Friday, March 20, 2026

OPINION

The real reason Trump is trapped in Iran

Robert Reich
March 20, 2026
RAW STORY


U.S. President Donald Trump arrives at the airport after touring a temporary migrant detention center informally known as "Alligator Alcatraz" in Ochopee, Florida, at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, U.S., July 1, 2025. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein


Friends,

Yesterday, Trump said that he’d do whatever is necessary to ease the oil crisis. He also assured America that the crisis “will be over soon.”

BS.

The problem isn’t just that Iran has blocked the Strait of Hormuz. It’s also that Iran, Israel, and the United States have all inflicted — and continue to inflict — serious damage to the oil and gas infrastructure of the Middle East. This damage will take months if not years to repair.

At one point on Thursday oil prices jumped to $119 a barrel before falling back to around $111 a barrel — all but guaranteeing that the price of gas at the pump will continue to rise, as will the prices of many other products and services indirectly affected by oil prices.


What we are now witnessing is one of the grossest military and political blunders in modern history.


It’s not hard to understand why Trump is trapped in Iran. He doesn’t listen to anyone outside his small circle of sycophants who tell him what he wants to hear.

But there’s something else. Iran has adopted an asymmetric war strategy that’s working.

I’m indebted to Marty Manley for uncovering a fascinating historical fact that sheds light on what Iran is doing. During the Korean War, U.S. Air Force Colonel John Boyd came up with a theory of competitive decision-making that shaped American military doctrine for a generation. He called it the OODA loop: Observe, Orient, Decide, Act.


Boyd found that victory doesn’t go to the side with more firepower. It goes to the side that cycles through the OODA loop faster — observing what’s changing, orienting to its meaning, deciding what to do, and acting before its adversary does.

Get inside your opponent’s loop, Boyd reasoned, and you don’t just outpace him. You break his ability to form a coherent picture of the war he’s fighting.

Manley observes that Iran has adopted Boyd’s approach. Iran hasn’t needed to match American firepower; it’s needed only to generate economic and political problems for Washington that outrun Washington’s ability to orient, decide, and act.


Iran has gotten inside Trump’s OODA loop because Iran has responded to U.S. airstrikes by widening the war horizontally — attacking tankers in the Strait of Hormuz, launching drones and missiles at Gulf state oil and gas infrastructure, provoking the U.S. and Israel to destroy even more of that infrastructure, hitting Amazon data centers in the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain (causing regional outages for banking, e-commerce, and cloud services), and squeezing other choke points that the global economy depends on.

Iran’s leaders — veterans of asymmetric wars in Iraq and Syria — are applying the same asymmetric logic to Trump’s war. Inexpensive drones, short-range missiles, and sea mines can have the same effect that IEDs had in Iraq — only with far greater strategic impact, because they disrupt global supply chains.

What has Washington done? Dropped more bombs and launched more missiles.


On Wednesday Israel struck at the crown jewel of Iran’s energy industry — the giant South Pars gas field that Iran shares with Qatar and is by far the largest in the world. (Israel says Trump gave the attack his blessing; Trump says he didn’t.) Iran quickly retaliated with an attack on Qatar’s Ras Laffan Industrial City, the world’s largest liquefied natural gas facility.

The attacks have sent the global oil benchmark soaring and prompted a mad scramble in Washington. Trump threatens “to blow up the entirety” of Iran’s South Pars gas holdings if Iran attacks Qatar again. His treasury secretary says the U.S. will consider lifting sanctions on millions of barrels of Iranian oil.

Since he and Israel began bombing Iran, Trump’s strategy has been entirely reactive. Iran is generating problems for Washington faster than Washington can contain them — a clear sign that Iran is inside Trump’s OODA loop.


Trump and Israel assumed that overwhelming airpower would either compel Iran to surrender or trigger regime change. But neither has happened. The regime seems more entrenched and bellicose than ever.

As Iran continues to block the Strait of Hormuz and attacks its Gulf neighbors’ oil and gas infrastructure, the cost-benefit ratio continues to shift against Trump: Economic and political pressures are mounting on Washington faster than they are on Tehran.

Sure, Iran is hurting — but, as Manley argues, Iran can sustain its counteroffensive more easily and longer than the U.S. can sustain economic damage to Iran. An Iranian Shahed drone made of styrofoam and powered by a motorcycle engine, for example, costs orders of magnitude less than the precision missiles sent to intercept it or the economic havoc it causes when it ignites a tanker, data center, or desalination plant.


In addition, the longer Trump’s OODA loop stays broken, the more bad consequences occur that no one in the Trump regime anticipated. Trump’s war in Iran is now being led by Israel rather than the other way around, and Trump has no easy way to alter this power imbalance.

The war has also shifted the power balance between Russia and Ukraine, with Russian oil revenues potentially doubling as U.S. weapons stocks become depleted.

So what’s next for the U.S.? Is there any way out for Trump?

He could put “boots on the ground” in Iran and attempt to seize Iran’s stockpile of approximately 970 pounds of 60 percent enriched uranium — enough to produce multiple nuclear weapons if further enriched. If he could pull this off, a major feat.


But this would be a particularly dangerous move in terms of American lives lost. It could even risk an accidental nuclear explosion.

Moreover, no one knows where the enriched uranium is being stored. In the wake of U.S. and Israeli strikes last June, it’s likely in deep underground tunnels near Isfahan and other secure locations, but the International Atomic Energy Agency can’t verify the exact locations or status of the stockpile due to lack of access to bombed sites.

What about returning to the diplomatic table? As Richard Haass points out, Trump hardly gave diplomacy a chance before launching his war. U.S. envoys Witkoff and Kushner blended maximal positions — effectively demanding an end to Iran’s nuclear program, ballistic missile force, and support for proxies — with minimal time for negotiation.


Haass notes the stark contrast between this process and the administration’s apparently endless willingness to give Russia the benefit of the doubt and compromise Ukraine’s interests.

If Trump returned to negotiations now, from a position of demonstrated military capability rather than exhaustion, Iran might be forced to reorient and respond to an adversary that did something unpredictable.

The problem is that the Trump regime has repeatedly reneged on his promises to Iran, so Tehran has no reason to believe any offer Trump makes.

So, presumably for the foreseeable future, Iran will remain in Trump’s OODA loop, Trump will remain trapped in Iran, and American consumers will be trapped by soaring energy prices.



Robert Reich is an emeritus professor of public policy at Berkeley and former secretary of labor. His writings can be found at https://robertreich.substack.com/. His new memoir, Coming Up Short, can be found wherever you buy books. You can also support local bookstores nationally by ordering the book at bookshop.org
GOP calls to ban Muslims reverberate through Congress: 'Time for them to go home'

"It is not. I don't give a s--- what these people think," Omar replied through a smile. "I ain't going nowhere."


Matt Laslo
March 19, 2026 
RAW STORY


Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) looks at his watch. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz


WASHINGTON — Calls for a ban on Muslims in America are becoming more mainstream on the right.

Earlier this week, Raw Story was interviewing Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) about President Donald Trump’s top priority, the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility, or SAVE, Act, but the Alabama gubernatorial candidate didn’t want to discuss the election bill on the Senate floor this week.

“It ain’t gonna pass,” Tuberville said before he changed the subject. “I’m ready to get rid of the Muslims.”

“Why’s that?” Raw Story pressed.

“It’s time for them to go home,” Tuberville said as he flashed a broad smile. “They're trying to tear our country down.”

That’s news to the four Muslims in the 119th Congress, a record high.


"We've always had these people who really should be considered white nationalists and Christian fundamentalist nationalists," Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) told Raw Story. "So it's not surprising that they want to ban a whole people because of their faith."

“It's ridiculous”

Omar says she isn’t expecting a change in tune anytime soon, though.

"It's not going to go anywhere, though," Omar said. “It's just sad that they have a base that feeds off of this kind of bigotry, this level of unconstitutionality.”

Other Muslims in Congress say their colleagues on the right need a history lesson.

"Muslims have been a part of this country since the inception of this country and even before the inception of this country," Rep. Andre Carson (D-IN) told Raw Story while slowly shaking his head.

The nine-term congressman says critics need to open their eyes.

"Muslims have been critical in our infrastructure. Go to any major hospital, you'll find a Muslim physician,” Carson said. “Go to any major courtroom, you'll find Muslim barristers and judges and law enforcement community keeping us safe, thwarting potential terrorist attacks that you'll never hear about.”

Carson, a senior member of the House Intelligence Committee, knows from experience.

“I was one of them. I worked in counterterrorism and counterintelligence for the Department of Homeland Security in Indiana,” Carson said. “I mean, it's ridiculous.”

Ridiculous or not, since Trump joined Israel in its war against Iran, Islamophobia appears to be en vogue in certain GOP circles.

"Are you serious about the Muslim ban?"

Earlier this month, Rep. Andy Ogles (R-TN) made headlines nationwide for calling for a Muslim ban.

While the new bill he dropped Tuesday aims at Muslim-majority countries, it doesn’t single out the religion by name, even as it would upend immigration as we know it.

The measure seeks to dismantle the current family-based immigration system — commonly referred to by critics as "chain migration" — established by the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act.

It would “prohibit the admission of aliens from certain countries where the United States cannot reliably verify the identities or backgrounds of individuals seeking entry,” according to the measure’s title.

"All immigration to the United States shall serve the economic, cultural, and security interests of the United States as determined by Congress,” reads a draft of Ogles’ measure.

"Are you serious about the Muslim ban?" Raw Story asked the two-term member of the far-right Freedom Caucus.

"Until they address the violence that's being preached in their mosques, we've got to take a hard look at this,” Ogles replied.

"We downloaded a brochure from a U.S. mosque and it lays out the case and justifies when violence is warranted in the local community. Show me a church that's preaching that. Show me a synagogue, a Hindu temple, Buddhist monks that are preaching that anywhere, much less in the U.S."

"Some would say the Christian nationalist movement, there's violence in there," Raw Story pressed. "What do you make of that?"

"Show me where. Where?" Ogles said before tying recent domestic security incidents to terrorism, even though authorities have stopped short of such an assessment. "Four terrorist attacks in three weeks. They weren't Hindu. They weren't Buddhist."

While the gunman in a recent mass shooting in Austin, Texas, was wearing an Iran flag T-shirt and a "Property of Allah" hoodie, he was an outlier, according to Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), who said Tuberville and Ogles are cherry picking cases.

"It's so interesting to hear them say that when most of the mass shootings at schools are white males,” Tlaib told Raw Story on the steps of the U.S. Capitol. "I watch these shootings constantly, and it's always a white male, and I never hear them talking about banning white males.”

The hate — or “othering” — Muslims regularly feel from American politicians isn’t just from the GOP, though.

“It's very bipartisan"

"The Islamophobia in our Congress on both sides of the aisle is very real. It's very bipartisan," Tlaib said. "And it's the same kind of fear-mongering that you see with immigrants — ‘They're here to do all these awful things. They're drug dealers, gangsters.' — and we all know that's not true."

Tlaib says she knows from personal experience.

In 2023, the four-term congresswoman was censured — with the help of 22 of her fellow Democrats — for “promoting false narratives regarding the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel and for calling for the destruction of the state of Israel,” according to the measure’s text.

But the progressive "Squad" member says she hasn't been intimidated. Just this week, Tlaib took to the House floor to encourage American Muslims as their holy month of Ramadan drew to a close with the Eid al-Fitr celebration on Thursday.

“To all the millions of Muslim Americans in our country right now,” Tlaib said on the House floor this week. “I want you to know that not everybody in this chamber sees you as less human. We know — majority of us in this chamber — know that you are worthy of life, liberty and justice. May this Eid bring us closer to a future grounded in peace, justice, dignity for all.”

While Tlaib was censured by this GOP-controlled Congress, an effort to censure and strip her fellow “Squad” member, Congresswoman Omar, of her committee assignments failed last fall.

That appears to have only emboldened the outspoken four-term Minnesota progressive.

“Are the attacks painful?" Raw Story asked.

"It is not. I don't give a s--- what these people think," Omar replied through a smile. "I ain't going nowhere."



One magic number would likely tip US into recession: Wall Street economists


Nicole Charky-Chami
March 19, 2026 
RAW STORY

Economists cautioned whether surging oil prices and soaring tariffs amid the ongoing Iran war could tip the United States into recession and what signs could point to an economic downslide, The Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday.

The Journal polled 50 economists between March 16-18 from different sectors, including Wall Street banks and small consulting firms and universities, for a survey about what they expect the economic fallout might look like amid the military conflict in the Middle East. Experts did identify one important metric that could show potential signs of economic difficulty.

"Economists put the probability of a recession in the next 12 months at 32%, up modestly from 27% in January," The Journal reported. "Asked how high crude oil would need to climb to tip the recession probability above 50%, economists gave a range of responses: from $90 a barrel to $200, with an average of $138. Asked how long oil prices would need to be at an elevated level, they said from four weeks to 55 weeks, with an average duration of 14 weeks. U.S. oil futures closed at $96.32 a barrel Wednesday, compared with a February average of about $65."

Robert Fry of Robert Fry Economics predicted that the probability of an economic downturn was at 40 percent, explaining that "$125 oil for eight weeks is his make-or-break point."

"My forecast is contingent on the assumption that the Strait of Hormuz will be fully open to tanker traffic by mid-April," Fry said. "If it isn’t, oil prices will go much higher, and I will put a recession in my forecast."
Japan rejects Trump on Strait of Hormuz after Pearl Harbor joke

David Edwards
March 20, 2026 
RAW STORY


Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi raises her fist while saying "Japan is back" as she delivers remarks during a dinner hosted by U.S. President Donald Trump at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., March 19, 2026. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

President Donald Trump said that Japan was declining to help open the Strait of Hormuz, a day after he made a joke about Pearl Harbor.

Following his Thursday meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, Trump told Fox News host Martha MacCallum on Friday that the country would not assist with the fallout from the war in Iran because of "constitutional constraints."

"Japan is better ally than NATO," Trump reportedly said to MacCallum.

Japan's constitution bans the use of force except in defense of its territory. It's unclear whether the Japanese Self-Defense Force could be used to escort ships through the Middle Eastern waterway.

During his meeting with Takaichi, Trump compared his strikes on Iran to the bombing of Pearl Harbor.

"We didn't tell anybody about it because we wanted surprise. Who knows better about surprise than Japan? Why didn't you tell me about Pearl Harbor, OK?" the U.S. president joked.



'He's mentally unhinged': Trump hit with disgust as tasteless Japan comment flops

Tom Boggioni
March 19, 2026 
RAW STORY


U.S. President Donald Trump meets with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., March 19, 2026. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein

Donald Trump’s Oval Office appearance with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi ended on a sour note after he made a tone-deaf comment about Japan attacking Pearl Harbor in 1941.

At the end of what was a mostly cordial joint appearance, the president was asked why he did not alert the leadership of Japan and other allies about his impending attack on Iran.

First stating that he didn’t want to lose the element of surprise, he took what seemed an awkward stab at a joke, saying, “Who knows better about surprise than Japan? Okay, why didn’t you tell me about Pearl Harbor?"

That led to a few scattered laughs and then some murmuring, as the president continued, “You believe in surprise, I think, much more so than us. And we had a surprise, and we did, and because of that surprise, we knocked out, the first two days, we probably knocked out 50% of what we — and much more than we anticipated doing. So if I go and tell everybody about it, there’s no longer a surprise, right?”

Needless to say, social media lit up over the tasteless remark.

Former Chicago Tribune editor Mark L Jacob was quick to respond with, “Trump jokes about Pearl Harbor with his guest, the Japanese prime minister. He’s mentally unhinged, with no impulse control or sense of what’s appropriate.”

“I can’t believe that Trump just joked about Pearl Harbor while sitting next to Japan’s prime minister at the White HouseWhat an absolute embarrassment!” added Democratic strategist Jon Cooper. Journalist Steven Beschloss added, “’Who knows more about surprise than Japan? Why didn't you tell me about Pearl Harbor?’ -- the embarrassing idiot Donald Trump in response to a Japanese reporter's question about starting a war with Iran while sitting next to the Japanese prime minister.”

Educator Orion noted, “You can hear the air go out of the room.”

“This is another leak in the cognitive damn. Look for increasingly racist comments in the coming weeks. Unless biology steps in and saves us, I have a feeling we’ll hear the N word by the midterms,” predicted Democracy Dude.

“I didn't think he could still make me gasp, but I was wrong,” admitted archivist Rubberband Girl Cheryl McNeilly noted.

“My great-aunt Hisako was a Nagasaki survivor. Great-uncle was a pilot, brought her to US post-war. We saw her regularly till her death when I was 20. Sweet, gentle woman. First rule of the family was to NEVER discuss the war. Ever. Even when cancer finally killed her. The look on the PMs face ...”


'Profound idiot': Nicolle Wallace struggles to process Trump's shock joke to Japanese PM

Nicole Charky-Chami
March 19, 2026 
RAW STORY


MS NOW host Nicolle Wallace reacted to President Donald Trump's bizarre comment on Pearl Harbor and Japan during an Oval Office meeting and press conference with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi. (MS NOW/Screenshot)

MS NOW host Nicolle Wallace had a frank reaction on Thursday after President Donald Trump made a jaw-dropping comment that shocked people inside the Oval Office during a White House meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi.

Wallace was visibly stunned after discussing Trump's attempted joke that clearly left the room uncomfortable when a reporter asked why Trump hadn't warned his allies that the U.S.-Israeli military strikes were coming.

"One thing, you don't want to signal too much when we go in," Trump said. "We went in very hard and we didn't tell anyone about it because we wanted surprise. Who knows better about surprise than Japan? Why didn't you tell me about Pearl Harbor?"


Wallace watched the video playback and commented on Trump, asking her panel to share their thoughts.

"I struggle every minute of every day with platforming him, one, I should do it all day because it shows what a profound idiot he is," Wallace said. "But but two, we were on other sides. This is a question about why didn't you read in your allies? And he says, we didn't know what our adversary was going to do. I mean, David Frum, what do you even, how's your brain doing?"


Frum, a Canadian-American commentator and former speechwriter, described why Trump's words shocked the Japanese leader and dignitaries visiting America.


"So first, there's probably no society on earth where good manners count for more than Japan, a country that has been — and we're talking about 80 years since the end of World War II, that has been a staunch and loyal ally of the United States for 80 years, where the warmth of person to person ties," Frum said. "But the one big cultural difference has always been the emphasis on decorum and decency and respect in Japanese culture, whereas American culture can be a little more boisterous. For the president of the United States to insult them, and you can watch it, sort of figuring out 'No one is amused by what I just said. Maybe if I say it again, it'll get more amusing the second time. And what if I say right, right, right. And give them a little jab in the ribs? Maybe it'll be funny then.'"

Frum described why it was so surprising — and why it left them silent.

"And it's just horrifying. One more thing that needs to be pointed out in this analogy that he's drawing between the United States and Japan, who's doing the sneak attack?" Frum added. "Oh, yeah. He's comparing the United States to the Japanese sneak attack. He wanted to do a Pearl Harbor on Greenland. Now he wants to do a Pearl Harbor on Iran. He is comparing himself to the people whom Americans normally condemn, and then elbowing the Japanese that they don't think the whole thing is terribly amusing."

Marco Rubio hit with devastating clip on MS NOW as he fails fuming MAGA's own test

Daniel Hampton
March 19, 2026 
RAW STORY


(Screengrab via MS NOW)

MS NOW's Ari Melber on Thursday exposed what he framed as a glaring act of MAGA hypocrisy — playing a side-by-side clip of right-wingers melting down over Bad Bunny's Spanish-language Super Bowl halftime show while Secretary of State Marco Rubio delivered an entire address in Spanish.

"Nobody understood a thing!" Fox News host Jesse Watters bemoaned to viewers about the half-time show.

"Not one word of English?" another MAGA commentator raged.

Melber then played a side-by-side clip of Rubio delivering March 7 remarks in Spanish on television from the podium.

"To get up there and perform the whole show in Spanish is a middle finger to the rest of America!" MAGA Megyn Kelly fumed about Bad Bunny's performance.

Rubio "failed" Kelly's "test," Melber said in a separate segment teasing his takedown. He again let the contrast speak for itself, rolling footage of Rubio doing exactly that.

"For MAGA, apparently it's okay when they do it," Melber said dryly. After sharing a Spanish message to viewers, Melber added: 'Hope nobody's upset.'"

Melber brought on music journalist Neil Shah, a former longtime Wall Street Journal reporter and author of an upcoming book on the 2010 hip-hop boom, to put the backlash in context.

Shah said Trump and MAGA's complaints about Bad Bunny were "just out of touch with the reality of music," pointing out that the Puerto Rican superstar has been Spotify's number one artist for much of the last five years.

"Streaming has allowed many of these global artists to crash through the traditional gatekeepers in the American music industry," Shah said, citing Latin music, K-pop, and Afrobeats as genres that have exploded precisely because platforms opened doors the traditional industry kept closed.

Elon Musk faces billions in damages after brutal court loss

Erik De La Garza
March 20, 2026
RAW STORY



Elon Musk is seen with a bruised eye that Musk claimed he received at the hands of his son, X Æ A-12, as he attends a press conference with U.S. President Donald Trump in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 30, 2025. REUTERS/Nathan Howard

California jury found Friday that Elon Musk misled Twitter investors in the lead-up to his $44 billion acquisition of the social media company, potentially exposing him to billions in damages, according to multiple reports.

The verdict in the class-action case stems from claims that the Tesla and SpaceX CEO – who also served a controversial tenure as President Donald Trump’s DOGE head – made misleading statements during his 2022 effort to purchase Twitter. Musk later renamed the social media platform to X.

Attorneys for the plaintiffs said total damages could reach as much as $2.6 billion, CNBC reported Friday. Musk, however, was cleared of some fraud allegations, the outlet added.


“This is a great example of what you cannot do to the average investor -- people that have 401ks, kids, pension funds, teachers, firemen, nurses,” an attorney for the Twitter investors told CNBC outside a San Francisco courthouse. “That’s what this case was all about. This was not about Musk. It was about the whole operation.”

The lawsuit was originally filed in October 2022 after Musk completed the takeover at $54.20 per share.

Jon Stewart delivers personal blow as ugly battle with Elon Musk goes public

Adam Nichols
March 20, 2026  
RAW STORY



Jon Stewart gives remarks at a PACT Act rally to support funding veterans who are victims of burn pit related illnesses. (Shutterstock.com)

 Jon Stewart got into an ugly — and very public — battle with Elon Musk as the two hurled insults at each other, and the comedian delivered a personal blow to finish it off.

The dispute began after Stewart aired a segment on "The Weekly Show" examining X's impact on democracy. He criticized the Tesla head's focus on undocumented voting, stating, "Musk has pushed this idea that undocumented, non-citizen voting is rampant, it is sowing the seeds of our destruction, and we cannot do it."

Stewart highlighted what he viewed as a fundamental contradiction in Musk's position. He said: "The irony of it all is [because of] this guy's platform, this guy's algorithm, which he is in charge of... he is a far more relevant actor in the warping of our democracy, through his money and his algorithm, than any measure of undocumented, non-citizen voting will ever be."

Stewart predicted Musk's defense, stating, "What his argument—and I think his people's argument—would be, is: Now that we're getting uncensored material, now that the First Amendment has primacy, people move to the right because they learn the truth."

Stewart countered, "The truth is that algorithm incentivizes the misinformation from the right, and he designs it."


A clearly angry Musk responded directly with an attack on Stewart's credibility. "Jon Stewart is an extremely skilled propagandist disguised as a truth-teller," he wrote.

Stewart fired back, characterizing Musk as just, "An extremely skilled propagandist."

"Not as good as you! Stop being so humble," Musk fired back late Thursday.

Stewart subsequently invited Musk to appear on his show to discuss their disagreements. However, a previous invitation went unfulfilled. Last year, Musk indicated he would appear on Comedy Central's "The Daily Show" if the interview aired "unedited," but the appearance never occurred. Stewart later revealed that Musk had "ghosted" him after reading a follow-up message.

That's when Stewart went personal.

"Judging from his most recent revelations of his baby mamas, I think everyone has been left on read at some point by that gentleman," he said on his podcast.

Musk has at least 14 children with four women.

Musk's X platform has faced widespread criticism for inadequately addressing misinformation. In 2024, researchers reported that false claims originating from Musk received approximately 2 billion views on the platform, according to the Center for Countering Digital Hate.
Trump's big plan to boost Americans' 401Ks now threatens to sink savings: report

Alexander Willis
March 20, 2026 
RAW STORY

President Donald Trump’s plan to bolster Americans’ 401Ks by expanding access to private market investments is reaching its final stages, but according to Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) it may have come at the “worst possible moment” — and could end up sinking Americans’ savings, Politico reported Friday.

Trump signed an executive order last August designed to allow working-class Americans to more easily invest in markets not historically available to them through their retirement accounts, notably the private credit market, which involves loans made outside of traditional banks.

The Trump administration is now “planning to roll out” its proposal, though as Warren and others noted, the timing may prove disastrous.

“The roughly $2 trillion private credit industry — a major piece of the broader private markets where risky companies obtain loans from Wall Street firms that fall outside the highly regulated banking system — is facing a reckoning from investors,” Politico reporter Declan Harty wrote for the outlet Friday.

“A string of blow-ups has sparked new concern over the quality of loans underpinning the industry. Investors are pulling their money from credit funds so fast that they’re running into withdrawal limits. And fears of an artificial intelligence upheaval could ripple through the market, since private credit funds have been critical sources of capital for software companies, which are now endangered by AI.”

The factors plaguing the private credit market were described by Danny Moses — investor and predictor of the 2008 housing market crash — as “the perfect storm,” with Moses telling the outlet that the private credit market could very well face an upending equal to what the housing market saw in the 2008 financial crisis.

“They’ll have no choice but to bail out this entire industry if it goes off a cliff,” Moses told Politico. “It will impact retail investors, the banks, certainly private equity and private credit.”

And Amanda Fischer, who up until last year served as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission chief of staff, concurred with Moses in that Trump’s plan couldn’t have come at a more dire moment.

“The Trump administration is opening the door for fund managers to dump private debt and equity on retail investors and their 401Ks right at the point when the market is showing the largest signs of strain,” Fischer told Politico.
'What jobs?' Trump's buddy sparks firestorm as new plot for robot takeover revealed

Robert Davis
March 19, 2026 9:32PM ET
RAW STORY


FILE PHOTO: Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos speaks during the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Glasgow, Scotland, Britain, November 2, 2021. Paul Ellis/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo


One of President Donald Trump's corporate allies sparked a firestorm on Thursday after his plans to lead a robot revolution in manufacturing were revealed.

The Wall Street Journal reported that Amazon's Jeff Bezos is in talks to raise $100 billion to acquire manufacturing businesses and automate them with artificial intelligence. The report was published at a time when economic experts at the Federal Reserve had expressed concerns about the "almost zero" job growth over the previous year.

"The Amazon.com founder is meeting with some of the world’s largest asset managers to raise funding for the project," the report reads in part. "A few months ago, he traveled to the Middle East to discuss the new fund with sovereign wealth representatives in the region. More recently, he went to Singapore to raise funding for the effort as well, according to people familiar with the matter."

Political analysts and observers reacted to the report on social media.

"Jobs? What jobs?" military veteran John Jackson posted on X.

"Very curious what he means by AI or if he even knows," journalist Daniel Willis posted on Bluesky. "Because I’m not sure how a language simulator would automate manufacturing? Or if he just means machine learning, what there even is to automate beyond the programming we already give the robots who have done most of the work for decades?"

"The Epstein class is literally trying to take everyone's job and leave people to suffer and die with absolutely nothing," podcaster Kyle Kulinski posted on X. "Billionaires are a national security threat and need to be dealt with accordingly."

"This is the future people like @matthewstoller and @SohrabAhmari see for reshoring U.S. manufacturing," Derek Guy, editor at Put This On, posted on X. "It's reshoring in name only, as it does not create good-paying jobs for regular people."

Read the report article by clicking here.


The Fragment on Machines. Karl Marx – from The Grundrisse (pp. 690-712). [690]. The labour process. -- Fixed capital. Means of labour. Machine. -- Fixed ...




'Oh boy!' Jen Psaki beside herself as 'biggest grift' in Trump admin unearthed

Robert Davis
March 19, 2026 
RAW STORY


U.S. President Donald Trump meets with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., March 19, 2026. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein


MS NOW's Jen Psaki was beside herself on Thursday as she reported on two blockbuster stories about corruption in the Trump administration.

NBC News reported that former Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's top lieutenant, Cory Lewandowski, asked federal contractors to pay him in exchange for growing their contracts with the agency. One company highlighted in particular was the private prison company, GEO Group.

"Oh boy!" Psaki exclaimed. "That is a hell of a story. And that is just one of the stories, just one about a major alleged grift we got today."

Bloomberg also reported on Thursday that President Donald Trump's son, Don Jr., recently invested in a rare earth minerals company at roughly the same time that the company secured a $620 million federal loan. That investment also happened at a time when the Trump administration is threatening to withhold funding for a critical H.I.V. prevention program in Zambia in exchange for more of the country's rare earth minerals.

"While the rare earth magnet startup was only valued at about $200 million when Don Jr.'s firm invested in it, today, people familiar with the matter told Bloomberg that the startup is now valued at nearly $2 billion," Psaki reported.

Representatives for both Lewandowski and Trump Jr. have denied any wrongdoing.



Epic demotion delivered to Trump in emasculating Morning Joe putdown

Travis Gettys
March 20, 2026
ALTERNET


U.S. President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the Knesset on the day of Trump's address, amid a U.S.-brokered prisoner-hostage swap and ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas, in Jerusalem, October 13, 2025. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/Pool/File Photo

President Donald Trump has become little more than a sidekick to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, according to a pundit on MS NOW's "Morning Joe."

The 79-year-old president decided to join Israel in a military operation against Iran nearly three weeks ago, but his justification and goals for the strikes have shifted — and Americans are skeptical of their necessity. Journalist Anand Giridharadas said Trump's deference to Netanyahu was uncharacteristic for him.

"He promised no more forever wars and these kind of stupid wars," Giridharadas said. "He promised safety, like just basic safety. He promised crackdown on refugees and the border issue, and he promised costs would come down. By doing this war – I wouldn't even call this a war of choice, it's like a war of whim and maybe a war of like, following your friend off a cliff.

"He is, on all four of those issues, betraying not me and you or anybody else, but his core base. Those four promises, 'No more stupid wars, I'll deal with costs because, you know, refugees and safety, because Iran is a terror state.'"

Trump has said the war was necessary to destroy Iran's missile capabilities, its navy and its nuclear program, in addition to ensuring the regime can no longer arm or support terrorism in other countries. But Giridharadas argued that Israel's goals were completely different in this joint military operation.

"It may not be able to win on this battlefield that we're seeing on our screen, but for the next 20 years to come, we're going to all have to live with the threat of terrorism that has been re-ignited by this kind of treatment," he said. "There are going to be refugee flows when all of this, you know, the Israelis apparently want state collapse. That's one of their goals, I read in the New York Times this morning. Well, that state collapse is going to mean refugees on a giant scale. It's one of the more populous countries in the world."

Giridharadas said the dynamic begs the question of why Trump has taken a back seat to Netanyahu.

"Costs are going through the roof, and I think it's really worth asking as Americans: Donald Trump has demoted himself to being sort of Bibi's VP, right?" he said.

"Like, it's a very strange. We fund Israel's weapons, like, Israel is economically and militarily viable because of American support. So Donald Trump talks a lot about leverage and as you know, is obsessed with the notion of, 'If I'm giving you something, I want to be able to dictate terms,' and his whole policy is now on every personal and and economic elsewhere is about that.

"But in this relationship, he seems to be willing to follow his friend off a cliff," he added, "and very interesting, David Sanger reporting in the Times today about the Israelis having goals that are totally different from American goals, and yet the Americans are just, you know, along for the ride. So I'm curious why someone who is so sensitive to his own humiliation is willing to be Bibi's VP."