"Just a few days ago, on Sunday, the president wrote that he no longer felt 'an obligation to think purely of Peace,' since he hadn’t been awarded the Nobel Prize. Yet here he was: from bored of peace to Board of Peace in five days. Forget the road to Damascus; true conversions happen on the jet to Davos.
"And who better to solve the world’s conflicts than the man who, in his speech at the WEF a day earlier, became confused about whether he wished to illegally seize Greenland or Iceland? ...
“'Everybody wants to be a part of it,' Trump insisted of his new club. But big European countries had already turned him down. The initial members include Saudi Arabia, Israel and Belarus. Vladimir Putin says Russia may join too, if, and this is not a joke, he can pay the membership from Russia’s frozen assets. If these guys can run a peace initiative, the Sinaloa Cartel can run Narcotics Anonymous."~ Henry Mance in Financial Times op-ed 'From bored of peace to the Board of Peace'
Showing posts with label Trumpism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trumpism. Show all posts
Friday, 23 January 2026
"From bored of peace to Board of Peace in five days"
Friday, 16 January 2026
"One of the main differences between this Trump Administration and the previous term: he is currently surrounded by people who take his craziest ideas and then come up with elaborate rationalisations for why he should do them."
"One of the main differences between this Trump Administration and the previous term: ... the adults from the first term either said 'enough' after Jan 6th and walked away, or they found themselves driven out because they refused to budge on one or more of Trump's craziest ideas."That means the 2nd term self-selected for people who, through their own lack of virtue, are unbothered by the ethical failures of the first term, and people who are True Believers (tm) in the craziest schemes of Trumpism today. Or both. ...
"[So h]e is currently surrounded by people who take his craziest ideas and then come up with elaborate rationalisations for why he should do them."Trump wants tariffs on everyone and everything? 'You know, Mr. President, there's this law called IEEPA...'"Trump proposes some bonkers scheme to invade Greenland because he wants to make the country larger? 'You know, Mr. President, Greenland is actually important for US national security...'"In the previous Administration, there were at least a few adults who shut down the wackiest impulses of Trump or deflected them to other areas. Now, flattering Trump's wackiest impulses is a pathway to promotion."~ Phil Magness"The adults in his previous term were people who believed in real governance—whether one liked their particular ideological or policy leanings or not—and thought Trump could be moderated with intelligent guidance. They were patriotic people who wanted to serve their country whether or not they approved of who has been elected."This time, every adult knew Trump could not be moderated, that they could not effectively serve their country, but could only support the crazy or be destroyed. So the stayed away in droves."And of course that suited Trump just fine. The first time around he was uncertain, and he wanted the patina of serious expert people around him. But he chafed at not being able to control them, and he came to realise all he needed (personally, with certainty, and possibly politically) was the continued adoration of the MAGA crowd. So he has been happy to not have any qualified people on board, but to have sycophants who both inflate his ego and keep the MAGA folks swooning in political ecstasy."And the adults are just sitting by thinking about whether an actual seizure of power through cancelled or rigged elections is [possible], and how to prevent it if there's a real danger of it, and how to restore some sanity, decency, and global trust when this passes."
Wednesday, 5 November 2025
“‘Emergencies’ have always been the pretext on which the safeguards of individual liberty have been eroded"
“‘Emergencies’ have always been the pretext on which the safeguards of individual liberty have been eroded — and once they are suspended it is not difficult for anyone who has assumed such emergency powers to see to it that the emergency will persist."~ Friedrich Hayek, from his 1979 book Law, Legislation & Liberty, Vol III: The Political Order of a Free People
Thursday, 28 August 2025
"At this moment in history, arguing that the Left is more dangerous than the Right is like arguing that tuberculosis is more dangerous than the plague"
"[S]ome of my pro-Trump acquaintances ... dismiss ... my anti-Trump points with phrases along the lines of that’s just Leftist propaganda, or I don’t pay attention to what the mainstream media says about Trump.There’s an old cliche, 'You’re entitled to your own opinion, but you’re not entitled to your own facts.'...
"Something has seriously gone amiss in your psyche if you can watch an American president literally roll out a red carpet for a mass-murdering dictator, seize control of private companies, issue capricious tariff edicts that greatly increase the tax burden on Americans, or send an innocent man to a hellhole in El Salvador without a trial, and your response is Best President Ever. ...
"[I]t’s silly to argue about how dangerous the Left is right now. The Left are not in power! They are not the side with millions of 'fools' who believe a con man is the literal saviour of [America]. ... At this moment in history, arguing that the Left is more dangerous than the Right is like arguing that tuberculosis is more dangerous than the plague — during an outbreak of the plague. ...
"[Yet t]hey would much rather focus on the terrible things the Left might do if they were in power. Never mind that all Trump’s actions to expand the power of the executive branch are likely to be used by the Left in the future, thus ensuring that the horrors they imagine actually will come to pass.
"And the saddest part of all is that it didn’t have to be this way. If the Republicans actually cared a whit about freedom ... they could have used this rare opportunity when they hold the reins of power to shrink government spending, bolster the rule of law, preserve the separation of powers, and pass actual legislation that moves us in the direction of more freedom. But today’s Right doesn’t care about any of those things, and by supporting them [they] decimated the liberty movement . ...
"If America as we have known it is to be saved, it is today’s values of collectivism, subjectivism, and sacrifice that must be fought. Those values are being now promulgated by the Right just as much as the Left. ...[W]e can and should be fighting for the principles of freedom, individualism, and reason. Neither Trump nor today’s Republicans represent any of these ideals — and to imagine they do is just that: imagination."~ Stewart Margolis from his post 'Silent No More'
Tuesday, 1 July 2025
MAGA: "Empathy is out. Assholery is in."
Donald Trump, in my opinion, is not some history-altering mutant, like the Mule in Asimov’s 'Foundation' trilogy. I think of him as an opportunist who exploited rifts in American society and weak spots in American culture. He did not create those rifts and weak spots, and ... they will still be there waiting for their next exploiter. ...The first rift he identifies is The Rift Between Working and Professional Classes, i.e., between "the people who shower after work and the people who shower before work."
All through Elon Musk’s political ascendancy, I kept wondering: How can working people possibly believe that the richest man in the world is on their side? Similarly, how can people who unload trucks or operate cash registers imagine that Donald Trump, who was born rich and probably never did a day of physical labor in his life, is their voice in government?
The answer to that question is simple: The people who shower after work have gotten so alienated from the people who shower before work that anyone who takes on “the educated elite” seems to be their ally. In the minds of many low-wage workers, the enemy is not the very rich, but rather the merely well-to-do — people with salaries and benefits and the ability to speak the language of bureaucracy and science.
Actual billionaires like Musk or Trump or Jeff Bezos or Mark Zuckerberg are so distant that it’s hard to feel personally threatened by them. But your brother-in-law the psychologist or your cousin who got an engineering degree — you know they look down on you. Whenever they deign to discuss national affairs with you at all, it’s in that parent-to-child you-don’t-really-understand tone of voice. And let’s not even mention your daughter who comes home from college with a social justice agenda. Everything you think is wrong, and she can’t even explain why without using long words you’ve never heard before. Somebody with a college degree is telling you what to do every minute of your day, and yet you’re supposed to be the one who has “privilege”.
The tension has been building for a long time, but it really boiled over for you during the pandemic. You couldn’t go to work, your kids couldn’t go to school, you couldn’t go to football games or even to church — and why exactly? Because “experts” like Anthony Fauci were “protecting” you from viruses too small to see. (They could see them, but you couldn’t. Nothing you could see interested anybody.) Then there were masks you had to wear and shots you had to get, but nobody could explain exactly what they did. Would they keep you from getting the disease or transmitting it to other people? Not exactly. If you questioned why you had to do all this, all they could do was trot out statistics and point to numbers. And if you’ve learned anything from your lifetime of experience dealing with educated people, it’s that they can make numbers say whatever they want. The “experts” speak maths and you don’t, so you just have to do what they say.
Can we say we haven't seen that same thing here?
In his 2012 book 'The Twilight of the Elites,' Chris Hayes outlined the ways that the expert class has become self-serving. In theory, the expert class is comprised of winners in a competitive meritocracy. But in practice, educated professionals have found ways to tip the balance in their children’s favor. Also, the experts did not do a good job running the Iraq or Afghanistan wars, and they failed to foresee the economic crisis of 2008. When they did notice it, they responded badly: Bankers got bailed out while many ordinary people lost their homes. ...
On the public-trust side, people have been too willing to believe conspiracy theories about perfectly legitimate things like the Covid vaccine [and to applaud the appointment of an anti-vaccine loony to the job of Health Secretary]. Trump’s slashing of funding for science and research is a long-term disaster for America, and his war against top universities like Harvard and Columbia destroys one of the major advantages the US has on the rest of the world. But many cheer when revenge is taken on the so-called experts they think look down on them.There are many genuine reasons to mistrust the people we see so frequently wheeled out by media and government as so-called experts. But you'd be a fool to abandon trust in genuine expertise—or to place that trust instead in know-nothing figureheads like a Trump or a Bannon or (closer to home) to a Winston, Tamaki or the like.
The next rift he identifies however opens up in this era of Post-Truth Politics. Muder calls it Truth Decay, that realisation that in the marketplace of ideas, truth no longer matters. Post-modernism has won. The mainstream media's peddling opinion has betrayed their prior responsibility to just report the facts — both science and media have been corrupted by government money — and now reality is biting back in the form of a loss of public trust.
And now too many public figures neither know nor care. About anything. And certainly not about facts. Only a short while ago a Libertarian presidential candidate with unusually decent momentum was drummed out of the campaign by not knowing "What's Aleppo?" No, a Republican senator can confuse “gazpacho” with “Gestapo” and no-one blinks an eye.
Along with the lost of trust in experts and the inability of American society to agree on a basic set of facts, we are plagued by a loss of depth in our public discussions. It’s not just that Americans don’t know or understand things, it’s that they’ve lost the sense that there are things to know or understand. College professors report that students don’t know how to read entire books any more. And we all have run into people who think they are experts on a complex subject (like climate change or MRNA vaccines) because they watched a YouTube video.So the MAGAts have captured the low ground. For now. They've become the swamp. But in the absence of any coherent programme, all they have is pissing off their opponents. Making liberals cry. Essentially, at the end of the rot, what we are left with is this: Empathy is out. Assholery is in. Basically, when the rubber of MAGAt policies hit the road, they're intended to hit someone. "The cruelty is the point. MAGA means never having to say you’re sorry. If people you don’t like are made poorer, weaker, or sicker — well, good! Nothing tastes sweeter than liberal tears."
Levels of superficiality that once would have gotten someone drummed out of politics — [like a Defence Secretary's inability to answer a straight question, or the Attorney General's ignorance of the separation of powers, or the president's complete incomprehension of the Constitution he had sworn only weeks before to defend and protect] — are now everyday events.
We can hear the spectacle of cruel laughter throughout the Trump era. There were the border-patrol agents cracking up at the crying immigrant children separated from their families, and the Trump adviser who delighted white supremacists when he mocked a child with Down syndrome who was separated from her mother. There were the police who laughed uproariously when the president encouraged them to abuse suspects, and the Fox News hosts mocking a survivor of the Pulse Nightclub massacre (and in the process inundating him with threats), the survivors of sexual assault protesting to Senator Jeff Flake, the women who said the president had sexually assaulted them, and the teen survivors of the Parkland school shooting. There was the president mocking Puerto Rican accents shortly after thousands were killed and tens of thousands displaced by Hurricane Maria, the black athletes protesting unjustified killings by the police, the women of the #MeToo movement who have come forward with stories of sexual abuse, and the disabled reporter whose crime was reporting on Trump truthfully. It is not just that the perpetrators of this cruelty enjoy it; it is that they enjoy it with one another. Their shared laughter at the suffering of others is an adhesive that binds them to one another, and to Trump.And that was all just Trump's first term! It's already got much worse.
It’s hard to look at any list of recent Trump administration actions without concluding that these people are trying to be assholes. It’s not an accident. It’s not a side effect of something else. The assholery is the point.In the absence of anything else of positive substance, that's really all there is.
Wednesday, 2 April 2025
"The biggest ideological changes of the Trump era are not on *my* side. It’s the rest of the 'right' that changed."
"The biggest ideological changes of the Trump era are not on my side. It’s the rest of the 'right' that changed. ...
"To those observing from the outside, it is obvious that people who sign up for Trumpism completely transform themselves. Free marketers become protectionists, secularists become 'culture-war Christians,' people who once sang paeans to the Constitution become advocates of one-man rule. Most disturbingly, people who used to talk in old Reaganite terms about the positive contributions of immigrants now delight in the administration’s performative cruelty toward immigrants. Look at Marco Rubio, the son of Cuban refugees who is now the chief enforcer of the administration’s arbitrary detention of foreigners.
"Compared to that, I have been an island of stability. ... [W]hile my background would have been described as being 'on the right—back when that meant something different—I was never a conservative and not even quite a libertarian. For the general reader, I usually described myself as a 'secular free-marketer,' and that’s still true. But the context of the times has changed, and the main fault line in American politics is very different from what it was ten or fifteen years ago. ...
"I’ve been talking for a while about how I suspect we’re in the middle of a vast new political realignment, and that has now crystallised. The new political spectrum isn’t left versus right. It’s liberalism versus authoritarianism."~ Robert Tracinski from his post 'How I Changed, Or: How I Became a Mugwump'
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)




