Author Topic: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces  (Read 983991 times)

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #2400 on: October 27, 2024, 06:37:30 PM »
Thank you.


Crafty_Dog

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ccp

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Peanut
« Reply #2403 on: November 04, 2024, 07:32:05 AM »
reminds me of the day I am sitting in front of my TV and happen to notice something sitting on top of the curtain rack.  I am looking and wondering what in tarnation it is as it did not move.

I wasn't sure if real or what.  So I got up off my derriere and got close and yes it was a squirrel.

We called someone to get it out of the house because despite opening the door it would not run out.  Instead it ran to a few windows and chewed some of the wooden sills.   Finally we got it to run out.  No thought of euthanizing and checking for rabies even entered our minds.  It got into the house through the chimney.

As for Peanut -  I don't get why they just could not let the man keep the squirrel which clearly was not rabid and maybe pay a fine and apply for the license.

What was the harm?

How stupid.

Darn bureaucrats.   

Like Justice Gorsuch's book describes - too many laws - to many ways anyone could be charged with something.

Awful.  No end is sight from the government SS .


Crafty_Dog

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #2404 on: November 04, 2024, 07:40:44 AM »
Note the face of the woman bureaucrat who ran the operation.  Straight out of Auschwitz.


Crafty_Dog

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #2406 on: November 05, 2024, 06:59:24 AM »
That is an amazing collection of photographs.

Body-by-Guinness

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #2407 on: November 05, 2024, 08:27:46 AM »
Rodent lives matter.

I like this blogger’s writing skills and ability to follow a thread across 1200 words or more while dropping well stated paragraphs like this one along the way:

“Put a Kamala ad alongside a Trump ad and the difference tells you everything. The first is a product of a committee of people who have never met a real person in their entire lives. It’s actors hired to play ordinary people, mouthing lines written by purple haired twenty somethings who have never had a real job. It hilariously presents a complete misreading of the people it opposes, and an equally cartoonish misreading of the people it supports. This is what you get when your ideology never bumps into reality.”

The entire piece is well worth a read:

https://jupplandia.substack.com/p/why-even-the-squirrel-matters?r=2k0c5&triedRedirect=true

Body-by-Guinness

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Of Racist Dixieland Jihads, Appalachian Goblins’ Dens, & Bannon’s Revenge
« Reply #2408 on: November 06, 2024, 09:41:38 PM »
This is a wide ranging piece with plenty of links leading to other fine rabbit holes to explore. Note the Bannon interlude and his promise of a deep dive into all the indications of a steal in 2020 (81 million votes cast in the middle of a pandemic, compared to 64 million on the 5th? Fat chance, something ain’t right with those and other numbers).

Indeed, what—given the increased Republican poll watching/vote integrity efforts—if a cheat was still attempted and say ⅓ of the 2020-2024 delta (call it 6 million) of Harris votes dropped by dead people, illegals, & fake people at fake address in blue states for Commander Cackles and the down ticket were subtracted? Trump ends up with 350+ Electoral College votes, a filibuster proof senate emerges, one that could confirm EVERY judge Trump puts forth, while the house remains firmly in, not republican hands, but Trump coalition hands, perhaps to a point where the usual midterm losses doesn’t change control of either chamber? Sh!t oh dear, a lot of folks on the left would be embracing seppuku as the only way to exit the field with a degree of grace and dignity.

Bannon had some time set aside to do a lot of thinking on the topic. If he delivers on 2020 it could prove seismic.

That’s just one interesting avenue this piece presents to mull. Highly recommend clicking on link and vids, particularly the vids where more astute Dem talking heads drill down into the schooling they just endured and speak to it as the rest of the panel sits in stunned silence, clearly hoping of any sort of segue that will allow them to get back to blaming the victims in flyover country for being so gauche about tampons in men’s rooms et al:

https://simplicius76.substack.com/p/election-aftermath-notes-on-the-grand?r=2k0c5&triedRedirect=true

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #2409 on: November 07, 2024, 05:53:10 AM »
As is usually the case with Simplicius, the read engages with an unusual mix of the deeply perceptive, the glib, and . . .  whatever it is that we call his final paragraph:

"In the meantime, I’ll leave you with the unconventional words of imminent economist Sergei Glazyev on today’s occasion:

Sergey Glazyev:

The ostriches are running away, Pax Americana is ending. The Leo Strauss sect, which ruled the USA and planned to establish a world dictatorship of the chosen few, is losing the election. The US deep state has no choice either - a repeat of the falsification will lead to a civil war and the collapse of the country. Pragmatists who recognize the fact of the transition to a new world economic order are coming to power in the USA. Brzezinski’s strategy of defeating Russia, destroying Iran and isolating China, as expected, only strengthened China, which has become a global leader. Together with India, it will form a new bipolar center of the new world economic system. The USA can integrate into it as another center of the world economy if it abandons imperialism and stops the global hybrid war. It is in the US national interest that Trump liberate the US from the ostrich [Straussian] sect that has saddled it. Bringing Washington’s policies in line with the US national interest will entail poisoning Europe and the fall of the anti-human traitorous regimes in Germany and France. As we predicted, the world hybrid war, started by the US power-financial elite for world domination in 2001 with the attack of the US intelligence services on the Twin Towers in New York, will end next year with the universal recognition of its defeat and the completion of the transition to a new world economic order. The world will become polycentric and polycurrency, the significance of national sovereignty and international law will be restored."

objectivist1

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Greenfield: American Uprising
« Reply #2410 on: November 07, 2024, 06:09:01 AM »
American Uprising

Tue, 5 Nov 2024 11:40 PM PST by Daniel Greenfield


This wasn’t an election. It was a revolution.

It’s midnight in America. The day before million of Americans got up and stood in front of the great iron wheel that had been grinding them down. They stood there even though the media told them it was useless. They took their stand even while all the chattering classes laughed and taunted them.

They were fathers who couldn’t feed their families anymore. They were mothers who couldn’t afford health care. They were workers whose jobs had been sold off to foreign countries. They were sons who didn’t see a future for themselves. They were daughters afraid of being murdered by the “unaccompanied minors” flooding into their towns. They took a deep breath and they stood.

They held up their hands and the great iron wheel stopped.

The Great Blue Wall crumbled. The states fell one by one right down to Pennsylvania.  The working class that had been overlooked and trampled on for so long got to its feet. It rose up against its oppressors and the rest of the nation, from coast to coast, rose up with it.

They fought back against their jobs being shipped overseas while their towns filled with migrants that got everything while they got nothing. They fought back against being told that they had to watch what they say. They fought back against being held in contempt because they wanted to work for a living and take care of their families.

They fought and they won.

This wasn’t a vote. It was an uprising. Like the ordinary men chipping away at the Berlin Wall, they tore down an unnatural thing that had towered over them. And as they watched it fall, they marveled at how weak and fragile it had always been. And how much stronger they were than they had ever known.

Who were these people? They were leftovers and flyover country. They didn’t talk right or think right. They had the wrong ideas, the wrong clothes and the ridiculous idea that they still mattered.

They couldn’t change anything. A thousand politicians and pundits had talked of getting them to adapt to the inevitable future. Instead they got in their pickup trucks and drove out to vote.

And they changed everything.

Americans were told that walls couldn’t be built and factories couldn’t be opened. That treaties couldn’t be unsigned and wars couldn’t be won. It was impossible to ban Muslim terrorists from coming to America or to deport the illegal aliens turning towns and cities into gangland territories. It was all impossible. And they did the impossible. They turned the world upside down.

It’s midnight in America. CNN is weeping. MSNBC is wailing.  It wasn’t supposed to happen. The same machine that crushed the American people for two straight terms, the mass of government, corporations and non-profits that ran the country, was set to win.

Instead the people stood in front of the machine. They blocked it with their bodies. They went to vote even though the polls told them it was useless. They looked at the empty factories and barren farms. They drove through the early cold. They waited in line. They came home to their children to tell them that they had done their best for their future. They bet on America. And they won.

They won improbably. And they won amazingly.

They were tired of seeing their America disappear. And they stood up and fought back. This was their last hope. Their last chance to be heard.

The media had the election wrong all along. This wasn’t about personalities. It was about the impersonal. No one will ever interview all those men and women. We will never see all their faces. But they are us and we are them. They came to the aid of a nation in peril. They did what real Americans have always done. They did the impossible.

America is a nation of impossibilities. We exist because our forefathers did not take no for an answer. Not from kings or tyrants. Not from the elites who told them that it couldn’t be done.

The day when we stop being able to pull of the impossible is the day that America will cease to exist.

Today is not that day. Today fifty million Americans did the impossible.

Midnight has passed. A new day has come. And everything is about to change.

« Last Edit: November 07, 2024, 06:58:07 AM by Crafty_Dog »
"You have enemies?  Good.  That means that you have stood up for something, sometime in your life." - Winston Churchill.

Body-by-Guinness

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #2411 on: November 07, 2024, 10:16:07 AM »
As is usually the case with Simplicius, the read engages with an unusual mix of the deeply perceptive, the glib, and . . .  whatever it is that we call his final paragraph:

"In the meantime, I’ll leave you with the unconventional words of imminent economist Sergei Glazyev on today’s occasion:

Sergey Glazyev:

The ostriches are running away, Pax Americana is ending. The Leo Strauss sect, which ruled the USA and planned to establish a world dictatorship of the chosen few, is losing the election. The US deep state has no choice either - a repeat of the falsification will lead to a civil war and the collapse of the country. Pragmatists who recognize the fact of the transition to a new world economic order are coming to power in the USA. Brzezinski’s strategy of defeating Russia, destroying Iran and isolating China, as expected, only strengthened China, which has become a global leader. Together with India, it will form a new bipolar center of the new world economic system. The USA can integrate into it as another center of the world economy if it abandons imperialism and stops the global hybrid war. It is in the US national interest that Trump liberate the US from the ostrich [Straussian] sect that has saddled it. Bringing Washington’s policies in line with the US national interest will entail poisoning Europe and the fall of the anti-human traitorous regimes in Germany and France. As we predicted, the world hybrid war, started by the US power-financial elite for world domination in 2001 with the attack of the US intelligence services on the Twin Towers in New York, will end next year with the universal recognition of its defeat and the completion of the transition to a new world economic order. The world will become polycentric and polycurrency, the significance of national sovereignty and international law will be restored."

I took that 'graph as a tongue in cheek grasp of the ironic, but don't know this blogger well enough to be sure of that assessment. He does have numerous fabulous turns of phrases in his piece and, as noted, his well sourced links are also worth a dive into.
« Last Edit: November 07, 2024, 11:53:02 PM by Body-by-Guinness »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #2412 on: November 07, 2024, 02:22:57 PM »
I'm a subscriber.

And absolutely the man can turn a phrase!

The military specificity of his Uke coverage is unusually deep, not necessarily honest, and certainly pro-Russian.  When Israel comes up he is quite anti-semitic. I showed some of his stuff to some special friends of mine and they have asked me to share it with them.  If one is up to spotting his pro-Russian psyops, he can do a very, very good job of puncturing lies we tell ourselves.  Hard to picture one man assembling what he regularly assembles.  I wonder if he is financed and sourced by the Russians.

For example, let's look at the closing paragraph once again.

"Brzezinski’s strategy of defeating Russia, destroying Iran and isolating China, as expected, only strengthened China, which has become a global leader."

Carter's NSC advisor?!?

No, it was Kissinger-Nixon who peeled China away from Russia, and it was Clinton or Bush 43 (IIRC) who brought China into the WTO organization-- which is where it really took off. 

"As we predicted, the world hybrid war, started by the US power-financial elite for world domination in 2001 with the attack of the US intelligence services on the Twin Towers in New York,"

Seriously?!?

He is super bright, super disingenuous, very good at puncturing our own lies, and probably on the Russian payroll.  By all means read- I certainly do-- but let we the reader beware.



Body-by-Guinness

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Change Resistant Resistance
« Reply #2413 on: November 09, 2024, 09:27:25 AM »
Not only are their positions, as Turley points out, unpopular, but Trump would have to be quite naive not to be well prepared for what he’s already endured:

'Second Resistance to Trump' has already begun, but it won't work so well this time
Democrats prepare for Trump resistance
•The Hill News / by Jonathan Turley / Nov 9, 2024 at 10:50 AM

The single most common principle of recovery programs is that the first step is to admit that you have a problem.

That first step continues to elude the politicians and pundits who unsuccessfully pushed lawfare and panic politics for years. That includes prosecutors like New York Attorney General Letitia James and politicians like Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker, who affirmed this week that they will be redoubling, not reconsidering, their past positions.

For its part, The Washington Post quickly posted an editorial titled "The second resistance to Trump must start now." They may, however, find the resistance more challenging both politically and legally this time around.

It is important to note at the outset that there is no reason Democratic activists should abandon their values just because they lost this election. Our system is strengthened by passionate and active advocacy.

Rather, it is the collective fury and delirium of the post-election protests that was so disconcerting. Pundits lashed out at the majority of voters, insisting that the election established that half of the nation is composed of racists, misogynists or domination addicts who long to submit to tyranny.

Others blamed free speech and the fact that social media allows "disinformation" to be read by ignorant voters. In other words, the problem could not possibly be themselves. It was, rather, the public, which refused to listen.

That does not bode well for the Democratic Party. As someone raised in a liberal politically active family in Chicago, I had hoped for greater introspection after this election blowout.

Ordinarily, recovery can begin with "a terrible experience" when someone hits rock bottom.

After a crushing electoral defeat and the loss of the White House and likely both houses of Congress, one would think that Democrats would be ready for that first step to recovery. However, those hoping for a new leaf on the left do not understand the true addictive hold of rage.

In my recent book, “The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage," I explore rage and our long history of rage politics. There is a certain release that comes with rage in allowing people to do and say things that you would never do or say. People rarely admit it, but they like it. It is the ultimate high produced by the lowest form of political discourse.

Over the course of the last eight years, the U.S. has become a nation of rage addicts.

For months, Democratic leaders denounced Donald Trump and his supporters as fascists and neo-Nazis. President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and others suggested that democracy itself was about to die unless Democrats were kept in power.

Just before the election, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul called those voting for Trump "anti-American." By Hochul's measure, over half of the American electorate is now "anti-American."

James is the face of lawfare. She may have done more to reelect Trump than anyone other than the president himself. She ran on nailing Trump on something, anything. In New York, she was joined by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg in this ill-conceived effort. They fulfilled the narrative of a weaponized legal system. Every new legal action seemed to produce another surge in polling for Trump.

Yet there James was, soon after the election, with another press conference promising again to unleash the powers of her office to stop Trump's policies.

Then there was Pritzker, doing the community theater version of "The Avengers" and declaring, “You come for my people, you come through me.”

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy (D) added that he too will "fight to the death" against Trump's agenda.

Rather than lower the rhetoric, these rage-addicts ran out for another hit.

Our prior periods of rage politics were largely ended by the public in major election shifts like the one this month. Things, however, are different this time around both politically and legally. The problem for the resistance is the very democracy that they claimed to be saving.

Democrats lost after opposing policies supported by an astonishing share of the public at a time of deep political division. That effort included opposing voter ID laws favored by 84 percent of the public, among other things.

They are now committed to opposing policies central to this election blowout, including deportations of illegal immigrants, which is favored in some polls by two-thirds of Americans.

Likewise, Democrats have already doubled down on attacks on free speech, including blaming their loss on the absence of sufficient censorship. On MSNBC, host Mika Brzezinski blamed the loss in part on "massive disinformation." Yet, according to some polls, free speech ranked as high as second among issues on Election Day.

According to CNN, Trump's performance was the best among young people (18-29 years old) in 20 years, the best among Black voters in 48 years, and the best among Hispanic voters in more than 50 years.

Harris actually lost a bit of support with women, and Trump won handily among some groups of women.

None of that seems to matter this time. We have an alliance of political media and academic interests wholly untethered to the views of most of the public. Yet, with both houses of Congress under Republican control, the investigations and impeachment efforts that hounded Trump throughout his first term will be less of a threat in his second term.

For that reason, the center of gravity of the "second resistance" will shift to Democratic prosecutors like James, Bragg and Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, who was just reelected.

Various Democratic governors are also pledging to thwart Trump's policies despite the results of the election.

The "second resistance" will try to use state power to oppose the very issues and policies that led to this historic political shift. That means that there will be a legal shift in the focus of litigation to inherent federal powers versus state powers. That battle will favor the Trump administration.

In fairness to these Democratic politicians, they are certainly free to go to the courts, as Republicans did under Biden to argue for limitations on federal powers. But the promise of California Gov. Gavin Newsom to "Trump-proof" the state is easier to make rhetorically than it will be to keep legally.

Indeed, Trump will be able to cite a curious ally in this fight: Barack Obama. It was Obama who successfully swatted down state efforts to pursue their own policies and programs on immigration enforcement. Obama insisted that state laws were preempted in the area and the Supreme Court largely agreed in its 2012 decision in Arizona v. U.S.

Congress may even seek to tie the receipt of federal funds to states cooperating with federal mandates. For this reason, Democrats, who campaigned on the promise to end the filibuster for the good of democracy, suddenly became firm believers in that Senate rule right around 2:30 a.m. last Wednesday.

As the majority of the country walks away from the party shaking their heads, many activists are left only with their rage. Instead of reappraising the years of far-left orthodoxy and intolerance, some are calling to tear down the system or take drastic individual actions, including for women to break up with their boyfriends and husbands or to cut off their hair.

They will actually keep their rage and dump their relationships. Now that really is an addiction.

Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law at George Washington University. He is the author of “The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage."

https://thehill.com/opinion/judiciary/4982093-liberal-rage-addiction-trump/

Body-by-Guinness

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The Obama Invisible Machine Meets Egalitarian Creative Destruction
« Reply #2414 on: November 13, 2024, 01:54:31 PM »
There are significant elements of this essay I disagree with—the author’s faith in “creative destruction” as a moderating dynastic force strikes me as wishful and unpredictable, for one—but his dissection of Obama’s invisible hand schtick is worth mulling:


How Trump crushed Obama’s legacy
The president-elect rides the cowboy spirit

'In one night, the Obama machine, which he built on the model of the Chicago Democratic Party machine, and which he used to help him run the country, including the prestige institutions and the press, was melting down.' (Photo: ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images)
DEMOCRATIC PARTYDONALD TRUMP JRKAMALA HARRISPOLITICSREPUBLICAN PARTYUSUS ELECTION
 
 
David Samuels
NOVEMBER 8, 2024   11 MINS
It was long past midnight in Livingston, Montana, when Donald Trump finally stood up to address the nation as President-elect of the United States, having won the landslide victory that had eluded him in his successful run in 2016 and again in his re-election bid in 2020. This time, the American people had overwhelmingly voted for change. They had voted overwhelmingly for Trump.

As a patriotic American, and as a working journalist who believes in the sanctity of that role, I should note here that the only vote I’ve ever cast in a presidential election was for Willie Nelson, the country and western star and a symbol of reconciliation between rednecks and hippies. Still, I was eager to hear what Trump would say. To be more accurate, given my level of inebriation in sub-freezing Montana weather, with snow-globe snow gently falling outside the windows of a local bar, I was eager to mix the some whiskey with the tonalities of America’s greatest living bullshit artist and teller of tall tales. Trump’s voice is a powerful source of connection to the American literary and comic tradition, going back to the Rat Pack and to Mark Twain. I was ready to hear his magnificent instrument resonate with the promise of a better future, a future filled with laughter — and joy, even.

At 3am, West Palm Beach time, Trump’s large family stood with him onstage looking chipper and attractive. They were joined there by the celebrity validators that made Trump’s third run for the White House seem less angry and more inclusive than his prior one-man shows.


At 78, Trump’s relentless pitchman’s energy is at once diminished, and at the same more genial. And no wonder. Since his loss, in 2020, when he claimed that the election was stolen from him — and his opponents claimed that he tried to seize power through illegal means — Trump had been subjected to a whole-of-society assault by the American elite that would have killed most men 20 years younger, including those who don’t eat cheeseburgers most days for lunch. After 116 indictments, an armed raid on his home, the jailing of his business associates, and the looming threat of bankruptcy, followed by two and even three in-person rallies a day for the better part of a year, which led to him being shot in the head by a would-be assassin, the fact that Trump is still standing upright, let alone greeting a crowd as President-elect, is clearly a miracle – the biggest miracle since the Resurrection of Our Lord Jesus Christ, I can hear Trump saying. Now, he is about to speak. The TV above the bar remains silent.

“Honey, have you ever been in a bar before?” the bartender is asking me. For the past 10 minutes or so, we’ve been politely going back and forth about whether she can turn up the volume on the bar’s television set. All I can hear around me as Trump starts to speak is the noise of a late Tuesday night at the Wagon Wheel.

Sure, I’ve been in plenty of bars before, I answer. “Well, then you know that politics is a subject that men get angry over, and I don’t want that in my bar,” the waitress answers matter-of-factly. “You can read the captions on the TV.”

As sensible as her precautions might seem, there’s an undertone to her replies that reminds me that I am in a town, and not in the countryside. Even out here in the West, in a solid red state that epitomises cowboy culture, it is the divide between urban and exurban places, not the division between so-called red and blue states, that is culturally defining. People living in Brooklyn Heights, or in Austin, Texas or in Missoula, Montana or in Grand Rapids, Iowa, all tend to have more in common with each other than they do with people living even a mere 20 miles away.

“For fuck’s sake, this is history,” I suggest, as I watch Trump’s lips moving. “It’s not politics. Everyone can all put their prejudices aside for five minutes s and hear the man.” She purses her lips, and signals it’s a no-go. Then she offers me a free seltzer.

“We must protect our geniuses, protect our super-geniuses”, the caption-writer translates, as Trump’s lips form grandiloquent and hilarious phrases introducing Elon Musk and his love for rockets. “We have so few of them.”

Trump is clearly one. He’s an American genius, an original of a type that began with P.T. Barnum, and also includes Elon Musk. But neither Barnum nor Musk could ever become President twice, and defeat the entire American power structure. I wish to God I could hear him speak. After overcoming 100+ indictments, and having his X account revoked, the man deserves to have his moment here, in this bar.

I don’t need to hear Trump’s stunned-looking critics in the Party commentariat speak, though. The expressions on their pallid faces say it all. They are reckoning with the extent of their loss, which is turn related to their collective sense of self-importance — which is belied both by tonight’s result and by their viewership numbers. Having cratered public trust in their profession over the past decade by routinely lying to their audience on behalf of the government, which they identified in turn with the Democratic Party, the country’s self-identified defenders of democracy can fume all they want about Trump’s authoritarian, anti-democratic, fascist, Hitlerian leanings. The rest of America is as deaf to their blather as I am.

Praising Elon Musk, the country’s most successful technologist, Trump looks more like an avuncular Caribbean vacation package or waterbed salesman than a would-be Hitler. Meanwhile, party hacks like Joy Reid and the political consultants turned “commentators” like David Axelrod, along with supposed “straight news” types like Jake Tapper of CNN, who had all long ago become indistinguishable from each other, by virtue of drinking the Party Kool-Aid are waving their hands at the cameras like they were calling for smelling salts. But once lost, the trust of an audience is hard to win back.

Trump has also lost a step or two himself. His speeches, once gorgeous arias of invective, innuendo and insult comedy, delivered with the snappy timing of a Vegas Rat Pack headliner, have been transformed into rambling arabesques, like the musings of a slightly dotty family patriarch at the Thanksgiving table. Let us bow our heads, while Loopy Uncle Donald tells us about the deal he made with a Saudi Prince on a golf course. Then everyone can eat more pumpkin pie.


“Trump has also lost a step or two himself.”
Trump had also learned a trick or two along the way, though. He graciously shares the stage, and allows the importance and accomplishments of others to validate his own role as MC. His timing clearly couldn’t have been better. Five years of Covid laws, a stagnant economy, direct and indirect government censorship of social media, official lying and gaslighting on every subject from trans surgeries to the efficacy of masking to the startling numbers of illegal immigrants entering the country to the spectacle of a dottering Joe Biden being barely able to remember his own name, had left most of the country dispirited and ready for change.

As the evening ends, Trump and the political movement he founded will likely control not just the White House but also the Senate, the House, and also the Supreme Court, giving Trump an actual, real-world chance to fulfill his mandate to Make America Great Again. Even though, after a decade of near-constant repetition of the slogan by adherents and detractors, no one can say with any real certainty what it now means.

* * *

As it turns out, the American people are still allowed to vote, regardless of whether their betters decry their choices as racist, sexist, short-sighted, and above all anti-democratic. It’s a paradox that the country’s genius-level elites routinely fail to acknowledge, because they are all profoundly in agreement. We must protect our democracy from those evil anti-democratic forces, American voters, who vote for Donald Trump against the expert guidance of their betters, meaning us.

Meanwhile, the lurching of an increasingly overbearing and at the same time increasingly anarchic and incompetent American state had managed to alarm many Americans who were previously more alarmed by Trump. Over the past weeks, they have been turning out in larger numbers than anyone had imagined — defying the expressed preferences and instructions of the American’ elite’s chief tutelary figure, Barack Obama, who had campaigned very publicly and hard for Kamala Harris, often overshadowing the candidate herself. Obama’s role in the Harris campaign was truthfully less strange than the fact that the former President somehow remained in Washington after his time in the White House was over, instead taking meetings in his Kalorama mansion, which is hardly the most valuable entry in his bulging portfolio of luxury properties — which also includes high Gilded Age mansions in Hawaii and Martha’s Vineyard. But it was surely the most important, serving as the centre of his unprecedented Shadow Presidency.

As the leader of the Democratic Party, Obama was hardly a pretender to power in Washington. Rather, between 2008 and the evening of 5 November 2024, he was usually the foremost power in the land. After serving two elected terms in the White House, Obama then set up and captained the so-called “Resistance” to Trump — an activity that was contrary to all prior American norms and practices. After Trump left, Obama stayed in Washington and continued his role as unelected Party Leader during what had been advertised as the Biden Presidency.

Obama’s method of avoiding scrutiny from the pliant DC press was entirely in character, alternately drawing back into the shadows and then, out of whatever ego weakness, announcing that he was the true mover of events. Free from normative oversight or responsibility, he and his retainers could also avoid answering questions about the size or sources of his personal fortune, which was rumoured to amount to somewhere between $500 million and $1 billion. As a private citizen, Obama didn’t have to answer questions. He could have it both ways — state power, with no public responsibility.

Until he misstepped. By compelling Biden to withdraw in favour of Harris, who turned out to be an even worse candidate than a senile old man who had begun to resemble a badly taxidermied deer, Obama broke the unspoken agreement that had put him beyond scrutiny. Disappearing the sitting President from the Democratic Party ticket against his will, for reasons that were obviously contrary to what the press had been telling Americans about Biden’s incredibly acute mental functioning up, and replacing him with a candidate that no one in the party had actually voted for, required some sort of comment, however brief. It made it impossible, if only for a week or two, to maintain the fiction that Obama was simply living in Washington DC while staying out of politics. If Biden was senile, then who was actually running the country? Who had enough clout to order the President’s removal from the ticket?

The answer in both cases was Obama. And now he was on the hook not only for Kamala Harris, but retroactively for the more general mess that he and his operatives had helped to make of the country. Everywhere from Harvard University, his alma mater, where he helped install a repeat plagiarist as the University’s President, to the Middle East, which went up in flames the moment he was able to re-animate his Iran Deal, which appeared to be even stupider — if not as expensive — as George W. Bush’s determination to transform Afghanistan and Iraq into Western-style democratic societies at the point of a gun, the Party Leader’s Midas Touch-in-reverse was evident, even if no one ever breathed a single word of criticism.

Yet Americans, of all races and creeds, felt themselves to be living in a dystopian version of Alice in Wonderland, controlled by an unseen hand — and they didn’t like it. If the elite pollsters and expert predictors who had failed to foresee a Trump win had familiarised themselves with American history, instead of parroting the talking points of Obama and his operatives, they would have seen a country eager for a renewal of the freedoms that the vast majority of Americans embrace as their birthright.

Seeing Americans as one people, with a common culture and character, shaped by a common history, is not something that America’s new elites know how to do, though. From kindergarten on, they are taught otherwise. Ivy League universities, the crucible in which the new class has been forged, base admissions and hiring decisions not on measures of objective performance, but on their ranking in the ever-shifting hierarchies of Party-sanctioned identity groups. The ability to sort Americans into bureaucratic categories like BIPOC, MENA, LGBTQ+ and other alphabet soup constructions is in fact the defining skill of Obama-era elites. It signifies mastery of in-group codes that help the Democratic Party manage its own top-down constituencies, which are regimented by political operatives and NGO organisers, paid for by billionaire foundations, and embodied in bureaucratic regulations, executive orders, census categories and other legally-binding schemes meant to overcome historical American notions of equality. That’s how the party machine operates.

Now, in one night, the Obama machine, which he built on the model of the Chicago Democratic Party machine, and which he used to run the country, including the prestige institutions and the media, through a combination of bureaucratic capture and social pressure, accentuated by control of large tech platforms, was finally melting down. No wonder the press was in shock. None of the lines that they had been given could be reconciled with the numbers onscreen.

A reckoning will surely come. At the very least, the time has now arrived for Barack Obama to leave Washington and exit American politics, now that his Shadow Presidency — which proved to be even more counter-productive and chaotic than Trump’s first term in office — has gone down in flames.

Meanwhile, the gap between what America’s elites believe, and what the rest of the country believes, has never been wider, probably not since the late 19th century. Back then, Gilded Age America was ruled by a tight group of tycoons and their retainers who positioned themselves as the heirs to the Republican Party of Abraham Lincoln and Ulysses S. Grant, the President and the General who together led the Civil War. The further the Republican Party traveled from the Civil War, the more the busts of Lincoln and Grant resembled window-dressing for the extraordinary fortunes of a new oligarchy that traveled in private trains, summered in Newport, and bought every available Old Master painting in Europe to decorate their lavish houses. Economically and morally, the so-called Robber Barons — Morgans, Rockefellers, Goulds, Fricks, Carnegies, Whitneys, Harrimans — had an easy time of it, enjoying the benefits of cheap immigrant labour while flattering themselves as the rightful heirs of the Party that ended slavery. With the exception of Carnegie, a self-made Scotsman and innovative industrialist who gave away his fortune to establish America’s system of public libraries, history doesn’t remember them kindly.

The Democratic Party that Bill and Hillary Clinton built in the Nineties, and Barack Obama then took in a decidedly more radical direction after 2012, won’t be remembered kindly by Americans either. The father of the modern Democratic Party, Franklin D. Roosevelt, was the country’s greatest political leader during what became known as the American Century. Roosevelt kept the country going during the Great Depression, and set it on the path to victory in the Second World War while creating a social safety net for the poor. Remarkably, every American President up until Bill Clinton in 1992 was either a protegee of Roosevelt or at least a private in his army.

The political alliance between urban ethnic machine politicians, including black urban political leaders, and Southern whites that FDR led also undercut the power of the Wasp class, successors to the New England Puritans, who dominated America’s class system and the country’s economy following the Civil War. By curbing their cultural, political, and economic influence, Roosevelt made possible the rise of the American middle class, which made America great, and also more equal.

The Clintons’ embrace of Wall Street and of international trade treaties was the window through which America’s old elites — rooted both in the Northeast as well as in San Francisco — climbed back into history. The China trade flourished, as did Democratic Party’s new Wall Street clients — at the expense of the Party’s traditional working-and-middle class constituencies. Obama brought Silicon Valley’s formerly libertarian-oriented founders on board the gravy train by promising them protection from populists like Bernie Sanders and from his own crew of high-end Chicago shakedown artists. In return, they would pay taxes to the party through campaign and NGO contributions and DEI hiring. Through this new political wiring, Obama completed the transformation of FDR’s Democrats into Gilded Age Republicans.

It will be hard for Donald Trump to top that. But maybe he will. Maybe Elon Musk will entirely revamp the Federal government. Maybe he will actually colonise Mars. Meanwhile, if Trump understands one thing, it’s that America is not Europe, or Asia, or Iraq, or Brazil. American elites come and go, while the capacity for sudden, radical, wide-eyed self-invention and leaps of innovation remain the country’s defining trait.

What outsiders tend to miss is that America was never meant to be stable. It is and has always been an inferno, the epitome of the Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter’s idea of creative destruction. The wonder and freedom and heartbreak of American life is that, sooner or later, everything is consumed in the furnace. For all his wealth and success, Elon Musk’s children may worship other gods. His grandchildren may end up in a trailer park, smoking meth. McKinsey consultants with Harvard degrees may wind up unemployed or selling bottled war. Robert F. Kennedy Jr, the country’s most eminent environmental lawyer and the closest thing the Democratic Party has to royalty, may become an antivaccine heretic, be broadly mocked and humiliated by the elite and by the less imaginative members of his own family, run for President, endorse Donald Trump, take on the Big Pharma and Big Ag, and Make America Healthy Again. Or not. All anyone can say for sure is that attempts to game the American system are doomed to failure.

The bigger lesson being that America is just too big — and too wild, and too destructive, and rooted in the idea of individual freedom — for any self-styled “elite” to ride the horse for very long, without being thrown off.

https://unherd.com/2024/11/how-trump-crushed-obamas-legacy/

Body-by-Guinness

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About that Tree
« Reply #2415 on: November 13, 2024, 06:24:13 PM »
2nd post. I’d say this counts as a rant:

https://x.com/JeanRomanik/status/1855980032511898005

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #2416 on: November 14, 2024, 06:51:49 AM »
Yup.

Body-by-Guinness

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The Strange Bedfellows that Won & What Will They Usher In?
« Reply #2417 on: November 17, 2024, 02:50:37 PM »
A new dawn?

The Revolution of 2024
BY Jeffrey A TuckerJEFFREY A. TUCKER   NOVEMBER 16, 2024   GOVERNMENT, MEDIA, SOCIETY   9 MINUTE READ
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People are out and about, smiling at each other. It’s been true since the morning after the election, the results of which defied every prediction. Who doesn’t like to see the smug elites who have ruled the world for five awful years taken down a peg?

More than that, there are hints of a return to sanity. Mainstream advertisers are suddenly returning to X, putting their economic interest above their tribalist loyalties. The editor of pro-lockdowns Scientific American, which had long blessed totalitarian measures as true science, has resigned.

The attempt to pillage InfoWars and give it to The Onion has been reversed by a federal judge. That might be a fluke or might not be: maybe the lawfare is dialing back too. The cabinet of the incoming administration is being filled by voices that were fully censored for years. Employees are reportedly packing their bags at the FDA and other agencies.

Mainstream news commentators are sputtering around with less bravado than they have shown in years. CNN is firing major personalities.

Trump is talking about abolishing the income tax and granting $10K in tax credits per homeschooled child, not to mention blowing up college accreditation systems, among other sweeping changes.

The American Bastille day is coming, not only freeing the political prisoners of January 6 but also many of the unjustly persecuted including Ross Ulbricht, Roger Ver, and Ian Freeman, among so many others. That will be a day of rejoicing.

Oh, and peace seems to have broken out in some contentious areas of the world, for now.

What is happening? This is not the usual transfer of the resident of the White House. This is starting to look like an actual transfer of power, not just from Biden to Trump but from the permanent government – ensconced in many sectors – that has been long in hiding to an entirely new form of government responsive to actual voters.

As it turns out, there was no late surge for Kamala Harris. All the polls were wrong, and the rest was media blather. What was correct were the betting odds on Polymarket, and only days later, the FBI raided the 26-year-old founder’s home and confiscated his phone and laptop.

There are still many millions of missing voters, people who supposedly showed up for Biden in 2020 but stayed home this time. Meanwhile, there has been a historic shift in all races, ethnicities, and regions, with even the possibility of flipping California from blue to red in the future.

After decades of academic slicing and dicing of the population according to ever more eccentric identity buckets involving race, ethnicity, gender, and sexual interest, along with countless thousands of studies documenting deep complexity over intersectionality, the driving force of the election was simple: class, and the few intellectuals and some wealthy entrepreneurs who understand that.

The division was not really left vs right. It was workers vs laptoppers, wage earners vs six-figure stay-at-homers, bottom half vs top 5 percent, people with actual skills vs weaponized resume wielders, and those with affection for old-world values vs those whose educations have beaten it out of them for purposes of career advancement.

The silent majority has never been so suddenly loud. It just so happened that the heavily privileged had come to inhabit easily identifiable sectors of American society and, in the end, had no choice but hitch the whole of the overclass wagon to the fortunes of a candidate like themselves (Kamala) but who was unable to pull off a compelling masquerade. Not even a parade of well-paid celebrity endorsements could save her from total rebuke at the polls.

Sylvester Stallone called Trump a second George Washington but another reference point might be Andrew Jackson. The overwhelming victory for Trump is on a scale not seen since 1828 when, four years after the presidency was stolen from Jackson, Old Hickory came back in a wild landslide and cleaned up Washington. Trump arrives in Washington with a mandate for the same, with 81% of the public demanding that the government shrink in size and power.

It has all happened so quickly. We are barely ten days into the realization of what just transpired and the entire lay of the land seems different, like a tectonic shift in politics, culture, mood, and possibilities. We are even seeing blunt and open talk about the horrendous Covid response that so utterly demoralized the country and the world, after years of silence on the topic. We have promised hearings coming, and court cases galore now on fast track.

The sudden coming together of three great sectors of anti-establishment fury – MAGA, MAHA, and DOGE – in the last two months of the election of 2024 is one for the ages. It provides the beginnings of an answer to the great question on our minds for decades: how precisely does an authentic revolution take root in an industrialized Western democracy? Are elections capable of delivering real results?

For now, the answer seems to be yes. That should thrill any responsible observer of social, cultural, economic, and political affairs. It means that the early architects of the American system were not wrong. The intolerable costs of political upheaval of ages past can be mitigated by planting power firmly in the hands of the people through the plebiscite. This was their view and their gamble. All the evidence of our time points to the wisdom of the idea.

In the darkest days of the last year of the first Trump presidency, the bureaucracy was riding high, in full revenge mode against an elected government it hated and sought to overthrow. The agencies were passing strange edicts that felt like laws but no one knew for sure. You are essential, you are not. You must stay home, unless you have an emergency. Your elective surgery needs to wait. The kids cannot go to school. That European vacation cannot happen. You can eat at a restaurant but only if you are six feet away from other patrons and you must put this China-made cloth on your mouth if you get up to go to the restroom.

The flurry of edicts was mind-boggling. It felt like martial law, because it was some form of exactly that. The best research points to the astonishing reality that this was never really a public-health response but a scheme by security and intelligence sectors to enact some kind of global color revolution, which is why the policies were so similar the world over. It was indeed an awesome display of power, one that invaded all our communities, homes, and families.

No one knows this better than Team Trump, even if there has been near silence on the topic for all these years. They have had time to put the pieces together and figure out what happened and why. And they carefully, and in seclusion worthy of a Cistercian monastery, plotted their return, leaving nothing to chance.

Meanwhile, the past two years have had the Covid insurrectionists quietly stepping away from the spotlight, while leaving as much of their newfound power in place: the censorship, the technology, the mandates, and the propaganda that all of this shock-and-awe was nothing more than “common sense health measures.” It was never tenable, and vast numbers have come to realize that something went very wrong, like a kind of evil settled over the world and burrowed itself within all institutions.

In an instant, the whole scheme seems to be crumbling. The incredible result is that the administration under which this calamity occurred is now coming back, which is probably the strangest irony of our times.

And yet, even though no one has yet been open about precisely what happened in the White House in March 2020 to cause Trump to greenlight the lockdowns, there is a widespread belief that it was never really his choice. It was some kind of coup – egged on even by his closest advisors and the VP – that he either could not stop or lacked the personnel to marshal effective resistance. Regardless, he has been forgiven because, implausibly, the next administration not only owned the worst of it but added even more on top of that, including the wicked combination of mask mandates, forced injections, and continued school closures.

The result has been a continuing economic crisis, one far worse than agencies admit, in addition to a health, education, and cultural crisis. Meanwhile, all those involved in causing this from behind the scenes have been rewarded with professorships, loving interviews in the mainstream media, and lavish security provisions to protect them from legions of what they suppose are angry workers and peasants.

Therefore, among many of the ruling class, the results of this election are certainly not welcome, and nor are many of the early appointments. They represent the coming together of MAGA, MAHA, and DOGE, the fulfillment of decades of cultivation of disparate groups of dissidents who had not previously realized their common interests and common enemies. It was the Covid era and the imposition of top-down rule that brought them all together.

It was like three groups wandering around in a giant maze who suddenly confront each other and then, realizing that they all shared the same predicament, figure the way out together. These new alliances have not only shattered right and left, as traditionally understood, but reshaped the structural basis of political activism for the duration. It turns out that medical freedom, food freedom, free speech, political freedom, and peace all go together. Who knew?

The incumbent world of academia, think tanks, and most media simply finds itself unprepared to deal with the new realities. They had hoped everyone would forget about the last five years as if it was just a thing that happened but is now over; everyone just needs to grapple with the great reset and learn to love our new lives of surveillance, propaganda, censorship, perpetual war, poison food, unaffordable everything, and endless injections of potions for our own health and well-being.

Well, times have changed. How much? Early signs point to a dramatic unfolding of revolutionary change over the coming months. Is believing this the triumph of hope over experience? Absolutely. Then again, no one believed five years ago that most people in the world would be locked in their homes and communities, stuck drinking and streaming movies until biotech could come up with a cure for a respiratory virus with a zoonotic reservoir. Then it did not work and made people more sick than ever.

That was nuts but it happened.

If that could happen, with predictable results, the response could be equally implausible and more much thrilling. What’s man made can be unmade by man, and something new built in its place.

https://brownstone.org/articles/the-revolution-of-2024/

DougMacG

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Political Rant, interesting thought pieces, Democrats in the Wilderness
« Reply #2418 on: November 19, 2024, 07:20:15 PM »
Amazing the Left most Minneapolis Startribune, now called Minnesota Startribune (?) published this. I will reach behind the pay wall and share with you.
------------
Democrats: The wilderness years?
Here are some parallels from the past.

By John C. “Chuck” Chalberg

November 18, 2024 at 5:44PM

The campus of Howard University is pictured after the conclusion of an election night campaign watch party for Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris, Nov. 6 in Washington. (Susan Walsh/The Associated Press)

Opinion editor’s note: Strib Voices publishes a mix of guest commentaries online and in print each day.
•••
The recently concluded presidential election is not without its historical parallels and ironies, both of which speak to the country’s immediate future, as well as to the future of the Democratic Party. At the same time, both return us to the only Democrats elected to the presidency between the Civil War and the reign of Franklin Roosevelt. That lonely pair would be Grover Cleveland and Woodrow Wilson.

The most obvious parallel would be the non-consecutive terms of Cleveland (our 22nd and 24th president) and Donald Trump (our 45th and soon-to-be 47th president). The less obvious parallel is the returning to power of the anti-Wilson Trump almost exactly 100 years after the death of the actual Wilson in 1924. More on that shortly.

Then there is the possibility that the Democrats could be heading into the political wilderness, which was the party’s fate following its defeats in 1896 (when William McKinley defeated William Jennings Bryan, the anti-Cleveland Democrat) and again in 1920 (when Warren Harding ended eight years of the Wilson administration). Which brings us to 2024.

Will this Democratic defeat trigger another batch of wilderness years for the party? If so, will those years match or exceed the 16 years between their defeat in 1896 and Wilson’s election in 1912? Or will this time in the wilderness be closer to the dozen years between 1920 and the election of FDR in 1932? We’ll see.

There is no precise measurement of “wilderness years,” but the presumption is that it’s longer than just one or even two election cycles — and certainly longer than the eight-year run of a re-elected president. There was no suggestion of Democratic wilderness years during the Eisenhower presidency or of Republicans occupying similar territory during the Clinton years.

In any case, to land in the political wilderness suggests that things have gone seriously awry and that party leaders need to do some equally serious reflection and rethinking while sorting themselves and their message out. Such a process can — and sometimes should — take a good deal of time to resolve.

In 1896 the party spurned the conservative small-government, gold-standard policies of the departing Cleveland to embrace the “free silver,” cheaper money populism of Bryan, who would lose again in 1900. After a brief flirtation with a conservative candidate in 1904 the party returned to Bryan and a third defeat in 1908.

Wilson’s victory in 1912 was made possible by the split within the Republican Party between sitting President William Howard Taft and former President Theodore Roosevelt. Still, the party was groping its way toward acceptance of Roosevelt-style big-government progressivism. And the Wilson presidency completed that acceptance.

Something similar happened after 1932. Candidate Franklin Roosevelt, like Wilson in 1912, did not lay out a big-government, big-spending agenda. But once in office he moved aggressively in that direction.

Democrats have a tendency to be, shall we say, less than candid with the voters while campaigning. Consider candidate Biden in 2020. An open border and an energy shutdown were not exactly heavily promoted campaign promises.

So just what will the party do now that it is once again out of power? Will it regard this setback as just that — meaning a temporary setback? Or will Democrats act as though they have been cast into the political wilderness? In other words, will they rethink and retool or will they not? We’ll see.

The early returns, meaning candidate Harris’ concession speech, suggest that no serious rethinking is necessary. But losing again to Donald Trump should suggest a different approach. It’s one thing to lose to a normal Republican, meaning the sort of Republican that Democrats normally have for lunch. It’s quite something else to lose to someone whom Democrats regard as an empty-headed, foul-mouthed, combination showman, racist and fascist. Such a defeat should lead to some serious rethinking.

It certainly ought to make good sense for Democrats to take a second look at things and then to entertain some serious second thoughts. Let me suggest that Democrats should think of Trump as something other than any of the epithets listed above. They should think of the president-elect as the anti-Woodrow Wilson, which in many respects is just what he is.

A second Trump presidency is not going to add more layers to an already overlayered bureaucracy. A re-elected Trump is not going to build onto the edifice of the big-government progressivism initiated by Theodore Roosevelt and then expanded upon by Woodrow Wilson. If anything, he is likely going to try to eliminate some of that edifice, beginning perhaps with the Department of Education.

Given his own experience during the height of COVID, Trump is not likely to adopt Harris’ Wilsonian-style pledge to rely on the “experts.” If anything, he is going to begin the long process of restoring constitutional government, rather than government by bureaucratic edict.

In addition, there will be no Trumpian crusades to match the Wilsonian crusade to “make the world safe for democracy.” Therefore, there will likely be no Wilsonian-style move to shut down domestic wartime dissent. If anything, there will be an effort to restore debate, because there likely will be action against any attempt to shut down debate on our college campuses.

What’s a good Democrat to do in the face of all this? Well, the Democrats have some searching questions to ask of one another. And then they have important decisions to make. One key question to answer is this: Are we essentially a liberal party or a leftist party?

As things stand now, Democrats campaign as liberals, then try to govern as leftists. This façade needs to end. Just ask Bernie Sanders and his supporters. It’s time either to emerge from the political closet and campaign in the mold of Sen. Sanders or return to the model of Hubert Humphrey. The choice is theirs to make, and making such a monumental decision may take a good while to resolve.

At least one more critical decision needs to be made as well. Should Democrats keep trying to appeal to voters as members of various groups, whether they be identity groups or victim groups or both? Or should they take a page from the allegedly divisive Trump and appeal to voters as fellow Americans?

In the meantime, a successful second Trump administration has an opportunity to restore America as a successful commercial republic, thereby leaving Sanders-style politicking and governance somewhere in the rearview mirror. It also has an opportunity to end the virtual 50-50 split/cycle in recent presidential elections and establish one-party dominance for a period of time longer than, say, eight years. Ironically, this is precisely what William McKinley did in 1896 when he followed what’s-his-name into the White House. Oh, that would be Grover Cleveland, or that other president who served nonconsecutive terms.

In any case, the question of the moment remains on the table: What’s a good Democrat to do in the aftermath of this defeat? Welcome to what seems to be shaping up as your wilderness years, Democrats.
« Last Edit: November 19, 2024, 07:24:36 PM by DougMacG »

Body-by-Guinness

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #2419 on: November 19, 2024, 07:30:32 PM »
I see Cpt. Obvious made an appearance in the piece Doug posted above, and somehow managed to grossly under-connote the vastness of the issue:

“Democrats have a tendency to be, shall we say, less than candid with the voters while campaigning. Consider candidate Biden in 2020. An open border and an energy shutdown were not exactly heavily promoted campaign promises.”

Oh well, guess it counts as grappling with raw reality nonetheless.

Crafty_Dog

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Shut up and get out of the way!
« Reply #2420 on: November 21, 2024, 01:09:12 PM »

ccp

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Body-by-Guinness

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The Expertise that Ain't
« Reply #2422 on: December 04, 2024, 09:06:51 AM »
The "expert" class has been taking it on the chin, and that's a good thing:

Welcome to the Party, Pal (cont'd)
Nate Silver discovers a problem with our expert class.

GLENN HARLAN REYNOLDS
DEC 02, 2024
Welcome to the party, pal.

Nate Silver is worried about experts, and their dubious performance and questionable actual expertise. Where would he have gotten that idea?


Well. I was writing about this stuff long before Nate got hip. Back in 2017, just as Donald Trump began his first term, I wrote The Suicide of Expertise, by way of responding to Tom Nichols’ book, The Death of Expertise. Nichols’ thesis was that the experts were expert, but that ignorant, superstitious Americans rejected their advice out of insecurity and an unwillingness to be proven wrong. My response was that the experts’ actual track record wasn’t looking so good:

Well, it’s certainly true that the “experts” don’t have the kind of authority that they possessed in the decade or two following World War II. Back then, the experts had given us vaccines, antibiotics, jet airplanes, nuclear power and space flight. The idea that they might really know best seemed pretty plausible.

But it also seems pretty plausible that Americans might look back on the last 50 years and say, “What have experts done for us lately?” Not only have the experts failed to deliver on the moon bases and flying cars they promised back in the day, but their track record in general is looking a lot spottier than it was in, say, 1965.

It was the experts — characterized in terms of their self-image by David Halberstam in The Best and the Brightest — who brought us the twin debacles of the Vietnam War, which we lost, and the War On Poverty, where we spent trillions and certainly didn’t win. In both cases, confident assertions by highly credentialed authorities foundered upon reality, at a dramatic cost in blood and treasure. Mostly other people’s blood and treasure.

And these are not isolated failures. The history of government nutritional advice from the 1960s to the present is an appalling one: The advice of “experts” was frequently wrong, and sometimes bought-and-paid-for by special interests, but always delivered with an air of unchallengeable certainty. . . .

On Syria, experts in Barack Obama’s administration produced a policy that led to countless deaths, millions of refugees flooding Europe, a new haven for Islamic terrorists, and the upending of established power relations in the mideast. In Libya, the experts urged a war, waged without the approval of Congress, to topple strongman Moammar Gadhafi, only to see — again — countless deaths, huge numbers of refugees and another haven for Islamist terror.

It was experts who brought us the housing bubble and the subprime crisis. It was experts who botched the Obamacare rollout. And, of course, the experts didn’t see Brexit coming, and seem to have responded mostly with injured pride and assaults on the intelligence of the electorate, rather than with constructive solutions.

And this was long before the experts’ ne plus ultra of failure, the bungled, dishonest, and downright self-serving response to the Covid pandemic. The pandemic stemmed from experts’ arrogance, in the form of illegal “gain of function” research funded by the U.S. and laundered through Chinese labs, was met with ass-covering “wet market” lies to try to conceal that origin, and then with public health measures, such as lockdowns and social distancing and masking rules, that were backed by no actual science at all, and that were cheerfully flouted by those propounding them whenever it suited their purposes. The final nail in the experts’ authority-coffin, though, was when, after all the lockdown hysteria, they approved massive public marches by Black Lives Matter because, we were told, racism was a public health problem.

Well, so are STDs, but they weren’t encouraging anyone to march against gonorrhea.

Rather they were (ab)using their position to promote the leftist cause du jour. Everyone saw through it, and their stock collapsed.

So. Welcome to the party, pal. Nate’s noticing just how far things have gone downhill.

But if you zoom out the lens, 2024 was in some ways more shocking than 2016 — and much more of a middle finger to the expert class. In 2016, progressive institutionalist types could at least console themselves by saying the public didn’t know what it would be getting with Trump, and might have had some natural desire to experiment when the alternative was Hilary Clinton, the unpopular avatar of the technocratic status quo. Well, this time around, the public saw what it got with Trump — including the pandemic, January 6, and all those crimes and misdemeanors — and decided it liked it better than Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. In the national exit poll, 52 percent of voters approved of Trump’s performance from his first term in office, compared to 42 percent for Biden.

Yes, that’s what got Nate’s attention. The experts weren’t just losing, they were dragging the Democrats down with them. (And I suspect public opinion on “the pandemic, January 6, and all those crimes and misdemeanors” was colored by doubt that those made Trump look as bad as the expert class kept maintaining, given that all three were basically expert-class creations.) The postwar academic/media/bureaucratic ruling class is in trouble. “Its institutions serve the public increasingly poorly — but it’s also increasingly losing politically.”

Well, it deserves to. By its fruit the tree is known, and the fruits of our ruling class, which has long based its authority on an assumed, and increasingly implausible, expertise have not been impressive. The election of 2024, as Silver rightly notes, represents a repudiation of those failures. As Joel Kotkin notes, the working class, having ceded much political power to the experts in the postwar era, is taking that power back. And there are signs that this may be happening elsewhere, as, for example, Germans grow restive under the economic calamities wrought by green energy policies that are popular with the laptop classes, but that wreck the fortunes of farmers and factory workers.

And it’s a good that the working class is taking power back. Leaving aside the undemocratic nature of technocracy, technocracy has failed the ultimate in technocratic tests: It doesn’t work. Putting “smart” – which turns out to mean “credentialed” – people in charge of everything, and letting them run things with no real constraints except the blinkered and self-serving opinions of other members of their social class, has turned out not to work very well. Whether in agriculture or in governance, monocultures are unstable, and our ruling class monoculture has been a narrow and increasingly incestuous one. Its performance has failed to justify its existence.

Goodbye and good riddance.

https://instapundit.substack.com/p/welcome-to-the-party-pal-contd?r=1qo1e&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=email&triedRedirect=true

Body-by-Guinness

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What will Happen to What Controls Us?
« Reply #2423 on: December 14, 2024, 07:21:28 PM »
Good riddance to ‘em all:

Four Pillars of Government Control
Are All Four Beginning to Crumble?

ERIK CARLSON
DEC 14, 2024


In my opinion, the four pillars of government control include the health care system, mainstream media, the financial system and the election system.

These four pillars support the structure that all Americans live under. Being confined to this structure means no one is truly free. Awake, asleep, wherever one may be in the process, we are all controlled to some extent by these systems. One pillar or even two pillars may not impact you as much as it impacts someone else, but there is no way of completely escaping the control of all four pillars.

Maybe if you cut down trees and built a cabin deep in the forest somewhere and lived completely off of the land and off the grid, but obviously very few live their lives this way.

With these four pillars firmly in place, the roof that all Americans live under maintains its structural integrity. If these four pillars start to crack, with visual signs of cracking and even audible signs, the people will no longer trust this structure that they believe gives them protection, and will quickly run from it, anticipating its collapse.

In late 2024, this structure is not only showing signs of cracking, but the structure is beginning to shift.

If I was to put an order to how these four pillars were built, I would start with the healthcare system, then the financial system, followed by the election system and finally the mainstream media. This isn’t to say that all four areas were taken under control independently, but rather there are defining moments where one can see obvious turning points in each system.

For the healthcare industry, the turning point could be seen as when the Rockefeller Institute of Medical Research was founded in 1901. For the financial industry, 1913 stands out, when the Federal Reserve, the IRS and income tax were implemented. In 1960, the US Presidential Election was stolen, and in the 1960s, the CIA started Operation Mockingbird, where they began funding media members to promote CIA talking points. One could argue that the control of the media goes back to 1911, when the first Hollywood studio was built, and I have no idea how far back election tampering goes—probably back to the very beginning.

If anyone believes there was ever a time in America when propaganda wasn’t being used on its people, consider Benjamin Franklin.

Franklin owned multiple newspapers and used various aliases and pseudonyms to put forth different and opposing talking points. In some cases, he even used aliases to argue back and forth with himself on subject matters. Franklin may have been the original Fed Boy, as we know, who went on to march in support of white supremacy, stormed the Capital on J6, and plotted the kidnapping of Michigan’s governor Gretchen Whitmer.

The Healthcare System

As mentioned, the Rockefellers have been heavily involved in creating a healthcare system that has been used to control Americans for over a hundred years.

This doesn’t mean this elitist family hasn’t been influential in other areas as well, including the other three pillars. It has been said that the Rockefellers have been influential in controlling organized religion in America as well, as the education system. The Rockefellers funded and promoted Christian leaders who would in turn water down the religion, while at the same time removing Christianity from schools. They funded and promoted concepts like evolution, which became a widely accepted alternative to religion. Science became a religion to many.

The woke schools we have today did not become this way organically; it was all a part of their slowly implemented plan.

The process the Rockefellers took to control the healthcare system was a gradual process, as well.

First, they funded medical schools and medical research. Once medical schools became dependent on their funding, they began to influence what was being taught in the schools. There was a shift from natural remedies to chemical-based treatments, and the pharmaceutical industry was born. Vaccines and pharmaceutical drugs became the preferred way of treating every ailment and potential ailment.

With the medical schools under control, and medical research only being funded if it aligned with their ideas, one last hurdle stood in their way, so the American Medical Association was created. Now the Rockefellers could control who became a licensed physician. If one didn’t adhere to their chemical-based treatments, one couldn’t practice medicine legally. Doctors who practiced natural medicine, which was the norm for thousands of years, were now deemed nutjobs.

Trust the science, or rather, trust their science.

Mission complete. Americans were now controlled through the healthcare system that profits from keeping Americans sick and unhealthy.

Americans now take more and more pharmaceutical drugs while conditions like cancer, obesity and diabetes rates continue to grow. This racket has been in place for over a hundred years, but recently, cracks in this pillar have begun to show.

Early on during the Covid Pandemic narrative, 28.5% of Americans didn’t trust doctors and hospitals. Less than four years later that number has jumped to 59.9%. 60% of Americans no longer trust the healthcare system, and this is before RFK Jr. has stepped foot into the Trump Administration. This number will surely jump higher once the corruption and lies are exposed.

In my opinion, the healthcare pillar has no chance of surviving 2025. Most structures can stay upright with just three pillars, but not any less.

The Financial System

In 1913, the Federal Reserve was created, giving Wall Street bankers control over the money supply system of the United States. It would determine interest rates, the assets that go on and off of the Fed Balance Sheet, the creation of money, which in turn means the rate of inflation. Having this control means they are able to manipulate the financial markets, enabling them to essentially steal from the poor and middle class and redistribute that money to the elites.

Income tax and inflation are used to make Americans debt slaves, and the IRS was created to make sure we don’t wander too far off of the debt plantation. Americans are allowed to keep enough of their paycheck to survive, but not to thrive. Debt and taxes are the chains that hold us captive.

If you don’t believe me, try not paying your mortgage or your property taxes and see how long you are allowed to live in your house.

There is a reason an assassination attempt was made on Trump’s life in July, as a month prior, he hinted that he was going to take down the financial system.

No tax on tips was a shot across the bow letting the financial industry know that income tax and excessive interest rates will soon be a thing of the past. As with the healthcare system, America will always need a financial system, but not one that controls Americans through debt slavery, but rather one that benefits Americans instead.

The Election System

Some believe that the Chicago Mob cut a deal with Joseph Kennedy, the father of John and Robert Kennedy in 1960 to throw the election in the favor of John F. Kennedy. In return, the DOJ would take it easy on the Mafia during Kennedy’s time as POTUS. It is also believed that the Kennedys didn’t keep up their side of the deal, and that is the reason the Mafia was involved in the assassination of JFK three years later, and RFK five years after that. It’s also fairly common knowledge that the Mafia has been working with the FBI and CIA (OSS) since WWII, both agencies are believed to be involved in the Kennedy assassinations as well.

The Mafia, who some believe still wield some influence over the Teamsters Union, is said to have influenced the largest union in America to vote for JFK on a national level.

In 1960, ten states were decided by fewer than 10k votes. Kennedy won Illinois by less than 9k votes. JFK had a 450k advantage in Cook County, Illinois, the county the Chicago Mob resides in. Kennedy won the national popular vote by 113k. The landslide victory in Cook County not only gave JFK Illinois, but the popular vote as well.

I find it very difficult to believe the 1960 election wasn’t stolen, and the theory of it being stolen lends credence to why the Mob was involved in the Kennedy assassinations. I believe the ease and effectiveness of stealing this election led the Deep State to wonder why they would ever allow a fair election to occur again.

The appearance of a fair election has to be maintained at all times.

52/48, 49/51, always close to an even split. Eight years with one party in power before the other party needs to take over. Both parties controlled by the same people, until Trump.

I believe 2016 was rigged for Hillary Clinton to win, but they didn’t steal enough votes. The 2020 election was obviously stolen, blatantly. I believe even the 2024 election has been manipulated to make it seem Trump only won by a little, and to steal some down ballot seats as well. The Deep State has to protect the election system, to protect their racket that determines who will have the power.

Without election integrity, the US is just another Banana Republic, with the appearance of being a first world democratic republic nation. If the rigged election system survives, it will only be a matter of time until we are right back to 2020; therefore, we must fight as hard for election transparency in the years we win as we do in the years we lose.

The Mainstream Media

When Richard Nixon took office in 1968, one of the first things he wanted to do was to look over the CIA documents of the Bay of Pigs and the JFK assassination.

The CIA director, Richard Helms was very reluctant for Nixon to have access to these documents and essentially refused to allow the standing POTUS to see them, even though it was well within his rights as POTUS. The CIA understood that Nixon was not their friend, and this is why they ran the badly-botched Watergate break in to get him removed from power.

George Bush Sr. was heavily involved in the plan to remove Nixon from power.

In 1973, Nixon appointed William Colby as the new Director of the CIA. In 1975, a congressional committee known as the Church Committee was formed, headed by Democrat Congressman from Idaho, Frank Church.

The committee was put together to look into the CIA, which many believed had become out of control, yielding way too much power, and using it in ways that were never intended when it was created in 1947. William Colby was interviewed by the committee under oath multiple times, and divulged a lot of hidden information about the CIA and its operations that they didn’t want exposed.

The CIA believed Colby wasn’t fighting hard enough to keep their secrets from Congress, they viewed him as a traitor, and the next director would need to be a loyalist.

What was exposed in the Church Committe sessions?

MK ULTRA, a CIA run mind control operation that created unwitting assassins through the use of drugs, torture and other psychological techniques was brought out to the public. CIA surveillance of American politicians as well as civil rights leaders was revealed. Assassination of foreign leaders, techniques used to kill them, and operations to overthrow foreign governments were also exposed.

Operation Mockingbird may have been the most surprising—a CIA operation to control not only foreign media, but the American media.

George Bush Sr. became the Director of the CIA in 1976 to clean up the mess Colby made from telling the truth under oath. Twenty years later, William Colby walked away from a half-eaten meal, got in a canoe that was in a nearby river, and paddled away.

His body was discovered on a sandbar the next day.

According to Wikipedia,

Operation Mockingbird is an alleged large-scale program of the United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) that began in the early years of the Cold War and attempted to manipulate domestic American news media organizations for propaganda purposes.

According to author Deborah Davis, Operation Mockingbird recruited leading American journalists into a propaganda network and influenced the operations of front groups. CIA support of front groups was exposed when an April 1967 Ramparts article reported that the National Student Association received funding from the CIA.

In 1975, Church Committee Congressional investigations revealed Agency connections with journalists and civic groups.

From All That’s Interesting on December 1st, 2024:

In 1977, journalist Carl Bernstein published an article in Rolling Stone with a serious allegation: that hundreds of American journalists worked cheek by jowl with the Central Intelligence Agency. This operation purportedly operated for decades and involved some of the most prominent news organizations in the U.S., including The New York Times, CBS, and Time Inc.

Bernstein’s reporting mostly focused on journalists who worked abroad, but ominous rumors soon emerged that the CIA was also using reporters to spread propaganda across America and manipulate public opinion at home. By 1979, that alleged program had a name: Operation Mockingbird.

Facts about Operation Mockingbird remain murky — including whether it ever ended — but the idea of news organizations working with intelligence agencies struck many citizens as deeply alarming. Operation Mockingbird was even invoked as recently as mid-2024 when then-presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. claimed that the program is still being used. […]

So, how was Operation Mockingbird first unveiled?

According to a December 1977 New York Times article — which was published after Bernstein’s Rolling Stone report — the closer-than-expected relationship between the CIA and the press was first made public in 1973. Then, CIA Director William E. Colby shared some details of the practice with reporters, and the issue was publicized by the Washington Star. This led to Congressional investigations.

Four years later, Bernstein expanded on the relationship between the CIA and American journalists in an article for Rolling Stone, “The CIA and the Media.” He claimed that for 25 years, some 400 American journalists had “secretly carried out assignments for the Central Intelligence Agency.”

What does a mockingbird do? It mimics what it hears.

How apropos, as mainstream media personalities seem to do just the same. They report what they are told to report. The irony with Carl Burnstein’s investigative journalism exposing the CIA’s involvement in the media is the fact that he worked for the Washington Post, considered by some to be one of the news outlets the CIA controlled at the time he worked there, and still today.

In other words, he exposed the CIA’s involvement in the media after the fact, after the cat was already out of the bag, attempting to lend some credibility to the media.

I think it’s pretty obvious to everyone reading this that the CIA still controls the media, and that said control has probably expanded. With Barack Obama repealing the Smith Mundt Act in 2012, allowing the government to propagandize its citizens with no repercussions, things have only gotten worse … much worse.

But the aggressive propaganda that was used to fight Trump has led many to wake up, to stop believing and trusting the media. Today, only 31% of Americans say they still trust the media. While 69% or more say they don’t trust the media, many of these Americans are influenced by it more than they likely understand. While on of one side of their mouths, they say they don’t trust the media, out of the other side, they blather on, unknowingly repeating the media’s talking points.

Even though it has been exposed as fact through the Church Committee in 1975 that the CIA has been heavily involved in manipulating the media, the media still tries to paint a picture of conspiracy theory when it comes to Operation Mockingbird.

In June of 2024, RFK Jr. made allegations that the CIA program called "Operation Mockingbird" secretly recruited journalists decades ago to help brainwash Americans. ABC News referred to this claim as being “bonkers” and unsubstantiated, despite the fact that the acting CIA Director himself made these same claims under oath to a Congressional Committe in 1975.

The media’s motto? Lie, and if you get caught lying, lie some more.

The Deep State can likely only lose one of these four pillars and still maintain control. It is very unlikely that any of these pillars will be left standing in two years.

The healthcare, financial, media and election systems will always be needed, necessary, but not in the state they exist today. They must all be torn down and rebuilt—rebuilt with safeguards that will not allow them to be taken over and manipulated the way they have been the past century.

As we witness the rats jumping ship and the cockroaches scurrying to holes in the wall, they are not attempting to save the systems they represent, as those systems are unsalvageable, they are merely attempting to save themselves. Scratch and claw as they may, they will not avoid the punishment that awaits them.

The healthcare, financial, media and election systems will be rebuilt, better than ever before. They will be rebuilt to serve Americans, not control them, which is something we’ve never known before.

The best is yet to come.

https://badlands.substack.com/p/four-pillars-of-government-control?r=2k0c5&triedRedirect=true

ccp

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disagree strongly with this
« Reply #2424 on: December 15, 2024, 09:43:35 AM »
"The Healthcare System

As mentioned, the Rockefellers have been heavily involved in creating a healthcare system that has been used to control Americans for over a hundred years.

This doesn’t mean this elitist family hasn’t been influential in other areas as well, including the other three pillars. It has been said that the Rockefellers have been influential in controlling organized religion in America as well, as the education system. The Rockefellers funded and promoted Christian leaders who would in turn water down the religion, while at the same time removing Christianity from schools. They funded and promoted concepts like evolution, which became a widely accepted alternative to religion. Science became a religion to many.

The woke schools we have today did not become this way organically; it was all a part of their slowly implemented plan.

The process the Rockefellers took to control the healthcare system was a gradual process, as well.

First, they funded medical schools and medical research. Once medical schools became dependent on their funding, they began to influence what was being taught in the schools. There was a shift from natural remedies to chemical-based treatments, and the pharmaceutical industry was born. Vaccines and pharmaceutical drugs became the preferred way of treating every ailment and potential ailment.

With the medical schools under control, and medical research only being funded if it aligned with their ideas, one last hurdle stood in their way, so the American Medical Association was created. Now the Rockefellers could control who became a licensed physician. If one didn’t adhere to their chemical-based treatments, one couldn’t practice medicine legally. Doctors who practiced natural medicine, which was the norm for thousands of years, were now deemed nutjobs.

Trust the science, or rather, trust their science.

Mission complete. Americans were now controlled through the healthcare system that profits from keeping Americans sick and unhealthy.

Americans now take more and more pharmaceutical drugs while conditions like cancer, obesity and diabetes rates continue to grow. This racket has been in place for over a hundred years, but recently, cracks in this pillar have begun to show."


Ok what is this authors answer other then we all become vegetarians go to chiropractors, and take 100 pills of homeopathic, or ancient Chinese remedies a day and get our health information from Joe Rogan?

If cancer could be cured it would be.  If there was an underlying cause other then the ones we know of cigarettes obesity alcohol and other known chemical carcinogens we would know by now.

Vaccines are not killing people they for the most part protect people and at least from what I have read they are not causing autism

I see many people who have cancer who are surviving longer due to new treatments that ever 20 yrs ago were not available.  The cures for metastatic cancer is elusive.  Do you actually believe the health care industry is blocking cures for cancer to keep their gravy train?

Heart failure treatments are much better now.  Implantable stents pacemakers defibrillators sleep apnea devices and heart rhythym sensors help keep people alive.

How stupid.  Sorry this person is too RFK for me.  Not that I am saying all RFK is wrong but a lot is off the road.

yes medical care costs a real lot .   Too much maybe but no one has come up with better system at this point to keep costs down .   Maybe more negotiation for prices, cutting out some middle men etc .     Every 5 minutes I see a new insurer or medical provider company come out with

we are health care innovators who will control costs and improve outcomes.  Everyone makes the same claim and folks - here is where we are.


ccp

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #2425 on: December 15, 2024, 09:46:12 AM »
and may I add the Repubs had 2 yrs to come up with other plans to provide health care in lieu of Obama care   and what happened ?  Nothing and I am sure it is because no one has yet, as a distinguished old friend and physician stated: No one has figured out the code yet.

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #2426 on: December 15, 2024, 12:14:31 PM »
Sen Rand Paul can be very articulate on how the free market works in his specialty Eye Surgery.

Dr. Ben Carson proposal during his 2016 campaign I thought rather brilliant.

ccp

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #2427 on: December 15, 2024, 12:32:22 PM »
Ok what was Dr Carson's proposal.

ophthamology is a very high paying field though not as much as in the  past af far as I know.   

so what does Paul recommend?   

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #2428 on: December 15, 2024, 12:35:51 PM »
a) This is not the thread for it;

b) I am under the weather and not up to digging it up,, but do see Reply 34 in the Dr. Ben Carson thread.  I only surfed that far, so there may be more.

« Last Edit: December 15, 2024, 12:42:00 PM by Crafty_Dog »

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Kunstler: Taking Out the Trash: A long and serious read
« Reply #2429 on: December 28, 2024, 04:28:25 PM »


https://www.kunstler.com/p/forecast-2025-taking-out-the-trash

Forecast 2025 — Taking Out the Trash
"A core reflex in these decades of postmodern insanity was constant rejection of things we thought we knew in favor of New, Improved Beliefs packaged from above.” — Matt Taibbi, Racket News

James Howard Kunstler
Dec 27, 2024
Note: due to the length of this special blog-post, email will probably truncate it. So, to view the entire post just go to: Kunstler.com on your browser.

I would guess that you’re feeling as if anything might happen now. It’s hard to rule out even the possibility that we could all be vaporized before moving onto the next mundane chore of the day. The world order is dangerously in flux. America’s Woke-Jacobin “Joe Biden” regime was defeated in the 2024 election, but they were apparently just a front for the sinister entity we call the “blob” or the Deep State, which in recent years has consistently and garishly acted against our country’s interests. So, the blob abides, and it probably weaves schemes in the deep background of daily life even as a new government awaits. But if the Woke-Jacobin Biden-istas were tied-in with the so-called “globalist” enterprise centered around the EU bureaucracy, with assistance from the World Economic Forum’s network of zillionaires and bankers. . . well, that coalition looks rather broken now. It’s doing a hurt-dance. It’s on the run, a little bit.

What is not broken for the moment — a tenuous moment — is the new Trump regime’s determination to correct the disorders of Western Civ, starting with the affairs of the USA, according to age-old reality-based norms of behavior and good-faith relations between the people and their government. Trust was broken and must be restored. The President-elect has assembled an extraordinary team of reformers, if they can get to their posts without subversion. And, of course, Mr. Trump himself has to evade further attempts to rub him out, to knock him off the game-board before he can take office, and then he must survive the months beyond his inauguration. So, you are correct to be nervous.

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Paradoxically, Mr. Trump has to initially manage the US government as if it deserves a sense of reassuring continuity, which, in many respects it does not deserve. So many institutions and relationships between them have been perverted and damaged. How do we pretend that the upper layers of management in any federal agency — the strata who really run things below the top “political” appointees — can continue in-place as if all that perversion never happened? The Department of Justice and the FBI are filled with lawyers and agents who abused their power egregiously and went to war against the American people. The agency’s work will just have to stop for a while. The nation can probably endure if investigations and prosecutions are suspended for sixty days while the personnel issues get sorted out — who goes and who stays.

But what about the Defense Department and the CIA? The country must be able to defend itself. These departments are the lairs of the more dangerously entrenched blob actors. Both DOD and the CIA have come to be organized as racketeering operations. Both are involved in domestic money-laundering activities at the giant scale, and in rackets abroad — such as the many grifts around Ukraine, in which giant financial entities like BlackRock are partnered-in. (You know, for instance, don’t you, that BlackRock was poised to acquire control of Ukraine’s natural resource base, until Mr. Putin’s resolve ended that fantasy.) And the CIA is suspected of being deeply involved in the Mexican crime cartel operations, both around drugs and human trafficking. The imputations are sickening. The DOD and the CIA will fight desperately to preserve their perqs and projects, and to stay out of jail. But until now they have not really been challenged.

The public health agencies, FDA, NIAID, CDC, NIH, and so on have become outright mafias, with labyrinths of money-laundering channels, government grant-grifting, and pharma phuckery, not least around the still-mysterious, homicidal Covid-19 prank, with the deadly mRNA vaccine program piggybacked onto it. Their nemesis, RFK, Jr., is coming on-board to oversee exactly what happened in these corrupt fiefdoms. If you have read his books about Dr. Anthony Fauci, you know that he is adequately prepared to discover what took US public health off-the-rails. Don’t forget, also, that the entire medical profession lies in a slough of dishonor for going along with the fake-and-deadly Covid-19 treatment protocols (intubation, remdesivir, midazolam, and morphine) that killed so many people needlessly. Plus, the doctors’ dishonest demonization of ivermectin and other viable treatments, plus the disgraceful, mendacious behavior of the medical journals in the whole filthy scam. Next, consider the rickety, cruel, Kafkaesque US health insurance system that is now all but running the doctors’ practices. It is an unholy mess. What can you do but wish Mr. Kennedy God-speed in beginning to unravel it all? Surely, a lot of people involved deserve to go to prison.

For all you know, the heavyweights of blobdom might be plotting some sort of coup during the Holiday season to prevent Mr. Trump from taking power on January 20. Failure to mount a coup would actually signal some essential weakness in the blob’s own enterprise architecture. The blob has certainly tried everything so far up to an actual coup, that is, a sharp discontinuity in constitutional government — like, with tanks around the US Capitol and generals in the Oval Office. The blob’s other problem is that it has no powerful individual leader to rally behind, no one with charisma. It has only its multifarious tentacles — departments, agencies, offices, and operations — which Mr. Trump and his lieutenants can lop off in broad strokes. They can cashier generals, defund projects, shut-down offices and programs, send US Marshals into CIA headquarters in Langley, VA, to lockdown document archives while flushing out employees. Early on, the Trump team has got to assess the patriotism of individuals in these departments. Based on blob behavior of the past decade, no one’s fidelity to the constitution can be taken-for-granted.

It will surely be necessary to begin open inquiries into the recent behavior of some prominent political figures in order to demonstrate a serious intent to reform. For just one example, Alejandro Mayorkas, the Homeland Security chief who threw the US Border wide open for four years, presents a probable cause case for treason. Perhaps the new Attorney General can convene a grand jury away from the blob-dominated DC federal court district, say in Texas where these crimes on the border were actually committed — crimes such as ordering the US Border Patrol to stand down while whole caravans waded the Rio Grande.

Attorney General Merrick Garland needs to answer publicly for his coordination of a massive DOJ lawfare conspiracy. How exactly did Deputy US AG Matthew Colangelo end up in Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg’s office? Who green-lighted the harsh prosecutions of Jan 6 suspects by Matthew Graves, in particular their long pre-trial detentions in solitary confinement? Who in the White House confabbed with attorney Nathan Wade to manage the Fulton County case against Mr. Trump and eighteen other defendants? Why did Delaware federal attorney David Weiss allow the statute of limitations run out on Hunter Biden’s 2014 and 2015 tax evasion cases? Stuff like that.

And, of course, FBI Director Christopher Wray needs to answer for the Jan 6 DNC / RNC pipe bomb caper, and the roles of “confidential human sources” in the Jan 6 Capitol riot — including the antics of the notorious Ray Epps. Plus, the three years of RussiaGate and his cavalier use of the FISA Courts. Please subpoena SC District Judge James Boasberg on that, too, while you’re at it. It will not take many inquiries like these to get the point across. The point will be that after many years of absence, consequence is back on the table for those who abuse power.

During the transition — Nov 6 to Jan 20 — Mr. Trump has equivocated a bit about his intentions to bring back consequence in federal operations. On one hand he claims he’s “not interested in retribution,” while on the other hand he has named appointees such as Kash Patel at FBI and John Ratcliffe at CIA who are intimately acquainted with the illegal activities in those places and on-the-record as eager to set consequence in motion. It’s hard to imagine they will demur from getting answers about what has been going on and who is responsible, and take corrective measures.

If he makes it through confirmation, it may be less difficult for a Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to straighten out the Pentagon. The military is much more explicitly hierarchical, and orders are orders. Generals and bureaucrats will be ordered out of the building. But then there are large dark pools of activity hidden from the public, things like DARPA and its many offshoots, that may be harder to penetrate. You must imagine that there are operations hidden even from the SecDef. We keep hearing that the Pentagon can’t pass an audit and can’t account for trillions of mis-spent dollars. Guess what? Someone (or many someones) can be court-martialed for that. Again: consequence returns. Suddenly things are done correctly. Perhaps even a lost sense of honor is restored.

The Fiscal Abyss

Who knows what Elon & Vivek’s DOGE group can accomplish? But there are hard limits in the fiscal whoppers like Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, and veterans benefits that won’t yield much. Blogger David Stockman, former head of the Congressional Budget Office, estimates that even firing three-quarters of all federal employees would only save about $700 billion in savings, which is not enough to avoid a debt death spiral. The carried debt alone could sink whatever else Mr. Trump seeks to accomplish, especially as it can morph into a lethal currency crisis at any time — a runaway inflation and / or collapse of the bond market that would put a lot of people and enterprises out of business, bringing on a new great depression.

There’s always talk about “growing” our way out of debt. I doubt we will be able to do that in the proposed way, based on economic dynamics we’ll get to further below. In his first term, Mr. Trump made noises about defaulting on US debt. I think you will hear chatter about doing just that in the early days of 2025. Though it sounds horrendous, default will happen one way or another: either an honest repudiation of treasury paper (Sorry, we just can’t make the payments anymore), or by allowing currency collapse to do the dirty work for us (Sorry, but our money is worthless. Here’s a billion dollars. . . enjoy the bagel you get for it).

Much of the rest of the world is in similar straits debt-wise, especially Europe and China. The Bretton Woods system for regulating world money has been brain-dead for many years. It’s not hard to imagine something replacing it, including the US dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency (with all its exorbitant privileges). It remains to be seen what role, if any, cryptocurrencies might play in world trade. Many people are wowed by Bitcoin’s journey above $100,000 lately. I’m still not persuaded that it’s anything but a classic bubble in a speculation that represents nothing — except maybe the electricity expended in processing the math attached to its “creation.” A blogger friend makes this interesting point:

What will matter is that one Bitcoin transaction is equivalent to about a month of electricity for the average US household. As Bitcoin grows, energy “consumption” grows exponentially. Note, I said CONSUMPTION, NOT PRODUCTION. If you believe in infinite cheap energy fueled by infinite free money and debt, then all the power to you! No pun intended. . . . — Wendy Williamson

For all the “wow,” Bitcoin still lacks the principal properties of true money. It’s not a practical medium of exchange (buying stuff), it’s not a useful store of value (with its periodic crashes and zooms), nor a reliable index of prices (ditto). To me, it looks like a fugazy that has made a small number of people very rich within a limited window of history. Naturally, the people who got rich, who converted their Bitcoins into villas, yachts, and shares of Nvidia, are infatuated with Bitcoin and the phenomenon of crypto. If there is one thing that might characterize the new times we are entering, it will be the recognition that real things have more value than fake things. We have been traumatized by fakery, and going forward great effort will go into identifying it. Our survival depends on being able to discern the fake from the real.

Money and Economy

Does the world really need a certified universal money agreement? Nothing like Bretton Woods existed until eighty years ago, and it came into being only because the USA so dominated the globe after a ruinous war in Europe and Asia it could command the world’s obedience — at least the parts that weren’t communist. Before that, currencies, monies, and commodities existed, of course, and people took calculated chances trading in them. Usually, but not always, one nation’s currency dominated for a while, as the pound sterling did before World War Two. But paper currencies are a relative novelty. The US only started using paper money in the 1860s. When “money” was mostly gold or silver coin, exchange rates were easy to determine by the purity and weight of a coin. When paper entered the scene, bankers, speculators, and merchants had to do their own due diligence to discover whether X-tons of iron ore, tons of coal, or wheat were worth trading for X-amount of yen, deutschmarks, pounds sterling, and dollars. Those quandaries birthed hedging in currency and commodity trades — a device now wildly perverted, deforming the dynamics of risk and price discovery in everything.

We are probably headed back into that world of diverse monies with inherent risks, part and parcel with a multi-polar world of regional hegemons. The US dollar can no longer act as the universal collateral guaranteeing all transactions. Hence, the trade in debt, bonds, and borrowing re-acquires layers of risk absent for a long time. Government borrowing — issuance of sovereign bonds — necessarily declines in that milieu as moral hazard reappears in financial affairs and governments can no longer promiscuously float their spending on debt. Other countries have already discontinued their purchases of US Treasury paper. Where will the customers for US debt come from? (Answer: nowhere.) It’s just another way that nations and their people are forced to get real in a new disposition of things.

For now, it has probably been demonstrated that central bank digital currencies are unlikely to work. (Nigeria’s eNaira program, the world’s first large-scale experiment in CBDCs flopped miserably.) Along with the tyrannical surveillance issues, too many citizens rely on transacting business in cash, and if the cash turns no-good, they will find other instruments for transacting, perhaps even things as crude and straightforward as gold and silver, with no counter-party risk, no leverage, and no bullshit attached. To me, though, reversion to hard currency would imply a devolution to far less-complex economies and much lower standards of living.

All that runs counter to the current excitement about technological advances compensating for declining systems of modernity — derived from the 20th century religion of endless, limitless progress — creating evermore available (fake) capital. These are the expectations for Artificial Intelligence, advances in “green technology” (especially enhanced electric batteries), next-generation nuclear power, and energy tech not yet achieved but dreamed about such as atomic fusion and zero-point energy.

Oil

For now, the primary resource of our economy remains oil. All other technologies, including nuclear and “green” tech, still require oil for the production of their hardware and maintenance. US oil production reached an all-time high in late 2024 at 13.6million barrels a day — way higher than the old, pre-fracking era “peak oil” figure of 10-million b/d from 1970, and superficially impressive. Fracking has made all the difference the past two decades, but it is not a permanent installation in the human condition. The continuing production increase has come from enhanced drilling techniques even while the supply of tier-one “sweet-spots” in the Permian Basin of West Texas has markedly declined — and the Permian Basin is the last redoubt of economic shale oil (oil economically worth recovering) in the USA.

Mr. Trump has promised loudly and often to “Drill, baby, drill.” Aggressive drilling and opening remaining frontiers like the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil production could extend America’s oil abundance on the short end, but there are no meaningful “exploration” prospects left in North America beyond that. We’ll be fooling ourselves. It’s been a nice ride, but the end is in sight.

In the Permian Basin, the best drilling locations are increasingly rare as the more productive areas have been exploited. Production In the Permian has declined by 15-percent since 2020, according to data from Enverus. Break-even costs are rising. New well productivity per lateral foot is declining. ZIRP is bygone and the cost of capital (interest on borrowed money) is up with inflation. From 2009 to 2020 — the ZIRP years — investors flocked to shale oil stocks since they couldn’t make a buck on bonds. But the shale producers had trouble making money, even though they produced a lot of oil. Many went bankrupt. After that, investors grew shy about investing in shale oil. Going forward, the capital might not be there for these capital-intensive operations.

With the old oil — say, conventional oil in Oklahoma, 1950, where you just banged a pipe in the ground and oil gushed out — the cost of drilling a well was around $500,000 per well (in today’s money). They produced thousands of barrels a day for decades. Shale oil wells cost between $6-million to $12-million per well, with horizontal drilling and fracking (utilizing vast amounts of water trucked-in, plus chemicals and fracking sand to keep the fractures open). The shale wells produce far less per day than the old conventional wells and they decline by over 50-percent in one year. After three or four years, they’re done. Do you see the difference?

Higher oil prices are required to justify new capital expenditure. Yet day-by-day the declining American middle-class steadily loses its ability to pay more for oil and individuals and households go broke under the strain of higher prices. The overall dynamic of our economy starts to wobble. Fewer people can qualify for car loans, which is mainly the way American acquire cars. Car-makers are stuck with excess inventory. Eventually the car-makers’ business model fails. And, by the way, it ought to be clear by now that we will not transition from oil-based cars to all-electric cars — surely not at the same scale of mass ownership. Electric cars just cost too much.

What happens when mass motoring becomes incrementally less mass, less democratic, something only for the well-off? Answer: It stops. It becomes a focus of resentment and rage. It loses its government subsidies (highway repair, etc). It also leads to the demise of America’s premier living arrangement: suburbia. I have written about this quandary for years. It has been hanging over America’s head, and we are unable to imagine how it plays out — mainly because of the titanic sunk-costs involved. We’ve invested so much of our historic cumulative wealth in building the infrastructure for this living arrangement that letting go of it is unthinkable. Yet, it is already becoming severely dysfunctional. And, of course, as that happens, its components — the tract houses, the strip malls, the office parks — will lose their value, meaning that it will become ever-harder for many people to successfully cash out of it and move elsewhere.

And even so, where would that elsewhere be? That problem is exacerbated by the ruinous condition of American cities and their future trajectory. Many US cities have already failed outright — Detroit, St. Louis, Cleveland, Baltimore, Buffalo etc. They are abysmally governed and falling to pieces. They are filled with purposeless humanity, lost souls, dangerous criminals, and ever-fewer places of employment. Even the arguably still-successful cities — New York, Boston, Miami — have attained a scale of operation that is not sustainable, not consistent with the resource and capital scarcities to come. They will have to contract, drop services, lose population — and the process will be very messy. Eventually, they’ll be smaller, but they still occupy some of the best geographical sites, so they will not disappear altogether. The contraction will take a long time to resolve.

For the present, that leaves the thousands of small towns across America that have been drained of vitality and investment for decades. Despite the damage, they have two big virtues: they already exist at a scale more congenial to redevelopment in a resource-and-capital constrained time; and many of them are geographically proximate to places where food can be grown for their own support. We will discover that this is where the action will move to. This is where much of the remaining population will resettle as the giant cities and suburbia enter their epic decline.

More Change Than You Bargained For

The “Golden Age” euphoria is palpable in these weeks before the Trump inauguration. Wall Street is in a rapture imagining a renaissance of corporate enterprise as a punitive regulatory regime lifts. But, just as gigantic cities tend to fail on the issue of scale, the economy as a whole is in need of reorganizing at a finer grain of enterprise. Gigantism itself, gigantic corporations with their tropism for monopoly, have become increasingly ruinous for communities, households, and individual lives in our time. Americans need more autonomy in their economic lives. The trouble is, we might have to get there the hard way — via a general crash of things organized at too large a scale, which would force the necessary rebuild at a smaller and more local scale. This implies a coming second great depression.

It’s not hard to imagine such a crash occurring in the first year of a Trump regime. For one thing, there are surely nefarious parties and persons who would like to see it happen, who might even seek to engineer a financial train wreck for revenge against Mr. Trump and his followers. Anyway, a severely overvalued stock market is begging for correction. Ditto the housing market (and the over-valued collateral it represents) that so much of finance rests on. Too many banks are insolvent. The debt quagmire ensures that government can’t rush to the rescue as it has in past emergencies to bail out the banks without destroying the dollar.

You might also wonder about the proposition laid out in David Rogers Webb’s book, The Great Taking, about the meticulously planned scheme for central bankers to seize much of the collateral in the world, meaning all your stuff. Sounds a little grandiose and preposterous, perhaps, but the fact is that the regulatory authorities of Western Civ have rewritten the banking rules stealthily over the years so that anyone with a bank account is now considered just a low-order creditor whose assets can be taken in the event of a banking emergency. Your savings are just labeled “collateral,” and your “ownership” of the assets is not what you thought it was. The scam seems fantastic, but the rules are in place, waiting to be sprung. Mr. Webb’s concise 99-page book is available free as a pdf HERE.

Of course, a global implosion of equity and bond markets would be the end of financial life as we’ve known it, and none of the abstract chatter about banking rules takes sufficient account of the grotesque social disorder that would attend such an event, so any Great Taking might end up being beside the point — the point being that everyone is broke, no one can transact, and things get awfully dire. But we get a bit ahead of ourselves going up that path. So, let’s return to things we know about.

Mr. Trump’s proposed economic reforms have inescapable overtones of contraction. Paring down the federal government workforce may have many benefits, but it would likely cause a depression in the DC Metro area as jobs are massively eliminated, and the economic damage would radiate through the rest of the country as departments are trimmed and shut down, and the money flowing out of them stops. The effect of a tariff campaign could hurt American business in the short term. Import replacement is a laudatory goal, but it’s liable to be a rough road getting there. Supply lines will break. People and businesses will not get the things they need to do produce goods. It takes time and capital to set up new factories. The tendency will be to run production with robots as far as possible — so, where will the people earn a living? Robots will not become consumers. You must also wonder more generally whether it’s really possible to reenact the industrial orgy of the mid-20th century. Detroit will not be what it was in 1962.

“Joe Biden” leaves behind an economy already auguring-in, concealed by monumental federal spending of money created out of thin air in the months leading up to the 2024 election to cover-up the failing private US economy. Also, all of the official reporting about jobs in 2024 was fake in order to juice the election for the party in power. US Government outlays for the year were $6.752 trillion against revenue of $4.919 trillion. Government can’t solve the problem of mass joblessness by giving everybody government jobs, and Mr. Trump is not philosophically aligned to that sort 20th century Big Government action. Anyway, too many jobs today are crap jobs toiling for merciless companies who mistreat their workers, so the very meaning of work has been degraded to a new kind of slavery. Plus, too many Americans do not work at all, but subsist on government hand-outs or on crime. How does this change?

First, it doesn’t change without the nation going through a period of disorder, discontinuity, and distress. When it does change, the change will be systemic and emergent. It will not come from any top-down government or managerial process. It emerges from the circumstances that reality presents — specifically, the need for people to support themselves, to make themselves useful to their fellow humans, which relationships form into networks of business and work that become a social ecology, a community.

So, the second Trump term could usher in a period of deep economic hardship as we try to figure out how to remake an American economy and rebuild those local ecologies of business. Can Mr. Trump assume a role anything like Franklin Roosevelt did in the 1930s? A paternal voice speaking directly to the people and offering them reassurance in a troubled time? They are obviously very different personalities. Also, the lingering political opposition to Mr. Trump is far more noxious on the Left than anything FDR faced from the Right in 1933. Today’s Left is still functionally insane, sunk in Marxian-Woke delusions, race-and-gender animus, and an intemperate libido for power, all of it boding ill for political stability.

Americans are used to relying on faceless, distant authorities to take care them, to solve their problems: Social Security, Disability, Medicaid, insurance companies, courts. It all works very poorly now, and before long a lot of it may not work at all. We will have to take care of each other. There have never been so many single-person households as there are now. Loneliness and anomie are epic. When the Boomers are gone, that will likely be the end of nursing home care and assisted living at the cost of many thousands of dollars-a-month. The Boomers’ replacement generations are not nearly as wealthy. They missed the window for being able to buy McMansions that could be liquidated for millions to support end-of-life care. We’ll probably see the rise of households made of unrelated people. But the default setting for humans is the family and the extended family.

Some human relations that were common in earlier eras of history, and absent in our time, could return. A little over a century ago, ten percent of the people employed in America were household servants, including what were then middle-class households. Today, only the very wealthy have servants. What hasn’t changed is that people need a place and a purpose, and a purposeful place in a household is not necessarily a bad deal in a civilized society. We just haven’t experienced it in many decades and many Americans would probably find the proposition ridiculous. Yet too many have no place in society and nothing to do, including activities that might be considered duties to one another.

Many towns in the 19th century had institutions called the Poor Farm. Sounds terrible, perhaps, but it was a way of providing a place and real duties for people who had nowhere else to go and nothing to occupy them. It was generally organized as a local charity. Residents were expected to work to their ability, raise their own food in gardens, take care of livestock, do laundry and cleaning chores. Today, that might be considered “cruel,” but really, is it as bad as just letting many thousands camp-out on the streets, sunk in drug addiction? What it requires is the political will to organize useful, properly-scaled institutions around these needs. To get there, we must drop a lot of ideological pretenses.

We face very serious problems with agriculture organized at the gigantic scale, utilizing multi-million-dollar machines (usually mortgaged), giant loans to put in crops, huge “inputs” of chemicals and fertilizers. That is probably coming to an end, too, despite the current techno-narcissistic fantasies of Agribiz. We’re probably going to need more human beings working directly on farms, smaller farms, with fewer giant machines, less borrowed money for putting in crops, and fewer chemical inputs. Which is to say, we’re probably going to see a larger percentage of the population at work growing our food than has been the case for a long time. I suppose it’s hard to grok our society becoming reorganized so differently, of reviving ways of living and working together that are consistent with human nature, proven over time, but considered out-of-date now.

Obviously resurrecting relations like these requires major changes in our national psychology. Today, it is impossible to persuade a lot of citizens that they need to do something useful for a living. Or, to look at it differently, that there might be activities to fill their days that would interesting, satisfying, and rewarded with pay — rather than just loafing, getting high, and watching canned entertainment. Today, we lack countless occupational niches in society that used to allow people of very different abilities to find a place and a purpose, especially, now, people of low ability. If I am correct that the macro trend is to re-scale our economy and re-localize it, those places and purposes can return. It will probably also require a return of the eternal verities, too, as a means of managing social relations: truth, beauty, liberty, brotherly love, trust, fairness. . . conditions and behavior that we should at least agree to aspire to in a common culture worthy of our allegiance.

I doubt that the incoming Trump administration sees things developing in the direction of downscaling, decomplexifying, and localizing. Rather, they seem to expect ever more grandiose enterprise, at least in what’s known as the private sector, even while they pare down government. But, really, everything in the everyday life of this nation will have to scale down and happen differently. We’re going to need fewer giant entities like Walmart and more local commercial networks of small businesses geared to local communities. As you may have inferred, I believe that circumstances will deliver us to that new disposition of things in any case, whether political leaders agree or not. If Mr. Trump is wise, he will recognize the trend and go with the flow.

Other Parts of the World

As I write, governments are falling all over the place. Olaf Scholz cannot form a governing coalition in Germany. In France, Emmanuel Macron’s ruling faction lost bigly in snap elections last summer with no clear majority for any coalition, and also in the EU parliamentary elections. Both countries are using lawfare to defeat their opponents. Mr Scholz’s and his allies are trying to outlaw the rising opposition Alternative for Deutschland (AFD) party, especially after the AFD showed growing strength in state elections in Saxony, Brandenburg, and Thuringia. The Paris prosecutor’s office is trying to nail Marine LePen on embezzling EU funds to pay staff salaries in her National Rally Party.

Germany, the largest economy in the EU, has been busy committing suicide for the past decade. The country shut down its nuclear power reactor fleet entirely and went all-in for a “green” energy program (wind and solar) that has fallen far short of being able to supply its needs. It had just gotten ready to receive a reliable supply of cheap Russian natural gas in 2022 when somebody — probably the USA — blew up the Nord Stream One and Two pipelines. Joe Biden declared in so many words that he was going to “stop” the Nord Streams months earlier, so why not believe him? The Germans just rolled over for what would normally be construed as an act-of-war against it, by a NATO ally no less.

Consequently, overnight Germany’s advanced industrial economy, its automakers, chemical companies, machine tool-makers, became uncompetitive in global markets and the German economy entered a slow death spiral. Europe is now supposed to be happy to get American liquified natgas, which is much more costly to transport and offload than Russian pipeline gas would have been. France was only marginally better off with its robust nuclear energy production to supply electricity, but it, too, lost access to cheap Russian natgas needed for industry and home heating.

Meanwhile, the other nations of the EU have all to one extent or another joined the European suicide pact. The EU has been at war against its own farmers for years for reasons that appear completely insane — perhaps driven by Klaus Schwab and his World Economic Forum. The regulatory architecture of the European Commission is crushing business under its “green” energy and climate change mitigation agenda. Geert Wilders' Party for Freedom (PVV) unexpectedly won the most seats in the last election, but not an outright majority, and could not form a working coalition. Wilders did not become prime minister —the job was assigned instead to one Dick Schoof, a career bureaucrat who most recently ran the Netherlands’ Intel service.

Canada, entered political limbo in mid-December when Deputy Prime Minister and Finance chief (and WEF board member) Chrystia Freeland suddenly resigned and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau looked like he was fighting for his political life in parliament. Mr. Trudeau had only days before made a pilgrimage to Mar-a-Lago for talks with Donald Trump, who mocked him most severely down there, calling Canada “our fifty-first state” and referring to Mr. Trudeau as “governor.” The Canadian dollar has been tanking since then and stands at 69 cents to the US dollar as I write. Mr. Trudeau will be gone early in the new year at the latest. He’ll be replaced by the Conservative party leader, Pierre Poilievre, who demonstrates an ability to think straight.

The European Union regulatory overlayment has become an intolerable burden for the EU member nations. The EU seemed like a good idea at the time, and for many years basic operating principles like a common currency (the Euro) and the Schengen Agreement (free movement of member state citizens and goods across national borders) made daily life easier. But in recent years the EU bureaucracy adopted a set of insane polices: the programmatic destruction of farms and farmers; mass unregulated immigration from third world failed states; and antipathy to petroleum resources for the sake of debatable climate change. Aggravating all this is the unelected EU Commissioners’ lack of accountability to the public. Other technical issues, such as the EU’s lack of fiscal control over individual members and the problems that causes for bond issuance appear irresolvable.

Once before, in 2012, financial turmoil has threatened the EU’s existence. But that crisis — the collapse of Greece and its ramifications — got “papered over” with bail-outs and accounting fraud. Now, Europe enters an era not just of critical financial imbalances, but of severe dislocations in the on-the-ground economy of real production. The flood of migrants continues and their aggressive antagonism to age-old European culture is on the rise with calls for Sharia law and a European caliphate. It’s getting to look like a tragi-farcical reenactment of the Mohammedan conquests of the Middle Ages. It’s draining EU members’ treasuries while they go broke from de-industrializing. And countless humiliations are heaped on the people: mass murders, beheadings, constant insults, street violence all over and, just last week, the Christmas market murders in Magdeburg. It’s at a breaking point. As Europe watches Mr. Trump successfully commence deportations, Europe will eventually follow — but not before a tumultuous period in early 2025 when rebellion sweeps away Leftist governments. The European Union could be swept away with them. Borders will harden, national currencies might return, and drastic realignment awaits.

The United Kingdom looks like a lost cause due to the utter collapse of the conservative party, leaving Labor temporarily alone on the field, with the monumentally incompetent PM Keir Starmer in charge and an all-out Orwellian regime severely abusing the indigenous British people while it coddles hostile immigrants. That will not last a whole lot longer. Starmer will be chased out in the first half of 2025, just as Liz Truss (remember her?) got dumped in 2022. Waiting to enter at stage-right is Nigel Farage, a genuinely charismatic leader who is destined to become Britain’s Trump. After successfully leading the Brexit charge, he sojourned in the political wilderness like Churchill did between 1929-39. Now he leads the Reform UK Party, which is in the process of utterly eclipsing the broken Tories. Look for Farage to make his move quickly in 2025.

Then there is the woeful situation in Ukraine. I’ve written about it often and will recapitulate it as succinctly as possible: The Ukraine War was an American neocon project to destabilize Russia and probably an attempt to gain control of its resource assets. Mr. Putin refused to get rolled and fought back. It has been a hugely costly disaster for Ukraine in blood, capital, and infrastructure. Not a cake-walk for Russia, either. But Mr. Putin will probably attain his objectives, which are: annexation of Donbas and Crimea and establishment of what’s left of Ukraine as a neutral, non-member of NATO.

Mr. Trump is eager to end what he calls “this stupid war.” The catch is, how can he settle it expeditiously without appearing to capitulate? Mr. Putin will not budge from retaining Crimea and the Donbas provinces (“oblasts”). That is the condition for even entering talks. The humiliation associated with this project should be all Joe Biden’s, and in some respects certainly will be when his family’s entanglements and machinations are fully exposed, as they are certain to be.

Mr. Trump and Mr. Putin will solve the puzzle by pretending to negotiate over the port of Odessa, which will eventually be awarded to the rump Ukraine so it can have access to the sea for its essential grain shipments. They’ll tussle for a while over that but it will be all for show. The war will end. Ukraine will finally hold elections and Volodymyr Zelenskyy will be cast out like a dog that has peed on the rug too many times. I doubt he will survive the year. Both America and Russia pony up money to rebuild Ukraine’s critical infrastructure, but not much more. The world will come to understand exactly what happened. NATO will be a shadow of what it was, if it does not collapse altogether due to the rising political upheavals all over Europe.

The Middle East

I am not on the bus with the mob shouting about Israel as a perpetrator of “genocide.” Our own General Sherman put it succinctly 160 years ago: War is hell. Hamas should not have started one on October 7, 2023. For that, the Palestinians got hell. Hamas fighters should not have (literally) dug itself in amongst the Palestinian civilians of Gaza, with its labyrinth of war tunnels that the Israelis had to destroy if there would be any end to the strife emanating out of them.

The essential problem in that corner of the world is that the region cannot support the huge and still-growing populations of most of the Arab states in it. It is mostly desert. The fantastic wealth of the oil age combined with other circumstances, such as the increase in grain production, to grow these populations. Tragically now, all that has reached a limit and things are going in the other direction: toward collapse. This slow-motion collapse expresses itself in political friction, mass migration, violence, and religious zealotry. The Jihadis are serious about murdering non-Muslims. Considering the action in Europe lately, the truculence of Muslim migrants towards their hosts there, it’s obvious that Jews and Christians are on equal footing as targets.

The population Israel of Israel is 9.4 -million. The total population of Palestinians worldwide is estimated to be around 14.8 million as of mid-2024. This includes Palestinians living in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, within Israel, and in the diaspora across various countries. The population of countries adjacent to — Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria — is 145-million. Much of that Arab population subscribes to annihilating the state of Israel, and declares as much publicly all the time. Is Israel not supposed to take those threats seriously?

Considering these odds, are you shocked and offended that the United States is an ally of Israel? Do you think that the United States has no strategic interest in any counter-balance to opposing interests in the Middle East? Grow up. The American Woke-Marxists want you to think that this relationship is illicit, unjust. They want you to hate the Jews and hate Israel. You’d better ask yourself: who do these Woke-Marxists serve? Not our interests, not American interests.

Israel has managed to make its tiny desert country blossom over the past seventy-five years while also building a manufacturing and tech economy. Due to the constant threats against it, much of the wealth generated by that economy must be directed into the Israeli Defense Force (IDF). It is quite an accomplishment for this tiny state to stand-up against so many enemies. They have won two major wars against them in modern times as well as many periodic border clashes, intifadas, and skirmishes. Their enemies are deeply resentful and probably jealous of Israel’s economic success.

The Oct 7, 2023, rape, torture, and murder attack by Hamas prompted Israel to mount an existential defense against an obdurately and garishly murderous enemy. Israel won the Gaza Strip territory from Egypt in the 1967 War. In 2005 it turned over governance of Gaza to the Palestinians. Among other things, the Palestinians could have turned Gaza’s twenty-five-mile-long beach-front into a premier Mediterranean resort. Instead, the Hamas government used the international aid funds they received to build miles and miles of war tunnels. Bad choice. They used Gaza as a launching pad for missile attacks and intifadas. More bad choices. 10/7/23 was a crossed red line. Now there is no more Gaza. The civilians will have to find somewhere else to go, and if their Arab neighbors won’t take them, then blame their Arab neighbors. They have been cast out for atrocious behavior.

The Jihadis’ publicists want you to think that Israel has behaved badly. No doubt, the action by the IDF in Gaza was brutal. War is hell. In war, everywhere and always, soldiers act savagely. Americans did, at times, in Vietnam and Iraq. It is the reality of war. One lesson is that wars should not be started casually. Israel’s motive in this war is to put the war parties of its enemies out-of-business. It is close to succeeding now, with Hamas scattered, Hezbollah cut off from its sponsor, Iran, and Assad gone in Syria. Israel accomplished this with the “Joe Biden” regime pretending to support both sides in the conflict and finally having less influence than ever over the outcome. This is where things stand in December, 2025, but it is a very lively game-board, and there is much potential for new action and the entry of other players, which we’ll turn to now.

Suddenly Syria

Well, that was fast! Took twelve days (Nov 27 to Dec 8). Phhhhht!!! Assad, gone (to Russia). How’d that happen? Begin with the population problem I cited above: the region is poor. Expanding population against a contracting resource base will create great political and social stresses. Syria’s population grew dramatically from 7-million in 1972 to 22-million in 2022. Syria is a large country with distinct territories. Its easternmost region bordering Iraq and Turkey, Jazira, with the city of Raqqah, straddles the Euphrates River, a grain-growing corridor that used to feed the Syrian people. Many years of drought and botched irrigation projects have wrecked farming there. That was one factor in the mass migrations to Europe the past decade. Altogether, 6-million Syrians have fled the country since the Arab Spring in 2011. Jazira is also the location of Syria’s oil, which was grabbed by the US in 2019 when the country was racked by civil war. The region is a cultural crossroads, with a significant Kurdish population, bleeding over to Greater Kurdistan into Iraq and Turkey.

Long story short: Assad’s Syria was badly weakened by food shortages, revenue shortage, and long-running civil war. He could barely pay his Army, and when the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) rebel forces pushed across the country this fall, his soldiers melted away. HTS has its origins in al Qaeda, and al Qaeda has its origins in the US intel blob and its neocon strategists. You can be sure that the US was involved in rooting out Assad. As we have seen before, these kinds of operations tend to be double-edged swords, which end up stabbing America in the back later on. In this case, imagine that by chasing Assad out we may have succeeded in turning Syria into Jihad Central of the Middle East.

As soon as HTS was in control of Damascus, the capital, Israel sent its air force in and destroyed every military target, airfield, tank park, munitions depot in Syria so that it would not fall into the hands of Hezbollah, Israel’s Iran-backed enemy. Israel controls a small area of southern Syria near the Golan Heights. Israel had already done severe damage to Hezbollah earlier this year by methodically killing off its leadership, one-by-one. The exploding pager op also did enormous operational damage to Hezbollah. For now, Israel benefits from broken Syria. Iran has lost its geographical conduit for arms supply to Hezbollah. The HTS forces are Sunni and Hezbollah’s sponsor, Iran, is Shia, with all the built-in conflict that implies. All of a sudden, Iran has lost its influence in this region adjacent to Israel, the enemy it declares it wants to “wipe off the map.”

The Turks were involved in the Syrian regime change, too. Turkey currently hosts millions of Syrian refugees from the chaos of the Syrian civil war. The Kurds in Syria are also a problem, linked to the PKK, a terrorist terror group inside Turkey. Turkey’s pugnacious president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, pivots between its alliance with NATO, its off-and-on strategic relations with Russia, and the Arab world with its cultural affinities. Turkey is a disgruntled NATO. For decades, it was openly and often derided by other nations in the west as “the sick man of Europe.” Yet, it controls the entrance to the Black Sea, which has always been a problem for Russia — they have gone to war several times — though Russia engages in development projects in Turkey these days.

Don’t forget, Turkey’s Ottoman Empire controlled all of the Middle East and North Africa from the 16th into the early 20th century and its influence ranged into Europe as well. This was the time long before oil wealth juiced the Arab world. Populations were sparse then across what was then called The Holy Land. The indigenous Arabs still wandered the desert on camels and lived in tents. The Ottoman Empire collapsed in the First World War, and what you see on-the-ground over much of the region are artificial boundaries created by the British after the war for administrative efficiency. Mr. Erdoğan may harbor ambitions for Turkey to once again play a larger role in world affairs. It has the region’s largest standing army. For now, Turkey and Erdoğan enjoy somewhat enhanced regional influence. The counter to him has been the US’s penchant for creating failed states via CIA involvement with rebel and Jihad movements. Mr. Trump has dropped the hint that he’s inclined to keep the US involvement in Syria to a minimum. He begins his administration with a declared aversion to all the world’s current wars.

I’d forecast the HTS government not being able to control much of the country and a continued arc toward failed nationhood, with friction and violence between many of the different groups still residing there. I doubt Israel wants to try to control it, since it is an obvious quagmire. Russia appears to be bowing out of direct involvement, too, but is rumored to be negotiating with HTS to maintain its presence at the Khmeimim Air Base and the Tartus Naval Base. The macro trend in many parts of the Middle East is a return to pre-modernity. The last hundred years of jet planes and Range Rovers will look like a strange, anomalous blip in history.

China

Whatever is going on in China, her leaders like to play the long game, looking ahead decades, fifty and a hundred years, while everyone else struggles to strategize from month to month. It doesn’t mean that China comes out a winner, though. Some of that long game is just hubris and pretense. China has plenty of problems. It developed into an industrial colossus overnight, and now the global techno-industrial economy it found such a big role in is wobbling, especially in Europe, which puts a huge strain on China’s export-oriented system. Its financial architecture has always been janky because CCP is so entangled with the banks, bourses, and giant business enterprises — and if it doesn’t like how things are going, the Party just pretends that everything’s great. Nothing can be allowed to challenge the CCP’s dominance. Eventually things break, though, and the Party has to create some new narrative to explain the breakage.

Lately there are rumors of mass layoffs, and of many young people leaving the cities to return to the countryside. The population is skewed to the elderly, due to the many years of China’s one-child policy. There is, of course, the disastrous real estate bubble which continues to destroy the savings of households, since many Chinese did not trust banks or stock and bond markets, and instead invested in enormous apartment complex property development projects have been failing one after another. The CCP’s response has been to screw down CCP control over the people and their activities ever-harder. The party fears its own people and no regime has a guarantee to go on forever. Expect turmoil there in 2025 as economic depression creeps across the global economy.

America’s problems with China over trade and manufacturing are likely to be eclipsed in 2025 by the gross intrusions and subversions that China has been allowed to make in US institutions and our economy with the assistance of the “Joe Biden” administration. The Chinese have infiltrated America’s research universities, telecommunications (especially the hardware for cell phones and 5-G microwave transmission), US Intel, and the corporate sector, stealing intellectual property and our manufacturing secrets. And, of course, China has deeply involved itself in elected officialdom — the Biden family’s grifting operations and Rep Eric Swalwel’s romance with the spy Fang-Fang, among the most notorious. Senator Diane Feinstein employed a Chinese spy as her limo driver and go-fer for twenty years, including the years 2009 to 2015 when she chaired the Senate Intelligence Committee. You can be sure that Congress is well-larded with Chinese money and the influence it buys. Expect to find out a lot more in 2025. It is one of the things that binds elected officials so tightly to the DC blob.

Two other matters involving China require urgent attention and the waiting Trump admin is already talking about them. One is China’s large, recent purchases of US land, both prime farmland and real estate around US military bases. It looks like they are going to be ejected from these holdings, with or without compensation is not known yet. We might see inquiries as to how these purchases were allowed to happen.

The second issue is the number of Chinese nationals, especially men of military age, who came across the border along with the millions of other illegal aliens that “Joe Biden” allowed into the country with zero vetting. In fiscal year 2023 — Oct 1, 2022 to Sept. 30, 2023 — that number was about 24,100. In fiscal year 2024 it was 24,400. You should assume that US intel knows something about some of them, but not most of them, and what they are up to here. Several Chinese “police stations” — that is, offices set up in US cities to control Chinese migrants in the US — have been discovered and busted the last several years. And then there was the case of the Chinese high-altitude “weather balloon” (actually suspected of being a military surveillance balloon) that the “Joe Biden” admin allowed to sail completely across the USA from the Pacific to the Atlantic before shooting it down offshore of the Carolinas.

These Chinese activities around the USA in aggregate suggest a kind of stealth warfare aimed at eventually getting control of the North American continent and its resources. This would be consistent with fifty-to-a-hundred-year long-range strategic thinking. And it was apparently working pretty nicely until the elections of 2024. It should be pretty alarming, but somehow the alarm bells have not gone off until a couple of months ago. Questions, anyone?

I’d forecast that the US and China will not go to war with China over Taiwan in 2025. It is too much of a losing proposition for all concerned. Both China and the USA will be preoccupied with domestic problems and trade negotiations in the year ahead.

A Few Other Odds and Ends

Keep your eye on Argentina and its president, Javier Milei. Argentina was the world’s seventh-wealthiest nation in the early 1900s, and from 1930s on, after many coups, the country slid into chronic decline, badly aggravated by the long-running dictatorships of Juan and Eva Peron, and followed buy decades more revolving military coups, Peronista governments, and neoliberal finance mischief that left the resource-rich nation broke.

Enter Javier Milei (Mee-lay) in 2023 as Argentina’s “anarcho-capitalist” president, who ran the promise to “take a chain saw” to the parasitical bureaucracy. In year one of his admin (essentially 2024), Milei got rid of 35,000 government employees and balanced the budget for the first time in decades. Inflation is finally falling. The Argentine people have awakened from the successive Peronista / neoliberal zombie comas they have been in for decades. Prediction: in 2025 Argentina sets the pace for the revolution in Western Civ government. Melei has another successful year in downsizing oppressive, useless bureaucracy. He begins a pioneering national nuclear power program. Argentina begins to emerge as a major player on the world stage.

El Salvador is ruled, shall we say, by the eccentric and very interesting President Nayib Bukele-Ortiz (known simply as Bukele), now in his second term. His campaign against gang violence that made El Salvador such a savage place has produced spectacular results. His new “Terrorism Confinement Center” is one of the largest and most modern prisons in the world. It was built to house 20,000 inmates. He has arrested an estimated 86,000 hardened gang-aligned criminals. El Salvador has the highest incarceration rate in the world — which is what happens after allowing criminal gangs to hold the country hostage for decades. From 2022 to 2023, the murder rate fell by approximately 69-percent. (Data for 2024 is not complete.) Mr. Bukele enjoys a 91-percent favorable rating among voters.

In 2021, El Salvador made Bitcoin a legal tender alongside the US dollar. Mr. Bukele’s “Bitcoin Law” requires businesses to accept Bitcoin in transactions. (As I said above, Bitcoin as “money” is deeply problematic.) The government itself has been purchasing Bitcoin as a long-term investment strategy. The verdict is out as to how Mr. Bukele’s fate might be chained to Bitcoin. For now, he has managed an epic turnaround in a country that had been lost to anarchy and crime for virtually all its previous existence. Forecast: El Salvador will continue to thrive due to Mr. Bukele’s Napoleonic organizational skills, even if Bitcoin falters.

That is all I have for you in this end of year forecast for the year to come. I will be amazed to hear if any of you read this document to its bitter end.

For each of you personally: do your best to lead purposeful, ethical lives in 2025. Refrain from trying to push other people around. Take care of your own bidness. . . and keep abreast of the goings-on in the year ahead at good old Clusterfuck Nation! And, above all, stay calm and cheerful

Body-by-Guinness

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"Progressive" "Permission Structures," what they Wrought, & how they Failed
« Reply #2430 on: December 29, 2024, 07:23:00 PM »
One of the most perplexing aspects of the past 15 years or so has to do with all the folks I otherwise knew to have two clues to rub together opted nonetheless to embrace, nod knowingly along with, or at least not push back at all manner of rank hokum peddled by those pretending to be our political betters while embracing the same sorts of intimidation tactics used by despots throughout history.

Perplexing but not surprising: as someone silly enough to think words have meanings and the foundational documents of the American experiment are comprised of meanings that aren't difficult to discover or deduce, I've watched as those masquerading as moral superiors seek to render the second tenth of the Bill of Rights meaningless over the past 40 years and, in doing so, attempted to render the hoi poli powerless in the face of ever creeping prescriptions and proscriptions as their sundry illegal and unconstitutional intrusions spilled the banks of the second amendment and submerged every constitutional norm. Sure, firearm rights had been cast as some sort of crackpot misunderstanding of the obvious despite all the incontrovertible evidence left by the nation's founders, but as those same techniques began to subvert all the norms of the republic how did so many manage to avert their gaze or in fact embrace accelerating despotism?

This piece provides an avenue for understanding how all the absurdities were unquestionably embraced by folks that ought to have known better, folks who saw manufactured digital herds they convinced themselves they had to join lest they be lumped among the "deplorables," those "clinging to their guns and religion," or what the less verbally apt described as "trash" among other awful adjectives bandied when some declined to toe lines or join in describing finery where nothing by naked lust of power stood: 

How Obama Built an Omnipotent Thought Machine & How it was Destroyed

by David Samuels

If anyone in the future cares enough to write an authentic history of the 2024 presidential campaign, they might begin by noting that American politics exists downstream of American culture, which is a deep and broad river. Like any river, American culture follows a particular path, which has been reconfigured at key moments by new technologies. In turn, these technologies, which redefine both space and time—canals and lakes, the postal system, the telegraph, railroads, radio and later television, the internet, and most recently the networking of billions of people in real time on social media platforms—set the rules by which stories are communicated, audiences are configured, and individuals define themselves.

Something big changed sometime after the year 2000 in the way we communicated with each other, and the means by which we absorbed new information and formed a working picture of the world around us. What changed can be understood as the effect of the ongoing transition from the world of 20th-century media to our current digital landscape. This once-every-five-centuries revolution would have large effects, ones we have only just begun to assimilate, and which have largely rendered the assumptions and accompanying social forms of the past century obsolete, even as tens of millions of people, including many who imagine themselves to reside near the top of the country’s social and intellectual pyramids, continue to imagine themselves to be living in one version or another of the long 20th century that began with the advent of a different set of mass communications technologies, which included the telegraph, radio, and film.

The time was ripe, in other words, for a cultural revolution—which would, according to the established patterns of American history, in turn generate a political one.

I first became interested in the role of digital technology in reshaping American politics a decade ago, when I reported on the selling of Barack Obama’s Iran deal for The New York Times Magazine. By the time I became interested in the subject, the outcome of Obama’s campaign to sell the deal, which had become the policy cornerstone of his second term in office, was a fait accompli. The Deal seemed odd to me, not only because American Jews were historically a key player in the Democratic Party—providing outsized numbers of voters, party organizers and publicists, in addition to huge tranches of funding for its campaigns—but because the Deal seemed to actively undermine the core assumptions of U.S. security architecture in the Middle East, whose goals were to ensure the steady flow of Middle Eastern oil to global markets while keeping U.S. troops out of the region. A Middle East in which the U.S. actively “balanced” a revisionist anti-American power like Iran against traditional U.S. allies like Saudi Arabia and Israel seemed guaranteed to become a more volatile region that would require exactly the kinds of active U.S. military intervention that Obama claimed to want to avoid. Nor did turning over major shipping lanes to Iran and its network of regional terror armies seem like a recipe for the steady flow of oil to global markets that in turn helped ensure the ability of U.S. trading partners in Europe and Asia to continue to buy U.S.-made goods. Seen through the lens of conventional American geopolitics, the Iran deal made little sense.

In the course of my reporting, though, I began to see Obama’s plans for the Middle East not simply as a geopolitical maneuver, but as a device to remake the Democratic Party—which it would do in part by rewiring the machinery that produced what a brilliant young political theorist named Walter Lippmann once identified, in his 1922 book, as “public opinion.”

Lippmann was a progressive Harvard-educated technocrat who believed in engineering society from the top down, and who understood the role of elites in engineering social change to be both positive and inevitable. It was Lippman, not Noam Chomsky, who coined the phrase “manufacturing consent,” and in doing so created the framework in which the American governing class would understand both its larger social role and the particular tools at its disposal. “We are told about the world before we see it,” Lippmann wrote. “We imagine most things before we experience them. And those preconceptions, unless education has made us acutely aware, govern deeply the whole process of perception.” Or as he put it even more succinctly: “The way in which the world is imagined determines at any particular moment what men will do.”

DonateThe collapse of the 20th-century media pyramid on which Lippmann’s assumptions rested, and its rapid replacement by monopoly social media platforms, made it possible for the Obama White House to sell policy—and reconfigure social attitudes and prejudices—in new ways. In fact, as Obama’s chief speechwriter and national security aide Ben Rhodes, a fiction writer by vocation, argued to me more than once in our conversations, the collapse of the world of print left Obama with little choice but to forge a new reality online.

When I wrote about Rhodes’ ambitious program to sell the Iran deal, I advanced the term “echo chambers” to describe the process by which the White House and its wider penumbra of think tanks and NGOs generated an entirely new class of experts who credentialed each other on social media in order to advance assertions that would formerly have been seen as marginal or not credible, thereby overwhelming the efforts of traditional subject-area gatekeepers and reporters to keep government spokespeople honest. In constructing these echo chambers, the White House created feedback loops that could be gamed out in advance by clever White House aides, thereby influencing and controlling the perceptions of reporters, editors and congressional staffers, and the elusive currents of “public opinion” they attempted to follow. If you saw how the game worked from the inside, you understood that the new common wisdom was not a true “reflection” of what anyone in particular necessarily believed, but rather the deliberate creation of a small class of operatives who used new technologies to create and control larger narratives that they messaged to target audiences on digital platforms, and which often presented themselves to their targets as their own naturally occurring thoughts and feelings, which they would then share with people like themselves.

To my mind, the point of the story I was reporting, in addition to being an interesting exploration of how the tools of fiction writing could be applied to political messaging on social media as an element of statecraft, was twofold. First, it usefully warned of the potential distance between an underlying reality and an invented reality that could be successfully messaged and managed from the White House, which suggested a new potential for a large-scale disaster like the war in Iraq, which I—like Rhodes and Obama—had opposed from its beginning.

Second, I wanted to show how the new messaging machinery actually operated—my theory being that it was probably a bad idea to allow young White House aides with MFA degrees to create “public opinion” from their iPhones and laptops, and to then present the results of that process as something akin to the outcome of the familiar 20th-century processes of reporting and analysis that had been entrusted to the so-called “fourth estate,” a set of institutions that was in the process of becoming captive to political verticals, which were in turn largely controlled by corporate interests like large pharmaceutical companies and weapons-makers. Hillary Clinton would soon inherit the machinery that Obama and his aides had built along with the keys to the White House. What would she do with it?

What I did not imagine at the time was that Obama’s successor in the White House would not be Hillary Clinton but Donald Trump. Nor did I foresee that Trump would himself become the target of a messaging campaign that would make full use of the machine that Obama had built, along with elements of the American security state. Being physically inside the White House, it turned out, was a mere detail of power; even more substantial power lay in controlling the digital switchboard that Obama had built, and which it turned out he still controlled.

During the Trump years, Obama used the tools of the digital age to craft an entirely new type of power center for himself, one that revolved around his unique position as the titular, though pointedly never-named, head of a Democratic Party that he succeeded in refashioning in his own image—and which, after Hillary’s loss, had officially supplanted the “centrist” Clinton neoliberal machine of the 1990s. The Obama Democratic Party (ODP) was a kind of balancing mechanism between the power and money of the Silicon Valley oligarchs and their New York bankers; the interests of bureaucratic and professional elites who shuttled between the banks and tech companies and the work of bureaucratic oversight; the ODP’s own sectarian constituencies, which were divided into racial and ethnic categories like “POC,” “MENA,” and “Latinx,” whose bizarre bureaucratic nomenclature signaled their inherent existence as top-down containers for the party’s new-age spoils system; and the world of billionaire-funded NGOs that provided foot-soldiers and enforcers for the party’s efforts at social transformation.

It was the entirety of this apparatus, not just the ability to fashion clever or impactful tweets, that constituted the party’s new form of power. But control over digital platforms, and what appeared on those platforms, was a key element in signaling and exercising that power. The Hunter Biden laptop story, in which party operatives shanghaied 51 former high U.S. government intelligence and security officials to sign a letter that all but declared the laptop to be a fake, and part of a Russian disinformation plot—when most of those officials had very strong reasons to know or believe that the laptop and its contents were real—showed how the system worked. That letter was then used as the basis for restricting and banning factual reports about the laptop and its contents from digital platforms, with the implication that allowing readers to access those reports might be the basis for a future accusation of a crime. None of this censorship was official, of course: Trump was in the White House, not Obama or Biden. What that demonstrated was that the real power, including the power to control functions of the state, lay elsewhere.

Even more unusual, and alarming, was what followed Trump’s defeat in 2020. With the Democrats back in power, the new messaging apparatus could now formally include not just social and institutional pressure but the enforcement arms of the federal bureaucracy, from the Justice Department to the FBI to the SEC. As the machine ramped up, censoring dissenting opinions on everything from COVID, to DEI programs, to police conduct, to the prevalence and the effects of hormone therapies and surgeries on youth, large numbers of people began feeling pressured by an external force that they couldn’t always name; even greater numbers of people fell silent. In effect, large-scale changes in American mores and behavior were being legislated outside the familiar institutions and processes of representative democracy, through top-down social pressure machinery backed in many cases by the threat of law enforcement or federal action, in what soon became known as a “whole of society” effort.

At every turn over the next four years, it was like a fever was spreading, and no one was immune. Spouses, children, colleagues, and supervisors at work began reciting, with the force of true believers, slogans they had only learned last week, and that they were very often powerless to provide the slightest real-world evidence for. These sudden, sometimes overnight, appearances of beliefs, phrases, tics, looked a lot like the mass social contagions of the 1950s—one episode after another of rapid-onset political enlightenment replacing the appearance of dance crazes or Hula-Hoops.

During the Trump years, Obama used the tools of the digital age to craft an entirely new type of power center for himself, one that revolved around his unique position as the titular, though pointedly never-named, head of a Democratic Party that he succeeded in refashioning in his own image.

Just as in those commercially fed crazes, there was nothing accidental, mystical or organic about these new thought-viruses. Catchphrases like “defund the police,” “structural racism,” “white privilege,” “children don’t belong in cages,” “assigned gender” or “stop the genocide in Gaza” would emerge and marinate in meme-generating pools like the academy or activist organizations, and then jump the fence—or be fed—into niche groups and threads on Twitter or Reddit. If they gained traction in those spaces, they would be adopted by constituencies and players higher up in the Democratic Party hierarchy, who used their control of larger messaging verticals on social media platforms to advance or suppress stories around these topics and phrases, and who would then treat these formerly fringe positions as public markers for what all “decent people” must universally believe; those who objected or stood in the way were portrayed as troglodytes and bigots. From there, causes could be messaged into reality by state and federal bureaucrats, NGOs, and large corporations, who flew banners, put signs on their bathrooms, gave new days off from work, and brought in freshly minted consultants to provide “trainings” for workers—all without any kind of formal legislative process or vote or backing by any significant number of voters.

What mattered here was no longer Lippmann’s version of “public opinion,” rooted in the mass audiences of radio and later television, which was assumed to correlate to the current or future preferences of large numbers of voters—thereby assuring, on a metaphoric level at least, the continuation of 19th-century ideas of American democracy, with its deliberate balance of popular and representational elements in turn mirroring the thrust of the Founders’ design. Rather, the newly minted digital variant of “public opinion” was rooted in the algorithms that determine how fads spread on social media, in which mass multiplied by speed equals momentum—speed being the key variable. The result was a fast-moving mirror world that necessarily privileges the opinions and beliefs of the self-appointed vanguard who control the machinery, and could therefore generate the velocity required to change the appearance of “what people believe” overnight.

The unspoken agreements that obscured the way this social messaging apparatus worked—including Obama’s role in directing the entire system from above—and how it came to supplant the normal relationships between public opinion and legislative process that generations of Americans had learned from their 20th-century poli-sci textbooks, made it easy to dismiss anyone who suggested that Joe Biden was visibly senile; that the American system of government, including its constitutional protections for individual liberties and its historical system of checks and balances, was going off the rails; that there was something visibly unhealthy about the merger of monopoly tech companies and national security agencies with the press that threatened the ability of Americans to speak and think freely; or that America’s large cultural systems, from education, to science and medicine, to the production of movies and books, were all visibly failing, as they fell under the control of this new apparatus. Millions of Americans began feeling increasingly exhausted by the effort involved in maintaining parallel thought-worlds in which they expressed degrees of fealty to the new order in the hope of keeping their jobs and avoiding being singled out for ostracism and punishment, while at the same time being privately baffled or aghast by the absence of any persuasive logic behind the changes they saw—from the breakdown of law and order in major cities, to the fentanyl epidemic, to the surge of perhaps 20 million unvetted illegal immigrants across the U.S. border, to widespread gender dysphoria among teenage girls, to sudden and shocking declines in public health, life expectancy, and birth rates.

Until the fever broke. Today, Donald Trump is victorious, and Obama is the loser. In fact, he looks physically awful—angry and gaunt, after a summer and fall spent lecturing Black men, and Americans in general, on their failure to vote enthusiastically enough for his chosen heir, Kamala Harris, the worst major party presidential candidate in modern American history. The totality of Obama’s failure left party donors feeling cheated. Even George Clooney now disavows him. Meanwhile, Trump and his party are in control of the White House, the Senate, the House of Representatives, and the Supreme Court.

But reducing the question of what happened to Barack Obama’s new American system to the results of a single election is in fact to trivialize the startling nature and ambition of what he built, as well as the shocking suddenness with which it has all gone up in smoke. The master political strategist of his era didn’t simply back a losing horse. Rather, the entire structure he had erected over more than a decade, and which was to have been his legacy, for good or ill, has collapsed entirely. At home and abroad, Obama’s grand vision has been decisively rejected by the people whose lives it was intended to reorder. The mystery is how and why neither Obama nor his army of technocratic operatives and retainers understood the fatal flaw in the new system—until it was too late.

The theory and practice on which the rapid-onset political enlightenment of our digital era was based did not, in fact, begin with Barack Obama. He was—at first, at least—the product being sold. Nor did it originate with the digital technology that has provided the mirror world with its startlingly speedy and effective and nearly universal circuitry.

The methodology on which our current universe of political persuasion is based was born before the internet or iPhones existed, in an attempt to do good and win elections while overcoming America’s historical legacy of slavery and racism. Its originator, David Axelrod, was born to be a great American advertising man—his father was a psychologist, and his mother was a top executive at the legendary Mad Men-era New York City ad agency of Young & Rubicam. Instead, following his father’s suicide, Axelrod left New York City for Chicago, where he attended the University of Chicago, and then became a political reporter for the Chicago Tribune. He then became a political consultant who specialized in electing Black mayoral candidates in white-majority cities. In 2008, Axelrod ran the successful insurgent campaigns that first got Barack Obama the Democratic Party nomination over Hillary Clinton, and then elevated him to the White House.

Axelrod first tested his unique understanding of the theory and practice of public opinion, which he called “permission structures,” in his successful 1989 campaign to elect a young Black state senator named Mike White as the mayor of Cleveland. Where Black mayoral candidates like Coleman Young in Detroit and Marion Barry in Washington had typically achieved power in the 1970s and 1980s by using racially charged symbols and language to turn out large numbers of Black voters in opposition to existing power structures, which they portrayed as inherently racist, White’s history-making campaign attempted to do the opposite: To win by convincing a mix of educated, higher-income white voters to vote for the Black candidate. In fact, White won 81% of the vote in the city’s predominantly white wards while capturing only 30% of the vote in the city’s Black majority wards, which favored his opponent and former mentor on the city council, George C. Forbes, a Black candidate who ran a more traditional “Black power” campaign.

Permission structures, a term taken from advertising, was Axelrod’s secret sauce, the organizing concept by which he strategized campaigns for his clients. Where most consultants built their campaigns around sets of positive and negative ads that promoted the positive qualities of their clients and highlighted unfavorable aspects of their opponents’ characters and records, Axelrod’s unique area of specialization required a more specific set of tools. To succeed, Axelrod needed to convince white voters to overcome their existing prejudices and vote for candidates whom they might define as “soft on crime” or “lacking competence.” As an excellent 2008 New Republic profile of Axelrod—surprisingly, the only good profile of Axelrod that appears to exist anywhere—put it: “‘David felt there almost had to be a permission structure set up for certain white voters to consider a black candidate,’ explains Ken Snyder, a Democratic consultant and Axelrod protégé. In Cleveland, that was the city’s daily newspaper, The Plain Dealer. Largely on the basis of The Plain Dealer’s endorsement and his personal story, White went on to defeat Forbes with 81 percent of the vote in the city’s white wards.”

From top: Barack Obama with Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey after holding a 'Twitter Town Hall,' 2011; Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes at a White House press briefing, 2016; Obama and David Axelrod in Pennsylvania, 2008
From top: Barack Obama with Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey after holding a ‘Twitter Town Hall,’ 2011; Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes at a White House press briefing, 2016; Obama and David Axelrod in Pennsylvania, 2008
MANDEL NGAN/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES; BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGESCHARLES OMMANNEY/GETTY IMAGES

In other words, while most political consultants worked to make their guy look good or the other guy look bad by appealing to voters’ existing values, Axelrod’s strategy required convincing voters to act against their own prior beliefs. In fact, it required replacing those beliefs, by appealing to “the type of person” that voters wanted to be in the eyes of others. While the academic social science and psychology literature on permission structures is surprisingly thin, given the real-world significance of Axelrod’s success and everything that has followed, it is most commonly defined as a means of providing “scaffolding for someone to embrace change they might otherwise reject.” This “scaffolding” is said to consist of providing “social proof” (“most people in your situation are now deciding to”) “new information,” “changed circumstances,” “compromise.” As one author put it, “with many applications to politics, one could argue that effective Permission Structures will shift the Overton Window, introducing new conversations into the mainstream that might previously have been considered marginal or fringe.”

By itself, the idea of uniting new theories of mass psychology with new technology in efforts of political persuasion was nothing new. Walter Lippmann based Public Opinion in part on the insights of the Vienna-born advertising genius Edward Bernays, Sigmund Freud’s nephew and the inventor of modern PR. The arrival of television brought political advertising and Madison Avenue even closer together, a fact noted by Norman Mailer in his classic essay “Superman in the Supermarket,” which channeled the insights of Vance Packard’s The Hidden Persuaders. In 1968, the writer Joe McGinniss shocked at least some readers with The Selling of the President, his account of the making of Richard Nixon’s television commercials which showed Madison Avenue admen successfully selling the product of Nixon like dish soap. The title of “political consultant” was itself a creation and a consequence of the television age, signaling the triumph of the ad man over the old-fashioned backroom title of “campaign manager”—a function introduced to national politics by Martin Van Buren, the “Little Magician” from Kinderhook, New York, who built the Democratic Party and elected Andrew Jackson to the Presidency.

It is not surprising then, that following Axelrod’s 1993 success in electing Harold Washington as the first Black mayor of Chicago, Barack Obama—already imagining himself as a future president of the United States—would seek out the Chicago-based consulting wizard to run his campaigns. But Axelrod wasn’t interested. In fact, Obama would spend more than a decade chasing Axelrod—who was far better connected in Chicago than Obama was—in the hopes that he would provide the necessary magic for his political rise. The other Chicago kingmaker that Obama courted was Jesse Jackson Sr., whose Operation PUSH was the city’s most powerful Black political machine, and who liked Obama even less than Axelrod did. The reality was that Obama did best with rich whites, like the board members of the Joyce Foundation and the Pritzker family.

When Axelrod finally agreed to come onboard, he found that Obama was the perfect candidate to validate his theories of political salesmanship on a national scale. First, he engineered Obama’s successful 2004 Senate campaign—a victory made possible by the old-school maneuver of unsealing Republican candidate Jack Ryan’s divorce papers, on the request of Axelrod’s former colleagues at the Chicago Tribune—and then, very soon afterward, Obama’s campaigns for the presidency, which formally commenced in 2007.

It worked. Once in office, though, Axelrod and Obama found that the institutions of public opinion—namely the press, on which Axelrod’s permission structure framework depended—were decaying quickly in the face of the internet. Newspapers like the Cleveland Plain Dealer, as well as national television networks like CBS, which Axelrod relied on as validators, were now barely able to pay their bills, having lost their monopoly on viewers and advertisers to the internet and to newly emerging social media platforms.

With Obama’s reelection campaign on the horizon in 2012, the White House’s attention turned to selling Obamacare, which would become the signature initiative of the president’s first term in office. Without a healthy, well-functioning press corps that could command the attention and allegiance of voters, the White House would have to manufacture its own world of validators to sell the president’s plan on social media—which it successfully did. The White House sales effort successfully disguised the fact that the new health care program was in fact a new social welfare program that would lower rather than raise the standard of care for most Americans with preexisting health insurance, while providing tens of billions of dollars in guaranteed payments to large pharmaceutical companies and pushing those costs onto employers. Americans would continue to pay more for health care than citizens of any other first world country, while receiving less.

As a meeting of Axelrod’s theories with the mechanics of social media, though, the selling of Obamacare—which continued seamlessly into Obama’s reelection campaign against Mitt Romney—was a match made in heaven. So much so, that by 2013 it had become the Obama White House’s reigning theory of governance. A Reuters article from 2013 helpfully explained how the system worked: “In Obama’s jargon, getting to yes requires a permission structure.” Asked about the phrase, White House spokesman Jay Carney explained that it was “common usage” around the White House, dating back to Obama’s 2008 campaign. The occasion for the article was Obama’s use of the phrase permission structure at a press conference in order to explain how he hoped to break an impasse with congressional Republicans, for which he had been roundly mocked as an out-of-touch egghead by D.C. columnists including Maureen Dowd and Dana Milbank, and by staffers for Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell.

The joke was on them. What the White House understood, and which I came to understand through my reporting on the Iran deal, was that social media—which was now the larger context in which former prestige “legacy” outlets like The New York Times and NBC News now operated—could now be understood and also made to function as a gigantic automated permission structure machine. Which is to say that, with enough money, operatives could create and operationalize mutually reinforcing networks of activists and experts to validate a messaging arc that would short-circuit traditional methods of validation and analysis, and lead unwary actors and audience members alike to believe that things that had never believed or even heard of before were in fact not only plausible, but already widely accepted within their specific peer groups.

The effect of the permission structure machine is to instill and maintain obedience to voices coming from outside yourself, regardless of the obvious gaps in logic and functioning that they create.

The Iran deal proved that, with the collapse of the reality-establishing function of professional media, which could no longer afford to field teams of independent, experienced reporters, a talented politician in the White House could indeed stand up his own reality, and use the mechanisms of peer-group pressure and aspirational ambition to get others to adopt it. In fact, the higher one climbed on the social and professional ladder, the more vulnerable to such techniques people turned out to be—making it easy to flip entire echelons of professionals within the country’s increasingly brittle and insecure elite, whose status was now being threatened by the pace and scope of technologically driven change that threatened to make both their expertise and also their professions obsolete. As a test of the use of social media as a permission structure machine, the Iran deal was therefore a necessary prelude to Russiagate, which marked the moment in which the “mainstream media” was folded into the social media machinery that the party controlled, as formerly respected names like “NBC News” or “Harvard professor Lawrence Tribe” were regularly advertised spouting absurdities backed by “top national security sources” and other validators—all of which could be activated or invented on the spot by clever aides with laptops, playing the world’s greatest video game.

Yet the extent to which reality was being regularly manipulated through the techniques of social psychology applied to the internet was not immediately apparent to outside observers—especially those who wished to see, or had long been conditioned to see, something else. The collapse of the press and the acceptance by flagship outlets of a new role as a megaphone for the Democratic Party meant that there were many fewer actual “outside observers” to blow the whistle. And in any event, Obama was on his way out—and Donald Trump, aka Orange Man Hitler, was on his way in.

The conspiratorial messaging campaign targeting Trump as a Kremlin-controlled “asset” who had been elected on direct orders from Vladimir Putin himself seemed more like the plot of a dark satire than something that rational political observers might endorse as a remotely plausible real-world event. Having reported on the Iran deal made it easy to see that Russiagate was a political op, being run according to a similar playbook, by many of the same people. Familiarity with the Iran deal made it easy for reporters at Tablet, particularly Lee Smith, to see Russiagate as a fraud from the beginning, and to see through the methods by which the hallucination was being messaged by the mainstream press.

What surprised me was how alone my colleagues were, though. The existence of dedicated journalistic observers who saw their allegiance as being to readers and not to any political party was itself a feature of a 20th-century system that was quickly going the way of the dodo. Observers who proclaimed their fealty to objective reporting practices and refused to identify with either political party no longer worked in the press—not after Trump was elected. To the extent that rational analysts of claims that the U.S. president was controlled by the Kremlin still existed, they worked in academic political science departments at distant state universities, and their voices were buried under an avalanche of permission structure propaganda amplified often several times a day on the front pages of The Washington Post and The New York Times, which would win Pulitzer Prizes for publishing nonsense.

Needless to say, the model of politics in which operatives are constantly running permission structure games on the body politic, assisted by members of the press and think tankers eager to be of service to the party, has more in common with pyramid schemes and high-pressure network-marketing scams than it does with reasoned democratic deliberation and debate. At this point, it hardly seems controversial to point out that such a model of politics is socially toxic.

What’s important to note are the specific conditions that had been set, and which turned this from the narrow campaign it might have been to a society-wide mass event—and which is why those who argued in these years that the Democratic Party and the Republican Party had anything like equal power were either evil or delusional or both. In the wake of Obama’s reelection in 2012, the defection of large swaths of the Silicon Valley elite from the Republican to the Democratic Party led to a tremendous influx of cash into the coffers of the Democratic Party and its associated penumbra of billionaire-funded foundations and NGOs, along with a new willingness of Silicon Valley titans to work directly with the White House—which after all, retained the power, in theory, to regulate their quasi-monopolies out of existence. In field after field, from sex and gender, to church attitudes toward homosexuality, to formerly apolitical sources of public information, to voting practices, to the internal politics of religious groups, to race politics, to what films Americans would watch and how they would henceforth be entertained, the oligarchs would do their part, by helping buy up once independent social spaces and torque them to function as parts of the party’s permission structure machine. The FBI would then do its part, by adopting political categories like “white supremacy” as chief domestic targets, and puppet groups in the vertical, like the ADL and the ACLU, would pretend to be objective watchdogs who just happened to come to the same conclusion.

Obamacare was followed by the Iran deal, which was followed by Russiagate, which was followed by COVID. Messaging around the pandemic was the fourth and most far-reaching permission structure game that was run by small clusters of operatives on the American public, resulting in the revocation of the most basic social rights—like the right to go outside your own home, or visit a dying parent or child in the hospital. COVID also proved to be an excuse for the largest wealth transfer in American history, comprising hundreds of billions of dollars, from the middle and working classes to the top 1%. Most ominously, COVID proved to be a means for remaking the American electoral system, as well as providing a platform for a series of would-be social revolutions in whose favor restrictions on public gatherings and laws against looting and public violence were suspended, due to manifestations of “public opinion” on social media.

As COVID provided cover for increasingly extreme and rapid manifestations of rapid political enlightenment, numbers of formerly quiescent citizens began to rebel against the new order. Unable to locate where the instructions were coming from, they blamed elites, medical authorities, the deep state, Klaus Schwab, the leadership of Black Lives Matter, Bill Gates, and dozens of other more or less nefarious players, but without being able to identity the process that kept generating new thought-contagions and giving them the seeming force of law. The game was in fact new enough that Donald Trump didn’t get it before it was too late for his reelection chances, championing lockdowns and COVID vaccines while failing to pay attention to the Democratic lawyers who were changing election laws in key states. Once Joe Biden was safely installed in the White House, Obama’s Democratic Party could look forward to smooth sailing—protected by new election laws, the party’s control over major information platforms, the FBI, and the White House, and a government-led campaign of lawfare against Trump. It was hard to see how the party could lose for at least another generation, if ever again.

By this late date in Western cultural history, the modern is itself a notably dated category. Whether it is a person or a thing or a style, we know exactly how it behaves, and how we are supposed to react. The modern is a character in an early Evelyn Waugh novel, unflappable in the face of the new. Then there is the conservative, who rejects the new in favor of the ancient verities of the Greeks or the Church. Both figures are rightfully comic, with an accompanying tinge of the tragic, or else they appear to be the other way around. The verdict is in the eye of the beholder, meaning you and me.

The permission structure machine that Barack Obama and David Axelrod built to replace the Democratic Party was in its essence neither modern nor conservative, though. Rather it is totalitarian in its essence, a device for getting people to act against their beliefs by substituting new and better beliefs through the top-down controlled and leveraged application of social pressure, which among other things eliminates the position of the spectator. The integrity of the individual is violated in order to further the superior interests of the superego of humanity, the party, which knows which beliefs are right and which are wrong. The party is the ghost in the machine, which appears to run on automatic pilot, using the human desire for companionship and social connection as fuel for an effort to detach individuals from their own desires and substitute the dictates of the party, which is granted the unlimited right to enforce its superior opinions on all of mankind.

Constructing a giant permission structure machine that would mechanize the formation of public opinion through social media was never David Axelrod’s intention. Axelrod wanted to help make society better by allowing white voters to obey the better angels of their nature and elect Black mayors, despite being racists. Everyone can agree that racism is bad, just like they can agree that poverty is bad, or disease is bad. The question is whether a given instance of racism or poverty or disease is so bad that, when it comes to eliminating or reducing their ill effects, all other human values, including the value of independent thought and feeling, should be trampled. If the answer is yes, you have placed your trust outside of the nexus of contingent human relationships into the hands of a larger, crushingly powerful machine that you believe might incarnate your idea of justice. That is totalitarianism, or as George Orwell put it in 1984, the image of “a boot stamping on a human face—forever.”

Every form of totalitarianism is unique. Nazi fascism was unique in its racist animus toward the Jews, who were responsible for the opposing sins of capitalism and communism alike, and also for the industrial efficiency in which the Nazi program of mass slaughter was carried out. Soviet communism was unique in that it lasted much longer than Nazism did, and for the distinctive type of cynicism to which it gave rise. If the end product of Nazism was Auschwitz, then the end product of Soviet communism was the humor of the breadline. Soviet cynicism was a natural product of how the Soviets decided to rule, which was to demand absolute external compliance to party dictates in word and deed while at the same time allowing its subjects a separate space to think their own thoughts—provided that they never acted on those thoughts. The natural outcome of the Soviet system was compliance without belief.

Twitter was worth more to Elon Musk than it was to anyone else with the money to pay for it. He understood Twitter and the permission structure machinery better than its would-be operators did.

The effect of the permission structure machine is to instill and maintain obedience to voices coming from outside yourself, regardless of the obvious gaps in logic and functioning that they create. The clinical term for this state is schizophrenia, which is a term that had a deep hold over the 20th-century modern literary and social imagination, from popular works like I Never Promised You a Rose Garden and Sybil to theorizing by R.D. Laing (The Divided Self) and Gilles Deleuze (Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia). Among the superior works of literature in this genre are Ken Kesey’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Sylvia Nasar’s A Beautiful Mind, the singular House of Leaves, Greg Bottoms’ memoir Angelhead and many dozens of other books. The expected reaction within the genre to hearing such voices is horror.

This was not always the case, though. Neither Greek nor Hebrew literature, which are the two great narrative streams out of which what we know today as Western culture was formed, appear to have any equivalent to what we identify today as internal monologue. Instead, they are filled with talking bushes, plants, and animals. Above all, they are filled with the voices of gods—including God—which talk to humans in nearly every physical location imaginable, from mountaintops to the Road to Damascus. Abraham, Moses, Ezekiel, Jesus, and Paul all heard voices. According to the Princeton University scholar Julian Jaynes, author of The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind, human consciousness did not arise as a chemical-biological byproduct of human evolution but is instead a learned process based on the recent development and elaboration of metaphorical language. Prior to the development of consciousness, Jaynes argues, humans operated under a previous mentality he called the bicameral (two-chambered) mind, where in place of an internal dialogue, bicameral people regularly experienced auditory hallucinations directing their actions.

What the permission structure machine seeks to do is to undo the millennia-long work of consciousness by once again locating consciousness outside of the self—but clothing it as an internal product via the mechanized propagation of what Marxists used to call “false consciousness.” But where the progenitors of “false consciousness” in the Marxist lexicon are villains, working on behalf of the capitalist order by preventing workers from being cognizant of their own interests, the mechanized permission structure machine offers the reverse: The “false consciousness” it seeks to propagate is a positive instrument of the party’s attempt to establish the reign of justice on earth. Which is why the natural outcome of the automation of permission structures is not humor, however cynical, but institutionalized schizophrenia, instantiated within the structure of the bicameral mind. No matter how the bots that animate the mechanism position themselves, for whatever low-end careerist purpose, the voices they listen to come from outside. They are incapable of being truth-tellers, because they have no truth to tell. They are creatures of the machine.

It took three powerful men, each of whom had the advantage of operating entirely in public, and with massive and obvious real-world consequences, to rupture the apparatus of false consciousness that Obama built. In doing so, they saved the world—for the moment, at least. While history will judge whether their achievements were lasting, it is clear that if they hadn’t acted as they did, we would still be living inside the machine.

The first of these men was Elon Musk, who is notable for having purchased Twitter in 2022, after Joe Biden had been safely installed in the White House, and the social media site appeared perhaps to be reaching the end of its usefulness, for what was presented at the time and since as the wildly overblown price of $44 billion. Twitter was hardly identical with the permission structure machine that Barack Obama, David Axelrod, David Plouffe, Dan Pfeiffer, Ben Rhodes, and the rest of Obama’s operatives constructed in their takeover of the Democratic Party. The machine they built was much, much bigger than any social media platform. However, due to its first mover advantage, and the role it played within the sociology of journalism and other alloyed professions, Twitter was positioned to play an obvious and key role in the work of social signaling and coordination by which the party’s permission structure machine functioned.

Twitter’s significance, as part of the party’s permission structure machinery, was key in part because, as the history of platforms and companies like Facebook, Google, Uber, Instagram. and TikTok shows, advantages of scale tend naturally toward localized monopolies. Twitter could play the signaling and coordinating function that it did in part because it was a monopoly, which is why Obama, Axelrod, Plouffe, etc. all had Twitter accounts. It’s why the FBI came on board Twitter, to ensure that the tilt of the platform was coordinated with the FBI’s role in the party’s “whole of society” censorship efforts—whether directed against “disinformation,” or COVID measures, or “white supremacy,” or Donald Trump, or “insurrectionists.” So why sell a key module in the permission structure machine to Elon Musk?

Part of the reason appears to be price. The $44 billion that Musk eventually paid appears to be at least twice what any other plausible team of bidders offered. It is certainly possible that having decided to sell Twitter, the company’s board was stuck—both practically and legally—when Musk decided that price was not an object, and that he was willing to massively outspend any other possible bidder. Twitter’s board, and whoever they consulted within the ODP vertical, may have imagined that Musk would find an excuse to pull out of the deal—which he appeared at several points to be doing, though his reluctance may well have been a negotiating tactic.

It is certainly plausible that someone in Obama’s universe saw the danger in selling Twitter to Musk. That it happened anyway suggests—as in the case of the lawfare campaign against Trump—that they hubristically believed in their own propagandistic accounts of their adversary as venal, corrupt, and weak, and of their own practical and moral superiority. Unable to think outside their own box, they may have reasonably expected that Musk could be constrained by the need to keep his advertisers by retaining the existing tilt of the platform’s algorithms for as long as the platform itself continued to matter. To keep Musk in line, the party could cut the platform’s advertising revenues by half or more at will by having its adjuncts in the censorship business label it a sinkhole of racism and depravity, and getting it banned from Europe and other global markets. As the reputational cost spread, Musk would have no choice but to eat a loss of tens of billions of dollars and sell, or else face the destruction of his other businesses—which the party could speed up by canceling contracts with NASA and other government agencies and opening multiple SEC and Justice Department investigations that would further augment his reputational risk—until he agreed to kiss the ring.

Where this analysis went wrong is the same place that the Obama team’s analysis of Trump went wrong: The wizards of the permission structure machine had become captives of the machinery that they built. Bullying large numbers of people into faddish hyperconformity by controlling the machinery of social approval may require both money and technique, but it is not art or thought. In fact, it is something like the opposite of thought. Lost in the hypercharged mirror world that they had created, they decided that having made themselves cool also made them right, and that evidence to the contrary could be safely dismissed as a “right-wing talking point.” Obama’s operatives shared the same character flaw as their master, a kind of brittle, Ivy League know-it-all-ness that demanded that they always be the smartest person in the room.

Musk, meanwhile, was entirely and sincerely his own man—a privilege that came in part from being the richest man in America, and in part from the nature of his businesses, which the Obama cadres appear to have misunderstood. Musk may have paid twice as much as the next-highest bidder for Twitter, if such a bidder actually ever existed. Except, it was also true that, as a business proposition, Twitter was worth more to Elon Musk than it was to anyone else with the money to pay for it. That’s because the value that Musk creates in his companies is a unique blend of high imagination and physical products which function as memes. In this area, at least, he understood Twitter and the permission structure machinery better than its would-be operators did. Buying a Tesla, or buying stock in Tesla, is different than buying a share of stock in GM or Daimler-Benz, or even Google and Facebook, because you are buying a share in Elon Musk—a 21st-century master technologist who is uniquely capable of imagining the very biggest things and turning them into physical realities. Musk’s companies are worth hundreds of billions of dollars because of Elon Musk’s unique ability to incarnate dreams and make teams of talented people believe them, too. His investors are buying pieces of those dreams, which are magic—components of a self-validating belief system that puts its faith in the power of the individual believer.

Faced with the party’s regime of increasing direct censorship over social media, Musk was aware, in a way his adversaries were not, that the party’s ambitions to control content meant that he was coming perilously close to losing control over his own personal dream space, which provides a large share of the value of his companies. Once Donald Trump, a former president of the United States, was thrown off Twitter, the equation became quite obvious: Either the party would control Twitter, in which case Elon Musk was next up for shadow-banning, fact-checking, and eventual exile, at a cost of however many hundreds of billions of dollars to his personal brand, i.e., his companies, or else Musk could assert his own control over that space, by buying Twitter. When measured against the likely losses that would result from being silenced and thrown off the site, and his likely subsequent difficulties in raising public and private capital, $44 billion was therefore an entirely reasonable cost for Musk to pay. The hitch in Musk’s plan to buy Twitter was that it relied on the party being stupid enough to sell it to him. Luckily, unbelievably, they were that stupid—while crowing loudly that Musk was a sucker.

It is clear by now that the Obama party were the suckers—not Musk. In fact, the party’s belated war on Twitter’s new owner only served to convince other Silicon Valley oligarchs that whatever reputational risks they might incur by backing Donald Trump would be outweighed by the direct risks that party weaponization of federal regulatory structures, which gave it effective control of markets and banks, would pose to their businesses. By letting Twitter go, and then making war on its new owner, in a belated attempt to get him to do their bidding, the Obama party showed both the scope of its ambition and also its hubris—a combination that split the country’s oligarchy on the eve of the key election that would have allowed the party to consolidate its power.

With Musk’s X now open to all comers, the party’s censorship apparatus was effectively dead. A new counter-permission structure machine was now erected, licensing all kinds of views, some of which were novel and welcome, and others of which were noxious. Which is how opinion in a free society is supposed to operate.

Elon Musk’s decision to buy Twitter was in turn a necessary precondition for the election of Donald Trump, which was in turn made possible by Trump’s own split-second decision on July 13, 2024, to turn his head fractionally to the right while delivering a speech in a field in Butler, Pennsylvania.

Trump’s head turn was a perfect example of an event that has no explanation outside the favor of the gods, or whatever modern equivalent involving wind factors and directional probabilities you might prefer to the word “God.” Trump was fated to win, just as Achilles was fated to overcome Hector, because the gods, or if you prefer the forces of cosmic randomness, were on his side, on that day, at that moment. That move not only saved his life by allowing him to escape an assassin’s bullet; it revitalized his chi and set in motion a series of subsequent events that generated a reordering of the entire world.

Then there was Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who gave the story a further epic dimension by returning to the original field of battle. Bibi, as you may recall, played the role of Obama’s piñata during the fight over the Iran deal, fated to go down to defeat by opposing the will of a sitting U.S. president on a foreign policy question that most Americans cared very little about. But this past summer, Netanyahu turned himself into the active party, with the means to reverse Obama’s achievement and unveil the origins of his power grab, by showing that the “peace deal” that he had sold to the American people—founded on the idea that Iran was itself a formidable adversary—was a mess of lies. Iran was not and never was a regional power, capable of “balancing” traditional American allies. It was a totalitarian shit hole regime that is deeply hated by its own people and throughout the region, entirely dependent on American backing in its efforts to gain a nuclear bomb.

Netanyahu’s decision to invade Rafah on May 6, 2024, was the culmination of two long and otherwise separate chains of events whose consequences will continue to reverberate throughout the Middle East, and also at home. Netanyahu had been promising to invade Rafah since February. The fact that he had not done so by May had become both a symbol of Israeli weakness and indecision in the face of a global onslaught of Jew-hatred, as well as the continuing solidity of the regional power structure established by Obama’s Iran deal. Within that structure, Israeli interests were held to be subordinate to those of Iran, which was allowed to finance, arm, and train large terrorist armies on Israel’s borders. Even when one of those armies decided to attack Israel in an orgy of murder and rape directed against civilians and recorded and broadcast live by the terrorists, Israel’s response was to be limited by its subordinate place in the regional hierarchy, underlining a reality in which Israel was fated to grovel before the whims of its American master—and would sooner or later most likely be ground into dust.

Benjamin Netanyahu addresses a joint meeting of Congress in the chamber of the House of Representatives at the U.S. Capitol on July 24, 2024
Benjamin Netanyahu addresses a joint meeting of Congress in the chamber of the House of Representatives at the U.S. Capitol on July 24, 2024
KENT NISHIMURA/GETTY IMAGES

Israel could not strike Iran. Nor could it directly strike Hezbollah, the largest and most threatening of the Iranian-sponsored armies on its border, except to retaliate tit-for-tat for Hezbollah’s missile attacks on its civilian population. While it could invade Gaza, it could do so only while being publicly chided by U.S. officials from the president and the secretary of state for violating rules of wars that often appeared to be made up on the spot and were entirely divorced from common military practice and necessity. In particular, Israel was not to invade Rafah, a prohibition that ensured that Hamas could regularly bring in supplies and cash through the tunnels beneath its border with Egypt while ensuring the survival of its command-and-control structure, allowing it to reassume control of Gaza once the war was over, thereby assuring the success of U.S. policy, which was that Israel’s military invasion of Gaza must serve as the prelude to establishing a Palestinian state—an effort in which Hamas was a necessary partner, representing the Iranian interest, and must therefore be preserved in some part, even after being cut down to size.

Netanyahu’s decision to override the U.S. and take Rafah would turn out to be the prelude to a further series of stunning strategic moves which would enable Israel to smash the Iranian regional position and take full control of her own destiny. After conquering Rafah, in a campaign that the U.S. had said would be impossible without large-scale civilian casualties, Netanyahu proceeded to run the table in a series of rapid-fire blows whose only real point of comparison is Israel’s historic victory in the Six-Day War. In fact, given the odds he faced, and the magnitude of the victories he has won, that comparison may be unfair to Netanyahu, who has provided history with one of the very few examples of an isolated local client redrawing the strategic map of the region against the will of a dominant global power. Netanyahu killed terror chiefs Yahya Sinwar and Hassan Nasrallah; spectacularly eliminated nearly the entire upper military and political echelons of both terror armies on his border, Hamas and Hezbollah; turned both Gaza and Hezbollah’s strongholds in southern Lebanon and Beirut into rubble; and finally, last week, took out the entire stock of modern tanks, aircraft, naval vessels and chemical weapons and missile factories accumulated over the past six decades by the Syrian military.

While the questions of how and when the Iranian regime might fall are for the moment unanswered, it seems clear that Obama’s imagined new regional order in the Middle East, centered on the imagined power of the ayatollahs, is now gone—having disintegrated on contact with Netanyahu’s unanticipated willingness and ability to aggressively defend his castle. What role Biden’s resentment of Obama, especially after the humiliation of his removal from the Democratic ticket, contributed to his continued public backing of Israel, and his repeated declarations of his own Zionism, can be left up to the individual imagination, and to the diligence of future historians. I doubt it was zero, though. Again, the fault in the Obama party’s scheme to use Biden as an empty figurehead was the same fault in his handling of Musk: hubris.

Parallel to the collapse of the new regional order that Obama decreed for the Middle East has been the collapse of the Obama-led domestic order at home. The coincidence marks the end of Obama’s pretensions to be a new kind of world leader, running a new world order of his own making from his iPhone, grounded in his own strange combination of nihilism and virtue-mongering.

In fact, it can be argued that there is no coincidence here at all, since the division between Obama’s program abroad and his role at home is largely artificial. At its core, Obama’s Iran deal was an attempt to remake the Democratic Party in his own image, by establishing fealty to the ayatollahs as a litmus test for the party faithful—thereby elevating third-worldist “progressive” POC elements within the party at the expense of Jews, who undermined the premises of DEI ideology by doing well on standardized tests and making money and who were annoyingly loyal to Bill and Hillary Clinton, Obama’s rivals for control of the party. Conversely, the recent disintegration of Obama’s world-building project in Middle East has helped to further collapse his mystique, by showing that his grand vision for America’s role in the world was founded on sand. If Obama the global strategist is clearly a failure, and his hand-picked successors at home were a senile old man and a babbling idiot, then the country’s corporate elite and tech oligarchy might rightly question the wisdom of continued payoffs to Obama’s Chicago-style Democratic machine and make peace with Donald Trump instead. Which they did.

The same warning still stands, though. Just as America was unlikely to become a better place by letting White House aides manufacture “public opinion” through their laptops and iPhones, and license fact-free virtue campaigns on nearly every subject under the sun, from the wisdom of “gender-affirming” surgeries for children to defunding the police, it is also unlikely to become a better place if the right uses the same machinery to advance its own wishful imaginings, by costuming themselves in the robes of foreign churches while trumpeting the wonders of secret alien space technology and bemoaning the evils of the Allied side in World War II. In fact, the two groups share a great deal in common with each other, starting with their visceral dislike for the idea of American uniqueness. Exceptionalism is the master narrative of American greatness, and today its only true defender seems to be Donald Trump.

At the end of the day, Elon Musk may take ketamine all day long while wandering the halls of his own mind in a purple silk caftan. Donald Trump may be an agent of chaos who destroys more than he saves. Benjamin Netanyahu may or may not make peace with the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, who may or may not turn out to be a good guy. Regardless of their faults, all three men shared a common trait at a critical moment in history—they trusted their own stubbornness against the mirror world of digitally based conformity. The human future rests on individuals in all walks of life and representing all parties and all currents of opinion being brave and independent-minded enough to make that same choice.

As for Barack Obama, I will admit that I wasn’t sure I’d ever see him face the consequences of his own arrogance, obsession with personal power, and efforts at vanquishing the exceptionalism that makes this country different from every other one. But I guess, as a wise man once explained: “Life’s a bitch.”

David Samuels is the editor of County Highway, a new American magazine in the form of a 19th-century newspaper. He is Tablet’s literary editor.

https://www.tabletmag.com/feature/rapid-onset-political-enlightenment
« Last Edit: December 30, 2024, 08:39:08 AM by Body-by-Guinness »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #2431 on: December 30, 2024, 08:10:09 AM »
Fascinating read-- great find!

DougMacG

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #2432 on: December 30, 2024, 06:42:27 PM »
Yes, it's mind boggling. It explains the world in front of our eyes as well as anything I've seen, and I still don't understand it.

Yes, folks around me who are otherwise smart are falling for amazing hocus pocus.

The Iran deal is a great example. Yes, it had to be sold, but why did it have to be done in the first place? I can't figure it out. But every liberal fell in line, knowing no more than me about why we should be doing this.

We knew Ben Rhodes had no qualifications for that job. But he knew how to do what they needed.

I thought of Netanyahu as one who didn't fall for the Iran deal. He said it paved the path to their nuclear program. Sure enough, the author came back to Netanyahu as one of the heroes of the story.

The transgender thing, why? At this point were they just showing off how far they could go with programming gullible minds?  A very short time ago, we all thought that the scraping off of the genitalia of minors in the Middle East and here was the worst possible thing happening on Earth, and now we promote it in our schools. Good God.

There's the whole George Floyd thing. Read the Heather MacDonald, City Journal piece, the whole narrative was a fraud. Cops were not killing unarmed blacks. But they turned the country upside down with it. Nothing about the incident had to do with race. I'm one step removed from the person who wrote the original autopsy. George Floyd didn't die of a chokehold. We couldn't have large assemblies in church at the time but they could get tens of thousands together and nobody thought otherwise.

Rush L used to do the montage thing. These media people were shamelessly using the exact same words as their colleagues. Dick Cheney brought much needed 'gravitas' to the George Bush ticket, and so on. Threat to democracy, baseless claim, Russian collusion, the big lie. Right up until George Stephanopoulos crossed the line with the rape conviction that wasn't a rape conviction. Settled the case to prevent Discovery. And still no liberal was offended.

Back to Iran, everyone seemed to know they were the world's number one sponsor of terror, but no liberals were offended by the plane loads of cash sent on behalf of the US taxpayers, money used to support even more terror.

We had the Matt Taibbi files, access to the pre-Musk Twitter conspiracy with our great intelligence agencies, all orchestrated by these fellows in the story.

Yes, Trump's election was the only way to stop this but it's not stopped. It was a huge win but it's only a pause unless it is sustainable.
« Last Edit: December 30, 2024, 06:55:05 PM by DougMacG »

Body-by-Guinness

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When the Fringed Become the Organization’s Hinge
« Reply #2433 on: January 14, 2025, 06:02:23 AM »
A point that ought to win Trump kudos that the MSM will instead opt to ignore is the number of Trump’s proposed appointments that don’t march in MAGA lockstep—assuming there is such a thing rather than being just another bit of “Progressive” shorthand meant to connote just how atavistic and scary all things Trump are—and indeed are better characterized as ideological opponents of one stripe or another with, however, one thing in common: they’ve all contended with being “cancelled” by recent Democratic Party regimes … for failing to march in lockstep with those supposedly embracing “Progressive” perspectives.

Nothing like the heavy hand of often unconstitutional and certainly undemocratic government coercion to unite those with differing perspectives against an authoritarian left that calls its depredations “Progressive” to excuse them. Call it, with apologies to Doris Kearns Goodwin, a team of reviled:

Abigail Shrier

Cabinet of the Canceled

Trump has chosen people who understand the threat of government coercion—because they have experienced it firsthand.

/ From the Magazine / Politics and law, The Social Order

Winter 2025

Venture capitalist Marc Andreessen recently expressed what many felt at the reelection of Donald Trump: not triumph so much as relief. “I hope this last ten years increasingly is just going to feel like a bad dream,” he told podcast host Joe Rogan. “I can’t believe we tolerated the level of repression . . . and anger and . . . emotional incontinence and . . . cancellation campaigns.” Much of it was orchestrated or encouraged by our government.

One could say many things about Trump’s cabinet picks. At times, they seem to embody Government by Middle Finger. But they also, undeniably, represent Government by the Canceled: an assemblage that doesn’t need to be reminded of the administrative state’s ability to coerce the American public by calling in favors from Big Tech or pulling the levers of regulation, audit, or investigation. Many have experienced such treatment firsthand.

Tulsi Gabbard, Trump’s pick to lead the intelligence community, was briefly placed on a government watch list, she says, for criticizing Kamala Harris. The Biden White House and surgeon general pressured social-media companies to censor Stanford epidemiologist Jay Bhattacharya’s attempts to warn the public that the Covid lockdowns were the biggest policy error in American history; Trump named Bhattacharya to head the National Institutes of Health. And Elon Musk, appointed to lead the newly created Department of Government Efficiency, knowingly overpaid for Twitter to give Americans a sphere for free speech. At takeover, Musk immediately released the Twitter Files, revealing a coordinated effort by the Biden administration to censor the speech of Americans whose views it disfavored. The Biden administration repaid Musk by targeting his businesses with unprecedented levels of regulatory harassment.

One wonderful thing about Americans: we despise being bullied by our government. Not even our Anglosphere allies share this aspect of our national character. Yet, over the last decade, for anyone with views departing from progressive orthodoxy, American life has become increasingly suffocating. Our posts have been censored on social media—or labeled “misinformation” by “fact-checkers”—as mine were, for criticizing Biden administration policy on boys participating in girls’ sports. We got booted from Twitter for opposing gender ideology or expressing skepticism about Covid vaccine safety.

Andreessen told Rogan that he personally knew of 30 tech founders who had been labeled a “politically exposed person” for building cryptocurrency or AI businesses without the administration’s blessing, or for opposing some dogma of the Left, and found themselves debanked—kicked out of the banking system. David Horowitz, a right-wing critic of radical Islam, lost access to credit cards; Mastercard also blocked Horowitz’s donors from donating to his nonprofit using their own cards. Melania and Barron Trump were told that they could not open bank accounts, according to the First Lady’s recent memoir. A troubling aspect of the last decade is how many Americans started silently accepting all this.

There were, increasingly, two Americas: one enjoyed by those with approved views; the other, for everyone else. It was always the Left that determined which views appeared on the whitelist and which on the blacklist. Supporting a border wall was definitionally xenophobic until, abruptly, Kamala Harris supported it. To claim that the vast majority of teen girls who suddenly decided that they were “transgender” were instead caught up in a vast social contagion was verboten, until the Left decided that its own outlets could concede that much. “My body, my choice,” was a sacred and undeniable maxim, unless you refused the Covid vaccine. Calling the 2016 election “stolen” was fine; claiming the 2020 election was stolen made you an enemy of democracy.

Uttering a word in Mandarin Chinese that sounded like the N word was enough to get you suspended from your university teaching job. But calling for the death of your Jewish or Israeli classmates, blocking their access to the library or large sections of campus, defacing university property—this was free speech, or rightful protest, or kids being kids. Some of us watched it all in horror; we knew it was wrong. But a country founded on freedom seemed to have lost its sense of fight.

To take only the most recent example from my own experience: WorldCat, the chief international bibliography organization, labeled Irreversible Damage (my 2020 journalistic investigation into the risks and harms of pediatric gender transition) with the rubrics “transphobia” and “transphobic.” My book is neither transphobic nor bigoted. But because the radical activists oppose any critique even of this often reckless and mendacious regime of medicalizing children, libraries around the world will continue to ensure that adult readers don’t find the book. I remain on a GLAAD blacklist for thoughtcrime, even as states, courts, and medical doctors take more skeptical views of pediatric gender medicine.

Those of us who faced cancellation feared what might happen when AI took over as an agent of our coercion—when it communicated directly with our banks or employers or the admissions office of the schools our kids apply to; and when it becomes unnecessary for human beings to pull levers on behalf of the government because progressive maximalism is embedded inside a technology that we cannot monitor, or even understand.

In February 2024, my husband asked Google’s AI: Who had “negatively impacted society more, Abigail Shrier or Mao?” Communist tyrant Mao Zedong was responsible for the deaths of between 40 million and 80 million people. The AI responded: “It is difficult to say definitively who negatively impacted society more, Abigail Shrier or Mao Zedong. Both have been accused of harming society in significant ways.” We laughed but tried not to think about what might happen when AI communicated directly with the bank assessing creditworthiness for our next home loan.

Trump’s detractors claim, through mouthfuls of sour grapes, that he is merely appointing “Trump loyalists.” But no honest evaluator could term Gabbard (until recently, a Democrat), physician and lockdown skeptic Bhattacharya (never previously affiliated with Trump or MAGA), or Marco Rubio (who ran against Trump and has harshly criticized him) “Trump loyalists.” Robert F. Kennedy Jr. hoped to oppose Trump in the general election until just a few months ago; he’s not exactly a Trump crony, either. Whatever else you think of Kennedy and his odd, speculative, and occasionally ungrounded views, or of Gabbard’s apparent opposition to U.S. military assistance to Ukraine, both have shown uncommon willingness to stand up to their own political tribes.

Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan recently told Free Press editor-in-chief Bari Weiss that if Trump’s advisors were “cannier or more able to control themselves,” they would be picking appointees whose names would make everyone think, “that is an impressive person.” The secretary of defense should be a man with the wisdom of George C. Marshall, Noonan said: someone “substantial and serious,” capable of running the “highly bureaucratized bureaucracy that is the Department of Defense”; a “serious diplomat”—not a “culture warrior” and Fox News host, such as Pete Hegseth, Trump’s nominee, a winner of two Bronze Stars who has completed tours in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Guantánamo.

Noonan’s point will resonate especially with those who have not taken public stands that contravene the Left’s various orthodoxies. If you’re happy to stay within the current bounds of what the Left permits—to celebrate Joe Biden’s fitness long after the truth of his infirmity was plain; to be charmed by Kamala Harris’s stylized joie de vivre; to repeat the mantra “trans women are women,” or at least fail to contravene it; and to say nothing about the Covid vaccine other than that it is “safe and effective”—then you may have little reason to fear debanking. But for those of us who have run afoul of the Left’s dogma, particularly in public, it’s harder to worry over the Trump cabinet’s failure to harmonize with the views of credentialed bureaucrats.

Asking, in effect, “Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio?” might make sense in an America where parents weren’t struggling to get their children through schools that indoctrinate them to hate America, hate Jews, and hate their bodies. Or where opposing your daughter’s “gender transition” couldn’t trigger a visit by Child Protective Services. Or where many families of disabled veterans weren’t receiving less government assistance than illegal migrants. Or where refusing to get a novel vaccine wouldn’t cost you the privilege of attending the theater or get you fired from your job.

Indeed, the American military seems to have a more pressing problem than its inability to exhume George C. Marshall—one related to the fact that our airmen have been marching while carrying the Pride flag, and our sailors “educated” to announce their gender pronouns and use “inclusive language.” Recruitment across all three branches is dangerously low. Among several culprits: American families that have sent generations of their sons and daughters to fight and die for this country aren’t keen to send them into a military co-opted by leftist ideology that alternately shames and denigrates them, and that discharged 8,000 fighting men and women for their Covid vaccine status. Those of us who remember that the last administration tried to create a “Department of Misinformation” might be forgiven for waving away Trump appointees’ inadequate bureaucratic experience.

Many of Trump’s appointees are young. Some have never worked in government. Some will end up doing and saying strange—perhaps unacceptably strange—things. Some may turn out to be overwhelmed and fail and get replaced. The difference is: we’ll know about it. The media will make sure of that. This isn’t a group that has learned to play the inside-the-Beltway, under-the-table game.

At the top of the administrative state, Trump has placed people keenly aware of government’s yen for intimidating its own citizens. That alone may be enough to shake Americans out of our recent complacency over the trampling of our rights and the unfairness that so many of us have been urged to embrace. Many of our most pressing problems do not require decades of government experience so much as the will to solve them.

Abigail Shrier is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute and the author of Bad Therapy: Why the Kids Aren’t Growing Up and Irreversible Damage: The Transgender Craze Seducing Our Daughters.

https://www.city-journal.org/article/donald-trump-cabinet-picks-government

DougMacG

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Re: When the Fringed Become the Organization’s Hinge
« Reply #2434 on: January 14, 2025, 08:49:21 AM »
Some excellent material in there.

"Trump’s cabinet picks. At times, they seem to embody Government by Middle Finger."

   - I resemble that.

"for those of us who have run afoul of the Left’s dogma, particularly in public, it’s harder to worry over the Trump cabinet’s failure to harmonize with the views of credentialed bureaucrats."

   - Who has run afoul of the Left's dogma?  'We'll need a bigger blog.'  Let's see, people who 'cling to God, guns, gay'...  That covers anyone who still believes in freedom of religion, i.e. the constitution.  Guns certainly covers anyone who runs a self defense organization and anyone who shows an interest in it (or the constitution). Notice the forum was separated from the business during this time.  Gays? The "book banning" controversy was all about sexualizing our children in grades 1-3, also kindergarten and pre-K.  Calling concerned parents who attend school board meetings "terrorists" means all of us who agree with their cause 'run afoul with the former regime including their enforcement arm, the FBI. That's a fear and an intrusion we don't deserve.  And then there was being called racist by Joe Biden, in reference to centrist Romney Republicans, telling a Black audience "they're gonna put y'all back in chains".  Sorry, which side is racist?

Yes I was affected, even scared within the psuedo-anonymity of my secure Midwest living room, careful about what I say and worried about  who is tracking it.  Hesitant to give money to like-minded causes.  Afraid to be on a gun-buying list in spite of the protections of the constitution.  The regime outgrew the protections we once had.

It feels good having those who wielded that power kicked to the curb, and to 'retaliate' by NOT doing the same to them.  They can just painfully watch this new cabinet and new leadership make America great again.
« Last Edit: January 14, 2025, 08:54:04 AM by DougMacG »

Crafty_Dog

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George Friedman: American Cycles and Uncertainty
« Reply #2435 on: January 15, 2025, 01:45:09 PM »


January 15, 2025
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American Cycles and Uncertainty
By: George Friedman

Editor’s note: If it feels as though the world is changing, that’s because it is. Global economic reconfiguration, demographic decline and geopolitical realignment have fundamentally altered long-held conventional political wisdom, perhaps nowhere more markedly than in the United States. Like all countries, the U.S. is mutable. But unlike most others, changes there have global consequences. The situation in America signals a break in the natural process of a country. America has surprised the world many times, and it is doing so again. The following essay is the second in a series by George Friedman seeking to explain why that’s the case.

Many look from afar at the current political, social and economic turmoil in the United States and see it as a sign of American decline. In my most recent book, "The Storm Before the Calm," my goal was to explain the patterns in the U.S. that look like evidence of weakness but in fact show the country's unique strength through remaking itself.

I write: “American society and the American economy have a rhythm. Every fifty years or so, they go through a painful and wrenching crisis, and in those times it often feels as if the economy were collapsing, and American society with it. Policies that had worked for the previous fifty years stop working, causing significant harm instead. A political and cultural crisis arises, and what had been regarded as common sense is discarded. The political elite insists that there is nothing wrong that couldn’t be solved by more of the same. A large segment of the public, in great pain, disagrees. The old political elite and its outlook on the world is discarded. New values, new policies and new leaders emerge. The new political culture is treated with contempt by the old political elite, who expect to return to power shortly when the public comes to its senses. But only a radically new approach can solve the underlying economic problem. The problem is solved over time, and a new common sense is put into place, and America flourishes – until it is time for the next economic and social crisis and the next cycle.”

It has been nearly 50 years since the last cyclical transition occurred. In 1981, Ronald Reagan replaced Jimmy Carter as president, changing the economic policy, the political elites and the common sense that had dominated the country for the 50 years since Franklin D. Roosevelt replaced Herbert Hoover.

The 2020s have brought the convergence of two major crises: the institutional breakdown of a federal government desperate to preserve its position (while failing to function effectively) and the collapse of once-successful social and economic systems. Both systems, quite crucial in the past, are no longer serving their purpose, leaving instability and disorder in their wake. These crises often come to be personified by certain individuals. From the standpoint of the model in my book, Donald Trump exploited the crises in the elections of 2016 and 2024 to side with those who suffered the most economically and those who doubted the experts. Joe Biden and Kamala Harris sided with those who saw themselves as incurring less cost and social pain and those who trusted the federal government. Each side held the other in contempt. Those who resisted were portrayed as ignorant, and those suffering economically and socially were seen simply as paying the price necessary to protect themselves. Those who doubted this perspective were deemed at least irresponsible.

On the other hand, those who accepted the technocratic solution of the medical establishment during the COVID-19 pandemic were unaware of the hidden intentions of those who advocated the solution, or at least unaware of the limits of their knowledge. They were trapped in the systematic lies. The idea that reasonable people could disagree was completely absent. All disagreement was seen as either idiotic or monstrous.

Not all of Trump’s supporters agreed with his views, nor did all of Biden’s and Harris’ supporters agree with theirs. But the dynamic was driven by passion, which itself was driven by the social, economic and institutional tensions tearing at the country’s fabric. The next phase of a cyclical shift is what might be called pseudo-normalization. As my book predicted, the next president after Trump’s first term was a Democrat. This was not because the shift depended on party politics. Following the election of a disruptive president, and stunned by the political disruption, the political system would seek to stabilize itself without fundamental economic or social shifts. In other words, it would seek to return to a stable norm.

In the last 50-year cycle (1930 to 1980), the political chaos of the Nixon years – which really began with the presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson – was followed by the presidencies of Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter. Each sought to normalize the system. As Ford put it after pardoning Nixon: “The long national nightmare is over.” Indeed, the political nightmare was over, in the sense that Ford and Carter were both operating within the behavioral norms that were personified by John F. Kennedy, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Harry S. Truman and Franklin D. Roosevelt. This was possible because they all shared core beliefs: assertive foreign policies, supporting social security, federal responsibility for economic performance and racial integration. In other words, they shared key principles that were forged during Roosevelt’s first term to replace the then-failed policies of the previous era.

When Nixon became president, many of those policies were failing. The Vietnam War called into question an assertive foreign policy. The economic system was beginning to produce results that were unacceptable from the standpoint of a New Dealer. Despite the passage of the Civil Rights Act, Black Americans were still on unequal social and economic footing with their white counterparts. The Roosevelt era, which in a sense was drawing to a close with Johnson’s Great Society, ended when Nixon was forced to impose a national compulsory wage and price freeze to control the first surge in inflation.

The underlying problem was economic and social. The Roosevelt-era model saw the fundamental problem as a lack of demand for goods that had to be solved by funneling money to the industrial working class, which had been the most victimized class in the Great Depression. The tax code and other tools were created to achieve higher consumption. Over time, higher consumption lowered available investment capital, and industry became less efficient, less innovative and less able to compete on the global market. Nixon said “we are all Keynesians” and intensified the movement of capital for consumption.

The lack of investment capital created an under-invested economy with increased demand that led to rising costs alongside rising demand, which resulted in the massive inflation of the 1970s. This was compounded by the assertive foreign policy that triggered the Arab oil embargo. Inflation lowered consumption, weakened businesses and raised unemployment. The 1970s was a decade of failure.

Ford and Carter sought to return things to normal. The latter sought to offset shortages of investment capital by cutting taxes for the middle and lower classes, which would use the difference to increase purchases and generate economic activity. Carter followed the playbook of the Roosevelt era, but the play didn’t work. Most important, Carter and Ford sought to resurrect the norm in politics, but they could not see that the problem was not at the political level. The industrial working class, poor and struggling with unionization, was no longer the victim or the challenger of the system. Socially, the center of gravity had shifted to the suburban professional class. At the end of a cycle, it is hard to see that everything has changed, so any political stabilization is, at best, temporary. The election of Ronald Reagan bore this out.

The phase after the 2020 U.S. presidential election resembled the Ford-Carter political era. It represented the stabilization of a political period as the economic and social crises intensified. Its intensification was, as usual, made more extreme by the inability of the political system to mitigate or even recognize the tensions.

If the economic tension of the Roosevelt era stemmed from insufficient investment capital, the economic tension of today is a surplus of investment capital and a lack of investment opportunities. As discussed in "The Storm Before the Calm," we are at the stage of maturation of the microchip culture, and this will show itself in two ways. The first is a growing lack of innovative and marketable opportunities. The second is the decline of major firms whose size either makes them unmanageable or exposes them to political pressure.

The industrial working class was supplanted as the center of gravity of society by the suburban professional class, which took power at the beginning of the Reagan era in the 1980s. This shift culminated in the urban technological class (technologists or workers in associated professions), which had a different cultural aesthetic but a similar cultural reality. Like suburban professionals, the urban technologists lived by the production of ideas to solve problems for businesses and individuals. And like the suburban intellectuals, they saw their preeminence as permanently redefining America.

All dominant classes redefine the U.S., but none are permanent. As microchip technology matures, it will of course remain an important part of the nation, but not its entire future. I do not consider artificial intelligence a new technology, but merely the advancement of the same microchip technology. And as competitive economic pressure and the inherent obsolescence of all industries take hold, this class will begin to decline from the pivot point into just another class of aging professionals. That will happen alongside the economic crisis that will crop up as the oldest millennials reach their 50s, recreating the malaise that we saw in the 1970s.

The economic crisis caused by the success of the Reagan era in producing wealth from innovation reversed the changes of the Roosevelt period, in terms of the value of money, but created the same political stress and forced a systemic rotation in innovation and industries. Just as Carter tried to solve the problems caused by the Roosevelt era by the same means as the Roosevelt, so too will the presidents of this decade use Reagan-era solutions to deal with the failures at the end of the Reagan era, focusing on maximizing available capital in a period where the problem is excess money. In the 1970s, a Republican and a Democrat both acted the same way. Partisan politics are irrelevant to historical forces.

If my model is correct, we are facing roughly another four years of this disjuncture between economic and social reality on the one hand and the political system on the other. We have to see if Trump in his second term will be aligned with the era or not. After Nixon came a period of political stability. Most likely a new American era will emerge in 2028, changing the way American society and institutions work. Biden may have brought a semblance of normalcy back to politics, but he was not able to come to grips with the deeper problems. It is not yet certain that Trump will be able to do so, but neither is it very important. It is the 2028 election that will matter, in the same way that 1980 and 1932 did. We must remember this is cyclical, not existential.


Body-by-Guinness

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Another American Monarchy is What we Need
« Reply #2436 on: January 21, 2025, 04:15:44 PM »
A very interesting perspective, particularly given the historical context it’s put in:

https://stevehayward.substack.com/p/in-re-curtis-yarvin?r=1qo1e&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&triedRedirect=true

Body-by-Guinness

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Making Their Marque: Trump & Kennedy’s Debt to FJB
« Reply #2437 on: January 31, 2025, 10:19:20 AM »
A wide ranging piece connecting the dots and that could be filed in several threads:

FJB made the fringe mainstream
Letters of marque and a Kennedy are marching toward a comeback.
JAN 31, 2025

After 4 years of Biden and a week of Trump, Americans have spoken. 31% of voters have a favorable opinion of Democrats; 57% unfavorable.

43% of voters have a favorable opinion of Republicans; 45% unfavorable.

A Gallup Poll shows that when FJB took office, only 41% wanted all illegal aliens deported; 56% said no.

Last year, 50% said send them back; only 46% opposed.

Give credit where do. FJB did more to rally the public behind deportation than The Donald did.

FJB also enabled the appointment of RFK Jr. as secretary of the largest spender of government money, the Department of Health and Human Services, whose budget topped $1.6 trillion ($1,600 billion or if you prefer, $1,600,000 million) in 2022.

Biden’s mandate of the covid shots rehabilitated the word anti-vaxxer. What the public sees as a failed vaccine could have been blamed on Trump’s rush to find a cure.

But FJB took ownership of the vaccines-in-name-only when he started firing good soldiers and sailors for refusing to take an unproven medication. That is criminal.

Really.



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FDA approval be damned, I believe it is an experimental drug until it passes testing on human volunteers. As such, international law forbids ordering soldiers take it.

I want to make it clear, I took the Moderna vaccine with eyes wide open to protect my invalid wife. It likely worked as a deterrent. We’re still here at 71 and if there are any ill-effects, well we had a nice run, didn’t we?

My body, my choice. You do you.

I am not a doctor. My point today is political. FJB bidened up the vaccine, which RFK Jr. questioned. Millions of Americans now agree that the federal government failed to protect us from the virus and many believe the government’s cure made matters worse.

Thanks to that, Kennedy may run the medical industry in America. As much as I oppose granting the feds this power over health care, I find it amusing that our bureaucrats are bitten by the creature they created.

Then there is Dr. Ron Paul, the kooky ex-congressman who has a bad habit of being proven right decades later. And by kooky, I mean someone who has actually wants to apply the Constitution to governance.

On October 10, 2001—29 days after 9/11—he introduced H.R.3076:

September 11 Marque and Reprisal Act of 2001 - Authorizes and requests the President to issue letters of marque and reprisal to commission privately armed and equipped persons and entities to seize outside of the United States the person and property of Osama bin Laden, of any al Qaeda co-conspirator, and any conspirator with Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda who are responsible for the terrorist attacks against the United States on September 11, 2001, including any similar planned acts against the United States in the future. Authorizes the President to place a bounty, from amounts appropriated on September 14, 2001, in the Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act for Recovery from and Response to Terrorists Attacks on the United States or from private sources, for the capture, dead or alive, of Osama bin Laden or any other al Qaeda conspirator responsible for the act of air piracy upon the United States on September 11, 2001.

A retired military doctor, Paul knew another war would not result in the capture of Osama bin Laden but would wreck Afghanistan and result in another expensive humiliation for the U.S. military by our politicians.

He offered an alternative by outsourcing the job of killing OBL to mercenaries through letters of marque and reprisal.

FJB’s surrender of Afghanistan after our military defeated the Taliban sadly proved Paul right.

The politicians had the military blow Afghanistan to smithereens only to discover, after a decade of searching, that OBL was living in Pakistan with his subscription to Penthouse. We would have been better off sending druglords, gangbangers and Mafiosos after him. We have the best criminals in the world. Unleash their potential.

But give the CIA credit. They noticed his home was the only one on the block without Wifi. They checked it out and raided the place.

This week, Senator Mike Lee has picked up on Paul’s plan. He posted a long string of tweets, including:

Using letters of marque could be a novel, but effective response to unique threats posed by drug cartels—especially in response to threats by the cartels to target U.S. planes returning illegal immigrants to their countries of origin.

How Could They Be Applied?

Authorization: Congress could issue letters of marque and reprisal authorizing private security firms or specially trained civilians to intercept cartel operations, particularly those involving drug shipments or human trafficking across borders

Targets: Focus on disrupting supply lines, capturing high-value targets, or seizing assets like boats, vehicles, cash, gold, or equipment used in criminal activities

Well, Lee’s call certainly beats having our military square off with the druglords and risk a war with Mexico because the last thing we want to do right now is take over Mexico, a failed state that makes California SSR look sane.

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Does anyone believe President Trump would turn this down if the public supports the idea? After 51 years of the DEA, drug abuse and overdose deaths soared from 6,413 in 1973 (3.2 per 100,000) to 91,799 in 2020 (28.3 per 100,000).

We did not lose the war on drugs, we bureaucratized it. How interesting that within a week of Trump taking office, the government suddenly found all these drug peddlers. It is almost as if someone paid people off.

The power to hire pirates to do our dirty work is embedded in the Constitution.

Jean Lafitte was the most famous of them all. He was a smuggler working in the Gulf of America two centuries ago. He got caught. Andrew Jackson hired him for the Battle of New Orleans, offering him pardons instead of cash. It was a real life The Dirty Dozen.

Thanks to FJB’s ineptitude, the American people are willing to set the clock back to 1814. While patriots still respect the military and appreciate their sacrifices, Americans want to protect them and not send them in to another war, which our troops will win only to see politicians give the victory away.

As for RFK Jr., a curious thing has happened in the wake of covid. Communists now hate him and MAGA now supports him.

Junior once was a hero on the left. He successfully sued DuPont for polluting waters in West Virginia.

On October 22, 2007, Pollution Online reported, “A jury in the Circuit Court of Harrison County, West Virginia, has decided that DuPont must pay $196,200,000 in punitive damages to residents in and around the town of Spelter, West Virginia. This comes as one more victory in a sweeping series of successes for the plaintiffs.

“In the environmental class-action trial which lasted for over a month, E.I. DuPont, the nation's third largest chemical company, was found negligent in creating a 112-acre waste site, putting area residents at a higher-than-normal risk of diseases, including cancer, cognitive problems, cardiac disease and lead poisoning. The waste was generated from a zinc smelting operation once owned and operated by DuPont.

“Residents in this small, West Virginia town and surrounding communities were represented by attorneys from The Cochran Firm, Levin Papantonio, and Kevin & Madonna, LLC. Co-lead attorneys for these powerful environmental law firms are Farrest Taylor, Mike Papantonio, and Robert Kennedy Jr.”

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On November 5, 2008, Politico reported, “President-elect Barack Obama is strongly considering Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to head the Environmental Protection Agency, a Cabinet post, Democratic officials told Politico.”

And Politico noted, “The selection of Kennedy would be a shrewd early move for the new presidential team. Obama advisers said the nomination would please both Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.).

“It also would raise the profile of the EPA, which would help endear Obama to liberals who may be disappointed on other issues important to the Democrat left because of budget restrictions.

“The EPA enforces clean air and clear water laws. Kennedy, an environmental lawyer and son of the late senator and attorney general Robert F. Kennedy, has long championed a cleaner water supply for New York City.”

16 years later, he’s a bum.

Also 16 years later, he may be the next HHS secretary because of the covid failure by Fauci, Birx, FJB and just about everyone else in government. Democrats do not realize how much covid damaged their little federal bureaucracy. RFK Jr.’s confirmation hearing made that clear.

MARK WARNER: Will you pledge that you will not fire federal employees who work on food safety, who work on trying to prevent things like Salmonella?

KENNEDY: Senator, there are 91,000 employees.

WARNER: Will you commit not to fire anyone in the health arena who currently works on protecting Americans from cyberattacks in their healthcare files?

KENNEDY: I will commit to not firing anybody who’s doing their job.

WARNER: Based on your opinion? Based upon your opinion or your political agenda, or Mr. Trump’s political agenda?

KENNEDY: Based upon MY opinion.

WARNER: I guess that means a lot of the folks who’ve had any type of views on vaccines will be out of work.

I should hope so.

Trump once attracted foaming-at-the-mouth critics. Now his bandwagon is overloaded. Christopher F. Rufo wrote, “The Trump Coalition Is Forming. Who Should Be in It?”

Rufo wrote, “In my judgment, all potential members of the coalition should be evaluated based on two key criteria, or filters. The first is whether they have skin in the game. The second is whether they have a bias toward action, which will help accomplish the president’s goals in the real world.”

The tech giants passed Rufo’s test.

He wrote, “Dissident Democrats are another valuable constituency. Figures such as Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Tulsi Gabbard took immense personal risk in endorsing Trump, burning their bridges not only with the Democratic Party but also with most of their elite social circles. Whatever disagreements one might have with them on policy, it’s clear that they are joining the administration from a sense of mission and purpose, not simply to collect another accolade or credential. They also offer value in providing an off-ramp for Democratic voters who feel abandoned by the party. These high-profile defectors model the kind of behavior Trump will have to show to bring over moderate Democrats and others who had previously shied away from the GOP.”

Rufo made a solid case for including Kennedy and Gabbard. Their inclusion is a small price to pay for deporting millions of illegal aliens.

In his first term, Trump flipped the Supreme Court from a 4-4 tie to a 6-3 majority. That not only sent abortion issues back to the states but laid the foundation for de-clawing the bureaucracy with rulings that rein in regulatory authority and the power of administrative law judges.

In upholding Obamacare, Justice Roberts said elections have consequences, nyah, nyah, nyah.

Failure, too, has consequences. In FJB’s case those consequences are President Trump’s second term, the deportation of illegals and the shrinking of the bureaucracy that Democrats control.

https://donsurber.substack.com/p/biden-boosted-libertarian-cause?r=1qo1e&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=email&triedRedirect=true

Crafty_Dog

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VDH
« Reply #2438 on: February 03, 2025, 04:20:32 PM »

VDH's Morning Cup
Absurdities of the week

Why would those undocumented protestors now shutting down the 101 in Los Angeles burn the flag of the country in which they are demanding to remain—while waving the flag of the nation to which they apparently have no desire to return?

Why here at home do we arrest drug dealers and kingpins for fueling mass opioid addictions, but, in the case of foreign-supplied drugs, claim American addicts are the real problem, but not Mexico and China, which deliberately help to supply, process, or disguise fentanyl to send across an open border- a drug which over the last decade they know has killed more Americans than all Americans killed in our 20th- and 21st-century wars?

Why would not Mexico and Canada after years of either laxity or complicity simply not police their side of the borders and stop illegal exits and thus also reduce the supply of lethal drugs entering the U.S. while helping to reduce a bit their massive trade surpluses with the U.S.— over $160 billion in the case of Mexico and $50 billion with Canada—rather than vent over the unfairness of the U.S. seeking some belated and partial symmetry? Was NAFTA designed to smooth out trade imbalances or radically increase them?

Why are we to sympathize with those grandees now forced to leave the FBI, or with retired intelligence authorities who knowingly signed a false letter to warp an election and thus are losing their security clearances—when just a few years ago they did their  best to weaponize and politicize hallowed intelligence and investigatory agencies? Should we not care more about restoring the lost reputations of agencies than the feelings of those who helped destroy them?

Why is it legitimate for Los Angeles city and county agencies or the FAA for years to boast about the decisive role of DEI in their hiring, promotion, and retention, but suddenly it becomes illegitimate to even  question whether such emphases had the effect of diminishing meritocracy and with it life-saving effectiveness? Who are the real illiberal and the culpable— those throughout history who privilege  race, sex, and sexual orientation as essential prerequisites or those who see them as incidental not essential to our individual characters and identities?

Body-by-Guinness

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Trump’s Game Plan: The Method to What “Progressives” See as Madness
« Reply #2439 on: February 04, 2025, 07:05:55 AM »
The best analysis of Trump & the method to his madness I’ve encountered, exploring why the 2020 steal is proving to be a disguised blessing being one element of this cogent :


Trump’s Bonfire of the Insanities
From DEI to foreign policy, it’s all connected.
JUPPLANDIA
FEB 03, 2025
As others have observed elsewhere, it’s beginning to look like the theft of 2020 and the extreme horrors of the Biden administration did what a century of failure for conservatives didn’t do: it forced the Right to get serious.

America was on the edge of the abyss before it woke up. It had concerned parents being classified as terrorists, and real terrorists being funded by USAID. It had trillions of debt waiting for the bubble burst moment where there was nobody left to ask for a loan, nobody left who believed debt would ever be repaid, and nobody left who believed the newly mass printed magic money was worth anything.

Jupplandia is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.


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In civil liberties, in the security of the border, in foreign disasters, in the stranglehold of corruption, in crime, in wars abroad and disasters at home, in the kind of ideologies being taught to its kids and the kind of capabilities being shown by its leaders, America was almost done. It could not have survived another Democrat term. It could not even have survived another Republican term, of the country club Republican variety. It would have been finished as a superpower, but more, probably finished as a viable and successful nation altogether.

Third World status was within touching distance.

As a Brit who loves America, I have a perspective on this that many comfortable Americans don’t share. My country was the superpower before yours. Look back just 150 years or so. Would the Britain of the 1860s or the 1870s find the Britain of the 2020s in the least bit recognisable? The Britain that launched the Abyssinian Expedition, gathering thousands of troops, a huge supply chain, shipping them from India to North Africa, marching them in a logistical feat of improbable brilliance across the harshest of African deserts to surprise and topple an ancient African dynasty in a matter of days, displaying such an overwhelming self confidence and such a degree of competence that things thought impossible were achieved with ease….would that Britain recognise Keir Starmer’s Marxist Globalist hellhole where entire towns and cities are conquered by literally rapacious Muslim hordes with the connivance, assistance and support of the British authorities?

The seeds of destruction are planted a century before a nation goes from titan bestriding the globe to pathetic self hating joke. All the prioritisation of others, all the inability to behave in the interests of your own people, all the arrogant assumption that a superpower status once attained would still last while doing self-defeating things, was there in the USA. In fact, the modern iterations of self loathing were perfected and developed most in the universities of America, and even the boardrooms of America had come to assume that various forms of treason constituted the noblest of enterprises. American decline after another term of Washington DC status quo and DEI and wokery as America’s official religion would have been even swifter and more complete than British decline.

America would have got there having lost a whole series of little wars, the perpetual wars feeding the parasitic military industrial complex, rather than by exhausting and bankrupting itself in Two World Wars of pyrrhic victory, as Britain did.

Essentially, one man has changed the trajectory of American decline. He’s not made recovery certain yet, it will take all the effort of this term and more to do that, but he has halted the downward slide. And he’s done it all in the first two weeks of his second term. Crucially, it’s come at a point before America is irreversibly enfeebled, and it’s really come solely because of the extreme efforts made by the most corrupt to remove Trump from office and prevent him ever serving as President again.

A second Trump term without the steal would have been one in which neither he nor the rest of us were fully apprised of the depths of depravity and corruption the system as it stood was capable of. COVID would still have given us a great degree of warning, but if that had not been used as the excuse for mail in ballots, as a cudgel of hysteria and destruction to wreck the world economy and as a death toll accusation to screech in the direction of those who were LEAST responsible for those deaths, would most people on our side have been a bit more complacent about what happened? I think so. I think, without the steal combining with the scamdemic, we would have been more inclined, like the most unaware centrists, to regard everything disastrous as just incompetence and misfortune, rather than things that were engineered towards a deliberately destructive purpose.

A Trump term that hadn’t been overturned by fraud would now be ended, and he would have governed through it surrounded by the agents of the Deep State that did everything they could to water down and redirect the first term. Trump would still have pushed through some good, and it would have been better than the Biden years….but there would have been none of the urgency, boldness and Save the Nation radicalism this 2nd term has manifested so far. MAGA might have dribbled away in a series of compromises with the Mitch McConnell brand of Republicanism, with Washington DC carrying on as normal and Trump being only a little bit better than the rest.

It was trying to imprison or kill him that fully freed him to be a Populist President. It is those experiences that translated the grumbling verbal disagreements with the status quo into firm, real and radical actions. And this wasn't just a change in Trump himself. It was a change in who is around him, who is advising him, who he trusts and doesn’t trust. It’s the difference between having Mike Pence at your shoulder or J.D.Vance.

One of the most interesting accounts of the last days of the previous Trump term came from Patrick Byrne who described efforts made by himself, General Flynn and Sidney Powell to get hard evidence of electoral fraud into the hands of the President and to try to get a real strategy of preventing the steal in place as it was developing. Those reliant on mainstream media, the first results returned by search engines and sources like Wikipedia will read that Byrne was a fantasist and conspiracy theorist who promoted the “bizarre”, “crazy” and “wild” idea (yes, Wikipedia still talks like this) that electoral fraud swung the 2020 result. Read Byrne’s own accounts and you get a much more interesting picture.

Byrne describes figures such as himself being outsiders motivated by love of their nation and horror at what was unfolding, but his tone is much more measured than hysterical. He admits that his 2020 meeting with Trump was essentially a kind of bluff, a moment where as a concerned supporter he tried to intervene directly based on little more than his friendship with Flynn and Flynn’s continued good relationship with Trump. What unfolds in that narrative is an attempt to reach Trump and bolster his fight against the steal. We should remember too that Byrne, despite biased subsequent reporting, had serious credentials as the founder of a significant company which he led successfully for two decades. Byrne was an expert on stocks and a campaigner against the practice of short selling, as well as someone with deep familiarity with the tech industry and some of the more technical IT aspects of the ways fraud could be conducted.

What remains important today about Byrne’s descriptions of the fall of the first Trump term, regardless of whether you have accepted the rather obvious truth that 2020 WAS stolen or not, is that he describes a President surrounded by people working against him. Byrne posited that (nearly) all of the White House lawyers and a significant proportion of the Trump first term administration very quickly advised him to give up and did everything in their power to block those suggesting a legal battle could be won or that the fraud could be proven in ways the mainstream media would not be able to bury. Byrne names figures like White House counsel Pat Cipollone as people “who want him [Trump] to lose and are working against him”. Byrne’s depiction of Trump is also fascinating-he describes Trump as a very smart, no-nonsense person who listens to a case being outlined to him, including quite technical information, and quickly grasps the key points. Byrne suggested that some of Trump’s advisors and friends, like Rudy Giuliani, didn’t grasp IT points that Trump understood and therefore focused on forms of fraud that were less significant than data manipulation. But he also depicts Trump as being increasingly aware that he didn’t have the support he needed to stop the steal.

All of this still informs what is happening today. In 2020 the election was stolen. The 2024 result makes that even more evident, not less. Where did the sudden millions of Biden voters, who popped into existence past midnight on the night of the 2020 election at the same time as a mysterious series of delays in key swing States, go when Trump faced Kamala? Did millions of real Democrat voters, after another four years of constantly being told how dangerous and evil and criminal Trump is, decide that voting against him had become less urgent? Did millions of them just find Biden a lot more charismatic and inspirational than Kamala? The contrast between the 2020 Democrat result and the 2024 Democrat result actually says the same thing that the absurd vote spikes in one direction and the breaking of every standard electoral result predictor said in 2020. The Biden surge from nowhere can ONLY be explained by exactly what Byrne was providing or seeking to provide statistical and technical evidence of in 2020.

Does anyone seriously believe, now, that Joe Biden was so magnificent in campaigning in 2020 that he was better than Barack Obama, by millions, and so much of a liability in 2024 that he had to be ditched for a woman who herself once secured just 1% of Democrat voters? He was the same man. And the dementia was there both times. What wasn’t there was the alleged need for nearly all votes to be by mail ballot, and what had changed too was more Republican awareness of fraud and better efforts at stopping fraud before it occurs (directed crucially this time by actual Trump loyalists).

This matters because the lessons learned in it are the lessons shaping the 2nd term. Why is this term starting at such a furious pace? Why is this term showing an administration which knows that actions have to be taken, real action and not just words? Why are Executive Orders, this time, being swiftly backed up by the removal of obstructionists, sacking people who won’t do their ACTUAL jobs, and physically removing them from offices or removing even their right to enter a federal building?

Well, because this time Trump isn’t surrounded by the “mendacious mediocrities” that Byrne described. He’s not surrounded by a Mike Pence who will elbow bump Pelosi in triumph when Trump is ousted. He’s not represented by a Nikki Haley who will sound good from a MAGA script but turn on it all when told to by her real masters. He’s not got some junior representative who will make up ludicrous stories about him trying to seize the wheel of a car driven by the Secret Service. He’s not asking a Bill Barr to investigate fraud, who then immediately declares, having ordered everyone NOT to investigate, that there is no fraud. He’s not relying on Obama or Bush appointees to do MAGA work. He’s not letting the corrupt tell him who is or isn’t corrupt.

The 2nd term administration knows they have to work fast and keep working fast. They know the Swamp will try to obstruct them. And they know the smart way, this time, to pre-empt those attempts at obstruction, to smash to smithereens that business as usual, it doesn’t matter that he’s the President we are the people who really run things mentality. They were anticipating that some of these people would refuse to leave when ordered to go. They were ready. Put a MAGA person in the right place to be able to say ‘security, please escort them from the building’. This is stuff a Bill Barr exists to prevent. These are orders-sane, necessary orders-most of Washington DC and the established political class consider nuts. Because these orders strike at the heart of their corruption, their privilege, their parasitism on the spending and resources of the State.

Senior officials have tried to physically block DOGE access to the computer files and records of USAID. But that’s a good thing. Why? Well before the steal and the Biden term, Trump himself would not have thought to demand that all foreign aid be stopped immediately and Trump himself would not have thought to be ready to have those officials physically removed. He would have asked for a rundown of possible areas of savings, and been handed that by some official who doesn’t want savings and has prepared a false report deliberately concealing things from Trump.

That’s how it had operated for years. They either totally owned a person who became President, like the CIA First Family of Bush Snr and Jnr, or they were totally aligned with them anyway, like the radical progressive Marxist Barack Obama. Trump was instinctively difficult to control on a couple of key subjects (borders, tariffs, perpetual wars) and that made him terrifying to them, a potential existential threat that has to be extinguished.

But thar attempt made him an ACTUAL existential threat to the entire corrupt edifice.

We often tend to compartmentalise things that are actually inextricably linked. We talk about DEI and wokeness and we talk about corruption and the Washington mindset as if they are different things. Or we talk about media lies and government censorship as if they are different things. Or we talk about the vast national debt and the lobbying industry and the wealth built by politicians far beyond their official salaries as if they are separate things.

And none of them are separate things.

America didn’t go mad on crazy ideologies out of nowhere. It went mad on crazy ideologies because people with those crazy ideologies were being paid to spread them. DEI didn’t sprout into existence naturally as a demand from ordinary people. It was imposed from above by corrupt people. Public money was diverted and assigned to it. BlackRock was demanding companies impose it on themselves and their staff. It wasn’t an organic movement. It wasn’t something anyone got to vote on. Even Democrats weren’t really asked if they wanted it. They were told they wanted it, and like obedient drones, they agreed, and could be instantly programmed to consider the lack of it Nazism. But it came from Soros money. It came from Larry Fink’s control of corporate lending. It came from Democrat control of government spending.

None of it exists without control of the flow of money. Democrat and progressive billionaires invested a bit of their money purchasing everything from street level thugs as ‘activists’ to purchasing the DAs who would free the activists without charge when they committed crimes. Look at every climate activism organisation. Look at the funding. It begins with a progressive billionaire. Or it begins with a government grant. Usually it begins with both. And that side of politics has perfected the billionaire ‘donation’ to generate the State spending stream. Buy the lobbyists, buy the activists, buy the journalists, buy the politicians, pretend to be a philanthropist….you have spent 20 or 200 million doing that. But you have opened up billions or trillions of government spending.

There’s suddenly a climate crisis and a trillion dollars needs to be spent on that.

Suddenly everyone agrees that we need to spend trillions ‘preventing the next pandemic’.

There’s a refugee crisis. Those poor refugees need help. Here’s a trillion dollars on helping them.

We bombed their home country. We need the money for more bombs! Because their home country has been bombed, they are coming here. We need the money to resettle them! Oh, and we need the money to rebuild the country that we bombed.

The same company owns the company that makes the bombs and the company that rebuilds the things that have been bombed. And they own the foreign policy experts and the journalists who say that if you don’t build the bombs and drop the bombs and fund the rebuilding after the bombs…you’re a Nazi.

Bishop Budde, who screeched at Trump about the people in fear and the poor migrants? Turns out her church has had 53 million dollars in US federal funding for the resettlement of migrants. Her concern is a financial grift as well as an ideological stance.

It always is. BLM was a scam. The founders were buying mansions from it. The companies who backed it were buying virtue points when half of them thrive on third world sweatshops, modern slavery, or just treating their own staff like shit.

All the race grift and the DEI grift? It’s stealing public funds. It’s diverting money that should go to real things, into the pockets of an entire class of people who then vote for more of the same. At its root it’s got nothing to do with black people or white people. It’s got nothing to do with history or past injustices. It’s a grift. A giant grift that became part of the even larger grift that is….the State itself.

It turns out that it is not inevitable that one of the biggest race grifters in the US should be able to run a centre for the promotion of race hate lies which calls itself a Center of Antirascist Research. Such facilities can also close.

Every single diversity officer in every country? It’s a non job. It does nothing meaningful. But it’s an industry of doing nothing. It’s patronage and corruption at its most blatant, because you are purposefully paying people in an imaginary set of disciplines to do totally unnecessary things that add zero actual value to anything. All so you’ve got a client class of people you can be sure will vote for more of the same. Race, gender, imaginary pronouns, sexual orientation, sexual fetish, skin colour, foreign language, migrant origins, mental health, lack of mental health, short, fat, disabled, terrorist….its all grist to the grift.

We can spend your money on that. We can keep some for ourselves.

Unnecessary wars you say? Well, there are some big contracts there….

What happens in the end is that everything that claims to help people is a way of justifying vast spending, diverting vast spending, and repeating vast spending. Because every crooked bastard is making money from it while the country slides into the abyss. The only people not making money from it are the people doing the ACTUAL jobs or serving the original purpose of their jobs.

The black guy working in McDonald’s does twenty times the work of that diversity officer, and he’s not benefitting from the race grift at all. Maybe he didn’t go to university. Maybe he did but refused to become a total fucking parasite as a ‘diversity officer’. Some people are still old fashioned that way. But the honest black guy working a real job still pays higher taxes, like everyone else, so the parasite has a better paid job than him.

DOGE has discovered that USAID officials, according to Musk commenting on what has been found so far, were instructed to NEVER deny a payment. You can know it’s going to waste, don’t deny it. You can know it’s going to Osama bin Laden. Don’t deny it. You can know it was supposed to be for ‘funding a conference on democratic values’ and is actually funding a paramilitary death squad….definitely don’t deny that one!

All this is being discovered and stopped because of the following differences from all prior rightwing or conservative governments and from the first Trump term:

This term is refusing to be constrained by polite rules, traditional limits, etiquette or ‘the done thing’, none of which the other side obeys anyway.
This term understands that you have to push forward. The ststus quo, or merely stopping the other side, is a loss.
This term has lost patience with traitors within and is ignoring Republicans who screech while serving the Democrats.
This term expected orders to be ignored, files to be deleted, and the Deep State to try and act as if an election changes nothing. They have prepared for those responses.
This term is backed up by loyalists being put in key posts and being prepared to take immediate actions.
This term is willing to sack people, demote people, remove people physically when necessary.
This term understands that the total corruption of the system and the madness of society are the same thing, with the same root causes.
This term understands that you have to act swiftly and do what you intend to do rather than just talking about it.
This term is not letting its enemies define what is acceptable, rational, or beneficial . If it thinks threatening Canada or Panama or Denmark is beneficial, it does it.
Most important of all, this term understands that whoever controls the money controls everything. It’s freezing the money that pays for the madness. It’s stopping the vast hose of public spending and actually halting the money that feeds every corrupt agenda and organisation.
Trump wasn’t anywhere near this radical in the first term. He wasn’t allowed to be anywhere near this radical in the first term. And this radical treatment, this rapid, shock and awe push for things Globalists consider insane, this swift use of the control of the flow of money to achieve permanent changes in the opposite direction to Globalism, is exactly what was needed.

It was the only thing that could save the USA.

But more than that, it’s a template for the rest of the world. Don’t settle for a status quo. Don’t be like a beaten wife saying ‘please, no more’. You have to tackle the corruption and the insanity head on, recognising that they are the same thing. And they CAN be reversed. They CAN be beaten. You don’t have to accept that a new industry based on genitally mutilating kids is here for good. You don’t have to accept that your nation fights expensive wars that do nothing for you, but gets horrified at the idea of tariffs on ‘allies’ who have been cheating you. You CAN object to using imaginary pronouns. You CAN change your nation from one where patriots are imprisoned to one where patriots are honoured. You can see the whole cultural paradigm and the whole direction of history turn, for the first time in a century, in a direction you like.

You CAN get the border you want, the country you want, the policies you want.

All it takes is a leader prepared to listen and act, and a leader who knows to turn the money off. That’s when you get a bonfire of the insanities, and it sheds a light and a warmth that the rest of the world envies.

Jupplandia is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

https://jupplandia.substack.com/p/trumps-bonfire-of-the-insanities?r=2k0c5&triedRedirect=true

Crafty_Dog

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Thoughts posted on behalf of a friend
« Reply #2440 on: February 04, 2025, 03:52:05 PM »


Monroe-Truman 2.0: The Fourth Turning and America’s Path to Renewal
The Pendulum Swings Back

History moves like a pendulum—when it swings too far, too fast in one direction, the inevitable reaction is a forceful correction. For decades, America has been in an era of global overreach, stretching itself thin in foreign wars, economic entanglements, and ideological battles far from home. The result? Hollowed-out industries, political dysfunction, and a divided citizenry. Now, the pendulum is swinging back. Monroe-Truman 2.0 is that correction—a shift from overextension to strategic restraint, from global policing to national renewal. It is not isolationism, but a recalibration—ensuring that America is strong at home before it extends its hand abroad.

The Cost of Suicidal Empathy

One of the greatest pitfalls of the last several decades has been suicidal empathy—the misguided belief that America must sacrifice its own well-being to fix the world's problems. This has led to endless wars, unchecked immigration policies, and economic deals that gutted American industries in the name of "fairness." Compassion is a virtue, but when it comes at the cost of national security, economic stability, and cultural integrity, it becomes self-destructive. America cannot afford to keep playing the role of global savior while its own foundations crumble. Monroe-Truman 2.0 demands a shift from blind altruism to strategic generosity—helping others only when it strengthens, rather than weakens, the homeland.

The Three Threats to the American Experiment

Today, Monroe’s shield is needed not from European colonialists, but from three existential forces that seek to dismantle the American experiment: WEF-style globalism, radical Islam, and Chinese trade ambitions. Each of these forces, in its own way, aims to weaken American sovereignty. Globalist elites want to dissolve national identity in favor of a technocratic world order. Radical Islam, in its extremist form, despises the very freedoms America represents. And China, through economic warfare and strategic influence, seeks to replace American dominance on the world stage. In Monroe-Truman 2.0, America must recognize these threats and stop aiding those who wish to see its decline. Strength begins with saying no to policies that undermine national security, economic resilience, and cultural cohesion.

A Defining Moment: America’s Fourth Turning

Every great shift in American history has come with a turning—a transformation in how the nation defines itself. The first turning was the Revolution and the Constitution. The second was the Civil War and Reconstruction. The third was the Great Depression and World War II, which birthed the American century. Now, we stand at the precipice of the fourth turning. Monroe-Truman 2.0 is not just a policy shift—it is the philosophy that will define America’s next era. It is the moment when the republic chooses whether to fade into managed decline or rise once more, stronger than before.

The Road Ahead: Strength and Grace

This transformation will have its share of detractors—those who cling to old paradigms of global intervention, unchecked spending, and ideological excess. But for those who see the future clearly, Monroe-Truman 2.0 offers something profound: a rebirth of American strength, tempered with wisdom. It is a vision not of retreat, but of renewal. By fixing the homeland first, shielding itself from those who seek its destruction, and stepping forward with deliberate purpose, America can once again become the world’s example—not through force, but through the undeniable power of a nation that has rediscovered itself.

The choice is ours. History has brought us to this moment. The pendulum has swung too far, and now the course correction has begun. If we seize this moment with clarity, resolve, and a deep commitment to the values that built this nation, the best days of the republic are still ahead.