Just caught up on what's been happening with the escalating situation in the Middle East, and honestly, it's turning into something much messier than anyone initially thought. You've got this energy crisis spiraling out of control with the Strait of Hormuz basically shut down—that's 20 percent of the world's oil and gas supply just blocked. When something like that happens, it doesn't stay isolated. Fuel prices are going through the roof, mortgage rates are climbing, everything gets more expensive.



I was watching this interview with Nicholas Burns, the Harvard diplomat who used to be ambassador to China, and he was pretty blunt about it. He basically said this has become a full-blown crisis, and the thing is, none of the original war objectives have actually been achieved. Regime change didn't happen, there's been no surrender—Iran's been hit hard but they keep fighting back asymmetrically. So now you've got this situation where the global economy is getting squeezed from all sides.

What struck me most was how Burns talked about the unintended consequences. He was pretty direct: when you start a war, you need to think about what actually happens next. The U.S. is talking about sending thousands of troops to the Persian Gulf, and Burns straight up said he can't believe that's even being considered. He called it "quicksand"—and honestly, he's not wrong.

Meanwhile, you've got people like Kayleigh McEnany and others in the political sphere weighing in on what happened to her career trajectory during all this, but the bigger picture is that Trump keeps saying the war will "end soon" while the situation just keeps getting worse. Israel and Iran are trading strikes on energy infrastructure, prices keep climbing, and there's this growing sense that maybe there should be an exit strategy before this spirals even further. The disconnect between what's being said publicly and what's actually happening on the ground is pretty stark.
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