Common Sense for America

Iran vs America: The 47-Year War Nobody Talks About

9 min · 12. maj 2026
episode Iran vs America: The 47-Year War Nobody Talks About cover

Description

For more than four decades Iran has funded proxy wars attacked American interests and escalated conflict across the Middle East. In this episode of Common Sense for America Bruce Rutherford breaks down the history the strategy behind the Strait of Hormuz blockade and the arguments from both the left and the right. Was this response inevitable Is the blockade constitutional What happens next for America and the Middle East This episode covers: • The 1979 hostage crisis • The Beirut Marine barracks bombing • Iran’s proxy network including Hamas Hezbollah and the Houthis • The constitutional debate over military action • The economic strategy behind the blockade • The risks of escalation and what comes next Whether you agree or disagree this episode is about understanding the full story and looking at the issue through facts history and common sense. Subscribe for weekly political commentary geopolitical analysis and discussions on the issues shaping America today. #Iran #Politics #MiddleEast #Geopolitics #America #USPolitics #BreakingNews #CurrentEvents #ForeignPolicy #CommonSenseForAmerica

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72 episodes

episode 8 Million Veterans, One Rigged System: The Full Story artwork

8 Million Veterans, One Rigged System: The Full Story

In the 1930s, a philosopher in Mussolini's prison wrote down what he believed was the most effective way to take over a democracy: skip the guns, capture the universities. One generation later, the students become the lawyers, journalists, executives, and politicians and the revolution is complete without a shot fired. In this edition of Common Sense for America, Bruce Rutherford traces that idea from a 1930s jail cell to a 2026 boardroom, and asks the question almost no one wants to confront: was the leftward drift of American institutions an accident, or a plan? True to the channel's both-sides approach, Bruce gives each side a serious hearing the real history of exclusion that fuels the progressive case, and the documented organizing strategy that drives the conservative one before laying out a common-sense path forward that doesn't require capturing the institutions back. In this episode: Why employees at Google, Disney, and Nike now register further left than UC Berkeley faculty and what that signals The progressive argument, fairly stated: from the three-fifths clause to the 1944 GI Bill's unequal rollout The conservative argument, fairly stated: the two-parent family's drop from 78% to 66% and Thomas Sowell's research on why Herbert Marcuse's 1969 "repressive tolerance" doctrine and why Bruce reads it as a manual, not a prediction The "Long March Through the Institutions" and how it targeted the faculty meeting, not the ballot box The strongest counterargument that DEI is driven by legal liability, not conspiracy and Bruce's response to it A three-part common-sense solution: school choice, real viewpoint diversity, and merit over ideology Note: This episode reflects Bruce Rutherford's analysis and interpretation of the historical record. Viewers are encouraged to test every claim against the evidence which is exactly the point. Follow the money. Follow the history. Not the narrative. 👉 If you want politics explained without the partisan spin, subscribe and hit the like button. Tell us in the comments what you're seeing in your own community. #CommonSenseForAmerica #BruceRutherford #InstitutionalCapture #LongMarch #DEI #ViewpointDiversity #SchoolChoice #ThomasSowell

Yesterday12 min
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Why Did a US Mayor Work for China?

The mayor of Arcadia, California just pleaded guilty to acting as an illegal agent for the Chinese Communist Party. An elected American official, spreading Beijing's propaganda from inside an American city. How did we get here? In this episode, I lay out both sides honestly the left's warnings about McCarthyism and the dangers of naming "internal enemies," and the right's evidence of real institutional infiltration, from Cold War espionage to today's university faculty ratios. Then I get to the real problem: we've confused the right to hold anti-American views with immunity from being called out for them. From the fall of Rome to Bill Ayers teaching at a major university, from Gramsci's "long march through the institutions" to the documented Arcadia case this is about what happens when nations stop believing they're worth defending, and what common sense says we do about it without becoming the thing we're fighting. 🔔 Subscribe and hit the bell for more Common Sense for America 👍 Like this video if it made you think 💬 Comment below: where's the line between legitimate critique and genuine anti-Americanism? #CommonSenseForAmerica #Arcadia #NationalSecurity #Politics

12. juni 202611 min
episode Benjamin Franklin’s Warning for America Is Happening Right Now artwork

Benjamin Franklin’s Warning for America Is Happening Right Now

Benjamin Franklin left America with a warning that has echoed across nearly 250 years of history: "A republic, madam, if you can keep it." As America approaches its 250th birthday, that warning feels more relevant than ever. In this episode of Common Sense for America, Bruce Rutherford examines the growing divide between the country's founding principles and its modern political reality. Looking at arguments from both the left and the right, he asks a question that should concern every American: Have we kept the republic? Topics discussed in this episode: • Benjamin Franklin's famous challenge and what it means today • The Founders' structural failures and the constitutional system they created • Lincoln's warning that America's greatest threat would come from within • The debate over the Electoral College, Senate representation, and majority rule • The V-Dem Institute's downgrade of U.S. democratic standards • How Hugo Chavez transformed Venezuela from a democracy into an authoritarian state • Why constitutional safeguards were designed to slow political power • Independent redistricting, election integrity, and proposals for reform The Founders were imperfect men who created an imperfect system. Yet they also built a constitutional framework capable of correcting its own failures while preserving the stability of the republic. The question is not whether America faces challenges. The question is whether Americans still possess the civic courage required to preserve what previous generations built. Do you believe we are keeping the republic? Leave your thoughts in the comments. #BenjaminFranklin #Constitution #AmericanHistory #Politics #FoundingFathers #ElectoralCollege #Democracy #Republic #Lincoln #CommonSenseForAmerica

6. juni 202610 min
episode Benjamin Franklin’s Warning for America Is Happening Right Now artwork

Benjamin Franklin’s Warning for America Is Happening Right Now

Benjamin Franklin left America with a warning that has echoed across nearly 250 years of history: "A republic, madam, if you can keep it." As America approaches its 250th birthday, that warning feels more relevant than ever. In this episode of Common Sense for America, Bruce Rutherford examines the growing divide between the country's founding principles and its modern political reality. Looking at arguments from both the left and the right, he asks a question that should concern every American: Have we kept the republic? Topics discussed in this episode: • Benjamin Franklin's famous challenge and what it means today • The Founders' structural failures and the constitutional system they created • Lincoln's warning that America's greatest threat would come from within • The debate over the Electoral College, Senate representation, and majority rule • The V-Dem Institute's downgrade of U.S. democratic standards • How Hugo Chavez transformed Venezuela from a democracy into an authoritarian state • Why constitutional safeguards were designed to slow political power • Independent redistricting, election integrity, and proposals for reform The Founders were imperfect men who created an imperfect system. Yet they also built a constitutional framework capable of correcting its own failures while preserving the stability of the republic. The question is not whether America faces challenges. The question is whether Americans still possess the civic courage required to preserve what previous generations built. Do you believe we are keeping the republic? Leave your thoughts in the comments. #BenjaminFranklin #Constitution #AmericanHistory #Politics #FoundingFathers #ElectoralCollege #Democracy #Republic #Lincoln #CommonSenseForAmerica

5. juni 202610 min
episode 603 Americans Killed: Why Congress Must Vote on Iran artwork

603 Americans Killed: Why Congress Must Vote on Iran

Bruce Rutherford breaks down the Iran debate that Washington doesn't want to have not left vs. right, but whether America has the unified will to finish what it started. In this episode: Why the 60-day War Powers clock expiring is a legitimate constitutional question — and why it's being used wrong The 40-year kill record: 241 Marines in Beirut, 603 troops in Iraq, 3 soldiers at Tower 22 — Iran's war on America by the numbers How Iranian state TV is using Senate hearings as propaganda and what Madison said about the sword and the purse Why a congressional resolution isn't a restriction on the Commander in Chief — it's the most powerful signal Washington can send The 4 non-negotiable exit conditions: IRGC disbanded, UN-supervised elections, full sanctions until a free government is certified This isn't about party. It's about whether American resolve means anything when an adversary is watching. 📌 Call your representative. Tell them to bring this to a vote. Follow the money. Follow the history. Not the narrative. 🔔 Subscribe for new episodes every week.

26. maj 202610 min