Watching the reactions to Trump’s approach on Iran, one thing stands out: a lot of his supporters are genuinely angry with him.
They’re frustrated that he hasn’t “finished the job,” that he’s not bombing harder or faster. To them, any talk of negotiation, restraint, or calibrated pressure looks like weakness. As if this were Call of Duty, just drop a few bombs on the bad guys, the screen flashes “Mission Accomplished,” and Iran is liberated!
But the reality is not like that. Regime is a cancer, deeply embedded in the body of the nation. The regime and its loyalists have metastasized into every vital organ: the economy, the military, the institutions, and even large parts of the culture.
Removing it isn’t clean surgery; it’s a long, multi-stage treatment. Sometimes you operate, sometimes you use radiation, sometimes chemotherapy, always monitoring the patient’s response.
You don’t kill the host while trying to kill the disease.
I grew up in Iran. For decades we heard the regime’s chilling threat: “If we go, we’ll leave you a scorched earth.” They have deliberately tied their own survival to Iran’s survival.
A blunt, all-out military strike wouldn’t just destroy the regime, it would risk destroying Iran itself. And that is precisely what Trump does not want.
Trump has invested enormous political capital in this conflict. He understands better than most that genuine regime change is essential, but that real, lasting success depends on Iran rising again, not collapsing into chaos or fragmentation.
Power isn’t only about raw force. It’s about patience, timing, strategic understanding, and striking at the right moment.
What we’re seeing is controlled, calibrated pressure. Trump is giving the regime just enough of an off-ramp so it doesn’t go full suicidal and drag more innocent lives down with it. He’s tightening the noose slowly, forcing internal cracks to deepen, and waiting for that one fatal mistake. When it comes, he’ll be ready.
This regime is no longer sustainable. Its collapse has already begun and passed the point of no return. The real challenge is managing the fallout.
Talk to people in Iraq, Libya, or even Romania: many will quietly admit, sometimes with shame, that life under the old dictatorship, despite the lack of freedom, at least provided basic services and a functioning state. Today they often have neither, living in fragmented, broken societies.
Regime change in Iran is inevitable; there is no realistic future without it. But it must be done right. Otherwise, we risk a catastrophe far worse than the nightmare we already have. And the massive responsibility of avoiding this, is on one man,
@POTUS.
Meanwhile, the regime continues its familiar playbook: torturing its own people, manufacturing chaos, and treating war as its lifeline. Historically, it has survived through weakness and confusion.
This time, the board is being rearranged differently. Trump is moving with calm and patience, exposing the regime’s madness and intransigence to the entire world. This process takes time. It cannot be solved with a magic wand or a single dramatic strike.
Notice how the globalist left and their networks are in full panic mode trying to rescue the regime? That’s because its survival depends even more on its external lifelines than on internal repression.
Remember: even against Hamas, months of bombing in Gaza didn’t free the hostages. One precise strike in Doha on the leadership’s safe haven shifted the equation.
Regime change in Iran is a complex, high-stakes game, far more intricate than most commentators, who see only few pieces of the puzzle, can understand.
Have strategic patience. Trust the process. This is a marathon, not a sprint. Save your energy and have faith.
Let the man cook.
#ThankYouTrump