Once upon a time, America, albeit for a millisecond, saw South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham strap on a pair and condemn the tyranny of Donald Trump.On the nightOnce upon a time, America, albeit for a millisecond, saw South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham strap on a pair and condemn the tyranny of Donald Trump.On the night

This grotesque war lust exposes the truth about Lindsey Graham

2026/03/14 22:21
6 min read
For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at [email protected]

Once upon a time, America, albeit for a millisecond, saw South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham strap on a pair and condemn the tyranny of Donald Trump.

On the night of January 6, 2021, hours after a violent mob breached the U.S. Capitol at Trump’s behest, Graham took to the Senate floor to deliver a rebuke of Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election.

“Count me out!” he thundered. “Enough is enough!” he roared. And most of us said, “Was that Lindsey Graham?” Two days later, he spent four hours with Trump and soon after was calling fellow senators to urge them not to impeach.

The rest, they say, is history, and in this case, speculation that Trump knows something about Graham’s history or has something on him that keeps the lapdog South Carolina senator barking on his behalf. That conjecture, of course, is that Trump has a hold on Graham’s voters.

That said, there’s something deeply strange about Graham and his vicious fits of outbursts around the war with Iran that beg the question, “Why are you so angry, Lindsey?”

Since the United States launched military strikes against Iran, the senior senator from South Carolina has been practically giddy, like a boy who fawns over the muscles and ruggedness of his G.I. Joe doll.

Graham has been popping up everywhere, i.e., Fox News, press conferences, television studios, and Sean Hannity’s podcast, radiating a kind of frantic, over-the-top machismo that is rivaling the “warrior ethos” of Defense Secretary Peter Hegseth.

Graham has declared the war the “most significant thing that’s happened in the Mideast in a thousand years.” I guess the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire following World War I was just a dust storm?

He called Iran’s leadership “religious Nazis” and compared the conflict to a “21st Century Berlin Wall moment.” Is he comparing Ronald Reagan’s soaring words, “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall,” to Trump’s taunting, “Watch what happens to these deranged scumbags?”

He told Fox News the U.S. is going to “make a ton of money” once the Iranian regime falls, because apparently we’re treating the destruction of a nation and the possible humanitarian crisis of displacing 90 million people as a cash cow.

The war costs an estimated $1 billion per day, we’re told. Graham has essentially been touting it as money well spent and a good investment. Sure sounds like America First. To him, it’s better than helping those who lost their health insurance or face sky-high premiums with their bills.

Then, casually, he mentioned he’d be going back to South Carolina to ask constituents to “send their sons and daughters” to the Middle East.

Someone else’s sons and daughters. Never his own, because he doesn’t have any children, and he has absolutely no earthly idea what a horror it is for parents to send their children into a war, especially one that was started for no good reason.

This is Graham’s usual pathetic posturing. He’s a man who has spent decades desperately wanting to be perceived as something he is not. While Hegseth talks tough and aggressively, motor-mouthing lethal force, Graham seems to have found his own real-life G.I. Joe doll to slather over.

But why?

Graham has been in Washington since 1995 and cultivated a reputation as a foreign policy hawk, primarily as the late Senator John McCain’s moderate sidekick. Palling around with the manly McCain, who actually fought, was wounded and imprisoned in a war, made Graham feel like a Beltway tough guy. The man who would ostensibly bomb anyone, anytime, anywhere.

Graham was all about “warrior ethos” before there was such a thing as “warrior ethos.”

The transformation from the occasional voice of Senate moderation to full-throated, whacked-out warmonger was complete somewhere around 2016, and it has only accelerated since. The more Trump screws up, the more Graham “man’s up” for Trump.

What’s revealing isn’t just what Graham says; it’s also how he operates. Reporting from the Wall Street Journal detailed how Graham worked behind the scenes to drag a reluctant Trump into this war.

According to the reporting, he coached Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on how to pitch Trump, specifically how to appeal to him by telling the stable genius how he could “make history.” Graham started lobbying Trump on the golf course shortly after the 2024 election, arguing that obliterating Iran’s nuclear facilities was the president’s “moment to shine.”

The Journal also reported that he coordinated a media campaign with retired General Jack Keane and columnist Marc Thiessen, designing television appearances and op-eds to capture Trump’s attention and make, as reports describe it, the “bait irresistible.”

When it comes to being “irresistible,” Graham apparently hasn’t learned how to do the same in his personal life. But I digress.

Graham also admitted to visiting Israel to meet with intelligence officials, boasting that “they’ll tell me things our own government won’t tell me,” which he then used to strengthen his case to the White House.

Mmm, one wonders how the story of a heroic and conquering Graham, who secret agents confide in with their biggest state secrets, ended up as front-page news in the Wall Street Journal?

Oh, what the wildly insecure, emasculated Lindsey Graham wouldn’t do to feel important and be one of the boys.

Why, Lindsey, do you need this so badly?

The man represents a state with 5.3 million people, a state with real problems: poverty, healthcare access, crumbling infrastructure.

Instead, he’s out playing war-mongering warlord, channeling his inner G.I. Joe on Fox News, asking other people’s children to bleed in the desert while he licks his chapped lips about the investment returns of death and destruction.

It’s all the fantasies of a lonely, double-chinned old man who wants so badly to be treated like a man by hobnobbing with the young, chiseled jaws of military might.

Lindsey Graham wants to be seen as a war hawk because he thinks it makes him look powerful. What it actually makes him look like is someone who has never quite grown up, still playing with his G.I. Joe doll, only this time doing so by putting other people’s precious lives at risk.

Market Opportunity
OFFICIAL TRUMP Logo
OFFICIAL TRUMP Price(TRUMP)
$3.82
$3.82$3.82
-3.46%
USD
OFFICIAL TRUMP (TRUMP) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

DBS Tests Repo With Ripple RLUSD and Franklin sgBENJI

DBS Tests Repo With Ripple RLUSD and Franklin sgBENJI

The post DBS Tests Repo With Ripple RLUSD and Franklin sgBENJI appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Ripple, DBS, and Franklin Templeton launch tokenized repo pilot on DBS Exchange. Repo trades use Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin and Franklin Templeton’s sgBENJI token. sgBENJI issued on XRP Ledger enables fast collateralized lending and settlements. DBS, Ripple, and Franklin Templeton have signed a memorandum of understanding to bring repo transactions into tokenized finance. The framework pairs Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin with Franklin Templeton’s sgBENJI tokenized money market fund, listed on DBS Digital Exchange. The setup gives accredited clients a path to rebalance cash into a regulated, yield-bearing vehicle while transacting with stablecoins that settle within minutes. For institutions used to overnight repo desks, this is a first look at how traditional liquidity tools can migrate onto public blockchains. Related: Franklin Templeton Launches its DeFi Solution Benji on Ethereum Demand From Institutions Shapes the Design The three firms cited rising demand for digital asset allocations, with surveys showing nearly nine in ten institutional investors plan to increase exposure in 2025. The repo model was chosen because it mirrors an existing backbone of global funding markets: collateralized lending against short-term securities. By allowing RLUSD to trade directly against sgBENJI on DBS Digital Exchange, desks can manage intraday liquidity, park stablecoin reserves into a fund earning regulated yield, and unwind positions quickly when cash is needed. DBS to Expand Collateralized Lending The next phase extends sgBENJI beyond a trading instrument into repo collateral. DBS plans to let investors pledge sgBENJI against credit lines arranged through the bank or third-party lenders. That opens deeper liquidity pools with the assurance that collateral sits inside a regulated balance sheet. For trading desks, that means onchain repo could eventually function like its traditional counterpart, rolling positions overnight, secured by tokenized assets that settle in near real-time. XRP Ledger as the Settlement Rail Franklin Templeton will issue sgBENJI tokens on…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 20:25
Pepeto Attracts Capital As Early Shiba Inu And Pepe Investors Hunt Big Gains And The Next 100x Story

Pepeto Attracts Capital As Early Shiba Inu And Pepe Investors Hunt Big Gains And The Next 100x Story

The post Pepeto Attracts Capital As Early Shiba Inu And Pepe Investors Hunt Big Gains And The Next 100x Story appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News Early Shiba Inu and PEPE stories are legendary. Some first movers turned $1,000 into well over $1,000,000 as SHIB ran more than 26,000% in 2021, while PEPE delivered multi-thousand % bursts for the earliest entries. After riding those arcs, many of those holders are hunting the next big move, shifting from SHIB to PEPE and …
Share
CoinPedia2025/09/18 19:02
A 3821% surge in 20 years: Why are Pokémon cards valuable investments?

A 3821% surge in 20 years: Why are Pokémon cards valuable investments?

By David Unyime Nkanta Compiled by: TechFlow The Pokémon trading card game is extremely popular around the world, especially in Japan. These cards are very valuable, especially the rare ones. (Image source: Twitter / FADA Pack Magic @FadaPackMagic) Pokémon trading cards have gone from amusement park items to one of the world's hottest alternative investments. According to data from analytics firm Card Ladder, the Pokémon card market has grown 3,821% in value since 2004, far outpacing the S&P 500's 483% increase and Meta Platforms' 1,844% growth. From hobby to high-yield asset Pokémon trading cards, launched by Nintendo in 1996, have become a popular investment, traded across platforms including eBay, TCGplayer, and international expos. The market has seen explosive growth during the pandemic, as stimulus policies and lockdowns have driven collectors toward alternative assets. For some, the investment has yielded life-changing returns. Lucas Shaw, a 27-year-old account manager in Ohio, said the profits from selling the cards helped him pay for his wedding rings and celebrations. Similarly, Justin Wilson, a 32-year-old advertising manager in Oklahoma City, estimates the total value of his collection of 500 cards and 100 sealed items at about $100,000. He considers Pokémon cards part of his investment portfolio, alongside his Roth IRA and securities accounts. The appeal of Pokémon cards lies not only in financial gain but also in their emotional resonance. "You have to collect them all," Wilson said, referencing the series's classic slogan. For many, the cards represent both childhood nostalgia and speculative opportunity. Where does the value of rare Pokémon cards come from? A classic Poké Ball toy with matching Pokémon trading cards. Zapdos, Ninetales, and a trainer card are clearly visible. Image credit: Thimo Pedersen/Unsplash Unlike stocks, Pokémon cards don't generate dividends; their value depends on their rarity, condition, and cultural significance. Cards graded as perfect PSA 10 by the Professional Sports Authenticator (PSA) often fetch exorbitant prices. The most dramatic example occurred in 2022, when influencer Logan Paul purchased a near-perfect "Pikachu Illustrator" card for $5.3 million, setting a Guinness World Record for the most expensive Pokémon card ever sold privately. This event further ignited market interest and highlighted the speculative potential of high-level cards. Risks of the Pokémon Card Market Financial advisors warn against considering collectibles as the core of a portfolio. Card prices are extremely volatile, influenced by hype, media coverage, and collector sentiment. Counterfeit cards also remain a potential threat, with scams frequently occurring. Image source: Flickr/c0rnnibblets Still, the resilience of the Pokémon brand provides some stability to the market. Pokémon spans video games, movies, and merchandise, and unlike sports trading cards, the characters are immune to scandals, making them a safer investment for some collectors. The Future of Collectibles Investing The rapid rise of Pokémon cards reflects a broader shift in people's perception of value. As digital assets like Bitcoin face regulatory scrutiny and tech stocks undergo a market correction, tangible collectibles offer a nostalgic and potentially profitable haven. While the sustainability of its value remains uncertain, the 3,821% growth over the past 20 years has established Pokémon trading cards as the most vivid example of how a childhood hobby can transform into a multi-million dollar investment.
Share
PANews2025/09/18 18:00