So, the three headlines from the president's
speech last night, at least in the short term, are no ground troops. Didn't mention ground
troops. Yes, we are getting out in some number of weeks by the end of April. And there's not
going to be regime change. Regime change, as he said explicitly, is not our goal. So, are those
true? Well, of course, you can't tell. You can't know at this point as Trump himself said this has
been a very short engagement relative to say the first or second world war or Vietnam. But all of
those wars began with similar promises. This won't last long back by fall. All the kind of famous
slogans that we chuckle about ironically decades later. They had no idea what they were getting
into. And that is true again for every conflict. The second people start dying, you really don't
know where it's going to end. And that goes for this conflict, too. And all kinds of things
could happen between right now and resolution. And some of them are awful. And there also, by
the way, signs that there is, as there always is, quite a distance between what politicians tell us
and what they're actually planning to do or what they may do. So, for example, in the question of
ground troops, the president didn't mention them last night, but they are apparently on the way.
So, American troops are on the way to the Persian Gulf, including portions of the Nevada National
Guard for some reason. So, either that's a statement of intent, the administration does plan
to put boots on the ground, or it's an option they want to keep open. But either way, that very much
could happen. Particularly if the US decides we need actual regime change. We need to subdue the
country completely, change its leadership, demand unconditional surrender. None of those things can
be achieved. It is pretty much believed uh by air power alone. So that that could happen and it
could accelerate in other ways too. probably too horrible even to think about including the use
of non-conventional weapons, nuclear weapons of some kind. And the effects of that would be what
we don't know because those weapons have never been used. The kind of nuclear weapons that modern
nations possess are not even that closely related to the only ones that have ever been used 80 years
ago in Japan. So what would happen next? Again, we can only guess, but it would be awful. So,
those questions were partly answered last night, but they're not really the right questions that
we should be asking because this is not just a war in Iran. It is, well, really, it's a pivot in
history. What we're watching is a change of power globally. And so the questions we really should
be thinking about and that we're going to get the answers to fairly soon would include who runs the
world, who's in charge of the world, where are the real power centers, what is the nature of power,
what does it mean to have power, how do you know if a country is powerful, where does our power
derive? Why is the United States a power exactly? And finally, what is the United States? Who are
we? How do we understand ourselves? What do we stand for? What's our national character? Is there
one? What are we defending when we go to war? So, those are the questions that whether we want to
ask or not, and they're almost never discussed in public for some reason, that we're going to
get the answers to very soon because conflict forces an answer to these questions. In this
conflict in particular, this is a world war, which is to say the world, every nation in the
world, while not obviously directly engaged in it, has a stake in the outcome and the future of every
country will be determined in part by what happens in Iran. So to answer or try to answer the first
question, who controls the world? Well, how do you know? Well, you know because in terms of this
specific conflict, the nation that controls the world will be the one that opens the straight of
Hormuz. Now, what is the straight of Hormuz? Well, it's the choke point at the eastern end of the
Persian Gulf, which is the source of a fifth of the world's energy, probably 30% of the world's
fertilizer, whole bunch of other vital elements that the world needs to run, that the global
economy needs to operate. And you can't get any of those out of that region except through
that straight. And it's about 100 miles long. It's 25 odd miles wide at its shortest width. It
is basically the source of Iran's power. It turns out one of the things we've learned is that Iran
is not a military power. The president and many other leaders bragged about destroying its navy
and its air force and reducing its capacity to build missiles and ending its nuclear program.
And that's relevant. Certainly tactically it's relevant. But long-term its military, even its
nuclear program is not why Iran is powerful. Iran is powerful because of its geography. And that's
true for all countries. Geography is the single most important fact of a country. Where are you on
the globe? And what does that mean? And in Iran's case, its power is inherent because it is on the
other side, the northern side of the straight of Hormuz. So if you want the global economy to
function and it is globalized, every country is connected to every other country by commerce.
you have to be able to get through that straight and Iran is in charge of that decision, which
is to say Iran can stop you from doing that. And for many decades now, Iran has threatened to
do that. This is not the first time we've had a debate over the straight of Hormuz or it's been
in the news because in every single conflict with Iran, open conflict, diplomatic conflict,
beginning with the hostage crisis in 1979, extending through the war between Iran and Iraq
in which we took sides. Iran has said, "Hey, we will close the straight." And American policy
makers have understood that is ultimately why Iran is a nation that you have to reckon with that you
have to take seriously whether you like them or not even if you hate them maybe especially
if you hate them. So Iran is not a military power fundamentally. Iran is an economic power and
previous leaders have understood that. Our current leadership doesn't really seem to understand that
or has not said that in public. But Iran's power derives from its fat its ability to shut down or
at least gravely damage the global economy. So the only question that matters long term is who
reopens that straight. And it seems obvious at this point that the United States went into the
conflict with the mistaken belief that it could we could somebody could reopen that straight
by force. It's hard to understand how anyone who thought about it for 10 minutes, 5 minutes, 2
minutes could have reached that conclusion. How do you open it by force? Well, you could just blow up
Iran. You could end its regime. You could kill its Ayatollah. You could take out its leadership,
but does that open the straight? Think about what it takes to close the straight. Not much. In
fact, almost nothing. Mines, the threat of mines, boats with explosives on them, drones. It's
extremely easy to prevent commerce. It's very difficult to assure it. It's asymmetrical. And
so it's impossible to imagine how an outside power could keep the straight open without the
consent not just of the Iranian government, which you could destroy conceivably. You could just nuke
it, but without the consent of the people who live in Iran. Another way to put it is game it out.
You blow up Iran or you destroy any controlling authority within Iran and Iran collapses. Does
that open the straight? Well, of course not. It allows any armed group to control the straight
and then to collect taxes, levies, tolls for all shipping that goes through. It allows pirates
to take control of the straight. And that doesn't necessarily make commerce impossible, but it
massively increases the cost and it discourages normal flows of energy because who's going to
do that? Who's going to ensure a ship when no government can protect it or assure its protection
as it passes through the straits? So again, even if you reduced Iran to the state of permanent
civil war, ethnic conflict, even if you killed 90% of the people in Iran or 99% or 100%. You would
still be unable to promise shipping companies and oil producers and oil buyers that their oil or
their liqufied natural gas or their fertilizer, their sulfur, anything else they need from
the Persian Gulf would actually be able to go through that straight into the Indian Ocean
and out to the rest of the world. So that's not a solution. There's no military solution. And
that's not a peace neck position. War is bad. That's a practical observation that reflects
reality. You cannot bomb your way to an open straight. So if you're thinking about how to
resolve this through war, you have to somehow use force killing bombing to convince the Iranian
government. And you have to weaken it to the point where you convince them it's in their interest
to keep the straight open. But you can't bond them to the point they collapse because then there
will be no controlling authority to keep it open. So you need a government, but the government
has to like you, the government has to be weak enough to agree to your demands, but strong
enough to keep control over its territory and that waterway. Pretty delicate operation.
And at the end of it, you need consent. And this sort of explains what power really is.
Power is not the ability to destroy. Destroying is easy. Killing is easy. You can take life very
simply. Not hard at all. Dumb people do it all the time. Creating life is impossible. No human being
can do that. The difference that's the difference between man and God. Man can destroy but he cannot
create. So in human terms, power is the ability not to create chaos or destruction but to restore
order. Power is the ability to restore order. The most powerful person, the most powerful force is
the one that restores conditions to order. And you see that in your life. Your kids get in a fight.
That's easy. They're kids. They can beat each other up, but who's in charge? Well, the parent
who restores order. Dad comes home, knock it off. Dad's in charge. We know that because he got the
fighting to stop. And that's true of nations as well. The nation that restores order is the nation
in charge. The nation that forces the peace is the nation in charge. And in global terms, the
country that forces order on the Persian Gulf that opens the straight of Hormuz is the nation
that runs the world by definition. So for decades, certainly since the Second World War, the rest
of the world has assumed that that country is the United States. And again and again, as noted,
various Iranian leaders have threatened to close the strait. And in every single case, the rest
of the region has looked to the United States to make sure that doesn't happen. And the assumption
that if there was ever a problem, the US could fix it has remained up until February 28th when this
war began. And that was the day that the rest of the world realized that the United States was
unable to restore order. And this was a shock particularly for the six Gulf states who along
with Iran and Iraq are the energy producing states around the Persian Gulf. But those six
states, the GCC, the Gulf monarchies, our closest allies in the region, our most important allies
in the world, had lived for many years with the assumption that if there was ever a problem, the
United States could fix it. And they found out in very short order that that was untrue. And they
found out the hard way when hours after this war started, Iran started attacking them. And the
United States either wouldn't or couldn't stop that destruction. And the destruction is profound.
Profound. UAE, United Arab Emirates, location of Dubai and Abu Dhabi, two of the most famous cities
in the world, two of the nicest cities in the world, by the way, one of the richest countries
in the world, has taken over 2,000 missiles and drone attacks in the past months. 2,000 both
against energy infrastructure, economic targets, but also against hotels in downtown Dubai. The
airports, the busiest, most important airports in the region, maybe in the world, Dubai and Abu
Dhabi, the nicest airports in the world, attacked and the United States couldn't or wouldn't defend
them. Qatar, same thing. Saudi to some extent, same thing. Now, these are countries that partly
in exchange for the defense guarantee they thought they had, have been the largest and especially in
recent years, investors in the United States. So, their sovereign wealth funds, some of the biggest
in the world, have poured trillions of foreign direct investment into the US, literally trillions
of dollars. And the effects going forward are unknown, but it looks like I mean someone's going
to have to rebuild these countries. They're going to have to pay for it themselves most likely. And
so it looks like some of that investment maybe a lot of that investment will either stop and maybe
some of it under force majour will be pulled back. So it's a massive loss for them. It's a huge loss
for the United States. But more than anything, it's a reshuffleling of expectations and yes, of
power. Now, all of those countries are focused single-mindedly on reopening the straight because
that's the key to their economies. And of course, they live directly across the border from
Iran. And all of them have an interest in the United States doing that. And some of
them are pushing the United States to do that probably every bit as enthusiastically as
the Israeli government has to be totally honest. And you can understand that it's not an attack on
them from their perspective. Just make it stop, open the straight and there are a lot of practical
reasons why that needs to happen. One of them is oil and gas come out of the ground and you have to
put it somewhere. And if it's not going on ships, you have to put it in some sort of storage
facility. And those are limited in size. And if you don't have a place to put the oil
and gas, then you have to shut down the well and that's a that's a big operation and it can take a
long time to restart it. You basically shut down your entire economy. So there's a clock ticking
for these countries. You got to get the energy out of out of the region onto ships and out and you
need the revenue from selling it. So they want the United States to stop this immediately and by stop
it means open that straight. And their view is, well, you just crush the Iranian regime. It's
understandable why they feel that way. It's hard in practical terms to understand how you do
that. You You really can't. You need someone in Iran to agree to this. Someone who has the power
to control the country. And for the Gulf States and for a lot of countries around the world, that
is a nightmare scenario because that leaves the Iranians in control. So you go to all the trouble
to have this war and you have some version of the same regime still in charge. And from the
perspective of our allies in the Middle East, that is the last thing they want because these are
their enemies. They're literally the Iranians are bombing their countries. They don't want Iran in
charge. when all of this is over. But last night, the president seemed to indicate, in fact, didn't
seem to indicate, he just said, Iran's going to be in charge at the end. He said that when he
made the point that, well, the strait's going to reopen because Iran's going to need the money
from oil sales. That's another way of saying some kind of Iranian regime that we didn't choose is
going to be in power when this is all over. So that that statement alone is hugely significant
for the rest of the world. The president of the United States just said we're not going to be
in charge of who runs Iran when this war ends. But the most significant thing the president
said was about the straight and who opens it. And again, before we play this clip, keep in mind that
the rest of the world, including our adversaries, but especially our allies, always assumed it would
be the United States who, if it ever came to it, would reopen that critical waterway, that
key to the globalized economy, which it which it is. If there's any one geographic spot
on the globe that's the key to a global economy, to an interconnected economy, it's the straight
of Hormuz. Here's what the president said last night. The countries of the world that do receive
oil through the Hormone Strait must take care of that passage. They must cherish it. They must
grab it and cherish it. They can do it easily. We will be helpful, but they should take
the lead in protecting the oil that they so desperately depend on. So to those countries
that can't get fuel, many of which refuse to get involved in the decapitation of Iran. We had to
do it ourselves. I have a suggestion. Number one, buy oil from the United States of America. We
have plenty. We have so much. And number two, build up some delayed courage. Should have done it
before. Should have done it with us as we asked. go to the strait and just take it, protect
it, use it for yourselves. Iran has been essentially decimated. The hard part is done, so
it should be easy. You want the straight open, do it yourselves. So what does this mean?
Well, there are many levels uh on which you could analyze this. The first is the literal. So
we have enough oil. We don't need the oil there. or if you need the oil, you do it. to which a lot
of people have noted, well actually oil is priced on the international market and unless you shut
down American oil exports and in some basic sense nationalize the oil companies, control them, use
the government to control who they can sell to, then what happens in the strait affects us here
and gas prices and oil prices because we don't control those. Um, so there's that, but bigger
picture, what the president is saying is we can't open the street. And if it's so important to you,
because we could nationalize the oil companies, actually, if it's so important to you, you
do it. So, who's he talking to exactly? Well, this administration and previous administrations
have expressed increasing accelerating hostility toward Europe. And of course, Europe is who they
may be talking to. They seem to be talking to. Europe needs Qatari LNG, which they definitely
do. Since the United States blew up their pipeline from Russia, they're ever more dependent on
Gulf oil and particularly Gulf gas, natural gas. And so Europe, you do it. And we asked our
European allies to get in at the very beginning. And we're going to leave NATO because they're
not backing us up in Iran. It's not really a real conversation. Our European allies don't really
have militaries. And they don't have militaries because their countries have been occupied to one
degree or another by the US military since 1945 at the end of the Second World War. So they've
had not just a defense guarantee through NATO, they've had an actual physical defense against
whom? Russia for a lot of the time. And so they don't have the capacity to open the straight by
force. And of course, no one really does have that capacity. There's no force that can open
the straight, only consent. But even if you believe there was some military answer to this,
France and Great Britain and Germany are going to provide that answer. Spain, Portugal, Belgium.
It's absurd. It's absurd. Of course, Trump is not speaking to Europe. Nobody expects that Europe
could or has any interest in sending troops to the Persian Gulf to open the straight. So, who's he
speaking to? Well, practically speaking, there's really only one country on earth with the power,
not necessarily the military power, but maybe the power to open the Gulf, to open the straight at
the eastern end of the Gulf, let all that oil and gas out. And that of course is China. China is
who the president is speaking to. And by the way, the US president was supposed to be in China this
month, April, meeting with the Chinese president. she and that's been delayed until next month and
we'll see if that actually happens. But at the center of the conversation will be this question.
So how exactly would China open the straight of Formuz? Well, probably not with aircraft carriers.
In fact, you have to wonder how many aircraft carriers will be built after this conflict because
our aircraft carriers can't get very close to Iran because of the threat of drones and missiles. So,
is it even useful to have aircraft carriers in this moment? We'll have to assess that. Doesn't
seem it. But it's not its military that gives China the power to do this. It's its economic
relationships of course. So, China is the largest trading partner with every Gulf country and with
Iran. In fact, China is one of the only countries that has any kind of meaningful relationship
with Iran at this point. China and Russia, but particularly China. So, China could conceivably
bankrupt Iran if it wanted, but China is also dependent on Gulf Energy. All of Asia is dependent
on Gulf Energy. They need it. So, Asia, for example, uses about half the world's electricity,
mostly for manufacturing. Asia produces about 2% of the world's natural gas which is in most places
the energy source used to make electricity. So Asia while an economic power of course is woefully
short of energy and a lot of that comes from the Gulf. So China needs the Gulf, wants the Gulf.
You know, China has very deep energy storage. They've saved a lot of oil in their own strategic
petroleum reserve. But at a certain point, China's going to want to open that up. And Trump seems
to be saying that's inevitable. We don't need to worry about it. The question though is when. So
from the Chinese perspective, what's the hurry? China will be hurt economically by disclosure
if it continues, but so will the United States, but maybe more critically, so will American allies
in Asia. So if you're China, you're very focused on the countries right around you that aren't
fully under your control. Why wouldn't you be? Every great power is concerned first and foremost
about its region. Can I control the countries right around me? And in China's case, you have
Taiwan, you also have Japan, you have South Korea, and you have Philippines. So you've got four big
countries that are not directly controlled by China, but they're in Asia, and they were all
to one extent or another closely allied with the United States and benefit from some kind of
defense guarantee, mostly implied. And so if you weaken those countries, all of whom are totally
dependent on Middle Eastern energy and you weaken the United States by refusing to come to its
aid, the Gulf stays closed. Energy prices in the United States spike. Food prices spike. Political
unrest deepens. The US gets weaker, more chaotic. It hurts you, but it also sends a very clear
message to all those other countries in Asia you would like in your sphere of influence that hey,
the United States probably not going to come to our rescue if we have some kind of conflict with
China. Maybe we better come to terms with China. So this is not obvious to a lot of the geniuses
who run our country because they think in terms purely of military force. You know how many how
big's your army? How many nukes do you have? What's your navy look like? But from a Chinese
perspective which is longitudinal tend to think in terms of like years not just quarterly
reporting periods. This is greatly to your advantage. Greatly to your advantage. Why would
you want to stage a military invasion of, say, Taiwan, the one every think tank in Washington
is always telling us is coming any minute, when you could just send a really clear message
to the Taiwanese government that reunification with China is inevitable. And let's do this the
easy way, the non- messy way. Let's do here what we did in Hong Kong. Let's just bring all the
provinces home without having to kill anybody. And by the way, you have no choice because the
country you thought was going to protect you clearly isn't. Can't even protect Qatar. Can't
protect downtown Dubai. Is it really going to protect you? Does the US have the physical ability
to project power in the South China Sea when it can't even keep the drug cartels in Tijana under
control? Probably not. So stop with the pretense and let's come to terms favorable to us. Well, of
course China thinks that way and of course that's in their interest. All these dumb fantasies about
a showdown in East Asia between the US and China. They're in nobody's interest, but only China
seems to understand that. So if you're China, maybe you don't come to the rescue right away.
Maybe you let the pain continue for a while just to make it really clear who's in charge. And once
again, you'll know who's in charge by who settles the conflict. The person or nation that restores
order is dad. That's who's in charge. That's the head of household. That's the head of the world.
So that's what's at stake. Who runs the world? Now, is this good or bad from an American
perspective? Well, that's a more complicated question. Short-term, of course, it's bad. There's
a humiliation coming at some point. You hope it's not too profound. You hope it's not, you know,
10 times worse than the fall of Saigon in 1975 or the retreat from Kbble just a few years
ago. You hope not because it's dispiriting and people will die and it's just awful in every
way. But at some point it will become clear that the United States couldn't do the thing that
great powers do which is keep commerce going. And so it doesn't mean the United States is not
a great power. It just means it's not as great as maybe some people imagined it was. It's not
as powerful as our leaders told us it was and in some cases actually thought it was. And what
that really means is the unipolar moment is over. now has been over for a while, but in the
minds of your average US senator from Nebraska, we're in charge of everything and everyone will
just bow to our terms. And that's not true. Hasn't been true for at least 15 years. It's definitely
not true now and no one will be able to deny it. So, that's going to be hard for some people to
accept. It could be disputing to us as a nation, but it reflects reality and it's not the end
of American power or prosperity. It might in fact be the beginning of actual power and more
durable prosperity. The kind rooted in resources and production, the kind that's not necessarily
dependent on finance. So, it doesn't need to be a disaster, but it's definitely going to be a
global reshuffleling. And it revolves around the question of resources. It revolves around
what President Trump to his credit understands, which is ultimately power derives from
prosperity. Rich countries are powerful. Rich countries get to build powerful militaries to
express and in rare occasions exert their power. But wealth comes from resources. And what
are resources? Resources are food, water, and energy. The three things necessary for life,
for growth, for civilization, food, water, energy. Food by and large comes from energy by the way.
Huge percentage of fertilizer comes from natural gas. But it takes energy to make food of course.
But a country's resources, its physical resources, the things it finds in the ground are essential
to that country's prosperity. So physical reality matters. And that's harder and harder to keep in
mind when our day-to-day realities are determined by things that are not real. Electrical impulses,
ones and zeros, the digital world. But the digital world has limits. And those limits arrive at,
say, lunchtime when you're hungry. You can't eat Instagram. You have to eat food. And that's
produced by people grown in the ground, watered with water. So physical reality intrudes and
Trump because he is in the best way at his best a primitive person understands the primitive reality
which is we need these things. So if you look at the world that way, what are the rich countries?
What are the rich hemispheres? Well, again, Asia has relatively speaking very little energy. A lot
of highly productive countries starting with Japan and China are totally dependent on other countries
for resources. And of course, if you paid any attention to what happened in the last century,
you know, imperial Japan became imperial because it didn't have enough resources. And that's why it
went into China, and that's why it invaded a bunch of its neighbors. And that's how we wind up in
a in a war with it. So, this question doesn't go away. And if you look at the world through that
lens, you see that we're in a pretty good spot because the United States, as the president never
tires of saying, has deep resources, land, water, and lots of energy. Now, in the specific question
of oil, it's a little bit more complicated than you have heard. The US does actually import quite
a bit of oil. What we have is a massive abundance of natural gas which 25 years ago was considered
kind of marginally significant. Now it's understood to be you know a a critical resource
from which all kinds of different products that you use every day and pharmaceuticals and as
noted fertilizer and electricity all come. The United States has huge reserves of natural gas,
but our region, North America, South America, the Caribbean, the Western Hemisphere, has massive
reserves of energy, has huge amounts of water, fresh water, which matters, and has the world's
best farmland. So we are in a very rich hemisphere and we haven't really internalized that.
So actually if the world cleaves in two, if China fully controls the east or mostly
controls the east and we mostly control the west, probably something we could live with. probably
not a terrible thing for the United States, but it would require a totally different way of
thinking. It would require the US government, the Pentagon, the State Department, the the White
House, all the academics that feeded information and deep thoughts about what the empire should
be. would require all of them to change the way they think about the United States and its place
in the world. So all of a sudden what happens in Brazil which have massive reserves of freshwater
farmland and energy would be way more important than what happens in Saudi Arabia. And that's not
a bad thing because we have a lot in common with Brazil. It's a Christian country with a romance
language in our hemisphere right there directly beneath us. It's a country almost the size of the
continental United States. It's a huge country. It's a beautiful country by the way. And Saudi
Arabia is on the other side of the world. So, why wouldn't you spend a lot more time thinking about
what happens in Brazil, trying to improve Brazil, make it more stable, make it more pro-American,
not roll in and steal its oil, its resources, but bring it into your sphere of influence. Well, you
know, a country that was thinking clearly would do that and would have been doing that for like the
past 200 years. and not just in a Marshall Monroe Doctrine way. We're not going to tolerate this,
tolerate that, but actually try to integrate your economies a little bit more. Again, have positive
influence, some sway over Brazil. And then you think, well, if Brazil's important, what about
Canada and Mexico, which are literally on our borders, which are huge energy producers? Canada
has far more oil than the United States. far more fresh water than the United States. Canada is
the fourth biggest has the fourth biggest oil reserves in the world. How much do Americans know
about Canada? Well, Canada happens to be falling apart as a nation. Completely falling apart. It's
in a state of domestic chaos. It's become a police state under the influence of China. Canada, the
country with which we share the longest border. Our most critical ally on the globe is Canada, the
country we ignore. How many Americans know what its capital is or how to pronounce it? Probably
under half. Canada is the single most important relationship that we have. It has always been our
largest trading partner. But going forward, as American influence recedes to our hemisphere, what
happens in Canada matters more than anything else. Maybe we should think about that. Maybe we
should try to exert some influence on Canada. Not necessarily by force, though by force if
necessary. You could certainly make a regime change argument about Canada. Talk about a
country that's oppressing its own citizens. Killed almost 100,000 of them through its
state sponsored killing program, maids. You could make a human rights case to invade
Canada. Not that we should, but if ever there was a people that needed liberation from a
government that hates them, it's the Canadians, of course. But you could make a case based on
self-interest and regional interest, even on decency, to have a lot more positive influence on
the internal affairs of Canada than we currently do. Canada's not a sovereign country. It never has
been, ever. It's part of the British Commonwealth. Now it's some sort of colony of India and China.
It's never been sovereign and there's no reason that it should be. It should be decent and
wellrun for the benefit of its own citizens. And you could say the same for Mexico. Mexico has
brought benefits to the United States. A lot of decent people have come from Mexico. There's a
lot of American manufacturing in Mexico. A lot of great vacation spots in Mexico, a lot of great
Mexicans. But overall, Mexico has been a massive problem for the United States, both because of
mass migration from Mexico, because of the ongoing drug war in Mexico, which has now moved into the
United States. There's massive cartel influence in the United States. There are politicians in
the United States taking money from the cartels. America is with every passing day becoming
more like Mexico and not in a good way. Mexico has harmed the United States in a lot of ways,
real ways, measurable ways. The migrant crisis, all those illegals Biden led in, they all mostly
came through Mexico with the knowledge in some cases the cooperation of the Mexican government.
That's the behavior of an enemy nation. They don't need to be an enemy. But fixing that will require
paying some attention to what happens in Mexico. That's not bad. That's good. That'll be good for
Mexico and it's necessary for the United States. So why is all this relevant now? Because what's
happening in Iran is the end of American empire as we understand it. And that's sad. Boohoo. Empire's
dying. But it's not the end of the United States. It's not the end of our influence on other
nations. Hopefully positive influence. It's not the end of our economy. It's the beginning
of a very rough time in our economy, of course, but it's hardly the end of it. What we've been
doing for likely your lifetime if you're under 80 is well, it's not working anymore. It hasn't
actually helped the United States long term. Your grandkids at this point don't have the
promise of a better life than you had. So, it's not actually a successful experiment
and now it's ending because we've reached the limits of our demonstrated power. We can't
open the straits of Hormuz. The president of the United States said that last night. Someone
else do it. So, we're done. That's okay. It was always going to end. Hopefully, we can
get out without a nuclear exchange. But now, it is ending. And there's going to be a lot of
suffering and sadness as a result of that end. But there will also be there is an awful lot of
promise. Promise that the United States can act in its own interest that it can be reasonable
that it will not be governed by deranged people seized by hubris or get way out over their skis
and get a ton of people killed. You don't have to occupy countries you've never been to. Can't
identify in a map. I mean, what we're doing doesn't work whether you approve of it morally or
not and we're going to do something else and that something else is starting right now. So the
only point is you could with wise leadership turn this to the advantage of the United States
and the Western Hemisphere very very easily. And there's one other advantage to this moment
which is that it has been clarifying. All of a sudden we know what everybody in authority thinks
because they've been saying it because under pressure people confess. The pressure of course is
this war which a lot of people in our commentariat a lot of people in our government certainly in
our congress a lot of people in Israel wanted. They all wanted this and it didn't work the way
they said it would and even now it could go really really wrong and lots of Americans could die.
Relatively speaking, a lot have died. Oh, the casualty numbers are so low. Okay. How about if
that was your son? Would you feel they were low? Americans have died for this at the instigation of
Israel to no material benefit to our country. And everyone knows that. There's no denying it. That's
not a conspiracy theory. It's just a fact. And now it's completely out in the open. So those ideas,
neoconservatism, the preservation of empire, the idea that you take orders from a tiny country far
away. All of those things have risen right to the surface. No longer whispered about. We can just
say it openly because no one's hiding it anymore. and we can all say they're destructive, stupid,
and bad for the United States. So those debates are over. We now know what's going on, and now we
can change it. The other thing we've learned is that huge parts of Protestant Christianity in the
United States, the leadership, totally corrupt. And not just corrupt on an obvious level like,
oh, the preacher's having an affair or they're taking money from whomever. They're shaking down
the congregation for, you know, 20% tithes. No, corrupt on the level that matters most, which
is spiritually corrupt. They're not preaching Christianity, not just because of their feelalty
to Israel, which is bizarre and kind of hard to understand, but on a even deeper level than that,
there are many Protestant American church leaders who are preaching a religion that bears no
resemblance to Christianity. So, that's the core problem right there. Who knows what this
is? It's not Christianity. It's not what the gospels describe. Yesterday at the White House,
they all show up middle of Christian Holy Week, 4 days before Easter. And not just the the fringe
Christian Zionist, John Higgy or these strange people, but but the but the big guys. Franklin
Graham, son of Billy Graham, shows up at the White House yesterday to pray over the president
so he will have wisdom and restraint. No. to endorse the murder of civilians, which is
a war crime, but more important, it's a moral crime. You can't kill people who have committed no
crime, who did nothing wrong. You can't murder the innocent. You can't kill kids and women. And yet,
Franklin Graham is up there standing at the podium praying for that. Now, how do you do that? Well,
by quoting something called the book of Esther, which is in the Christian Old Testament, a
controversial book for a long time. Martin Luther thought it shouldn't have been there, but it is
there. And it's the story, among other things, of a genocide of Persians. Oh, yeah. 75,000
Persians. Not just people who committed crimes, but people who are Persian. and that's why they
were killed. And it's in the book of Esther, which you should read because it's interesting.
It also happens to be, maybe not coincidentally, the only book in the Christian Bible, Old and New
Testaments, that doesn't mention God. There's no mention of God in the book of Esther. Now, there
are all kinds of theologians, and this has been a debate for 2,000 years. And there are people
who argue that the book of Esther implies the presence of God. God's plan unfolds in the book
of Esther. Fine. Hardly a theologian, not going to debate it. But if you're a Christian clergyman
or call yourself one, and you're giving spiritual counsel to a head of state, it really matters.
And there's no reference whatsoever to Jesus. You're not preaching the gospel. You're not
speaking actual truth to actual power. You're doing something else. Now, why is there no
mention of Jesus? Why would Franklin Graham refer to the book of Esther, the only book
in the Bible that doesn't mention God, when he talks about Christianity, with the president
of the United States? Because you can't mention Jesus. That's why because there's no evidence
that Jesus was for genocide, killing civilians, murdering the innocent, murder at all. This is God
come to earth, the Christian Messiah who allows himself to be tortured to death by pagans. He
knows it's coming. That's the story of Holy Week. Jesus enters Jerusalem on a donkey, not on
a stallion. He's not coming to overthrow the oppressor by force. He's coming in in total
humility and accepting degradation and mocking and physical torture, getting spit in the face by
soldiers, whipped. He's allowing this to happen because he's saying the real victory
is bigger than any victory achieved by killing people. It's a victory
over death itself. That's the Christian message. That's the opposite
of the message you heard from Christian leaders at the White House on the eve of the
president's speech about the war yesterday. What does that tell you? The point is not
that they're bad or silly or practicing another religion other than Christianity. All
of that's true. But the point is not to beat up on poor Franklin Graham. The point is
that it's the end of something. Whatever that religion is is not going to continue. It
just won't because it's a lie. And so it will end as all lies do. It will be revealed as a
lie as all lies are. And so you're watching the end of the global American empire, the
unipolar world that was great, by the way, while it lasted, but it's over. And you're watching the
end of whatever American Protestant Christianity, one of the greatest and most positive forces in
the history of this world, whatever it became after the Second World War, which is something
unrecognizable. The people who built National Cathedral on the highest point in Washington DC,
one of the most beautiful buildings in the United States were Episcopalians. They built that that
cathedral and it was the nation's cathedral was also above all a tribute to God. And you can tell
by its beauty that it was. And now it's populated by people who share almost nothing in common
with the people who built it. And that's the story of all human institutions and all human
schemes. They all come to an end, of course, cuz they're devised by people who are silly and
venal and lack foresight and they're just limited, cuz we all are much more than we imagine.
And so all of that dies at some point. And we just happen to have the misfortune or the
great luck to be living in the middle of the moment where these great institutions and the
expectations that come along with them are dying right in front of us right now. And that's
sad. It's hard to watch. It'll affect your sleep if you think about it too much. But it's
also a prerequisite. It is a necessary step. And this is something that all Christians
are thinking about in Holy Week to rebirth. The seed doesn't produce the tree until it dies.
And so the death of the unipolar moment and of the institutions within the evangelical movement,
American Protestant Christianity are going away. But they will be replaced by something better
and purer, more true to itself, constructive, unifying, healing institutions
that build and don't just destroy. That's going to happen. And God willing, we will live to see it. So rejoice in
that. as sad as this is and happy Easter. So, if you're following the war with Iran,
you probably notice something strange. The coverage is everywhere, but the facts are
hard to find. They're not actually telling you anything. How many people have been killed?
What are the actual stakes for this country, your country, our country, the United States?
The basic questions, the ones that matter. You can't actually find out because this is a censored
moment. You're not learning the truth. And that's not accidental. If you want to learn the truth,
you need to stand up for the First Amendment, which is your birthright as an American. And
we've set up our company TC on the Tucker Carlson Network to make it possible for you to participate
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