A war begins on February 28 and the explanation arrives a month later. That timing alone forces a bigger question than any single headline: what happens to democracy when the commander in chief can stretch war powers without Congress, without a public case up front, and with a trust gap that never closes? I walk through the current state of the war in Iran, why stopping Iranian nuclear weapons still matters, and why regime change fantasies and ground troop talk should make all of us nervous.

Then we follow the money and the mood. Oil prices surge past $100 as markets fixate on the Strait of Hormuz, and the instability spills into everything from consumer budgets to business travel and long-term investment decisions. I also look at a weak labor market snapshot from the latest job creation numbers and why economic confidence often drives approval ratings more than any speech ever will.

From there, I shift to the No Kings protests as a massive coordinated movement focused on executive overreach and civil liberties, plus a blunt reminder that votes in November are what turn public outrage into consequences. I close with government dysfunction that shows up in a DHS shutdown with TSA workers still on the job, and a rare glimmer of bipartisan traction: the Kids Online Safety Act (COSA) and the push to regulate social media harms for teenagers through a duty of care, safer defaults, and transparency.

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