Curious-1
32.1K posts


BACKCHANNEL BREAKTHROUGH? Pakistan Brokers Ceasefire Plan To Reopen Hormuz: Report
hannity.com/media-room/bac…
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@gc22gc @RealSamFaddis Stop gaslighting us, it was a failed covert operation. We expected more from you and Steve.
Very unfortunate
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FADDIS: All credit to the team, they got the weapons officer out alive, no fatalities, some wounded. But this was a major operation and a major firefight. We had to blow up two C-130s, other aircraft hit. We were told they’d quit. That’s not what we saw. They’re not folding, they coordinated in real time, and their air defenses aren’t gone.
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@gc22gc @RealSamFaddis Steve, I am an iranian and 3 Times Trump voter. He betrayed us not only on no new middle east wars but also on everything else .. The America First, will not stand for this and not blindly follow Trump. Cut your losses and have a clean break with this Judas!
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In my new piece in The New York Times today, I argue the Iran war has reached a point Washington still refuses to say out loud:
either the U.S. escalates to a ground war—or Iran emerges as a new center of global power.
Think about—what stops this future?
nytimes.com/2026/04/06/opi…
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If you want to understand Trump’s on-again, off-again tweets about what he’s going to do to Iran, remember what he said in 2015. I get it’s easy to criticize Trump. But it’s more important to understand him:
In a 2015 radio interview with @hughhewitt , Trump repeatedly emphasized that U.S. leaders (and he himself as a potential leader) should avoid being too predictable in foreign policy and military matters, as this telegraphs intentions to adversaries and weakens negotiating or strategic positions.
When pressed on specific foreign policy scenarios (e.g., responses involving China or Middle East groups), Trump declined to detail plans, arguing that unpredictability was a strength:
“I wouldn’t want to tell you, because frankly, they have to, you know, somebody wrote a very good story about me recently, and they said there’s a certain unpredictability about Trump that’s great, and it’s what made him a lot of money and a lot of success. You don’t want to put, and you don’t want to let people know what you’re going to do with respect to certain things that happen. You don’t want the other side to know.”
He also told the WP:
“I don’t want them to know what I’m thinking, does that make sense? I want people to be guessing ... I don’t want people to figure it out. I don’t want people to know what my plan is. I have plans. I have plans! But I don’t want to do it.”
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Never thought these would be real headlines. I should add that there is no real movement by the cabinet to do this.
TIME@TIME
What to know about the 25th Amendment as lawmakers call for Trump’s removal time.com/article/2026/0…
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“I think that the California high-speed rail nightmare is the probably quintessential example of government waste and mismanagement,” says Rep. Vince Fong, a Republican whose district sits in California’s Central Valley, through which the project is supposed to run. cbsn.ws/41kxw9k
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In California’s Central Valley, some jokingly call these unfinished concrete structures their own “Stonehenge.” They were built for the state’s high-speed rail project, which has seen costs balloon and is years behind schedule. cbsn.ws/4tm7QoA
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