Knicks’ first-ever ticker-tape parade promises to be day to for the ages
Finally, after 210 official ticker-tape parades, the Knicks get their turn to enter the Canyon of Heroes.

Why, oh why does everyone jump through hoops when Donald Trump announces yet another deal with Iran? It’s become such a joke that when “breaking news” notifications pop up on my phone these days, I always say to myself, “Trump’s touting another Iran deal.”Only a fool would believe Trump when he says a deal is “complete.” Because once again, the man who wrote The Art of the Deal, or more accurately, paid Tony Schwartz to write it, says a deal is done. It is set to be signed this Friday in Geneva, and the entire world is responding the way it always does: by believing something Trump says and breathing yet another sigh of relief.This war has been a shambolic, haphazard pigsty of epic proportions. Come to think of it, didn’t J.D. Vance go to Pakistan to sign a deal? Or was it Marco Rubio? Or was it Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff? Or did they all go together? Or did they go to Qatar?See what I mean?Yes, I know there was a preliminary deal signed on Monday, but...Here’s what we supposedly have. The U.S. and Iran say they’ve reached an agreement to end more than 100 days of war, reopen the Strait of Hormuz, lift the U.S. blockade — and God knows what it'll do about Iran’s nuclear program.Trump stated over the weekend and on Monday that Iran no longer wants to pursue nuclear weapons. That comment defies explanation and forces you to let go of any sense of reality.The formal signing is scheduled for Friday in Switzerland, mediated by Pakistan and Qatar. I guess you have to invite them at this point. Maybe everyone thinks the third time is a charm? Or is this the fourth attempt to sign a deal?Trump is telling reporters the actual text of the memorandum “may not be released until after Friday.” Which means nobody knows what the hell they are going to sign on Friday because, just like the war, this so-called memorandum is a shambolic, haphazard pigsty.But details are leaking. There are reports that Iran will receive a whopping $300 billion for reconstruction. Only an idiotic fool would hand this intensely crooked regime that absurd amount of money, And Trump says the Strait of Hormuz will be open. But it appears there’s a significant diplomatic dispute over Iran's plan to charge commercial vessels, because the strait’s territorial waters belong exclusively to Iran and Oman, Tehran asserts it has the legal right to co-manage the waterway and levy chargesWho can trust either side? And more pointedly, who can trust Iran to begin with, let alone trust them to sign something 72 hours away? Then there’s Netanyahu, who you’d think might have an opinion on a deal involving his own backyard. Yet his office released a statement clarifying that Israel isn’t even a party to it.Iran says one thing. Trump boasts about another. Iran says what Trump says isn’t true. Israel and Lebanon exchange fire. Iran makes an irrational, late stage demand. American officials say that’s not how any of this works.And on and on.If this all feels familiar, it’s because we’ve watched this before. Donald Trump has always, from his earliest days, failed to shepherd lasting deals to successful completion.Back in 1983, a younger Donald Trump bought himself a football team, the New Jersey Generals, and by 1986, it all went bankrupt.He decided the USFL’s best move was to challenge the NFL head-on in court with an antitrust lawsuit Trump was sure would force a merger or a massive payout.He testified. He guaranteed victory. He bloviated. And the USFL did, technically, win. A jury found the NFL had acted as a monopoly. The prize? One dollar, tripled to three under antitrust law.The league folded within days, and Trump walked away from the wreckage of a deal he’d personally engineered with nothing to show for it but failure. And 40 years later, we have the same mess, but with much bigger stakes, and still the same failure of a man trying to win. He will lose. He always does.That’s the Trump pattern. Announce it loudly, skimp on the details, let everyone else clean up later. A “very strong memorandum of understanding,” that Trump himself admits is “a little conceptual,” is not a peace deal.This reminded me of the September 2024 presidential debate, when pressed on his decade-long promise to replace the Affordable Care Act, Trump famously blurted out, “I have concepts of a plan.” Doesn’t that sound familiar to “a little conceptual?”One wonders what happened to those “concepts?”Finally, there’s one aspect of this fragile deal that could kaput the whole thing: Trump’s Truth Social ramblings, attacks, and verbosity.His short fuse and fat, fast fingers could blow the whole thing apart. If Iran makes a noncommittal statement, or if someone says Trump is TACO’ing again, or doing what Obama did with this shoddy Iran deal, Trump won’t be able to control himself. He will flail.And Iran will say, OK, if that’s how you feel, we ain’t signing.
Finally, after 210 official ticker-tape parades, the Knicks get their turn to enter the Canyon of Heroes.
Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), vice chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, joins Meet the Press NOW to discuss the war with Iran as the White House continues to negotiate the terms to a memorandum of understanding. NBC News Capitol Hill Correspondent Melanie Zanona reports on the FISA debate on Capitol Hill as DNI nominee Jay Clayton’s confirmation is delayed amid the president’s frustrations with Congress.
President Trump made the case for his deal with Iran during an hour-long press conference on Wednesday, while seeming to lower his own bar for success and warning he could bomb Iran again if nuclear talks fail.The big picture: For two months, Trump has been seeking a deal to end the war, reopen the Strait of Hormuz and stabilize global energy markets. This deal should achieve that. But some of Trump's critics argue that making concessions just to return to status quo ante shows the war itself was a costly mistake.Reality check: Before the war and as it got underway, Trump laid out highly ambitious parameters for any successful resolution with Iran.That included "total surrender" and the full dismantlement of Iran's nuclear program. No enrichment, no ballistic missiles, no funding for proxies. Trump even wanted a say in picking the supreme leader. The memorandum of understanding — which Trump signed on Wednesday and senior administration officials finally unveiled in full in a call with reporters — is a much more modest agreement. Breaking it down: Iran gets sanctions relief to sell oil, the strait reopens, the blockade lifts. The parties also give themselves 60 days to negotiate a nuclear deal. Iran could see all sanctions lifted and receive billions in frozen funds and investments, if it agrees to limit its nuclear program and "dispose of" its stockpile.Trump and his team acknowledge a final deal may never happen. But he claimed on Wednesday that "if it doesn't get done in 60 days, we go back to bombing." (He later said the deadline could shift.)Uncharacteristically, Trump downplayed the deal somewhat, noting that it was just a memorandum. He also further enraged hawks by expressing sympathy for Iran's desire to possess missiles and pursue nuclear energy.Between the lines: Trump has been under fire from Democrats and GOP hawk ever since details of the MOU began leaking out.A senior administration official told reporters that Iran had requested the document not be published until it was formally signed, and that the delay "caused a lot of consternation" in the White House.Trump's team won over one critic, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who endorsed the deal after an hour-long phone call with White House envoy Steve Witkoff on Wednesday morning.Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), on the other hand, claimed "Reagan is rolling over in his grave" over "the worst foreign policy blunder in decades."Referring to the circling hawks, Trump said "the tough guys... would would take the country down the tube" and were "stupid" for wanting to continue bombing Iran.What he's saying: In a recognition of the bind Iran put him in by closing the strait, Trump said he didn't want to kick off an economic "catastrophe" and become another Herbert Hoover, who presided over the Great Depression.He argued that the U.S. military objectives, such pummeling Iran's navy, had been achieved. Trump said the MOU creates a path to limit Iran's nuclear program for the long term. And he said U.S. allies in Europe and the Middle East — with the possible exception of Israel — wanted to see the war end and the deal signed.Friction point: There's plenty in the deal for critics to sink their teeth into.It only calls on Iran to open the strait without restrictions for 60 days, leaving open the possibility of tolls after that. A senior U.S. official told reporters that wouldn't happen, because Gulf countries wouldn't sign up to any deal that allowed it.The MOU also calls for a plan to establish a $300 billion fund to rebuild Iran. Trump denied the U.S. would contribute money to such a fund, and U.S. officials said it was more about the potential for investments after a nuclear deal — such as allowing the UAE to build a power plant in Iran. Despite the administration's claims that this was entirely a "pay for performance" deal, the text makes clear that Iran will receive sanctions waivers to sell oil freely as long as negotiations are ongoing.The U.S. officials claimed the practical implications would be limited because Iran is already exporting oil to China.The MOU says nothing about Iran's ballistic missiles or support for terrorist organizations and militias in the region, despite Trump's insistence — dating back to his first term — that any deal with Iran would have to cover those issues."They have to have some because other people have some," Trump said. "Missiles aren't the problem."What to watch: A senior U.S. official said the meeting in Switzerland on Friday between a U.S. delegation headed by Vice President Vance and an Iranian delegation headed by parliamentary speaker Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf would be "critical" to shifting into nuclear talks. The official claimed a "gentleman's agreement" had been reached around Iran's planned nuclear concessions, and the U.S.
Trump has insisted the deal ensures that Iran will never buy, develop or produce a nuclear weapon. But text of the agreement falls short of that.
The Federal Open Market Committee voted unanimously to leave its benchmark interest rate in a target range of 3.5%-3.75%. Policymakers were split over whether they expect to raise rates this year. This is the first decision issued under Chair Kevin Warsh. Bloomberg's Michael McKee reports. (Source: Bloomberg)
The Trump administration has taken aggressive new steps this week to shut down the Department of Education.
The Iranian national soccer team is attempting to portray itself as the victim after being required to leave the United States immediately following its opening World Cup match against New Zealand. The post Iran’s World Cup Team Forced to Leave From US Hours After 2-2 Draw with New Zealand — Coach Whines They Are the “MOST OPPRESSED” Team in the Tournament… But This Has ALWAYS Been the Plan appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
Welcome to Wednesday’s Washington Secrets. You know what is no longer a secret? The memorandum of understanding with Iran. It was read aloud by a senior U.S. official on a briefing call with reporters, finally ending the speculation about the text of the agreement. We’ll leave analysis of the memo for others, but our takeaway […]