What Happened Today - 9 March 2026
What Happened Today – 9 Mar 2026
Iran Update (gonna be a long one)
Epstein Interest…Dip…cause WAR
Pam Bondi Testimony
Noem Fallout
SAVE Act…holding us hostage
Market Update
TSA Update – Shutdown update
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Iran Update (gonna be a long one)
The Iran war is getting uglier, bloodier, more expensive, and less under control by the day, and nothing about the last few days suggests this thing is wrapping up anytime soon; in fact, between Trump’s own comments and what the Pentagon and intel people are leaking, everything points toward a drawn‑out mess with a real risk of escalation, including talk of a draft and even new theaters like Cuba on the horizon. The White House keeps pretending this is some “weeks, maybe a month” limited operation, but Trump himself has already said there will “likely be more” American deaths and keeps talking like casualties are just the cost of doing business, which tells you exactly how seriously he takes ending this quickly.
Let’s start with the basic state of the war: Trump kicked off this thing with joint U.S.–Israeli strikes that literally decapitated Iran’s leadership and blew straight past any idea of a “surgical” operation. Since then, CENTCOM has confirmed at least six U.S. service members killed in the Iran theater just in the first days, with reporting now putting the confirmed U.S. dead at seven, plus multiple seriously wounded, and even Trump’s own people admit more deaths are expected. He told the New York Times and others that the U.S. is prepared to sustain the assault on Iran for “four to five weeks if necessary,” and in multiple on‑camera comments he basically shrugged that “when you go to war, some people will die” and “that’s the way it is,” which is a hell of a thing to say when you’re the one who chose this war. Behind the scenes, you’ve got Mar‑a‑Lago turned into a discount “situation room,” where he watched B‑2s hit Iran, then slid right back into a fundraiser and gala at the same resort, literally going from war‑planning to glad‑handing donors without leaving the building.
On the lies and gaslighting, it’s been nonstop from Trump and his crew. From day one, he sold this as a contained, short war that would “teach Iran a lesson” and maybe last a few weeks, while simultaneously talking about “unconditional surrender” and regime change, which everyone with a brain knows means a long, grinding conflict, not a quick hit‑and‑run. He keeps insisting U.S. strikes are perfectly precise and that we “never” hit civilians, even as internal U.S. assessments now say the United States is “likely” responsible for bombing a girls’ school in Minab, Iran, killing around 168 people, many of them little kids. And instead of owning that, he jumped on a plane and told reporters that “we think it was done by Iran” because they’re supposedly “very inaccurate with their munitions,” offering zero evidence while his own Pentagon and CENTCOM refused to back him up and said the incident is still under investigation. Add to that the constant downplaying of U.S. casualties—publicly framing the first deaths as expected and almost inevitable, then repeating that there will “likely be more” as if it’s just a line item on a spreadsheet—and it’s clear the White House is trying to numb the country to the human cost so they can keep this thing running.
Troops are dying, families are shattered, and Trump can’t even be bothered to show basic respect in public. Over the weekend he went to Dover for the dignified transfer of the remains of six U.S. soldiers killed in an Iranian strike in Kuwait, and he shows up in a white “USA” baseball cap—the same kind he sells as merch for fifty‑something bucks—with the cameras catching him saluting flag‑draped coffins while keeping the hat on. No other president has worn a baseball cap during a dignified transfer, and people who track this stuff say there’s no record of Trump ever doing it before either; it was so out of pocket it immediately blew up online with families of vets and military folks saying exactly what you’re thinking: take your damn hat off. Reporting also shows he spent that same broader period toggling between war briefings and the full Mar‑a‑Lago lifestyle—fundraisers, club events, being physically at his private resort while overseeing “Operation Epic Fury”—and there are photos and stories about him hunkered down at the club’s makeshift situation room instead of the actual White House Situation Room that taxpayers just paid tens of millions to upgrade.
Meanwhile his family is sniffing around the war for profit, just like clockwork. Eric Trump and Don Jr. are backing a new drone company—Powerus—that’s explicitly trying to “meet fresh demand from the Pentagon” and fill the gap created by Trump’s own administration banning new Chinese drones. The Wall Street Journal and other outlets report that Powerus is merging with a publicly traded golf‑course holding company that’s backed by the Trumps, going public on Nasdaq via a reverse merger, with Trump family investment vehicles like American Ventures and a Trump‑linked investment bank—Dominari Securities—right in the middle of the deal. On top of that, Eric Trump is separately investing in an Israeli drone maker, Xtend, in a $1.5 billion SPAC‑style merger to take it public, raising all the same conflict‑of‑interest alarms people screamed about during Trump’s first term, only now he’s doing it while his dad is running an active war that will directly boost demand for drones. So yeah, “no new wars” Trump is presiding over a brand‑new war while his sons position themselves to profit from the hardware that war requires; that’s not subtle, that’s a walking billboard for grift.
The school bombing in Iran is the most gut‑wrenching piece of this and the clearest example of the White House lying straight to our faces. A U.S. preliminary assessment—backed up by multiple sources speaking to CBS and Reuters—says the United States is “likely” responsible for the strike on the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ school in Minab, which killed at least 168 people, with lists from Iranian authorities and analysis by Human Rights Watch indicating that dozens of the dead were schoolgirls between 7 and 12, plus teachers and the principal. The working theory from U.S. officials is that an American strike hit in error because planners used outdated intelligence that still labeled the area as part of an IRGC military complex, not the school it actually is now. Israel has already said it was not operating in that area, and satellite imagery shows the school surrounded by other damaged structures but near IRGC‑linked sites, which is exactly what makes these “dual‑use” targets so dangerous. While all that’s coming out, Trump is on Air Force One telling reporters the U.S. believes “it was done by Iran” because they’re supposedly inaccurate and “have no accuracy whatsoever,” even though his own Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and CENTCOM are refusing to endorse that claim and saying only that an investigation is ongoing. Human Rights Watch and others are already saying this needs to be investigated as a possible war crime, and U.S. allies are being told to demand real accountability for hitting a kids’ school, but the administration’s first instinct was to blame the victim country instead of leveling with the American public about what our bombs did.
Inside Iran, the war and that school strike are reshaping politics fast. Iran now has President Masoud Pezeshkian, a reform‑minded figure who won last year but has been forced into full wartime mode; he’s calling the Minab school attack a crime that will “never be erased” from the country’s memory, and his foreign minister has taken it to the U.N. as something that demands international condemnation. At the same time, the power vacuum after the killing of Iran’s longtime leader has empowered hard‑line security figures, and U.S. reporting shows Trump musing about how he hopes elements of the Revolutionary Guard will somehow just lay down arms and let a “new government” emerge—while he’s literally bombing their country. The bottom line is that U.S. and Israeli strikes are strengthening the argument of Iranian hardliners and making moderates weaker, which is exactly the opposite of what we supposedly want if we care about de‑escalation or any future nuclear deal.
Back home, the “no draft” line is already cracking. Trump’s press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, went on record saying that the president “has not ruled out” a U.S. military draft in connection with the Iran war, framing it as him wisely keeping “his options on the table,” while insisting it’s not part of the current plan. That’s Washington‑speak for “we’re not doing it today but don’t hold us to that tomorrow,” and it’s landing like a brick because we’re only days into this war and already talking about conscription for a conflict Trump promised to avoid in the first place. The official spin is that Trump’s top priority is protecting Americans and U.S. bases that Iran has been threatening for decades, but that’s exactly the kind of threat profile we had before he chose to start this war; nothing about Iran suddenly changed on February 28 that forced his hand, this was a choice. So yeah, anyone who believed the “no new wars” branding is now staring at an Iran quagmire plus draft chatter and realizing that was always just another slogan.
Economically, the war and the Strait of Hormuz anxiety are already hitting people where it hurts. Brent crude and WTI both spiked past the $100 mark for the first time since 2022, with overnight prices touching close to $120 a barrel before settling a little lower, and U.S. crude futures were trading around $100–$105 on Monday. Markets are freaking out: U.S. stock indices dropped sharply at the start of the week as traders priced in a prolonged conflict and possible supply disruptions, and prediction markets now see a real chance that oil could blow past $130 or even $150 a barrel by the end of the year. On the ground, AAA data shows the national average gas price has already jumped to roughly $3.48 a gallon, up from around $3 just a week ago, and analysts are warning this is likely just the beginning if the war continues or widens. CBS and others are openly connecting the price spikes to Trump’s Iran war and fears about the Strait of Hormuz, so when the White House blames “global factors,” just remember the biggest “factor” is the president’s own decision to light a match near one of the most sensitive oil chokepoints on earth.
On the broader geopolitical front, Russia is sliding in behind Iran as you’d expect, quietly helping Tehran withstand pressure and using the chaos to push its own agenda in the region, though the details are still coming into focus in open‑source reporting. U.S. allies that used to be solid—like parts of Europe—are openly uneasy, torn between backing the U.S. and not wanting any part of a campaign that’s already killing children and driving oil toward 2022‑style chaos. And now, on top of all that, there are fresh reports that Trump is “considering” broader confrontations in the hemisphere, including talk around Cuba in some political chatter, which just adds another layer of “how many fronts do you think you can fight on?” when we’re not even a full two weeks into the Iran conflict. It feels less like strategy and more like a guy addicted to looking “strong” on TV, no matter how many lives and alliances he burns through in the process.
Does this look like a war that’s about to end? No. Trump’s own words about “four to five weeks,” the expectation of more American deaths, the draft not being ruled out, and the way oil and markets are reacting all scream that this is a conflict the White House expects to drag on and is gearing up to ride politically. Add in the school bombing, the family drone grift, the hat‑at‑Dover disrespect, and the Mar‑a‑Lago war room, and it sure looks like America is letting a reality‑TV presidency run a real‑world war with real people’s kids, both ours and Iran’s, paying the price.
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Epstein Interest…Dip…cause WAR
The latest Epstein files that just dropped are brutally damning, and you can feel how fast the country got whiplashed away from them the second Operation Trumpstein (the Iran war) kicked off, like the whole damn news cycle decided we’re only allowed to hold one outrage in our heads at a time. In the days right before and right after the Iran strikes, DOJ quietly pushed out “previously missing” FBI interview summaries and related Epstein records that include a woman’s allegations that Trump sexually assaulted her when she was a minor in the 1990s, plus more documentation of how often Trump was on Epstein’s plane and how badly the department handled these files in the first place, and then boom—war starts, and suddenly all that is background noise.
Here’s what’s actually in this latest batch: DOJ released FBI 302s—summaries of interviews—with an unidentified woman who says Epstein trafficked her and arranged for her to be taken to a “very tall building with huge rooms” in New York or New Jersey where Trump allegedly sexually assaulted her, with Epstein blackmailing her family and threatening her afterward. These documents were supposed to be in the big Epstein Files Transparency Act disclosures already, but were “incorrectly coded as duplicative,” which is DOJ‑speak for “we buried them until Congress and reporters caught us.” NPR and BBC both pointed out that indexes showed at least three interview memos—more than 50 pages—were missing from what DOJ had posted, and only after public pressure and a bipartisan House freak‑out did the department cough up these summaries, while people tracking this say there are still around three‑dozen pages and underlying notes that have never seen daylight.
Zooming out, these memos didn’t come in a vacuum; they sit on top of the December and January data dumps that were already painting an ugly picture. Those earlier releases included: flight logs and internal emails showing Trump flew on Epstein’s jet more than previously reported, a 2020 email from a prosecutor saying new records “reflect that Donald Trump traveled on Epstein’s private jet many more times than previously has been reported,” and then DOJ adding this little CYA line about how some documents contain “untrue and sensationalist claims” against Trump, which is basically them pre‑smearing accusers in their own archive. The big January trove—millions of pages—also surfaced new names (including senior officials like the current Navy Secretary appearing on Epstein flight manifests), more material tying Ghislaine Maxwell to recruitment trips, and all kinds of correspondence and surveillance footage that raise more questions than they answer about how Epstein operated and how much powerful people knew, while still refusing to give the clean “client list” people expected.
The damning part isn’t just the content, it’s the pattern: DOJ got caught sitting on the Trump‑linked interview summaries after Congress literally passed a law forcing them to make this stuff public. An NPR investigation flagged that specific block of FBI interview serial numbers that had been indexed and then magically not uploaded, and a Republican‑led House committee moved to subpoena Attorney General Pam Bondi, with members accusing the department of running a White House cover‑up to protect Trump from a survivor’s allegations. The department’s explanation—“oops, we mis‑coded them as duplicates”—is laughable when you’re talking about exactly the kind of politically sensitive files everyone’s watching, and it only came after public shaming plus the threat of contempt of Congress. Even now, reporters note that the public summaries are out, but unredacted versions and underlying notes are only viewable by members of Congress, and watchdogs say at least dozens of pages and internal communications about how these allegations were handled are still missing from the online “Epstein Library.”
And then, right as that pressure was peaking, Trump lights the fuse on Iran. You’ve got commentators and even elected Republicans like Thomas Massie saying out loud that these strikes “won’t make the Epstein files go away,” calling the Iran action “acts of war unauthorized by Congress” and flat‑out suggesting the timing looks like an attempt to change the subject. Media analysis backs up what you’re feeling: coverage and public interest in the Epstein files dropped off a cliff after the first waves of “Epic Fury” hit Iran, with one analyst telling Al Jazeera that search traffic and click‑throughs on Epstein‑related content plummeted once war headlines took over, even though the missing‑files scandal was just starting to break open. The Reddit deep‑dives and op‑eds are basically saying the quiet part out loud—this war is real, the suffering is real, but the administration knows perfectly well that once there are bombs and body bags on TV, the average American will subconsciously downgrade “53 pages of testimony” to background static, and that’s exactly the kind of environment where inconvenient documents quietly disappear.
Behind the scenes, there is some movement, but it’s slow, bureaucratic, and absolutely not on the same emotional scale as dropping bombs on Iran. A House committee has already voted to subpoena Bondi over the withheld Epstein pages, framing it as an effort to “end this White House cover‑up,” and members from both parties are demanding a full accounting of every document that was indexed but not released. DOJ, for its part, is now in damage‑control mode: they posted the new memos, claimed it was all an honest mistake, and are promising more “review” of the archive, while quietly insisting there’s no evidence Trump did anything wrong and that the allegations in the files are “unsubstantiated.” Survivors’ lawyers and civil‑liberties groups are pushing for independent oversight or an inspector‑general–level review of how Epstein materials were handled, but that’s technical, slow work, and it gets almost zero airtime compared with live war footage and oil‑price panic.
So yeah, you’re not crazy: the newest Epstein documents are brutal—interview summaries of a woman alleging Trump assaulted her as a minor in an Epstein‑arranged encounter, more proof he was on that plane more than he ever admitted, and a Justice Department that got caught hiding the very pages that tie it all together—and then the second Trump launched Operation Trumpstein, America basically looked away. The war is real, the carnage is real, but the timing and the way the coverage vanished make it feel like we’re watching a president run two operations at once: one with missiles overseas, and one with redactions and “mis‑coded” files at home.
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Pam Bondi Testimony
Right now there isn’t a hard date on the calendar for when Pam Bondi has to sit down and answer for this Epstein mess, but the House Oversight Committee has already voted to subpoena her, and members are saying they expect her in a closed‑door session “in the coming weeks,” with video to be released afterward, so this isn’t some vague “sometime this year” thing—she’s on the hook as soon as staff finish working out scheduling and ground rules. What makes this round different from the last time she testified is that she can’t just filibuster with MAGA talking points about how “transparent” DOJ has been and brag about stock market performance under Trump; last month she was in front of Judiciary, where she mostly ran cover and talked up how her department supposedly released “over 3 million” pages and did an amazing job, but now Oversight is coming at her with proof that the so‑called “missing” Epstein files—specifically the FBI interview summaries from the South Carolina woman who accused Epstein and also made allegations about Trump—were indexed, not released, and only showed up after the press and Congress caught DOJ in a lie. Nancy Mace and others have already signaled they’re not letting her wiggle off into nonsense this time; they’re explicitly framing this as one of the biggest cover‑ups in U.S. history, saying Bondi is protecting powerful men instead of Epstein’s victims, and they’ve made clear they want answers about missing videos, missing audio, missing logs, and why DOJ was pulling tens of thousands of pages offline while telling the country “all the files” were out—so instead of a friendly, performative oversight hearing, she’s walking into a perjury trap of her own making if she keeps trying to spin this the way she did last time.
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Noem Fallout
Kristi Noem’s whole fall from “ICE Barbie” to made‑up title lady has been a train wreck in slow motion, and the last week was the crash. Trump officially fired her as Homeland Security secretary after months of disaster—two fatal ICE shootings in Minnesota, a $220 million propaganda ad campaign she tried to pin back on him under oath, ugly internal chaos at DHS, and the never‑ending affair rumors with Corey Lewandowski—then tried to save face by stuffing her into this clown‑ish new role: “Special Envoy for the Shield of the Americas,” some freshly invented “security initiative” in the Western Hemisphere that sounds serious but has no statutory authority, no real defined duties, and reads like a demotion with a gold‑spray‑painted title slapped on top. Even reporting from normally cautious outlets makes it clear this is not a promotion; it’s Trump kicking her out of the Cabinet after she crossed his red lines—publicly blaming him for that ad spend, fumbling her hearings, and becoming a walking scandal—and then tossing her a bullshit envoy gig so he can say he didn’t totally dump one of his own.
And then, magically, her “not‑my‑boyfriend” bails at the same time. Corey Lewandowski, the rumored lover who’s been her shadow for years, is out of DHS too—he’d been serving as her senior adviser/de facto chief of staff under the fig leaf of an unpaid “special government employee,” jet‑setting with her on that 737 with the private cabin, bullying a Coast Guard pilot over a forgotten blanket, and generally acting like the guy really running the show. Multiple outlets now say that once Trump decided to replace Noem with Sen. Markwayne Mullin at DHS, there was basically zero appetite in the White House to keep Corey around, and MS Now/New York Post–type reporting makes it clear his exit is being treated as part of the same cleanup operation—Noem’s gone, the alleged affair guy is gone, and everyone in MAGA world is pretending none of this was one of Washington’s worst‑kept secrets for years. So the fallout is exactly what it looks like: Trump torched her real job, handed her a fake prestige title, and her “he’s just an adviser” companion got quietly shown the door at the same time, because the whole arrangement had finally become too messy and too public even for this crowd.
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SAVE Act…holding us hostage
Trump is absolutely holding the whole country hostage with the SAVE Act right now, using his same recycled, debunked “illegals are stealing your elections” garbage to justify a bill that doesn’t fix a real problem but does make it a hell of a lot harder for regular people to vote. Noncitizen voting in federal elections is basically nonexistent—decades of investigations, including Trump’s own failed “election integrity” commission, turned up essentially zero meaningful cases—yet he’s acting like there’s a raging crisis so he can ram through a federal “show your papers” law and then blame Democrats for “supporting voter fraud” if they don’t go along.
What the SAVE Act actually does is crank voter suppression up to eleven. It forces every voter who registers or updates their registration to show documentary proof of citizenship in person—we’re talking passports or birth certificates plus photo ID—with no real option to just mail or upload documents, and it tells states they have to run their voter rolls through state and federal databases and kick off anyone who doesn’t match. Most people don’t walk around with a passport, and REAL ID or a normal state ID won’t cut it unless it explicitly lists your citizenship, which almost none of them do, so for millions of voters the new reality would be: go track down your birth certificate, get time off work, travel to an election office, and hope they process it correctly—or you just disappear from the rolls. It also guts third‑party registration drives because groups can’t collect registrations with proof of citizenship attached; everything has to go through officials, which is exactly how you choke off new voters in communities that already get ignored.
And you nailed who gets screwed first: married women, trans folks, and anyone whose current legal identity doesn’t line up perfectly with the piece of paper they were born under. Because the bill wants your proof of citizenship to match your current ID, a woman who changed her name when she got married now has to produce not just a birth certificate in her old name but also marriage documents and possibly court orders to convince some clerk that she’s the same person; experts estimate roughly a third of married women could lack “matching” documents under these rules. For trans, nonbinary, and intersex people, this is even more brutal: a lot of folks don’t have every document updated, and the SAVE Act effectively forces them to either present ID with a deadname or wrong gender marker, or risk challenges and denial at the registration stage—when only about 11% of trans people currently have all IDs reflecting their name and gender, this bill is basically a voter‑ban wrapped in “integrity” language.
The wild part is even conservative outfits are quietly admitting this is a sledgehammer for a fly. Analyses show that out of roughly 1.5 billion ballots cast in federal elections since 2000, there are around 100 documented cases involving noncitizens—call it 0.000007%—and none of them changed an outcome; meanwhile, advocates estimate the SAVE Act could block millions of citizens from voting, especially women, trans people, poor folks, rural voters, seniors, and disabled people who can’t easily travel with a stack of original documents. Civil rights groups, democracy orgs, and even some Republican‑leaning voices are saying the quiet part out loud: this is not about making elections safer, it’s about shrinking the electorate down to the people Trump likes, and he’s using his fake “stolen election” narrative as the gun to the country’s head—either pass this, or get accused of helping “illegals” vote forever.
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Market Update
The markets are getting absolutely hammered right now, and it’s directly tied to Trump’s Iran war chaos and the oil spike that came with it. Over the last several trading days, the Dow has gone on a roller coaster straight down—dropping around 785 points on Thursday, another 400–650‑plus on Friday depending on the close you look at, and at one point Monday it was off by as much as 900–1,100 points intraday before “recovering” to still finish hundreds of points in the red. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq are right there with it, logging their worst week since at least 2025, with tech getting hit hard and global markets—from Europe to Asia—selling off in sympathy because everyone sees the same thing: a long Iran war, oil over 100 a barrel, and no adult in the room.
Oil blowing past that $100 line is the fuse that lit this sell‑off—Brent crude is up roughly 30–35% in a week, with spikes over $110, and traders are suddenly pricing in higher inflation, slower growth, and central banks having less room to cut rates, which is basically the Holy Trinity of “bad for stocks.” You’ve got energy names and defense contractors popping, but everything tied to consumers, travel, small caps, and interest‑rate sensitivity is getting smacked, because if gas and heating go up fast, people stop spending on everything else. Trump is out there saying higher energy prices are a “small price to pay” and promising they’ll drop “rapidly” once Iran surrenders, but markets are very clearly voting that they do not believe his timeline or his “I have a plan” schtick—if they trusted him, you wouldn’t see this much panic selling and flight into the dollar and bonds.
So yeah, the markets are not gently “adjusting”; they’re flashing big red warning lights that this war and Trump’s tough‑guy posturing are already hitting people’s 401(k)s and retirement accounts, even before the full economic pain of expensive oil and jittery global trade really shows up in the real economy.
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TSA Update – Shutdown update
TSA is a disaster right now because Trump and Congress decided to play chicken with Homeland Security funding, and they’re using our actual lives and time in airports as leverage, like that’s just another bargaining chip. With this partial DHS shutdown, TSA agents are “essential,” so they still have to show up—but they’re doing it without pay, which means a ton of people are calling out, quitting, or picking up other work, and the result is exactly what you’re seeing: lines stretching for hours at big airports, people missing flights, spring break travel getting torched. Houston Hobby and New Orleans had security waits pushing three hours over the weekend, Charlotte and Atlanta are seeing nearly hour‑long standard lines even on a normal morning, and airports are telling people to show up four to five hours before their flight just to have a chance at making it through.
As for when this ends, nobody can give a straight answer because the shutdown is tied directly into Trump’s immigration and “election integrity” hostage‑taking—DHS funding is where he’s trying to jam through his enforcement agenda and things like the SAVE/SAVE America stuff, and the White House has already floated cuts to travel programs like Global Entry and saber‑rattled about TSA PreCheck as a way to crank up public pain and force Democrats to cave. Right now, the standoff is over how to fund DHS and what strings get attached, and Trump’s people are openly framing it as Democrats “refusing to protect the border” plus “refusing to secure our elections,” which tells you exactly where this is heading: he’s absolutely willing to keep TSA lines miserable and airports chaotic to pressure them into swallowing his voter‑suppression and hardline enforcement wishlist. So unless there’s a clean DHS funding deal that strips out his poison pills, yeah, the same logic he’s using with the SAVE Act—“do what I want or I break things”—is going to keep bleeding into TSA, and we’re all stuck paying for it in hours of our time while these clowns posture on TV.
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Sorry there was no update on Friday — it was a long week of work travel, and the news cycle was almost impossible to digest, let alone write about, as I bounced through time zones. Hang in there, everyone!
Speak Truth! Keep speaking TRUTH!
Don’t Give up the Ship!
Go Cause Good Trouble, with Your Elbows Up!
These are facts that I researched and verified – AI helped put together some sentence structure, but the words and tone are mine. These are my views based upon facts, research and thoughtful consideration using logic. I own the copyright to any images used. I’m comfortable to stand alone to uphold truth. Feel free to check me, but do not attack me. I am only causing good trouble.