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May 11, 2026 - Rubin Report - Dave Rubin
09:20
Unexpected Iran Escalation, Fetterman Sounds Alarm, Cruise Ship Quarantine | 5/11/26 FIRST LOOK

President Trump warns Iran of severe consequences after Tehran rejected a peace proposal, accusing the regime of 47 years of delay and proxy violence. Simultaneously, Senator John Fetterman breaks with his party to criticize Democrats for prioritizing anti-Trump messaging over solutions like inflation control. In a separate crisis, 17 Americans aboard the Hantavirus-stricken MV Hondius are evacuated to Nebraska's high-security quarantine center, where officials manage a 38% fatality rate virus distinct from COVID-19. These converging events highlight escalating geopolitical tensions and domestic political fractures while underscoring urgent public health challenges requiring unprecedented federal intervention. [Automatically generated summary]

Transcriber: CohereLabs/cohere-transcribe-03-2026, WAV2VEC2_ASR_BASE_960H, sat-12l-sm, script v26.04.01, and large-v3-turbo
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Washington Tehran Rhetoric Sharpens 00:06:08
dave rubin
Hey everybody, I'm Dave Rubin and this is First Look.
It's Monday, May 11th, 2026.
We've got a packed show for you today.
President Trump issues a major warning to Iran after Tehran refuses to discuss its nuclear program in the latest peace proposal.
Democrat Senator John Fetterman blasts his own party for obsessing over F-Trump messaging instead of offering solutions.
17 Americans stranded aboard the Hantavirus-stricken cruise ship Are now headed to a federal quarantine center in Nebraska.
Let's dive in.
We start overseas, where tensions between the United States and Iran are heating up once again after Tehran reportedly refused to discuss its nuclear program in the latest peace negotiations.
President Trump responded Sunday with a very blunt warning.
Hosting on Truth Social, Trump accused Iran of dragging negotiations out for decades while continuing to destabilize the region and manipulate world powers.
Trump wrote, Iran has been playing games with the United States and the rest of the world for 47 years.
Delay, delay, delay.
And then he escalated further.
Trump accused the regime of killing Americans through proxy attacks and roadside bombs, crushing internal protests, and overseeing the deaths of tens of thousands of Iranian dissidents.
He wrote, They will be laughing no longer.
Now, this latest blow up comes after Iran reportedly sent its response to the U.S. Peace proposal through Pakistani mediators, and according to multiple reports, Tehran again refused to seriously engage on the core issue, its nuclear program.
That remains Trump's red line no nuclear weapon, no endless stalling, no fake negotiations while uranium enrichment continues behind the scenes.
And the administration increasingly appears convinced that Iran is trying to buy time.
Remember, this follows months of escalating tensions, naval blockades in the Strait of Hormuz.
Seized Iranian cargo vessels, threats against U.S. bases in the Middle East, and ongoing disputes over enrichment and inspections.
At one point, Iran's own state media outlets were contradicting each other publicly, with different agencies giving completely different answers about whether Tehran would even participate in talks.
That chaos only reinforced the administration's belief that Iran is scrambling internally while trying to project strength externally.
Trump's message now is essentially the games are over.
And unlike previous administrations, this White House is making clear it's willing to apply sustained economic and military pressure until Tehran either changes course or faces even harsher consequences.
Now, politically, this is also becoming a defining contrast heading into the midterms.
Trump and Republicans are framing the issue as strength versus appeasement, deterrence versus delay, and peace through leverage instead of endless diplomatic theater.
Whether negotiations continue remains unclear, but one thing is obvious.
The rhetoric between Washington and Tehran is getting sharper by the day.
Now, to a pretty remarkable moment inside the Democratic Party, Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman is once again breaking with fellow Democrats, this time openly criticizing his own party for building entire campaigns around hatred of Donald Trump instead of offering actual solutions.
Speaking with Bill Maher on real time, Fetterman said, My colleagues, whether for the Senate or the House, they're literally running on F. Trump.
He added, they have campaign commercials with that message.
It's absurd.
And honestly, that's probably one of the most accurate things a Democrat has said in years.
Because for a huge chunk of the modern Democratic Party, opposition to Trump has basically become the entire platform.
Not inflation, not crime, not immigration, not the economy, just Orange Man Bad.
Now, Fetterman made clear he's still a Democrat.
In fact, he pointed out he votes with Democrats roughly 93% of the time and rejected speculation that he could switch parties.
But he also admitted something many Democrats don't want to say out loud.
The party has become intolerant of any internal disagreement.
Fetterman said, I thought we were supposed to be a big tent party.
Instead, he says he's essentially been punished for expressing even mildly independent opinions.
And one example he gave was surprisingly revealing.
He mocked the left wing outrage over Trump's proposed White House ballroom expansion.
Fetterman said, like the ballroom.
I don't care about the ballroom.
Bill Maher immediately jumped in, agreeing, it's so stupid.
Then Maher added something that caught attention.
Referencing the recent assassination attempt at the White House correspondence dinner, Maher joked, America probably does need a ballroom.
Now step back for a second.
This is Bill Maher and John Fetterman, two liberals, openly admitting the Democratic Party is becoming consumed by performative outrage and anti Trump obsession.
And politically, Republicans see this as a huge opening.
Because while Democrats focus on Ballroom outrage, Trump obsession, celebrity activism, and resistance theater, voters are still dealing with border security, inflation, housing costs, crime, energy prices, and increasingly, even some Democrats are admitting their party sounds completely disconnected from normal people.
Fetterman isn't becoming MAGA, but he is saying something many voters already feel.
A political movement built entirely around hating one man eventually runs out of ideas.
Hantavirus Ship Quarantine Update 00:03:07
dave rubin
And finally, an update on the growing health situation aboard the Hantavirus stricken cruise ship MV Hondius.
Seventeen Americans who remain stranded aboard the vessel are now expected to be evacuated to a federal quarantine facility in Nebraska in the coming days.
The ship docked in Tenerife on Sunday, beginning what officials describe as a week long evacuation process involving passengers from more than a dozen countries.
The Americans are expected to be transported aboard a U.S. government medical repatriation flight.
Directly to the National Quarantine Unit in Nebraska.
That facility, operated by Nebraska Medicine and the University of Nebraska Medical Center, is actually the only federally funded quarantine unit in the entire country, and it's built specifically for high risk infectious disease situations.
The unit includes 20 isolated single occupancy rooms, private bathrooms, negative air pressure systems, special biocontainment protocols, dedicated infectious disease staff, Rooms even include Wi Fi and exercise equipment for extended stays.
Now, health officials are trying very hard to prevent public panic here.
Acting CDC Director Jay Bhattacharya appeared on CNN Sunday and repeatedly emphasized this is not COVID.
He stressed that hantavirus outbreaks historically have been successfully contained and said there is no evidence this will turn into a global pandemic scenario.
Still, the numbers are serious.
At least three passengers have died.
Five others became critically ill, and Hantavirus carries a fatality rate approaching 38%.
The World Health Organization has recommended a 42 day isolation period for passengers exposed aboard the ship, which originally departed Argentina back on April 1st.
Now, interestingly, the Americans won't necessarily be forced to stay in Nebraska the entire time.
Officials say passengers may eventually be allowed to return home, but only if they agree to six additional weeks of monitoring afterward.
The CDC is also deploying teams to Offutt Air Force Base to oversee assessments and coordinate the arrivals.
And once again, this is another reminder of how quickly infectious disease concerns can create global anxiety after what the world experienced during COVID.
The difference this time, at least according to health officials, is that the government is trying to contain the outbreak aggressively early while also avoiding the fear and overreaction that defined much of the pandemic era.
Still, for the Americans stuck aboard that ship, the uncertainty is far from over.
And that's your first look this Monday.
Quick recap.
President Trump issues a hardline warning to Iran after Tehran refuses to discuss its nuclear program.
John Fetterman blasts Democrats for building campaigns entirely around Trump messaging.
And 17 Americans aboard the Hantavirus cruise ship prepare for federal quarantine in Nebraska.
We'll keep following all of it.
I'm Dave Rubin.
Thanks for starting your day with First Look.
See you tomorrow.
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