor Green.
Ryan, obviously, Tucker Carlson, I don't know if he said anything about the 25th Amendment.
I don't think he did.
Actually, I have his reaction that he sent in his email newsletter right in front of me.
Basically, he's saying, this is what happened after Midnight Hammer.
He feels like we're back in the holding pattern, post-midnight hammer holding pattern, which is.
not at all in insane position to have at this moment, but brutal reaction from these Trump.
I mean, these are people who have talked to Trump. It's worth mentioning. People who know him.
Long-time allies who are blowing up their relationship with him over this. That's done non-trivial things
when you're talking about the president of the United States. Hakeem Jeffries was on CNN yesterday,
and he said, you know what we need to do? We need to bring up the war powers resolution immediately.
said Mike Johnson, he's to call Congress back into session.
We need to bring up the war powers.
Are you, this is satire, right? Are you joking?
Like, Jeffreys and Greg Meeks had a top Democrat on Foreign Affairs
refused to bring up the war powers resolution
before going into recess with Trump threatening this massive escalation.
They said they didn't have enough votes, does not appear to be the case.
They hadn't made sure that they even had full attention.
to have the vote.
And now that we have a ceasefire,
now Jeffreys says he's going to bring
the war powers resolution to the floor?
It's insane.
Now, so good for a bunch of these Democrats
who are saying, like, this is a madman.
It used to be 25th Amendment.
Good for Alex Jones.
Like, this is a good coalition.
Some other Democrats, though,
have, I think, taken the,
taken the kind of easy political way forward, which at its heart is psychopathic.
Trump threatened to annihilate an entire civilization and then didn't do it. And some Democrats
are responding by saying, ah, you wimp. It's like, grow. No, no. What, like, what are you trying
to do? Before we roll this clip of Senator Chris Murphy, Democrat from Connecticut, I was last night,
as this news was breaking, I had CNN on the TV and trying to figure out what's happening.
I had it on mute.
Well, that's not helping.
No.
Well, no, I wanted to specifically see how CNN would react.
That's basically all you're going to learn from CNN.
And I see this come up on the screen with the Chiron and everything.
And my thought was, we are about to go back to war in an even worse and more brutal, destructive way as soon as I saw this.
and because it's like they're trying,
it's almost like they were trying to humiliate Trump
and humiliate him back into war.
That's what it looked like.
Oh my gosh, we're about to die.
Trump, who clearly must watch this show.
Think about this, Donald.
If Democrats desperately want you to get back into this war,
okay, they are, that's immoral, it's gross, it's despicable.
But think about why they want you to get into the war
because it's so damaging for you.
So don't do this.
the thing that Democrats want you to do. Come on, man. All right, let's roll D4, Senator Chris Murphy.
Donald Trump has agreed to give Iran control of the Strait of Hormuz. That is extraordinary.
If you go deeper into the statement from the Iranian National Security Council,
they claim that Trump has also agreed to Iran's right to enrichment to suspend all sanctions
against Iran and to allow Iran to keep their missile program, their digital program, their
drone program and their nuclear program. Now, who knows if any of that is true, but if at the very
least this agreement gives Iran the right to control the straight, that is cataclysmic for the world.
And it is just stunning that that's where we have gotten to. Okay, so then, okay, it's cataclysmic for
the world. What is Chris Murphy saying there? That we should keep doing more war?
Like is he think like
Clearly like they think that there's some political advantage
And making Trump look like the obvious idiot he is
For getting into a war he shouldn't have gotten into
And there is
And now we're worse off
Yeah but everybody gets that
Right there's obviously a political advantage
But to make it in that particular way
It's like putting it seems to me
I think you're right about this
Putting partisanship out of the substance
Of actually keeping the peace
It's true
Trump got us into a war
now we're worse off.
But when you talk like that,
it sounds like you should keep,
like your argument is like,
well, let's keep going.
Unless you start it with,
I'm glad that he ended this
and he best not started again.
Yeah.
And I'm just,
Griffin just sent this,
producer Griffin just sent this post.
This was just to underscore
how ridiculous it is
to see a Democrat talking like this.
From Megan Kelly,
obviously my boss
who said yesterday on her show,
I am sick of the shit.
Can't he just behave like,
a normal human.
Who Trump?
Yep, in reference to Trump.
And we can add it in post?
But this is, again, why, and we'd be talking.
Or is the Twitter post?
This was on, this was a video, but it was on yesterday's show.
But we've been talking on Monday about how you have to,
when the president of the United States is talking about wiping out entire civilizations
and total destruction, it doesn't matter if it's a taco negotiation.
You have to take it seriously.
It very obviously seemed like a taco negotiation, but you don't have the luxury of saying,
oh, this is just a taco.
I'll take Trump seriously when I decide to take Trump seriously.
I'll take Trump seriously and I'll just take the L if I'm wrong, that he's not serious.
You can't do that with nuclear powers.
We don't know of the luxury.
I'm sorry, we don't have the luxury of doing that.
And then to have Democrats continuing to act as though this is normal partisan politics,
obviously Republicans are doing it too and even worse because they're supporting Trump.
So it's not good all around, but then to have even the political opposition
taking partisan dubs
when you have
total destruction
of a civilization
on the table
as unlikely as that
may have seemed
it doesn't matter
what the odds are
any talk of that
takes away the luxury
of just saying
it's possibly a taco
and here you have
the DEM victory lap
like oh Trump is so weak
right
it's as bad as the CNBC clip
that's been going
to viral Cerroda posted
it's like
Trump has threatened
to end civilization
what should investors do
What does this mean for the Dow?
So Tim, Tim Miller over at the bulwark, who's been on fire.
I'll probably get him in trouble by even saying that.
So he had Democrat Josh Godheimer on.
Godheimer wouldn't even say he's against the war.
He's sort of processing that it's going through the ceasefire.
Let's roll some of Biller's interview with Godheimer.
Back to the other thing we were talking about?
No, obviously not.
And I said that.
Yeah, obviously not.
So why would we trust him to do something if we know he isn't going to handle
well. This is a very high-stakes situation. I don't think anybody, you know, the straight of our moves is now been closed.
We've got the best generals in the world, it's not just Donald Trump that runs this. We've got the best generals in the world and the best military in the world, the best military in the world, the best intelligence in the community.
I mean, but our generals are not the ones that are bleeding out. A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again. That's the president. That's their boss.
Yes, but okay, but fine. So why would you, so, yeah, it's absurd. Why would you let a guy that would tweet that be in charge of a war where American lives?
are at risk. Because who's going to be, we have a commander in chief. That's his job. What do you want?
Yeah, to oppose them, I think. To oppose, to say that as a Democratic representative, you do not think that an unhinged
commander in chief should be getting us into a war where he's promising genocide in Iran.
The reason why I opposed it, why I supported the war powers resolution a couple weeks ago, because I opposed
him. I made it very clear. But like, that doesn't mean that I'm not going to support our service,
men and women. It doesn't mean I'm not going to back the great work of our military and intelligence
community. It doesn't mean that I'm not going to say the government of Iran needs to be crushed.
Okay.
That's what I think.
So you're kind of forwarding the abstract.
Like you wish it would work well, but you don't know what the objectives are and you don't want to do anything to constrain it.
I have a huge problem with how this thing's being executed from how it's being executed.
The goal of crushing Iran, I think is, I think the goal of crushing Iran is the right thing.
I think not giving us hearings is a problem.
I think not giving us more information, the country and the Congress is a huge problem.
I think firing the Army Chief of Staff, huge problem, right?
So you asked me, if you asked me, like, do I think the goal of massively diminishing Iran is a good thing?
Totally.
Do I think the way this is being executed is going well?
No.
So do you think we're in a better place now than we were six weeks ago, economically, geopolitically, from a safety standpoint, do you think we're in a better, a worse place than we were six weeks ago?
I think if we've diminished their military, I think we're stronger if we've diminished them.
Really?
What's nice about Godhammer, I think it's like I think he's speaking openly in ways that a lot of Democrats feel privately.
And that is, I don't think that's going to be the case.
Maybe a couple cycles from now.
I think there's a real reckoning coming inside the Democratic Party, whether they like it or not, whether they cancel Hassan Piker or not.
But.
Yeah, that'll do it.
But yeah, that from Godheimer, I don't like the president, but I like that he's going to war with Iran, is gross.
And he's in a deep minority of being willing to say that publicly.
But yeah, my understanding is that that's a pretty pervasive view kind of privately.
And on the other hand, should add that it's also, since we're talking about the bulwark, wildly amusing to see neo-conservatives,
coping by being so anti-Trump that the war they've wanted forever is still not good enough in
one way or the other. I mean, just banana stuff all around. Although Tim was never a neo-combe.
No, not Tim, no, but speaking of the bullwork. Other bullwork. Yeah, yeah, exactly. Yeah,
there's interesting times. Speaking of people crashing out, should we talk about Ben Shapiro?
Yes, let's do it.
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Well, Ryan and his colleagues over at DropSight News have found themselves in the crosshairs
of people who are in support of or were in support of the Iran War, including Ben Shapiro,
who, you know, I think Ryan, I'm catching astray in this clip as well.
Are you?
Because he talks about how you're part of the horseshoe, which would involve your right-wing
allies.
Are you the woke right?
Let's not open up that candleworms.
First, let's just roll the clip.
People can make up their own minds.
Ryan Grimm, who's become a favorite on the horseshoe right and the grievance party right,
suddenly quoted by all of these people who have decided that isolationism is the way.
He put out an actual tweet saying this.
So Sean McGuire, who's an investor, put out a tweet saying,
how did we get to the point where so many Americans are rooting against America?
And Ryan Grimm, over at DropSight News, which is a left-wing misinformation propaganda site,
put out the statement, quote, if this is an honest question, I'd say Americans are rooting against
America because we facilitated a genocide. Presumably, this would be Israel's action against
Hamas, which was not, in fact, even remotely close to a genocide, and followed it with a surprise
attack on a girls' elementary school, followed by attacks on universities, medical centers,
more schools, a world-famous pharmaceutical research center, a volleyball team, an unfinished
bridge we claimed was transporting weapons, and then a nuclear power plant. We are now promising
endless attacks on civilian infrastructure. Okay, so again, every single thing he is saying there
is a lie. And the reason I say it's a lie is because we have hit those sites, because they are
dual-use sites, except for the ones that we hit by accident. If you truly believe that the American
military is so evil that we target girls' schools for the fun of it, that there's no military
usefulness, no mistakes made, that we just decided to get up one morning and murder a bunch
of school girls. Get the hell out of the country. Seriously, you hate the country and you hate the
military. There's no other way to explain what you are saying. There's no other way to explain it. You
think Pete Hegseth and President Trump are sitting around drawing up a target list and they say,
you know what, just for good measure, let's kill a bunch of Iranian schoolgirls. Is that what you
think? If you think that you despise America. Again, you can oppose the war. You can oppose the way
that the war is being fought. You can have problems with the general overall strategy. You can have
honest questions about the war. That's not what we're talking about here. We're talking about people
openly hoping that America loses because they do not like America, because they think a more
powerful America in the world is a bad thing. And Iran is counting on these people to undermine support.
Again, this is nothing new. This happened throughout American history. If you go back to the Vietnam War,
the Viet Cong were counting on more on university students to claim that the real bad guys
versus, you know, the communists who were murdering hundreds of thousands of people, that the real bad
guys were actually the United States. And that's why you had them literally chanting in solidarity
with Ho Chi Men. Same sorts of people now. And they span a lot of
swath of the left and a large part of the right now, or at least a significant part of the
online right. I shouldn't say a large part of the right, because, again, it's not true. But Ryan Grimm and
Tucker Carlson are holding hands walking off into their common isolationist anti-American future
together. That's sweet. It's very sweet, isn't it? It does often occur to me that one of the biggest
problems I have with you is you're not sufficiently supportive of the Vietnam War.
Well, I mean... You cocked on Vietnam. You know what's funny is that just yesterday,
Secretary of State Marco Rubio posted a tweet that was laudatory of the Vietnamese communist government.
So like, hey, if Rubio can recognize the virtues of Ho Chi men, why can't university students in the 60s 70s?
Also, the Vietnamese were fighting off an occupying power in their own country.
Well, this...
They liberated their country from two occupying powers.
in the United States. Obviously,
like, on what planet is
that appropriate for us to even be in there?
It wasn't, yeah.
Anyway.
We need not.
You know, when I...
I was saying when I saw this clip, I flashed back
to this discussion that we had right before
Christmas where we interviewed each other, one of the
questions I asked you, I was like, Grand, you love
the Fourth of July. Do you love America?
And you responded, I can't imagine loving a country.
That's right. How do you love a country?
So, Ben, you should go watch that clip.
He wants the full download on grimism.
Ben, even though he read it, seems to have a reading comprehension problem, I didn't say we targeted a girls' school. I hope we didn't. I said we attacked a girls' school. We did. With multiple strikes, there was purple chalk on the sidewalk outside of it. Like, okay, if Ben is sure that it was an accident, I believe that. It also is completely, it completely shows a reckless disregard.
for human life to not have a person look at a satellite image of a place before you bomb it.
There are thousands of people in the Department of Defense.
We sent, you know, we hit 1,000 plus targets.
It had been updated on Google Maps.
On Google Earth.
If you scrolled in, it was called an elementary school.
Yep.
So we have such a reckless disregard for human life that we didn't even.
check. So that's the point. We attacked the school. And he didn't address all the other things.
The point is, a country who does that is going to be hated by a lot of people. We did all,
we did all of those things. I didn't, I was like, should we even like talk about this? But then,
you know, this like IDF guy, you know, started, came at, came at us too. And I, and so I do think
it's becoming like an actual kind of political. It is.
news event that is bubbling up in our discourse.
Yeah, let's put the next element up on the screen.
Because it actually is, I think DropSight is something that you all have to think about.
This is Iton Fishberger, former IDF, pretty big, if you're not on X, you probably never
heard of him, but pretty big viral X account that shares constant pro-Israel propaganda.
It's long past time, he wrote yesterday, for congressional and DOJ investigations into the foreign
ties of DropSight news.
Here's what we know. It has at least two reporters, quote, reporters on the ground in Iran, who feed the site regime-approved disinformation and propaganda.
Ryan, why don't we just respond point by point to this? That's what Fishberger says is enough to get you investigated because you're being fed propaganda from, quote, reporters on the ground in Iran.
We have at least one reporter. You got that in Gaza sometimes as well.
Yeah. Yeah, we have at least one reporter in Iran who is registered with the government as you have to do if you're doing official.
if you're doing a journalism of above board,
we have other journalists who are not registered,
who publish anonymously,
and they're not doing regime.
None of them are doing regime propaganda.
When CNN goes into Iran,
they have to register with the government.
Like, that's what you do.
Now, they don't have the First Amendment
and the press freedoms that we do.
That's for sure.
But the idea that, like,
because you have a reporter or reporter
on the ground in Iran, you are foreign funded?
That's absurd.
Yeah.
Yeah, well, they also, and they mentioned the point about Gaza.
Yeah, what else?
What else is he said?
What are his other?
250K from SORUSO's Open Society.
2024, we got that grant.
Yep, that's true.
And you've talked about it on the show again.
By the way, we talked about this a couple of weeks ago.
You were like, no strings attached.
That's the condition.
Yeah, and I remember at the time being like, if we take this,
people are going to like.
Make it a thing.
for it. It's like, but there's no strings attached, and we can then fund an enormous amount of
reporting in Gaza, which is what it was for. Okay, let's do it. Yeah. Also, you're published by
billionaire communist Nepo Baby, Nika Sun Chung. She's, her title is publisher. Yeah. Yeah. She doesn't
give us money. Her dad doesn't give us money. And they are billionaires, right? He's a billionaire.
Yeah, he owns the LA Times, and he owns like several.
He created several cancer drugs that have become blockbusters,
and so he's a multi-billionaire for having done that.
But he doesn't give money to us, and we've never asked him, and we're not going to.
DropSight frequently flies to the Middle East to interview the leaders of U.S. designated terrorist organizations.
I can't even read that sentence.
It's so ridiculous.
Do we interview people that the U.S. has designated as terrorists?
Yeah, we do that.
As journalists, 1,000 million percent should.
Yeah.
They're complaining about Sharif followed the sympathetic dispatch from the funeral of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah after he was killed by Israel.
You can read, go read the piece.
Go see how sympathetic it was.
Dropside is fiscally sponsored by the Social Security Works Education Fund while it pursues its own 501C3 status,
an arrangement that reduces transparency and allows the outlet to obscure who its funders are.
fiscal sponsorship is a normal thing for a new nonprofit.
All nonprofits are not required, even whether they're fiscally sponsored or not,
to disclose all of the names of all of their donors.
That's just not a thing.
This is, that was the last point.
Well, he added a bonus that you've tweeted the U.S.
as a rogue terrorist state and a cancer on the world.
I mean, come on.
We're objectively telling the truth in that one.
There's, I mean, you and I could talk.
Trump's just to annihilate an entire civilization.
He sure did.
He sure did.
We don't get.
He's not making my side of that argument any easier by the day.
But yeah.
As I tell everybody who comes at us about our funding, like, you don't have to subpoena us.
Like, here, I'll look it up, I'll look it up right now.
So we have...
You have a 990.
We have two...
There's 990 should be public.
We have two primary streams of revenue.
One is subscriptions and the other is just small donations.
And then the third is bigger donors who give more than like $2,000 or so.
That makes up maybe like 10%.
The big donors make up about 10%.
And we're grateful for them.
But it's the small donors that make up the bulk of it.
Interestingly, there's not a lot of overlap.
We have about 25,000 people who've made small contributions.
And we have, looking at it now, 18,594 paid subscribers.
That's incredible.
I mean, you're not even two years old.
Yeah, and a subscription is 100 bucks.
So you can do the math pretty easily on that.
But there's not actually a whole lot of overlap between the subscribers and the donors.
So that means we actually have about 40 to 45,000 people who have given money at some point in another.
Total subscribers, you know, paid and unpaid.
Right now we're at 792,236.
And so the bulk of our revenue is from people who read the site and then give money to it.
ironically um in the first like hour um oh i just asked our i just asked our fundraising guy so since
aton um put this tweet up we got 178 donations damn of it's been like what not even a day yeah less
than a day on an average of thirty seven dollars each none more than 250 dollars uh totaling
$6,700.
So Aiton, he's like, who funds these guys?
You do, you moron.
Like, his penchant for lying has produced in the public a real demand for people who don't lie.
And so the more lies he tells, and the more wars he encourages Israel to fight and encourages the U.S. to support,
then the more people are going to want to support us.
And I've told him and others, if you want to gut us, you want to take the legs out from under us, stop with the wars.
Like, we would, I think our, I think people would be spending less money on our reporting if there were fewer wars for us to report on.
Definitely.
I would happily take that trade off.
Definitely.
Try peace for a while.
And then we'll go cover other things, corporate abuses, whatever.
And there's frankly, there's probably less interest in that.
Yeah, that's true.
But that's funny.
I would love nothing more than to make less money and have fewer wars to cover.
And by the way, the reason you mentioned this in your response to him, like, you don't have to snitch tag ways and means.
Right.
He's trying to get Ways and Means Committee to, like, subpoena us.
I will say I don't think that's ridiculous from his perspective because they are opening investigations.
And sometimes I think there are some because of the way Farrow works and the like that are, I think, somewhat legitimate.
Now, they're going to be done on a totally partisan basis, and you can bet your ass that any Israeli
potential, like, nonprofit schemes aren't going to be folded into these investigations.
They're mostly looking at places China and alike that may have had, like nonprofits,
like Code Pink, for example, or ones that have direct Antifa ties and are getting funding
from different places like China.
And there's some interesting stuff, actually, on the table.
Drop site won't, I don't think drop site will be on the table because there's so many people on the right that are following your reporting closely and see the value in it.
And also they could just look and be like, oh, this is where the money comes from.
Yeah, exactly.
It's like straight up clean American money.
100%.
But this is a strategy that is being intentionally deployed by Republicans right now who are under immense pressure from their base to get scalps and stop just chit-chatting about, oh, we're going to go after this person and this person.
They're trying to actually go deep and do these investigations.
They are into groups like Code Pink.
So it's not, and that's why I thought it was important to talk about, because it's not nothing.
And I think some of it is earnest on their part.
Like, I think this guy, in his addled mind, is incapable of conceiving of a news organization that is supported by its readers and people who want it to exist rather than a foreign government that is.
doing it for propaganda purposes. He can't, he genuinely can't understand that that's possible.
Because that's not how he or they operate. Their approach is we're going to get together
some very rich people and we're going to buy, we're going to produce this media property
and we're going to run it. And if it makes some money, great if not, like the purpose is
ideological. Like that, the idea that you would just do honest reporting and that people would
supported, I think is a foreign concept, but it's actually a domestic concept. It's an American
concept. Well, we'll see what happens, but you should be, you should feel pretty good, Ryan.
You know, DropSight's fine. Right. Go subscribe to DropSite. Also, does that, by that definition,
is the studio a dual-use property, by the way, because here is, this is a civilian studio. It's
where all kinds of civilian work gets done, but also it's where the Iranian regime does its
propaganda via you.
Yes, according to Ben Shapiro, those things I listed, universities, medical centers are
dual use.
I'm afraid right now we're in a dual use location.
It is true that schools do produce people who go on, some of them to become soldiers,
others become scientists, others work in the nuclear field.
So it is true.
And in fact, something like 60% of engineers in Iran are,
women. So the girls, the 165 plus girls and that elementary school, you know, a lot of them
would have grown up to be engineers. So according to that, I guess, their logic, it's all dual
use and it's all clean. Yeah, sick. Let's move on to Professor Pape. Great day to have him on the
show to react to all the events of the last 12 hours. So we'll bring him in now.
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your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the On Purpose podcast.
My latest episode is with Noah Kahn, the singer-songwriter behind the multi-platinum
global hit stick season and one of the biggest voices in music today.
Noah opens up about the pressure that followed his rapid success, his struggles with mental
health and body image, and the fear of starting again after such a defining moment in his career.
It's easy to look at somebody and be like, your life must be so sick.
Man, you have no clue.
Talking about the mental illness stuff,
it used to be this thing that I was ashamed of.
I'm just now trying to unwind this idea
that I have to be unhealthy physically
or in pain in some emotional way in my life
to create good music.
If someone says that I did a good job,
I'm like, yeah, I'm good.
Someone says that I suck.
I'm like, I suck.
Getting to talk about this is not common for me.
Right now I need it more than ever.
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Chetty,
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University of Chicago, Professor Robert Pape, has been warning that the United States, Israel and Iran are trapped in an escalation trap.
That's also the name of his substack.
He'll be having a live briefing over at his substack at 7 p.m. tomorrow.
Now with a tenuous ceasefire taking hold, Professor Pape joins us to walk through how trapped they seephing.
still are and what the way out of this is. Professor Pape, thank you so much for joining us here
again. Thank you very much for having me. And I really think we need to understand that, yes, this is all
fragile, but big things are here in front of us. There's really three issues to discuss. Number one,
the trap, why the trap is not over, and in fact, maybe even tightening. Number two, the change in the
world balance of power right in front of us as evidence by the nature of the ceasefire agreement
itself. And then number three, the statement by Donald Trump, the President of the United States
to end the civilization in Iran, that will endure. That's not going to be forgotten. So the trap.
Maybe I could just come in with the trap. Yeah, let's start with the trap. Yeah, let's start with the trap.
So are they out of the trap or is the trap not over yet?
No, the trap is is not over.
In fact, we may be coming to an extremely dangerous phase of the trap.
And the reason is this.
Number one, U.S. military forces are poised on a razor's edge in the region to strike.
So the trap will start to unwind when President Trump literally removes
that all the carrier battle groups, removes all the fighters, removes the Marines,
just literally pulls it back geographically.
Number two, Pete Hegsef, Secretary Hegsteth, just before we came on,
vocally and publicly said, we're going to get that enriched uranium.
We're going to get it.
Well, we know that that has been a big part of this whole issue.
Iran has enough enriched uranium for between 10 and 16 nuclear weapons.
They are now maximally incentivized to have those nuclear weapons.
They know if they just go into those caves where the drones are and the missiles are, we can't get, we can't stop them from building those nuclear weapons.
And so you can expect over the next six months or the next year, nuclear test, not just simply,
now weapons in secret, but this is going to be incredibly dangerous for this trap, because,
of course, Iran is going to show, I think, very little sign. They're going to just give up
the nuclear weapons now that Donald Trump has threatened to kill 92 million Iranians, and
probably all 92 million will help build those nuclear weapons, all of them, including the pro-democracy
movement. And you've obviously studied this for a long time. How viable is it that Iran would be
able to reconstitute its missile supply, launchers, and even nuclear, potentially nuclear weapons,
just in the next, I mean, we had Midnight Hammer last June and found ourselves back in the same place
February 28th. So what is the immediate future it look like of Iran's ability to rebuild its military?
Yes, they are building not just dozens, but
but something like 50 to 100 missiles every single month.
That is what happened after Midnight Hammer.
They went back to rebuilding, reconstituting, or you could say reloading their guns.
And that has been happening on a steady basis and also producing the drones on a steady basis.
In fact, they were still shipping drones to Russia for Ukraine last fall.
So they're producing them, they're shipping them, they're developing them.
And so this is, we will have weakened this sum, but the, without the bombs continuing to fall,
even that weakness will disappear.
And Iran is making $75 to $100 billion a year in R&B, in Chinese banks, that they will be able to use for all of these purposes.
So they will have the money, they will have the space, they will have the material,
and this is why all this destruction of these launchers, this was just not meaningful.
It was always at most temporary stopgap, and we will see within a year, this will be fast and
furious.
Because now, keep in mind, before the bombing started on Feb 28, you had something like
16 or 20 percent of the population supporting the regime.
Now, I'm not saying they like the regime's ideology, but you now have a lot.
have 92 million people. Where is their best security coming from? Not from Donald Trump. He just
threatened to murder each and every one of them. So what are they going to do? They're going to,
the vast majority of them are going to help in these programs because they don't want to die.
So this is really quite an extraordinary set of events that have been triggered. And the effects
of this are going forward and we will see it. Secretary Hegseth, he sees, he sees,
right away that there's been no disincentive here. And he's saying, we're going to take the material.
Well, Iran, I think, is not just going to hand it over. This is, how are they going to stop the next
nuclear threat by Donald Trump? There's only one way now, which is nuclear weapons with a nuclear
test and probably several nuclear tests to just rub it into America's face. You nuke us. We're coming back.
And so you mentioned that Trump's saying that, you know, tonight a great civilization is going to die, that that is going to leave a permanent or at least a very long-term mark on our geopolitics.
Can you explain how you mean that?
Yeah.
So we need to understand that no president in the history of the United States has made a statement threatening to erase, destroy, kill an entire civilization.
Point number one, that is the evidence of genocidal intent that's required in the Geneva Accords to convict for genocide.
We need to understand that the genocide accords that we have, they're about the intent to commit genocide.
Usually, that's the hardest thing to find.
It's not the killing of people.
It's the intent.
Well, President Trump, I don't think there could be a clearer evidence of genocidal intent than you just saw.
Number two, President Trump is one of only a handful of people on the planet with enough nuclear weapons that he would be able to actually execute that threat.
So we have 500 Minutemen missiles, and they have warheads with 300,000 kilotons on them.
Hiroshima Nagasaki was only 12 to 22 kilotons.
So these are much, much more powerful than Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
and we have 500 of them.
And within 45 minutes, their geroscopes can be reoriented to Iran, 20 minutes after that,
all of those 500 can land on Iran.
So I'm sorry to be so blunt, but we need to really understand that what Donald Trump has
done here is it's immoral.
It is very likely, I'm not a lawyer, very likely contradict the Geneva Accords,
but it's also dangerous because now every American is marked here.
And this will be wherever we travel in the world, about to maybe get on a plane to go to London here.
This is not trivial.
And so what you're seeing is now 92 million Iranians, not just these tiny number of supreme leaders,
they're pretty maximally incentivized to show that there's a,
some payback that can come. So this is really an enormously consequential move by President Trump,
and it will do no good that he will somehow maybe take it back or his supporters would say,
it's just Trump being Trump. No, I'm sorry. Not everybody who's a drunk at a bar has their
finger on thousands of nuclear weapons that can be delivered within a matter of an hour or less,
as I'm explaining in detail.
This is way too consequential, and this will have tremendous ripple effects across the world.
Our allies, the idea our allies in Europe will let us even run NATO.
NATO, we need to understand.
It is an military organization where when the American General runs the operation of a NATO military operation,
it's the American General who controls the nuclear weapons of Britain.
Do you think Britain is going to go for that at this?
I mean, yeah, you can see right away.
So the consequences here are way beyond what's, and then in the straight of foreign moves.
The consequences are there's a new hierarchy of power.
Donald Trump just kowtowed to Iran, essentially.
There's a new hierarchy, and everybody in the Middle East will see that.
MBS will know.
There's no Donald Trump cavalry coming to save him.
So that's Saudi Arabia.
So you're seeing these gigantic consequences of what's happened are consequences for all Americans.
There are consequences for the world balance of power.
Iran is becoming the fourth center of world power.
And I want to steel man this analysis a bit by bringing in the perspective of people who think this is a massive loss for Iran.
This is Noah Rothman writing in National Review this morning saying Iran's central nervous system
has been severed, as indicated by the Islamic Republic's field commanders attacks on Gulf targets
long after the ceasefire was announced.
Its commanded control, intelligence, and domestic security apparatuses have been severely degraded.
Its Navy and Air Force are gone.
Its air defense network and nuclear weapons programs are in ruins.
Its petrochemical and steel industries have been badly damaged, truncating two major sources
of foreign revenue that sustain the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Keep going here.
The Gulf states are now ensconced in Washington's orbit.
America's adversaries in Beijing and Moscow did not much alter the balance in Iran's favor.
Tehran's defense industrial base is a smoldering wreck. And it goes on to say it stores of long
and short range missiles, drones, and the launchers to use them are dramatically depleted.
What's your response to that, professor?
My response is this is just not on planet Earth. So this is not even just victory rhetoric and
so forth. But we need to understand that what has just happened is Donald
Trump has just agreed that, yes, ships can pass through the Strait of Hormuz, but only if the
Iranian military gives that permission. And that is enormously consequential here. And if it was the
case that all of this was going in the other direction, you would not need any ceasefire from
Iran, you would not need any deal from Pakistan. The United States would just simply be the power
in the region. What's happening is the complete opposite of the United States. The United States would just simply be the power in the region.
What's happening is the complete opposite of that.
And people can just say whatever they want, of course, but nobody's going to pay that any meaningful attention, meaning they won't actually act on that assumption.
They're going to act on the realities that have just been demonstrated by war.
War is often clarifying for the realities of power.
Before war, we have a lot of talk.
We have a lot of bolster.
we have basically talking smack, okay?
But once you get into war, the realities start to actually take shape.
And what you're seeing here is that the reality is that before the war, President Trump and the United States was guaranteeing safe passage through the Straits of Hormuz effectively.
It had military bases in the region to protect the Gulf states from being attacked and smashed.
During the war itself, none of that was protecting the Gulf states.
none of it was moving their oil.
And the only thing that is actually now protecting the Gulf states is Iran deciding not to attack.
So if you want your country protected, who are you going to go to the United States or are you going to go to Iran?
Right now, it's pretty clear you've got to go to Iran and yes, maybe you've got to hope Iran will not attack you.
Because if Iran decides to attack you, there's nothing the United States going to do to protect you.
This is power politics of the first order.
The balance of power in the world and in the region is changing.
In the region, it is now Iran at the top of the hierarchy, not the United States.
In the world, Iran is becoming the fourth center of world power.
It's not yet as powerful as the United States.
I'm not trying to say, and it's emerging as the fourth center as well.
The new, once they actually acquire the nuclear weapons and do the test,
which I'm saying is likely in six months or a year,
how would you stop it at this point
without ground conquering all of Iran?
It will become unmistakably the fourth power center in the world.
So I'm not quite saying they're there yet,
but they are emerging in all of the ways
that we will credit this here going forward.
This debate on what's happening will become clarified
because the war is clarifying power.
And to be clear, your point is that the only way to
stop them from within six months to a year acquiring the nuclear weapons, reconstituting is
boots on the ground? Yes, but it's not just a few boots on the ground. This isn't going to stop
with 10 or 20,000 Americans. And even if we devoted all 1.2 million troops here, this would not be
enough. So this is why this was a dilemma. This is why it was an escalation trap. We don't have
these hidden secret options, if only we would use them. And then you saw what was the hidden secret
option? Nuclear destruction of every living person in Iran. That's where Donald Trump had to go because
he doesn't have all these other weapons at his, all these other success strategies here. And you see
what that has brought. So what you are facing, we're facing here is a true escalation trap and the
off ramp to stage three, which is the ground war, is Iran's world power. That's what I've been
explaining on my substack is there is a branch here, and either it's Iran as a new emerging world
power, or it's the ground war. And you can see these are the real tensions. Literally,
the ceasefire has clarified what I've been saying on my substack just literally in the last week,
in the briefings, et cetera.
And so how does Israel's strategic calculus factor in here?
As they went into the war, the straight was open, Iran was isolated and sanctioned.
If you listen to Israeli leader, Benjamin Netanyahu, privately, he was saying they're
many years away from a nuclear weapon.
Now, they're not isolated, as you said, they're regional and growing power.
sanctions are currently off, basically, and are likely to come off as a result of these
negotiations permanently. And, you know, I think it's debatable whether or not they can
secretly race for a bomb. But let's, let's, I think, stipulate that they're more likely,
they're in a better position. And people inside Iran are now, and this is a thing people
don't understand. Before the war, the people in power in the Iranian government were opposed
to seeking a nuclear weapon for both ideological and political reasons.
Those people were killed, and people who support seeking a nuclear weapon are empowered.
Not that they are in power completely, but they have been empowered.
Their faction has been empowered.
So how did Israel respond to this?
Because the U.S. is its own power center, but Israel has its own interests that sometimes
are aligned with the United States and sometimes are distinct.
how do you see them moving forward in this new arrangement?
So we need to understand that before the war, 40 days ago,
there was a balance of power in the region.
And if anything, Israel was the emerging hegemon with the hierarchy,
with the Abraham Accords, counterbalancing against Iran.
Iran, as you said, the supreme leader,
the one we killed, didn't really want the nuclear weapons.
He had fought was against it.
But now you're seeing this shift where even Israel, so Israel was the only country in the region with nuclear weapons.
Well, now what you're going to get is you're getting this shift.
And as I'm saying, you're, you've maximally incentivized, not just the regime, but all 92 million Iranians for nuclear weapons here.
And so it's, it's extremely likely, maybe over 90% likely, maybe not 100, that they will have that nuclear capability.
And what that's going to do is it's going to put Israel down on the hierarchy.
Now, Israel remains 7 million Jews.
It is surrounded by 500 million Muslims.
As that hierarchy shifts, this is going to be a dramatic shift against Israel in the region.
And so you're going to, you are going to end up with Israel, you know, has often said, well, they all hate us anyway.
Yes, but only a few hundred thousand at most were ever mobilized to attack.
Israel. You could now have a much larger pool mobilized, and it's because, again, go back to President
Trump's nuclear threat. These threats are clearly explaining that for the West and possibly
Israel, they're glad to kill them all. This is not going to work to Israel's security. It's going to go
in the opposite direction, and their nuclear weapons here will not provide that much security,
because what it's going to do is even if they used a nuclear weapon,
it will only further incentivize not just Iran,
but every state in the region, to want a nuclear weapon here.
We're moving to a world that is going to be dramatically worse for Israel's security.
This is one of the things I've been trying to explain to the Israelis.
This strategy is not just about, well, we just have to do this for our security.
No, it's their own, this is self-defeating for their security.
And I think this will also start to become manifest within just a year or two.
I don't think you'll have to wait five or ten years.
This will come pretty quickly because of the change and the balance of power.
And there are only seven million Jews, unless there are going to be a rush of another
10 million Jews to go live in Israel now, imagine that.
You're probably going to lose seven of the Jews in Israel.
You're going to lose more than you're going to get.
in the next year, and it's precisely because of the growing insecurity of Israel.
And can you respond to the claim that the response from Moscow and Beijing proves that Iran,
Tehran is increasingly isolated and didn't have its allies rallying around it?
What do you, I mean, Donald Trump posted this morning that anybody who supplies weapons to Iran
is going to be sanctioned, so potentially I suppose that could include
China, can he sanction China to the extent where Iran can't rebuild? What do you make of the international
response from potential allies? Well, first of all, Iran is building its own weapons. So Iran was an exporter
of drones to Russia, not the other way around. So we need to really understand here. Iran is not
Grenada. Iran is not a small state. It's not even Venezuela. I mean, Iran is already a major country here.
This is already, it was over 1% of world GDP.
It may be growing that.
Russia is only 2% of world GDP.
We need to put this in some perspective here.
So Iran doesn't really need the weapons.
It will make the weapons themselves.
What it will benefit from is probably the trade and the oil and all the money there.
And also, there may be growing technology transfers here, say, between China, which has a lot of AI.
and Iran, and this will be one of the things that I would imagine could easily happen in the future.
So, as I explained in the New York Times piece, there are, with Iran is the fourth center of
world power, you have the United States, but Russia and China and Iran are not at each other's
odds. They're against the United States. You don't need a formal NATO among Russia, China,
and Iran. They've just structurally incentivized to cooperate in a myriad number of ways.
all of which lowering America's power in the world.
And this Trump is just trying to, you know, do a magician's trick.
Slight of hand, nothing to see here.
We're all good.
Well, no, the realities here are coming for all to see.
And this will just simply be powerful over time.
And it will also work to President Trump's domestic political detriment here
and probably in the very near future.
I mean, this is, you're now asking all those Congress people who are running for office
to hook their wagon in the midterms to somebody who's threatened the genocidal destruction
of an entire civilization led to the rise of Iran as a fourth center of world power.
So yes, there may be, you know, 20% here that will, or 25, that will stick and ride and die with
with Trump. But the bottom line is there's not going to be very much. Every politician will know
this is a really, really bad horse to be hooked to. And I think you're going to see the GOP itself
is going to have some real question. It's not the Democrats. The Democrats are going to want to
keep Trump around for political reasons. Maybe not for security reasons. So that's where I would
draw the line. But politically, Trump is like the perfect thing to keep around for the Democrats. It's
the GOP who's going to have the biggest problems here. I wanted to get your reaction to this
new quote from Donald Trump, which I think you're going to appreciate. It's Jonathan Carl. He says,
I asked President Trump, if he's okay with the Iranians charging a toll for all ships that go through
the Strait of Hormuz. He told me there may be a joint U.S. Iran venture to charge tolls.
Quote, we're thinking of doing it as a joint venture. It's a way of securing it, also securing it
from lots of other people. It's a beautiful thing. What do you make of that? Well, again, another
statement not on planet Earth. And by the way, there is some jointness to the tolls as just emerged.
Iran has agreed to share some of it with Oman. Why would they do that? Iran is becoming the dominant
power in the region. They can dole out some goodies here to get everybody in line with the new
hierarchy. I don't see everybody cottoning up to Donald Trump to do it that way. So again, this is
just more evidence that it's just not on planet Earth. So you will get statements and they can say
what they want, but the countries are going to go for their security. The idea that they are
going to give up their security and their wealth to somehow give Donald Trump a photo op,
I think this is not happening. I think this is just way too consequential.
What has occurred and will occur. It's not over what and will occur also I was just curious
So if people haven't read it yet they got to go go read your piece that you had in the New York Times
It was about Iran emerging as a you know new power
That was a point that you made here last week on the show. I was curious when did the times reach out to you and say hey
Saw you on breaking points or like I'm just telling you guys have been the best in in terms of allowing me to come on and also space to
really explain and you know we're doing it regularly you got it first i actually started that piece
several weeks ago people kept asking me what was the longer term future and i wouldn't really i didn't
want to let it let tell them yet because we're still going through the middle parts of the stage one
stage two stage three but then when i came on with you i had the piece ready to go and before i sent it
to the new york times i decided i'm going to do and no so i didn't announce all that on your show
show and say, oh, you know, there's no point. I'm still just professor paper.
It under, frankly, with our audience. I wanted to give you the first exclusive scoop, okay,
and I didn't, and it was really quite a pleasure. It was like an inside pleasure for me,
because I really appreciate the relationship here and how much this has really, I think,
I get so many emails, by the way, the breaking point, the things for breaking points,
are just the dominant thing in my inbox. And so it's really just been a pleasure. And,
And so, no, I'm the one who's pushed it forward here, but they could see right away that that was,
and it's got like an enormous number of reactions and comments here and so forth and so on,
on theirs.
And this is, and now you're seeing that just in a few days after I published the piece,
clear evidence that Iran is in the catbird seat, as I was saying, and we need to understand.
They don't just have money and they're not just talking about ships.
This is power, politics of the first order that is changing.
And you're seeing evidence of it right now, which is Donald Trump is essentially having to give, you know, sort of fantasy posts that nobody, I'm not even sure he, does he even believe? Who knows?
But this is that far removed from reality on his side.
And I think with our audience, for most people, it actually undermines their credibility if they appear in the New York Times.
But I think in your case, we're going to allow an exception.
So, well, look, I am just pleased and honored to be able to do this, and I definitely take your point.
I'll be careful as a future.
We won't.
And I don't get sucked into the legacy back.
Speaking of a shifting balance of power.
That's right.
The escalation trap of the legacy media.
Well, Robert Pave is a professor at the University of Chicago.
He is doing more live streams.
Go check out his substack.
relation trap, follow him on social media. Thank you so much for your time, Professor Pape.
Absolutely. We'll see you soon. Okay. Bye-bye. All right. Well, Emily, that was a much happier show than
the one I did yesterday was Sager. Amazing what 24 hours can do. Civilization stands.
For now. We live for another day. For another day. But when you hear Professor Pape outlining
potential for the future. It's going to be ugly. Which we appreciate, by the way,
everyone can also see this with their own. You don't have to be a professor at the University of Chicago
to see with your own eyes what happened between Midnight Hammer and what are we calling this epic fury
Epstein Fury.
Epstein Fury. Oh, and yes, to answer your question, the Epstein files reporting will resume
now that we're moving on from this. Trump thinks he put an end to it? No, no, no, no, it's just on hold.
Well, we'll obviously be here throughout the day in case there are any major updates. So obviously
stay tuned. And Ryan and I will be back Friday. If you want to get the second half of the Friday
show.
It's free now. I talk to Sagar.
Oh, well, there you go.
Friday show free.
Please do still support the show.
Yes, support the show just because we should.
org.com.
Help us bring this independent journalism to you.
If you can't, no problem, just like, subscribe, comment.
It helps us so much.
We appreciate all of you for making this possible.
As we just discussed with Professor Pape, it does really matter to have independent media
out in front covering this in the way that legacy media will not.
Yes. I think if you followed all this through us, you were better informed than anywhere else.
I agree with that, and I think the record is pretty defensible on that point. So appreciate you all.
I hope you have a great rest of your day. We'll see you back here with more soon.
Ready for a different take on Formula One? Look no further than No Grip, a new podcast tackling the culture of Motor Racing's most coveted series.
Join me, Lily Herman, as we dive into the under-explored pockets of F1, including the story of the woman who last participant,
participated in a Formula One race weekend, the recent uptick in F1 romance novels, and plenty of mishap scandals and sagas that have made Formula One a delightful, decadent dumpster fire for more than 75 years. Listen to No Grip on the IHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Lori Siegel, and this is mostly human, a tech podcast through a human lens. This week, an interview with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.
I think society is going to decide that creators of AI products bear a tremendous amount of responsibility.
to the products we put out in the world.
An in-depth conversation with a man who's shaping our future.
My highest order bit is to not destroy the world with AI.
Listen to mostly human on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the On Purpose podcast.
My latest episode is with Noah Kahn,
the singer-songwriter behind the multi-platinum global hit stick season
and one of the biggest voices in music today.
Talking about the mental illness stuff,
It used to be this thing that I was ashamed of.
Getting to talk about this is not common for me.
Right now, I need it more than ever.
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