Regime change is real—but not in the way most people think.
While the media focuses on governments and elections, a deeper struggle is unfolding over the institutions, financial systems, and geopolitical networks that shape national policy from behind the scenes.
In this analysis, Mike examines Trump's Iran strategy, the future of the Abraham Accords, the growing crisis inside Europe, the war in Ukraine, and the emerging battle over the Federal Reserve.
From the Middle East to Wall Street, a larger question is being asked: Who controls the direction of nations?
As calls for reform grow louder at the Fed and the old geopolitical order continues to fracture, the debate is no longer simply about policy. It is about the future of
sovereignty, economic development, and the role of the United States in the world.
I've been telling people for a while now, regime change has happened. Nearly everyone in the old leadership has been removed. Even though the new leaders of Iran still bear the same name, they are not the same people. They have all witnessed one of the greatest smack downs one country has ever given to another. I expect they are going to be much more congenial going forward. This has been regime change without any of the messy unrest and chaos that typically accompanies one. Absolutely brilliant on President Trump's part.
The Iranian people, almost all of them, will tell you different. They say there is no true regime change unless the entity known as the Islamic Republic falls.
Short Summary:
Regime change is real—but not in the way most people think.
While the media focuses on governments and elections, a deeper struggle is unfolding over the institutions, financial systems, and geopolitical networks that shape national policy from behind the scenes.
In this analysis, Mike examines Trump's Iran strategy, the future of the Abraham Accords, the growing crisis inside Europe, the war in Ukraine, and the emerging battle over the Federal Reserve.
From the Middle East to Wall Street, a larger question is being asked: Who controls the direction of nations?
As calls for reform grow louder at the Fed and the old geopolitical order continues to fracture, the debate is no longer simply about policy. It is about the future of sovereignty, economic development, and the role of the United States in the world.
X • https://x.com/stegerMG
Substack • mikesteger.substack.com/
00:00 Intro
01:18 The Iran Deal and the "Shadow Regime"
03:35 JD Vance on Direct Negotiations
05:45 The Abraham Accords and Middle East Strategy
07:45 Ukraine and Europe's Political Crisis
10:15 NATO, Russia, and Trump's Diplomacy
12:20 Regime Change at the Federal Reserve
14:20 Kevin Warsh vs. Jerome Powell
16:10 Hamilton's National Banking Vision
17:20 Final Thoughts
I've been telling people for a while now, regime change has happened. Nearly everyone in the old leadership has been removed. Even though the new leaders of Iran still bear the same name, they are not the same people. They have all witnessed one of the greatest smack downs one country has ever given to another. I expect they are going to be much more congenial going forward. This has been regime change without any of the messy unrest and chaos that typically accompanies one. Absolutely brilliant on President Trump's part.
The Iranian people, almost all of them, will tell you different. They say there is no true regime change unless the entity known as the Islamic Republic falls.
Yeah, but we know we can't trust them. I do know that I trust President Trump.
Really?
Who told you that??
LMG: Most of Iranian people…
The Islamic Republic is killing people. We need them gone. There is no place in humanity for them.
❤️🇺🇸
“The effects will take decades”?
What did he think he was communicating when he said that?