A president musing publicly about erasing an entire civilization crosses a line that even some of his staunchest allies refuse to defend. When Marjorie Taylor Greene — once one of Trump’s loudest defenders — calls for the Twenty-fifth Amendment, it signals more than a political spat. It reveals a growing fear that the power to unleash catastrophic war is in the hands of someone speaking in apocalyptic riddles.
Yet, almost in the same breath, Trump agreed to a conditional two-week ceasefire with Iran, claiming U.S. “military objectives” were already exceeded. Shipping lanes in the Strait of Hormuz will reopen under Iranian coordination, buying the world a sliver of time. Between the threats of annihilation and the language of restraint lies a terrifying uncertainty: is this brinkmanship, or a warning that the guardrails around presidential power are far weaker than anyone dared to admit?
