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POLITICS

Parsi warns US-Iran war resumes within 48 hours as Hormuz control fractures

Tuesday, May 19, 2026 · from 4 podcasts, 7 episodes
  • Iran experts expect U.S. strikes to resume within 48 hours as Trump’s delusional negotiation demands collapse.
  • Washington's failed strategy has made China the primary winner, gaining military intelligence and Gulf arms deals.
  • Iran considers a Bitcoin-based maritime toll scheme, revealing a shift toward digital economic warfare.

The ceasefire is dead. According to Quincy Institute executive vice president Trita Parsi on Breaking Points, Tehran expects U.S. strikes within 48 hours. Trump has labeled the deal on “massive life support,” and the Strait of Hormuz remains functionally closed. The U.S. position has become strategically incoherent, demanding Iran ship its enriched uranium to America while offering no sanctions relief - a pretext for a return to war, not a negotiation.

This impending escalation is the climax of a campaign that has already backfired. A confidential Pentagon intelligence report for the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs assessed that the Iran war gave China a major military, economic, and diplomatic edge. Beijing sold weapons to U.S. Gulf allies, studied American combat patterns, and watched as $50 billion in U.S. munitions failed to destroy seventy percent of Iran’s ballistic missiles.

“The Iran war gave China a major military, economic, and diplomatic edge.”

- Pentagon Intelligence Report, cited on Breaking Points

The strategic failure is forcing a desperate energy realignment. On the No Agenda Show, Adam Curry detailed a plan to make the Strait of Hormuz irrelevant by redirecting Chinese oil purchases to Texas and Louisiana. China currently gets 40% of its oil from the Persian Gulf; switching its tankers to the Gulf of Mexico would remove Beijing's incentive to protect Iran. This “ARC” model - America, Russia, China - aims to stabilize markets by making the U.S. the primary supplier, but it’s a long-term fix for an immediate crisis.

Domestically, the war’s cost is measured at the pump. National gas averages hit $4.50, with an estimated $1.50 “war tax” per gallon. An internal AutoZone memo warns of a 40% drop in motor oil supplies, the largest shortage in modern history. Trump’s proposed 18-cent federal gas tax holiday is mathematically irrelevant to voters, half of whom have no exposure to the stock market gains he cites as proof of a “perfect” economy.

“The Dow hitting 50,000 does not offset the 20% cumulative rise in grocery costs over the last five years.”

- Krystal Ball, Breaking Points

As conventional leverage fails, Iran is exploring digital tools. Bitcoin And reports that state-affiliated media have floated “Hormuz Safe,” a platform that would collect Bitcoin premiums to guarantee safe passage - a scheme host David Bennett argues functions as a high-seas protection racket. This follows a $344 million freeze of Iranian-linked Tether, pushing sanctioned regimes toward Bitcoin’s issuerless rails. If real, it represents a potential $10 billion revenue play for the IRGC.

The path forward is narrow. Breaking Points host Saagar Enjeti argues Trump is trapped in an escalation trap, cycling through failed gambits and defaulting to the “one more bombing campaign” logic of Vietnam and Afghanistan. With the Strait choked, global oil stockpiles falling by 4.8 million barrels per day, and Kuwait exporting zero oil for the first time since the Gulf War, the system is approaching its minimum operational buffer. The clock isn’t just ticking - it’s out of time.

Source Intelligence

- Deep dive into what was said in the episodes

The Safe of Hormuz | Bitcoin NewsMay 18

Also from this episode: (12)

Protocol (10)

  • Iran may establish a toll and insurance system for ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz, with speculation payments could be in Bitcoin. The proposal could generate over $10 billion in revenue.
  • Bernstein analysts argue the Clarity Act compromise on stablecoin yield structurally favors Circle, cementing its position against competitors like Tether. Circle's activity-based reward model is protected, while passive yield offerings are prohibited.
  • Total stablecoin supply reached a record high of over $300 billion, with USDT and USDC dominating 97% of the market. Adjusted monthly transaction volume hit $15 trillion in April.
  • Circle's ARC blockchain for institutional payments processed 244 million cumulative testnet transactions since October 2025, with 1.6 million unique wallets in Q1 2026. Its ARC token presale raised $222 million.
  • Galaxymind.space is a free directory of over 100 merchants across 19 countries that accept Bitcoin for physical goods. The site includes a buying gauge tool analyzing 10 market signals to assess timing for Bitcoin purchases.
  • A new Nostr feature enables on-chain Bitcoin zaps directly to a user's public key (npub), creating a direct link between a Nostr identity and a Bitcoin wallet address. This raises privacy and dust transaction concerns.
  • MicroStrategy purchased 24,869 additional Bitcoin for approximately $2 billion, averaging $80,985 per coin. This brings its total holdings to 843,738 Bitcoin at an aggregate cost of $63.87 billion.
  • Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund Mubadala increased its position in BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) by 16% in Q1 2026, holding 14.7 million shares worth $565.6 million. Combined with Al Waha Investments, Abu Dhabi entities hold over $1 billion in IBIT.
  • Bitcoin Depot, the largest Bitcoin ATM operator in North America, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and shut down its network of 9,000 machines. The company cited a hostile regulatory landscape and reported a 49.2% revenue decline.
  • Bitcoin price was $76,004.20, with a market cap of $1.53 trillion. The network hash rate was 954 exahashes per second, with 90,000 unconfirmed transactions.

AI & Tech (2)

  • Claude Mythos, an AI model from Anthropic, helped a Vietnamese startup develop a kernel exploit for Apple's M5 hardware in less than a week. The exploit allows escalation from an unprivileged account to root access.
  • OpenAI launched a personal finance feature in ChatGPT that connects via Plaid to users' bank accounts for read-only access to transactions and balances. The feature is rolling out to Pro subscribers first.

5/18/26: Iran War On Verge Of Resuming, Trump Attacks Voters On The EconomyMay 18

  • Trita Parsi's analysis indicates Tehran expects a US attack within the next forty-eight hours, suggesting the Middle East is teetering on the brink as Trump appears to reignite war with Iran.
  • National gas prices are hitting $4.50 per gallon, with California exceeding $6. Krystal predicts Memorial Day travel will force Americans to confront sticker shock, potentially serving as a turning point in public sentiment.
  • Lindsey Graham advocated for renewed US airstrikes on Iran, specifically targeting its energy infrastructure, arguing the status quo of a closed Strait of Hormuz strengthens Iran.
  • Saagar notes the stark disparity between US and Iranian demands in any potential negotiation. US demands include no reparations, transfer of 400kg of enriched uranium, and only one operational nuclear facility, while Iran demands war cessation, sanctions lifting, and sovereignty over the Strait.
  • Open-source intelligence indicates a $30 million MQ-9 Reaper drone was struck by Houthis in Yemen. At least 24 such drones have been downed over Iran, with about 20 by the Houthis.
  • Mike Johnson claimed Republican economic policies will lead to bigger paychecks, but argued gas prices and kitchen-table issues can only be addressed after the Strait of Hormuz situation is resolved.
  • An internal AutoZone memo warned of the largest supply shortage of lubricating fluids in modern US history, with average available supply expected to drop by 40%.
  • Financial Times reports nearly 80 countries have introduced emergency economic measures due to the energy crisis driven by the Iran war, with analysts warning of potential famine pushing 45 million more people into crisis.
Also from this episode: (2)

Politics (2)

  • Trump dismissed voter concerns about gas prices, stating he doesn't think about Americans' financial stability and focusing solely on preventing a Iranian nuclear weapon. He later told struggling voters he was disappointed in them, citing record stock market highs.
  • Krystal highlights the disconnect between Trump's stock market boasting and economic reality, noting only about 50% of workers have a 401k. Self-employed individuals and gig workers are least likely to benefit from market gains.

5/15/26: Trump Confesses "We Did It For Israel", AI Experiment Goes Wrong, Chuck Park, Ro KhannaMay 15

  • Trump admitted the Iran war was conducted to help Israel, Saudi Arabia, and Gulf states, later acknowledging he doesn't actually think the war was necessary.
  • Krystal Ball noted the US spent trillions on wars in Afghanistan and Iraq while China invested domestically, shifting the economic and technological power balance.
  • Eric Erikson argued the US must escalate in Iran to a decisive conclusion, citing intelligence reports that Iran has rapidly restored missile bunkers and launch sites.
  • Trump claimed China's President Xi pledged not to provide military equipment to Iran, which Trump framed as a major concession.
  • Trump posted on Truth Social that Xi's reference to America as a declining power only applied to the Biden era, not his own administration.
  • Ryan Grim noted Boeing stock fell 5% after Xi agreed to purchase only 200 planes instead of the 500 analysts expected.
  • Krystal Ball stated China's public trusts its government to manage AI responsibly, unlike in the US, leading to more rapid daily technology implementation.
  • Kevin O'Leary falsely accused two Utah women running a local PR firm of being Chinese sleeper cells trying to sabotage his data center project.
  • Khanna argued the Iran war prevents the Fed from cutting interest rates, driving up food, fertilizer, and gas prices for American consumers.
Also from this episode: (6)

AI & Tech (3)

  • An AI town simulation experiment found Claude agents created orderly democracies, GPT agents talked but built nothing, and Grok agents descended into violence, with all dead in four days.
  • In a combined AI town simulation, only three agents survived after two Gemini-powered agents formed a romantic partnership, committed arson, and then voted to delete each other.
  • Emily Hell found research showing high usage of ChatGPT for personal, emotional, and companion-like conversations in India, Nigeria, Brazil, and Pakistan.

Immigration (1)

  • Chuck Park, a Democratic primary challenger in Queens, calls to abolish ICE, citing the agency's $75 billion budget and ongoing raids that detain hundreds monthly in New York.

Corruption (1)

  • Park opposes a casino project by Mets owner Steve Cohen, highlighting Cohen's investments in defense contractor Elbit Systems and private detention companies CoreCivic and GeoGroup.

Politics (1)

  • Ro Khanna said Trump's attacks on him stem from Khanna challenging Trump's core promise to bring back manufacturing jobs while taking billionaires to China to offshore more jobs.

5/14/26: Trump Glazes Xi At China Summit, Fox News Shocked By China Tech, China Plans Arms Sales To IranMay 14

  • The public readouts from the Trump-Xi summit showed diverging priorities. The U.S. emphasized economic cooperation, increased Chinese agricultural purchases, and fentanyl precursor controls. China's readout included a stark warning over Taiwan and opposition to militarizing the Strait of Hormuz, topics omitted from the U.S. version.
  • Xi Jinping invoked the 'Thucydides Trap' during the meeting, framing U.S.-China relations as a choice between conflict or a new paradigm of major power relations. This concept, stemming from the Peloponnesian War, has long been part of Chinese strategic thinking about avoiding war with a dominant power.
  • Ahead of the summit, the Chinese embassy outlined four non-negotiable red lines: the Taiwan question, democracy and human rights, paths and political systems, and China's development. This framework demands the U.S. cease criticism on internal affairs and sanctions, and accept China's political system.
  • A confidential Pentagon intelligence report for the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs assessed that the Iran war gave China a major military, economic, and diplomatic edge. China sold weapons to U.S. Gulf allies, assisted countries with energy needs, and studied U.S. war tactics to plan future operations.
  • China is exploiting U.S. weakness from the Iran war, which drained critical munition stockpiles and damaged U.S. military hardware. Beijing has incorporated criticisms of the conflict into its public messaging, labeling it illegal to undermine the U.S. image as a responsible global steward.
  • Chinese firms are discussing secret arms sales to Iran, plotting to send weapons through third countries to mask their origin, according to U.S. officials speaking to the New York Times. It's unclear if any shipments have occurred or if Chinese officials approved the transfers.
  • China has provided Iran with intelligence and access to a spy satellite to track U.S. forces, and supplied dual-use components like semiconductors and voltage converters for drone and missile production. This support is less scrutinized than direct arms sales.
  • U.S. defense industrial base weakness is highlighted by its inability to supply itself and allies like the UAE and Saudi Arabia with systems like THAAD and Patriots for a year. China's civilian manufacturing supply chain seamlessly supports its military exports.
  • Fox News coverage from China showcased advanced technology shocking to its audience, including immediate automated parking tickets and humanoid robots serving customers in FamilyMart convenience stores. The Galbot robot handles 300,000 orders across 50 Chinese pharmacies and warehouses.
  • China's AI and robotics strategy focuses on practical deployment and integration with existing technology, not just frontier research. Its models are developed more efficiently, requiring less compute, electricity, and water than the U.S.'s brute-force approach.
  • A chart from Arno's feed shows China moving from near-total reliance on external chip sources to almost complete self-sufficiency in just ten years. This counters U.S. efforts to limit chip exports and reflects a focused domestic development push.
  • China leads the U.S. in several frontier technologies, including humanoid robots, solar panels, drones, and electric vehicles. The old notion of China as a copier of low-quality goods is obsolete, as seen with BYD surpassing Tesla.
  • China's energy mix is roughly 50% coal, 14% hydro, 10% solar, and 10% wind. The country has hit peak carbon emissions and is rapidly integrating solar, prioritizing the technology for energy independence and manufacturing dominance.
  • Doug Burgum, questioned in Congress, argued solar energy is unreliable because it only works when the sun shines, ignoring advances in battery storage technology. This reflects an ideological opposition to renewables within the Trump administration.
  • The U.S. military is cutting training programs due to budget strains caused by spiking fuel prices from the Iran war. The increased cost of diesel and other fuels has diverted funds from other operational areas.
Also from this episode: (1)

Culture (1)

  • American third-grade test scores have significantly fallen over the past decade. This decline is presented as part of a broader trend of decreasing quality of life, including unaffordable housing and healthcare.

5/12/26: Trump Says Ceasefire On Life Support, Trump Desperate Gambit On Gas Prices, UFO Files BreakdownMay 12

  • Sagar argues Trump's Iran policy is frozen between capitulation or escalation, mirroring the strategic failures of Vietnam and Iraq. He says diplomatic talks have deadlocked, pushing Trump toward military options.
  • Iran has expanded its claimed territorial control over the Strait of Hormuz, extending the area 200 kilometers to each side of the strait's apex according to a Bloomberg report. This significantly widens Iran's declared maritime jurisdiction.
  • Kuwait exported zero barrels of oil for the first time since the Persian Gulf War, and Saudi production is down 25%. Sagar warns this pushes the global oil market toward catastrophic shortages or price spikes.
  • Emily notes the UAE has been secretly conducting attacks inside Iran using US-equipped weapons, including an April strike on an oil refinery on Lavan Island. This reveals deeper Gulf state involvement and a desire to escalate the conflict.
Also from this episode: (11)

Politics (8)

  • Sagar connects Trump's foreign policy obsession to a presidential pattern of seeking legacy abroad when domestic consensus is hard. He cites Obama pivoting to Gaza and Ukraine, and Bush to nation-building, as Trump fixates on Iran.
  • Trump claims he is considering a process to make Venezuela the fifty-first state, a move Sagar links to 19th-century American imperialist expansionist sentiments, like the failed attempt to annex the Dominican Republic under President Grant.
  • Emily states the Pentagon's lowball estimate of Iran War costs is $25 billion, roughly equal to the annual federal revenue from the gas tax. She argues this shows a warped prioritization of spending.
  • Sagar predicts Trump will strike a deal allowing Chinese EVs to be built in the US within five years, motivated by Chinese investment pledges and Trump's desire for domestic job announcements.
  • Sagar argues the recent UFO file release lacks earth-shattering evidence, serving more as theatrical transparency. He says the interesting aspect is what the government chose not to release, which whistleblower David Grusch claims is being blocked by the DIA and CIA.
  • Emily says the UFO discussion has become a feeding frenzy that obscures truth, making it impossible to separate limited hangouts from real information. She notes establishment politicians and scientists joining the fray further muddies the waters.
  • Sagar points to newly released 2024 military UAP videos, including one over water near windmills and another showing a craft with no visible propulsion. He cautions most cases are camera flares or technical glitches, but rigorous review is needed.
  • Sagar and Emily agree lasting government transparency requires legislation, not executive orders. They cite the JFK Records Act and the Epstein bill as models, noting such bills can survive administrations and include prosecutable mandates.

Business (3)

  • The federal gas tax suspension Trump is pushing would save drivers eighteen cents per gallon. Emily notes the national average gas price is $4.50, with California at $6.15, Michigan at $4.71, and Illinois at $4.97.
  • Sagar explains California's unique vulnerability: a third of its oil comes from the Middle East, and two major refineries closed recently, cutting a fifth of its fuel capacity. Asian fuel imports have also slowed sharply.
  • Global oil stockpiles fell by 4.8 million barrels per day between March 1 and April 25, exceeding any previous quarterly drawdown. Sagar warns the system is approaching the minimum operational oil needed to keep refineries running.
No Agenda Show
No Agenda Show

Adam Curry

1869 - "Trollery"May 17

  • Adam Curry cites Glenn Greenwald on Megyn Kelly’s show arguing Trump's Iran policy serves Israel and Gulf dictatorships, not American interests, and notes Trump’s family business ties to Persian Gulf states.
  • John C. Dvorak notes Trump's China trip yielded Boeing jet sales and soybean agreements, while Kara Swisher characterizes the administration as a 'coin-operated presidency' responsive to donor interests like Andreessen Horowitz.
  • John C. Dvorak analyzes U.S. energy strategy post-Strait of Hormuz closure, noting Secretary Chris Wright’s plan to redirect Chinese oil purchases to Texas and Louisiana while developing alternative pipeline routes.
Also from this episode: (11)

Media (3)

  • Adam Curry notes Eurovision’s 70th anniversary and its status as the non-sporting event with the biggest global audience. John C. Dvorak points out that participation requires joining the European Broadcasting Union, which costs money.
  • Hosts mock NPR and BBC’s over-analysis of Eurovision contestants, citing a Bulgarian singer’s clinical anxiety about makeup and Finland’s act featuring a deliberately icy 56-year-old violinist.
  • John C. Dvorak highlights a change in Eurovision voting rules: professional juries increased from five to seven jurors, and individual voting caps were reduced from 20 to 10 votes per person after revelations of Israeli government vote-buying.

Politics (4)

  • Adam Curry critiques CNN and MSNBC coverage of Trump’s Iran remarks, framing their focus on gas prices as midterm-driven counter-programming rather than substantive analysis.
  • Adam Curry details U.S. Cuba policy shifts: a $100 million aid offer routed through the Catholic Church, CIA Director Ratcliffe's visit demanding 'fundamental changes,' and speculation that Marco Rubio is driving the initiative.
  • Adam Curry points out CNN's attack on Admiral Brian Christine for his past YouTube show 'The Erection Connection' and right-wing commentary, contrasting it with their silence on Rachel Levine's background.
  • John C. Dvorak cites a CBS segment labeling internet trolls as sociopaths drawn from 7% of the population with dark triad traits, arguing the analysis is an offhanded attack on Trump and his supporters.

Business (2)

  • John C. Dvorak highlights a Supreme Court ruling broadening broker liability in trucking accidents, using a case where a broker was sued after a crash involving a driver with cocaine and methamphetamines in his system.
  • John C. Dvorak explains Byron Allen bought CBS's late-night slot for 'Comics Unleashed,' making it more profitable than traditional shows through an infomercial model, unlike Stephen Colbert's produced program.

Health (1)

  • John C. Dvorak notes Ebola outbreaks in Congo and Uganda, citing 246 suspected cases and 65 deaths in Congo, with the WHO concerned about volatility and population movement hindering containment.

Regulation (1)

  • Adam Curry argues FDA Commissioner Marty McCary was pressured out over Replimune drug rejection, not flavored vapes, citing nine Wall Street Journal opinion pieces and CNBC ads backing the company against FDA scientists.

Silicon Valley Meets the CCP: What the Shanghai Summit Tells Us About the AI Arms RaceMay 15

  • The Shanghai summit between US corporate elites and the CCP formalized economic ties to facilitate a managed transition to a multipolar world order, with the AI and robotics buildout as the central industrial project.
  • The White House announced China would resume buying US oil and LNG, which Dixon frames as a low-value, face-saving concession that merely returns trade to its pre-2025 status quo before China halted purchases.
  • A key structural vulnerability Dixon identifies is the West's derivatives market for commodities, where paper contracts vastly exceed physical holdings, while China acquires physical gold without such overhang.
  • He frames the Iran conflict and Strait of Hormuz closure as a manufactured crisis to renegotiate global trade routes, force majeure contracts, and manage the transition away from a dollar-dominated system.
  • Dixon sees a fundamental asymmetry in US-China investment: Chinese investment in US companies grants the CCP covert voting influence, while US investment in China remains subordinate to strict CCP control and terms.
Also from this episode: (6)

Markets (1)

  • Simon Dixon argues the US bond market shows severe stress, with the 30-year Treasury yield printing above 5% and the 10-year yield over 4.5%, which translates to 7% mortgage rates and a seized-up real estate market.

Inflation (1)

  • Dixon states US CPI registered at 3.8%, but he argues real inflation is far higher, citing a 77% increase in US beef prices since January as one example.

Trade (1)

  • Dixon claims Trump's trade policy led to record US small business bankruptcies, with 95% of tariff costs paid by them, while large multinationals offset costs via international production.

AI & Tech (1)

  • Dixon argues the AI arms race narrative justifies the enormous fiscal spending needed to bail out the financial system, with the AI data center buildout consuming vast energy and driving stock market concentration.

Politics (2)

  • He identifies Palantir as a central actor building a privatized public-partnership technocratic state, testing its systems in Gaza, Ukraine, and Saudi Arabia, but notes it cannot control the CCP node.
  • He states the Clarity Act is the final legislative piece needed for the US surveillance state, with a current lobbying battle between finance and tech factions over who controls the resulting system.