Operation Epic Fury
Wall‑to‑wall coverage of a rapidly escalating U.S.–Iran war, as President Donald Trump delivers live White House remarks announcing ongoing “large‑scale combat operations” in Iran following Operation Midnight Hammer—a joint U.S.–Israel strike that, according to the president, obliterated Iran’s nuclear program and decapitated its leadership, including the Ayatollah, while eliminating “49 top Iranian leaders.” Trump outlines four core objectives: destroy Iran’s missile capabilities and production, annihilate its navy, ensure the regime can never obtain a nuclear weapon, and halt Tehran’s arming and direction of terrorist proxies. He confirms four U.S. service members have been killed in action, projects a four‑to‑five‑week campaign (with the capacity to go longer), and vows that rebuilding Iranian nuclear sites “anywhere else” will be prevented.
Clay and Buck frame the strikes as a strategic turning point after decades of failed diplomacy with Tehran, calling it a decisive end to “kicking the can down the road.” Buck—drawing on his CIA background—argues Iran’s rulers misread Trump’s red lines and underestimated U.S.–Israeli intelligence and precision strike capability, noting how daytime, deep‑penetration attacks and air supremacy signal a technological gulf that Iran’s air defenses and foreign‑sourced systems could not bridge. The hosts emphasize the distinction between the Iranian people and the clerical regime, predicting that the next question dominating geopolitics will be “Who will rule Iran?”
The Czar of Talk Radio
Guest Michael Berry, the “Czar of Talk,” who breaks down how the massive U.S.–Israel strike on Iran is consuming all political oxygen and disrupting expected turnout patterns in Texas—especially after a suspected terror‑motivated shooting in Austin heightened local anxiety. Berry explains that early projections of roughly 40% turnout may collapse, and notes that the biggest race in Texas—the Republican U.S. Senate primary—has become a referendum on longtime Senator John Cornyn, whom the MAGA base increasingly views as part of a McConnell‑aligned establishment. Berry outlines rising support for Ken Paxton and Wesley Hunt, and details why Paxton’s pro‑Trump credentials and Cornyn’s past criticism of Trump are shaping voter sentiment.
A major discussion emerges around Operation Chaos‑style crossover voting, as some listeners consider voting in the Democratic primary to help Jasmine Crockett win. Berry sharply warns against it, arguing that Republicans cannot afford to abandon their own primary when critical MAGA‑vs‑establishment battles are on the ballot. Clay and Buck analyze the likely outcomes: a Paxton‑vs‑Cornyn runoff in May and a Democratic matchup where either Jasmine Crockett or James Talarico could emerge, though Berry predicts Crockett’s base turnout—particularly among Black Democrats—may deliver her a surprise win. They discuss why Crockett would be a disastrous general‑election candidate in deep‑red Texas, while Talarico, though still weak statewide, may fare slightly better.
FREEDOM
The astonishing global response to President Trump’s coordinated U.S.–Israel strikes that decapitated Iran’s leadership, pointing out that oil markets and the stock market remain stable—a sign that world markets view the strikes as controlled and effective. They update listeners on a disturbing terror‑inspired mass shooting in Austin, in which the suspect wore pro‑Iran apparel and reportedly kept images of Iranian regime leaders at home, underscoring fears of domestic radicalization as Iran lashes out regionally.
The hosts then shift to the extraordinary outpouring of joy from Iranian‑American communities across Los Angeles, Washington, New York, and elsewhere—massive street celebrations praising President Trump for toppling the regime that oppressed millions for nearly five decades. Clay highlights Senator John Fetterman’s surprising break from his party, quoting Fetterman’s blunt criticism of Democrats who oppose the only strategy that can truly prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons. Buck frames the political divide as another case of “reflexive anti‑Trumpism,” arguing that Democrats oppose Trump’s actions simply because Trump is the one taking them—even when those actions advance human rights, weaken terrorism, and liberate millions. Clay compares the moment to the fall of the Berlin Wall, noting how Venezuela, Cuba, and now Iran are each seeing transformational change as a result of Trump’s foreign‑policy doctrine.
Powerful emotional testimony from Iranian‑Americans: one caller describes weepi