Thursday Afternoon Breaking News Updates with Ben - 7/2/2026

Thursday Afternoon Breaking News Updates with Ben - 7/2/2026

Trump made $2.26 billion on crypto while his retail investors lost the same amount — and his financial disclosure logs over 21,000 individual stock trades while in office.

Jul 2, 2026 1:09:30 Difficulty: Beginner Played

TL;DR

Ben Meiselas delivers a rapid-fire breakdown of the Trump administration's economic failures, foreign policy disasters, and brazen self-enrichment on July 2, 2026. A devastating jobs report (only 57,000 new jobs vs. expectations of 110,000–120,000), Trump's $2.26 billion crypto windfall while retail investors lost billions, the collapsing "Great American State Fair," Russia's ballistic missile strikes on Ukraine, and the Iran Strait of Hormuz standoff all feature prominently. The single most useful takeaway: Trump's financial disclosure reveals over 21,000 individual stock trades and $2+ billion in crypto gains — a textbook conflict of interest playing out in real time.

#Trump financial disclosure #jobs recession #crypto self-dealing #Strait of Hormuz geopolitics #Strategic Petroleum Reserve crisis #Patriot missile shortage #CHIPS Act politics #K-shaped economy #Great American State Fair failure #state media propaganda #meme coin rug pull #presidential corruption #Iran war aftermath #fertilizer shortage #consumer confidence collapse #jobs report #crypto pump and dump #Strait of Hormuz #Strategic Petroleum Reserve #Great American State Fair #Ukraine Patriot missiles #Micron CHIPS Act #Iran war #crack spreads #consumer confidence #meme coin losses #Zoran Momdani #state regime media

Ben Meiselas covers breaking news for July 2, 2026, including a devastating jobs report, Trump's financial disclosure revealing $2.26B in crypto gains and 21,000+ stock trades, the Great American State Fair's ongoing failures (including a stage collapse), Russia's ballistic missile strikes on Ukraine, and the Iran Strait of Hormuz standoff.

Chapter list
  • The episode opens with a dense block of pre-roll advertising. Ro promotes the first FDA-approved GLP-1 pill for weight loss. Talkspace pitches its online therapy platform with a $80 discount code (SPACE80). HomeServe promotes home repair plans for unexpected breakdowns. Odoo markets its all-in-one business management software. Stamps.com closes the block with an offer for businesses to skip post office lines and save up to 90% on carrier rates. None of these are editorially integrated into the show; they are standalone ad reads preceding content.

  • Ben Meiselas launches into the show with characteristic urgency, cataloguing what he calls a systematic burning down of the United States. The morning's jobs report is the anchor: only about 57,000 new jobs created versus expectations of 110,000–120,000, with downward revisions to April and May. The only sector adding jobs is healthcare — the same sector Trump is attacking. Meanwhile, Trump's financial disclosure has landed: over 900 pages, documenting more than 21,000 individual stock trades and crypto holdings Meiselas conservatively estimates at $1.2 billion disclosed, but possibly $15–20 billion in reality. Trump's post this morning about Micron — a company whose stock he owns — is offered as a live example of the manipulation, even as Micron's shares are down. The meme coin math is particularly stark: Trump made $2.26 billion; retail investors lost roughly the same amount. Meiselas also notes Trump's Qatari jet and his bizarre behavior at a North Dakota ribbon-cutting, setting a tone of escalating absurdity layered over genuine financial devastation.

  • Meiselas turns to foreign policy, describing what he characterizes as a catastrophic and unlawful war with Iran launched at the behest of Netanyahu. The central geopolitical reality emerging from that conflict is stark: Iran now holds control over the Strait of Hormuz and the flow of oil tankers through it — and that leverage is their trump card. US special envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are depicted as pitching Iran with visions of luxury hotels and a booming Tehran skyline, à la Don Draper from Mad Men, in exchange for not tolling the strait. Iran's response, as Meiselas narrates it, is blunt: you've violated the MOU daily since signing it, JD Vance himself admitted it was only signed to replenish our depleted stocks, and you're the least trustworthy negotiating partner imaginable. The MOU violation context is critical: Meiselas highlights Vance's on-air comments about 'replenishing our stocks' as evidence the ceasefire was never intended to be permanent — and the strategic petroleum reserve is now at what he calls functional tank bottom.

  • Meiselas offers a rare economics tutorial for a political podcast, walking through why Americans aren't seeing gas price relief despite crude oil nominally falling. The key concept is crack spreads — the delta between crude prices and refined fuel prices — which reflects refinery costs largely decoupled from the crude market. The strategic petroleum reserve, mostly held in Cushing, Oklahoma, has been drawn to what Meiselas calls 'functional and technical tank bottom,' the lowest level in history. Even with the Strait of Hormuz slightly more open than at the war's peak, tanker volumes are still suppressed, meaning supply constraints persist. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is accused of manipulating crude prices downward to manufacture the appearance of relief, but the pump price tells a different story. The SPR drawdown also matters for fertilizer: Meiselas reveals the US quietly attempted a fertilizer emergency declaration, acknowledging the country has essentially run out of domestic supply. Farmers already know this — no matter how many times Trump tells them they're living a golden age.

  • Meiselas zeroes in on the lived economic reality of ordinary Americans, contrasting it sharply with Trump's invented statistics. The personal savings rate has collapsed below 3%, an all-time low, meaning a single medical emergency — increasingly likely as Medicaid and healthcare access are stripped away — could push millions into bankruptcy. Trump's claim that 401(k)s are up 85% is dismissed as a fabricated number; the reality, Meiselas argues, is that many Americans have already been forced to dip into retirement accounts to pay current bills. Consumer confidence data, he notes, has sunk to levels described as worse than the Great Depression — and he refuses to treat that as a perception problem. People feel like they're in a Great Depression because they are in one, he argues. The K-shaped economy that benefits oligarchs while crushing everyone else is the organizing frame: billionaires write off yachts and sports teams while regular people can't make rent.

  • The Micron episode is offered as a crystalline example of late-stage corruption. Trump posted that Micron — a 'great American company' — donated $250 million to Trump Accounts and claimed the stock rose 9 points. Both claims are false: the stock is down. Meiselas traces the money: Micron was a major beneficiary of Biden's CHIPS Act, receiving close to $3 billion in taxpayer-funded incentives over recent years. That subsidy inflated the company's balance sheet. Now, with a MAGA administration in power, Micron donates $250 million to Trump Accounts — investment vehicles that buy index funds containing Micron stock — effectively recycling taxpayer money back into the company's own valuation. Trump then posts about it to boost the stock price further. It's a circular grift: public money → corporate balance sheet → Trump promotional vehicle → stock pump → Trump's own portfolio gains. Meiselas notes this same scheme worked for a while earlier in the Trump term but is now failing as even investor sentiment has soured on the manipulation.

  • The mid-show break features three sponsor integrations. Wild Alaskan Company is pitched as a premium, sustainable seafood delivery service with vacuum-sealed fillets; the promo offers $35 off a first box at wildalaskan.com/meidas. Mars Men is a testosterone support supplement marketed to men experiencing the natural hormonal shifts of aging, offered at 50% off for life plus free shipping and three free gifts at mengotomars.com. Shopify rounds out the break as the e-commerce backbone of the MeidasTouch merch store itself, promoted with a $1/month trial at shopify.com/midas. All three reads include personal testimonials from Meiselas.

  • Meiselas plays a damning supercut assembled by MS Now, showing Howard Lutnick, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, and economic adviser Kevin Hassett cycling through an endless loop of 'next quarter will be incredible' promises — from Q4 2025 through every quarter of 2026. Each promise passes without delivery, and the next one is issued with equal confidence. Meiselas connects this directly to his professional experience as a litigator in a massive California Ponzi scheme case in 2014–15, saying the parallels are so precise they're almost hard to believe. The scapegoat machinery is already visible: when the bubble finally bursts, Democrats winning the midterms — or the Senate parliamentarian, or the Supreme Court — will be blamed. The Byrd Rule and parliamentary procedure will become, in MAGA framing, the saboteurs of a golden economic future that was always just one quarter away.

  • Meiselas presents the Momdani thermostat episode as a perfect microcosm of how the Trump regime operates. Mayor Zoran Momdani of New York City posted sensible heat-crisis advice — set thermostats to 78°F, unplug unused electronics — and Fox News anchor Harris Faulkner mocked him as 'Mayor Cum Donnie' and called the advice communist. Meiselas then reveals that the Department of Energy's own website contained virtually identical guidance, recommending thermostats between 75 and 78°F during summer days. Shortly after Momdani's post drew mockery from Fox, the Trump administration scrubbed those pages from the DOE website. The deletion is not trivial: Meiselas uses it to make a broader epistemological argument. If the regime will delete thermostat guidance to score a political point, why would anyone trust the jobs data, the economic statistics, or any federal information? The 57,000 jobs figure — already terrible — might, he suggests, be masking a far worse reality.

  • The Great American State Fair — Trump's repurposing of America's 250th birthday celebration — is imploding in real time, and the day's events provide a grim highlight reel. A stage literally collapsed during rehearsals, narrowly missing a group of young girls who were dancing. Fox News showed near-empty grounds while Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins appeared on camera to insist the fair was 'hitting every mark' and drawing 150,000 visitors daily. Meiselas also highlights the Temu Arch — a prototype of the triumphal arch Trump wants to build — which was reportedly oozing unidentified material. The human cost is personified in a Fox DC segment showing a Trump-hat-wearing woman who, after suffering heat exhaustion with no air conditioning or adequate medical support nearby, dunked herself in a religious tent's baptism pool. She described the experience as a fair highlight. Meiselas connects the stage collapse to a wider pattern: like the reflecting pool destruction and the general mismanagement, this is what happens when grifters run events and blame others for the results.

  • Meiselas pivots to Ukraine, insisting the story not be drowned out by the state fair spectacle. Russia's latest strategy is chillingly logical: having assessed that Ukraine can shoot down Shahed drones but lacks Patriot interceptors for ballistic missiles — stocks depleted by the Iran war — Russia has pivoted to a ballistic missile swarm. The strike hit Kyiv's Premier Palace Hotel and multiple other sites across Kharkiv and Zaporizhzhia, killing more than 20 people and wounding hundreds. Ukrainian President Zelensky confirmed they lack the Patriot missiles that were promised. Trump's stated plan — to sell interceptors to European NATO allies who would then provide them to Ukraine — has quietly been abandoned, with the Iran war stock depletion used as cover. The detail that Witkoff keeps a framed letter from Putin describing his vision for eastern Ukraine displayed in his office ties together the administration's Russia orientation with its Ukraine policy in a single, damning image.

  • Taking a brief reflective turn, Meiselas discusses watching the FIFA World Cup and finding genuine joy in the global communal experience it represents. Mexico's hosting, he says, has been spectacular, with enormous and enthusiastic crowds. The games offer a moment of cross-cultural connection that exists entirely despite Trump, not because of him. [1] Into this contrast lands the behavior of Homeland Security Secretary Mark Wayne Mullen, who said he 'jumped for joy' when the Iranian national team lost — a comment Meiselas calls sick and disgusting. Sports, Meiselas argues, is one of the few remaining spaces where people seek unity, and the Trump regime's instinct is to politicize even that. He draws a direct contrast with Netanyahu, whose decisions alongside Trump have caused immense pain and division globally. The sports segment serves as a humanizing interlude before the episode's return to structural political analysis.

  • This section delivers the episode's most analytically dense passage. Meiselas draws on his litigation background — specifically a major California Ponzi scheme case from 2014–15 — to argue that the Trump economic narrative follows the Ponzi playbook with uncanny precision: perpetual optimism, the scapegoat mechanism, the private enrichment of insiders, and the inevitable collapse. The crypto numbers crystallize it: Trump made $2.26 billion, retail investors lost $2.2 billion. That's not a K-shaped economy as an abstraction — that's a pump-and-dump executed at national scale. Trump's social media company holds a lot of Bitcoin, meaning massive paper losses are coming in the next quarterly report — but Trump personally has already cashed out. Looking ahead, Meiselas argues that whoever the next Democratic president is will face a recovery task that makes Biden's look like minor stitches versus open-heart surgery. And the oligarchy, Meiselas predicts, will engineer a market panic to destabilize that recovery just as it's getting underway — mimicking what happened to Biden in his first two years.

  • Reuters ran a story that Meiselas describes as 'pretty horrifying': profiles of ordinary people who lost significant money — in one case $40,000 in life savings — in the Trump meme coin collapse. The striking through-line of the Reuters reporting is that many of these victims blame Democrats for short-selling the meme coin, rather than Trump for engineering the pump-and-dump. Meiselas uses this to articulate the grift's self-reinforcing logic: the incentive structure for bad actors is to cultivate marks who will redirect their anger outward rather than upward. It's 'right around the corner' economics — the Ponzi promise — applied to crypto. The Democrats shorted the meme coin, the Democrats blocked the factories, the Democrats prevented the $21 trillion boom. None of it ever existed. Meiselas circles back to Trump's tariffs, arguing they were used not as economic policy but as a personal currency to extract side deals and exemptions for his family while ordinary consumers absorbed the price increases.

  • In the episode's most personal segment, Meiselas steps back from data and into moral territory. He describes speaking with Governor Shapiro about the impact of the Trump era on their children — young people who have known no other version of American politics, for whom Trump-style behavior is simply 'how presidents act.' Meiselas recalls visiting the Reagan Library near his wedding venue and being struck, despite his strong policy disagreements with Reagan, by the evident attempt to project dignity and shared values — something wholly absent from the Trump presidency. He confesses that he would now take a George W. Bush presidency over Trump, a statement he acknowledges is nearly impossible to imagine saying. The segment closes with a direct address to MAGA supporters: this isn't a political argument, these are objective facts, Trump is literally destroying your life and you appear to enjoy it. The tone is exasperated but not dismissive — Meiselas describes encountering a seemingly nice woman at the Great American State Fair who sought medical help in a baptism pool and still seemed to find it all fun. He processes this with genuine bewilderment about what it means to reach people who are in a psychologically resistant state.

  • Meiselas wraps with several closing threads. He mentions his interviews with Governor Gavin Newsom and Governor Josh Shapiro — the Newsom interview available immediately, Shapiro's likely the following day — and frames both as examples of leaders who 'carry themselves with dignity.' The July 4th timing gives the episode a rallying energy: Meiselas asks, essentially, is this the cycle you want? Is an America 250 defined by a collapsing stage fair, meme coin rug pulls, and Ponzi economics the vision you're signing up for heading into the midterm cycle? He closes with a subscriber pitch for Midas+ at midasplus.com (ad-free audio, Ron Filipkowski daily recaps), a push to help the channel reach 7 million subscribers, and a reminder that the Brother Show airs live at 8 PM Eastern and 5 PM Pacific. The tone is urgent but forward-looking — a conscious attempt to channel the episode's anger into political mobilization.

crack spread
The price difference between crude oil and refined petroleum products like gasoline; determines refinery profit margins and explains why pump prices don't move in lockstep with crude oil prices.
K-shaped economy
An economic recovery pattern where wealthy individuals and asset owners see gains while lower-income earners continue to decline, forming a 'K' shape on a graph.
Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR)
The US government's emergency stockpile of crude oil, stored primarily in underground salt caverns in Texas and Louisiana; used to stabilize supply during crises.
Patriot interceptor
A surface-to-air missile system used to shoot down incoming ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and aircraft; Ukraine urgently needs these to defend against Russian ballistic missile attacks.
VLCC
Very Large Crude Carrier — a massive oil tanker capable of transporting 2+ million barrels of crude oil; critical to global energy supply passing through the Strait of Hormuz.
World Liberty Financial
A Trump-affiliated cryptocurrency and decentralized finance platform from which Trump personally profited billions while retail investors suffered major losses.
MOU (Memorandum of Understanding)
A non-binding or semi-binding written agreement between parties; here refers to the ceasefire/diplomatic arrangement between the US and Iran that Meiselas says the Trump regime violated daily.
Byrd Rule
A Senate rule that limits what provisions can be included in reconciliation legislation, preventing non-budgetary items from bypassing the 60-vote filibuster threshold.
CHIPS Act
The Creating Helpful Incentives to Produce Semiconductors Act, signed by President Biden in 2022, which allocated billions in taxpayer funds to boost domestic semiconductor manufacturing.
Trump Accounts
Investment accounts established under Trump, funded by corporate donations, that invest in market index funds — which in turn reinvest in the donating companies, creating a circular financial arrangement.
pump and dump
A market manipulation scheme where an asset's price is artificially inflated ('pumped') through hype or misleading promotion, then insiders sell ('dump') at the peak while retail investors absorb the losses.
TBI (Traumatic Brain Injury)
Brain damage caused by a sudden blow or jolt to the head; Meiselas references the hundreds of soldiers who suffered TBIs when Iran struck US bases in Iraq after Soleimani's killing.
Shahed drone
An Iranian-designed loitering munition (kamikaze drone) used extensively by Russia against Ukrainian infrastructure; less expensive than ballistic missiles but shootable with air defenses Ukraine currently has.
rug pull
A crypto scam where developers or promoters suddenly withdraw liquidity or sell their holdings, collapsing the token's value and leaving retail investors with worthless assets.
super pardon
As used by Meiselas, a self-granted or negotiated legal protection Trump allegedly secured — through a lawsuit settlement against the Treasury and IRS — that Meiselas argues waives tax liability and halts audits.
perfunctory
Carried out with minimal effort or care, treating something as a routine obligation; Meiselas implicitly characterizes Trump's financial disclosures this way.
TDS (Trump Derangement Syndrome)
A dismissive term used by Trump supporters to mock critics of Trump, implying their opposition is irrational; Meiselas references Trump posting AI videos depicting himself as a doctor 'treating' TDS.
Ponzi scheme
A fraudulent investment operation that pays returns to earlier investors using capital from newer investors, rather than actual profits, until it inevitably collapses.

Chapter 2 · 03:05

Opening Monologue: Trump's Economic Disaster, Crypto Billions, and the Jobs Report

Ben Meiselas launches into the show with characteristic urgency, cataloguing what he calls a systematic burning down of the United States. The morning's jobs report is the anchor: only about 57,000 new jobs created versus expectations of 110,000–120,000, with downward revisions to April and May. The only sector adding jobs is healthcare — the same sector Trump is attacking. Meanwhile, Trump's financial disclosure has landed: over 900 pages, documenting more than 21,000 individual stock trades and crypto holdings Meiselas conservatively estimates at $1.2 billion disclosed, but possibly $15–20 billion in reality. Trump's post this morning about Micron — a company whose stock he owns — is offered as a live example of the manipulation, even as Micron's shares are down. The meme coin math is particularly stark: Trump made $2.26 billion; retail investors lost roughly the same amount. Meiselas also notes Trump's Qatari jet and his bizarre behavior at a North Dakota ribbon-cutting, setting a tone of escalating absurdity layered over genuine financial devastation.

Claims made here

The June 2026 jobs report showed only approximately 57,000 new jobs created, well below expectations of 110,000–120,000, with significant downward revisions to April and May figures.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Trump made over $1.2 billion from his crypto holdings, as disclosed in his financial disclosure, with Meiselas speculating the true figure is $15–20 billion when hidden family trust arrangements are considered.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Trump's financial disclosure document is over 900 pages long and reveals more than 21,000 individual stock trades made during his time in office.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

The New York Times reported that the Trump administration had to warn Iran that Netanyahu was attempting to assassinate the Iranian lead negotiators before the Switzerland ceasefire talks.

Ben Meiselas New York Times

Business
Data point 57,000

Thursday Afternoon Breaking News Updates with Ben - 7/2/2026 · Jul 2, 2026 Business

Only 57,000 jobs were created in June 2026, roughly half what economists expected, with virtually all gains confined to healthcare. Meiselas goes further, questioning whether even that number is real given the regime's willingness to delete government data on a whim.

Business
Data point 21,000+

Thursday Afternoon Breaking News Updates with Ben - 7/2/2026 · Jul 2, 2026 Business

Trump's financial disclosure runs over 900 pages and logs more than 21,000 individual stock trades made while in office. Meiselas argues this number, combined with fund investments and crypto holdings, makes Trump's self-dealing unprecedented and likely criminal.

Chapter 3 · 10:20

Iran, the Strait of Hormuz, and the Witkoff–Kushner Real Estate Pitch

Meiselas turns to foreign policy, describing what he characterizes as a catastrophic and unlawful war with Iran launched at the behest of Netanyahu. The central geopolitical reality emerging from that conflict is stark: Iran now holds control over the Strait of Hormuz and the flow of oil tankers through it — and that leverage is their trump card. US special envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are depicted as pitching Iran with visions of luxury hotels and a booming Tehran skyline, à la Don Draper from Mad Men, in exchange for not tolling the strait. Iran's response, as Meiselas narrates it, is blunt: you've violated the MOU daily since signing it, JD Vance himself admitted it was only signed to replenish our depleted stocks, and you're the least trustworthy negotiating partner imaginable. The MOU violation context is critical: Meiselas highlights Vance's on-air comments about 'replenishing our stocks' as evidence the ceasefire was never intended to be permanent — and the strategic petroleum reserve is now at what he calls functional tank bottom.

Claims made here

The US Strategic Petroleum Reserve has been drawn down to what Meiselas describes as 'functional and technical tank bottom,' the lowest level in history.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Business
Strategic Petroleum Reserve at Tank Bottom — Crack Spreads Explain Your Gas Bill

Thursday Afternoon Breaking News Updates with Ben - 7/2/2026 · Jul 2, 2026 Business

The US Strategic Petroleum Reserve is at functional tank bottom — the lowest level in history — while the Strait of Hormuz throttles global supply. Meiselas explains crack spreads: the gap between crude prices and refinery costs means pump prices won't fall just because crude does, and the SPR crisis compounds it.

Chapter 4 · 15:00

Strategic Petroleum Reserve Crisis and Crack Spreads Explained

Meiselas offers a rare economics tutorial for a political podcast, walking through why Americans aren't seeing gas price relief despite crude oil nominally falling. The key concept is crack spreads — the delta between crude prices and refined fuel prices — which reflects refinery costs largely decoupled from the crude market. The strategic petroleum reserve, mostly held in Cushing, Oklahoma, has been drawn to what Meiselas calls 'functional and technical tank bottom,' the lowest level in history. Even with the Strait of Hormuz slightly more open than at the war's peak, tanker volumes are still suppressed, meaning supply constraints persist. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is accused of manipulating crude prices downward to manufacture the appearance of relief, but the pump price tells a different story. The SPR drawdown also matters for fertilizer: Meiselas reveals the US quietly attempted a fertilizer emergency declaration, acknowledging the country has essentially run out of domestic supply. Farmers already know this — no matter how many times Trump tells them they're living a golden age.

Chapter 5 · 18:00

America's Financial Reality: Savings Rate Collapse, 401(k) Myths, and Consumer Confidence

Meiselas zeroes in on the lived economic reality of ordinary Americans, contrasting it sharply with Trump's invented statistics. The personal savings rate has collapsed below 3%, an all-time low, meaning a single medical emergency — increasingly likely as Medicaid and healthcare access are stripped away — could push millions into bankruptcy. Trump's claim that 401(k)s are up 85% is dismissed as a fabricated number; the reality, Meiselas argues, is that many Americans have already been forced to dip into retirement accounts to pay current bills. Consumer confidence data, he notes, has sunk to levels described as worse than the Great Depression — and he refuses to treat that as a perception problem. People feel like they're in a Great Depression because they are in one, he argues. The K-shaped economy that benefits oligarchs while crushing everyone else is the organizing frame: billionaires write off yachts and sports teams while regular people can't make rent.

Claims made here

The American personal savings rate has fallen to below 3%, an all-time low, leaving millions of Americans unable to cover unexpected expenses like medical emergencies.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Consumer confidence in the US is currently at levels worse than during the Great Depression, according to Meiselas.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Chapter 7 · 28:00

Sponsor Break: Wild Alaskan Company, Mars Men, Shopify

The mid-show break features three sponsor integrations. Wild Alaskan Company is pitched as a premium, sustainable seafood delivery service with vacuum-sealed fillets; the promo offers $35 off a first box at wildalaskan.com/meidas. Mars Men is a testosterone support supplement marketed to men experiencing the natural hormonal shifts of aging, offered at 50% off for life plus free shipping and three free gifts at mengotomars.com. Shopify rounds out the break as the e-commerce backbone of the MeidasTouch merch store itself, promoted with a $1/month trial at shopify.com/midas. All three reads include personal testimonials from Meiselas.

Claims made here

Micron has received approximately $3 billion in government incentives from Biden's CHIPS Act in recent years, including close to $3 billion in 2026 and $1.2 billion the year before.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Business
Data point $250M

Thursday Afternoon Breaking News Updates with Ben - 7/2/2026 · Jul 2, 2026

Micron announced a $250 million contribution to so-called Trump Accounts — investment vehicles that buy market funds including Micron stock, effectively recycling the money back into the company.

Chapter 9 · 34:40

Zoran Momdani, the Thermostat War, and the Deletion of Government Data

Meiselas presents the Momdani thermostat episode as a perfect microcosm of how the Trump regime operates. Mayor Zoran Momdani of New York City posted sensible heat-crisis advice — set thermostats to 78°F, unplug unused electronics — and Fox News anchor Harris Faulkner mocked him as 'Mayor Cum Donnie' and called the advice communist. Meiselas then reveals that the Department of Energy's own website contained virtually identical guidance, recommending thermostats between 75 and 78°F during summer days. Shortly after Momdani's post drew mockery from Fox, the Trump administration scrubbed those pages from the DOE website. The deletion is not trivial: Meiselas uses it to make a broader epistemological argument. If the regime will delete thermostat guidance to score a political point, why would anyone trust the jobs data, the economic statistics, or any federal information? The 57,000 jobs figure — already terrible — might, he suggests, be masking a far worse reality.

Claims made here

The Department of Energy's website previously recommended setting thermostats to 75–78°F in summer, identical to advice given by NYC Mayor Zoran Momdani; the Trump administration deleted those pages after Momdani's tweet.

Ben Meiselas US Department of Energy website

Government
The Trump Regime Deleted the Thermostat Page — Because Momdani Said the Same Thing

Thursday Afternoon Breaking News Updates with Ben - 7/2/2026 · Jul 2, 2026 Government

When NYC Mayor Zoran Momdani tweeted that residents should set thermostats to 78°F during a heatwave, Fox News called it communist. The Trump administration then deleted the Department of Energy's own page with identical guidance — exposing how the regime shapes 'reality' to win news cycles.

Chapter 10 · 38:10

Great American State Fair: Stage Collapse, Empty Grounds, and a Baptism-Pool Medical Emergency

The Great American State Fair — Trump's repurposing of America's 250th birthday celebration — is imploding in real time, and the day's events provide a grim highlight reel. A stage literally collapsed during rehearsals, narrowly missing a group of young girls who were dancing. Fox News showed near-empty grounds while Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins appeared on camera to insist the fair was 'hitting every mark' and drawing 150,000 visitors daily. Meiselas also highlights the Temu Arch — a prototype of the triumphal arch Trump wants to build — which was reportedly oozing unidentified material. The human cost is personified in a Fox DC segment showing a Trump-hat-wearing woman who, after suffering heat exhaustion with no air conditioning or adequate medical support nearby, dunked herself in a religious tent's baptism pool. She described the experience as a fair highlight. Meiselas connects the stage collapse to a wider pattern: like the reflecting pool destruction and the general mismanagement, this is what happens when grifters run events and blame others for the results.

News
The Great American State Fair: A Stage Collapse Captures the Trump Presidency

Thursday Afternoon Breaking News Updates with Ben - 7/2/2026 · Jul 2, 2026 News

A stage at the Great American State Fair literally collapsed during rehearsals, nearly injuring the young girls dancing on it. The Trump regime had promised 150,000 daily visitors; footage showed near-empty grounds, a structural failure, and a heat-stricken attendee seeking emergency care in a baptism pool.

Chapter 11 · 42:20

Ukraine Under Ballistic Missile Attack: The Patriot Gap Trump Created

Meiselas pivots to Ukraine, insisting the story not be drowned out by the state fair spectacle. Russia's latest strategy is chillingly logical: having assessed that Ukraine can shoot down Shahed drones but lacks Patriot interceptors for ballistic missiles — stocks depleted by the Iran war — Russia has pivoted to a ballistic missile swarm. The strike hit Kyiv's Premier Palace Hotel and multiple other sites across Kharkiv and Zaporizhzhia, killing more than 20 people and wounding hundreds. Ukrainian President Zelensky confirmed they lack the Patriot missiles that were promised. Trump's stated plan — to sell interceptors to European NATO allies who would then provide them to Ukraine — has quietly been abandoned, with the Iran war stock depletion used as cover. The detail that Witkoff keeps a framed letter from Putin describing his vision for eastern Ukraine displayed in his office ties together the administration's Russia orientation with its Ukraine policy in a single, damning image.

Claims made here

Russia launched a massive ballistic missile strike on Kyiv, Kharkiv, and Zaporizhzhia, killing over 20 people and injuring hundreds of others.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

News
Russia Exploits Ukraine's Patriot Gap With Ballistic Missile Swarm on Kyiv

Thursday Afternoon Breaking News Updates with Ben - 7/2/2026 · Jul 2, 2026 News

Russia has adapted its strategy to exploit Ukraine's Patriot interceptor shortage — caused by the Iran war — and launched a massive ballistic missile strike on Kyiv, Kharkiv, and Zaporizhzhia, killing over 20 people. Trump has refused to supply more interceptors, even as Witkoff reportedly has a framed Putin letter in his office.

Chapter 13 · 49:05

The Ponzi Scheme Analogy: What Comes After the Collapse

This section delivers the episode's most analytically dense passage. Meiselas draws on his litigation background — specifically a major California Ponzi scheme case from 2014–15 — to argue that the Trump economic narrative follows the Ponzi playbook with uncanny precision: perpetual optimism, the scapegoat mechanism, the private enrichment of insiders, and the inevitable collapse. The crypto numbers crystallize it: Trump made $2.26 billion, retail investors lost $2.2 billion. That's not a K-shaped economy as an abstraction — that's a pump-and-dump executed at national scale. Trump's social media company holds a lot of Bitcoin, meaning massive paper losses are coming in the next quarterly report — but Trump personally has already cashed out. Looking ahead, Meiselas argues that whoever the next Democratic president is will face a recovery task that makes Biden's look like minor stitches versus open-heart surgery. And the oligarchy, Meiselas predicts, will engineer a market panic to destabilize that recovery just as it's getting underway — mimicking what happened to Biden in his first two years.

Claims made here

Trump personally made approximately $2.26 billion on crypto and meme coins, while retail investors in Trump-linked crypto products lost approximately $2.2–2.3 billion.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Trump's social media company (Truth Social) holds significant Bitcoin, and will likely report massive paper losses in its next quarterly earnings due to the crypto market crash.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Business
Data point $2.26B

Thursday Afternoon Breaking News Updates with Ben - 7/2/2026 · Jul 2, 2026 Business

Trump personally banked $2.26 billion on meme coins and crypto while ordinary retail investors in World Liberty Financial lost approximately $2.2 billion. This isn't a side effect — it's the design. The K-shaped economy isn't an abstraction; it's a pump-and-dump.

Chapter 15 · 59:40

What It Means to Be Human: Dignity, Leadership, and the MAGA Complicity Trap

In the episode's most personal segment, Meiselas steps back from data and into moral territory. He describes speaking with Governor Shapiro about the impact of the Trump era on their children — young people who have known no other version of American politics, for whom Trump-style behavior is simply 'how presidents act.' Meiselas recalls visiting the Reagan Library near his wedding venue and being struck, despite his strong policy disagreements with Reagan, by the evident attempt to project dignity and shared values — something wholly absent from the Trump presidency. He confesses that he would now take a George W. Bush presidency over Trump, a statement he acknowledges is nearly impossible to imagine saying. The segment closes with a direct address to MAGA supporters: this isn't a political argument, these are objective facts, Trump is literally destroying your life and you appear to enjoy it. The tone is exasperated but not dismissive — Meiselas describes encountering a seemingly nice woman at the Great American State Fair who sought medical help in a baptism pool and still seemed to find it all fun. He processes this with genuine bewilderment about what it means to reach people who are in a psychologically resistant state.

Claims made here

A Reuters story profiled a woman who invested her entire $40,000 life savings in the Trump meme coin and lost it all, but blamed Democrats for shorting the coin.

Ben Meiselas Reuters

Chapter 16 · 1:04:40

Call to Action, Governor Newsom Interview Tease, and Closing

Meiselas wraps with several closing threads. He mentions his interviews with Governor Gavin Newsom and Governor Josh Shapiro — the Newsom interview available immediately, Shapiro's likely the following day — and frames both as examples of leaders who 'carry themselves with dignity.' The July 4th timing gives the episode a rallying energy: Meiselas asks, essentially, is this the cycle you want? Is an America 250 defined by a collapsing stage fair, meme coin rug pulls, and Ponzi economics the vision you're signing up for heading into the midterm cycle? He closes with a subscriber pitch for Midas+ at midasplus.com (ad-free audio, Ron Filipkowski daily recaps), a push to help the channel reach 7 million subscribers, and a reminder that the Brother Show airs live at 8 PM Eastern and 5 PM Pacific. The tone is urgent but forward-looking — a conscious attempt to channel the episode's anger into political mobilization.

No indexed bits in this chapter.

Show stoppers

Business
Data point $2.26B

Thursday Afternoon Breaking News Updates with Ben - 7/2/2026 · Jul 2, 2026 Business

Trump personally banked $2.26 billion on meme coins and crypto while ordinary retail investors in World Liberty Financial lost approximately $2.2 billion. This isn't a side effect — it's the design. The K-shaped economy isn't an abstraction; it's a pump-and-dump.

Business
Data point 21,000+

Thursday Afternoon Breaking News Updates with Ben - 7/2/2026 · Jul 2, 2026 Business

Trump's financial disclosure runs over 900 pages and logs more than 21,000 individual stock trades made while in office. Meiselas argues this number, combined with fund investments and crypto holdings, makes Trump's self-dealing unprecedented and likely criminal.

Snapshots ()

Key Quotes ()

This episode

Cast

  • Track

Stats

Episode stats

Insight Overview

insights
chapters

Insight distribution

Sub-Categories

Speaker breakdown

Talk Time

This episode

Claims & Sources

3 / 15 cited (20%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

The June 2026 jobs report showed only approximately 57,000 new jobs created, well below expectations of 110,000–120,000, with significant downward revisions to April and May figures.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Trump's financial disclosure document is over 900 pages long and reveals more than 21,000 individual stock trades made during his time in office.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Trump made over $1.2 billion from his crypto holdings, as disclosed in his financial disclosure, with Meiselas speculating the true figure is $15–20 billion when hidden family trust arrangements are considered.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Trump personally made approximately $2.26 billion on crypto and meme coins, while retail investors in Trump-linked crypto products lost approximately $2.2–2.3 billion.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Micron has received approximately $3 billion in government incentives from Biden's CHIPS Act in recent years, including close to $3 billion in 2026 and $1.2 billion the year before.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

The US Strategic Petroleum Reserve has been drawn down to what Meiselas describes as 'functional and technical tank bottom,' the lowest level in history.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

The American personal savings rate has fallen to below 3%, an all-time low, leaving millions of Americans unable to cover unexpected expenses like medical emergencies.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Russia launched a massive ballistic missile strike on Kyiv, Kharkiv, and Zaporizhzhia, killing over 20 people and injuring hundreds of others.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

The Department of Energy's website previously recommended setting thermostats to 75–78°F in summer, identical to advice given by NYC Mayor Zoran Momdani; the Trump administration deleted those pages after Momdani's tweet.

Ben Meiselas US Department of Energy website

A Reuters story profiled a woman who invested her entire $40,000 life savings in the Trump meme coin and lost it all, but blamed Democrats for shorting the coin.

Ben Meiselas Reuters

During his first term, Trump invited the Taliban to Camp David on September 11 to celebrate, and released 5,000 Taliban prisoners.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Following the US killing of General Soleimani, Iran attacked US forces in Iraq causing hundreds of traumatic brain injuries, which Trump covered up by falsely claiming no one was seriously hurt.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

The New York Times reported that the Trump administration had to warn Iran that Netanyahu was attempting to assassinate the Iranian lead negotiators before the Switzerland ceasefire talks.

Ben Meiselas New York Times

Consumer confidence in the US is currently at levels worse than during the Great Depression, according to Meiselas.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Trump's social media company (Truth Social) holds significant Bitcoin, and will likely report massive paper losses in its next quarterly earnings due to the crypto market crash.

Ben Meiselas no source cited