Trump Draws the Line: No Healthcare Bill Without Direct Payments to the People
President Trump rejects all proposals that fund insurance companies — calls for total realignment of healthcare power back to American citizens.
Trump detonated the healthcare debate with a blunt directive: if Congress wants his signature, the bill must send money straight to the people. No more subsidies to bloated insurance giants. No more corporate middlemen. Just direct power — and cash — back in citizens’ hands.
He didn’t mince words. In a Truth Social post, Trump called insurance companies “rich,” “fat,” and “thieves.” The ACA’s subsidy collapse is the regime’s mess — but Trump’s seizing it as a pivot point. His vision: Americans buy better plans on their own terms, free from cartel control.
⚔️ Don’t fight blind next week.
The next propaganda cycle is already being seeded.
The Ledger gives you the playbook before the first shot’s fired — so you can watch them spin in real time.
Teaser for this Sunday
➜ Upgrade before Sunday’s drop →
Trump Greenlights Only One Healthcare Path: Cash to the People
It’s not a policy debate — it’s a declaration of war.
President Trump just lit the fuse on the health care cartel. No middlemen. No backroom lobbies. No trillion-dollar slush pipelines. His Tuesday post wasn’t a proposal — it was a final warning:
No more feeding the insurance beasts. Direct payments or nothing.
Why now? ACA subsidies are set to vaporize by year-end. That means exploding premiums, collapsing coverage, and a fresh squeeze on working Americans. But instead of panicking, Trump’s seizing the moment — torching Obamacare’s legacy scaffolding while it’s weakest.
The regime’s spin will scream “deregulation” and “destabilization.” Translation: their puppet insurers are losing grip. And they know once Americans taste direct bargaining power, the whole rigged system burns.
This isn’t about wonky legislation. It’s about realigning power.
Trump’s plan shifts control from government-controlled exchanges to citizen-driven negotiation. It’s the health care version of pulling U.S. troops out of NATO — unthinkable for the old guard, but inevitable under America First.
Even some Democrats are nodding behind the curtain. Why? Because the base is boiling. Cassidy’s onboard. MAGA’s already there. And the old GOP playbook — “repeal and replace someday” — just got shredded on live TV.
Implications: Big Insurance just became Big Tobacco 2.0. And Trump is telling Congress: burn the bridge or be burned with it.
The people are watching. The clock is ticking.
Will Capitol Hill kneel to the cartel — or flip the switch?
Get it done. Now.
Inside Intel → Outside Noise
The operations you see playing out here each night start in The Ledger’s forecast window.
It’s where we decode the coordination before the media spin begins.
CIRCLE OF POWER
1. $1B Leap Into Nuclear Revival
The Donald Trump administration has green‑lit a $1 billion loan to restart the reactor at Three Mile Island — the infamous 1979 meltdown site.
The move isn’t nostalgia — it’s strategic. The loan targets “dispatchable, reliable electricity,” aims to power ~800,000 homes, and signals a full‑tilt return to strength in U.S. energy infrastructure.
Decode: Trump is rewinding the energy tyranny of the green‑tech beguiled bureaucracy. Big Oil, Big Gas, Big Nukes — they’re all back in play under “America First” dominance.
2. The Saudi Reboot: Re‑Alignment With Riyadh
During a high‑profile meeting at the White House, Trump welcomed Mohammed bin Salman with full state‑ceremony. He publicly vouched for MBS’s innocence in the Jamal Khashoggi killing — despite U.S. intelligence saying otherwise.
The agenda: defence agreements, U.S. F‑35s for Saudi Arabia, and a Saudi investment pledge of up to $1 trillion in U.S. industry (AI, tech, nuclear).
Decode: The globalists in the intel community freak out. America First sees Riyadh as a tactical ally — not a moral lecture subject. The old narrative of rights‑driven diplomacy dies here.
3. Questions Swirling Around the Trump Assassination Attempt
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt says Americans deserve full answers about what drove Thomas Crooks to attempt assassinating President Trump — pointing to uncovered online posts showing violent intent and the use of they/them pronouns.
Initial FBI reports claimed Crooks had no significant online presence; new findings contradict that. Leavitt stressed Trump himself is pushing for deeper briefings.
Decode: The deep state wants silence. The America First camp demands truth. This is a raw confrontation between transparency and institutional cover‑up.
Together with The Ledger
The System Didn’t Break — It Revealed Itself
When the shutdown hit, the agencies froze… but the infrastructure underneath kept moving.
Identity systems tightened, scoring models updated, and private platforms synchronized risk signals without waiting for a single directive.
If you want the part no platform will admit to — the real machinery behind the friction you felt — this week’s Ledger lays it out.
This isn’t a negotiation. It’s a line in the sand. Congress has its marching orders — pass a direct-pay bill or don’t bother showing up. MAGA’s not playing defense anymore. The insurance racket is over. Trump’s building a new system — people-powered, cartel-proof.
~ Scott 🇺🇸
PS: The same people who lied about COVID, rigged the markets, and buried the lab leak…
want you to trust Blue Cross with your life.
Not this time.
Don’t Read It Secondhand.
Every Sunday, The Ledger drops the full Command Brief — forecasts, power-maps, and narrative models for the week ahead.
Foresight beats outrage.







The entire Thomas Crooks debacle is ridiculous. The FBI obviously didn't do their job. Then they lied and covered up with the help of MSM and Biden's administration. The truth needs to be revealed so people know just how corrupt our government has become. Maybe they'll finally wake up, ditch MSM and vote Republican.
Small correction. First ACA is only 6.7% of the population. Second, current inflated subsidies are not used by working Americans. Mostly early retirees. People who are upper middle income. They would get a spike, as they should. Elderly and Medicare has gone up with inflation. No 400% of FPL. Those who actually need subsidy, the working poor, would still get. It was the Dems irresponsibly poor decision making that led to this. ACA has a working poor subsidy that isn’t going away. Only the inflated part that early retirees are using. Over 93% of the population isn’t using. That 93% has been paying, with no credit or subsidy. Thought Dems believed in equity