The madman is running wild

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

سپاه پاسداران انقلاب اسلامی

Trump threatens Sánchez and Meloni with US troops withdrawal



Donald Trump said he would "probably" remove American troops from Spain and Italy, in renewed attacks against Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez and Italian leader Giorgia Meloni.

Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office, the American leader said Italy had "not been of any help to us," and accused Spain of being "absolutely horrible." Both Spain and Italy have denied their bases to U.S. military planes that are taking part in the Iran war.

The remarks follow similar threats aimed at Germany's Chancellor Friedrich Merz earlier this week. All three European NATO allies have been critical of the U.S.-Israel war on Iran.
 

TACO turns NACHO: Wall Street coins new Trump nickname




Trump’s shifting stance on the Strait of Hormuz crisis has inspired a new Wall Street nickname, following the earlier “TACO” label used for his pattern of issuing threats and later retreating.

A new acronym, NACHO, short for Not A Chance Hormuz Opens, is gaining traction.

The term replaces the earlier TACO (“Trump Always Chickens Out”), which was used to describe Trump’s tendency to back down after aggressive announcements.

The new nickname reflects growing frustration over Trump's stop-start blockade in the Strait, which has disrupted global oil supplies and pushed fuel prices higher.
 

Trump wildly claims seeking congressional approval for Iran war is ‘totally unconstitutional’


Donald Trump dismissed the idea of seeking congressional approval for his Iran war as “totally unconstitutional” on Friday, calling those asking for it unpatriotic.

Trump was asked about a deadline for getting approval to declare war through Congress while speaking to reporters outside the White House.

Friday marks 60 days since Trump informed Congress about military operations by the United States against Iran, leading critics to point out that he could be in violation of the War Powers Resolution.

A provision in the resolution requires a president to terminate military deployments after 60 days if not authorized by Congress. T

Trump called seeking congressional approval “totally unconstitutional”.
 
Trump is apparently unable to understand what a DEFENSIVE alliance is. They are sticking to NATO. rules. Trump is not. He thinks that if he starts a war, they must back him. That would give him a 32 country army to use as he wishes. He would wish.
 
Wrong. With the Chicken Tax back in 1964 foreign auto manufacturers, at least some of them, built factories in the US to make light trucks and gained a huge market share because the "tax" was 25% to import foreign made light trucks.

Laughable nonsense. Your rosy self-delusions are belied by numerous diplomatic messages.
 

Fact check: Trump denied he made this remark about Iran. He made it on camera one day earlier



On Saturday, President Donald Trump told reporters that he was “looking at” a new Iranian peace proposal. Then a reporter reminded Trump that he had said the previous night that the US might be better off not making a deal with Iran.

“Well, I wouldn’t have to. I didn’t say that,” Trump responded. “I said that if we left right now, it would take them 20 years to rebuild. But we’re not leaving right now. We’re gonna do it so nobody has to go back in two years or five years.”

In reality, Trump did say — on camera — what the reporter told him he said. His denial was yet another case in which the president wrongly asserted he hadn’t said something he had said in a public forum.

Trump made the remark about Iran during a Friday speech to the Forum Club of the Palm Beaches in South Florida.

After mentioning that one of his golf clubs is hosting a PGA Tour tournament, he said: “Yesterday, somebody came up, said, ‘Sir, the tournament is great.’ I said, ‘What tournament are you talking about? I’m so busy with the Iranians calling trying to make a good deal, and we’re not gonna let that happen.’ But … they’ve gotta make a bad deal. But — if they make a deal at all. Because frankly, maybe we’re better off not making a deal at all, do you want to know the truth. Because we can’t let this thing go on.”

Trump did say at a different point of the Friday speech that “if we left right now, it would take them 20 years, 25 years, to rebuild the place.” But that clearly doesn’t negate the existence of his “maybe we’re better off not making a deal at all” remark.

A history of denying remarks he made on camera​


It’s one thing for the president to try to deny having made a remark someone claimed he made in a private meeting. For years, Trump has attempted something more brazen: denying he ever made remarks the public saw him make.

In December 2025, for example, when an ABC News reporter asked Trump on camera whether he would release the video of the US military’s controversial follow-up strike on an alleged drug-trafficking boat in the Caribbean, Trump said, “I don’t know what they have, but whatever they have we’d certainly release, no problem.” But when another ABC News reporter reminded him five days later that he said he would have no problem releasing the video, Trump falsely claimed, “I didn’t say that. That’s — you said that, I didn’t say that. This is ABC fake news.”

During his 2024 campaign, Trump falsely denied he had said “lock her up” about his 2016 election opponent, Hillary Clinton, though he had done so on multiple occasions at televised rallies attended by thousands of people. During the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, he denied having made two remarks he had made on camera the previous week.

Trump has also tried to inaccurately portray the nature of some of his previous public remarks. In an interview with Time magazine in April 2025, he wrongly claimed he had “obviously” been speaking “in jest” and exaggerating when he promised during his 2024 campaign to immediately end the war in Ukraine if he was elected again — though he publicly made the promise on more than 50 occasions in an entirely serious manner.
 

Trump again threatens entire nation of Iran saying country will be ‘blown off the face of the earth’




President Donald Trump says Iran will “be blown off the face of the earth” if U.S. vessels guiding ships through the Strait of Hormuz are resisted, escalating his threats to eliminate Iranian civilization.

Trump’s latest rhetoric follows last month’s threats that a “whole civilization will die” in Iran “never to be brought back again” if the nation did not surrender.

“Iran has taken some shots at unrelated Nations with respect to the Ship Movement, PROJECT FREEDOM, including a South Korean Cargo Ship,” Trump claimed on Truth Social on Monday as he suggested South Korea should “come and join the mission.”
 

Trump trolled after boast​


Donald Trump has been widely mocked for a social media boast that shows he doesn’t understand the rules of a card game.

During a Truth Social posting spree on Sunday, the 79-year-old president shared an edited image of himself holding several Uno cards, along with the caption “I have all the cards.”

The image was shared soon after Trump announced the U.S. will help ships pass through the Strait of Hormuz shipping route—the vital passageway he largely closed off due to US naval blockade—so that vessels can “freely and ably get on with their business.”

The president did not disclose exactly how these plans will be carried out.

The White House also shared an image of Trump holding several cards to suggest he is winning the war in the Middle East.

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However, as several social media users noted, the aim of Uno is to get rid of all the cards in your hand, meaning Trump is not doing well at all.
 

Trump self-soothes by casting himself as fantasy hero


Donald Trump has taken to a galaxy far, far away, as polls show Americans increasingly rebelling against his leadership.

The 79-year-old president’s White House X account commemorated the Star Wars-themed “May the 4th” day by posting an AI rendering of Trump as the Mandalorian, also known as Din Djarin, in the eponymous Disney TV series.

The infamously thin-skinned Trump is depicted clad in the Mandalorian’s heavy-duty armor, striking a heroic pose while clutching an American flag. He is also carrying Grogu, better known as “Baby Yoda,” whom the Mandalorian protects from the evil Galactic Empire in the Disney TV series and upcoming movie.

The post’s caption bizarrely blends the president’s so-called “Donroe Doctrine” with a Mandalorian mantra and a nod to Star Wars Day.

The post comes as Trump has deployed U.S. armed forces—the world’s most powerful military—to wage war on Iran, compounding his error by closing the Strait of Hormuz, and sparking a global oil crisis and sending gas prices in the U.S. soaring.



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