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jeudi 12 mars 2026

I Want a President Who Takes Out our Enemies and Not One Who Sends our Enemies Billions of Dollars on Pallets in the Middle of the Night. Obama Was a Snake.

I Want a President Who Takes Out our Enemies and Not One Who Sends our Enemies Billions of Dollars on Pallets in the Middle of the Night. Obama Was a Snake.

 Obama handed over $1.7 billion in cash—pallets of it—to the world's leading state sponsor of terrorism. This wasn't some noble act of diplomacy; it was a dangerous payoff that emboldened Iran at the exact moment they were ramping up their nuclear ambitions and funding proxies to attack American interests.


While that money flowed straight into the regime's coffers, our enemies grew bolder. The same administration that called it a "settlement" conveniently ignored how it looked like ransom when American prisoners were released right after the cash arrived. Weakness invites aggression, and Iran took full advantage.

Contrast that with decisive leadership that took out Qasem Soleimani—the architect of so much American bloodshed. Strength deters. Cash bribes only buy more trouble. We deserve leaders who put America first, not those who bankroll our adversaries. 

The image sets up a split screen — Donald Trump left, Barack Obama right — under a headline that binds two ideas with a rope of outrage: “takes out our enemies” versus pallets of cash to enemies, “in the middle of the night,” finished with “Obama Was a Snake.” It’s politically potent and fact-adjacent, but the facts need sorting.

The pallet story is real in the narrow sense that, in January 2016, the Obama administration sent $400 million in foreign currency to Iran, followed by two more installments totaling $1.3 billion, to settle a decades-old arbitration claim over a failed arms deal from before the 1979 revolution. The money came from a U.S. fund used to resolve such claims. Critics, including Trump, said it looked like ransom because it happened around the same time Iran released American prisoners. Obama officials said the payments were timed deliberately — they’d withhold the money as leverage until the prisoners were freed — and they deny it was a ransom. Either way: it was payment of a disputed claim, not aid or a gift, and the cash format reflected sanctions-era banking restrictions.

“Takes out our enemies” is Trump’s brand — from the ISIS campaign to the Soleimani strike in his first term — and the headline uses it as a foil. Obama authorized the bin Laden raid, which counts. Both presidents combined force, deals, and sanctions; neither fits the pure archetype the meme sells.

And the “snake” line? That’s venting, not verifiable fact, and the whole frame elides a detail: the $1.7 billion was Iran’s money, frozen, then paid with interest to settle a legal claim. You can call the timing cynical and still note the headline’s arithmetic — pallets, night, enemies — is built for share-cards, not balance sheets. The pics are real; the moral is edited.

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