Tuesday, March 31, 2026
Our latest documentary, The Bibi Files, is banned in Israel. Actually.
The reason is simple and draconian. This film exposes years of stories the Netanyahu government wants to keep hidden. Over-the-top corruption allegations, shady backroom deals, the prime minister’s anti-U.S. geopolitical maneuvers, and so much more. The Bibi Files has it all.
Featuring insider testimony and leaked interrogation footage, this new documentary reveals a side of power that regular citizens were never meant to see. As America dives deeper into the Iran War, understanding who is pulling the strings matters more than ever.
For a full exposé on the man at the center of it all, watch The Bibi Files on TCN: https://tuckercarlson.com/watchthebibifiles
As of March 2026, a relentless cycle of reckless borrowing has driven the U.S. national debt to a staggering $39 trillion, fundamentally destabilizing the bedrock of U.S. Treasury securities. Once the undisputed gold standard of global finance, long-term Treasuries are rapidly devolving into high-risk IOUs. This shift exposes a severe and accelerating erosion of investor confidence in both the U.S. dollar and the nation’s underlying fiscal health.
This trajectory is not merely flawed; it is mathematically terminal. According to the latest CBO Long-Term Budget Outlook, the debt is projected to mushroom to $53.1 trillion by 2035, fueled by a fatal structural disconnect between stagnant revenues and surging mandatory spending. Most alarming is the sheer explosion in debt service: annual net interest payments are on track to hit $1.8 trillion by 2035 and $2.1 trillion by 2036. At this scale, interest costs will not only eclipse the entire national defense budget but will dominate federal spending. We are effectively mortgaging the nation’s future to its creditors—a catastrophic milestone perfectly timed to collide with the looming insolvency of Social Security.
This existential risk is not the product of isolated partisan mismanagement, but of decades of bipartisan complicity. Our systemic failure has handed foreign debt holders a potent, coercive weapon: the threat of dumping U.S. Treasury obligations en masse. That leverage effectively downgrades the United States from a dominant superpower to a financially captive state, severely crippling our geopolitical negotiating power.
Ultimately, the greatest threat to the Republic is no longer a foreign adversary, but the domestic leadership that has steered us into financial ruin. This escalating crisis is compounded by public complacency—a willful blindness that will inevitably bankrupt future generations and strip them of the promise of a free, prosperous society.
Jimmy Carter the 39th President of the United States explained the country's biggest mistake. He didn’t hate his country.he wanted what was best for it.
While China has spent decades laying tracks for the future, we’ve been digging graves in the past. They’ve built cities, schools, trains that move faster than thought. We’ve built military bases, debt, and an empire of rust.
China chose infrastructure. We chose interference. They built railways across continents. We bombed bridges across borders. They invested in AI, medicine, and education. We invested in overthrowing oil-rich governments, branding it freedom.
We spent $300 billion trying to bend the world to our will. They spent it making their own nation unshakable.
We don’t have high-speed trains. We don’t have roads that last. We don’t have universal healthcare, or education systems that top the charts. But we do have the most advanced weapons on Earth, pointed at every direction but inward.
If we’d used even a fraction of that money on ourselves, our cities would hum like circuits. Our schools would shine. Our hospitals would heal. Our people might feel something we haven’t felt in a long time—progress.
Jon Sanders
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