Gas prices ticking up a few cents had the usual suspects hyperventilating on cable news, predicting economic doom and clutching their pearls like it was 2008 all over again. Meanwhile, Donald Trump walked up to the microphone Wednesday night and dropped a number so absurd it sounded like a punchline — except it was real.
The United States of America is now producing more oil and gas than Saudi Arabia and Russia combined.
Let that marinate for a second. The two countries most associated with global energy dominance — the kingdom that built cities out of crude money and the country that uses pipelines like chess pieces — and we’re outproducing both of them. Together. At the same time.
Drill Baby Drill Wasn’t a Bumper Sticker — It Was a Blueprint
Trump laid it out plainly during his address on the Iran conflict:
“Because of our ‘Drill Baby Drill’ program, America has plenty of gas. Under my leadership, we are the number one producer of oil and gas on the planet — without even discussing the millions of barrels that we’re getting from Venezuela.”
Without even discussing Venezuela. That’s the energy equivalent of saying you won the poker tournament and forgot to mention you also took the side pot.
And here’s where the geopolitics get interesting. While Iran was busy getting its military infrastructure turned into rubble during Operation Epic Fury, their final tantrum move was launching terror attacks against commercial oil tankers in the region. That’s what bumped gas prices up at home — not some failure of American energy policy, but a dying regime lashing out like a cornered rat.
Trump didn’t sugarcoat it:
“This short-term increase has been entirely the result of the Iranian regime launching deranged terror attacks against commercial oil tankers in neighboring countries that have nothing to do with the conflict.”
He then added the kicker everyone was thinking:
“This is proof that Iran can never be trusted with nuclear weapons.”
Hard to argue with that when their goodbye card to the world was blowing up oil tankers.
A Message to the Freeloaders
Trump also turned his attention to the countries wringing their hands over Strait of Hormuz oil shipments — many of whom, he pointedly noted, refused to lift a finger during the campaign against Iran. His advice came in two flavors, both vintage Trump.
“Number one: buy oil from the United States of America. We have plenty.”
“And number two: build up some delayed courage,” and “go to the Strait and just take it.”
The man literally told half the globe to either open their wallets or grow a spine. No diplomatic niceties. No State Department word salad. Just a guy telling freeloading nations to stop expecting America to babysit their energy supply while they sit on the sidelines criticizing how we do it.
He pointed out that the U.S. imports almost no oil through the Strait of Hormuz “and won’t be taking any in the future,” adding flatly, “We don’t need it. We haven’t needed it.”
The Price Drop Is Coming
For Americans watching the pump numbers with one eye squinted, Trump offered a timeline that should bring some relief. Once the conflict settles — and with Iran “essentially decimated, both militarily and economically” — the Strait reopens naturally.
“When this conflict is over, the Strait will open up naturally. They’re going to want to be able to sell oil because that’s all they have to try and rebuild. It will resume the flowing, and the gas prices will rapidly come back down.”
That’s not wishful thinking. That’s basic economics filtered through a president who actually understands leverage. Iran needs oil revenue to rebuild. The world needs the Strait flowing. Supply meets demand, prices drop. The hard part — dismantling Iran’s military capability — is already done.
Four years ago, the “experts” said energy independence was a fantasy cooked up by guys in hard hats. Now America is the undisputed heavyweight champion of global energy, producing more than the two biggest names in the game put together, telling nervous allies to buy American or figure it out themselves, and watching gas prices that spiked because of a foreign regime’s death rattle — not because of anything broken at home.
Trump didn’t just move the needle on energy. He snapped it off the gauge.
