WarRoom Live


Posted originally on Rumble on Bannon War Room on: June 4, 2026

Caroline Wren: Why Bill Pulte’s Potential Appointment Sparks Panic — FISA-Reauthorization Threats Expose Establishment Resistance


Posted originally on Rumble on Bannon War Room on: June 4, 2026

Episode 5420: The Senate Undermining President’s Cabinet Appointments; Barbarity Of The CCP


Posted originally on Rumble on Bannon War Room on: June 4, 2026

Canada’s Globe & Mail finally admits anti-Catholic “215 First Nation school burials” story a hoax


Posted originally on Rumble on Bannon War Room on: June 4, 2026

Wendy Rogers: Governor Hobbs’ Veto Stampede — Over 450 Republican Bills Rejected


Posted originally on Rumble on Bannon War Room on: June 4, 2026

Forrest Zhou: Eight hundred million to one billion people were killed by Mao through starvation, the Cultural Revolution, and the one-child policy. The Chinese people will finish the business of taking down the CCP.


Posted originally on Rumble on Bannon War Room on: June 4, 2026

REPRIEVE IN FRANCE: National Assembly backs off from bill that would break the Seal of Confession


Posted originally on Rumble on Bannon War Room on: June 4, 2026

Ep 3917a – [CB] Panics Over The Clarity Act, Their System Of Control Is Coming To An End


Posted originally on Rumble By X 22 Report on: May, 2, 2026

Why Turkey Matters More Than People Realize


Posted originally on Jun 4, 2026 by Martin Armstrong |  

Syria Map

I have repeatedly warned that people need to watch Turkey. Most analysts view Turkey as simply another emerging market struggling with inflation, currency volatility, and political uncertainty. They are missing the larger picture. Turkey sits at the crossroads of Europe, Russia, the Middle East, and Asia. When capital shifts, when energy flows change, when geopolitical alliances begin to fracture, Turkey is often standing directly in the middle.

Now Turkey is negotiating with Russia to extend natural gas supply agreements beyond 2026. The discussions involve Turkey’s state energy company BOTAS and Russia’s Gazprom, with future supply volumes and contract terms still under negotiation. Russia remains one of Turkey’s most important suppliers through the TurkStream and Blue Stream pipelines.

Europe spent years proclaiming that it would permanently divorce itself from Russian energy. Sanctions were imposed and pipelines were destroyed. Yet the laws of economics do not care about political slogans. Energy must still move from where it is produced to where it is consumed. Russia still possesses enormous reserves. Europe still requires energy. Turkey increasingly controls one of the most important transit routes connecting those two realities. Today, TurkStream is effectively the last major route carrying Russian gas into parts of Europe.

This is precisely why Turkey has become so important in the emerging multipolar world. Erdogan has spent years balancing relations with NATO, Russia, China, Europe, and the United States. Western leaders often criticize him, yet they continue dealing with him because geography has given Turkey leverage that cannot be replaced. Turkey’s position allows it to act as a bridge between competing power blocs.

At the same time, Turkey is not merely relying on Russian gas. Ankara is expanding energy cooperation with Azerbaijan, investing roughly $30 billion into its electricity infrastructure, strengthening transmission links across the region, and attempting to position itself as the primary energy hub connecting Asia, the Caucasus, the Middle East, and Europe.

Turkey sits directly on the fault line of several major geopolitical trends at the same time. The war cycle, the fragmentation of Europe, tensions between NATO and Russia, instability in the Middle East, migration flows, and the global energy transition all converge in one place. Whenever multiple historical trends intersect in a single region, volatility follows.

What many fail to understand is that Turkey’s future is no longer tied exclusively to Europe. It is building relationships eastward and southward while maintaining one foot inside the Western system. That balancing act may become one of the most important geopolitical stories of the next decade.

People should watch Turkey carefully because it is increasingly becoming the barometer of the new world order. The old postwar structure is breaking apart. The nations positioned between competing power centers often become the biggest winners. Turkey may be one of them, provided it can navigate the storms that are clearly gathering into 2027 and beyond.

Debt or Death – Economic Military Recruitment


Postedoriginally on Jun 4, 2026 by Martin Armstrong |  

The Majority of Russians Do Not Want to Fight, But a Minority Will Suffice for the Kremlin

Governments always know exactly where to find soldiers during economic decline. They look for debt, unemployment, hopelessness, and young men with no future. That has always been the pattern throughout history. Rome did it. Napoleon did it. Britain did it. The United States targeted poor communities for Vietnam and Iraq. Now, Russia is openly doing the same thing by forgiving massive debts for men willing to go fight in Ukraine.

Putin has now signed a decree wiping out debts up to 10 million rubles, roughly $140,000, for new military recruits and even their spouses if they sign contracts with the Russian Defense Ministry for at least one year. That is economic recruitment. They are effectively saying to indebted young men: fight for the state and we will erase your financial problems.

This is what governments do when war collides with economic stress. Military recruitment always surges where opportunity collapses. Young men drowning in debt, unable to afford housing, unable to build families, and unable to see a future become the ideal targets for governments needing manpower.

The Kremlin needs a constant supply of men while trying to avoid another politically dangerous mass mobilization. Instead of openly forcing millions into the army, they increasingly rely on financial incentives, debt forgiveness, bonuses, housing promises, educational incentives, and economic desperation.

Russia plans to recruit another 409,000 troops in 2026 — a clear sign the enemy is not abandoning its ambitions and continues preparing for further aggression against Ukraine, Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrsky said.
From @apnews: "Russia offers cash bonuses, frees prisoners and lures foreigners to replenish its troops in Ukraine" "Kateryna Stepanenko, a Russia researcher at the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War, said

This is not unique to Russia whatsoever. Canada is moving in exactly the same direction economically even if the political class pretends otherwise. Youth unemployment in Canada has exploded higher over the past several years while housing costs have become completely detached from wages. In many parts of Canada, young people cannot even dream of owning a home anymore. Rent consumes enormous portions of income. Debt burdens continue rising. Real wages have failed to keep pace with inflation.

Then, suddenly, military recruitment begins rising sharply. That is not a coincidence. Governments always recruit most successfully during periods of economic hopelessness because the military starts to look like one of the few stable paths remaining for many young men. Canada itself has seen military recruitment improve recently after years of severe shortages, particularly as economic uncertainty, geopolitical fears, and deteriorating job prospects spread among younger demographics. The political class frames this as patriotism. In reality, economics is always lurking underneath.

May be a graphic of text that says '"You violently defund their public schools and intentionally starve their neighborhoods, creating an invisible economic draft. "We offer young, disadvantaged Americans a glorious pathway out of poverty, providing free college tuition and the profound honor of serving the greatest military force on earth." Then you hold a college degree over their heads, forcing desperate teenagers to go blow up poor kids in the Middle East just so they can afford to read a goddamn book." NOAM CHOMSKY LINDSEY GRAHAM'
Great Depression

During the Great Depression, military enlistment surged globally because civilian economies collapsed. During the Great Recession in 2008, the United States military disproportionately recruited from poorer regions devastated by deindustrialization and debt. Recruiters never set up offices primarily in wealthy neighborhoods. They go where economic pain exists.

Russia is simply becoming more direct about it. The frightening part is how normalized this becomes during prolonged war cycles. First it begins with bonuses. Then debt relief. Then special privileges. Then prison recruitment. Russia has already moved through much of this progression during the Ukraine conflict. Wagner heavily recruited convicts, prisoners, migrants, and economically desperate foreigners from poorer countries throughout Africa and Asia.

Reports now show Russia recruiting vulnerable migrants and foreign workers aggressively because economically vulnerable populations are always easier to pressure into military service. Governments understand human desperation very well.

Meanwhile the political elites who advocate endless war rarely send their own children anywhere near the front lines. That has also been true throughout history. The burden falls overwhelmingly on working class young men who often see enlistment as their only remaining path toward stability, income, housing, education, or debt relief.

The war cycle feeds on economic despair because hopeless populations are easier to mobilize. That is one of the oldest lessons in history.