Happy Monday, Patriots! | President Trump is turning up the pressure on Europe — and making it clear that America's national security comes first, no matter who objects. | According to new reports, Trump directly warned Norway's prime minister that after being denied the Nobel Peace Prize, he no longer feels bound to "think purely of peace" as he pushes for complete U.S. control of Greenland. The president has repeatedly argued that the Arctic territory is vital to American defense, missile detection, and countering Russian and Chinese expansion. | Trump doubled down on his position, signaling he's willing to use economic leverage and tariffs against European nations that stand in the way. | While foreign leaders panic, Trump is playing hardball — and reminding the world that America will not be boxed in by weak alliances or outdated thinking. | Don't miss the rest of today's Trump headlines below! | —Nick | In today's email: ๐ Trump Draws a Line in Minnesota ✈️ Trump Presses Iran's Leaders to Change Course ๐ฐ Trump Announces Tariffs for Greenland Deal ๐️ Trump's Prize Rejected by Nobel Foundation ๐
Trump Responds to SCOTUS Case on Women's Sports | | | | | ✅TRACKING TRUMP✅ | Curated by Mike Luso | President Trump's team is quietly readying 1,500 active-duty troops for possible deployment to Minnesota as federal immigration officers face off with aggressive agitators in Minneapolis. Trump has made clear he does not currently see a need to invoke the Insurrection Act, even as clashes continue around ongoing enforcement operations. At the same time, he is calling out Minnesota Democrats for using those protests as political cover for what he describes as a massive, years-long fraud problem in their own backyard.
On the economic front, Trump is drawing a sharp line with Europe, announcing plans for 10% tariffs on multiple European countries unless Denmark agrees to a complete U.S. purchase of Greenland in the name of national defense and global security. He argues that the United States has subsidized Denmark and the broader EU for decades by providing maximum protection while charging little or nothing at the border. | Check out all the latest developments and more below! | | | | | ✈️ Trump Presses Iran's Leaders to Change Course Iran's supreme leader has publicly acknowledged that thousands of Iranians have been killed in recent unrest, a rare admission that highlighted the scale of the regime's crackdown. President Trump responded by calling for "new leadership" in Tehran, arguing that Iranians deserve a government that does not massacre its own citizens. He used the revelation to reinforce his long-standing position that the current regime is illegitimate and destabilizing for the region. U.S. officials under Trump have pointed to the death toll and mass detentions as evidence that sanctions and diplomatic pressure have exposed the regime's weakness. Trump's comments signal that human rights and regime behavior remain central to his Iran policy, not just nuclear negotiations or military deterrence. | ๐ฐ Trump Announces Tariffs for Greenland Deal President Trump has announced a new 10% tariff threat against multiple European countries unless Denmark agrees to what he calls the "complete and total purchase" of Greenland by the United States. He frames the proposal as a national security move, arguing that America's defense posture and Arctic presence would be strengthened by bringing Greenland fully under U.S. control. Trump contends that the United States has been subsidizing Denmark and other European Union nations for decades by providing military protection while collecting relatively little at the border. Under his approach, European countries would face higher costs on exports to the U.S. unless Copenhagen comes to the table on the Greenland deal. The move ties together his trade agenda and security doctrine, using tariffs as leverage to reshape both economic relationships and the strategic map. | ๐️ Trump's Prize Rejected by Nobel Foundation Venezuelan opposition leader Marรญa Corina Machado physically gave her Nobel Peace Prize medal to President Trump during a meeting at the White House, saying "he deserves it" for his role in helping remove Nicolรกs Maduro. The Nobel Foundation responded by stressing that a prize cannot be passed on or further distributed, "even symbolically," rejecting the notion that Machado could transfer the award to Trump. Machado said she presented the prize on behalf of the Venezuelan people and credited Trump with historic work against Maduro's dictatorship. Trump wrote on Truth Social that it was a "great honor" to meet her and that she had presented him with her Nobel Peace Prize for his work. The episode left Machado celebrating Trump's role in Venezuela while the Nobel authorities made clear that, in their view, he is not the official laureate. | ๐
Trump Responds to SCOTUS Case on Women's Sports President Trump has publicly declared that "we got men out of women's sports" as the Supreme Court weighs landmark cases on gender, athletics, and fairness in competition. His comments align with policies that bar biological males from competing in female categories, which he and his supporters describe as necessary to protect safety and competitive integrity. The pending Supreme Court decisions could shape how those policies are applied nationwide in schools, colleges, and professional leagues. Trump has framed the issue as part of a broader cultural battle over whether basic biological distinctions will be respected in law and public life. For many conservative voters, his stance on women's sports has become a litmus test for standing up to what they see as ideological overreach in education and athletics. |
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| | | | | | ๐ Trump Draws the Line in Minnesota๐ | President Trump's administration is preparing up to 1,500 active-duty soldiers for potential deployment to Minnesota as federal immigration officers face sustained, sometimes violent, resistance in Minneapolis. A senior U.S. official confirmed that units are being readied as a contingency while federal authorities continue targeted enforcement operations against immigration violators in the city. Protesters have repeatedly tried to disrupt those operations, confronting officers and attempting to block vehicles as removal and arrest missions proceed. | Federal officials say the goal is to reinforce Immigration and Customs Enforcement personnel if local conditions deteriorate, not to impose military control over civilians. President Trump has publicly stated that he sees no reason "right now" to invoke the Insurrection Act, signaling that he wants to keep the focus on backing law enforcement rather than launching a domestic military crackdown. He has instead trained his political fire on Minnesota's Democratic leadership, accusing Governor Tim Walz and Representative Ilhan Omar of treating federal enforcement as a distraction from a sprawling, multimillion-dollar fraud scandal inside the state. | Trump's criticism centers on reports that Minnesota's public-assistance programs were exploited for years, with shell nonprofits and front organizations siphoning off funds while state officials missed or ignored warning signs. He argues that local leaders are more outraged by ICE operations than by taxpayers being looted on their watch. In a series of posts, Trump has portrayed the ICE protests as coordinated efforts to delegitimize federal enforcement while diverting public attention away from the fraud cases and the state bureaucracy that failed to stop them. | At the same time, he is signaling that Washington will not retreat from immigration enforcement in Minneapolis or elsewhere, even if demonstrations intensify. According to reporting on internal planning, the Pentagon has been asked to keep forces on standby so they can move quickly if local authorities formally request support or if federal property and personnel face heightened threats. | Trump's stance on Minnesota fits into a broader pattern of linking border security, interior enforcement, and fiscal integrity under an America First banner. He has repeatedly argued that sanctuary-style politics, lax oversight of benefits programs, and hostility to federal officers ultimately land on the shoulders of working Americans who fund the system. Supporters view the potential troop deployment as evidence that the administration is willing to back words with tangible force protection, ensuring that ICE agents are not left exposed if protests escalate. | Critics, including some Minnesota officials, have warned that bringing in troops could inflame tensions, but Trump's aides emphasize that the preparations remain precautionary and contingent on conditions on the ground. For now, the White House is betting that a combination of firm enforcement, visible readiness, and unrelenting pressure on state leaders over the fraud scandal will reframe the conflict away from street theatrics and back toward public safety and accountability. In Trump's telling, Minnesota has become a test case for whether Washington will defend its officers, secure its laws, and demand basic honesty from the people who manage public money. | | | | | | ๐ Quick Bite News ๐ | ๐ฅ President Trump plans to pardon former Puerto Rico Governor Wanda Vรกzquez Garced and co-defendants Julio Martin Herrera-Velutini and former FBI agent Mark Rossini, calling the case a political prosecution. Vรกzquez's pardon materials argue there was no quid pro quo in her 2020 campaign financing and that the investigation began shortly after she endorsed Trump. Critics in Puerto Rico say the decision undermines public integrity and sends the wrong signal on corruption cases. | ๐ฌ At a White House roundtable, President Trump slipped into a playful French accent while reenacting a phone call with French President Emmanuel Macron about drug prices. Trump said he told Macron that Americans were paying up to 13 times more than Europeans for the same medications and threatened a 25% tariff on French goods if prices did not rise overseas. He described Macron as a "very nice person" and said the conversation kicked off a broader push to force multiple countries to pay more so the U.S. can pay less. | ๐ฐ The IRS has confirmed that President Trump ordered the so-called "1776 Warrior Dividend" for U.S. troops to be tax-free, effectively boosting the value of the benefit for service members. The payment is framed as a one-time reward for those who have served during a period of heightened global tension and renewed deployments. By exempting the dividend from federal income taxes, Trump aims to ensure that enlisted families receive the full amount in their pockets rather than seeing a chunk withheld. | ✈️ Retired Gen. Jack Keane warned that Iran's leaders should take President Trump "at his word" as the U.S. moves additional military assets into the region in response to the regime's deadly crackdown on protesters. He said Trump's threat to hold Tehran accountable for killing and arresting thousands of demonstrators remains active, and that the White House has not softened its stance. Keane added that Iran has brought in foreign militias with machine guns to control the streets and that U.S. bases and Israel could be targeted if Trump decides to strike Iran's ballistic missiles.
๐️ President Trump has unveiled a proposed $50 billion rural health plan funded, he says, by cutting Medicaid waste, fraud, and abuse rather than raising taxes. The initiative is designed to shore up struggling rural hospitals, expand access to care, and improve infrastructure in small communities. By tying the funding to anti-fraud measures, Trump casts the plan as both a pro-patient investment and a crackdown on misuse of public dollars. | God bless,
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