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Trump Threatens Iran's "Whole Civilization." DHS Shutdown Winners and Losers (With Kirk Bado)

That temperature just keeps rising...

Trump’s borderline-genocidal threats towards Iran from Tuesday morning are no doubt unsettling — and depending on whether this war keeps escalating after this episode is published, “unsettling” could be an understatement. The idea that civilization might be over feels hyperbolic, but it captures the uncertainty of the moment. We are sitting here waiting on a deadline tied to Iran, and even before anything happens, the rhetoric coming from Donald Trump is already at a level that feels historically aggressive.

Honestly, I don’t know how else to process Trump’s post other than to take it seriously on its face. Presidents have said strong things before, but that kind of language feels different. It isn’t just tough talk or positioning. We’re talking about raising the stakes in a way that makes everything else around it feel more volatile. Even if it is meant as leverage, it is the kind of leverage that can spiral if it is misunderstood or taken literally.

Part of me thinks that wording did not come out of nowhere. There was that open letter from the Iranian president talking about their country as one of the oldest continuous civilizations in history, and it feels like Trump is almost mirroring that language in a much more threatening way. That tracks with how he communicates. He tends to grab onto a phrase and then amplify it into something louder and more confrontational. But when the subject is this serious, that amplification hits differently.

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What really complicates things for me is the question of who actually speaks for Iran right now. Even if there are people inside the government who want to negotiate or deescalate, it isn’t clear they have control over the parts of the system that are actively carrying out military actions. The Revolutionary Guard seems to operate with its own momentum, and there have already been examples where official statements from leadership did not match what was happening on the ground. That makes any potential deal feel shaky before it even starts.

At the same time, there are signals that nobody really wants this to go all the way. Regional players like Saudi Arabia and Israel seem to prefer a scenario where enough damage is done to force a change in behavior without triggering total collapse. The idea is to hit hard enough that the current path is no longer viable, but not so hard that everything spirals into something uncontrollable. That’s a very narrow lane to try to stay in, especially when the rhetoric is this intense.

Then there’s Trump himself, and I just keep coming back to the sense that he wants out. He talks about bringing people home with a win, but also hints at more aggressive options that would be far more complicated in reality. There is always that tension between the dealmaker instinct and the willingness to escalate. Right now it feels like both are present at the same time, and it’s anything but clear which one is going to win out.

So I end up sitting with a lot of uncertainty, like a lot of people seem to have right now. The timeline suggests something is supposed to happen soon, but these situations have a way of stretching out or changing shape at the last minute. When the conversation ends on a line like an entire civilization potentially disappearing, it leaves me in a place where the only honest answer is that we are going to find out in real time what any of this actually means.

Chapters

00:00:00 - Intro

00:02:19 - Trump’s Escalating Threats on Iran

00:16:00 - Kirk Bado on the Winners and Losers of the DHS Shutdown

00:40:02 - Update and Sanctuary City Airports

00:43:24 - Bill Gates

00:45:34 - Kalshi

00:49:53 - Interview with Kirk Bado, con’t.

01:16:42 - Wrap-up

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