The Strait of Hormuz is effectively closed. For the past two months, this narrow waterway has been the scene of a dangerous standoff. Fewer than 15 ships now pass through each day — down from 125 to 140 in normal times.
The Chokepoint Crushing American Wallets
Result? Gas prices have exploded.
Across many states, regular gasoline now costs more than $5 a gallon. The national average sits above $4.40 and is still climbing. Every fill-up hits your family budget hard.
$1 Billion a Day — The Real Cost to You
Here’s the number that should anger every American: this shutdown is costing U.S. consumers and businesses **more than $1 billion every single day**.
Drivers alone burn roughly 370 million gallons of gasoline daily. The price spike above pre-crisis levels adds up fast. Add diesel, jet fuel, shipping costs, and higher prices for everything from groceries to Amazon deliveries — and the daily bill easily tops one billion dollars.
The Military-Industrial Complex’s Record Profits
While families tighten their belts, defense giants are celebrating.
Lockheed Martin, RTX, Northrop Grumman, and General Dynamics have seen their stock prices soar between 30% and 110% since February. New contracts for missiles, fighter jets, and naval escorts are pouring in. War has never been more profitable.
“War is a racket,” General Smedley Butler said nearly a century ago. In 2026, the racket is louder than ever.
Your Grocery Bill. Your Commute. Your Wallet.
This is not abstract foreign policy. This is your grocery bill. This is your morning commute. This is the $1 billion a day being pulled straight from American pockets and funneled into the bank accounts of weapons makers and oil executives.
Why Washington Keeps Doubling Down
The Strait of Hormuz carries one-fifth of the world’s oil. Its closure is the biggest energy shock since the 1970s. Yet instead of pushing hard for diplomacy, Washington sends more destroyers and more threats.
Iran refuses to reopen the strait without concessions. The U.S. answers with military muscle. And every extra day of this standoff means another billion dollars taken from your paycheck.
Time to Call It What It Is
This is a massive transfer of wealth from ordinary Americans to the military-industrial complex. Defense CEOs are posting record quarters while families in Ohio, Texas, and California choose between filling the tank and filling the fridge.
The next time a politician calls this “national security,” ask one simple question: If it’s so vital to American security, why are everyday Americans the ones paying the price at the pump while the weapons makers get richer?
The Strait of Hormuz is closed. Gas is over $5 a gallon. And the only people winning are the ones who profit from war.
The rest of us are left with the tab.
