Tuesday, July 14, 2026

The Snapshot

Tuesday, July 14, 2026.  Chump's claiming he's going to impose a toll on the Strait of Hormuz, people grow more concerned about the damage he's doing to us with our one-time international allies, ICE kills another person (this time in Maine), a judge comes down very hard on Todd Blanche, NYT reveals that Blanche has been overseeing Chump's weaponization programs at the Justice Dept, and much more. 




Iran is the war of choice that Chump started.  It is ripping apart the economy.  Brandon Weichert (NATIONAL SECURITY JOURNAL) writes

The Iran War is back on again, it seems. Over the weekend, the United States pummeled nearly 200 Iranian targets across the massive country. Iran retaliated by hitting US military facilities throughout the Gulf Arab states. All this came after US President Donald J. Trump declared that his temporary ceasefire, which lasted barely 18 days, was “over.” He referred to the Islamic Republic as “scum.”
Since then, the war has resumed–with Trump insisting that the United States will take full control over the contested Strait of Hormuz (SoH).
Many were surprised that the president restarted the conflict. After all, the United States is particularly sensitive to spikes in global oil prices. Beginning the Iran War anew, even if it is on the grounds of reopening the SoH (through which 20 percent of the world’s oil must pass), will only harm the United States’ economy. That is especially true, considering how drastically depleted America’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) has gotten.

Since the SoH was closed at the start of the war, the Americans had relied heavily on their 400-million-barrel-strong SPR to deflate energy prices for American consumers. Officially, the SPR has been drained by about 100 million barrels since the war began. But many oil experts fret that the SPR is stored in salt caverns for many years (decades, even). Therefore, while there may be around 300 million barrels of oil remaining in the SPR, not all of that oil is usable. The environment and the chemical processes engineers must employ to keep the oil in those caverns fresh enough to be usable corrupt much of the oil stored in the SPR.
If those figures on the declining viability of the remaining oil in the SPR are accurate, then restarting hostilities right now–especially when those hostilities result in the closure of the SoH again–will only harm the US economy by raising pump prices.
Higher prices at the pump mean higher prices everywhere.

All that leads to higher inflation, which in turn prompts the Federal Reserve to either maintain relatively high interest rates or raise them.

And that becomes a noose around the economy’s neck, dragging it into stagflation.


The American vulnerability is different, and it is counted in missiles. By the time the spring ceasefire took hold, the Pentagon had expended at least half its THAAD ballistic-missile interceptors, nearly half its Patriots, 45 percent of its Precision Strike Missiles, and about 30 percent of its Tomahawks, according to CSIS analysis that CNN confirmed against internal Defense Department assessments. Those stocks were never rebuilt. As fighting resumed this weekend, CNN reported the replenishment arithmetic: roughly 15 new Tomahawks and 20 new Patriots arriving per month, with no THAAD deliveries forecast in 2026, and a three-plus-year timeline to restore pre-war inventories.
Stimson Center analysts note such missiles take years, not months, to replace. CSIS's Mark Cancian warns that days more at the current tempo push stockpiles toward a "new, higher level of risk" for a Pacific contingency, and Senator Mark Kelly has made the uncomfortable arithmetic plain: Iran retains a huge stockpile of cheap ballistic missiles and drones, so every barrage trades million-dollar interceptors against munitions costing a fraction as much.

The Army is asking for more than $20 billion just to replace THAAD and Patriot expenditures, inside a war supplemental estimated at $80 to $100 billion, and the bill extends beyond munitions, with the Navy's newest carrier returning from the campaign to face a year or more in the repair yard. The Pentagon insists, on the record, that it has everything needed to fight, and CSIS's own analysis agrees that the U.S. can sustain the fight against Iran under any plausible scenario. The risk is not losing this war, but what is left in the arsenal for the next one.

[. . .]

Iran is wagering that oil pain fractures American patience before bankruptcy fractures the regime. Washington is wagering that economic strangulation works faster than interceptor depletion. Two dates now measure the race: July 17, when Iran's last legal oil sales end, and a THAAD delivery schedule that reads zero for the rest of the year.

As Mike noted last night "Losers Platner and Chump," Chump has declared that the US is in charge of the Strait of Hormuz and will be charging a toll. Yan Zhuang (NEW YORK TIMES) notes:

President Trump has said that the United States will charge a 20 percent fee on cargo shipped through the Strait of Hormuz, despite his own administration’s position that such fees violate international law.

He made the announcement on Monday amid an intensifying battle between Iran and the United States to control the waterway, a crucial artery for global energy supplies. The two countries have traded attacks over the strait for the past week, in effect shattering their month-old cease-fire.

[. . .]

A 20 percent fee on the value of a vessel’s cargo could more than double the cost of shipping oil through the strait, experts said.

For a large tanker carrying two million barrels of oil, for example, the fee could add over $30 million in costs. Consumers would likely face higher prices as a result.

Because of the high cost, some analysts said they doubted whether the fee would come into force. For ship operators in the region, the prospect of fees is less of a concern right now than an escalation of the conflict between Iran and the United States, experts said.



Of all the responsibilities assigned to an American president, none is more important than keeping the country safe from its enemies. Yet, the U.S. has rarely, if ever, been as vulnerable as it is today under President Trump. He has become our greatest national security threat. 
Let’s assess what he has done.

He launched a war of choice against Iran, a strategic and economic ally of Russia and China. The war quickly depleted America’s supply of critical weapons. Experts say it will take at least three years to rebuild the arsenal. The Center for Strategic and International Studies says this has “created a window of vulnerability for a potential Western Pacific conflict.“

Trump has railed against NATO allies France, the United Kingdom, Italy and Germany for not supporting his attacks on Iran, even though NATO is a defense alliance, not a war alliance. Iran has retaliated by attacking U.S. military facilities in Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and Jordan. Trump’s relationship with Saudi Arabia has been strained by the kingdom’s refusal to let U.S. forces use its bases and airspace during the war. 
Trump has frequently lashed out at and alienated NATO, which, at 77, is one of history’s oldest security alliances. Lately, he has publicly insulted Italy’s leader, told his staff during a news conference to cut off trade with Spain, and outraged Belgium by interfering with its World Cup match against the United States.   
He has threatened to take Greenland from Denmark, by force if necessary. That would obligate the alliance’s other 31 members to defend Denmark against his aggression. 
[. . .]
Since Trump’s second term began, about 300 FBI agents who worked on national security have left the bureau. The loss has been characterized as a “purge” that has greatly depleted the FBI’s capabilities.
Now, the administration has diverted 260 FBI analysts to focus on a “priority investigation” of the 2020 election. Their task is to find proof of Trump’s six-year fantasy that he won against Joe Biden. 
The Department of Homeland Security is preoccupied with White House adviser Stephen Miller’s goal of deporting 1 million immigrants this year, which the Southern Poverty Law Center describes as “racist and draconian” rather than related to homeland security. Meanwhile, there has been a sharp drop in morale at the Pentagon, where Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth fired 15 senior officers while the U.S. is at war. 

Trump, who prefers to follow his gut rather than facts, has hollowed out the government’s vital intelligence agencies and replaced career experts with political loyalists. He recently named Bill Pulti, a housing developer, as acting director of National Intelligence.  


He really has a pattern of undermining the security of the United States.  No where is that more clear than in his diversion of FBI agents into the 2020 election investigation.  He is very lucky that there has not been a major terror attack on US soil.  He more than invited that to happen when he made Trashy Garbage aka Tulsi Gabbard the DNI.  Bill Pulti is even worse, if that is possible. 


And Chump's economy may be even worse than some realize.  




America’s labor market continues to look relatively healthy on the surface, but two trends in the employment data this year may be hiding the real problems Americans are facing with the labor market.
America’s unemployment rate fell to 4.2 percent in June, a level that would typically signal a healthy labor market. But a closer look at the data suggests the jobs picture may not be as strong as the headline number implies.
While unemployment edged lower, labor force participation fell to 61.5 percent, and millions of Americans remained stuck in part-time work or outside the labor force despite wanting employment. Those trends have fueled concerns among economists that the official unemployment rate may be masking broader signs of labor market weakness and underemployment.
The broadest measure of labor underutilization—known as the U-6 unemployment rate—stood at 7.9 percent in June, nearly double the official unemployment rate. Millions of people are also not being counted as unemployed despite not having jobs.
“The June jobs report has some eyebrow-raising data, especially the big drop in the labor force,” Heather Long, chief economist at Navy Federal Credit Union, previously told Newsweek, adding the caveat that one month doesn’t make a trend.



A federal immigration agent shot and killed an individual in a vehicle on Monday in the coastal city of Biddeford, Maine, according to the state attorney general’s office. Nearly eight hours later, details remained scant, and federal authorities had not provided any information about the fatal encounter.
The state’s governor, the city’s mayor and other officials said they were seeking details, and demanded a full investigation of the killing. It was the second fatal shooting in a week involving an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent firing into a vehicle.
Social media video shot early Monday showed agents surrounding a still body at an intersection in a residential neighborhood of Biddeford, next to a car with bullet holes in the windshield, as local police officers arrived at the scene.
Representative Chellie Pingree, a Democrat, said in a phone interview on Monday that “we have gotten reports that ICE officers shot through a car window, and the individual in the car was killed.”

Patrick Whittle, Leah Willingham and Jack Brook (AP) note, "Immigrant rights groups identified the man who was killed as a 26-year-old native of Colombia." They also note, via Senator Angus King, that Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullins claims the man they killed was using his car as a battering ram.  Christopher Cann, Shawn P. Sullivan and Natalie Neysa Alund (USA TODAY) point out, "Federal officials have repeatedly accused people shot by immigration authorities of using their vehicles to ram agents. For example, [Renee] Good was shot and killed inside her car on Jan. 7."  Suzanne Gamboa and Nicole Acevedo (NBC NEWS) add:

Fighting back tears, protester Katie Barrow, told NBC Boston, she was heartbroken that someone died because of immigration enforcement. “It’s just disgusting,” she said. “A badge and a gun are not a license to kill.”

Adam Bartow (WMTW) notes, "A family friend told Maine's Total Coverage Joan Sebastian Guerrero was killed in the shooting Monday morning. She says Guerrero leaves behind a wife, 3-year-old child, and sister."


When Kristi Noem was pushed out of her job as the secretary of homeland security and replaced with Oklahoma’s GOP senator — and wannabe MMA fighter — Markwayne Mullin, the public was assured he would make all those pesky problems with Immigration and Customs Enforcement go away.

[. . .]

The public-facing faux-moderation that came with Mullin’s confirmation — along with the war in Iran — did push ICE out of the national headlines, even while maintaining Trump and Miller’s mass deportations.
On Tuesday, though, a fatal shooting in Houston served as a grave reminder that nothing has changed substantively at the Department of Homeland Security, much less at ICE. The biggest difference between Mullin and Noem is that he’s male and she’s female, though both are bizarrely committed to cartoonish performances of their gender, with him pretending he’s going to fight people on Capitol Hill and her apparent cosmetic transformations.
Mullin was never intended to be more than a surface change, meant to deflect attention from Trump and Miller’s attempt at ethnic cleansing through deporting and harassing immigrants. ICE remains what Noem always wanted it to be: a rogue organization staffed by people who are too sadistic or unqualified to meet already too-low standards for regular police work.
The details of the shooting are awful. Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, 52, was driving to work in Houston when ICE agents, reportedly chasing someone else entirely, allegedly boxed in his car and him through the stomach. The officers weren’t wearing body cameras. According to the New Republic’s Greg Sargent, witnesses to the killing have allegedly been pressured to self-deport before they can testify. The official DHS response is the same dubious claim, issued in standard boilerplate, the agency always relies on in these cases: accusing the victim of threatening to run over ICE agents with his car.
It’s unlikely anyone sincerely believes this anymore. It’s what DHS said when an officer killed Minneapolis resident Renee Good, even though multiple videos showed she was turning the car away from the man who shot her. It wasn’t true when Border Patrol agents shot Marimar Martinez in Chicago, which was later revealed with the release of body camera footage. Since Alex Pretti wasn’t in a car when he was shot by Border Patrol officers in Minneapolis, they tried to blame the gun on his hip, even though video footage shows he never touched it during the incident. As Melissa Gira Grant of the New Republic pointed out, not only does DHS put these excuses out before an investigation can determine what happened, they block any good faith effort by other law enforcement agencies to conduct a real investigation. It’s a series of preemptive cover-ups, which is not what they’d be doing if they had any confidence in these stories.

On the topic of Renee and Alex, they were both murdered in January.  Philip Marcelo (INDEPENDENT) reports:

Minnesota prosecutors announced Monday they have secured key evidence in their ongoing investigations into the fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti during protests over a federal immigration enforcement crackdown earlier this year.
"Through the cooperation of our federal partners we have obtained the hard drives of previously withheld evidence in the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti and the shooting of Julio Sosa-Celis," Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty said.
The newly released materials include police body-camera footage, witness statements and other evidence that federal officials had previously withheld.
Moriarty said state and local investigators have also taken possession of Good's damaged vehicle.


As Betty noted last night in "Good for Judge Williams," U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams has issued an order in Chump's pretense of suing himself.  Lawrence O'Donnell covered Judge Williams order at length last night on his MS NOW program.




Trump sued the IRS and the Treasury Department for $10 billion over the leak of his tax returns. For the record, this is a leak that happened during his first presidency. But in his second term, Trump decided he could bilk the taxpayers for some quick cash and the Justice Department — an institution that historically enjoys independence, but whose acting and presumptive future head has publicly taken the position that Donald Trump has the “right” to direct in its conduct of individual criminal cases — declined the defend the United States government against Trump’s suit and “settled” — coughing up a $1.776 billion “Anti-Weaponization Fund” for Trump’s January 6 allies and other flunkies, and a blanket immunity deal. Todd Blanche then went to Congress and claimed that no court could review any of these decisions because “there is no judge.”

Except there is a judge and settling a case in a corrupt bargain does not remove the judge from that equation. Judge Kathleen Williams has now declined to accept the premise that a lawsuit between a man and himself is, to use the parties’ word, “ordinary.”

There is nothing “ordinary” about this case; it is the very definition of sui generis.

In the past, there might have been a colorable claim that the president in his personal capacity is not the same as the executive agencies he directs. It still would run head first into concerns about the level of independence any agency head could possibly have in such a case — not to mention the fact that the president in charge during the offending conduct was the same one cosplaying as a plaintiff — but Judge Williams notes that the Supreme Court just put the kibosh on that:

Indeed, just recently, the Supreme Court cited Myers v. United States, 272 U.S. 52, 133 (1926) as a “landmark decision” and “perhaps our best word on the subject” of whether the President could remove subordinates in government service at will. Trump v. Slaughter, 609 U.S. __, slip op. at 16 (2026). Finding that he could, the majority ruled that “[s]ubordinates who exercise the President’s power are subject to removal by him. Then, and only then, can they remain accountable to the President, and the President to the people.” Id. at 36. “[T]hese officers exercise the President’s power, not their own, and thus must be responsible to him.” Id. at 35 (emphasis in original).




Judge Williams, in her order, said that Trump's personal lawyers and the Department of Justice attempted to "use the Court to provide some legitimacy ... to earmark billions of dollars from American taxpayers to redress grievances not defined in the law."  

"The Parties used the existence of federal litigation as a means of conferring legitimacy upon a course of action that they were unwilling to subject to judicial review," Williams wrote. "The context of the 'settlement,' the relationships of the people involved in negotiating and approving it, the ethical implications of their conduct, and the Parties' swift efforts to dismiss this case after the Court raised fundamental jurisdictional questions all support this conclusion. Accordingly, the Court expressly finds that Plaintiffs acted in bad faith."

Williams also directly called out acting Attorney General Todd Blanche throughout her order, and suggested he provided "misleading" testimony before Congress when probed over the Justice Department's now-defunct "Anti-Weaponization Fund."

"The Court is extremely troubled by the testimony given by Acting Attorney General Blanche on May 19, 2026," Williams said. "In response to why the 'settlement agreement' had not been submitted to this Court for review, he stated that 'there is no judge' because the case had been dismissed and, therefore, there was "no mechanism" for reviewing the agreement ... While temporally accurate, this answer is, at best, misleading and, at worst, disingenuous. The Court was available to review any pleading by any Party at any time during this lawsuit. And if Acting Attorney General Blanche had thought the dismissal was improvidently granted or thought Plaintiffs misspoke when they said, "no judicial analysis is appropriate," he only had to file an appearance and ask for relief."




This is big news for Chump.  And even bigger news for Todd Blanche whose confirmation hearing is supposed to start tomorrow.  This is a very big scandal.  And Blanche is already seen circumventing the law by refusing to release all of The Epstein files.  But this morning's NEW YORK TIMES offers yet another scandal for Blanche.  



Mr. Martin, a right-wing lawyer who championed the cause of the Jan. 6 rioters, had just been forced out as the acting U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia. The White House then inserted him into Justice Department headquarters, in part to oversee a task force to investigate claims that the Biden administration had targeted President Trump and his allies.

Mr. Blanche, who once led Mr. Trump’s criminal defense team, did not believe that Mr. Martin, a provocateur with minimal prosecutorial experience, had the chops and know-how to do the job, according to current and former officials who requested anonymity to discuss private conversations.

“I am frustrated,” Mr. Blanche wrote to Mr. Martin, after less than a month on the job, documenting a relationship that swiftly descended from tense to testy.

He moved quickly to rein in Mr. Martin, scheduling a check-in meeting every Friday, according to a trove of internal Justice Department emails obtained by a government watchdog and provided to The New York Times in advance of Mr. Blanche’s confirmation hearing to be attorney general on Wednesday.

Mr. Blanche, a methodical former federal prosecutor, also created an organizational plan for the weaponization group that assigned key investigative lanes to some of his own deputies. That ensured, among other things, that he had tight control over one of the most sensitive issues on his plate — demands from Mr. Trump and his supporters to identify, investigate and punish those who had once pursued them.

The multifaceted portrait of Mr. Blanche that emerges from 352 pages of documents obtained by American Oversight is of a Trump loyalist who is committed to executing the president’s agenda but also intent on keeping a firm a grip on processes inside his building, perhaps because he has such limited control over forces beyond it.


When Blanche began overseeing Martin's work in attacking those who Chump wanted revenge on, he was breaking the ethics pledge he had signed about recusing himself.  Senator Adam Schiff noted this pledge May 19th in a letter he wrote with Senators Dick Durbin and Richard Blumenthal:


We are writing to seek information regarding recent reports indicating that potentially serious ethical violations have taken place at the highest levels of the Department of Justice (DOJ). As the Designated Agency Ethics Official and most senior career official at the Department, you have a unique and important role in defending the Department’s integrity. Specifically, we are seeking prompt clarification regarding Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche’s potential failure to recuse himself from matters involving his former private client, President Donald Trump, even after he was advised to recuse himself by ethics officials. Furthermore, we request that you personally ensure the preservation of all existing and future records, communications, and materials related toethics advice provided by Department or external ethics officials to senior political DOJ appointees – including previous officials who have left the Department. 

In a stark diversion from institutional norms, Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche – as well as others appointed to lead the Justice Department – previously served as President Trump’s personal attorney. Recent public reporting revealed that in March 2025, less than two weeks after assuming the role of Deputy Attorney General, Mr. Blanche was explicitly and formally advised by the Department’s top career ethics lawyer that his recusal from legal cases involving President Trump in his personal capacity was necessary.

At Mr. Blanche’s confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee on February 12, 2025, he committed to recusing himself from cases when advised to by government ethics officials. When Sen. Schiff asked Mr. Blanche about potential conflicts of interest he may face as Deputy Attorney General stemming from his private representation of President Trump in federal criminal matters, he stated under oath, “I will follow the rules as told to me by the experts, career prosecutors in the department, if it comes to ever recusing.”The unmistakable understanding from this testimony is that Mr. Blanche would recuse himself from matters where he was advised to do so by an ethics official.

Upon his confirmation as Deputy Attorney General, Mr. Blanche signed an ethics pledge – addressed to you – stating that, pursuant to the department’s impartiality regulation, he would not participate “personally and substantially in any particular matter” involving parties in which a former client – such as President Trump – is a party for a period of one year after he last provided service to that client or until the client satisfies any outstanding bill, whichever is later. Furthermore, Department regulations strictly prohibit his participation in any criminal investigation or prosecution in which he holds a relationship – including a “close personal relationship,” as an attorney, or otherwise – with anyone involved in the matter.

Instead, Mr. Blanche appears to have ignored ethics and legal advice. This misconduct would be considered extreme on its own and is even more offensive given President Trump’s unprecedented efforts to seek vast personal financial compensation from taxpayer money and use the Department to exact vengeance against his political enemies.

I don't understand how someone with all these problems gets confirmed. 


Let's wind down with this from Senator Elizabeth Warren's office:

Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) released the following statement in response to the news that a coalition of 12 attorneys general filed a lawsuit challenging the proposed Paramount-Warner Bros. merger:

“A Paramount-Warner Bros. megamerger would mean higher costs and fewer choices for Americans. Good news: the states are stepping up to block this antitrust nightmare. This fight isn’t over.”

###



Trump has 11 PM MELTDOWN as PLANS COLLAPSE!!!

BREAKING: Trump DOJ SLAMMED By Florida Judge for BOGUS Settlement