JIM WEBB PODCAST

COL. DOUG MACGREGOR : Thomas Massie's Loss And The Money Behind US Foreign Policy

50 min · 20 mei 2026
aflevering COL. DOUG MACGREGOR : Thomas Massie's Loss And The Money Behind US Foreign Policy artwork

Beschrijving

A newborn comes home from the hospital and, minutes later, we’re back on the hardest question in American life: who actually has power in Washington when a high-profile incumbent can be drowned under tens of millions in outside money? We start with Thomas Massey’s primary loss and talk candidly about donor influence, lobbying pressure, and why it feels like some foreign policy positions are effectively “off limits” if you want to keep your seat. If you’ve ever wondered why Congress struggles to reflect what voters say they want, this is the uncomfortable incentive structure behind it. From there, we connect the political story to the economic one. We dig into runaway spending, entitlement promises no one wants to reform, and the slow-motion danger of a weakening dollar. The theme is simple: meaningful change rarely arrives because of speeches or think pieces, it arrives when households feel real pain through inflation, shortages, or job loss. That’s when public opinion stops being theoretical and starts becoming political force. Then Col. Doug McGregor walks through the escalating risk of war with Iran and why the Persian Gulf is not a place where the US can assume dominance. We talk modern surveillance and strike networks, missile saturation, lessons from Ukraine’s battlefield, and how a wider conflict could hit oil infrastructure and desalination plants with knock-on effects that ripple through energy markets, shipping, fertilizer, and food prices. We also zoom out to BRICS, gold settlement, and the growing China Russia Iran alignment, ending on what we should prioritize first: defending North America and rebuilding real capacity at home. If this conversation sharpens your thinking, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a rating or review so more people can find the show. Chapter Markers 0:00. Baby News And Guest Welcome 1:47. Massey’s Defeat And Foreign Influence 4:17. Debt, Entitlements, And Dollar Decline 10:13. Pain Before Political Change 11:31. Congress For Sale And Corruption 15:11. Scarcity, Jobs, And Social Unrest 20:04. Cromwell’s Legacy And American Values 22:34. Home Front First And Cohesion 24:15. Why War With Iran Backfires 33:26. Ukraine Lessons And Modern Firepower 37:38. Gulf Infrastructure And Energy Shock 39:54. BRICS, Gold, And Eurasian Alignment 47:55. Defending North America And Closing Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jim-webb-podcast/donations [https://redcircle.com/jim-webb-podcast/donations] Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands [https://redcircle.com/brands] Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy [https://redcircle.com/privacy]

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31 afleveringen

aflevering PRO. MOHAMMAD MARANDI - LIVE From Tehran, IRAN artwork

PRO. MOHAMMAD MARANDI - LIVE From Tehran, IRAN

The market popped on a promise: a Trump-brokered Iran agreement that could reopen the Strait of Hormuz and ease a global energy squeeze. But when a headline lands right before futures reopen, I can’t help asking whether we’re seeing diplomacy or gamesmanship. Oil prices, the Nikkei, and US stocks all react instantly, even though the public still has almost no verified detail from the US side about the memorandum of understanding or the real enforcement mechanisms behind it.  To cut through the fog, I’m joined by Professor Seyed Mohammad Marandi live from Tehran. We talk about why Iranian leaders and ordinary people don’t evaluate US negotiations in a vacuum and how war memory still shapes strategy today. Morandi shares personal experience from the Iran-Iraq war, including surviving chemical attacks, and explains why that history fuels deep skepticism toward Western “human rights” messaging and toward US claims of good-faith bargaining.  Then we get practical and specific: what the reported terms imply about sanctions relief, frozen Iranian assets, maritime access through the Persian Gulf, and the biggest trigger point of all, Israel’s operations in Lebanon. We also look at the political pressure cooker around Netanyahu, the risk of the deal collapsing if commitments aren’t met, and what a sustained disruption in Hormuz means for inflation, fuel availability, and long-tail economic damage worldwide.  If you want a clear, grounded read on the Iran deal rumors, the Strait of Hormuz stakes, and the Lebanon ceasefire question, listen now, then subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review with your take on what happens next. CHAPTER MARKERS * 0:00 Breaking News And Big Claims * 2:04 Host Check In And Quick Sponsor * 2:58 World Cup Crowd Energy Break * 4:02 Markets React To Iran Deal Talk * 12:19 Marandi's War Story And Media Lessons * 21:53 What The Deal Demands By Friday * 26:01 Tehran’s Mixed Mood And Skepticism * 28:13 Can Washington Restrain Israel * 31:28 Winners Losers And Public Backlash * 35:59 Netanyahu’s Next Move At Home * 40:49 Proving Good Faith With Money And Terms * 43:16 Final Takeaways And Subscribe Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jim-webb-podcast/donations [https://redcircle.com/jim-webb-podcast/donations] Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands [https://redcircle.com/brands] Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy [https://redcircle.com/privacy]

16 jun 202644 min
aflevering PATRICK HENNINGSEN : The Lebanon - Iran Connection Explained artwork

PATRICK HENNINGSEN : The Lebanon - Iran Connection Explained

Lebanon isn’t a side quest, it’s the pressure point that can keep a US Iran war simmering for years. We sit down with journalist and geopolitical analyst Patrick Henningson, founder of 21st Century Wire, to unpack why Lebanon remains under covered, why the framing around Hezbollah is so politically useful in Washington, and why that framing can make diplomacy feel “impossible” by design. We break down Hezbollah’s origins in the Israeli occupation of South Lebanon, the reality of Hezbollah as both a political party and an armed force, and the uncomfortable question most headlines skip: why can’t the Lebanese Armed Forces defend their own airspace? From there, we zoom out to Israel’s longer term strategic interests in the south, including territory, resources, and water, and we talk about how post October 7 rules have shifted in ways that change the calculus for civilians and states alike. The conversation also draws parallels to Iraq’s Popular Mobilization Units, the war on terror’s elastic definitions, and how labels like “Iran backed” can erase local agency while lowering the threshold for violence. Finally, we tackle the big strategic picture: Iran’s rising leverage, America’s declining credibility, and what an “interregnum” between world orders looks like when no one trusts the old rules anymore. CHAPTER MARKERS * 0:00 Why Lebanon Is The Missing Piece * 1:55 Guest Background And Quick Housekeeping * 3:40 What Hezbollah Is And How It Formed * 13:56 Why Lebanon’s Army Stays Handcuffed * 20:44 Israel’s Goals Beyond “Security” * 22:55 Sectarian Pressure And Syria’s Spillover * 28:13 Iraq Parallels And The Terror Label * 45:41 Iran’s Leverage And America’s Decline * 1:07:36 The “Why” Question And The Interregnum Watch Patrick Henningsen, Like & Subscribe to him on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@21stCenturyWireTV Also visit Patrick's Substack here: https://patrickhenningsen.substack.com See all of Patrick Henningsen and his team's work here: https://www.21stcenturywire.com Follow Patrick’s daily shorts on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/21wire_media/ Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jim-webb-podcast/donations [https://redcircle.com/jim-webb-podcast/donations] Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands [https://redcircle.com/brands] Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy [https://redcircle.com/privacy]

13 jun 20261 h 15 min
aflevering Negotiating With Bombs Is Not Negotiating with/ Dan McKnight of Defend the Guard artwork

Negotiating With Bombs Is Not Negotiating with/ Dan McKnight of Defend the Guard

“We’ll negotiate with bombs” is the kind of line that should stop you cold, especially when it’s paired with fresh strikes on Iran and talk of ground troops. We sit down with Dan McKnight, founder of Bring Our Troops Home and a longtime Marine, Army, and National Guard veteran, to unpack what this moment says about U.S. foreign policy and why the constant recycling of “imminent threats” and instant “victories” keeps the public numb while the war machine keeps moving. From there, we get practical. Dan breaks down how the National Guard is actually used, including state active duty, Title 32, and Title 10 federalization, and why Title 10 has become a pipeline for overseas combat deployments without a congressional declaration of war. We talk through the Defend The Guard strategy, the big Texas win that pushed it into the state GOP platform, and why state legislatures may be the best pressure point to restore constitutional war powers and protect Guard units from being treated as a “warm supply of bodies.” We also dig into the policy hooks that lock in endless intervention: NDAA Section 224 and the push to tie the U.S. defense industrial base closer to Israel, plus Intelligence Authorization Section 622 and the fear that withholding intelligence could effectively become illegal. Along the way, we hit the costs at home, the risks of escalation in the Strait of Hormuz, and why modernization for drone warfare matters more than bluster. Subscribe, share this with a friend who cares about war powers, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway: what would it take for Congress and the states to reassert control over when America goes to war? CHAPTER MARKERS * 0:00. Iran Strikes And War Talk * 1:37 Meet Dan McKnight And The Mission * 5:24 Texas Win For Defend The Guard * 7:24 How National Guard Activations Work * 10:18 Overdeployment Costs At Home * 13:06 War Powers And Iran Legality * 23:05 The Off Ramp And Modern Warfare * 30:29 NDAA Section 224 And Industrial Ties * 35:10 Intel Bill 622 And Israel Sharing * 39:30 Building A Coalition That Resists War * 50:14. How To Help And Closing Notes Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jim-webb-podcast/donations [https://redcircle.com/jim-webb-podcast/donations] Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands [https://redcircle.com/brands] Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy [https://redcircle.com/privacy]

11 jun 202654 min
aflevering DARRYL COOPER aka Martyr Made : Populism’s First President Andrew Jackson artwork

DARRYL COOPER aka Martyr Made : Populism’s First President Andrew Jackson

Checkout our sponsor: KillerInstinctCoffee.com A lot of people use “populism” like a slur, but the older American meaning is blunt and practical: the will of the people pushing back on concentrated power. Darrell Cooper joins me to map that fight across US history, starting with Andrew Jackson as the first true national populist figure and asking why he still triggers strong reactions today. We talk about honor, accountability, and why some leaders connect because they embody the class and culture that feels ignored, not because they deliver perfect policy papers.  From there we get into the money question. Jackson’s battle with the Second Bank of the United States isn’t just a trivia fact, it’s a clear case study in how central banking, credit, and insider access can concentrate wealth. We connect those early struggles to modern arguments about the Federal Reserve and the way financial systems reward scale. Along the way we unpack how the cotton economy once underwrote banks, shipping, and infrastructure, and why the Civil War creates a sharp “before and after” that supercharges industrial capitalism and tariff politics.  The second half moves into the Gilded Age and the Industrial Revolution: immigration, tenement life, and the transition from semi-independent producers to wage laborers who can’t survive a downturn. We trace the populist uprising around William Jennings Bryan, the gold standard fight, and the uneasy but real cooperation between farmers and the labor movement, including Eugene Debs. We also talk about Teddy Roosevelt and trust busting as an elite attempt to keep private empires from dwarfing the state itself.  If you care about American history, working class politics, central banking, and why populist movements keep getting co-opted, this one will stick with you. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review, what part of the populist story do you think gets most misunderstood today? CHAPTER MARKERS * 0:00. Why Talk Populism Right Now * 2:44 Meeting Andrew Jackson’s America * 6:59 Honor Culture And Political Identity * 10:06 Charisma As The People’s Weapon * 14:40 Breaking The Second National Bank * 23:46 Civil War Aftershocks And Tariffs * 28:51 From Workshops To Wage Dependence * 36:35 Bryan, Gold, And Producer Politics * 41:35 Organizing Lessons From Bryan To Trump * 46:27 Why Teddy Roosevelt Takes On Trusts * 53:23 Tenements, Brutal Work, And Replacement Labor * 57:02 A Baltimore Row House Reality Check * 59:09 Mine Wars Next And Where To Follow Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jim-webb-podcast/donations [https://redcircle.com/jim-webb-podcast/donations] Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands [https://redcircle.com/brands] Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy [https://redcircle.com/privacy]

10 jun 20261 h 1 min
aflevering Dave Smith: Trump is LYING About the Iran Deal artwork

Dave Smith: Trump is LYING About the Iran Deal

The fastest way to understand American power is to watch where it mysteriously stops. We start with Trump’s constant “deal with Iran is coming” talk, his public back-and-forth over Netanyahu, and the recurring promise that a ceasefire is always just days away. Then we ask the uncomfortable question out loud: if Israel is a US-backed client state that depends on American money, weapons, and diplomatic cover, why does Washington behave like it can’t apply basic pressure behind closed doors? Dave Smith joins me to break down the real mechanics: war powers that flow easily toward escalation, a political current that punishes restraint, and the role of the Israel lobby in shaping what’s “allowed” in US foreign policy. We talk about why leaders perform toughness for the cameras, why that performance can look like humiliation, and why so many people are left speculating about leverage when outcomes don’t match the supposed balance of power. From there we get concrete about the stakes: the Greater Israel project, settlement expansion, the risk of a wider Iran conflict, and the Strait of Hormuz as the most obvious economic lever. We also dig into reports of Israeli espionage, the backlash to a client state spying on its patron, and fears around deeper military integration and data sharing through measures like NDAA Section 224. Finally, we look for political upside in a bleak landscape, including what Thomas Massie’s rise with younger voters signals for anti-war politics and what 2028 could look like if the old narratives keep collapsing. CHAPTER MARKERS * 0:00 Trump’s Claims And Ceasefire Theater * 1:55 Welcoming Dave Smith And Setup * 4:05 Who Actually Calls The Shots * 11:10 Leverage Over Presidents And “Why” * 16:45 Butler Security Questions And Pressure * 24:35 Greater Israel And Open Defiance * 33:10 Iran War Endgame And Hormuz * 40:55 Israeli Espionage And Data Sharing Fears * 49:10 Thomas Massie And The Youth Shift * 54:20 2028 Politics And The Rubio Lane * 56:05 Final Thoughts And Closing Plugs Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jim-webb-podcast/donations [https://redcircle.com/jim-webb-podcast/donations] Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands [https://redcircle.com/brands] Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy [https://redcircle.com/privacy]

9 jun 202657 min