Just The Truth
Your No-BS Conservative Newsletter
⏱ 5-Minute Read • Monday Edition
Monday, June 22, 2026
⚡ Greenspan dies at 100 • U.S.–Iran agree to 60-day roadmap
★ Lead Story
The Maestro Takes His Final Bow: Alan Greenspan Dead at 100
Alan Greenspan, who ran the Federal Reserve for 18 years under four presidents and became the rare central banker known to ordinary Americans, died Monday morning at his Washington home. He was 100. His wife, NBC News correspondent Andrea Mitchell, confirmed he passed from complications of Parkinson's disease.
What to Know
- ▸ Ronald Reagan appointed him in 1987; he stayed on through George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and George W. Bush until 2006 — the second-longest Fed tenure in history.
- ▸ A libertarian Republican and onetime associate of "Atlas Shrugged" author Ayn Rand, he was hailed as the "Maestro" during the long boom of the 1990s.
- ▸ Critics later faulted his low-rate, light-regulation approach for helping inflate the 2008 housing crash; Greenspan himself admitted he had put too much faith in banks to police themselves.
The Perspective
Whatever you make of the man, Greenspan was a free-market true believer at the helm of the world's most powerful central bank for nearly two decades — and the prosperity of the '90s was real. He was also big enough to own his mistakes, which is more than most in Washington ever manage. The honest verdict isn't sainthood or villainy; it's that one man's faith in markets shaped the American economy for a generation, for better and for worse. We'll let history weigh the ledger.
Read the full story at NBC News.
★ The World Stage
Tense Start, Cautious Finish: U.S. and Iran Agree to a Roadmap
The first round of high-level U.S.–Iran talks wrapped early Monday at Switzerland's Burgenstock resort above Lake Lucerne. Mediators Qatar and Pakistan announced the two sides had agreed on a roadmap toward a final deal within 60 days, plus a new communication line meant to keep the Strait of Hormuz open and avoid incidents.
The Details
- ▸ Vice President JD Vance led the U.S. team; Iran's was led by parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf. Technical talks on the nuclear program, sanctions, and dispute resolution run the rest of the week.
- ▸ The opening was rocky. Trump warned online the U.S. would "hit Iran very hard again" over Hezbollah, and Tehran said it had again closed the Strait of Hormuz — the chokepoint for roughly 20% of the world's oil.
- ▸ Mediators called the progress "encouraging." Iran's foreign minister claimed movement on ending the fighting in Lebanon, restarting oil exports, and unfreezing Iranian assets.
The Perspective
A roadmap is not a deal, and a deal is not peace. Talking is still better than another shooting war, and getting Iran to the table at all is no small thing. But the same week's headlines — a presidential threat to bomb, a closed Strait of Hormuz — are a reminder of how thin the ice is. We'll judge this one by what actually gets signed in 60 days, not by the photo-op in the Alps. No pom-poms here.
Read the full story at NBC News.
★ The Trade War
Beijing Punches Back: China Sanctions 10 U.S. Defense Firms
China's Commerce Ministry on Monday barred Chinese companies from exporting "dual-use" goods — items with both civilian and military uses — to 10 American military-linked firms, including military-drone makers and rare-earth miners. It's retaliation for Washington adding Chinese tech giants to its own military blacklist.
The Details
- ▸ Earlier this month the Pentagon added Alibaba, Baidu, BYD, and NIO to its list of firms it says aid China's military modernization. Baidu calls the label "totally baseless."
- ▸ Separately, China's Finance Ministry barred government buyers from purchasing from 46 U.S. companies, among them defense heavyweight Lockheed Martin.
- ▸ The move lands barely a month after Trump met Xi Jinping in Beijing and the two pledged to cool tensions. Analysts call it largely symbolic — but the rare-earth angle is the part worth watching.
The Perspective
So much for the springtime thaw. The Beijing handshake was always going to be tested the first time real interests collided, and here we are. Symbolic or not, China holds genuine leverage over rare earths and the supply chains underneath our defense industry — which is exactly why "decouple and rebuild at home" beats "trust Beijing's goodwill" every time. Friendly summits are fine. Self-reliance is better.
Read the full story at the Associated Press.
★ Across the Pond
Starmer Out: Britain Set for Its Seventh Leader in a Decade
U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced Monday outside 10 Downing Street that he will resign, after an uprising inside his own center-left Labour Party. His exit clears the way for Britain's seventh prime minister in ten years.
The Takeaways
- ▸ Andy Burnham, the popular former mayor of Greater Manchester who only returned to Parliament last week, is the runaway favorite to succeed him and has confirmed he'll run.
- ▸ Starmer said he informed King Charles III and will stay on as caretaker until Labour selects a new leader.
- ▸ He swept into office less than two years ago in a landslide. The collapse since has been a stunning fall for Britain's governing left.
The Perspective
Two years from a landslide to the exit. Voters handed Labour the keys expecting competence and got revolving-door chaos instead — a familiar story when a governing party promises everything and delivers a stalled economy. There's a lesson here for politicians on both sides of the Atlantic: a mandate is a loan, not a gift, and the bill always comes due.
Read the full story at NBC News.
⚡ The Bottom Line
A giant of American capitalism passed on the same morning Washington sat across the table from Tehran and traded blows with Beijing — while a left-wing government across the Atlantic quietly imploded. Markets, diplomacy, and politics are all in motion at once, and the easy narratives won't survive contact with the next 60 days. We'll keep calling balls and strikes, win or lose. The truth doesn't take sides — and neither do we. That's just the truth.
"The truth isn't conservative or liberal. It's just the truth."
This newsletter presents news from a conservative perspective. We encourage seeking multiple sources.
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