Last night, President Trump addressed the nation for the first time since launching Operation Epic Fury against Iran on February 28. Joseph and Andrew break down a speech that offered no new information, no clear exit strategy, and no plan for the Strait of Hormuz — 32 days into a war that’s sent gas prices past $4 a gallon and oil past $100 a barrel.
They cover Trump’s complete inversion of the standard wartime communications playbook — waiting a month to make his case while public support eroded beneath him. They dig into the regime change contradiction: Trump encouraged Iranians to rise up in the first days of the war, now says regime change was never the goal, and claims the remaining leadership is “less radical.” Joseph and Andrew aren’t buying it.
The conversation turns to the Strait of Hormuz, where Iran’s IRGC is running a de facto toll booth — charging ships $2 million to pass, with China potentially assisting in the collection. Trump says the Strait will “open up naturally.” Andrew argues the conflict isn’t over until it’s resolved, and that if the U.S. and Europe both refuse to secure it, Iran has no incentive to give up its leverage.
Andrew offers a provocative thought: the endgame might look remarkably similar to the Obama-era Iran nuclear deal that Trump tore up. And both hosts question whether Western leaders — Starmer, Carney, and others — have anything resembling a plan to deal with the economic fallout hitting consumers at the pump and the grocery store.




