Hope For America with Heather Delaney Reese

Trump's disturbing NATO visit exposed something allies already know

18 min · 9. juli 2026
episode Trump's disturbing NATO visit exposed something allies already know cover

Beskrivelse

At the NATO summit in Ankara, the danger was visible before Donald Trump even reached the microphone. He stepped off Qatar's Air Force One gripping the handrail, wandered off the blue carpet, and had to be physically guided back into place by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Then the words caught up with the image. Trump admitted he almost skipped the summit because NATO allies did not support his Iran attack, praised Erdogan while considering a return of F-35 fighter jets to Turkey, dismissed Ukraine's suffering as something that "doesn't affect the United States," threatened Europe over Greenland, and showed once again how quickly his weakness becomes someone else's opportunity. At home, his Justice Department was threatening election officials over a nearly nonexistent noncitizen voting crisis, while his interference in the World Cup turned one of America's rare shared joys into another reminder that under Trump, even the rules of a soccer match can become political property. Based on the events of 7-7-2026 The Breakdown: * Trump arrived in Ankara on Qatar's Air Force One at 2:15 p.m. local time and appeared physically uncertain as he gripped the handrail walking down the stairs. * Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan greeted Trump on the tarmac before the two began a ceremonial walk along a blue carpet. * Trump repeatedly drifted from side to side, stopped, and appeared disoriented during the walk toward Turkish military personnel. * Erdogan reached under Trump's arm, redirected him back toward the carpet, and pointed him toward the microphone on live television. * The White House later posted edited arrival footage that cut out the moments where Trump appeared lost and had to be guided. * Asked about possible U.S. troop drawdowns from Europe, Trump instead complained that NATO allies did not support his strike on Iran. * Trump said he was "very disappointed with NATO" and suggested he might not have attended if the summit had not been hosted by his "friend" Erdogan. * Trump said the United States would consider selling Turkey F-35 fighter jets, even though Turkey was removed from the program in 2019 after buying Russian S-400 air defense systems. * When asked about risks from American technology sitting alongside Russian systems, Trump said he had "no concerns at all about anything" and praised Turkey's roads. * Erdogan told reporters Trump had already promised him five jets, while the White House declined to clarify whether that was true. * Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu urged the United States not to transfer F-35s to Turkey, warning it would upset the regional balance of power. * Trump said he would lift CAATSA sanctions on Turkey because "we don't want to sanction friends," despite Turkey's Russian defense purchases. * On Ukraine, Trump said Russia's war "doesn't affect the United States" and complained that images of the battlefield did not "help the look." * Trump renewed threats over Greenland, saying it should be controlled by the United States and warning Europe that America could remove soldiers from the continent. * Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen rejected Trump's Greenland demand, while Finland's president answered with the line, "Be more Arctic, be more cool." * Erdogan gained legitimacy, potential access to advanced U.S. aircraft, sanctions relief, and a NATO spotlight while opposition journalists were denied accreditation and Turkish citizens were arrested. * Trump's Justice Department sent letters to election officials in all fifty states and Washington, D.C., threatening possible prosecution over noncitizen voting. * Noncitizen voting is already illegal, and Brennan Center research has found it accounted for roughly 0.0001 percent of votes in examined jurisdictions. * Trump called FIFA's president to push for reversal of a U.S. red card, admitted he did not know what a red card was, and still got the automatic World Cup suspension lifted. * After Belgium beat the United States, Belgian players mocked Trump's YMCA-style dance and their football association posted "Overturn this," turning the moment into a global punchline. This was not just a strange diplomatic visit, a reckless policy promise, an election intimidation campaign, or a sports controversy. It was one pattern repeating across every part of American life: a president who cannot separate public responsibility from personal grievance, who treats allies as props, authoritarians as friends, democratic institutions as obstacles, and shared national moments as things to bend around himself. But the more visible that pattern becomes, the harder it is to ignore. People who may not follow NATO, sanctions, or election law saw it in the World Cup. Allies saw it in Ankara. Voters can see it before November. That recognition matters, because a country can still choose clarity over chaos, truth over spectacle, and democracy over one man's need to dominate every room he enters. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til at kommentere

Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af Hope For America with Heather Delaney Reese-fællesskabet!

Kom i gang

1 måned kun 9 kr.

Derefter 99 kr. / måned · Opsig når som helst.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle episoder

166 episoder

episode Elon Musk faces possible criminal charges over $1 million voter lottery cover

Elon Musk faces possible criminal charges over $1 million voter lottery

Last night, the clearest warning came from the images Trump chose to share and the violence his government keeps asking Americans to accept. He presented himself beside Xi Jinping as though authoritarian power is the company he wants America to keep, while families here at home are grieving ICE killings, democratic allies are learning to treat the United States as a threat, and institutions from the Senate to a Wisconsin elections commission are being forced to hold the line where the federal government will not. Based on the events of 7-14-2026 The Breakdown: * Donald Trump posted three images with Chinese President Xi Jinping at 7:57 p.m., presenting himself beside one of the world's most powerful authoritarian leaders. * One black-and-white image showed Trump standing behind Xi, looking diminished while Xi appeared confident and in control. * The images followed another post showing an altered Oval Office scene with Canada, Greenland, Cuba, and Venezuela covered by the American flag. * That altered map mocked Canada and Greenland while threatening Cuba and Venezuela with the symbolism of American territorial conquest. * Trump's public admiration for Xi fits a longer pattern that includes Vladimir Putin, Kim Jong Un, and Viktor Orban. * Xi's government crushed democratic movements in Hong Kong, targeted ethnic minorities through internment camps, and built a vast surveillance state. * Democratic allies have already begun treating the United States as a danger to manage, not a reliable partner. * Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen rebuked Trump, while French President Emmanuel Macron warned Europe that America could betray Ukraine. * NATO leaders have had to plan around the possibility that the American president is no longer acting in the interest of the democratic world. * The episode unfolded alongside reports of ICE killings, grieving families, detention conditions, and official statements insisting agents had no choice. * ICE has become a domestic enforcement arm operating with unmarked vehicles, unidentified agents, no body cameras, and little meaningful accountability. * Historical authoritarian movements often built forces loyal to the leader instead of the constitution, beginning with vulnerable communities before expanding outward. * Senate Democrats blocked the $1.15 trillion National Defense Authorization Act in a 50 to 46 vote, denying the 60 votes needed to advance it. * Chuck Schumer said Trump started a war without authorization, without a strategy, and without an exit. * Chris Murphy described the defense bill as an authorization for a war the country does not want. * Democrats used the NDAA vote to force a reckoning after the administration ignored repeated war powers resolutions. * In Wisconsin, a bipartisan elections commission voted 5 to 1 to find probable cause that Elon Musk violated state election bribery laws. * Musk's America PAC offered million-dollar prizes during the 2025 Wisconsin Supreme Court race while spending more than $20 million to influence the contest. * America PAC's own director admitted recipients were vetted for their suitability as spokespeople, undercutting the claim that ordinary voters were randomly rewarded. * The Brown County District Attorney now has 40 days to decide whether to bring charges tied to a rigged lottery disguised as democratic participation. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.

I går14 min
episode Trump's planned Thursday primetime address is deeply concerning cover

Trump's planned Thursday primetime address is deeply concerning

Last night, at 5:44 p.m., weary, struggling, and slurring his words, Donald Trump sat behind his desk in the Oval Office to sign executive actions slashing protective status from nearly three million acres of public land in Utah. There was a moment that caused awkward concern when, minutes after introducing Utah Governor Spencer Cox, Trump finished signing, held up the ceremonial pen, and asked, "Who should I give this to?" before handing it directly to Cox. The governor had been standing in the same place the entire time. Yet the President no longer appeared to recognize the man he had introduced only minutes earlier. Based on the events of 7-13-2026 The Breakdown: * Trump signed executive actions stripping protections from nearly three million acres of Utah public land while struggling to stay awake * The moment he failed to recognize Governor Spencer Cox minutes after introducing him * The clinical term for what we may be watching: confabulation, when a deteriorating brain fills gaps with fabricated information the person genuinely believes * A Fox & Friends call to honor Lindsey Graham that veered into the filibuster, the SAVE America Act, and false claims about Spencer Pratt and ballots * On the Hugh Hewitt show, Trump announced a specific Iranian military target, "Pickaxe," on live radio * Trump dismissing his own Iran peace deal: "It was a test... memorandums of understanding when you're dealing with sleaze bags don't mean much" * Describing Graham's fatal aortic dissection as "a certain part of his body literally blowing up" * The cryptic word about Thursday's address: "guilt," or possibly "gilt," both equally revealing * 35 Truth Social posts in roughly 90 minutes, including reposting praise for the peace deal he had just killed * The phrase in his Slaughter case post, "at a time when it is most needed," the language of emergency authority * In Biddeford, Maine, an ICE agent shot and killed Joan Sebastian Guerrero, 26, authorized to work in the U.S., reportedly in front of his 3-year-old daughter * DHS Secretary Mullin admitting they killed the wrong person, and the protests that marched to Susan Collins's office * Marco Rubio announcing a campaign to "dismantle the ICC, brick by brick" * The contaminated information environment around Mitch McConnell's hospitalization photo * The reporting that Thursday's primetime address will claim foreign interference in the 2020 election, and may declare Georgia's senators illegitimate * Why he is building the case that elections are broken four months before the midterms * Judge Kathleen Williams voiding Trump's IRS settlement, sanctioning his attorneys, and calling the $1.776 billion figure a "branding effort" * Williams closing with John Adams: "Facts are stubborn things" On Thursday, the President will try to convince this country that its own elections are a lie. But today, a judge proved him wrong. There are still people in this system willing to look at the full weight of corruption and say this was wrong, and there will be consequences. Facts are stubborn things. And so are we. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.

15. juli 202621 min
episode Trump’s Meet The Press appearance about Lindsey Graham revealed everything cover

Trump’s Meet The Press appearance about Lindsey Graham revealed everything

Donald Trump's first reaction to Lindsey Graham's death revealed the same emptiness that has defined so much of this era: even a friend's sudden passing became, almost immediately, a calculation about power, votes, and the SAVE America Act. Graham's story is not simple, and grief does not require us to erase the truth. He once saw Trump clearly, warned the country in language that history will remember, and then spent his final years choosing relevance over principle. That choice matters now because the same forces he helped strengthen are still moving through the courts, the Senate, the Justice Department, and even the land itself, and the margins are thin enough that public pressure can still change what happens next. Based on the events of 7-12-2026 The Breakdown: * Lindsey Graham's office announced at 2:02 in the morning that the South Carolina senator had died hours earlier, shocking even Donald Trump. * Trump posted that Graham was "dead!" and that he was "so sad!" less than ninety minutes after the announcement. * On Meet the Press, Trump repeatedly turned Graham's death into a problem for the SAVE America Act, saying it was "a big blow" to the votes needed. * Trump described Graham's final phone call mostly as a legislative update, saying Graham was pushing the SAVE America Act "like crazy." * When asked about replacing Graham in the Senate, Trump said he already had "somebody" in mind, even while claiming it was too soon to discuss. * On the same day he performed public grief, Trump posted attacks on democratic socialism, a fake image of Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, and Kamala Harris, fighter jets, and approval rating claims. * Graham once called Trump a "race-baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot" and said Republicans would deserve destruction if they nominated him. * After January 6th, Graham said "count me out" on the Senate floor, then returned to Mar-a-Lago within weeks. * Graham later admitted to The New York Times that his turn back toward Trump was an attempt "to be relevant." * Graham once praised John McCain's country-first ethic, then stood beside Trump after Trump mocked McCain's military service and memory. * Graham helped put Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett on the Supreme Court, backed war with Iran, chaired the Budget Committee, and co-sponsored the SAVE America Act. * Graham reportedly felt unwell after speaking with Trump, was urged to seek medical care, and refused because he had a Meet the Press appearance the next morning. * Emergency responders were called to Graham's home for chest pains at 8:30, CPR was underway twenty-five minutes later, and the preliminary cause of death was aortic dissection. * Graham's death carries a personal warning about ignoring serious symptoms and choosing work, television, or obligation over urgent medical care. * Trump's age and visible struggles raise a separate warning about the shame of clinging to power when people around you benefit from your decline. * The Trump administration finalized a rule gutting the Endangered Species Act by removing the long-standing definition of "harm" that protected wildlife habitat. * The rule puts species like the spotted owl, Florida panther, monarch butterfly, wolverine, manatee, and Atlantic salmon at greater risk by treating their homes as expendable. * The administration also rescinded the Public Lands Rule, opened 245 million acres of public land to extraction, and rolled back protections for more than 300 million acres of Pacific Ocean. * Todd Blanche's confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee now turns on a thinner Republican margin, with Thom Tillis positioned as a key vote. * Calls to senators matter because offices log constituent pressure, report issue tallies to members, and react when enough people speak at the same time. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.

14. juli 202618 min
episode Trump’s latest desperate attack - he’s completely lost it cover

Trump’s latest desperate attack - he’s completely lost it

Donald Trump spent Saturday trying to project strength, but what he revealed instead was fear. From a golf course outside Washington, D.C., he lashed out at Maggie Haberman, Jonathan Swan, the New York Times, Democrats, and nearly every major news outlet because they dared to raise questions about his health, his behavior, and the truth the public has a right to know. At the same time, his Justice Department is hauling Times reporters before a grand jury over reporting that embarrassed him, while his administration keeps escalating lawsuits, subpoenas, raids, arrests, deportations, censorship threats, and government pressure against the press. This is not random anger. It is a campaign to make truth feel dangerous, and it is aimed at every journalist, writer, creator, and American who still believes the First Amendment belongs to the people. Based on the events of 7-11-2026 The Breakdown: * Trump spent Saturday at Trump National Golf Club while posting five increasingly erratic Truth Social attacks in one afternoon. * Maggie Haberman told Jonathan Capehart that Trump's health remains a "black box" inside the administration, with less information released after repeated Walter Reed visits. * Trump responded by calling Haberman "Maggot Hagerman," attacking her reporting, and threatening the New York Times with a multibillion dollar lawsuit. * He claimed he had just finished a "perfect physical" and another cognitive test at Walter Reed, even though the White House said he was referring to his May 26 exam. * The cognitive test Trump keeps bragging about is the Montreal Cognitive Assessment, a screening tool for dementia, not an intelligence test. * By 3:16 PM, Trump posted a 449-word rant attacking Haberman, Jonathan Swan, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, CNN, MSNBC, ABC, CBS, and NBC. * Three more posts followed between 4:54 and 4:56 PM, including attacks on Democrats as communists and "loud and unattractive people." * George Conway warned that a severely mentally ill man has control of America's nuclear arsenal, while Haberman and Swan calmly pointed to the success of their book "Regime Change." * The Justice Department subpoenaed New York Times reporters Julian Barnes, Eric Lipton, Tyler Pager, and Eric Schmitt to testify before a federal grand jury. * The subpoenas appear tied to Times reporting on Secret Service concerns about Trump's Qatari-gifted Air Force One and its lack of advanced antimissile capabilities. * Times attorney David McCraw called the subpoenas "brazen," and press freedom advocates said they break with longstanding Justice Department protections for reporters. * Trump's administration has taken control of the White House press pool and barred the Associated Press over its refusal to rename the Gulf of Mexico. * FCC Chairman Brendan Carr has investigated major networks while sparing Fox, and pressure around CBS, Paramount, Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Kimmel, and ABC shows how media leverage is being weaponized. * Trump has sued ABC, CBS, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, and the BBC for staggering sums no sitting president has ever used against the press this way. * Voice of America, Radio Free Europe, Radio Free Asia, Middle East Broadcasting Networks, NPR, and PBS have all been targeted or gutted under this administration. * Pentagon rules under Pete Hegseth pushed reporters to surrender credentials rather than accept restrictions on seeking nonpublic information, even when it was unclassified. * The White House launched a government "media bias" tracker, while journalists including Mario Guevara, Don Lemon, Georgia Fort, and Hannah Natanson have faced arrests, deportation, or raids. * Trump has threatened to jail reporters who protect sources, called for treason charges against news organizations, and reportedly pressed Todd Blanche with printed articles marked "Treason." * The larger strategy is not just to win cases, but to make speaking, reporting, writing, and telling the truth feel personally and financially dangerous. * The answer cannot be silence. It has to be louder voices, stronger support for independent and legacy media, and a public that refuses to surrender the First Amendment. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.

13. juli 202628 min
episode "I hope you'll miss me" - Trump fears Iran will never stop coming after him cover

"I hope you'll miss me" - Trump fears Iran will never stop coming after him

Donald Trump is hiding from the cameras while issuing threats that could put American service members and civilians in immediate danger, and at the same time his administration is dismantling the institutions that protect our elections, suppressing voting access, and expanding an immigration enforcement system with less accountability and more force. The warning signs are not scattered or accidental. They are connected: a president treating personal vengeance as national policy, firing the people responsible for helping states run elections, holding housing relief hostage for a voter suppression bill, and building new machinery to move human beings outside public scrutiny. The question is not whether this is serious. The question is whether enough Americans will recognize the pattern while there is still time to stop it. Based on the events of 7-10-2026 The Breakdown: * Donald Trump told the New York Post he has "left instructions" if Iran assassinates him, saying the United States should "literally bomb them at levels that they've never seen before." * Trump later posted that "1000 Missiles are Locked and Loaded" and threatened to "completely decimate and destroy all areas of Iran" for a one-year period, subject to extension. * His Truth Social post did not limit retaliation to military targets or nuclear sites, which makes the threat broader, more reckless, and more dangerous for civilians and American troops. * The threat comes after years of Iranian anger over Trump's 2020 killing of General Qassem Soleimani and recent reporting about renewed assassination threats. * Trump said he is "number one on the kill list for Iran," and the Secret Service reportedly used "distraction and misdirection" during his NATO summit travel. * The White House fired all three remaining commissioners of the Election Assistance Commission, leaving the only federal agency devoted solely to election administration without a quorum. * Thomas Hicks, Benjamin Hovland, and Christy McCormick had all been unanimously confirmed by the Senate, but were removed for insufficient alignment with Trump's election agenda. * The Supreme Court's 6-3 ruling in Trump v. Slaughter gave Trump new power to remove independent agency commissioners, and he used it within eleven days against the EAC. * The administration has also gutted CISA, cutting roughly a third of its staff and proposing to eliminate the election security program that supports state and local officials. * Peter Ticktin, Trump's longtime friend and former lawyer for Tina Peters, drafted a 17-page executive order that would declare an election emergency and seize federal control of the midterms. * Fired EAC commissioner Benjamin Hovland warned that stripping resources from election workers creates a risk of self-fulfilling failure that can later be used to justify more control. * Trump refused to sign a bipartisan housing bill as a "PROTEST" because the Senate has not passed the SAVE America Act, even as housing prices hit record highs. * The SAVE America Act would require documentary proof of citizenship for registration and photo ID for voting, creating new barriers for millions of eligible Americans. * The Bipartisan Policy Center found that more than 21 million Americans do not have easy access to citizenship documents, while noncitizen voting flags at only 0.04 percent. * ICE agents in Houston shot and killed Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, a construction worker who was not their target, after stopping a white van on the way to a job site. * DHS initially claimed Lorenzo was the target and was in the country unlawfully, then admitted two days later that he was not the person agents were seeking. * Three men in the van said ICE's account was false, and Lorenzo's brother said an agent mocked him as he lay bleeding after being shot. * Lorenzo had no criminal record, three American citizen sons, and was close to obtaining legal status, according to his family. * DHS is building its own deportation airline, with at least nine jets planned and roughly $140 million already spent on six Boeing aircraft. * Taken together, the Iran threat, election firings, voter suppression push, ICE killing, and deportation fleet show a government concentrating force, fear, and control ahead of the midterms. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.

12. juli 202626 min