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Trump Orders Massive 172 Million Barrel Release
The Order President Trump authorized a release of 172 million…
The Order President Trump authorized a release of 172 million barrels from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. Officials say the draw will start next week and take about 120 days at planned discharge rates. Washington frames this as a direct move to blunt high pump prices tied to the conflict with Iran, and it comes alongside a reported international effort of roughly 400 million barrels from allied reserves. How the Release Works The SPR lets the government sell stored crude into the market to increase supply and push prices down. That can help short term, but it does not create new oil. Markets often react to the idea of more supply as much as the supply itself. Deliveries take time, and traders will watch how fast the oil hits refineries and gas stations. International Coordination Officials say 32 IEA members backed a coordinated release to stabilize markets. Coordinating across countries sounds impressive. The real test is timing, logistics, and legal hurdles. For example, promises of replacement barrels from places like Venezuela are politically complicated and may not arrive on the schedule that officials expect. Questions That Remain Key questions include who pays to refill the reserve, whether replacement promises are firm,…
Paid Petition Lines Caught in San Francisco
Video Shows Payment for Signatures On a sunny afternoon in…
Rightward Wave Hits Chile, Ecuador, Paraguay
Chile's New Direction José Antonio Kast took the presidential oath…
Chile's New Direction José Antonio Kast took the presidential oath in Valparaíso after a decisive 2025 win, promising to tackle crime and curb illegal immigration. The ceremony drew friendly faces from the right and a modest U.S. delegation, while some expected regional leaders stayed away. Kast campaigns like he learned the playbook across the hemisphere, and his victory will likely shift policy and tone in Santiago. Still, rhetoric is cheap. Passing laws and changing institutions is harder than getting applause in a congressional hall, so watch which bills actually move through Congress and how the courts respond. https://twitter.com/OOCprogresismo2/status/2031781197899051130?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw Ecuador's Crackdown Ecuador announced a major security offensive in violent provinces and set a night curfew to start mid March, saying it has significant logistical support from U.S. forces. Authorities stressed they want to avoid civilian harm, which is the official line governments give before big operations. Joint operations can help with intelligence, transport and training, but they also raise questions about transparency, oversight and long term strategy. If success is only a temporary drop in violence, the government will need more than raids to change the underlying criminal networks. https://twitter.com/JakeCan72/status/2029397218936189048?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw Paraguay Opens the Door Paraguay's Chamber of Deputies approved a Status…
Weinstein Claims #MeToo Was Money Grab
Prison Interview, Plain Talk Harvey Weinstein gave a long interview…
Jan. 6 ‘Hero’ Officer Indicted on Sex Crimes
The arrest and the charges Federal and local court filings…
Pass the SAVE Act? Senate Keeps Stalling
What is the fight about? The SAVE America Act is…

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