Glamour Gems
06/16/2026
"Obama Just Said What EVERYONE Was Thinking About Trump's Iran Deal!" | Bill Clinton
You know, in all my years in public life, and folks, that's been more than a few, I have rarely seen a moment that captures the cost of abandoning diplomacy quite like the one we're living through right now. Just this past Friday, June 13th, Barack Obama sat down with Robin Roberts at his presidential center in Chicago, and he said something that I think a whole lot of Americans were already feeling in their bones.
He said, "It is doubtful that any agreement with Iran is going to be significantly different from the deal we already had." And let me tell you, that is not just a former president defending his legacy. That is a man who spent years in the situation room who understands what it takes to build a coalition and hold it together, telling the American people the plain truth.
Because one day after that interview, Donald Trump announced his own deal with Iran, a memorandum of understanding to end the war that has shaken the entire world. Now look, I want to be careful here because this is a sensitive moment and the stakes are about as high as they get. If this deal brings peace, if it stops the bombing and ends the suffering of ordinary people, then I will be the first to say, "Thank God for that.
" But here is the question we have to sit with, and we'll come back to it in a moment. If we were always going to end up at a negotiating table with Iran offering sanctions relief for nuclear concessions, what exactly did we gain from all the destruction it took to get here? That question matters. It matters for every American family, for every service member, and for every nation in the world that is watching to see whether America's word still means something.
Now, to understand why Obama's words carry the weight they do, you've got to understand what came before. Let me take you back. In 2015, the Obama administration working alongside the United Kingdom, France, Germany, China, and Russia, negotiated the joint comprehensive plan of action, the JCPOA. Now, look, I'll be the first to tell you that deal was not perfect.
No deal ever is. When I was in the White House, every agreement I ever signed had something in it that made me wse a little. That's the nature of diplomacy. But here's what the JCPOA did accomplish. It constrained Iran's uranium enrichment. It gave international inspectors real access. And it kept the world's major powers aligned on one of the most dangerous nuclear challenges of our time.
06/16/2026
"Most People Don't Realize What Trump Just Threatened Iran With!" | Bill Clinton
Now look, I want you to listen to me carefully this morning because something happened today that most folks probably scrolled right past on their phones. A social media post went out, just words on a screen. But I'm telling you, those words carry more weight than almost anything I've seen a president put in writing since the Cold War.
On June the 13, 2026, the president of the United States announced to the world that a deal to end the war with Iran will be signed tomorrow. He said the Straight of Hormuz will open immediately. He said Iran no longer wants a nuclear weapon. And tucked inside that post, almost like an afterthought, he wrote that if things don't work out, quote, "We have the ultimate alternative, hopefully never to be used again.
" Now, I want you to sit with that sentence for a moment because we'll come back to it later. And when we do, I think you'll understand why it should concern every single American, regardless of party. This isn't about left or right. This isn't about who you voted for. This is about the most serious question a democracy can face.
How does the most powerful nation on earth make decisions about war and peace? and who gets to make them? Because right now, the answer to that question is one man, one platform, and zero institutional guard rails. And that should worry you whether you're a Republican, a Democrat, or someone who's never voted in your life.
So, let's walk through this together, step by step, because the details matter here. They always do. Let me tell you something. To understand what's happening right now, you've got to understand how we got here. In 2015, the Obama administration, working alongside Britain, France, Germany, Russia, and China, negotiated the joint comprehensive plan of action with Iran.
Now, was it a perfect deal? No. No deal ever is. I've negotiated a few in my time and I can tell you that the nature of diplomacy is that nobody walks away fully satisfied. But here's what the JCPOA did. It froze Iran's enrichment capacity. It shipped out 97% of their enriched uranium stockpile. and it put international inspectors on the ground with the most intrusive verification regime ever applied to a nuclear program. It was working.
The IEA confirmed that 14 separate times. Then in 2018, the United States pulled out unilaterally. No violation had occurred. Our own allies begged us to stay in. And what happened next is exactly what every serious foreign policy mind predicted. Iran started enriching again. The inspectors lost access and the diplomatic channels collapsed.
Fast forward to June of 2025 and we launched Operation Midnight Hammer. Seven B2 bombers, 14 bunker buster bombs, strikes on Ford, Natans, and Isvahan. By February of 2026, we were in a fullcale war. A naval blockade shut down the straight of Hormuz. Gas prices climbed. Markets shook. And for three and a half months now, we've heard every other week that a deal is just days away.
06/15/2026
What Happened to Neil Diamond at 84, Try Not to CRY When You See This
Neil Diamond, a man forged in the cold fires of Brooklyn poverty, carved his name into the heart of American music with nothing but a $9 guitar and a soul that refused to be silenced. The world knows him as the voice behind Sweet Caroline, a song that has echoed through stadiums for generations, binding millions together in joy and memory.
He is one of the bestselling artists of all time with over 130 million records sold worldwide, 17 top 10 albums, and a place in both the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame. But behind that legacy lies a story not glamorous, but devastating. Two shattered marriages, children he barely knew, a loneliness so profound that fame could never fill the void.
And now at 84, Parkinson's disease turning his final years into a battle fought in trembling hands and failing balance. Before we begin, if his music ever gave you comfort in dark times, leave a like as tribute to a man who turned suffering into sacred art, who bled on stage so that millions could heal.
Behind the thunder of global fame lies a cruel truth. Neil Diamond's first stage was not lit with dazzling spotlights, but with the dim bulb of a cramped Brooklyn apartment where heat was rationed and hope was scarce. He was born on January 24th, 1941 in Brooklyn, New York as the world tore itself apart in World War II. His parents, Akiba Keefe Diamond and Rose Diamond, were Jewish immigrants from Russia and Poland, two souls who carried faith in their hands and hunger in their pockets.
His father pedled dry goods doortodoor, chasing nickels through the bitter cold, while Rose kept the household stitched together with prayer and patience. Winters were merciless. The wind slipped through window cracks. The heat barely held. The family moved from one cramped apartment to another, never staying long enough to plant roots or catch their breath.
Neil learned early that nothing stayed. Not warmth, not security, not even Love's gentle touch. The apartments smelled of boiled cabbage and old wood. the walls so thin he could hear neighbors arguing, babies crying, radios crackling with war news. He shared a bedroom with his younger brother, Harvey, sleeping on a mattress that sagged in the middle, blankets that never quite kept the cold away.
When his father was drafted into the army, the fragile calm of their small world shattered. Rose gathered what little they owned, holding her two boys close as she boarded a train bound for Cheyenne, Wyoming, a place so vast and foreign it might as well have been another planet. The journey took days, rattling through America's heartland, past landscapes Neil had only seen in school books.
When they arrived, the Wyoming skies stretched wider than anything he'd ever known, and the silence was deafening. There were no familiar voices, only the whistle of the wind and the ache of distance. At night, while his mother mended clothes under a dim bulb, her fingers moving with mechanical precision to earn a few extra dollars, Neil wandered into the local cinema.
He sat for hours in the dark, watching the singing cowboys on screen, their voices steady, their hearts unbroken. Gene Autry, Roy Rogers, men who seemed to carry the weight of the world but made it look light. Those melod.i.es reached him in a way words never could. That's where he learned that a song could make loneliness sound beautiful.
That music could turn suffering into something people wanted to hear. When the war ended and they returned to Brighton Beach, the ocean air carried salt and promise, but the struggle remained. Rose worked as a bookkeeper. Akiba returned to pedalling and Neil watched his parents age faster than time allowed. He became an observer, a boy who felt everything too deeply....Read more in comment๐๐๐
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