Trump's war with Iran moved $23.5 billion out of your gas tank and into the hands of 41 energy billionaires. Oxfam counted the transfer down to the second: a thousand dollars every time one of them blinks
That is not a figure of speech. It works out to about $300 million a day landing with the men who own Chevron, Shell, Exxon, BP, ConocoPhillips and TotalEnergies, tracked on Forbes' own real-time list from the first week of the strikes through mid-May.
Here is the mechanism, because it is worth understanding.
A war in the Persian Gulf spikes the price of crude. You feel it the next morning at the pump. The companies pump the same oil they were already pumping, charge you more for it, and the gap drops straight into a shareholder's account.
No new wells. No extra workers. A war and a markup.
Regular billionaires saw their fortunes inch up less than half a percent this spring. The oil and gas barons got nearly eleven percent richer. The pump did that. You are the pump.
And you paid. American families have absorbed an estimated $60 billion in extra energy costs since the bombing started. The UN projects the war will push another 32 million people into poverty by year's end. Food prices this spring climbed three times faster than the same months last year.
Here is the part to keep in your back pocket. The money is not gone. It changed hands, and it can be sent back. Senator Sheldon Whitehouse and Representative Ro Khanna wrote a bill that taxes the wartime windfall and returns it to consumers as a rebate, around $33 billion a year.
Whitehouse and Elizabeth Warren just sent letters ordering the oil giants to explain their profits.
So the decent thing would be to claw it back. Instead, the G7 leaders gathered this week at a lakeside hotel in Evian, where Emmanuel Macron reportedly kept Iran off the agenda entirely, rather than embarrass the president whose war handed his biggest donors a fortune.
Read that twice. The men who cashed in are honored guests. The war that fed them is the one topic no one at the table is allowed to raise.
Oxfam's director Amitabh Behar had a name for leaders who tiptoe around the man who caused the damage instead of confronting him. He did not call it diplomacy. He called it cowardice.
A ceasefire may finally be taking hold. Crude will drift back toward seventy dollars.
But the $23.5 billion already moved, and it is not moving back on its own. It is sitting in the accounts of Trump's donors right now, growing by another thousand dollars every time one of them blinks