Tuesday, May 19, 2026

The Snapshot

Tuesday, May 19, 2026.  Chump's been enriching himself via the stock market, Arab leaders ordered him to stand down on Iran, he's creating a slush fund for his militia, Homeland Security caught in another lie, and much more. 



President Donald Trump declared he was hitting pause on a planned military attack against Iran on Monday, but his Truth Social post was also the first time the operation was revealed.

Fresh off his visit to China last week, Trump, 79, is back to dealing with the ongoing war he started in Iran.
The fragile ceasefire remains in place as the president struggles to reach a deal, but the president is now claiming there was an operation ready to go.

Trump wrote that he had been asked by the leaders of Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates to “hold off on our planned Military attack of the Islamic Republic of Iran, which was scheduled for tomorrow.”

[. . .]

In the hours leading up to Trump’s social media announcement Monday afternoon, he fired off 36 posts not about the war, but Tuesday’s primaries and his political endorsements.

However, before that, he did rattle off one post about the war in which he whined about the coverage he was getting.




President Trump said Monday that he had authorized a new wave of attacks against Iran this week but that he was holding off to make room for “serious negotiations,” after he said three Gulf leaders requested more time to work out a nuclear deal.

Mr. Trump has repeatedly threatened to launch new strikes, only to pull back at the last minute from plunging the United States back into an unpopular, expensive war. On Monday, he confirmed plans to strike and canceled them at the same time.

“We were getting ready to do a very major attack tomorrow, and I put it off for a little while, hopefully maybe forever, but possibly for a little while, because we’ve had very big discussions with Iran, and we’ll see what they amount to,” Mr. Trump told reporters.

When Mr. Trump launched the war alongside Israel on Feb. 28, he estimated that it would end in four to five weeks. The conflict is now in its third month, and Mr. Trump is caught between dueling impulses: to force Iran into submission, and to declare victory and move on.



He's also caught between Arab leaders.  Arab leaders told Chump to back down and that's why he did yesterday as Ben (MEIDASTOUCH NEWS) notes in the video below. 






Turning to the day to day, Megan Schaltegger (DELISH) notes:

Wondering why your monthly grocery bill suddenly feels like a second rent? The sticker shock is real. According to new data from the Labor Department, food prices skyrocketed in April, bringing the annual inflation rate for the category up to 2.9%.

Translation: Your weekly grocery run is more expensive than it’s been in years…and it’s still climbing. AP News reports that Americans have not even seen the full impact of rising energy costs on their retail food pricing yet—which, yes, likely means the worst is yet to come.

“Most of what we’re seeing now in the food price chain probably predates the conflict,” Purdue University economist Ken Foster told the outlet. “We’re cautiously waiting to see what the June numbers and the May numbers might show as they come out in terms of...the extent to which energy shocks in the Strait of Hormuz and shipping blockades and so forth are going to impact food prices.”



For three consecutive years, American workers held a thin but meaningful edge over rising prices: their earnings were growing faster than inflation. That streak ended in April 2026, and the consequences are about to ripple through household budgets in ways that are difficult to ignore.

The latest Consumer Price Index report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed prices accelerating at a pace that Wall Street underestimated, and that the Federal Reserve cannot easily fix.

Behind the numbers is a collision of geopolitical conflict, a data correction from last year’s government shutdown, and persistent cost pressures on the essentials you buy most often.


That's where we are.  Where are we headed?  James McClenathen (THE MOTLEY FOOL) notes

Prices are rising fast. And top economists expect things to get worse before they get better.

Annual inflation is expected to hit 6% this quarter, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia's Survey of Professional Forecasters. Three months ago, the same group predicted 2.7%. That's a massive jump in a short time.


6% somewhere over the next six months?  


Of course, not everyone is suffering.  Eva Roytburg (FORTUNE) reports:

On the morning of Monday, March 23, President Trump pulled his first “TACO” of the Iran war. After four weeks of fighting, with oil prices already up 55%, Trump had given Iran an ultimatum on Friday: make a deal within 48 hours, or the U.S. would strike its power plants and energy infrastructure.

But on Monday morning, Trump reversed course. In an all-caps Truth Social post, he announced the U.S. and Iran had been having “very good and productive conversations” and that he would extend the deadline for a deal by five days.
Wall Street, for the first time since the war began, exhaled. Stocks rose. Brent crude plunged nearly 11%. Energy stocks — one of the few reliable winners of the conflict — sold off with oil.

The brokerage account in Trump’s name spent the day buying them.

According to the 113-page periodic transaction report released by the Office of Government Ethics on May 14, Trump’s brokerage account spent that same day buying a sweep of petroleum and gas stocks, including Phillips 66, Exxon Mobil, and Chevron, along with defense and aerospace names like Lockheed Martin and General Dynamics: the companies that stood to profit if the war dragged on.

The day wasn’t an outlier. The filing, which covers January through March, shows a consistent posture through the Iran conflict: as Trump prosecuted the war and told Americans it would end “soon,” the account in his name was hedging it, buying gold, Treasuries, and cash.

A spokesperson for the Trump Organization, the family’s privately held conglomerate, told Fortune the brokerage accounts are operated by third-party financial institutions that have “sole and exclusive authority over all investment decisions.” Trades, the spokesperson wrote in a statement, are executed through “automated investment processes and systems administered by those institutions,” and neither Trump, his family, nor the Trump Organization “plays any role in selecting, directing, or approving specific investments.”
[. . .]

The accumulation began the same day the war did. The disclosure reports trades only in ranges, not exact dollar figures, with purchases falling between $50,000 and $5 million depending on the position. 

Markets generally divided into two camps: the risk-on assets—U.S. stocks, growth, tech—that investors buy when they’re confident the economy will grow , and the safe havens—gold, Treasuries, cash—they retreat to when they’re not. Through the Iran war, the account moved steadily from the first camp to the second, even as Trump told Americans the conflict was nearly over.

On March 2, the first trading day of the war, the account bought Newmont, the gold miner, for $50,000 to $100,000. On March 4, the day Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz, it bought the iShares US Treasury Bond ETF for $250,000 to $500,000. The next day, it bought $500,000 to $1 million of the iShares Gold Trust.

The buying continued even as Trump publicly insisted the war was under control. 


Last night on MS NOW, Rachel Maddow addressed Chump's stock buys and the ways he then manipulated the stock.  






Immigration is Chump's signature policy and how's that worked out for America?  It's given us a very bad name and image on the international stage.  Tourism to the US is down and it's Chump's immigration policies that have led to the decrease.  It's ripped families apart.  It's destroyed neighborhoods.  And Brendan Rascius (INDEPENDENT) reports it's cost a lot of money as well:

President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown could cost the federal government nearly half a trillion dollars in lost tax revenue over the next decade, according to economists.

Undocumented immigrants currently pay about $66 billion each year in payroll and federal income taxes. But policy changes introduced by the Trump administration may deter many from filing returns, potentially reducing federal revenue by between $147 billion and $479 billion over 10 years, an analysis by the Yale Budget Lab concluded.
Trump, who pledged to carry out the largest deportation effort in U.S. history, has taken a number of steps in furtherance of that goal, including strengthening enforcement measures, promoting self-deportation and significantly boosting funding for ICE.

One key development came last April, when the Internal Revenue Service agreed to share taxpayer data with Immigration and Customs Enforcement for individuals with final removal orders. Under the arrangement, ICE submitted names and addresses, which the IRS matched against its records before returning confirmed identities. By August, the agency had handed over tens of thousands of records.

Although a federal court found the agreement unlawful in November, the policy shift may have already had a chilling effect, discouraging some immigrants from filing taxes.


Let's stay with immigration for a bit more to note some developments. Ronda Kaysen (NEW YORK TIMES) reports:

The Trump administration has long claimed that mass deportations would deliver more jobs and higher wages to American-born workers. But a new study casts doubt on that assertion, undermining a central tenet of the president’s immigration policy.

Recent surges in deportations have led to job losses for both immigrant and American-born workers, while wages have stayed flat, according to the study, published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, a nonpartisan research organization. Construction, which depends heavily on immigrant labor, was impacted more than any other industry studied, with American-born workers losing more jobs as a result of the deportations than the undocumented workers who remained.

The study offers the first national analysis of the effects of the Trump administration’s aggressive deportation operations on the labor market, comparing communities that experienced surges in deportations between January 2025 and October 2025 with those that did not.

Analyzing federal labor data, researchers focused on four industries that rely heavily on undocumented immigrant workers: agriculture, construction, manufacturing and wholesale. Deportations had a chilling effect on each of those industries, disproportionately affecting men, who accounted for more than 90 percent of the immigration arrests. Taken together, the affected industries saw a 5 percent drop in employment for male undocumented workers and a 1.3 percent drop for male American-born workers without a college degree.




We noted that Chump's policies have split up families. Ashleigh Fields (THE HILL) reports a number:


A new report from the Brookings Institution found that more than 145,000 U.S. citizen children have likely been separated from at least one parent due to detention over their immigration status in the second Trump administration. 

The information released on Monday by Brookings indicated that more than 22,000 children have experienced having all of their co-resident parents detained. The nonprofit public policy organization says only 5 percent — or around 1,100 — of these children have received services from the child welfare system based on information collected from interviews with community organizations and child welfare agencies.
Other minors are living with family or friends for the time being, while some have left the country alongside their deported parents. 

“The bottom line is that there is no systematic approach to protecting the children of those detained by ICE [Immigration and Customs Enforcement],” the Brookings report says. 

“ICE does not directly involve itself in safeguarding the well-being of a detainee’s children and only refers to child protection if children are present at an arrest and no alternative care is immediately available,” it adds.


The Brookings report is entitled "The administration has detained 400,000 immigrants: What do we know about their children?" and is written by Maria Cancian, Nissi Cantu, Lanikque Howard, and Tara Watson.

Regarding the children, the report notes:

We know surprisingly little about what happens to children of detainees. Children who are themselves unauthorized may face detention or deportation, but most children of detainees are U.S. citizens. In some cases, the child may travel to the parent’s origin country with a deported parent, but the government does not publish systematic data on its transportation of U.S. citizen children to foreign countries and we do not know how commonly this happens.

Parents wishing their children to remain in the United States are encouraged by community partners to have a family preparedness plan, specifying a close friend or relative who will care for the child if the parent cannot. In many of these cases, the government is unaware of children left behind, and most parents prefer to avoid contact with the child welfare system even if they have only substandard care options.

Caregivers are sometimes able to access supports through the child welfare system. Sometimes supports may be available without a formal child welfare case being opened—e.g., when prevention resources are available. The child welfare system typically becomes more deeply involved only when a care arrangement becomes unsustainable or the abuse or neglect of a child comes to the attention of authorities. Some children, a small minority of those with detained parents, will end up in foster care. Even when a child welfare case is opened, or a child enters foster care, the case may not be identified or documented as immigration-related.


And the report concludes:

Most children affected by parental detention and deportation are U.S. citizens. As immigration enforcement expands, ensuring that affected children have access to basic supports and protections should be understood not as optional, but as a necessary governmental responsibility tied to the foreseeable consequences of family separation and displacement. When we detain or deport a child’s parents, the nation has a clear obligation to recognize, account for, and safeguard the child’s well-being.



A U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent has been charged with assault for allegedly shooting a Venezuelan immigrant during Operation Metro Surge in Minneapolis, the second time local prosecutors have leveled criminal charges against federal officers for their conduct in the city this winter.

Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty said ICE agent Christian Castro in January fired several shots through the front door, one of which struck Julio Sosa-Celis in the thigh before tearing through a wall in a child’s bedroom. Moriarty said Castro had lied about being attacked before the shooting.
“Mr. Castro fired his service weapon at the front door of the home, knowing there were people who had just run inside that presented absolutely no threat to him or anyone else,” Moriarty said Monday at a press conference.

Moriarty said a nationwide warrant had been issued for Castro’s arrest. He is facing four counts of assault in the second degree and one count of falsely reporting a crime. Neither ICE nor the Department of Homeland Security immediately responded to a request for comment.


Ava-joye Burnett (SCRIPPS NEWS SERVICE) notes that Castro is the second ICE agent with an arrest warrant:


Gregory Donnell Morgan Jr. was charged in April with two counts of second-degree assault after prosecutors said he pointed a gun at two people during an apparent road rage incident on Highway 62 in the Twin Cities.
During the initial investigation, Morgan told authorities he was an ICE agent assigned to the Minneapolis area and was returning to a federal facility at the end of his shift on Feb. 5 when another driver allegedly tried to block him while he was driving on the shoulder.
Morgan said he displayed his weapon and yelled, “Police, stop,” because he feared for his safety. Authorities said Morgan acknowledged he was not responding to an emergency or conducting an active law enforcement operation at the time.

And when not content just to separate a family, ICE prevents a parent from seeing their child born.  Billal Rahman (NEWSWEEK) reports:


A Guatemalan man missed the birth of his first child after Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) held him for several days despite a federal court order requiring his “immediate release,” according to legal filings and his family.

On May 1, U.S. Magistrate Judge Karen E. Scott of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California ruled that ICE had violated procedural due‑process protections when it re‑detained Freddy Cortez Lugos—who was in the U.S. on humanitarian parole—during a routine check‑in and ordered the agency to free him without delay. Instead, Cortez Lugos remained in custody until the evening of May 4, his relatives said, adding that amid the delay, his partner went into labor and gave birth to their son, Izaan, on May 1.
The case highlights the ongoing tension between federal courts and the Trump administration’s mass deportation policy, as judges continue to scrutinize ICE’s authority to re‑detain people who were previously released under parole or supervision. At stake is not only whether ICE is complying promptly with court orders but also whether constitutional due‑process protections have real force during the government’s aggressive push to expand immigration enforcement.


Turning to reparations, Chump's delivering them . . . to White insurrectionists.  Nikki McCann Ramirez (ROLLING STONE) reports:


The Justice Department confirmed on Monday that it is creating a $1.776 billion fund to send taxpayer money to "victims of lawfare and weaponization."

According to a statement from the DOJ to MeidasTouch, the fund would "consist of a Commission of five members appointed by the Attorney General. One Member will be chosen in consultation with congressional leadership" and "the President can remove any member."

Hours before the announcement, President Donald Trump withdrew a $10 billion lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service, paving the way for the creation of the fund in an attempt to skirt concerns about the president's attempts to use taxpayer funds to compensate himself. Last week, ABC News and CNN reported on internal White House discussions regarding the president's desire to drop the lawsuit in exchange for the massive fund to compensate allies and other individuals he feels have been wronged by past administrations - particularly former President Joe Biden. According to CNN, the settlement would also kill any existing IRS audits on Trump, members of his family, or associated businesses. 

ABC News reported that the fund could potentially respond to claims made by individuals who believe they were the victim of overreach or "weaponization" by the Biden administration. This could include the roughly 1,600 Jan. 6 defendants, whom Trump pardoned soon after taking office last year. While sources claim the agreement might include a provision barring Trump from directly pocketing the money, his businesses or other enterprises and associations may not be placed under such a restriction. 


Last night, Rachel Maddow addressed this topic with US House Rep Jamie Raskin.


Other coverage includes . . . 






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


“Free File cannot efficiently, effectively, and securely serve the taxpayers who are statutorily entitled to free tax filing services.”

Text of Letter (PDF)

Washington, DC - U.S. Senators Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), a member of the Senate Finance Committee, Angus King (I-Maine), and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Ranking Member of the Senate Finance Committee, asked the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to launch a new probe into the Free File program, a partnership with private tax prep companies. The request comes after the Trump administration killed the Direct File program, instead touting its failed Free File program, which has a nearly two-decade-long record of underperformance.

“We have serious concerns that Free File cannot efficiently, effectively, and securely serve the taxpayers who are statutorily entitled to free tax filing services,” wrote the lawmakers.

In April 2022, GAO released a report entitled “IRS Should Develop Additional Options for Taxpayers to File for Free,” highlighting the need for the government to develop new ways for low- and middle-income Americans to file their taxes for free. In response, the Biden administration created the Direct File program, which allowed Americans to file their tax returns online, for free, and directly with the IRS.

Last October, the Trump administration killed the Direct File program, asserting that the Free File program, which is operated by for-profit tax preparation firms and has a lengthy track record of underperformance, could meet taxpayers’ needs.

In addition to GAO’s earlier report, numerous reports by Congressional committees, nonpartisan watchdogs, and media outlets have identified serious problems with Free File. Free File partners have deliberately misled taxpayers into paying for assistance when they are eligible to file for free. Additionally, an investigation by Senator Warren found that Free File partners have leaked sensitive taxpayer data to private tech companies, putting taxpayers’ most sensitive information at risk.

To address concerns surrounding Free File’s underperformance and the lack of options for Americans to truly file their taxes for free, the senators requested that GAO initiate an investigation to evaluate the program’s user experience, accessibility, accuracy, and costs.

Senator Warren is a leading voice in advocating for taxpayers and for improved IRS resources:

  • In April 2026, Senator Warren introduced the Stop Corporations and High Earners from Avoiding Taxes and Enforce the Rules Strictly (Stop CHEATERS) Act, a bill to restore and revitalize the IRS with additional funding for tax enforcement, technology operations support, systems modernization, and taxpayer services like free taxpayer assistance.

  • In April 2026, Senator Warren took to the Senate floor to seek unanimous consent to pass the Direct File Act. The bill would reverse the Trump administration’s decision to end the highly successful Direct File program—which allowed Americans to file their taxes online, for free, and directly with the government—and make the program permanent.

  • In February 2026, Senator Warren led over 150 lawmakers in introducing the Direct File Act, new legislation that would reverse the Trump administration’s decision to end the highly successful Direct File program — which allowed taxpayers to file their taxes online, for free, and directly with the government — and make the program permanent.

  • In February 2026, Senator Warren led her colleagues in pressing Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Chief of Taxpayer Services Ken Corbin on the Treasury Department’s decision to end Direct File and instead promote Free File.

###




Trump PANICS as ARAB NATIONS give FINAL WARNING!!!

I Know Why Desperate Trump Is in Free Fall | The Daily Beast Podcast