Donald Trump, Avatar of his Class, Capitalism & the Decline and Fall of Bourgeois Democracy

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blindpig
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Re: Donald Trump, Avatar of his Class, Capitalism & the Decline and Fall of Bourgeois Democracy

Post by blindpig » Wed Oct 01, 2025 3:28 pm

Trump Declares War on the U.S.
Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist 01 Oct 2025

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Members of the military attend a meeting convened by U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in Quantico, Virginia. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Donald Trump has declared war on the “enemy within” and put the military on notice that they will mete out the same treatment domestically that they dispense around the world.

“Chicago about to find out why it’s called the Department of WAR!” - Donald Trump

"Last month, I signed an executive order to provide training for a quick reaction force that can help quell civil disturbances. This is gonna be a big thing for the people in this room, because it's the enemy from within and we have to handle it before it gets out of control." - Donald Trump speaking to high ranking military officers

"Only in recent decades did politicians somehow come to believe that our job is to police the far reaches of Kenya and Somalia while America is under invasion from within. We’re under invasion from within, no different than a foreign enemy but more difficult in many ways because they don’t wear uniforms. At least when they're wearing a uniform you can take them out. These people don’t have uniforms. But we are under invasion from within and we’re stopping it very quickly." - Donald Trump speaking to high ranking military officers

Recently the name Department of Defense was retired and that federal agency in charge of the military was given its original name, Department of War. Immediately president Donald Trump implied via one of his Truth Social posts that he was declaring war on the city of Chicago. He then walked back his comment claiming that "We're not going to war. We're going to clean up our cities," which may have seemed benign for those engaging in wishful thinking until Trump and Secretary of War Pete Hegseth called a meeting of the top military brass.

The gathering began with Hegseth telling admirals and generals that they needed to shape up, literally. “It's completely unacceptable to see fat generals and admirals in the halls of the Pentagon, and leading commands around the country and the world. It's a bad look.” While laughable, the comedic antics were a distraction from the main event, remarks from president Trump himself.

From the moment Hegseth announced the meeting there was a great deal of speculation about its purpose. After Hegseth ordered shaping up or shipping out, Trump made the rational clear. First he jokingly asked for applause and then told the assembled admirals, generals, and other top military staff gathered from around the country and around the world, “If you don’t like what I’m saying you can leave the room. Of course, there goes your rank, there goes your future.”

But there was no joking as to Trump’s intent or his determination to get rid of anyone who won’t follow it. He repeated that he wanted to send the military to “dangerous” cities and again used Chicago as an example of one that could be used as a “military training ground.”

In recent days Trump has increased his rhetoric against leftist groups and individuals and on September 22, 2025 he issued an Executive Order designating “Antifa” as a Domestic Terrorist Organization. There is no organization named Antifa but the evil beauty of the designation is that the name can be applied to anyone that Trump chooses, who can then be subjected to terrorism charges.The order states in part, “All relevant executive departments and agencies shall utilize all applicable authorities to investigate, disrupt, and dismantle any and all illegal operations — especially those involving terrorist actions — conducted by Antifa or any person claiming to act on behalf of Antifa, or for which Antifa or any person claiming to act on behalf of Antifa provided material support, including necessary investigatory and prosecutorial actions against those who fund such operations.”

The term “material support” for terrorism goes back to the Bill Clinton administration with the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996. Again the vagueness of material support is intentional and means that anything from written or verbal expressions of support or monetary donations can be referred to as such and prosecuted under the full force of the law.

Trump wasted no time in issuing a second directive just three days later on September 25, 2025 with a National Security Presidential Memoranda/NSPM-7 entitled “Countering Domestic Terrorism and Organized Political Violence.” The NSPM-7 was even more chilling as it described the criteria that would make a person or a group a target for investigation and prosecution: “Common threads animating this violent conduct include anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, and anti-Christianity; support for the overthrow of the United States Government; extremism on migration, race, and gender; and hostility towards those who hold traditional American views on family, religion, and morality.”

Prior to the issuing of this NSPM-7 only foreign groups designated as being “terrorist” were included in these prohibitions. But now domestic organizations and their funders can be targeted for expressing what is allegedly protected by the First Amendment. We are allowed to be against capitalism or Christianity or other religions, aren’t we? What is “extremism” on race and gender? Who is deciding what is extreme? Is no one able to question traditional views on family or morality? Most importantly, the term “material support” means anything the state wants it to mean and therefore our legal rights are at risk. Trump is making clear that the military will be involved in suppressing speech and action and that any of the brass he spoke to who aren’t on board with the plan should fill out their retirement papers and will no longer have to worry about their physical fitness.

There is another important point about Trump’s remarks to the military officers. He spoke of policing “the far reaches of Kenya and Somalia.” Kenya is a member of the U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM), an alleged U.S. ally that involved itself in the latest iteration of a Haiti occupation at Washington’s behest. Somalia is also an AFRICOM partner nation despite being continually the target of U.S. military aggression for more than 30 years.

Yet straight from the horse's mouth we see a direct connection between international and domestic repression. Trump isn’t content for the U.S. to be a global hegemon unless it can also act against dissent at home too. We at Black Agenda Report have made this very point for years. The wars abroad are always brought home, whether through the distribution of surplus military equipment to police through the 1033 Program or Trump and his predecessors claiming the right to kill anyone they choose through the Obama administration “kill list” or indefinite detention of anyone a president may choose.

Black people in Kenya or Somalia or Chicago can be subjected to the wrath of the state whenever doing so is expedient. Trump’s attacks on democratic run cities are a feast of red meat to his Make America Great Again followers. Without the occasional outburst of violence against Black people or anyone designated as a leftist they may ask why Trump’s tariff policies are causing inflation or wonder why there isn’t full disclosure of his connections with Jeffrey Epstein. There is nothing like a crackdown on the marginalized and demonized to whip up an angry mob at an opportune moment.

After the shooting death of right wing influencer Charlie Kirk, Trump and company conducted a full court press of hatred against the left and elevation of the racist podcaster to sainthood. Now we see new determinations to break legal precedent and violate the spirit of the Posse Comitatus Act which forbids the use of the military to police a civilian population.

Initially Hegseth’s announcement of the military summoning was met with many questions. Was the U.S. going to war against Iran/Venezuela/China? Were they stopping a palace coup? Now there is a simple answer. Trump is getting the military onboard to carry out his fantasy of destroying anyone he sees as an enemy. Black people, big cities, leftist groups, and anyone who funds their activities are now all in his crosshairs and the people Trump has designated to carry out his wishes know that they must comply or get out. He has declared war on millions of people in this country and the only questions are whether anyone with the power to stop him will have the will to do so and whether the people he has designated as “enemies within” will surrender.

https://blackagendareport.com/trump-declares-war-us

Mother Earth Is Angry!
Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence 01 Oct 2025

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Increasing global temperatures, represented here, and the illnesses that come with them, are not distributed equally around the world. Image: NASA

Mother Earth's angry! She’s shaking her
Head and sistar-gurling her hands on her
Hips … She’s saying, “Enough dinosaur-
Driven death and destruction! Enough!”

Meanwhile, amidst Mother Earth’s melting
Arctic, a muddle-headed fossil fool slouched.
An unhinged lecturer jousted with windmills,
Solar panels, heat pumps, electric bikes and cars.

Meanwhile, amidst Mother Earth’s ceaseless
Hot flashes, a fact-free foghorn pontificated
Pinocchio-like — gaslighting — torturing his
Captive audience with fossil foolishness …

Mother Earth's angry! She’s saying, “You can’t
Be what you wanna be — 93 million miles from
Reality! You can’t say what you wanna say, for
Fox-boxers sane-washing and chanting, U-S-A!”

© 2025. Raymond Nat Turner, The Town Crier. All Rights Reserved.

https://blackagendareport.com/mother-earth-angry

******

From Ukraine to Gaza, profit is the policy: Trump’s wars enrich defense conglomerates
October 1, 2025 Lev Koufax

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Just three days before Trump’s claim that he was “the President of Peace,” his administration approved $6.4 billion in weapons sales to apartheid Israel. That is $6.4 billion to bomb hospitals and murder children.

The State Department recently updated its list of wars that Donald Trump allegedly ended. Trump now claims that he has brokered a peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Trump would have the world believe that this is another feather in his cap as a peacemaker. Previously, Trump and his State Department have taken credit for six other conflicts: India and Pakistan, the DRC and Rwanda, Serbia and Kosovo, Egypt and Ethiopia, Israel and Iran, Thailand and Cambodia.

We have previously reported on the patent factual inaccuracies of these claims. India and Pakistan have both denied that any third party played a role in mediating the Kashmir-centered skirmishes of 2025. The last war between Egypt and Ethiopia ended in 1876. Trump started the war between Israel and Iran, which he also claims to have ended. Does an arsonist really deserve credit for dousing the fire they started?

Even where Trump and his administration have played some role in mediating conflicts, there is still an inherent Western arrogance in claiming complete credit for any brokered peace. This arrogance is compounded when considering the continued U.S.-funded genocide in Gaza and the U.S.-NATO proxy war against Russia in Ukraine.

Just three days before Trump’s claim that he was “the President of Peace,” his administration approved $6.4 billion in weapons sales to apartheid Israel. That is $6.4 billion to bomb hospitals and murder children — some President of Peace.

While claiming to be a peacemaker, Trump simultaneously announced a strategy that ensures NATO’s war in Ukraine continues indefinitely. Three hours before his seven wars ended claim, Trump ranted on Truth Social that “with the support of the European Union is in a position to fight and WIN all of Ukraine back in its original form. With time, patience, and the financial support of Europe and in particular, NATO, the original Borders from where this War started, is very much an option.”

Trump’s latest rant makes the U.S. imperialist strategy in Ukraine even more apparent. As we wrote in March, Trump and his cohorts never planned to end the war in Ukraine. U.S. imperialism had no intention of ending its NATO war in an attempt to bleed Russia of resources and political will. Burden shifting the Ukraine war to Europe is an imperialist strategic decision aimed at refocusing for war on China. The Republican Party effectively used war weariness to parlay a 2024 election victory over the deeply unpopular Joe Biden. However, rhetoric is not the same as policy.

Outright U.S military aid to Ukraine may have ended, but the Trump administration has continually arranged for Ukrainian purchases of U.S. weapons with NATO funds. In the end, the result is the same. The war rages on, and with it, so do massive profits for U.S. defense conglomerates.

Donald Trump is nothing more than an imperialist war monger. The proof is in the pudding. Trump’s first fascist administration murdered Qassem Soleimani in cold blood. Just a few months ago, Trump ordered strikes on Iranian nuclear sites. Strikes on Iran followed a several-week-long naval and air campaign against Yemen. With Trump’s approval, Israel has launched its largest-ever ground offensive into Gaza. Bloodshed has not been limited to the Middle East. The U.S. military destroyed multiple small boats off the coast of Venezuela under the pretext of fighting “narco-terrorism.” These extrajudicial executions have accompanied an unprecedented U.S. naval buildup across the Caribbean Sea.

To be clear, the fascist demagogue is not acting alone. He is supported by a whole circus of generals, DOD staffers, the defense lobby, and fascist demagogues like Pete Hegseth. Trump’s administration unleashing war across the planet is not a matter of one man or even a Republican majority in Congress. Imperialist escalation against the entire Global South is a reflection of the imperialist goal to break all resistance.

Trump’s continued war drive is a threat to the entire working class across the globe. Workers everywhere face a literal fight for survival. The only way forward is global working-class resistance against the global billionaire class.

https://www.struggle-la-lucha.org/2025/ ... lomerates/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Donald Trump, Avatar of his Class, Capitalism & the Decline and Fall of Bourgeois Democracy

Post by blindpig » Thu Oct 02, 2025 3:17 pm

The enemy within: Trump turns the U.S. military against the people
October 1, 2025 Gary Wilson

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Generals and admirals at Quantico session with Trump. Hegseth has begun an “anti-woke” purge of the officer corps.

President Donald Trump’s appearance before hundreds of generals and admirals at Quantico was not a routine address. It was a declaration of war — not on foreign rivals, but on the people in the U.S.

At a time of austerity budgets and cuts everywhere, the two-hour special assembly of all admirals and generals in command positions worldwide cost approximately $6 million, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies. It could have been done on Zoom for a few thousand dollars.

Flanked by his so-called Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, Trump laid out plans to transform the U.S. military into a domestic instrument of repression, targeting immigrants, Black and Brown communities, unions, women, LGBTQ+ people and anyone who dares resist his agenda.

“We’re going to straighten them out one by one,” Trump told the brass. “That’s a war too. It’s a war from within.” He announced the creation of a “quick reaction force” to put down civil disturbances, casting protest as an “enemy from within.”

He went further: U.S. cities, he suggested, should be used as “training grounds” for the armed forces. The meaning was clear — the normalization of military occupation on U.S. soil.

This was not theater. Trump has already sent National Guard units and Marines to Los Angeles, ordered federal forces into Portland, overseen the occupation of Washington, D.C., and named Chicago, Baltimore, San Francisco, and New York as future targets.

The plan is clear: concentrate military power against the working-class, multinational centers of resistance that anchor U.S. cities.

Building a political guard

Hegseth railed against “woke garbage,” vowed to purge dissenting officers, and pushed directives that would gut protections against racism and sexual abuse, including rape. Even seemingly trivial rules — like beard bans — carry a racist edge, aimed at forcing out Black and Muslim soldiers, sailors and marines.

Hegseth has begun an “anti-woke” purge of the officer corps. He has fired dozens of senior officers, including the previous chairman of the Joint Chiefs, other top generals, combat commanders, and other commanders.

The goal in eliminating Black, Latine, women, lesbian, gay and trans officers is to ensure a political guard in the mold of the Waffen-SS.

Trump’s demand was explicit: any officer unwilling to join this war on the “enemy within” should resign.

This was no isolated provocation. It is the spearhead of a coordinated, multi-front offensive to consolidate personal rule and unleash a historic assault on the U.S. working class.

This authoritarian offensive reaches far beyond the barracks. Trump has moved to neutralize every potential source of opposition — indicting critics, hounding media outlets, and leaning on corporations and social media platforms to silence dissent. TikTok, newly brought under oligarchic control, is being reshaped as a tool for suppressing digital protest.

Harshest on the most oppressed

As always, the harshest blows fall on the most oppressed. ICE operates as a Gestapo-like force, detaining tens of thousands without charge and deporting two million, according to Homeland Security, within months — spreading terror in immigrant neighborhoods and leaving families too frightened to leave their homes.

Meanwhile, the assault on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion is a calculated attempt to roll back the gains of the civil rights movement. Corporations are eagerly complying, weaponizing discrimination to strip workplace rights from Black, Asian, Latine, women, lesbian, gay and trans workers.

Trump’s vow to use major cities (all with Black mayors) as “training grounds” makes the racist logic clear. Deployments to Los Angeles, Portland, Memphis, and the occupied capital (Washington) are not about “crime waves.” They are military operations designed to crush popular protest and silence resistance.

Purges and austerity

The authoritarian offensive extends deep into the government itself. The administration has purged an estimated 300,000 federal workers, clearing the way to turn the machinery of government into Trump’s personal party apparatus.

But authoritarianism here has a class purpose. “Make America Great Again” is not a carnival slogan or nostalgic appeal. It is a program to restructure U.S. capitalism by restoring profitability and global supremacy. And the chosen method is as old as capitalism itself: the ruthless intensification of exploitation.

Wages must be driven down, unions crushed, with the police and military force unleashed to discipline labor.

Trump’s bombast is camouflage; his tantrums are tactics. The real goal is to expand the U.S. government’s role in repressing working-class resistance and securing the conditions for renewed profits.

Class war budget

Trump’s budget exposes the blueprint: massive tax giveaways to the wealthy, financed through deep cuts to Medicaid, food assistance, and every program working people depend on to survive.

In Marxist terms, this is not mere fiscal policy — it is the government acting as the executive committee of the capitalist class, orchestrating a direct transfer of value from labor to capital. Workers lose the meager social wage they fought to win; capital reaps the reward in the form of subsidies and tax relief.

And this is only the opening salvo. What is being prepared is not one round of cuts but a rolling offensive — a sustained assault on living standards and democratic rights until resistance is broken.

Dictatorship of the bourgeoisie

This is not McCarthyism in the midst of a booming postwar economy, when red-baiting was used to pacify a labor movement still on the rise. What we face today is far more dangerous: repression unfolding in the middle of a crisis economy defined by what capitalist economists call a “K-shaped recovery.”

The metaphor is telling. The upward line represents the soaring fortunes of the asset-owning capitalist class, fattened by imperialist super-profits and speculative bubbles. The downward line marks the opposite reality: a working class pushed into stagnation and decline, with its wages flat and its social wage gutted by austerity.

The conclave at Quantico, the ICE raids, the mass purges, and the austerity budget are not disconnected episodes. They are interlocking parts of a single program: the construction of a dictatorship to wage open war on the working class.

At the U.N. on Sept. 25, just days before the assembly of generals and admirals, Trump laid the groundwork for a U.S. invasion of Venezuela. In the last month, U.S. forces sank three boats off Venezuela’s coast.

Speaking from the podium at the U.N., Trump warned, “We will blow you out of existence / obliterate you.”

Trump is not merely eroding norms. He is actively constructing an apparatus of power designed to crush organized opposition. His invocation of “the enemy within” is not rhetoric. It is a declaration of class war.

Quantico was a show of force and a statement of intent. The White House is remapping the instruments of state toward political domination. The question now is whether the working class meets this offensive with fragmented outrage — or with collective power strong enough to turn back the billionaire oligarchs who would trample democratic rights to secure their domination.

https://www.struggle-la-lucha.org/2025/ ... he-people/

*****

Trump’s Imminent War(s) and Economic Damage as His Legitimacy Crumbles
Posted on October 2, 2025 by Yves Smith

Since Trump 1.0 suffered sustained frontal attacks on his legitimacy via Russiagate, he has operated his second term with a laser-like focus on making sure that he has his hands firmly on every lever of power he can grab, from having toadies in top Administration position to crippling funding cuts to what he sees as competing power centers, above all universities and the science and medical establishment (recall that Trump regards dealing with climate change as another limit on his freedom of operation) to open jackbootery with ICE raids by masked agents, threats to “flood” peaceful cities like Portland with what he intends to look like occupying forces in the form of National Guard deployments.

As we’ll describe soon, Trump looks to be on the verge of launching wars against one or both of Venezuela and Iran. But he looks to have overplayed his hand with the US military with calling generals and flag officers to Quantico to give them not just a bizarre set of anti-DEI and anti-fat directives, but also to have Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and then Trump himself say that they expected the military to operate against US citizens on US soil, harping on the “enemy within”. Recall that the armed services defied Trump in his first term, when he issued lawful orders to pull out Afghanistan that were simply ignored. Admittedly these directives came at the very end of his time in office.

It is also worth keeping in mind that the armed services have served as checks on trigger-happy civilian leaders. In the Biden Administration, Lloyd Austin repeatedly and often successfully opposed Biden and Secretary of State Blinken’s Ukraine escalation plans, one suspects by pointing oyt the limits of US weaponry and Russia’s retaliatory options. But as Larry Johnson pointed out in a talk with Daniel Davis, the last actual resignation of a general over illegal orders, to his knowledge, was under Bush the Senior, as in decades ago. Hegeseth’s and Trump’s addresses received a very stony faced reception, and YouTuber accounts second-hand from those in the room suggest a combination of gobsmackedness at the pathetic display and horror at the demand to operate domestically against Trump-designated demons. The measured Daniel Davis, in a talk with Colonel Macgregor, pointed out it was obvious that Trump’s definition of “radical left” threats could easily include all of Team Dem.

As these events are happening, Trump is implementing another method for quashing domestic dissent via his new national security directive, NSPM-7, which as Ken Klippenstein describes, looks to have as a major objective stripping not-for-profits that don’t toe the Trump line of their not-for-profit status. And the plan seems to be to target only only ones allegedly engaged in the wildly expanded definition of terrorism (as in challenging the Administration’s version of American values) but also ones that receive funding from purported baddies. Expect the grantees of Soros’ Open Society foundation to be at the top of this new enemies’ list.

In parallel, the evidence of harm from Trump’s economic malpractice is mounting. Payroll processor ADP reported a 32,000 fall in private sector jobs for September, compared to the expected weak gain of 51,000. ADP also revised its August figures to negative 3,000 from an initial report of 57,000 jobs added. Perhaps there was an offset via a rise in state and municipal employment, but with DOGE deploying its chainsaw, one would expect a fall in Federal jobs too. Thanks to the shutdown, BLS reports are expected to be delayed. But will anyone believe them after Trump fired the BLS head for earlier large revisions?

On the inflation front, Trump has kept TACO-ing with tariffs, and has “delayed” putting 100% tariffs on patented and branded prescriptions. But he is still set to impose 25% tariffs on furniture and kitchen cabinets and a 10% ones on timber and lumber on October 14. This sort policy whipsaw leads to stockpiling when possible and makes planning close to impossible, which will deter investment and expansion plans.

More less than cheery sightings:

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The problem is that Trump may have gotten far enough with his authoritarianism that no one can stop these freight trains, particularly his rush to war. One possible blindsiding event might be a market meltdown. Trump does not even begin to have a team that could cope adequately, and being at war with the Fed does not help. An AI-bubble-implosion stock market crash would be highly attention-getting and would likely induce a big pullback of spending at the very top which has helped prop up the economy. So the result would be a dot-bomb reply, of a recession and the Fed trying hard to pump some activity back into the economy via a protracted period of negative real interest rates. As we explained long-form in ECONNED, that set the stage for the structured credit bubble which fed both frenzied subprime mortgage lending and too many who should have known better buying CDOs composed heavily of the riskiest subprime bond exposures.

But more and more unexpected defaults and delinquencies of significant creditors would choke lending and if enough banks took losses, might even induce a crisis. However, unlike the subprime crisis, where the bad action was concentrated in one big sector and one could see the body blows to banks via instruments like asset-backed commercial paper, second mortgages, and CDOs, here more types of loans are coming under strain, and they also involve a lot of non-bank lenders, most prominently credit funds.

But at a certain point, if enough loans look wobbly, the greater opaqueness means no one will know where bad debt sits. That will lead creditors to yank deposits, refuse to roll commercial paper and short-term loans rather than risk loss of access to their funds, even if arguably for a short time.

To return first to the reaction from the top military officers at Quantico to the Hegseth-Trump shtick conjoined with an ugly demand. Judge Napolitano and former Lieutenant Colonel Karen Kwiatkowski discussed how dead the reaction in the room was:

Starting at 6:15:

Kwiatkowski: What I hoped that Hegseth would say, but what I truly expected was that it would be a big nothing. It would be a nothing burger…. And Hegseth, I think, delivered on that. He didn’t have much to say. But Trump actually, he actually moved the ball way far to an own goal. I mean, that that was an own goal. Frankly, everything Trump said was uh hurting us, violating our standards. I’m sure that those generals and admirals that were sitting there, while I don’t agree with most of them, and I really consider them to be a parasitical class on this country, but even them, I think, were shocked at at the kind of lack of knowledge that Trump exhibited. And he spoke forever…

[9:30] Well, clearly uh they noticed they had pauses where they expected applause to happen or punchlines and that kind of thing and they didn’t get that. They didn’t get that applause… a lot of those guys based on uh that they’re currently active duty, they they came of age in uh the Bush 43 wars, you know, in the Middle East. And we know the lessons of those wars, you know, you don’t lie about your intel. You don’t make up stuff. You don’t try to nation build…

[11:10] We are fomenting wars and ruining our own ability to uh maintain the bare essentials. And and the generals and admirals know this. They know this far better…..bringing all these people back on short notice and you would think you would be coming back for something really important and andit not only wasn’t important, it was it was insane.


Larry Wilkerson, on Dialogue Works, was more pointed. Starting at 1:55:

Wilkerson: It was absolutely bizarre. Um I can’t describe it any other way and as bizarre but welcome in my military professional mind was the stoic response of his audience. I mean, they were truly imbued with what I would say is a an ethic that is pure in the United States military, probably more so than any other military in the world. I don’t say that loosely… And they came in with the idea of we’re just going to sit here. We’re not going to have any facial expressions of note. We’re not going to clap in any particular way. We’re not going to acknowledge anything that’s being said as we’re pro or we’re con and we’re just going to sit here. It really was a spectacular performance in a subdued sort of way by 300 or so of these generals and admirals and it was probably the only performance they could make other than getting up in mass and walking out in resignation. And I had that argument with the general just a few minutes ago before we came on and right after I finished the Judge [Napolitano] because he had sent me an email reprimanding them for not getting up and walking out. And I said back to him, general officer, I said back to him, what would happen to the real security of the United States if they were to do that? because you’d be talking about abandoning all of the key positions in the US military in front of all our enemies on television and you you that would be unconscionable to do that. There would be there’s too much right now. We’re looking at a potential war. I think it’s coming. It’s coming like a freight train with Iran that has the potential to go nuclear.

Other YouTube commentators, such as Colonel Douglas Macgregor, Larry Wilkerson, and Matthew Ho, argued it was disgraceful that there were no walkouts. But notice Wilkerson’s tacit assumption, that the disgust was so widespread that departures would or could have represented nearly all the attendees.

And the same way financial time runs faster than political time, so too here military time runs faster than political time. Even a mass decampment, which would represent mass resignation (Hegseth said that anyone who didn’t want to be part of the new whiter and thinner armed services should leave, as in quit) which would flip out the press and Congress, does not seem likely to impede the war operations Trump has set in motion. If nothing else, Israel is primed to act and the US would have to execute its part of the plan. Large scale resignations at the top would run the risk of only the most Trump loyal and Zionist crazed being at the helm.

But then again, the passivity may run deeper than Wilkerson can admit to himself:

Tucker Carlson has revealed that during the brief Iran-Israel war earlier this year, Israeli soldiers were barging into U.S. military meetings at the Pentagon, issuing demands, and telling American officers what to do.

He says Pentagon officials stood by in silence and is Show more


In the meantime, in a paler version of the runup to the Iraq War, and similar to right before the 12 day war with Iran, the US is moving military assets to the Middle East, particularly refueling jets. In a talk with Daniel Davis at Deep Dive, Douglas Macgregor said he was hearing that the US was also deploying old Tomahawks and very heavy bombs. He speculated the latter might not be intended for Iran but to complete the flattening of Gaza while all eyes were on Iran.

Later in Larry Wilkerson interview that we reposted above, Wilkerson said he was hearing that forces were being called up to move on Venezuela. Are these reports/orders meant to serve as an attempt at a diversion regarding the timing of a strike on Iran? Is the US really so deranged to think it can fight two wars in two different hemispheres at the same time? Those World War II days are long past, and the Allied win was in a big way due to the costly efforts of Russia and China.

Conventional wisdom had held that the attack on Iran was coming soon, likely before year end, presumably due to concerns that more time would enable Iran to get more equipment from Russia and become better at using it. I’m not sure if this applies to Iran, but the IDF avoided attacks on Lebanon in January and February because the mountains were misty enough to impede air operations.

But the movement of equipment suggests action is more imminent; I believe it was Douglas Macgregor who suggested the timing was days or weeks.

BREAKING:

🇺🇲🇮🇷🇮🇱 A new WAR with Iran is increasingly likely

US is sending massive numbers of fighter jets and aerial refueling tankers to the Middle East

Some of the tankers have already arrived at Al-Udeid Airbase in Qatar, they were carrying fighter jets alongside them Show more


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Even if the US intends these deployments to be a show of force, Netanyahu has agency.

Hegseth, in a moment military professionals derided as the posturing of a junior staff officer, taunted US opponents, most of whom actually have no interest in being enemies: (Video at link.)

It looks more likely that the US will be the party to find out. But sadly, a world of innocent bystanders will be along for the ride.

Trump Admin Moving Fast, Breaking Things as Shutdown Continues
Posted on October 2, 2025 by Nat Wilson Turner

The Trump administration is moving fast and breaking things as they capitalize on the opportunities presented by the government shutdown, compliant courts, ethically flexible corporations, and generous foreign governments.

Let’s start with Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Director Russell Vought who featured so prominently in yesterday’s Coffee Break.

Vought immediately seized on the shut down to close multiple infrastructure projects in New York and yesterday he told GOP congresspeople that mass layoffs of federal employees will be coming “in a day or two” and that “funding for food assistance for the Women, Infants and Children food assistance program would run out in the next week or two.”

The shutdown is just a news hook for Vought to draw attention to what he’s already been doing (with an early assist from Elon Musk & DOGE), per The New York Times:

Before the government shutdown began Wednesday, many agencies published contingency plans — routine frameworks that are typically updated before a shutdown. These documents included details about which programs will be suspended and how many employees will be furloughed until the shutdown is over.

They reveal, to some extent, how much President Trump has slashed the federal work force through firings, layoffs and incentivized resignation programs, because they also include a recent report of how many employees work at each agency.

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— Nat Wilson Turner (@natwilsonturner) October 1, 2025

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— Nat Wilson Turner (@natwilsonturner) October 1, 2025

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— Nat Wilson Turner (@natwilsonturner) October 1, 2025

The Times piece also has cuts by subagency, where available.

The Courts have been a key part of Team Trump in his second administration, enough so that Republican National Lawyers Association President took to Real Clear Politics to celebrate that “Trump Is Most Successful President in the Courts in Generations.”

President Trump is on a winning streak the likes of which we haven’t seen in generations.

In fact, while the legacy media idolize rogue judges who throw up roadblocks to President Trump’s agenda at every turn and amplify perceived losses, what they don’t want you to realize is that when the dust settles, Trump wins most of the time on the ultimate decision.

The 2024-25 term built on important wins achieved during Trump’s first administration, where he was able to successfully fill the federal judiciary and the Supreme Court with originalist and textualist jurists, who adhere to the rule of law and the Constitution rather than a rigid ideology that pre-determines cases based on outcomes and parties.

Trump’s remaking of the judiciary during his first administration continued to rack up wins even during the Biden administration, when the Supreme Court returned abortion regulation to the states (Dobbs 2022), ended the practice of basing college admissions on racial preferences (Students for Fair Admissions 2023), and overturned decades of unaccountable, bureaucratic rulemaking (Loper Bright 2024).

…the White House “has won 18 times at the Supreme Court since Trump took office and is on a 15-case winning run.” Furthermore, “the Trump administration has asked the Supreme Court to weigh in on an emergency basis 28 times. … It has lost only two.”

The U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals – just below the Supreme Court – are also consistently delivering victories for Trump, constitutional conservatives who supported him, and the rule of law.

The Fourth Circuit, now a court usually delivering progressive, policy-driven decisions, just weighed into the discussion over federal firings with a 2-1 victory for Trump, ruling that Democrat-led states could not pursue lawsuits challenging the dismissal of nearly 25,000 probationary federal employees.

Trump was able to reshape the Ninth Circuit – once widely referred to as the “Ninth Circus” because it was so reliably left-wing – during his first term, such that when California Gov. Gavin Newsom tried to reclaim control of the state’s National Guard during violent protests in L.A., District Judge Charles Breyer, who tried to hand his governor a victory, was overturned in embarrassing fashion.

But not every judge is rolling Trump’s way. U.S. District Judge William Young, a Reagan appointee ripped Trump’s “effort to deport pro-Palestinian academics” in a “scathing 161 page opinion” that is generating lots of love in the MSM.

Although, the ruling is so far all talk and no teeth, according to Politico:

(Young) did not immediately order changes to administration policies, but said he will hold further proceedings on how to rein in the practices he found to violate First Amendment free-speech rights.

“The President’s palpable misunderstanding that the government simply cannot seek retribution for speech he disdains poses a great threat to Americans’ freedom of speech,” Young wrote, describing the courts as the most crucial bulwark to this threat.

“I fear President Trump believes the American people are so divided that today they will not stand up, fight for, and defend our most precious constitutional values so long as they are lulled into thinking their own personal interests are not affected,” Young added. “Is he correct?”

Young has repeatedly tangled with the administration over policies he has described as discriminatory, one of a handful of old-guard Reagan-era judges to sound off about Trump’s approach to governing.

In August, two members of the Supreme Court — Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh — rebuked Young for blocking the Trump administration’s decisions to cut off medical research grants it deemed related to diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives. The two Trump appointees said recent rulings on other grant-related cases on the high court’s emergency docket made clear Young’s ruling was impermissible.

I covered the Supreme Court’s difficulty in communicating their desires to lower courts previously.

Perhaps it shouldn’t be a surprise that Gallup is finding the Supreme Court’s approval rating near all-time lows.

Another case that has the shitlibs in high dudgeon, is the indictment of key RussiaGate prankster former FBI head James Comey. Just look at the outrage:

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— Nat Wilson Turner (@natwilsonturner) October 1, 2025

I can’t resist lightening the mood by sharing Comey’s entire Instagram statement, although some might find it more sickening than amusing (though it’s not quite the banger his previous video claiming to be a Taylor Swift fan was): (Video at link.)

Here’s a partial transcript via ABC News:

James Comey: My heart is broken for the Department of Justice. I have great confidence in the federal judicial system and I am innocent, so let’s have a trial, and keep the faith.

My family and I have known for years that there are costs for standing up to Donald Trump, but we couldn’t imagine ourselves living any other way. We will not live on our knees and you shouldn’t either.

Somebody that I love dearly recently said that fear is the tool of a tyrant and she is right (Comey is referring to a statement his daughter, Maurene Comey, made in a farewell email to her colleagues after being fired from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York this summer).

“But I am not afraid, and I hope you are not either. I hope instead you are engaged, you are paying attention and you will vote like your beloved country depends upon it, which it does.”


I must admit I’m enjoying the media coverage of the Trump appointee who’s handling the case, (this is some classic Trump admin dipshittery):

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— Nat Wilson Turner (@natwilsonturner) October 1, 2025

The New Yorker’s Ruth Marcus tells this part of the story just fine:

Thursday’s indictment of the former F.B.I. director James Comey bore a single, telling signature: that of Lindsey Halligan, installed by President Donald Trump just three days earlier to serve as the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia. Halligan is an insurance lawyer turned Trump attorney and White House aide; in March, Trump appointed her to remove “improper ideology” from the Smithsonian. She has scant experience in federal courts and none as a prosecutor. Her predecessor in the position, a seasoned prosecutor nominated by Trump, was forced out last Friday, according to numerous news reports, after balking at demands to concoct cases against Comey, in addition to New York’s attorney general, Letitia James, and others.

But overall, I have to agree with Aaron Mate that the Comey indictment is in good company with the RussiaGate prosecutions that Comey and the MSM were so worked up about during Trump 1.0. Note that Mate agrees “Trump is exploiting the justice system for revenge against a political foe,” he just puts it in context:

By the derelict standards of the 2016 Trump-Russia collusion probe that Comey presided over and promoted long after leaving his position, his 2025 prosecution is perfectly legitimate.

By January 2017, when Trump took office, FBI agents knew that they had nothing to go on (in the Russiagate investigation), and even discussed shutting down. But under Comey’s watch, the opposite occurred. Rather than abandon their baseless collusion hunt, the FBI expended considerable energy to make it look legitimate.
Comey directed agents to snare Trump National Security Advisor Mike Flynn in what amounted to a perjury trap, a move he later bragged about while hawking the first of two Russiagate-profiteering books. Getting Flynn to speak with two FBI agents was “something we’ve, I probably wouldn’t have done or maybe gotten away with in a more organized investigation, a more organized administration,” a self-amused Comey recalled.
It worked: Flynn was accused of falsely telling the FBI that he had not discussed the issue of sanctions with Russian ambassador Sergei Kislyak.

It was all a lie. The declassified transcript of the intercepted Flynn-Kislyak showed that the two barely discussed the issue of sanctions beyond a few inconsequential words.

Comey has now been indicted on the same perjury charge that he nabbed Flynn on. While both cases can be described as politically motivated and substantively flawed, Comey’s at least has some approximation to a factual predicate.

Comey, who was fired by Trump in May 2017, used his supposed credibility to keep the ruse alive. Hawking his memoir, A Higher Loyalty, to a Russiagate-crazed media upon its release in April 2018, Comey went out of his way to prop up the most farcical Trump-Russia conspiracy theory in circulation.
“I don’t know whether the current president of the United States was with prostitutes peeing on each other in Moscow in 2013,” Comey told ABC News. “It’s possible, but I don’t know.” …Comey, wrote The New York Times‘ Michelle Goldberg, “has started a long overdue national conversation about whether the pee tape is real.”

Trump has repurposed his political foes’ playbook for his own purposes. For all of the legitimate indignation at his abuses, a considerable portion of blame belongs to those, including the newly indicted Jim Comey, who handed him the tools.


Trump is also celebrating yet another victory against Ivy League universities:

The defining battle in his crusade against higher education will soon be over, President Trump told reporters in the Oval Office, announcing, seemingly offhand, that a deal with Harvard University had been reached.

“All you have to do is paper it, right, Linda?” the president said as he turned to his education secretary, Linda McMahon. “Yes, sir,” she replied. Once the agreement is finalized, the president said, “then their sins are forgiven.”

The announcement came during an unrelated event at the White House on Tuesday concerning advancements in the treatment of pediatric cancer. Details are still forthcoming. Pressed for more information, White House spokeswoman Liz Huston would only say that “President Trump is reshaping higher education. Stay tuned for further announcements!” But Trump seems to have achieved exactly what he wanted: a splashy settlement.

The Trump administration launched a multi-pronged assault on Cambridge earlier this year, freezing more than $2.4 billion in federal research grants in response to allegations that the school, which predates the nation, continued to promote so-called diversity, equity, and inclusion programs and discriminated against Jewish students and faculty. During an August cabinet meeting, Trump told McMahon, “We want nothing less than $500 million from Harvard. Don’t negotiate, Linda. They’ve been very bad.”

The transgressions of that university now seem to be forgiven. Trump previewed a deal whereby Harvard pays a $500 million fine and operates “a series of trade schools” to train students in subjects like artificial intelligence and automotive engineering. He called it “a big investment in trade schools done by very smart people.”


Team Trump players are also scoring big off Israel’s 8 front war, such as cast-off 2020 Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale, per The Hill:

President Trump’s former campaign manager Brad Parscale has registered as a foreign agent for Israel, hired to create digital campaigns combating antisemitism in a contract worth $6 million.

Parscale filed paperwork with the Foreign Agents Registration Act saying he began work for the Israeli government on Sept. 18. He registered a company called Clocktower X LLC and is primarily corresponding with Israel’s minister of Foreign Affairs and Eran Shayovich, listed as chief of staff at Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, according to his LinkedIn.

Parscale’s contract was first reported by the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, a Washington-based think tank that advocates for restraint in foreign policy.

According to Parscale’s contract, his company is hired to create content where at least 80 percent “is tailored to Gen Z audiences across platforms, including TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, podcasts, and other relevant digital and broadcast outlets.”


It’s a good thing Israel came through for Brad, according to Wikipedia he’d been reduced to “real estate flipping, restarting his political consulting firm, forming a data analysis startup” and working for a losing GOP primary campaign in Ohio.

Responsible Statecraft has more details on what Parscale’s company will be up to and introduces a bank shot that explains how Don Jr. will be wetting his beak on the deal:

Clock Tower will create new websites to influence how AI GPT models such as ChatGPT, which are trained on vast amounts of data from every corner of the internet, frame topics and respond to them — all on behalf of Israel.

As part of this work, the firm will also use search engine optimization software MarketBrew AI, a predictive AI platform that helps clients adapt to algorithms and promote their work on search engines like Google and Bing, to “improve the visibility and ranking of relevant narratives.”

Clock Tower will integrate its pro-Israel messaging into Salem Media Network properties, a conservative Christian media group that boasts a vast radio network and produces high-profile shows such as the Hugh Hewitt Show, the Larry Elder Show, and the Right View with Lara Trump. In April, the conservative media network announced Donald Trump Jr. and Lara Trump as significant stakeholders in the company. Salem Media Network did not respond to a question clarifying whether it would be compensated by Clock Tower for promoting messages on behalf of Israel, or how these messages would be integrated.


I have no idea how Clock Tower will “integrate its pro-Israel messaging into Salem Media Network properties.” Perhaps they’ll insert ads into Salem’s podcasts and radio broadcasts?

Speaking of Trump 1.0 left-behinds, former favorite-son-in-law Jared Kushner is, as I’ve posted before, cleaning up in Gaza, but now it’s been revealed that he was at the center of the $55 billion deal that took EA Games private with Saudi and UAE money, via Yahoo Finance:

Jared Kushner brokered the initial connection between the Redwood, California-based video game maker and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, and for months acted as a central figure in the talks, according to people familiar with the matter, who requested anonymity to discuss private conversations. When the deal’s momentum slowed around mid-year, Kushner pushed to keep it going, some of the people said.

Kushner’s matchmaking role in the plan to take EA private adds another strand to the dense tangle of business relationships between wealthy Gulf states and the president’s family. Just this week, as news of the EA deal rippled across Wall Street, the Trump Organization was inking a separate agreement to expand with another development in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia’s second-largest city, underscoring the extent of the family’s connections to the oil-rich nation.

Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, along with Silver Lake Management and Kushner’s Affinity Partners, agreed to pay $210 per share in cash for EA, valuing the video-game company at about $55 billion. JPMorgan Chase & Co. is providing a $20 billion loan to support the deal.

The Saudis will be the largest contributor to the $36 billion in equity backing the deal, acquiring a controlling stake in EA, while Affinity will have the smallest share, according to people familiar with the matter.

Kushner, 44, already had a financial tether to PIF. After acting as a senior adviser to Trump in his first term, working on foreign policy negotiations in the Middle East, he founded Affinity Partners in 2021. The Saudi sovereign wealth fund contributed about $2 billion.

Affinity, which now has $5.4 billion in assets, including from Abu Dhabi-based asset manager Lunate and the Qatar Investment Authority, hasn’t previously been part of such a high-profile deal. Some of its other bets have been on companies including EGYM, a Munich-based health technology company, and in Greenwich, Connecticut-based QXO Inc.


Trump spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt did not enjoy being asked about it:

Q: How did the White House decide it was appropriate for Jared Kushner to be working on matters that involve Qatar, the UAE, Saudi Arabia — 3 countries combined that have given him more than $2.5b

LEAVITT: It's frankly despicable that you're trying to suggest that it's… pic.twitter.com/y1veEaG3rW

— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) October 1, 2025



The Daily Beast wallowed in Leavitt’s crapulence:

“I think it’s frankly despicable that you’re trying to suggest that it’s inappropriate for Jared Kushner, who is widely respected around the world and has great trust and relationships with these critical partners in these countries to strike a twenty point comprehensive detailed peace plan that no other administration would ever be able to achieve,” Leavitt declared.

“Jared is donating his energy and his time to our government, to the president of the United States, to secure world peace, and that is a very noble thing,” she insisted.

“Virtually everyone in the world is supportive of this plan that Jared Kushner offered his time to help put together alongside our special envoy Witkoff, the vice president, the president of the United States, Secretary Rubio and the president’s entire national security team,” she continued.


Leavitt didn’t have the quick instincts to turn the conversation to a topic more favorable to team Trump, the tariff deal with Pfizer.

Pfizer Inc. secured a reprieve from President Donald Trump’s long-threatened tariffs on the pharmaceutical industry Tuesday by agreeing to slash some of its drug prices by up to 85% and selling directly to the American public, a move other major drugmakers are expected to follow.

Pfizer said it will ensure Americans receive comparable prices to those offered in other countries and will launch new medicines at parity, addressing a key Trump complaint that Americans unfairly shoulder the highest medical costs in the world. In exchange, the company gained a three-year grace period from widely anticipated pharmaceutical tariffs that the administration has been promulgating.

It’s the latest example of the transactional nature of winning tariff exemptions from Trump, who has unilaterally wielded trade policy to exert power over multiple industries. As recently as last week, he threatened 100% tariffs on the pharmaceutical industry.

Similar deals could be forthcoming. Eli Lilly & Co. said it’s in active discussions with the administration to further expand patient access, as the announcement Tuesday underscores the urgency of making medicines more affordable.

It will be interesting to see if Trump can leaven his budget-slashing and civil war mongering with enough populist moves like this to pull off GOP wins in the mid-term elections.

But then again, that’s what gerrymandering is for. We’re in a post-constitutional order, remember.

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2025/10 ... ought.html
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Donald Trump, Avatar of his Class, Capitalism & the Decline and Fall of Bourgeois Democracy

Post by blindpig » Fri Oct 03, 2025 1:30 pm

Musing About Trump’s Recent Moves

U.S. President Donald Trump is pushing his country into an uncomfortable direction. What might be the reasons for him to do so?

His recent address to a gathering of all military commanders included the demand to fight the ‘enemy’ within the country:

He did, however, speak with great moral clarity about certain classes of Americans whom he views as a grave threat:

The American left: “They’re really bad. They’re bad people.” Again, he’s talking about Americans here.
His own domestic political opponents: “They’re vicious people that we have to fight, just like you have to fight vicious people. Mine are a different kind of vicious.”

American journalists: “sleazebags.”

Residents of American inner cities: “animals.”

His Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth called on flag officers (Generals) to follow a conservative ideology. He has also announced a reduction of flag officer positions which will give him the chance to weed out those officers who have a more liberal standpoint.

Trump wants the military to use U.S. cities as training grounds (archived):

It was at that moment that the president recounted a conversation with his defense secretary: “I told Pete, we should use some of these dangerous cities as training grounds for our military.”

This seems to be, together with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) raids, a preparation for countering severe domestic unrest. But there is, so far no reason for any a big unrest to happen. The U.S. society is generally not a rebellious one. Why would Trump perceive that unrest is coming?

On the other side Trump is clearly preparing for a more global war.

Another round of war with Iran is imminent. Air-tankers have been deployed to the Middle East, Israel’s air defenses have been beefed up with more THAAD launchers and a carrier group is entering the Mediterranean.

The increase of forces near Venezuela is also continuing. It is clearly a build up towards a regime change attempt (archived).

Trump has increase intelligence sharing with Ukraine to allow for deep strikes into Russia.

At the same time the U.S. seems to have largely given up on militarily countering the rise of China.

Regime change in Iran and Venezuela could bring a huge amount of additional energy resources under Washington’s control.

When the big stock market crash that everybody is warning (archived) about (archived) will finally happen, the U.S. economy will get severely damaged.

Unrest in the U.S. could then become real.

Having control over additional resource assets would dampen the negative effects for the U.S. dollar and debt position.

Is Trump expecting something like that?

Posted by b at 14:25 utc | Comments (155)

https://www.moonofalabama.org/2025/10/m ... /#comments

******

I think John Helmer answered the question, Trump is working to retain his MAGA base in the wake of negative polls across the board and with the mid-terms coming up. Everything he does relates to that goal, international and domestic, he must retain the power he has now or things will get ugly for him.
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Re: Donald Trump, Avatar of his Class, Capitalism & the Decline and Fall of Bourgeois Democracy

Post by blindpig » Mon Oct 06, 2025 4:12 pm

The Enemy Within: Trump Turns the U.S. Military Against the People
Posted by Internationalist 360° on October 1, 2025
Gary Wilson

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Generals and admirals at Quantico session with Trump. Hegseth has begun an “anti-woke” purge of the officer corps.

President Donald Trump’s appearance before hundreds of generals and admirals at Quantico was not a routine address. It was a declaration of war — not on foreign rivals, but on the people in the U.S.

At a time of austerity budgets and cuts everywhere, the two-hour special assembly of all admirals and generals in command positions worldwide cost approximately $6 million, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies. It could have been done on Zoom for a few thousand dollars.

Flanked by his so-called Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, Trump laid out plans to transform the U.S. military into a domestic instrument of repression, targeting immigrants, Black and Brown communities, unions, women, LGBTQ+ people and anyone who dares resist his agenda.

“We’re going to straighten them out one by one,” Trump told the brass. “That’s a war too. It’s a war from within.” He announced the creation of a “quick reaction force” to put down civil disturbances, casting protest as an “enemy from within.”

He went further: U.S. cities, he suggested, should be used as “training grounds” for the armed forces. The meaning was clear — the normalization of military occupation on U.S. soil.

This was not theater. Trump has already sent National Guard units and Marines to Los Angeles, ordered federal forces into Portland, overseen the occupation of Washington, D.C., and named Chicago, Baltimore, San Francisco, and New York as future targets.

The plan is clear: concentrate military power against the working-class, multinational centers of resistance that anchor U.S. cities.

Building a political guard

Hegseth railed against “woke garbage,” vowed to purge dissenting officers, and pushed directives that would gut protections against racism and sexual abuse, including rape. Even seemingly trivial rules — like beard bans — carry a racist edge, aimed at forcing out Black and Muslim soldiers, sailors and marines.

Hegseth has begun an “anti-woke” purge of the officer corps. He has fired dozens of senior officers, including the previous chairman of the Joint Chiefs, other top generals, combat commanders, and other commanders.

The goal in eliminating Black, Latine, women, lesbian, gay and trans officers is to ensure a political guard in the mold of the Waffen-SS.

Trump’s demand was explicit: any officer unwilling to join this war on the “enemy within” should resign.

This was no isolated provocation. It is the spearhead of a coordinated, multi-front offensive to consolidate personal rule and unleash a historic assault on the U.S. working class.

This authoritarian offensive reaches far beyond the barracks. Trump has moved to neutralize every potential source of opposition — indicting critics, hounding media outlets, and leaning on corporations and social media platforms to silence dissent. TikTok, newly brought under oligarchic control, is being reshaped as a tool for suppressing digital protest.

Harshest on the most oppressed

As always, the harshest blows fall on the most oppressed. ICE operates as a Gestapo-like force, detaining tens of thousands without charge and deporting two million, according to Homeland Security, within months — spreading terror in immigrant neighborhoods and leaving families too frightened to leave their homes.

Meanwhile, the assault on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion is a calculated attempt to roll back the gains of the civil rights movement. Corporations are eagerly complying, weaponizing discrimination to strip workplace rights from Black, Asian, Latine, women, lesbian, gay and trans workers.

Trump’s vow to use major cities (all with Black mayors) as “training grounds” makes the racist logic clear. Deployments to Los Angeles, Portland, Memphis, and the occupied capital (Washington) are not about “crime waves.” They are military operations designed to crush popular protest and silence resistance.

Purges and austerity

The authoritarian offensive extends deep into the government itself. The administration has purged an estimated 300,000 federal workers, clearing the way to turn the machinery of government into Trump’s personal party apparatus.

But authoritarianism here has a class purpose. “Make America Great Again” is not a carnival slogan or nostalgic appeal. It is a program to restructure U.S. capitalism by restoring profitability and global supremacy. And the chosen method is as old as capitalism itself: the ruthless intensification of exploitation.

Wages must be driven down, unions crushed, with the police and military force unleashed to discipline labor.

Trump’s bombast is camouflage; his tantrums are tactics. The real goal is to expand the U.S. government’s role in repressing working-class resistance and securing the conditions for renewed profits.

Class war budget

Trump’s budget exposes the blueprint: massive tax giveaways to the wealthy, financed through deep cuts to Medicaid, food assistance, and every program working people depend on to survive.

In Marxist terms, this is not mere fiscal policy — it is the government acting as the executive committee of the capitalist class, orchestrating a direct transfer of value from labor to capital. Workers lose the meager social wage they fought to win; capital reaps the reward in the form of subsidies and tax relief.

And this is only the opening salvo. What is being prepared is not one round of cuts but a rolling offensive — a sustained assault on living standards and democratic rights until resistance is broken.

Dictatorship of the bourgeoisie

This is not McCarthyism in the midst of a booming postwar economy, when red-baiting was used to pacify a labor movement still on the rise. What we face today is far more dangerous: repression unfolding in the middle of a crisis economy defined by what capitalist economists call a “K-shaped recovery.”

The metaphor is telling. The upward line represents the soaring fortunes of the asset-owning capitalist class, fattened by imperialist super-profits and speculative bubbles. The downward line marks the opposite reality: a working class pushed into stagnation and decline, with its wages flat and its social wage gutted by austerity.

The conclave at Quantico, the ICE raids, the mass purges, and the austerity budget are not disconnected episodes. They are interlocking parts of a single program: the construction of a dictatorship to wage open war on the working class.

At the U.N. on Sept. 25, just days before the assembly of generals and admirals, Trump laid the groundwork for a U.S. invasion of Venezuela. In the last month, U.S. forces sank three boats off Venezuela’s coast.

Speaking from the podium at the U.N., Trump warned, “We will blow you out of existence / obliterate you.”

Trump is not merely eroding norms. He is actively constructing an apparatus of power designed to crush organized opposition. His invocation of “the enemy within” is not rhetoric. It is a declaration of class war.

Quantico was a show of force and a statement of intent. The White House is remapping the instruments of state toward political domination. The question now is whether the working class meets this offensive with fragmented outrage — or with collective power strong enough to turn back the billionaire oligarchs who would trample democratic rights to secure their domination.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2025/10/ ... he-people/

*******

The Enemy From Within: Trump’s War on American Cities
Posted by Internationalist 360° on October 1, 2025
Prince Kapone

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How Politico launders militarism into common sense, and how the ruling class sharpens its counterinsurgency state under crisis

The Theater of Obedience

On September 30, 2025, Politico ran a piece by Irie Sentner and Paul McLeary under the title, “Trump, justifying domestic military action, tells Pentagon leaders to ‘handle’ the ‘enemy from within.’” At first glance it reads like sober reportage: a president delivering a “dark and winding” 72-minute speech at Quantico, peppering his tirade with insults for Biden, DEI programs, and immigrants, while proposing that American cities be turned into military “training grounds.” But look again. The text is less journalism than stenography, less analysis than the laundering of state ideology. It is the theater of obedience, performed in print.

Sentner and McLeary, both long-time defense correspondents, are not neutral scribes. Their careers rest on access to Pentagon corridors and the favor of brass in uniform. The price of that access is a steady reproduction of the worldview of the national security state: generals are sober guardians, the Pentagon is a professional machine, and “politics” only enters when a figure like Trump clumsily pushes beyond tradition. In reality, the entire edifice they cover is politics—the politics of empire, repression, and capital—but their craft requires them to pretend otherwise. They are not rogue voices, they are functionaries in the newsroom wing of the war machine.

Politico itself is no innocent platform. Owned by Axel Springer SE, a German media conglomerate openly pledged to NATO and the Atlantic alliance, it operates as an amplifier of Western state power and capital. Every “scoop” about defense is framed to reassure investors and allies that U.S. militarism is both stable and legitimate. The job of its editors is not to expose the permanent war economy but to naturalize it, to weave it seamlessly into the daily diet of news so that endless militarization feels like common sense. When Trump rants, they present it as “remarkable,” but never question the structure that allows such ranting to mobilize billions of dollars and entire armies.

The article leans on familiar amplifiers. It draws legitimacy from the Pentagon stage itself, from the presence of generals and admirals flown in at public expense, from the nodding gravity of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. Behind them stand the usual think-tank strategists, RAND alumni, and defense contractors whose fortunes depend on militarizing both foreign soil and domestic streets. Their voices are not quoted, but their fingerprints are everywhere in the framing: cities as “lawless zones,” soldiers as “heroes,” Trump as aberrant but still a commander to be taken seriously.

The propaganda mechanics are textbook. The framing declares Trump’s idea a “remarkable break,” which erases the long continuity of the U.S. military patrolling its own poor and racialized populations, from Reconstruction to the civil rights movement. The omissions are glaring: no mention of the Posse Comitatus Act, no acknowledgment of National Guard deployments against Black uprisings in the twentieth century, no recognition of the Pentagon’s own 1033 pipeline arming police departments with military gear. Instead of history, we are given adjectives—“dark,” “winding”—a liberal horror at Trump’s tone rather than his substance. It is emotional manipulation for readers who fear demagoguery but accept militarism as long as it wears a professional mask.

The cognitive trick is simple: contrast Trump with “tradition” so that the Pentagon appears as a reluctant actor, dragged into politics by a wayward president. This absolves the institution of its actual role as the backbone of domestic repression. False equivalence is deployed through the invocation of Washington and Lincoln, as if settler-colonial wars and civil war suspensions of rights were noble precedents. And the orientalist tropes once hurled at colonies—“lawless,” “dangerous”—are now repurposed to describe U.S. cities where the poor and oppressed dwell. The enemy is recast as internal, and the map of empire folds back onto the metropole.

Thus, the Politico article is not a neutral report but a transmission line for imperial ideology. It tells readers that Trump is uniquely outrageous, but that the system itself remains sound. It buries history under adjectives, erases structure under narrative flair, and in doing so it prepares the ground for acceptance. When the tanks roll into Baltimore or Chicago, the reader will remember not that this is the iron law of empire turned inward, but that Trump was “dark and winding.” This is how propaganda works in polite society: by narrowing vision until continuity looks like rupture and repression looks like order.

The Facts They Bury Beneath the Spectacle

Beneath the melodrama of Politico’s narrative lies a concrete scaffolding of facts that can and must be pried apart from the propaganda. Trump did indeed describe America’s inner cities as “a big part of war” and suggested that Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle, Washington, and Memphis could serve as live “training grounds” for the U.S. military. He has already ordered the National Guard into Washington, Memphis, Los Angeles, and Portland, and floated further deployments to Chicago, Atlanta, Baltimore, and New York. His newly christened Department of War, under the hand of Pete Hegseth, positions the military as an order above civilian society, reinforced by a costly spectacle in Quantico where nearly every general and admiral was flown in at public expense for a pep rally dressed up as patriotic seriousness.

These are verifiable claims, and they map onto a grim trajectory. What Politico avoids spelling out is that this militarization of U.S. urban space is not a rupture but the latest expression of a historical pattern. The U.S. state has always turned its armies inward to enforce racial and class domination: during Reconstruction when federal troops were deployed to suppress Black freedom, in the violent crushing of labor uprisings like the Pullman Strike, and again in the 1960s when the National Guard rolled tanks through Black neighborhoods during civil rights rebellions (Smithsonian). These are not aberrations—they are precedents, rehearsals for the present moment.

Equally absent is the legal architecture that once constrained such deployments. The Posse Comitatus Act of 1878, designed to limit federal military involvement in domestic law enforcement, has been steadily undermined since the “War on Drugs” and virtually hollowed out in the post-9/11 “War on Terror” (Cornell Law). Today, Pentagon resources flow freely into domestic policing through the infamous 1033 Program, funneling assault rifles, armored vehicles, and surveillance tech into the hands of local police departments (ACLU). When Trump proposes using cities as training grounds, he is not leaping into unknown terrain—he is accelerating a process already institutionalized.

There is also the matter of political economy. The military spectacle at Quantico was not just a morale exercise; it was a billboard for the contractors whose profits depend on militarized governance. Companies like Raytheon and Lockheed Martin build the kinetic weapons, while Palantir and Axon supply the software and surveillance infrastructure. This domestic theater feeds directly into global markets where counterinsurgency and repression are exported as U.S. “expertise” (The Intercept). What is rehearsed in Baltimore today is sold to Bogotá, Tel Aviv, or Manila tomorrow.

The geopolitical context seals the contradiction. Trump’s rhetoric is not simply about “crime” or “urban decay.” It coincides with the erosion of U.S. hegemony in a multipolar world order. As the Tricontinental Institute notes, imperial decline sharpens the drive to consolidate control at home even as global influence wanes (Tricontinental). When Washington cannot guarantee supremacy abroad, it tightens the grip on its internal colonies: Black communities, migrant neighborhoods, and the poor who inhabit the “dangerous cities.” This is not about public safety; it is about securing accumulation in crisis.

Politico’s omissions are therefore not incidental—they are structural. By stripping Trump’s proposals of their historical precedents, legal erosion, economic incentives, and geopolitical context, the article reduces everything to a grotesque personality show. But once excavated, the facts tell a different story: a state apparatus recalibrating, under duress, to militarize its own territory in the same way it has long militarized the periphery. What they call a “remarkable break” is in truth a convergence, where domestic repression and imperial war finally reveal themselves as two sides of the same coin.

From Crisis Rhetoric to Counterinsurgency State

Once the facts are stripped of Politico’s melodrama, the true pattern emerges. Trump’s Quantico speech was not an oddity of tone or a personal obsession with “dangerous cities.” It was a crystallization of the U.S. state’s long project of fusing external imperial violence with internal repression. What the article tried to sell as a “remarkable break” is really a sharpening of continuity: a counterinsurgency state maturing in the open. The language of “training grounds” does not signify policy drift—it signifies the official acknowledgment that American urban space, especially where the poor, migrants, and Black communities live, has been reclassified as insurgent terrain. In this framing, the line between Baghdad and Baltimore collapses.

Here the concept of Technofascism becomes indispensable. This is not fascism in the 1930s sense of jackboots alone, nor is it merely digital surveillance. It is the fusion of monopoly-finance capital with both the digital infrastructure of data capture and the kinetic machinery of war. When Trump tells generals that Los Angeles or Portland should be treated as live-fire classrooms, he is effectively proposing the integration of predictive policing algorithms, mass surveillance feeds, and military weaponry into a single, normalized apparatus. The “war on crime” becomes indistinguishable from the war on terror. The civilian is recoded as enemy combatant by software, and the bullet follows where the data points.

This trajectory reveals the U.S. as a Counterinsurgency State. From its founding it has waged war on colonized peoples, both internally and abroad, but now it names this openly. What Trump calls “enemy from within” is simply the reclassification of the surplus population—the unemployed, the racialized, the poor—into permanent insurgents. The National Guard deployments are not isolated; they are the logical extension of a state that has long governed its own colonies through terror, whether the Black Belt South, Native reservations, or the barrios of Puerto Rico. In this optic, the Department of War’s revival is not symbolic—it is structural, a recognition that repression is no longer episodic but permanent.

The deeper motor of this shift is the Crisis of Imperialism. U.S. hegemony abroad is slipping; multipolarity grows as China, Russia, and BRICS+ nations build institutions that no longer bow to Washington. Unable to secure dominance abroad as it once did, U.S. capital requires greater discipline at home. This is why Quantico’s theater cost millions to stage: it was less about speeches and more about signaling to finance, to contractors, to the ruling class that the military remains the ultimate guarantor of order in times of decline. The crisis is not only economic; it is ideological. The spectacle at Quantico sought to re-anchor the myth of military heroism precisely as its global aura falters.

From the standpoint of the global proletariat, none of this is shocking. The oppressed have long known that the U.S. empire trains its weapons first on colonized people. The novelty lies only in how naked the merger has become, how openly domestic repression is named as “training.” What the Politico article called “dark and winding” is in fact brutally clear: the U.S. ruling class, through Trump’s mouthpiece, admits it has no vision left but the gun. It can no longer promise prosperity, democracy, or peace. It can only promise order enforced by soldiers in the streets. That is not a break with American tradition—it is its culmination.

To reframe Trump’s Quantico moment is therefore to reject the liberal fantasy that institutions will restrain him. The Pentagon is not reluctant. Politico is not watchdog. Both are participants in the recalibration of repression. The crisis of imperialism dictates this course, and technofascism provides its operating system. What looks like a grotesque aberration from the outside is, from the inside, the rational unfolding of a system designed to crush resistance wherever it appears, whether in the slums of Gaza or the streets of Portland. In this sense, Trump was not rambling at Quantico—he was announcing the new normal.

From Fragments to Frontlines

If Trump’s Quantico speech revealed anything, it is that the U.S. ruling class has no solutions left but repression. The empire is unraveling abroad, profits are thinning at home, and so the boot is prepared to fall harder on the necks of the poor, the colonized, and the working class within the borders of the United States itself. The question before us is not whether repression will intensify—it already has. The question is how those who suffer under its weight will organize, not as scattered victims, but as a united force that links every struggle into one front against technofascism.

The call is first to the working class in the U.S.—the majority who labor without security, whose wages are eaten by inflation, whose children are fed into debt and despair. But it is also to those who know, perhaps more viscerally, that this empire was never meant to serve them: Black communities criminalized and occupied since slavery, Indigenous nations still resisting theft of land and water, migrants treated as disposable cogs while being scapegoated as invaders. Their struggles cannot remain parallel lines; they must converge. The colonized and the exploited within the U.S. are not separate categories—they are overlapping trenches of the same battlefield.

This front must not be inward-looking alone. The fight against technofascism here is inseparable from the uprisings and resistance abroad. When Venezuela asserts sovereignty, when Palestine refuses annihilation, when BRICS+ crafts institutions to break the dollar’s grip, they are striking at the same imperial machine that sends tanks into American streets. To stand with them is not charity—it is self-defense. Every worker in Memphis or Portland must know that their struggle for dignity is bound up with the struggles of Havana, Johannesburg, and New Delhi. This is not a metaphor; it is material fact. Empire wages one war on many fronts, and so too must our resistance.

Tactics must grow from the soil we stand on. In some places, it means deepening community defense networks against police and Guard incursions. In others, it means forging worker-tenant alliances that link housing, wages, and anti-policing struggles into a single campaign. Where possible, it means exposing and disrupting the corporations profiteering from militarization—Palantir, Lockheed, Axon—through divestment, boycotts, and blockades. It means using political education to unmask liberal illusions and arm new generations with the memory of Reconstruction, of the Panthers, of every uprising erased from textbooks but still alive in spirit. It also means building channels of solidarity with multipolar states and socialist movements abroad, not as distant sympathizers but as comrades in the same war.

The configuration of forces is uneven, but the direction is clear. The U.S. ruling class is consolidating technofascism as its domestic mode of rule, while its imperial grip weakens globally. That contradiction is our opening. We cannot afford to fight as isolated camps—workers here, colonized there, socialists abroad. We must fight as a united front: workers linking arms with the colonized, the colonized drawing strength from global anti-imperialist sovereignty, socialist and multipolar forces finding common cause with the rebellions in the belly of the beast. From fragments, we must forge frontlines. That is how we break the cycle of repression, and that is how we build the possibility of emancipation.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2025/10/ ... an-cities/

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Is The US Going Soft On China?

The Manchurian Candidate Playing Multi-Dimensional Chess? Or Just Accepting Reality?
Roger Boyd
Oct 06, 2025



Since Obama’s pivot to Asia in 2011, the US has spent fourteen years vainly attempting to hold back the rise of China. To many outside observers, the lost cause and self-defeating nature of these attempts have been obvious, but not to Donald Trump when he came into office this year. He decided that all that was needed was to escalate the hell out if the situation, so he did.

On February 1st, less than two weeks after being sworn in, Trump announced a 10% increase in tariffs on all goods from China. After China responded with its own retaliatory tariffs, Trump upped the rate to 20% on March 3rd. China responded again and Trump increased the tariffs to 54% on April 2nd. China retaliated again and Trump raised the tariff level to 104% on April 8th, and China once again responded in kind. So Trump raised the tariff rate to 145%, and China again responded. In essence, China was saying that they could do without exports to the US and would cut off all imports from the US. They were calling Trump’s bluff, as they knew that a completely cut off of Chinese imports would very significantly impact the US economy, while they had worked hard over the years to reduce their exposure to the US. China also put an export ban on the critical minerals that are crucial to so many parts of a modern economy and military, and which the US is dependent upon China for nearly all its supplies. At the same time it slashed its buying of US agricultural products, causing mayhem in that sector of the US economy.

Trump backed down, and a 90-day truce was agreed on May 12th, with a 30% tariff on Chinese exports to the US and a 10% tariff on US exports to China. Trump only respects strength, and China has displayed its strength and its steadfastness. But Trump was still playing dirty, as per usual, as he placed limits on the supply of AI chips to China and started revoking Chinese student visas. So China kept the rare earth minerals export ban, and tightened its enforcement. After Trump had blathered about a deal being done when it had not been, the truce was extended for another 90 days on August 11th.

On September 3rd, Trump placed secondary sanctions on India for buying Russian oil, but did not do the same to China. He then lobbied Europe to place 100% tariffs on India and China for buying Russian oil! While China directed its corporations to not buy Nvidia microchips, as domestic producers have significantly caught up and China wants them to have the benefit of the Chinese domestic market. Also, China has developed more lightweight and cost-effective AI models, and major Chinese companies such as Alibaba are investing heavily in facilities in China and in other nations outside the West. And China announced an increased trade surplus as it diversifies its exports even more away from the US, and slashes its imports from the US; the US needs Chinese imports more than China needs to export to the US. Now, China stands as the beacon of free trade while the US has launched a tariff war on the world.

That 90-day extension will be up early November, and it seems that Chinese steadfastness and patience is working as Trump’s rhetoric has taken a much more respectful tone and he has stated that he will meet with Xi at a regional summit in late October and visit China early next year; although China has confirmed neither of the meetings. Also, members of the US House of Representative visited China to meet with Chinese government officials.

In parallel to the above, China has displayed more and more of its huge military industrial complex capacity as well as its increasingly advanced defence technology. The India Pakistan 12 Day War showed the superiority of its J-10 fighter and air to air missiles over advanced Western technology, and many of its latest pieces of equipment show equivalence or even superiority over Western designs. Part of this advantage is the widespread use of ASEA (active electronically scanned array) radars that require third generation (e.g. gallium nitride GaN, silicon carbide SiC and indium selenide InSe) microchips. These chips are utilized extensively by Chinese industries, from smartphones to electric vehicles to 5G base stations to wind and solar installation. With such a manufacturing base, China has a huge advantage in cost and availability of such third generation microchips. As noted here:

This strategic leverage has enabled China to deploy cutting-edge phased array radar systems across its armed forces at a pace and scale unmatched by the US and its vassals.

China is the only country deploying GaN-based phased array radar on a large scale. According to state broadcaster CCTV, the domestically developed radars are interconnected to form coordinated networks capable of detecting stealth aircraft, ballistic missiles and other targets … China’s global leadership in GaN-based phased array technology is an example of the “military-civilian fusion strategy”

Under the strategy, military technology is first disseminated to civilian markets, where enormous demand drives rapid iteration in the supply chain. This leads to increased production capacity, lower costs, and continuously improving reliability. The commercial scale, in turn, provides for a highly cost-competitive military procurement ecosystem.

China’s military progress results from investment in tech infrastructure, human capital, and state will. Technological leadership can only be achieved through long-term planning and system thinking.

China’s growing military superiority based on its dominance in critical minerals such as rare earth is the child of such planning.


The US invented ASEA radars, but because of its limited materials processing and manufacturing capabilities they are not widely implemented within the US armed services. China’s export restrictions on gallium arsenide further limit the US military’s capabilities to implement ASEA radars, limiting most of the US military to the more limited PESA (passively electronically scanned array) radars. The Chinese aircraft can detect US aircraft before the US aircraft can detect them, and then use their longer-range air-to-air missiles to shoot the US aircraft down.

Across a spectrum of new technologies, China can use its extensive commercial manufacturing capabilities to drive down prices and achieve high quality mass production. This then makes advances in Chinese weaponry, such as the new J-35 and J-50 fighter jets, both more cost effective and faster than the US MIC. The massive Chinese ship building industry also supports a colossal level of new military ship building. The US can simply not keep up. China has removed the option of US attack by displaying its defensive strength, backed by its enormous manufacturing and high technology capabilities. There certainly does seem to be a “pivot away from Asia” taking place, as reported here:

The Pentagon’s top national security focus will mirror that of President Donald Trump’s “America First” agenda, with multiple U.S. officials telling Military Times that the department will prioritize protecting the homeland and the Western Hemisphere … “[Protecting] the border is the top priority for the base, and I think for moderates, too. So this shift is fulfilling that promise,” said one official, who spoke to Military Times on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive policy information.

Just as the US is going “back to the future” with gunboat-style diplomacy in the Caribbean.

China has removed the options of a trade tariff war, technology export restrictions, and a shooting war from the US. Through careful diplomacy and patience, together with the overreach of the separatist forces, it has also helped defuse the Taiwan separatist issue. The Xinjiang Western genocide hoax also seems to have lost its propagandistic bite, especially when the US is an active participant in the Zionist regime’s very real genocide. And the memories of the Hong Kong riots, fully aided by the US, have faded away. The US is also losing the propaganda war. Even more as China starts to have the image of a climate action and clean energy champion while Trump rants about the climate change “hoax” and the wonder of fossil fuels at the United Nations.

This year, and into the next, may possibly be the period when the US oligarchy has to grudgingly accept that they have to deal with China more like an equal. If this comes about, many will scream that Trump is being “soft” on China, when in fact he is just being forced to accept reality. Just as he has been forced to accept the reality that he cannot force Russia to agree to terms that are not in its interest. It may also be becoming obvious to his administration that the US is far too financially extended (govt. debt to GDP of 124%, budget deficit of 7% and rising) to risk any kind of crisis with China. Even more so when he is at some kind of war with pretty much the rest of the world.

Ironically, as the US attempts to fix its imbalances through tariff wars it is helping the rest of the world de-risk themselves from the US economy. As their export dependency upon the US falls, as they are forced to localize more production in the US or redirect exports away from the US, the effect of a US crisis upon their domestic economies will be lessened. A prime example is a Brazil which is rapidly moving its exports away from the US as it takes advantage of the Chinese re-sourcing of agricultural goods and responds to the 50% tariff that was imposed in an attempt to interfere in Brazil’s internal affairs. In 2024, China received 28% of all Brazilian exports while the US received only 12%. We can expect to see a jump in the exports to China and a big drop in the exports to the US this year and next. Brazil has only responded to the US tariffs by taking a case to the WTO, but we can also expect a general resistance to US goods in the country. Brazil’s goods exports to the US of US$40.3 billion in 2024 were only equal to 1.8% of Brazil’s GDP. US goods exports to Brazil were actually higher than that! Already, more Brazilian soybeans and coffee are finding their way to China and Chinese goods could replace some of the imports from the US. About a quarter of Brazil’s imports came from China in 2024, with the US in second place at 16%.

Another example is that of an India which the US seems to have decided to give a good punching. First with the additional 50% tariff (25% for buying oil from Russia), then with the sanctioning of the Chabahar port crucial to India’s logistics plans, then the US$100,000 fee for with the H1B visas so used by Indian nationals and offshoring companies. The impact of the 100% tariff on branded and patented pharmaceuticals on India will be limited as it mostly exports generic drugs, but India will be hit by the 30% tariff on furniture. Once again, the only option that the US is giving to another nation is to integrate more with its opposition; perhaps another unlikely alliance with China?

Then there is even a South Korea which has been publicly humiliated by the horrendous treatment of Hyundai’s staff who did not have the right papers because the US authorities had been dragging their feet on South Korean workers who were critical to getting Hyundai’s new US plant up and running. No wonder South Korea is balking at the huge amounts that the US is demanding that it invest in the US. The sheer arrogance of the Trump administration, and its proclivity to escalate its demands during negotiations, “moving goalposts", is on display for the whole world to see. At a time when South Korean public sentiment toward the US is souring badly. When one of America’s tightest vassals with a large occupying US army is balking at an agreement, the US administration should be understanding that it has jumped the shark. The US is displaying the relationship skills of a mafia boss, one that does not understand that its power is waning and a much more pleasant and trustworthy option is available.

And now the Trump administration has created yet more trade chaos with its new 100% tariff on branded and patented pharmaceuticals (hits Europe), 50% on kitchen cabinets (hits China & Vietnam), 30% on upholstered furniture (hits China & Vietnam) and 25% on heavy trucks (hits Mexico, Canada, Japan, Germany & Finland). The Trump administration is once again moving the goalposts on countries that thought that they had already agreed trade terms, or were in the process of doing so.

With the creation of such chaos by the Trump administration, and its fiscal position, it can simply not afford to escalate further with China. Kitchen cabinets and upholstered furniture are relatively low on the value-added curve and represent a relatively small part of China’s exports to the US, so should not cause too much of an issue for the US-China trade negotiations. For Vietnam it is a huge slap in the face after the utterly one-sided trade agreement that it thought that it had made earlier this year. The position of Europe, and Mexico and Canada is also now thrown back up in the air. All while China is opening up to the world outside of the US.

While slackening off the aggression toward China, the Trump administration seems to be doing all it can to drive other nations into the arms of China by displaying its utter arrogance, mendacity and untrustworthiness to anyone that does not have China’s ability to fight back. While showing the Chinese population how much they need to support the Party-state in its fight with the US menace. Perhaps Trump is playing multi-dimensional chess; as the Manchurian candidate.

https://rogerboyd.substack.com/p/is-the ... t-on-china

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Black PressMAGA Billboard in Montgomery Sparks Outrage with Racist Imagery

BLACKPRESSUSA NEWSWIRE — A billboard in Montgomery, Alabama, has ignited a storm of backlash after displaying the words “It’s Time to Get the Clowns Out!” alongside images of people in racist blackface

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Published onBy Stacy M. Brown Screenshot from WKRG TV broadcastScreenshot from WKRG TV broadcast

By Stacy M. Brown
Black Press USA Senior National Correspondent

A billboard in Montgomery, Alabama, has ignited a storm of backlash after displaying the words “It’s Time to Get the Clowns Out!” alongside images of people in racist blackface, all framed in the branding of Donald Trump’s “Make America Great Again” slogan.

The display, funded through the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts and created by the artist-led group For Freedoms, was intended to spark dialogue ahead of an exhibit marking the 60th anniversary of Bloody Sunday. Instead, it set off anger and pain in a city where civil rights history is not a distant memory but a lived experience. Critics say the pairing of MAGA messaging with blackface is more than provocative — it is racist and dangerous. “Timing and context mean everything,” wrote one Montgomery resident in response. Others argued that no amount of artistic intent could justify splashing racist caricatures on a public billboard in a majority-Black city.

Montgomery Mayor Steven L. Reed ordered the billboard removed almost immediately after it went up, calling it a politicized distortion of a sacred history. “We must be extremely mindful of how we use such images of our shared history, especially when they risk being perceived as politically charged,” Reed stated. “Our history deserves to be treated with the utmost respect and care, ensuring it unifies rather than divides us as a community.” The decision to take down the billboard exposed a deeper conflict between the city and the museum’s leadership. According to members of the museum’s board, the billboard had been erected without their approval, adding to what they describe as a two-year struggle with City Hall over control of the museum’s operations.

The controversy has drawn sharp responses from civil rights and arts advocates. The Southern Poverty Law Center praised the mayor’s decision, saying, “We can never afford to empower or embolden bad actors to cause harm and trample the rights and freedoms of marginalized groups.” But the National Coalition Against Censorship condemned the move as government overreach, writing in a letter to Reed, “Though you may not agree with the politics or the vision of the artists behind the billboard, your position…does not give you the right to enforce your personal political perspective on the museum’s programming.” For many in Montgomery, the billboard has reopened wounds tied to the ongoing use of MAGA rhetoric. The slogan, tied to Donald Trump’s presidency, has long raised questions: Which America is being called “great,” and when exactly was it great? “This is a country built on slavery, and the legacy of slavery,” one resident stated. “What has been great are the people who fought for freedom. That is what makes America great.” The billboard may be gone, but the questions it raised — about race, history, and who gets to decide how America’s past is remembered — remain on full display.

https://blackpressusa.com/maga-billboar ... t-imagery/
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Re: Donald Trump, Avatar of his Class, Capitalism & the Decline and Fall of Bourgeois Democracy

Post by blindpig » Wed Oct 08, 2025 3:55 pm

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Federal agents, including members of the Department of Homeland Security, the Border Patrol, and police, clash with protesters outside a downtown US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility on October 4, 2025, in Portland, Oregon. The facility has become a focal point of nightly protests against the Trump administration and his announcement that he will be sending National Guard troops into Portland. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Trump Troops ‘Deliberately Attacking Peaceful Protesters’ in US Cities, Senator Says
Originally published: Common Dreams on October 6, 2025 by Stephen Frager (more by Common Dreams) | (Posted Oct 08, 2025)

A US senator is warning that acts of unprovoked violence against protesters from troops deployed to American cities by President Donald Trump are part of a “deliberate” strategy to provoke backlash and justify further crackdowns on civil liberties.

“Trump’s troops are deliberately attacking peaceful protesters to incite violence,” said Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), who has watched as the city of Portland in his home state has been swarmed by federal police in recent days as part of an effort by the Trump administration to crack down on protests at Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention centers.

“The goal is to generate riots to justify the expansion of authoritarian measures and to strengthen the case for the troop deployments,” Merkley continued. “Let me be emphatically clear: There is no ‘invasion’ or ’rebellion’ that justifies the federalization of the National Guard.”

“Unlike former deployments in support of citizens’ rights like attending school—this is about attacking citizens’ right to peacefully protest,” he said. “Our republic is in big trouble.”

Last week, Trump ordered Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to “provide all necessary troops” to Portland, which he described as “war-ravaged” and “under siege from attack by Antifa, and other domestic terrorists.” Trump authorized the military to use “full force, if necessary.”

Portland residents and police have found Trump’s description of their city laughable. As Portland police official Craig Dobson testified last week, ”For the most part, nightly ICE-Facility protests since July 18, 2025, have been limited to fewer than thirty participants. The protests have been largely sedate during this time.“

On Saturday, Trump made the similarly fanciful claim that ”Portland is burning to the ground“ at the hands of ”paid insurrectionists,“ and said he was deploying 200 Oregon National Guard troops to the city to patrol the protests.

In a ruling Saturday night, a federal judge agreed that Trump’s descriptions of Portland were ”untethered to facts,“ ruling that the protests outside ICE facilities there did not meet the high legal standard for Trump to deploy the National Guard.

As The Oregonian pointed out, his description of Saturday’s protests ”contrasted sharply with scenes unfolding simultaneously outside the city’s ICE facility and ignored decisions by the federal government to promote and, in fact, create images of disorder around the ICE building.“ The report continued:

At protests on Saturday, it was federal law enforcement agents who escalated tensions in South Portland, according to Portland residents, reporters on the ground and videos on social media.

Hundreds of demonstrators gathered at the ICE facility on Saturday afternoon to protest immigration enforcement and Trump’s planned deployment of Oregon National Guard troops to monitor the Portland protests. They heckled agents, shouted and carried signs.

They also formed a line in front of the building on a public sidewalk, so every time a car left the building’s garage, dozens of federal agents walked out of the building and moved protesters away from the driveway.

But by mid-afternoon, federal agents began using chemical crowd control on the protesters, pointing less-lethal guns that sprayed pepper balls into the crowd and throwing tear gas canisters.


Merkley highlighted one particularly egregious case in which a 19-year-old protester, identified as Leilani, was shown arguing with a federal police officer in riot gear.

After being ordered to move away from the building to allow a car to exit the garage, The Oregonian reports that ”she complied but was hurling curse words and insults at the two officers in front of her when a third agent wearing a gas mask approached her. Within 10 seconds, the officer directed a canister at the 19-year-old’s face and doused her with chemical spray.“

Other similar cases were documented at protests over the past month in which federal police have responded with violence to protesters who posed no clear threat.

Another video from Portland Friday night shows federal officers pushing protesters who blocked the building’s driveway into an intersection before hitting them with volleys of tear gas, smoke, and pepper balls.

Troy Brynelson, a reporter on the scene from Oregon Public Broadcasting, said: ”You can see what almost looked like fireworks, those are flash bangs from federal officers. It wasn’t clear what the crowd did to provoke this. OPB reporters didn’t observe anything before the officers started using the gas.“



”You’re gassing an entire neighborhood for nothing!“ one protester is heard shouting.

In another video from Friday, an agent is shown shooting pepper spray into the air intake vent of an inflatable frog costume worn by a protester, which activist Joe Gallina pointed out was ”a major health risk.“ A video from the next night shows the same frog alongside dozens of other protesters standing across from a line of riot police several yards away. As they heckled police, they were blasted with another round of pepper balls.

These sorts of scenes have played out in other places where Trump has launched militarized crackdowns. Last week, in Chicago, a man on a bicycle was chased by several federal agents after shouting, ”Fuck Trump“ to them at an intersection.

At protests outside Chicago’s Broadview facility last weekend, peaceful protesters and journalists were hit with pepper spray and rubber bullets, while one reporter was briefly taken into custody. Another journalist for Chicago’s CBS News affiliate was blasted with a pepper ball as she was driving with the window down outside the facility on Sunday, with no protesters in the area.

On Monday, attorneys representing journalists and protesters who were attacked filed a lawsuit alleging that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) was committing the ”illegal and brutal suppression of First Amendment rights.“

”Never in modern times has the federal government undermined bedrock constitutional protections on this scale, or usurped states’ police power by directing federal agents to carry out an illegal mission against the people for the government’s own benefit,” the complaint states.

https://mronline.org/2025/10/08/trump-t ... ator-says/

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Body Camera Video Betrays DHS Account of Chicago Border Patrol Shooting, Attorney Says

“I think there’s a danger to the community, but I don’t think it’s Ms. Martinez,” said an attorney for Marimar Martinez, who was shot several times by a Border Patrol agent in Brighton Park, Chicago.

Julia Conley
Oct 07, 2025

An account given in court on Monday by the attorney of a woman who was shot several times by a Border Patrol agent “really makes it sounds like” the agent “tried to murder an anti-ICE protester in Chicago and DHS lied to cover for him,” said one researcher, referring to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Department of Homeland Security, whose agents have descended on the Chicago area in recent weeks and have violently raided homes and assaulted community members there.

Christopher Parente, an attorney for Marimar Martinez, spoke at a hearing Monday at a federal courthouse two days after federal officers accused her of driving toward them in the Brighton Park neighborhood of Chicago.

Parente said body camera footage called the account of federal prosecutors and Border Patrol into question, as it showed a Border Patrol agent saying to Martinez, “Do something, bitch” before pulling over and shooting her at least five times.

“We need a zero tolerance policy for lying by law enforcement,” said Jonathan Cohn, political director of Progressive Mass.


Martinez and another driver, Anthony Ian Santos Ruiz, were charged Sunday with felony assault of a federal officer, with prosecutors saying they were “aggressively” driving in a “convoy” including several vehicles. The Chicago Sun-Times noted that a statement by DHS after the incident referenced a loaded gun in Martinez’s car, which was not mentioned in the charges filed.

In court on Monday, Assistant US Attorney Sean Hennessy told U.S. District Judge Heather McShain that Martinez had a gun in her car but did not brandish it, while Parente said she has a concealed-carry license and a valid firearm.

A video captured by a security camera at a nearby tire shop showed Martinez’s Nissan Rogue pulling alongside a Chevy Tahoe driven by Border Patrol agents, who had just conducted an operation in nearby Oak Lawn. A GMC Envoy driven by Ruiz is seen following closely behind the authorities’ car. The shooting is not captured on the video.

McShain acknowledged the danger of Martinez and Ruiz’s actions but denied a request by the federal government to detain them, pending trial, citing the two US citizens’ lack of criminal history and extensive community ties. Martinez works for a school and had several character witnesses write letters to the court on her behalf.

“I think there’s a danger to the community, but I don’t think it’s Ms. Martinez,” said Parente at the hearing.

Roughly 100 community members responded to the shooting Saturday by holding a protest in the area where federal agents fired pepper balls and tear gas at the demonstrators.

The shooting in Brighton Park was one of several recent incidents in which federal agents have violently confronted community members in the Chicago area, following President Donald Trump’s deployment of immigration officers as part of what he calls “Operation Midway Blitz.” Over the weekend, Trump announced he was deploying hundreds of members of the National Guard—both from Illinois and other states—to Chicago to support the effort over the objections of rights groups and Democratic Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker.

The president and his allies have repeatedly claimed that a federal law enforcement response is necessary in cities including Chicago, Portland, and Washington, DC, even as statistics have shown violent crime is down in the cities and as local authorities have denied that protesters against Trump’s mass deportation campaign are causing havoc.

On Monday, officials in Chicago and Illinois sued the Trump administration over its invasion of the city, and a group of protesters and journalists filed a separate suit arguing that federal agents have “shot, gassed, and detained individuals” for exercising their First Amendment rights.

https://www.commondreams.org/news/woman-shot-by-ice

(I generally try to avoid posting from so-called progressive sites, however...)

*****

enemy within

Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence 08 Oct 2025 🖨️ Print Article

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“Political language … is designed to make lies sound truthful and
murder respectable “
— George Orwell

They are the bloodthirsty! Parasitic. Anti-freedom, fascist,
Pedophile, compromised ones. The grifting, gaslighting, big-
Lying ones. Way Back Machine, return to the ‘50s —1850s — ones.
The Judas Iscariot, Benedict Arnold, billionaire “enemy within” ones.

They are the thirty pieces of silver ones, camouflaged in stars and
Stripes! Red, white, and blue-wrapped ones — wholly-owned —
Bought and bossed. The remote-controlled ones — rolling red carpet
On bent knee — servicing strongmen. They are: “The Enemy Within.”

They are the enemy within warring on the working-class! Reich-cult.
Sadist bullies dispatching platoons of masked goons! The worst of the
Worse! J6-confederate-felons, flooding factories, fields and streets —
Redacting 1st amendment — Erasing 4th, 13th, 14th, 15th freedoms …

They are chainsaw-brandishing bandits. Looting, uprooting, destroying things
That work! Thieves turning fruits of our labor into personal ATMs. Waste,
Fraud and Abuse disguised as Department Of Grifter Enrichment — DOGE.
Rejecting 99 Cents Store solutions — like mirrors — for detecting themselves.

They are an ethno nationalist food truck serving poisonous menu of misery:
School Shooting Du Jour! War Of The Week! Jobless, Homeless, Hungry
Government Shutdown Gumbo. Medical Neglect Noodles. Post-Constitutional,
Police State Pork Fried ICE. Doom and gloom, dark, death and destruction desserts.

They are warfare state “Drill, baby, drill!” dinosaurs shaking down with teargas,
Pepper-spray, rubber-bullet reign, places we live and love. Fox-box foot soldiers
Prancing like peacocks. Transforming our cities into ‘training grounds’
Instead of solar-paneled, windmill wonderlands running armadas of electric busses.

WE are the ones we’ve been waiting for! Robust resisters riding in on white horses
Named Mutual Aid. United Front, Mass Movement Mamas and Papas. Department
Of Solidarity. Door-knocking neighbors, meeting more than four corners. WE are the
Ones we’ve been waiting for! Street Heat Senators/Shoe Leather Legislators muscling
Up movements! Robust resisters refusing to slip on elephant excrement-donkey dung —
Bipartisan — billionaire bullshit!

© 2025. Raymond Nat Turner, The Town Crier. All Rights Reserved.

https://blackagendareport.com/enemy-within
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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blindpig
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Re: Donald Trump, Avatar of his Class, Capitalism & the Decline and Fall of Bourgeois Democracy

Post by blindpig » Thu Oct 09, 2025 3:47 pm

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Image by Myotus, Creative Commons 4.0

Grim Reaper in our midst, on to No Kings and beyond
Originally published: ZNetwork on October 5, 2025 by Michael Albert (more by ZNetwork) | (Posted Oct 09, 2025)

Trump posts a video. In it, Trump and Vance are band members for The Grim Reaper. And the Reaper is, well—wait for it—Russell Voight, the author of Project 2025. Th brain behind the brawn. Talk about telling it like it is. Transparency on steroids. Okay, perhaps for even greater verisimilitude it should have been Voight and Thiel as a two-headed Reaper leading the band, but perhaps the sequel will get that right.

Trump tells the military and all of us that dangers at home are the real dangers we face. He proclaims the enemy is in LA. Vance parrots the enemy is in Chicago. Soon Portland, San Francisco, and New York. And what do you know? They actually make an (unintended) point. Trump and his ilk are the real immediate enemy. And they are indeed within our country. They are who they warn us about. We have seen the enemy and it is Trump and Co. They even explicitly tell us so, or show us so. Grim Reaper indeed.

A mob of ICE Agents attacksan apartment building in Chicago. They pull out sleeping kids and their parents. They Zip tie the kids. They handcuff the parents. They drag them out, throw them into the back of vans, and drive off. Where to?

That is the “enemy within” at work. Trump’s video—AI created, fascistically-prompted—is not entertainment. Nor is it fiction. The “enemy within” announces itself. Are we listening?

We can spell out the details. We can describe how they decimate already inadequate programs. We can catalog how they violate already moribund laws. We can dissect the threats, tariffs, and bombings. We can count the children violated, list the stomachs made more hungry. And we must do all that because so far not everyone gets it. Some of us, indeed quite a few of us, still think Reaper’s band is just too unreal to be real. Stop exaggerating the danger, they say. Quit calling it fascism they instruct. Others think the features of the Reaper’s band are real and even frightening but add that they will in the end nonetheless save our society rather than incinerate our souls. Stop naysaying. Get on board the makeover train, they say. We do need a makeover. Some excesses are inevitable. Yes, there will be pain. But see the light. What’s wrong with that report, they ask. It is that this makeover is Reaper led. This makeover leads to death.

To report the facts and their implications therefore matters a lot. The details matter a lot. To grow consciousness, consciousness raising matters a lot. Especially when we write and speak the facts and their implications in ways that speak directly to those who don’t yet agree.

But I hope you will pardon me if I point out that the image of this vile orange entity sitting up in his bed, or perhaps slouching at a desk in his room, laughing up a storm in the middle of the night as he malignantly posts a video of demons killing us ought to be more than enough to propel ten million people into the street on October 18, the next No Kings day, to both raise new consciousness and simultaneously build toward retiring the Reaper.

Macabre is not another word for cute. Homicidal is not a path toward peace. Suicidal is not a path toward justice. That Trump’s macabre, homicidal, suicidal postings don’t surprise us doesn’t mean they are laughably moot. They are sickeningly serious. To ridicule the maniac and then return to our daily agendas thinking he/they can’t last was never enough. Now it is less than zero.

October 18th is just two weeks away. 2,233 protests are planned. How many of us will attend? Trump sends masked agents to terrorize immigrant families. He profiles, arrests, detains, and disappears people. He prepares to send troops to occupy Democratic cities. Was his big meeting of Generals just for show? Just to scare? Or was it to also probe to find who will obey and who should be replaced? Trump requires subservience. He scapegoats immigrants and trans people. He elevates oil and savages solar. He further enriches the rich and impoverishes the poor. So for the next two weeks do we build No Kings on October 18? How can we not?

But then comes the big question. How many of us will go to our schools or workplaces or even to our dinner tables now, this week and next, to urge others into motion? How many of us will organize as best we can, writing, speaking, urging, during each new day for the 18th? And then an even bigger question arises. How many of us will, on October 19th, sign on to do that much and still more for November 19th? Or even sooner?

Yes there is reason to fear what is unfolding. But to exaggerate their power and silence ourselves—to succumb to fear does Trump’s work for him. If you seek a way to personally help resistance grow, diversify, and even extend beyond when Trump disappears check out AllofUS.org it offer a connection mechanism anyone, anywhere, can use.

But what should resistance seek? Pre-Trumpian business as usual gave us Trump. Observing that that is undeniably true doesn’t mean we have to return to pre-Trumpian business as usual. It doesn’t mean we have to settle for that only to later arrive back where we now are, or worse—much less to do so again and again. It means, instead, that even as we grow our resistance sufficiently to end Trump, end Vance, end Voight, and end Theil, we need to also imbue our resistance with sufficient spirit, solidarity, desire, organization, and awareness for it to continue non-stop way past eliminating our current “danger within.” We need to prepare means and mindsets to continue for as long as it takes to fundamentally alter society’s defining relations. We need to make another world that is possible our world. To break the chain of endless oppressive return. Not overnight, but ceaselessly.

No Kings, now. A better world to follow.

https://mronline.org/2025/10/09/grim-re ... nd-beyond/

(Well and good, but no Democrats, no Republicans and especially no capitalists either. Because ya know the Dems are working this movement to their advantage. And to continue with the litany above we need to end Schumer, end Harris, end Sanders and his puppy AOL. )

*****

U.S. Demonstrators Flood Downtown Chicago to Oppose National Guard Deployment

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(FILE) ICE agents detaining a person in Colorado. Photo: EFE.

October 9, 2025 Hour: 1:29 am

Thousands of demonstrators took to the streets of downtown Chicago on Wednesday to protest the deployment of the National Guard to the city’s metropolitan area — a decision by the White House aimed at reinforcing federal agents during racially biased immigration raids.

The march, which proceeded largely without incident, intensified outside Trump Tower in Chicago — which houses a hotel and luxury residential apartments — with chants denouncing the Trump administration as a fascist regime and opposing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and unlawful deportations.

Tara Roland, a supporter of the Freedom Road Socialist Organization said the country must stand firm against what she described as efforts to impose an authoritarian system, urging people to unite in resistance.

Other signs at the protest read: “When we organize, we win,” “Communities united against Trump’s Nazi regime,” and “Trump to The Hague.”


On Thursday morning, a federal judge appointed under the previous administration led by Democrat Joe Biden is set to rule on whether the deployment of Texas guardsmen complies with the law.

Meanwhile, in nearby Latino-majority towns and counties such as Will — about an hour from downtown Chicago — residents gathered to show solidarity, reject the National Guard deployment, reaffirm their rights, and find encouragement amid the threat of immigration crackdowns.

Meanwhile, local authorities such as Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson — whom Trump called to be jailed today for “failing to protect” ICE in his city — participated this afternoon in a Hispanic Heritage Month celebration, signaling his defiance amid mounting pressure from the Oval Office.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/u-s-demo ... eployment/

(We are against al Republicans and Democrats!)

*****

Clickbait Title ...

... from neocon central Newsweek. No shit))


Russian State TV Threatens to Bomb NATO Country Over Tomahawk Missiles
No, it doesn't. This is who "threatens":


A Russian lawmaker has warned that Moscow could bomb NATO member Poland if the United States provides Tomahawk missiles to Ukraine. During a discussion on the state TV program 60 Minutes, Russian MP Alexey Zhuravlyov warned that Moscow would be ready for the potential missiles delivery, and said it could target Poland’s Rzeszów military hub in response.

You see, some MP, who is NOT in anyway involved in a decision circuit of Russia does what all lawmakers around the world do--because none of them have any responsibility--spews BS. Having said all that, though, it has to be known that Aegis Ashore installation in Poland, same as installation in Deveselu, Romania, have fixed geographic coordinates and are easy targets for any Russian modern stand off weapon, in case of war. Per TLAM saga, I don't know how many times I should explain that it is all BS in a feeble attempt of Trump to "impress" Russia. He should be listening (he will not) to this, though:

The momentum generated during the Alaska summit between Russian President Vladimir Putin and his US counterpart Donald Trump has been “exhausted,” Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov has said. The diplomat claimed that the “powerful impetus” to find a settlement to the Ukraine conflict was extinguished by Russia’s opponents and the efforts of “supporters of a ‘war to the last Ukrainian,’ primarily among Europeans.” Putin and Trump met in Anchorage, Alaska in mid-August to discuss finding a path to resolving the Ukraine conflict, as well as restoring bilateral ties between Moscow and Washington. Although no breakthrough was achieved, both sides hailed the meeting as constructive, and the White House stated that there was now a “light at the end of the tunnel and an opportunity for lasting peace.”

So, back to square one and considering Trump's obvious deteriorating cognitive functions coupled with his childish narcissism which now reaches galactic proportions, it seems that the US failed to grasp at the last log Russia provided. Now it is going to be a straw only and we all know what that means for a drowning man.

Meanwhile, Russian anti-drones are dealing with 404 heavy "drones", which are nothing more than Polish iterations of light aircraft loaded with explosives terrorists from NATO launch deep into Russia. (Video at link.)

Russia now produces a whole line of anti-drones, that is why the effectiveness of 404 drones in the tactical zone dropped to 2-4%. I will only quote Vladimir Putin: "It is impossible to defeat Russia on the battlefield"(c).

http://smoothiex12.blogspot.com/2025/10 ... title.html

Oh, No-o-o ...
The world has come to an end))) Fake, but funny.

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http://smoothiex12.blogspot.com/2025/10/oh-no-o-o.html

******

Will Trump Work Himself Into a Shoot Versus Illinois Governor?
Posted on October 9, 2025 by Nat Wilson Turner

U.S. President Donald Trump dramatically escalated his administration’s conflict with Illinois’ top Democratic elected officials this week.

First he deployed hundreds of National Guard troops (some from Texas) to Chicago, Illinois. Then he called for the arrest of Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson.

Both Illinois officials responded defiantly on social media, as seen below.

Trump is also threatening to invoke the Insurrection Act.

He’s already issued the alarming National Security Presidential Memorandum 7 as reported by Ken Klippenstein.

My question is: Are any of these people serious?

Trump is clearly intent on making an authoritarian power grab and is likely trying to bait political opponents into Quixotic acts of resistance.

ICE agents in Illinois have been caught committing “jackbootery” as NC posted on Tuesday.

The Democrats seem oblivious to the nature of kinetic reality and incapable of going beyond ineffectual rhetoric and lawsuits, so far.

The legal angle is egregiously pointless and impotent given the corrupt courts in the Trump 2.0 era.

But what if things escalate out of anyone’s control?

What if Trump or the Democrats “work themselves into a shoot?”

A work is everything that happens within the fictional world of wrestling. Everything you see on TV during a WWE show is a work and, with the advent of social media, more and more of what fans read from wrestlers on Twitter or Instagram is also a work. The thing about a work is that the goal is to elicit a response from the audience. When a wrestler is “working” in the ring they want the live audience to cheer them if they are a “babyface,” or good guy, and boo them if they are a heel.

A “shoot” is something real or legitimate. It breaks the fictional world of the work. It’s something not part of the show or part of the character.

…wrestling fans want to get worked. Since the 1990s, most wrestling fans know that the WWE is scripted entertainment and that the performers in the ring are working together to tell a story through their matches. In short, we all know it’s a work. This has made it a lot harder for wrestlers and wrestling companies to work the fans and get the responses they want from them. The companies need those responses because it’s the emotional response and enjoyment of getting caught up in the show, in the work, that makes fans spend money. Getting worked is also the fun part of wrestling for fans. They want to get sucked into the fictional world of the show. Wrestling companies need to work the fans and the fans want to be worked.

American political partisans want to get worked.

We want to take our minds off the enshittification of our shared reality by imagining that we are on the verge of a definitive national political cataclysm, but the reality is no one living has any idea what such a thing would entail.

The latest tomfoolery

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https://t.co/bVKM0nAR83 pic.twitter.com/wGjIVlXmAg

— Nat Wilson Turner (@natwilsonturner) October 8, 2025


Pritzker put out a statement on Sunday as well:

“This evening, President Trump is ordering 400 members of the Texas National Guard for deployments to Illinois, Oregon, and other locations within the United States. No officials from the federal government called me directly to discuss or coordinate.

“We must now start calling this what it is: Trump’s Invasion. It started with federal agents, it will soon include deploying federalized members of the Illinois National Guard against our wishes, and it will now involve sending in another state’s military troops. ​

“I call on Governor Abbott to immediately withdraw any support for this decision and refuse to coordinate. There is no reason a President should send military troops into a sovereign state without their knowledge, consent, or cooperation. ​

“The brave men and women who serve in our national guards must not be used as political props. This is a moment where every American must speak up and help stop this madness.”


Texas Governor Greg Abbott responded:

I fully authorized the President to call up 400 members of the Texas National Guard to ensure safety for federal officials.

You can either fully enforce protection for federal employees or get out of the way and let Texas Guard do it.

No Guard can match the training, skill, and… https://t.co/7SUk9XlMBn

— Greg Abbott (@GregAbbott_TX) October 6, 2025



Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson spoke up too:

This is not the first time Trump has tried to have a Black man unjustly arrested. I’m not going anywhere. pic.twitter.com/MQdHtzis3t

— Mayor Brandon Johnson (@ChicagosMayor) October 8, 2025


Trump has previously deployed forces to Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.

Is the clampdown already here?

Tucker Carlson, who’s recently been mixed up in “the political blender” due to his opposition to Israel’s genocide in Gaza, goes full Christian Nationalist and endorses Trump’s ICE antics in his latest video:

Why is America moving towards civil war?

For the same reason all countries that wind up in civil war get there because the differences between their population between people within their borders becomes too great to bear.

People decide I have nothing in common with people who live near me and I don’t want to live near them anymore. In other words, diversity difference is actually intolerable to most people. Not necessarily racial diversity, though sometimes that too, but diversity of all kinds.

It is not our strength. In fact, it is without question our weakness and it has always been. If you have nothing in common with your wife, do you have a stronger marriage? No. Of course, your marriage falls apart. And the same is true for countries.

And the truth about the United States is that on every level, beginning with a demographic level, the American population has less in common with itself, with one another than ever before.

So if you want to prevent a civil war, figure out what everybody or at least the bulk of the people in your nation have in common and emphasize that. And so what would that be in our case? Hard to know.

In fact, at this stage, really the only realistic hope for national unity is spiritual revival. Is a place where most Americans wake up to realize that God exists and created every single person in the United States of America. And that’s what we have in common, our humanity.

Not because our common humanity is meaningful by itself, but because our common humanity comes from God and we’re created in his image. And only when people truly realize that will they hesitate before killing each other.

We hope that comes soon, but in the meantime, there is a step that the government at all levels, federal, state, and local, can take to restore at least a sense of calm in the midst of rising chaos.

So out of chaos comes what? Democracy, spontaneous order. No. Imposed order. Dictatorship. Of course, each and every time that’s what happens out of chaos. People beg for a strong man. There’s always someone willing to oblige. And that’s exactly what they get. And that’s exactly what we’re going to get unless some kind of order is restored. Which is another way of saying restoring order is not a step toward totalitarianism. It may be the only way to prevent it, but we need to do it now.


Trump and his Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller are believed by some to be deliberately provoking confrontation as a pretext for further authoritarian measures.

Thomas Edsall expressed that view in The New York Times:

Over the past four weeks, he has initiated what amounts to a unique form of partisan civil war designed to amass power in a nominal democracy and defang, decimate and defund the opposition.

Trump’s assault on the left combines the use of the available tools of violent conflict — the military, the Department of Homeland Security and ICE in particular — with the prosecution of critics (and people he just doesn’t like), cuts of essential funds for liberal institutions, the use of regulation to threaten businesses with bankruptcy, the criminalization of free speech and the blackmailing of corporate America into obedience.

Two days after the assassination of Charlie Kirk last month, Stephen Miller, Trump’s top domestic policy adviser, went on Sean Hannity’s Fox News Show to describe in great detail how the administration plans to deal with its domestic opponents: “We will not live in fear, but you will live in exile, because the power of law enforcement under President Trump’s leadership will be used to find you, will be used to take away your money, take away your power, and if you have broken the law, to take away your freedom.”

For Trump and his allies, recent developments, including the government shutdown, the indictment of James Comey and the assassination of Kirk, are openings to escalate the attack on institutions and programs identified with liberalism and the Democratic Party. For the MAGA right, any crisis is an opportunity. In fact, every crisis is.


Miles Taylor, Department of Homeland Security chief of staff for part of Trump’s first term is among the “it’s a set up” chorus:

I co-wrote Trump’s first anti-terrorism plan in 2017-18. He’s not trying to stop “left-wing” terrorism. He is staging it.

His troop deployments are a false flag — meant to provoke a response in order to justify harsh crackdowns.

This is now very obvious.

— Miles Taylor (@MilesTaylorUSA) October 7, 2025



U.S. Senator Chris Murphy (D-CT) took to the Senate floor to “explain Trump’s plan”:

1.Turn the justice system into a political witch hunt operation that punishes critics for free speech and immunizes loyalists for actual criminality.
2.Use government power to compel the media to tell only the regime’s narrative and to silence critics.
3.Use the military to perform political intimidation in places with high levels of opposition to the regime.
4.Seize control of Congress’s spending and tax powers to use those powers to reward loyalists and punish opponents.
5.Rig the rules and the information. Tilt the election playing field your way and destroy the idea of truth.

Murphy, who seems to be running for President, wrapped with a hopeful, and peaceful, plan to resist:

Step 5 of the plan:

Rig the rules and the information. Tilt the election playing field your way and destroy the idea of truth. pic.twitter.com/q5hxc0E8aI

— Chris Murphy 🟧 (@ChrisMurphyCT) October 8, 2025



As Tom Neuburger wrote yesterday:

“The American Hard Right has never, ever been stronger. The feast is before them, all laid. They have the presidency. They have Trump, a master intimidator, and so they have Congress (look up “men fit to be slaves”). They have Roberts and most of his Court. They have power of the purse at last, and crime without price. They act like kings. They have a timid pretend opposition, so tied to their money and privilege they’re afraid to offend (by which I mean piss off their donors).

And the people, the last obstacle? They’re outraged, true, but they don’t rush to the streets in a way that disrupts the state.

Can Trump really pull it off?

In her introduction to Neuburger’s piece, Yves was basically skeptical of Team Trump’s ability to pull off a clampdown, but she warned that “this team, if nothing else, is possessed by hubris. So they could well try a much bigger power grab backed by force. Even if it fails, the damage could still be vast in human and institutional terms.”

Will Schryver has long been a skeptic of the current administration’s ability to pull off a crackdown:

I want to emphatically reiterate that I am convinced an authoritarian federal government could not long sustain a totalitarian crackdown on "dissent" in America.

It would be a human, material, and logistical challenge beyond their capacity.

But that doesn't mean they won't try.

— Will Schryver (@imetatronink) September 22, 2025


There are also those in the national security apparatus who say they plan to resist including Brigadier General Alan R. Gronewol, “Oregon’s top military leader” who testified on September 30:

Speaking before a state Senate subcommittee, Brigadier General Alan R. Gronewold told legislators that before deployment, the two companies of soldiers would be trained in “protective crowd control.” That training is now up in the air as Gov. Tina Kotek on Tuesday ordered troops to go home after a federal judge ruled over the weekend that Trump had no authority to call them up.

Gronewold said Guard soldiers serve two purposes: “One, to defend America, and two, to protect Oregonians. And so by serving in this mission, they will be protecting any protesters at the ICE facility.”


However the prospects for organized resistance are dim as Aurelian convincingly argued recently when discussing some recent unrest in France:

…the fundamental problem faced by ordinary people today trying to influence those in power. A minimum degree of consensus and organisation is necessary if anything is to be achieved, but consensus and organisation don’t just appear magically: they have to be developed and practised. In the past, opposition political parties and trades unions often provided the basis of this organisation: as far as anyone can see, Mélenchon and other political figures primarily used last week’s protests to further their own interests. For all that the Internet was supposed to bring people together (and the Gilets jaunes which we’ll get to in moment could not have happened without it) the Internet doesn’t promote consensus or organisation automatically: indeed, there’s some evidence that it’s a divisive force in such cases.

It’s worth recalling how this kind of thing would once have been organised, say in the 80s or 90s. Protests in those days were articulated around two main pillars: organisations and community. Last week’s protests would have been organised by the trades unions and the Socialist or Communist parties (OK, often in competition with each other) and would have been professionally organised, with synchronised demonstrations, massive rallies addressed by political leaders, banners, flags, hand-outs and articulated demands with lots of media coverage. It might not have achieved an enormous amount in the end, and there would certainly have been a performative element, but it would not have been damp squib like last week’s episode.


This doesn’t bode well given the rapidly building technological advantage ICE has over the American citizenry, via 404 Media:

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has bought access to a surveillance tool that is updated every day with billions of pieces of location data from hundreds of millions of mobile phones, according to ICE documents reviewed by 404 Media.

The documents explicitly show that ICE is choosing this product over others offered by the contractor’s competitors because it gives ICE essentially an “all-in-one” tool for searching both masses of location data and information taken from social media. The documents also show that ICE is planning to once again use location data remotely harvested from peoples’ smartphones after previously saying it had stopped the practice.

The new documents provide much more detail about the sort of location data ICE will now have access to, and why ICE chose to buy access to this vast dataset from Penlink specifically.
“Without an all-in-one tool that provides comprehensive web investigations capabilities and automated analysis of location-based data within specified geographic areas, intelligence teams face significant operational challenges,” the document reads. The agency said that the issue with other companies was that they required analysts to “manually collect and correlate data from fragmented sources,” which increased the chance of missing “connections between online behaviors and physical movements.”


I’m tempted close with a quote from Yasha Levine, but I’ll make it the penultimate point as it’s a bummer:

We are all too far removed from issues that matter most to us and have no power over the forces that govern our lives. And so everyone’s political energies are directed into the Spectacle — to bear witness, to rage, to comment, to learn, to obsessively read, to mock, to argue with people on line. In fact you could say the lack of political power is inversely proportional to the amount of time we spend in the Spectacle. The Spectacle gives us the illusion of power…of doing something…of projecting our will and being into the world.

On a slightly more hopeful note, I’ll quote Ian Welsh from 2019 who presciently predicted the impact of drones on modern war (as confirmed confirmed just this week by Haig Hovaness for Naked Capitalism) and argued they were a weapon for the weak:

Governments may force drone registration and so on, but they are an easy, cheap tech to make with off-the-shelf parts. Currently, they can’t be stopped easily by conventional militaries, and it will be impossible to harden all targets against them in the perceivable future. They will make both terror attacks and assassinations quite simple.

I always thought the US was foolish for developing this technology. They made it happen much faster than it would have otherwise, and while initially it was (and still is) useful to them, in the end it will be a technology that terrorizes them and other powerful governments.


That last is just by way of pointing out that it’s never been 2025 before, the United States has never been what it is before, and there is absolutely no way to predict the outcome of a full-on civil conflagration in America except that it will be dreadful and we’ll all wish it never happened.

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2025/10 ... l-war.html

Tom Neuburger: Is the Trump Administration Out to Trigger Civil War Soon?
Posted on October 8, 2025 by Yves Smith

Yves here. I do not want to sound uncharacteristically Pollyannaish. The Trump Administration is full of ideologues who are very much out of touch with what is happening in America, particularly among the many communities that voted for Trump and now feel betrayed, such as farmers, small businessmen now whacked by tariffs and supply chain problems, vets worried about whether their ability to get care (I know one personally who is freaked out about possible tariff impacts on the supply of drugs essential to him). Sy Hersh has just reported that Trump’s cognitive decline has reached the level where he can no longer read the room, and that may apply to his team generally. The damage to the economy from tariffs (as in inflationary effects) is only starting to take hold now. Growth is concentrated in AI and is flagging in the rest of the economy. Most important, Trump’s base is fracturing over his continued support for Israel, the widespread belief that Israel’s fingerprints are on the Charlie Kirk murder, as well as unhappiness over the Epstein cover-up.

Another general issue is that the Trump team is good at breaking things (witness DOGE) but not at actual operations (witness the “obliteration” of Iran’s nuclear program and its denialism about our ability to supply Ukraine). And another key part of the denialism picture is the way the Hegseth/Trump performances in front of the generals and flag officers they summoned to Quantico backfired. John Helmer described how the Russian press saw the exercise as troublingly similar to when Hitler demanded that his military swear a loyalty oath. The many detailed, negative reactions from military-aligned YouTube channels (and not the usual suspects that I follow) suggests that Trump would find it hard to get a sufficient number of service members who would be willing to go into cities and fire on civilians if told to do so.

Another factor that works against Trump now is the lack of trust in orthodox media. Any anomalies give rise to a lack of consensus often derided as conspiracy theory. That could also impede an effort to rally citizens against “the enemy within” as Hegseth tried to do. Look at how anti-immigration policies polled at ~60% before the election. ICE raids and deportations have resulted in the current majority disapproval.

However, this team, if nothing else, is possessed by hubris. So they could well try a much bigger power grab backed by force. Even if it fails, the damage could still be vast in human and institutional terms.

By Tom Neuburger. Originally published at God’s Spies

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I want to consider this quote from The Onion’s Ben Collins:

Pretty clear Stephen Miller, [Kristi] Noem, [Pete] Hegseth and Trump are trying to provoke a Civil War at this point. What’s interesting is they want to do it now, because even though they’re unpopular, they seem to believe this is the most popular they’ll be ever again.

Is it true? It’s certain that Miller, at least, wants a war. Unless Carl Biejer is right, Miller’s language shows that. For example (emphasis mine):

[This is] Legal insurrection. The President is the commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces, not an Oregon judge. Portland and Oregon law enforcement, at the direction of local leaders, have refused to aid ICE officers facing relentless terrorist assault and threats to life. (There are more local law enforcement officers in Oregon than there are guns and badges in the FBI nationwide). This is an organized terrorist attack on the federal government and its officers, and the deployment of troops is an absolute necessity to defend our personnel, our laws, our government, public order and the Republic itself.

“Legal insurrection … an organized terrorist attack on the federal government”. There are laws against that. Another example, Miller to Hannity:

The Democrat party … is an entity devoted exclusively to the defense of hardened criminals, gangbangers, and illegal alien killers and terrorists. The Democrat party is not a political party. It is a domestic, extremist organization.

Noem and Hegseth agree (see here and here) and seem to be willing, as commanders of government forces, to fight by his side. Trump also agrees:

[T]hey’re throwing bricks at full force into the window and into the car. It looks like it’s a war zone. And I said, never let that happen again. From now on if that ever happens, and I say it here, you get out of that car and you can do whatever the hell you want to do …

Last month, I signed an executive order to provide training for a quick reaction force that can help quell civil disturbances. This is going to be a big thing for the people in this room [the Pentagon’s generals] because it’s the enemy from within and we have to handle it before it gets out of control.


Trump says he wants to use U.S. cities as “training grounds for our military National Guard.” The context, superficially, is the “immigration invasion,” but ending the imagined “far left,” the permanent enemy and proxy for all opposition, is really the goal.

So the war seems to be starting. We have rhetoric, boots on the ground, and like our pre-War South (or the Israeli government), there seems no provocation they won’t escalate from. Lincoln said of the South, their purpose is “rule or ruin.” Is that true today of Miller and people like him? Would Trump go along? Perhaps; he has so far.

Why Do It Now?

Let’s go back to Ben Collins above (emphasis mine): “they want to do it now, because even though they’re unpopular, they seem to believe this is the most popular they’ll be ever again”.

I think that’s wrong. A more correct statement would be “because this is the most power they’ve ever had before.”

The American Hard Right has never, ever been stronger. The feast is before them, all laid. They have the presidency. They have Trump, a master intimidator, and so they have Congress (look up “men fit to be slaves”). They have Roberts and most of his Court. They have power of the purse at last, and crime without price. They act like kings. They have a timid pretend opposition, so tied to their money and privilege they’re afraid to offend (by which I mean piss off their donors).

And the people, the last obstacle? They’re outraged, true, but they don’t rush to the streets in a way that disrupts the state. Shades of our non-reaction to Bush v. Gore — if we let it occur, we own it.

Revolt in Lebanon

Consider Lebanon. In 2019 the people rose up against new taxes, but the revolt morphed quickly to protest against everything — corruption, greed, self-dealing immunity, a sealed-off ruling class — the whole ugly pie. Their rally cry captured that. كلن يعني كلن — “all means all.” Every one of them goes.

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Protesters outside of Riad Al Solh Square in Beirut on 19 October 2019 (Wikipedia)

The revolution partly succeeded. It certainly put elites on their heels (“all means all”) and caused many good changes. (Revolutions can’t fully succeed. Failure is built in, thanks to the nature of the state. The only real revolt is statelessness, but that’s a topic for later.)

Revolt in the U.S.

In contrast, the U.S. is different. People see masked police, thugs on the streets, and what? Strong letters, silence or protests, and then life goes on. (“The game just started. Come watch.”) Words and no deeds that matter, a repeat of the 2000 theft — sadly compliant, or worse, just apathetic.

This is not to excoriate. It’s to describe. I’m pointing out Trump’s position — he has all the power. No one stands up with force that prevents; the battlefield’s his. In the minds of the Millers of the world — and there are many — the time to strike may be now, when their side is most strong.

Do or Do Not?

This could fizzle, of course. The courts might stop the incursions; the mayors could win; the war against protest may not metastasize past Israel and immigrants. Trump could back down. If he does, that’s a victory of sorts, though we’ll never really go back. Like after 9/11, the nation’s been changed.

But what if the forces of right-wing revolt want more? What if they want it all, now that “all” seems available, and now that the Palantir-9/11 security state seems built just for this? After all, Palantir’s Thiel and others like him are clearly no fans of democracy, not by a lot. The state won’t stand with rebellion against the state.

So how would people like Miller win final victory? They have their own army — ICE — deployed in the cities. So far the targets — those they attack and arrest — are mostly immigrant-appearing, plus random objectors. The war needs to be spread.

Enter “antifa” and NSPM-7, Trump’s security declaration that outlaws (he says) “anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, and anti-Christianity; support for the overthrow of the United States Government; extremism on migration, race, and gender; and hostility towards those who hold traditional American views on family, religion, and morality.” That’s a hell of an enemies list; it’s most non-voters, Democrats, and many of his own.

What’s needed next? A spark. Will it come because they attack, or because they’re attacked? Or will something “unusual” happen? Whichever, they need escalation. Not now perhaps, but not too long from now. The time for Bush-Cheney, if they wanted, to declare martial law was early, when passions were high and no one was firmly grounded. They went to Iraq instead.

We’re not firmly grounded now and there’s no next Iraq. That war is here, not abroad. Will they launch it? That’s up to them.

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A fire in Germany

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Re: Donald Trump, Avatar of his Class, Capitalism & the Decline and Fall of Bourgeois Democracy

Post by blindpig » Fri Oct 10, 2025 3:31 pm

Nobel committee decides on peace prize winner, experts agree 'not Trump'

The US president has contributed billions of dollars to Israel’s genocide in Gaza, and directly killed hundreds of civilians in a brutal war on Yemen earlier this year

News Desk

OCT 9, 2025

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A protester holds a sign depicting Trump on a fake Nobel medal, outside the US consulate in Tel Aviv. (Photo credit: Reuters)

The Norwegian Nobel Committee has announced that it has already finalized a choice for the recipient of its renowned peace prize, which experts say is unlikely to be US President Donald Trump.

“The last meeting of the Nobel Committee took place on Monday,” a spokesman, Erik Aasheim, told AFP.

“The final touches were made on Monday, but we never disclose when the Nobel Committee makes its decision.” There will be a laureate this year, he confirmed, responding to speculation that the prize may not be awarded due to tense geopolitical crises.

The committee has not scheduled any more meetings before 10 October, when the name will be announced at 12:00 pm.

Trump has repeatedly hailed himself as the rightful recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize. The US president recently said it would be an “insult” if he is not selected. He has reportedly even called Norwegian officials to discuss the prize.

However, historian and Nobel Prize specialist Asle Sveen said the newly announced ceasefire deal in Gaza “has absolutely no impact” on the choice, particularly because “the Nobel Committee has already made its decision.”

“Trump will not win the prize this year. I’m 100 percent certain,” he added.

Sveen also pointed to the “free rein” Trump has given Israel to bombard Gaza, as well as the massive amounts of military support.

Other experts, including the director of the Peace Research Institute Oslo, Nina Graeger, have also expressed doubt that Trump could win the prize.

“He has withdrawn the US from the World Health Organization [WHO] and from the Paris Accord on climate, he has initiated a trade war on old friends and allies. That is not exactly what we think about when we think about a peaceful president or someone who really is interested in promoting peace,” Graeger told Reuters last month.

Trump came into office this year framing himself as the ‘peace president’ and ender of wars.

Despite this, he launched a brutal war on Yemen in March that killed hundreds of civilians. Throughout the year, he provided Israel with billions in military aid as it continued its genocide of Palestinians in Gaza.

He also ordered a massive US bunker-buster attack on Iranian nuclear facilities in June, in support of Israel’s illegal war on Iran. During his first term years ago, Trump illegally assassinated Iranian Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani, risking a widespread regional escalation.

The US president has praised himself for mediating an end to the India–Pakistan conflict and facilitating talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan. He has also long vowed that he would be the one to end the war in Gaza.

He has also vowed to end the Russia–Ukraine war, despite recently escalating the situation by unveiling weapons deliveries to Kiev and imposing harsh tariffs on Moscow’s energy partners.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky signaled on 9 October that Ukraine will nominate Trump for the prize if he sends Kiev US Tomahawk missiles.

“During our most recent meeting, I didn’t hear a ‘no.’ What I did hear was that work will continue at the technical level and that this possibility will be considered,” Zelensky said, adding that the missiles would “sober” Russia up and bring them back to negotiations.

“The plan for ending the war won’t be easy, but it is certainly the way forward. And if Trump gives the world – above all, the Ukrainian people – the chance for such a ceasefire, then yes, he should be nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize,” he added. “We will nominate him on behalf of Ukraine.”

Trump said on Monday he had “sort of” made a decision on whether to send the missiles or not.

https://thecradle.co/articles/nobel-com ... -not-trump

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Ten Reasons Why Trump Should Never Be Awarded the Nobel Peace Prize
Posted on October 10, 2025 by Yves Smith

Yves here. As many know or soon will know, the winner of the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize will be announced on Friday. Trump’s embarrassing personal lobbying for it alone should be disqualifying. The article below lists some concrete grounds as to why the Nobel committee should reject Trump’s entreaties. It is disappointing that the article does not address how Trump’s particularly claims regarding achieving particular peace settlement are false or at best, grossly exaggerated. For instance, Trump did not negotiate the de-escalation between Pakistan and India over their recent attacks on each other; Modi was allegedly infuriated by Trump trying to take credit. Similarly, as any reader of the press in Suotheast Asia will know, peace has not been achieved between Thailand and Cambodia. Skirmishes continue, the underlying dispute is unresolved, and the US is not in the picture.

And let’s not get started on Trump actively supporting Israel’s genocide in Gaza. It is truly sick that it was Netanyahu who nominated Trump for the Peace Prize. The fact that Trump could not find a more legitimate advocate speaks volumes.

So if Trump manages to win, the bestowing of the award would not be a testament to his peacemaking but to his power, specifically EU members pressuring the committee to give Trump the prize so as to curry favor because Putin. And as many, including members of the commentariat, have observed, if Trump wins, it will complete the discrediting of the peace prize that started when Obama was the pick.

My vote goes to the members of the Sumud flotilla.

We’ll provide some updates after the announcement.

Update: 8:30AM EDT. MSM schadenfreude:

Trump loses Nobel Peace Prize he shamelessly campaigned for https://t.co/b4kJB9qb1n

— TIME (@TIME) October 10, 2025


And substantive takes:

Why give the Nobel Peace Prize to an opposition leader who applauds US pressure against her country when the US Navy is preparing for an attack on Venezuela?
– Is the logic that democracy delivers peace, and the US military delivers democracy through war?

— Glenn Diesen (@Glenn_Diesen) October 10, 2025


***

What has Maria Corina Machado done to deserve the Nobel Peace Prize?

She’s accepted US taxpayer money to fund anti-gov’t NGOs, plotted coups, and agitated for direct military intervention in Venezuela to achieve regime change.

Does the Nobel Committee have any legitimacy?
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— Anya Parampil (@anyaparampil) October 10, 2025


Venezuela’s🇻🇪 election loser Maria Corina Machado has won the Nobel Peace Prize:

‘If we win, we will move the Venezuelan embassy to Jerusalem to support Israel.’

Like many other US-backed Latin American politicians, her policies are copy & paste support for Israel, support for… pic.twitter.com/0UXBVIhIhe

— Afshin Rattansi (@afshinrattansi) October 10, 2025


By Clarence Lusane. Originally published at TomDispatch

Who doesn’t know that President Donald Trump desperately wants a Nobel Peace Prize and said bitterly, “They will never give me a Nobel Peace Prize. It’s too bad. I deserve it, but they will never give it to me”?

And for once, he’s right. He won’t get one, but wrong, of course, that he deserves it. Actually, there are way more than 10 reasons why he doesn’t deserve such a prize, but as 10 is such a nice round number, let me use it.

As a political scientist who focuses on human rights, global racial justice, and social movements, I’ve given considerable thought to and conducted research on the Nobel Peace Prize. I once taught a course on the history and politics of that prize while a faculty member at American University’s School of International Service. Last year, I even spent time in Oslo at both the Nobel Peace Center museum and the Norwegian Nobel Institute, which houses many of the Nobel Peace Prize Committee’s documents, including, for example, original nomination letters that can be viewed and studied.

I was there doing research on the 1964 prize awarded to Martin Luther King Jr., and I read several of the original letters sent to the Committee nominating him. His main nomination came from the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), which sent a letter dated January 31, 1963, that arrived after the January deadline for that year. His nomination was, however, carried over to 1964 and then he won.

As it turns out, I fall into one of the categories of those who can officially make such a nomination. They include members of “parliamentary assemblies” (or the U.S. Congress), previous Nobel Peace Prize Laureates like 17-year-old Malala Yousafzai or former Vice President Al Gore, directors of peace research institutes and foreign policy institutes, members of international courts, members of the Norwegian Nobel Peace Prize Committee, and (relevant to me) university professors.

Although the Committee has never explicitly stated that such a thing is possible, I’m going to assume that I can also make an “un-nomination.” In fact, believe it or not, while there were many letters of support for Dr. King’s nomination, there were also letters asking the Committee to deny him the prize, even if most of them came from individuals ineligible to make (or unmake) a nomination.

And let me just say: I can think of no one more deserving of being un-nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize than President Donald Trump. His record of authoritarian and antidemocratic rule grows more dangerous and harmful by the day, not just for the United States but for the entire global community. And yet he has indeed been nominated by Republican sycophants in Congress who seek his favor, and global strongmen, including Gabon’s President Brice Oligui Nguema, who came to power thanks to a military coup, and Azerbaijan’s Ilham Aliyev, who has been that country’s president for 22 years. They all understand that such recommendations appeal to his need for adulation and blunt any criticisms he may have of their own behavior.

The Nobel Committee does not, in fact, release information about each year’s determination, including all the individuals or groups nominated, until 50 years later, so the only way Trump and the world would know that Israeli President Benjamin Netanyahu, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet, and others have indeed nominated him is if they publicly stated it or told him so.

Autocracy, Racism, and Lawlessness Are Not Qualifications

The award normally focuses on a nominee’s work in the previous year, which means Trump’s “peace” efforts during his first term and his time out of office won’t be considered for next year’s award. So, let’s examine his first eight months in office in 2025 and ask a basic question: What has Trump done so far this year to not deserve the award?

First, within hours of being back in office, the “peace” president pardoned and commuted the prison sentences of 1,500 insurrectionists who had rioted on his behalf on January 6, 2021. (Actually, those are 1,500 reasons for no Nobel Peace Prize right there!) Hundreds of those individuals violently attacked police officers with the goal of stopping the peaceful transfer of power to the legitimately elected Joe Biden. Rather than condemn their actions, Trump rewarded their (and his) lawlessness.

Second, in his immoral and racialized campaign against undocumented immigrants who, he claims, are “poisoning the blood of the country,” his administration has unlawfully kidnapped individuals off American streets and renditioned them to horrific gulags in El Salvador and elsewhere. Some had committed no crimes and were legally in the United States or even U.S. citizens.

Third, he shut down the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). That agency, founded in 1961, had spent decades providing humanitarian assistance to millions of people around the world. As Oxfam noted, with the elimination of USAID, “At least 23 million children stand to lose access to education, and as many as 95 million people would lose access to basic healthcare, potentially leading to more than 3 million preventable deaths per year.”

Fourth, he has deployed staff from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), as well as the National Guard and other troops in Los Angeles, Washington, D. C., Chicago, and soon, it seems, to Memphis, Tennessee, and Portland, Oregon (supposedly to protect Immigration and Customs Enforcement facilities there “under siege from attack by Antifa, and other domestic terrorists”). In Los Angeles, he claimed that the city was also “under siege” by people protesting his immigration raids. In fact, it was the inhumane and violent actions of ICE under Trump’s orders that sparked resistance in Los Angeles. In Washington, he falsely and repeatedly stated that he was sending in troops to control widespread crime. That canard was cover for him to spread his anti-immigrant campaign to another “sanctuary city,” and to target the most vulnerable people there like the unhoused and scooter delivery riders. (A Washington judge did at least recently block him from speedy deportations of undocumented immigrants.)

Fifth, signaling his desire for a new imperialist era, he threatened to seize Canada, Greenland, and the Panama Canal. CNN identified at least nine lies of his as to why Canada should become this country’s 51st state, including that its citizens like the idea (they don’t); that it doesn’t allow U.S. banks to operate there (it does); and that it doesn’t “take” U.S. agricultural products (it’s second only to Mexico in purchasing such products). Trump not only declared that he wanted Greenland for “security” purposes but didn’t rule out using military force to get it. Mind you, Greenland is a self-governing territory of Denmark whose people and government have no interest whatsoever in becoming part of the U.S. Though built by the United States, the Panama Canal was ceded to Panama in a 1977 treaty signed by President Jimmy Carter and ratified by the Senate. Trump claims that the United States is not getting fair market treatment for its use. However, as one expert on the canal noted, Trump is insisting on preferential treatment and promising to take it back if he doesn’t get his way.

Sixth, in a brazen abuse of power, he demanded that Brazil stop the prosecution of his ally there, former President Jair Bolsonaro. Like Trump in 2021, Bolsonaro and his followers were unsuccessful in their violent attempt to stop a transition of power to then-elected President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva after Bolsonaro legitimately lost the 2022 election. Trump has called the trial a “witch hunt” and said he would impose a 50% tariff on Brazilian imports unless it was stopped and Bolsonaro freed.

Seventh, in another of his unconstitutional executive orders, he threatened two U.S. professors with legal penalties for working with or writing in support of the International Criminal Court (ICC). The ICC (of which the United States is not a member) prosecutes war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide, all of which have no statutes of limitation. Trump was rebuffed by two federal judges who concluded that he was violating the First Amendment right to free speech by stating that he would “impose tangible and significant consequences” on anyone supporting the ICC. It has evidently particularly upset him that the ICC has issued an arrest warrant for his partner in crime in the war on Gaza, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. About a dozen countries have stated that they would honor the warrant.

Eighth, Trump’s June bombing of three nuclear sites in Iran took place under distinctly dubious legal authority. That both lawmakers and scholars can’t even agree on whether the president flaunted the law or not suggests the carelessness of his actions when it came to legal procedures involving war. And despite Trump’s boast that he “completely and fully obliterated” Iran’s nuclear program, reports from his own intelligence agencies suggest that the program was set back only a few months. Apparently embarrassed by the truth, War Department Secretary Pete Hegseth fired Lieutenant General Jeffrey Kruse, who headed the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency that reported on the botched airstrikes.

Ninth, he withdrew the United States from critical international bodies, including the World Health Organization and UNESCO, as well as less well-known organizations like the Council of Europe’s European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) that works with 46 European governments and civil society organizations across the region to address issues of discrimination. I admit that the last one is a bit personal for me. From 2022 to 2025, I was the U.S.-appointed “independent expert” to that very commission and attended its meetings in Strasbourg, France. My appointment was approved by then-Secretary of State Antony Blinken and the Council of Europe. In January, I was informed that Trump was withdrawing the U.S. from its “observer” status on the commission because ECRI was not aligned with the values of the incoming administration. Sadly, that part was all too true.

Tenth, he is complicit in the genocide and famine taking place in Gaza. While his claims of ending seven wars are dubious at best, in the one conflict where he could most decisively have intervened to bring closure to it, he’s done anything but. His unholy alliance with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu has meant a lot of performative concern about starvation and the tens of thousands of deaths in Gaza along with an unending supply of weapons for Israel. His insensitivity to the suffering of the people in Gaza has only been compounded by his disturbing desire to cleanse the area of Palestinians and develop what he’s called a “Riviera of the Middle East” there.

And mind you, I won’t even count President Trump’s “pathetic” groveling campaign for the Nobel Peace Prize as one of the reasons he shouldn’t get it. That seems almost self-evident. It reminds me of comedian Steven Wright’s joke: “I’d kill for a Nobel Peace Prize.” It’s impossible to imagine Nelson Mandela, Jimmy Carter, or Martin Luther King Jr. calling officials in Norway and begging for the prize as Trump recently did; or, for that matter, using his platform at the United Nations to falsely claim that “everyone says I should get the Nobel Peace Prize.” And mind you, that ludicrous claim came only weeks after his unlawful killing of multiple individuals with military strikes in the international waters of the Caribbean without due process or any legal recourse, not to speak of changing the name of the Department of Defense to the Department of War. “Everyone,” of course, meant almost nobody. A Washington Post-Ipsos poll found that 76% of Americans don’t believe that he deserves the award, including 49% of Republicans.

It’s inexplicable to me why former Secretary of State Hilary Clinton would cavalierly state that she would nominate Trump, the twice-impeached, 34-count convicted felon and adjudicated sexual abuser, for the prize if he brought a ceasefire to the war in Ukraine. By now, it should be crystal clear that Trump has no interest in Ukraine’s sovereignty, which he’s denigrated repeatedly, while proving all too willing to grant concessions to the universally recognized aggressor in that conflict, Russian President Vladimir Putin. But even if he did help broker a fair peace agreement, which the entire world (except Putin) wants as soon as possible, that shouldn’t excuse his broader autocratic behavior and agenda.

Note to Trump: The Award Must Be Earned

His authoritarian push to reshape the United States and demean all its governing, social, financial, and cultural institutions is itself a threat to peace. He continues to attack a free press, bully universities, ignore judicial orders, abuse the very principle of a separation of powers, and openly seeks to rig elections in his favor. Forget for the moment the fascism, authoritarianism, patrimonialism, retribution, bigotry, corruption, greed, mendacity, and incompetence — his one character trait that should be considered most disqualifying is his cruelty. His lust for revenge and power has brought unspeakable malice and pain to undocumented immigrants, LGBTQ families, federal workers, foreign students, and any number of individuals whom he feels have challenged him.

Trump is possibly the most unethical, petty, and vengeful president in American history. Compassion and empathy simply play no role in his character or makeup. After all, at the memorial for the assassinated Charlie Kirk, moments after his widow Erika Kirk called for forgiveness and stated that “the answer to hate is not hate,” Trump said, “I hate my opponent, and I don’t want the best for them.”

The Nobel Peace Prize is awarded to “the person who has done the most or best to advance fellowship among nations, the abolition or reduction of standing armies, and the establishment and promotion of peace congresses.” He meets none of those criteria.

Let Trump continue to whine and play the victim as he manifests his doctrine of intimidation, bribes, and palling around with authoritarians. In the not-too-distant future, history will extensively document and abhor the outrages and inhumanity of the Trump era, recording it with the same disdain and dismay that now is used for the eras of slavery and segregation, or the McCarthy years. Let’s hope that the Nobel Peace Prize never becomes another institution that Trump disgraces and diminishes.

Copyright 2025 Clarence Lusane

(It is really quite impossible to disgrace the Nobel, it has lost it]s 'grace' long ago, if ever it had some. Nonetheless, a poke in the eye for Trump is always a good thing.)

******

Nobel Committee, Fearing Trump’s Wrath, Hands Peace Price To Regime Change Puppet

The President of the Unites States Donald Trump had demanded to be given the Nobel Peace Price. But following that demand would have been disastrous for the already blemished prestige of the Nobel. The government of Norway, which strongly influences the decisions of the Nobel Peace Price committee, was in a pickle:

With hours to go until the announcement of this year’s Nobel peace prize, Norwegian politicians were steeling themselves for potential repercussions to US-Norway relations if it is not awarded to Donald Trump.

Mr Trump has long been outspoken about his belief that he should be awarded the peace prize, an honour previously bestowed on one of his presidential predecessors, Barack Obama, in 2009 for his “extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples”.

In July, Mr Trump reportedly called Jens Stoltenberg, Norway’s finance minister and the former Nato secretary general, to ask about the Nobel prize.

The newspaper columnist and analyst Harald Stanghelle speculated that retribution from Mr Trump – if it were to come – could take the form of tariffs, demands for higher Nato contributions or even declaring Norway an enemy.


After some talks behind the scenes it was decided to give the price to a different person than Trump but with the very obvious intent to also satisfy Trump by furthering a major foreign policy aim of his:

The Nobel Peace Prize was awarded Friday to Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado who lives in hiding after attempting to run against President Nicolás Maduro.

Machado, 58, was recognized for keeping “the flame of democracy burning amidst a growing darkness” and “ever-expanding authoritarianism in Venezuela.”

She leads the Vente Venezuela opposition party, but was blocked from running as the nation’s president and expelled from office in 2014. She now lives in hiding and faces “serious threats against her life,” the Norwegian Nobel Committee said.


The Trump administration has long aimed at ousting Nicolas Maduro, the socialist leader of Venezuela. It has positioned its military assets around the country and is planing from regime change under false pretense:

Shortly after taking office, Trump declared Tren de Aragua to be a foreign terrorist organization that had “flooded the United States with deadly drugs, violent criminals, and vicious gangs.” In July, the president ordered the Pentagon to target certain Latin American drug cartels. By August, there were eight naval vessels—including destroyers, a cruiser, and a littoral-combat ship—operating in the Caribbean Sea. By September, the first of four boats had been struck, and 21 alleged drug traffickers have now been killed. Last week, the administration sent a confidential notice to Congress signaling its intent to carry out more strikes. The campaign could extend inside Venezuelan territorial waters or include drone strikes inside its land borders, defense officials told us.

But it is far from clear that the ties between Maduro’s government and Tren de Aragua are as extensive as the Trump administration has suggested, or that they exist at all. Ronna Risquez, author of the book El Tren De Aragua, told us there was “no evidence” that Maduro leads gang or drug-smuggling operations; an internal memo from the U.S. National Intelligence Council arrived at a similar conclusion. It’s also not clear that Venezuelan drug operations, centralized or otherwise, are significant enough to merit the country being singled out as a threat to American lives. Venezuela is not a major cocaine or fentanyl producer. And even though most of the world’s cocaine grows in neighboring Colombia, Venezuela is also not a major transit hub.


Trump’s anti-‘narco terrorist’ campaign is clearly aimed at regime change. This despite extensive offers by the Venezuelan government to allow the U.S. to profit from Venezuelan riches (archived):

Venezuelan officials, hoping to end their country’s clash with the United States, offered the Trump administration a dominant stake in Venezuela’s oil and other mineral wealth in discussions that lasted for months, according to multiple people close to the talks.

The far-reaching offer remained on the table as the Trump administration called the government of President Nicolás Maduro of Venezuela a “narco-terror cartel,” amassed warships in the Caribbean and began blowing up boats that American officials say were carrying drugs from Venezuela.

Under a deal discussed between a senior U.S. official and Mr. Maduro’s top aides, the Venezuelan strongman offered to open up all existing and future oil and gold projects to American companies, give preferential contracts to American businesses, reverse the flow of Venezuelan oil exports from China to the United States, and slash his country’s energy and mining contracts with Chinese, Iranian and Russian firms.


That offer wasn’t enough for a greedy Trump:

The Trump administration ended up rebuffing Mr. Maduro’s economic concessions and cut off diplomacy with Venezuela last week. The move effectively killed the deal, at least for now, the people close to the discussion said.

The Trump administration did away with generous offer because it is confident that its plans for regime change will achieve a total domination over Venezuela.

The new Nobel Peace Price laureate, María Corina Machado, plays a big role those plans.

Who is that lady you might ask. In July 2024 the NY Times published a friendly portrait of her (archived):

Ms. Machado, a conservative former member of the national assembly once rejected by her own colleagues, has not only corralled Venezuela’s fractious opposition behind her, but has also captivated a broad swath of the electorate with a promise for sweeping government change.

If the opposition wins, Mr. González, 74, will be president. But from Washington to Caracas, everyone understands that Ms. Machado is the driving force behind the movement.

She became a political activist in 2002, helping to found a voter rights group, Súmate, that eventually led a failed effort to recall Mr. Chávez. She was a darling of Washington — the U.S. government provided financial aid to Súmate — and became one of Mr. Chávez’s most detested adversaries.

But it wasn’t just the government that loathed her. Among colleagues in the opposition, she was often viewed as too conservative, too confrontational and too “sifrina” — Venezuelan for “snobbishly high class” — to become the movement’s leader.

She has said that the politician she most admires is Margaret Thatcher, the conservative icon known for her stubbornness and fealty to the free market. And Ms. Machado has long supported privatizing PDVSA, the state oil company, a move other opposition leaders say would put Venezuela’s most valuable resource in the hands of a few.


Machado, while on the U.S. payroll, was involved in a 2002 military coup attempt in Caracas:

Questions still surround Ms. Machado’s actions in 2002, when dissident military officers and opposition figures led a short-lived coup meant to oust Mr. Chávez. Ms. Machado was at the presidential palace during the installation of a new president, Pedro Carmona.

In the 2005 interview with The Times, Ms. Machado insisted that she and her mother were in the palace that day only to visit Mr. Carmona’s wife, a family friend — not to support the coup.

More recently, in a 2019 interview with the BBC, Ms. Machado called on “Western democracies” to understand that Mr. Maduro would only leave power “in the face of a credible, imminent and severe threat of the use of force.”


Machado even asked the Zionist war criminal Benjamin Netanyahoo for military support in a coup (edited machine translation) :

María Corina Machado asked the prime minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, a military intervention in Venezuela, through a document posted on its social network X in 2018.

Machado described the military intervention of “power and influence” against the Venezuelan government.

“Today sending a letter to Mauricio Macri, President of Argentina, and to Netanyahu, Prime Minister of Israel, to ask them to apply their strength and influence to advance the dismantling of the criminal regime in Venezuela, intimately linked to drug trafficking and terrorism,” she wrote.

In addition, the document points out that Machado was “convinced that the international community, according to the doctrine of the responsibility to protect, is called to give Venezuelans the support needed to generate the change,” a change of government.


Machado is still in cahoots with (and likely still payed by) the U.S. to further regime change in Venezuela (archived):

[U.S. Secretary of State] Rubio met with five opposition figures in May who secretly fled to the United States in what he called a “precise operation.” He has praised the opposition leader, María Corina Machado, whom he called by her nickname, the “Venezuelan Iron Lady,” in a tribute this year.

Pedro Urruchurtu, an adviser to Ms. Machado, said in an interview that the opposition had developed a plan for the first 100 hours after Mr. Maduro’s ouster that would involve a transfer of power to Edmundo González, who ran for president against Mr. Maduro last year.

“What we’re talking about is an operation to dismantle a criminal structure, and that includes a series of actions and tools,” Mr. Urruchurtu said, adding: “It has to be done with the use of force, because otherwise it wouldn’t be possible to defeat a regime like the one we’re facing.”

The opposition’s plans include persuading other governments to take diplomatic, financial, intelligence and law enforcement actions, he said.


To recap – the Nobel Peace Prize committee is giving the price to an opposition politician in South America who is on the payroll of the U.S. government and has been involved in previous military coups attempts in her country. Her advisor is arguing for the use force to overthrow the government. Ms. Machado’s plan is to the sell out whatever Venezuelans have to the foreign empire that pays her.

The Nobel Committee and Norway may, for now, have saved themselves from Trump’s wrath but the decision to award the price to Ms. Machado is another huge blemish to its record.

Posted by b on October 10, 2025 at 11:30 UTC | Permalink

https://www.moonofalabama.org/2025/10/f ... uppet.html

******

The Militarized Path to the Insurrection Act in the U.S.
October 9, 2025 , 3:25 pm .

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National Guard members patrol near the U.S. Capitol on October 1, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Photo: Al Drago/Getty Images)

On October 8, 2025, US President Donald Trump again left open the option of invoking the century-old Insurrection Act to circumvent court and state obstacles to National Guard troop deployments in US cities dominated by Democratic governments.

Despite strong objections from local and state officials, the president and his advisers have emphasized or reiterated the "need" to invoke the law . They have repeatedly used the term "insurrection" to describe demonstrations in cities like Portland, where protests against immigration policies have clashed with ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) officers.

This discourse strategy seeks to legitimize an extreme recourse to internal militarization as a response to what is described as institutional chaos.

There is already conflicting case law: a federal judge has temporarily blocked the deployment of National Guard troops to Portland, while another court in Illinois allowed a federal deployment to Chicago to move forward.

According to presidential statements from the Oval Office, he has justified invoking the law by saying it is nothing new: "Well, it's been invoked before," Trump commented, arguing that the troops are necessary to protect federal property and personnel, as well as to reinforce a broader campaign against urban crime.

"If the governor can't do the job, we will," he added , in explicit reference to cities like Chicago, which he said had high crime rates .

Insistence on the law
On January 20, 2025, just hours after his inauguration, Trump signed an executive order declaring a national emergency on the southern border of the United States.

In that document, he instructed the Secretaries of Defense and Homeland Security to submit, within 90 days, a report on whether additional measures were needed to achieve "complete operational control" of the border with Mexico, including the possibility of invoking the Insurrection Act of 1807.

This exceptional provision was interpreted as the first step toward legally legitimizing internal militarization under the rhetoric of order and security in a country that declares itself in a state of emergency.

The Insurrection Act constitutes one of the few exceptions to the constitutional principle that prohibits the armed forces from participating in the enforcement of civilian law, a principle established by the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878.

Under ordinary circumstances, the Army and Air Force cannot act as police forces within the national territory. However, the 1807 Act grants the president the authority to deploy regular troops and the federalized National Guard when he determines that "unlawful obstructions, combinations or assemblies, or rebellion against the authority of the United States" make the enforcement of federal law by ordinary judicial means "impracticable."

In other words, the president can temporarily substitute civilian justice for military coercion if he argues that the institutional system cannot contain an internal threat.

Although this prerogative has been exercised around 30 times in the history of the United States, its use has always responded to extraordinary situations and clearly defined contexts: the Civil War in the 19th century, the strikes and labor uprisings of the 1870s and 1890s, the protection of the civil rights of African Americans during Reconstruction and the 1960s, or the suppression of the Los Angeles race riots in 1992, the last time it was invoked.

In none of these cases was it used for immigration or border security purposes, making Trump's proposal a precedent without historical or legal basis.

In fact, at the time, both Pentagon Chief Pete Hegseth and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem advised against invoking the Insurrection Act, concluding that the border situation did not warrant military intervention.

Their assessment was based on official data reflecting a sustained reduction in illegal crossings, attributed more to severe asylum restrictions and pressure on Latin American governments to contain migration flows than to a real increase in threats.

However, Trump has insisted , or rather Stephen Miller has , on presenting migration as an "invasion" that threatens the integrity of the country . This deeply ideological narrative transforms a social and humanitarian phenomenon into a national security conflict.

In this way, migration is treated as a military threat.

In practice, this is a political reinterpretation of the Insurrection Act, replacing the legal concept of "rebellion" or "uprising" with that of "mass migration," distorting the original purpose of the instrument.

Ultimately, what we see is not the prudent application of an exceptional law, but rather its strategic reinvention for political purposes ; that is, it is an attempt to consolidate federal power over Democratic states, reinforce the presidential image of authority, and project a discourse of firmness toward public opinion in the face of a fabricated internal enemy.

Even in presidential action, the White House is redefining the notion of threat and expanding the scope of national defense, extending it from protection against external enemies to the containment of internal phenomena such as migration and drug trafficking. Venezuela enters this equation as a manufactured "enemy."

In short, the "migrant invasion" and the "opioid flow" are two threats that Trump deliberately links in the document , and which he uses to justify the expansion of military power.

The new military installation
This political agenda under the law that he seeks to invoke , which ostensibly seeks to "protect" US territory, actually represents a silent process of redefining the military's role in the internal life of the United States .

In a recent speech to senior Pentagon officials , Trump proposed using American cities as "training grounds" for the armed forces, an idea that alarmed some in the American political class.

Defense experts have warned about the seriousness of this precedent. Randy Manner, a retired general and former deputy chief of the National Guard Bureau, warned that using the Insurrection Act in the manner Trump is contemplating "has no real precedent."

For Manner, this is "an extremely dangerous slope, because it basically says the president can do whatever he wants." In more blunt terms, he described this scenario as "the very definition of dictatorship and fascism."

The militarization of American cities is a gradual and calculated process , with punctual deployments of the National Guard, carefully measured to test the courts' resilience, gauge public reaction, and, of course, confront the Democrats.

The starting point of this process can be traced back to the June 7 memorandum in which the White House authorized National Guard operations in Los Angeles to contain protests against ICE immigration raids.

Despite objections from Governor Gavin Newsom and local leaders, 2,000 troops were initially deployed, later increasing to 4,000 , including 700 Marines.

The protests that led to the operation had been triggered by an ICE raid in the Los Angeles textile district , an area densely populated by Latin American migrants , which ended with multiple arrests and reports of abuse.

Similar demonstrations took place in San Diego, Massachusetts, and other cities across the country. In response, Trump ordered new demonstrations in Washington, DC, Chicago, and Portland, justifying them with the argument that crime and "urban lawlessness" were out of control.

However, local officials denied that narrative. In Chicago and Portland, protests had been largely peaceful and small, with no signs of insurrection or police overreach.

This pattern reveals a carefully planned institutional escalation, as it appears that Washington, D.C., was the initial laboratory; Los Angeles, the social trial run; and Chicago and Portland, the political testing grounds.

Each deployment has further expanded the White House's scope for action and weakened states' ability to resist federal control.

This strategy seeks to reactivate the hardline Republican vote , comprised of nationalist, conservative, and religious sectors , while weakening moderate Democratic factions, forcing them to react on a terrain dominated by the narrative of order, authority, and national defense. All of this in anticipation of the 2026 midterm elections .

Behind the electoral dimension, the context is intertwined with the so-called Project 2025, a roadmap promoted by sectors of the American right that seeks to expand presidential authority and restructure the state apparatus under a centralized control framework.

On the economic front, militarization offers an additional incentive because it revitalizes funding flows to the military-industrial complex and the private security corporations orbiting the Pentagon. Each deployment brings new contracts, supplies, technology, training, and maintenance, which translates the "security crisis" into a profit opportunity.

Federal intervention does not seek to protect citizens, but rather to strengthen executive power and fuel economic interests linked to the military-industrial complex. The Trump administration invokes an "internal enemy" that extends across the hemisphere, also targeting Venezuela.

https://misionverdad.com/globalistan/el ... on-en-eeuu



When presidents assassinate
Andrew P. Napolitano

October 9, 2025 , 3:14 pm .

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U.S. President Donald Trump at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, September 26, 2025. (Photo: Joyce N. Boghosian/White House)

Over the past six weeks, President Donald Trump ordered U.S. troops to attack and destroy four speedboats in the Caribbean Sea, 1,500 miles from the United States. The president revealed that the attacks were carried out without warning, were not intended to stop, but rather to kill everyone on the boats, and were successful in their missions.

Trump has claimed his victims are "narco-terrorists" who were planning to deliver illegal drugs to willing American buyers. He apparently believes that because these people are presumably foreigners, they have no rights he should honor, and he can kill them freely. As far as we know, none of these anonymous, faceless individuals were charged or convicted of any federal crime. We don't know if any of them were Americans. But we do know that all were extrajudicially executed.

Can the president legally do this? In a word: NO. Here's the backstory.

Limit federal powers
The United States Constitution was ratified to establish federal powers and to limit them.

Congress is established to make laws and declare war. The president is established to enforce the laws Congress has made and to be commander in chief of the armed forces.

Restrictions are imposed on both. Congress may only enact legislation in the 16 discrete areas of governance articulated in the Constitution, and it may only legislate subject to all of the natural rights of the people identified and articulated in the Bill of Rights.

The president can only enforce the laws Congress has written; he cannot make his own. And he can employ the armed forces only in defense against an imminent military-style attack or to wage wars Congress has declared.

The Constitution prohibits the president from waging undeclared wars, and federal law prohibits him from using the armed forces for law enforcement purposes.

The Fifth Amendment, along with the 14th, which restricts the states, ensures that no person's life, liberty, or property may be taken away without due process of law. Because the drafters of the amendment used the word "person" instead of "citizen," the courts have consistently ruled that this due process requirement applies to all human beings.

Basically, wherever the government goes, it is subject to constitutional restrictions.

Trial in Court
Traditionally, due process means a trial. In the case of a civilian, it means a jury trial, with the full range of concomitant protections required by the Constitution.

In the case of enemy combatants, it means a fair neutral tribunal.

The court's order came in a strange and terrifying way. In 1942, four Nazi troops arrived by submarine at Amagansett Beach, New York, and exchanged their uniforms for civilian clothes. At almost the same time, four other Nazi troops arrived by submarine at Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, and also changed into civilian clothes. The eight then dedicated themselves to their assigned task of destroying American munitions factories and infrastructure. After one of them went to the FBI, all eight were arrested.

At trial, all eight were convicted of attempted sabotage behind enemy lines, a war crime. The Supreme Court quickly returned to Washington from its summer recess and unanimously upheld the convictions. By the time the court issued its formal opinion, six of the eight had been executed. The two Americans were sentenced to life imprisonment. Their sentences were commuted five years later by President Harry Truman.

The lynchpin of all this was President Franklin D. Roosevelt's decision to appoint a lawyer and hold a trial. The Supreme Court made it clear that even unlawful enemy combatants—those not in uniform and not on a recognized battlefield—are entitled to due process; and, were it not for the trial afforded the Nazi saboteurs, it would not have allowed their executions.

This jurisprudence was essentially followed in three Supreme Court cases involving foreign nationals whom the George W. Bush administration had arrested and characterized as enemy combatants detained at the U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

In times of war, U.S. troops may legally kill enemy troops engaged in violence against them. But, pursuant to these Supreme Court cases, the United Nations Charter (a treaty the United States drafted), as well as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (another treaty the United States drafted), if combatants do not engage in violence, they cannot be harmed, only arrested.

All of this means that Congress has effectively declared war on the country or group from which the combatants come. That hasn't happened since December 8, 1941.

Now, back to Trump ordering the military to kill foreigners in the Caribbean.

International law provides for the detention of vessels involved in acts of violence in international waters. It also provides for the detention and search of vessels, with probable cause for search, in U.S. territorial waters.

But no law permits, and prevailing judicial precedent derived from the Constitution and federal statutes absolutely prohibits, summary killings of persons not engaged in acts of violence, on the high seas or elsewhere.

The US attorney general has reluctantly revealed the existence of a legal memo purporting to justify Trump's orders and the military's killings, but insisted the memo is classified. That's a non sequitur .

A legal memorandum can only be based on public laws enacted by Congress and interpreted by the courts. There are no secret laws, and there can be no classified justification for killing the legally innocent.

If the memorandum purports to allow the president to declare nonviolent enemy combatants on a whim and kill them, it defies 80 years of consistent jurisprudence, and its drafters and implementers have engaged in serious crimes.

Where will these extrajudicial killings be moved? To Chicago?

https://misionverdad.com/traducciones/c ... s-asesinan

Google Translator

(Can't believe I'm posting 'Da Judge' but he lays out the law, such as it is...)

*****

Is This a Horst Wessel Moment?

For several days, while Wessel lay critically wounded in a Berlin hospital, Goebbels issued daily health bulletins on his new hero. And since Ali Höhler belonged to a Communist street gang, Goebbels portrayed the gun battle as an infamous act of political terrorism. The Gauleiter wrote an emotional account of his visit to the hospital, and he quoted from the hero’s song: “Comrades shot dead by the Red front and Reaction march in spirit with our ranks!” When Horst Wessel finally died, Goebbels staged a tremendous funeral. “His song made him immortal,” Goebbels cried, and, echoing the line about the marching dead, he called out “Horst Wessel!” And the assembled Storm Troopers shouted: “Present!” Goebbels… said of the dead youth “...Come to me: I will redeem you.” Then everyone sang the “Horst Wessel Song,” which, after Goebbels had produced enough pamphlets and posters, was to become the Nazis’ official anthem. Before the Deluge, Otto Friedrich (1972)

The murder or assassination of Charlie Kirk has become an event threatening to radically reshape the political landscape, with the MAGA right exploiting Kirk’s violent death occurring at an outdoor event at a Utah university.

Immediately after Kirk’s demise a storm of controversy arose over its meaning. For most US citizens, Kirk was not a well known figure. As with other instances of political violence, the fact that attacks are growing in frequency draws more concern, more discussion than an identification with the victim.

But with the elites of the right and their media servants, Kirk was a rising star, a charismatic youth leader poised for future greatness. He was credited with bringing young people into the MAGA movement, though polls still show young people leaning more and more left. With a dysfunctional Democratic Party, his role was to herd dissatisfaction rightward, especially with college students. His death has elevated him into a martyr of the MAGA cause. He has been canonized in ruling MAGA circles.

For their most prominent political foes-- the liberal elites and their covey of pundits-- Kirk was a dangerous character, especially on social and lifestyle conversations that obsess them. They recognize that he was good at selecting lightning rod issues that challenge liberals. He was not such an easy target with centrists as Trump, since Kirk offered a self-confident, reasonable style that separated him from Trump’s bombast and arrogance.

While fear was central to his message, it was buffered by a nostalgia for an imagined earlier time when everyone got along, worshiped the same God, and basked in patriotic light. Kirk sought to hide the racism and sexism that flowed freely beneath the surface with denial and artfulness.

In short, Charlie Kirk was a MAGA con man, in a political universe filled with con artists and wannabee con artists.

In the aftermath, MAGA hucksters have manufactured a remarkable narrative that has elevated Kirk to a national status that he never earned; they have constructed an elaborate network of blame that links everything and every one who stood in opposition to MAGA to Kirk’s murder; and they have frightened easily frightened liberals into condoling Kirk’s death and attesting to his great “human” worth.

But most disgustingly, MAGA shock troops established an atmosphere so thick with fear that virtually ANYONE can be banished from status, employment, or reputation who dares challenge the sainthood of Charlie Kirk.

This demonstrates to all the unbridled power and ruthlessness of the MAGA camp.

But there is another side to this story, a chapter of equal, perhaps, more significance.

That is the role of the institutional enablers. A cornerstone of liberal democratic theory is the structural guide rails of political life supposedly established by the constitution, the body of law, the court system, the security sectors, the regulatory agencies, the educational system, and-- perhaps most importantly-- the media. These rules and institutions are hailed as barriers to abuse, corruption, and anti-democratic acts; they are alleged guarantors of universal and absolute personal rights and protections.

Their citation and their celebration are instilled early and often in the citizenry of Europe and North America. Citizens are told that living under the umbrella of these guarantees is what separates the civilized West, from the unfortunates in the rest of the world.

Curiously, they have always failed when they are most needed; they collapse before the weight of powerful forces-- the forces that they are meant to resist. The failure of the guard rails to protect outspoken or dissident voices from the wrath of university administrators, government bullies, anti-immigration thugs, or media executives at this moment is only the latest example of a long history of failure. The Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798, the systematic abridgement of the thirteenth and fourteenth Constitutional amendments after Reconstruction, the anti-Red repression after World Wars I and II are among a host of anti-democratic turning points that left the US democratic reputation tarnished and left an indelible stain on political life.

Those who speak most fervently about the virtues of our system, those who manage and govern the institutional guide rails are often the first to surrender to the challenges to free speech and open advocacy. The University presidents and administrators who turned campuses into bastions of thought conformity, the government bureaucrats who quietly watched their colleagues cast into unemployment, the union leaders who vigorously “regretted” the stripping of union rights from hundreds of thousands of government employees, and the employers-- from school boards to corporate media executives-- who fired employees who dared to speak against the ludicrous beatification of Charlie Kirk-- fall in line without a fight.

One of the US’s better writers, Dalton Trumbo, writing in 1949, called the early anti-Red hysteria of the time “The Time of the Toad”. Trumbo-- himself a top Hollywood writer who was fired, jailed, and blacklisted for his Communist Party membership-- recalled a story by Emile Zola involving a man “inuring himself against newspaper columns” by devouring a raw toad everyday “so he could face almost any newspaper with a tranquil stomach… and actually relish that which to healthy men not similarly immunized would be a lethal poison.”

Trumbo and Zola were correct to see the news media and the commentariat as administering “a lethal poison”. Their thirst for sensationalism, scandal, and vulgarity played a significant role in pushing Trump onto the political stage. Their uncritical embrace of bipartisan, imperialist foreign policy accounts for widespread national disinterest in the US’s bloody hand. They have shown themselves dutiful puppets of wealth and power. And now the owners, editors, script writers, and faces of the media are enthusiastically bending a knee to MAGA’s assault on the little independence that they have retained.

In early 1930 Germany, the Hitlerites sought to turn the death of a contemptible, minor SA leader into an affront to the entire German nation. Through Goebbels unprincipled, unscrupulous propaganda campaign, through the support of big business, military leaders, opportunist “mainstream” politicians, and a sensation-seeking media, they succeeded.

The only barriers to their further success in 1930 stood a powerful labor movement, a dominant Social Democratic Party, and a growing, popular Communist Party. Nonetheless, in the September 1930 election the Nazi party became the second largest party, gaining 95 seats in the Reichstag.

What barriers do we have?

Greg Godels

zzsblogml@gmail.com

https://zzs-blg.blogspot.com/2025/09/is ... oment.html

******
I've noticed that the npr propagandists continually make reference to Trump's "political enemies". This is incorrect, a solipsist only has personal enemies, everything is 'personal' to such a person.

*****

From Cassad's Telegram account:

Colonelcassad
The White House stated that Trump wasn't particularly eager to receive the Nobel Prize and would continue to resolve military conflicts around the world and conclude "peace deals." This follows a year of statements from various leaders supporting Trump's candidacy. This follows negotiations with Trump. We believe it.😀

Well, it has been established through experience that the Nobel Prize, as before, is in the pocket of the globalists.

***

Colonelcassad
The Nobel Prize, as before, remains a utilitarian tool in the hands of globalists, revealing potential targets for future attacks. This is precisely the time for the aggression being prepared against Venezuela.
It's worth recalling that shortly before the start of the Second World War, the Nobel Prize was awarded to Muratov, editor of the festering dump Novaya Gazeta.

Now, the agenda is an attempt to overthrow the legitimate government of Venezuela, with the concomitant establishment of a puppet government, if this can be accomplished. Guaidó has long since faded from the spotlight, so it's urgent to promote a new figure, who, if necessary, can be declared "President of Venezuela" by a rescript from Washington.

https://t.me/s/boris_rozhin

Google Translator
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

User avatar
blindpig
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Re: Donald Trump, Avatar of his Class, Capitalism & the Decline and Fall of Bourgeois Democracy

Post by blindpig » Sat Oct 11, 2025 3:57 pm

White House blasts Nobel Committee after far-right Venezuelan ally awarded 'peace prize' over Trump

Maria Corina Machado has repeatedly called for US and Israeli military intervention in her country

News Desk

OCT 10, 2025

Image
(Photo credit: Bloomberg/Getty Images)
The White House on 10 October accused the Nobel Committee of choosing “politics over peace” for snubbing US President Donald Trump as the peace prize winner.

“President Trump will continue making peace deals, ending wars, and saving lives. He has the heart of a humanitarian, and there will never be anyone like him who can move mountains with the sheer force of his will,” said White House spokesman Steven Cheung.

“The Nobel Committee proved they place politics over peace,” he added.

President Trump will continue making peace deals, ending wars, and saving lives.

He has the heart of a humanitarian, and there will never be anyone like him who can move mountains with the sheer force of his will.

The Nobel Committee proved they place politics over peace. https://t.co/dwCEWjE0GE

— Steven Cheung (@StevenCheung47) October 10, 2025


The Oslo-based Nobel Committee announced on Friday that far-right Venezuelan political leader Maria Corina Machado – a close ally of Trump – was chosen as this year's peace prize recipient.

Over the past two decades, Machado has been a staunch supporter of Washington’s regime change efforts in Venezuela and has advocated for a military intervention of her country to depose President Nicolas Maduro.

Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado has been awarded the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize. A staunch advocate of free-market economics, privatization of state industries, foreign investment, and closer alignment with the U.S. and Western institutions, she has openly called…
Image
— Drop Site (@DropSiteNews) October 10, 2025


In 2018, she sent a letter asking the Israeli Prime Minister and wanted war criminal Benjamin Netanyahu to intervene in Venezuela to overthrow President Maduro militarily.

In an interview with Israeli media two years later, Machado promised to relocate the Venezuelan embassy in Israel to Jerusalem if she ever gains power.

Maria Corina Machado, the Zionist who Washington tried to install as leader in Venezuela, has been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize today.pic.twitter.com/GXIbKfkEOg

— Kawsachun News (@KawsachunNews) October 10, 2025


Machado has also backed Trump's militarization of Venezuela's coast and the extrajudicial killing of Venezuelan and Colombian citizens by US strikes.

The peace prize winner has historically lobbied for harsh US sanctions against her country and for the privatization of natural resources, including oil and water.

“If this is what counts as ‘peace’ in 2025, then the prize itself has lost every ounce of credibility,” wrote Michelle Ellner, Venezuelan-American member of the Code Pink activist group.

Other winners of the Nobel Peace Prize include former US president Barack Obama, responsible for scores of deadly drone attacks across West Asia and Africa, as well as the arming and funding of Al-Qaeda in Syria.

Israeli politicians responsible for war crimes against Palestinians and Lebanese – including Menachem Begin and Yitzhak Rabin – have also won the prize.

Additionally, Henry Kissinger, former US Secretary of State responsible for the killing of civilians across the globe, received the Nobel Prize in 1973.

After being rejected by the Nobel Committee, Trump was nominated for the Israel Prize for Lifetime Achievement and Special Contribution to Society and the State.

https://thecradle.co/articles/white-hou ... over-trump

“President Trump will continue making peace deals, ending wars, and saving lives. He has the heart of a humanitarian, and there will never be anyone like him who can move mountains with the sheer force of his will,”
JFC that is some of the most abject sycophancy that I've seen in my life. The rest comes from this White House too. If I were that shameless I'd cut my throat.

*****

The US will impose 100% tariffs on Chinese goods.
October 11, 11:11

Image

Getting China to make unilateral concessions failed, and China responded to threats and blackmail with force.
Trump threw another fit over this and promised new tariffs against China.

It has just been revealed that China has taken an extremely aggressive stance on trade, sending a highly hostile letter to the world declaring that, effective November 1, 2025, it will impose sweeping export controls on virtually all of its products, as well as some products even those it doesn't manufacture. This affects ALL countries, without exception, and is clearly a plan they've been hatching for years. This is absolutely unheard of in international trade and a moral disgrace in its dealings with other countries.

Based on the fact that China has taken this unprecedented stance, and speaking only for the United States and not other countries that have also been threatened, effective November 1, 2025 (or sooner, depending on any further actions or changes made by China), the United States will impose a 100% tariff on China, on top of any tariff it currently pays. We will also impose export controls on any and all critical software on November 1.

It's hard to believe that China would take such action, but they did, and the rest is history."


Overall, the US-China trade war is set to escalate. That's a good thing.

https://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/10122093.html

Google Translator

******

Anti-ICE protests continue as judges block Trump’s National Guard deployment in Portland and Chicago

“The oath we took as soldiers absolutely comes with an asterisk, and this is it,”: Veteran activists in Portland urge National Guard Troops to defy Trump’s orders

October 10, 2025 by Natalia Marques

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Demonstrators in Chicago on October 8 (Photo: Saja Bilasan)

A US federal judge issued a temporary restraining order on October 9, blocking the Trump administration’s deployment of hundreds of National Guard troops to Chicago. Hundreds were already stationed in the midwestern city at the time of this ruling. This comes days after a separate judge blocked the deployment of the National Guard to Portland, Oregon.

Currently, there are around 500 National Guard troops in the greater Chicago area, 2,400 in Washington, DC, and 100 still in Los Angeles down from a peak of 4,700 in June.

With the support of the Governor of Tennessee, the state’s National Guard troops are set to begin patrolling the city of Memphis. Unlike Chicago, Los Angeles, and Portland, Tennessee’s Republican governor Bill Lee is supportive of Trump’s federal takeover efforts and therefore is sending troops from his own state to Memphis – thus eliminating the legal obstacles Trump has faced in other states.

Chicago’s Mayor Brandon Johnson called the judge’s order a “win for the people of Chicago and the rule of law.” The previous day, Trump called for the jailing of both Johnson and Illinois Governor JB Pritzker for “failing to protect Ice Officers”. But Johnson asserted that, as protests against violent ICE raids continue in Chicago, that there is “no rebellion,” there are “just good people standing up for what is right.”

Federal troops blocked in Portland
Trump announced the deployment of federal troops to Portland on September 27, characterizing the West Coast city as “war ravaged” and claiming that ICE facilities were under attack by “Antifa, and other domestic terrorists.”

According to federal judge Karin Immergut, who was appointed by Trump during his first term, there is “substantial evidence that the protests at the Portland ICE facility were not significantly violent or disruptive in the days – or even weeks – leading up to the President’s directive ordering the deployment of troops to Oregon.”

Top Trump adviser Stephen Miller described Immergut’s ruling as a “legal insurrection.”

On September 22, Trump announced that he was declaring “Antifa” a domestic terrorist organization, despite the fact that Antifa is a decentralized movement with no central organization attached.

Amid attempts by the Trump administration to militarize the city, Portland residents have continued to protest. Demonstrations continued against ICE, including a march to the ICE facility in Portland in the early afternoon of Saturday, October 4 – which was attacked by federal agents deploying tear gas, smoke canisters, and pepper balls at protesters. Protesters outside the ICE facility also experienced similar brutal crowd control tactics by federal agents once again that evening – including tear gas, flash-bang grenades, and pepper balls – despite no clear provocation by demonstrators.

Portland veterans urge National Guard members to disobey
On October 6, dozens of veterans, some with anti-war veteran group About Face, held a press conference, with some speakers and signage urging National Guard members to disobey Trump’s orders. Several signs read “Trump is the real enemy within,” referencing the President’s previous statements claiming that he is sending troops to so-called “Democrat-run” cities to protect from “invasion from within”. Other signs read: “Veterans say: Duty to disobey”, “No war in Portland”, and “Guard, go home.”

“Trump is signaling in very clear terms he wants to go to war in American cities,” said Portland City Councilor Mitch Green, an Army veteran who served in the US invasion of Afghanistan, at the press conference. “He said he wants to use Portland as a training ground and that soldiers should do ‘whatever they want’ to protesters. While it’s unclear what the role of the National Guard will be, these threats are as serious as anything in American history. The oath we took as soldiers absolutely comes with an asterisk, and this is it.”

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2025/10/10/ ... d-chicago/

*****

Jared Kushner ‘Out of the Spotlight’—But Not Out of Mideast Politics, or Out of the Money
Belén Fernández

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President Donald Trump dispatched his son-in law Jared Kushner and the United States’ Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff to Egypt last weekend to sort out the remaining details of the president’s so-called “peace plan” for the Gaza Strip, much of which territory has been obliterated over the past two years of Israel’s US-backed genocide. The official Palestinian fatality count has surpassed 67,000, although some scholars suggest the real death toll may be more in the vicinity of 680,000.

Kushner’s inclusion in the Egyptian expedition may have come as a surprise to those who haven’t been following the news—and perhaps to many of those who have, given the dearth of reporting on the continuing Middle Eastern machinations of nepotism’s favorite poster boy.

‘Focus on my firm’
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Stories like NBC‘s (2/13/24) that stressed Jared Kushner distancing himself from his father-in-law’s White House helped Kushner avoid scrutiny of his many conflicts of interest.
A senior adviser in the first Trump White House, Kushner was a driving force behind the Abraham Accords, the normalization deals between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco. He was also the brains behind the 2019 “Peace to Prosperity” plan that was meant to resolve the pesky seven-decades-long Israeli/Palestinian conflict—an undertaking for which Kushner famously felt qualified on account of having read 25 whole books on the subject.

The current “peace” that the US is now endeavoring to inflict on Gaza sounds suspiciously similar to Kushner’s 2019 plan, which was basically structured around the idea that all the Palestinians really need in order to prosper is “foreign direct investment,” “private-sector growth,” “free trade agreements” and other exciting neoliberal solutions that magically excise Israel’s key role in annihilating any prospect for peace. The new plan promises “many thoughtful investment proposals and exciting development ideas [that] have been crafted by well-meaning international groups” and a “special economic zone… with preferred tariff and access rates to be negotiated with participating countries.”

In his first administration, Trump had additionally tasked his son-in-law with dealing with an assortment of other crises, including the coronavirus pandemic, prompting even the New York Times to go so far as to run an op-ed (4/2/20) originally headlined “Jared Kushner Is Going to Get Us All Killed”—although it was subsequently revised to “Putting Jared Kushner in Charge Is Utter Madness.”

Fast forward to February 2024 and the NBC News headline “Jared Kushner Says He Would Not Join a Second Trump Administration” (2/13/24), which quoted him: “I’ve been very clear that my desire at this phase of my life is to focus on my firm…. I’ve really enjoyed the opportunity as a family to be out of the spotlight.”

‘Significant backing in the Gulf’
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Noting that the Saudis poured billions into Kushner’s firm against their financial advisors’ advice, the New York Times (4/10/22) reported that “ethics experts say that such a deal creates the appearance of potential payback for Mr. Kushner’s actions in the White House.”
Now that the second Trump administration is in full swing, the Western corporate media appear largely content to allow him to remain “out of the spotlight,” even as he remains up to no good—and as his investment firm Affinity Partners remains a beneficiary of US diplomatic initiatives shepherded by Kushner himself. For example, Affinity has used backing from Gulf investors to acquire a roughly 10% stake in Israel’s largest insurer, Phoenix.

Of the sporadic reporting on Kushner’s activities that has taken place since Trump resumed office, much of it has focused on just how out of the spotlight he is. In May, for example, a CNN article (5/9/25) announced that Kushner was “quietly advising” the administration ahead of the president’s big Middle East trip that month, “informally advising administration officials on negotiations with Arab leaders.”

Underlining that Kushner “does not have, nor want, a formal role in Trump’s second term,” CNN cited sources affirming that he “has continued to be a crucial player behind the scenes on Middle East talks.” Crucially, he had been “heavily involved in discussions with Arab nations, including Saudi Arabia, about signing agreements that would normalize diplomatic relations with Israel”—an expansion of the Abraham Accords that would both effectively legitimize genocide and bulldoze remaining obstacles to investment.

Of course, like other corporate media outlets, CNN is not in the business of connecting the dots, and the article offered only the rather noncommittal observation that “Trump critics and some former diplomats have noted that Kushner has business interests in the region, which complicates his involvement.” There followed a brief mention of the fact that Affinity Partners has “received significant backing from sovereign wealth funds in the Gulf,” and that Kushner enjoys a “close personal relationship” with homicidal Saudi prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Indeed, part of that “significant backing” was a $2 billion investment in Affinity Partners from a fund led by bin Salman, which, as the New York Times (4/10/22) reported, was secured by Kushner, despite his lack of “experience or track record in private equity,” shortly after leaving the White House. Kushner did, however, have experience in brokering $110 billion in weapons sales to Saudi Arabia, and in helping “protect those and other weapons deals from congressional outrage over the murder of [Saudi journalist Jamal] Khashoggi and the humanitarian catastrophe created by the Saudi-led military intervention in Yemen,” as the Times put it.

As Forbes magazine reported (9/15/25), Kushner is now a billionaire, thanks in part to his “knack for raising funds from high-profile Middle Eastern backers.” Translated into non-euphemism, Kushner has literally been utilizing US foreign policy as a vehicle for his own personal enrichment. In addition to his dealings with Saudi Arabia, Kushner also raised $1.5 billion for Affinity just last year from backers affiliated with the royal families of Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.

At an October 1 White House press briefing on the Gaza peace plan, one journalist posed the rare question to Trump’s press secretary Karoline Leavitt: “How did the White House decide that it is appropriate for Jared Kushner to be working on matters that involve Qatar and the UAE, Saudi Arabia, three countries that combined have given him more than $2.5 billion for his investment firm?” Leavitt snapped that “I think it’s frankly despicable that you’re trying to suggest that it’s inappropriate” for someone to be so nobly “donating his energy and his time to our government, to the president of the United States, to secure world peace.” And that was that.

Meanwhile, in August 2025, CNN (8/27/25) was back with an update on the man who has still “quietly advised administration officials on Middle East issues,” and who reportedly attended a meeting at the White House, along with war criminal and former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, “about a plan for post-war Gaza.” This time, CNN decided not to mention Kushner’s financial conflicts of interest, and ended its intervention with a nonjudgmental nod to Kushner’s relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, ringleader of the present genocide, “with whom he has close family ties dating back decades.” (As Time (6/1/17) magazine revealed in 2017, Netanyahu even “once spent the night” at the Kushner family home in New Jersey.)

‘Move the people out’
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Kushner (Reuters, 2/5/25) once described the Arab/Israeli conflict as “”nothing more than a real-estate dispute between Israelis and Palestinians.”
In short, there are so many conflicts of interest swirling around the figure of Kushner that it should be nearly impossible for journalists to avoid covering them—and yet they manage to do so remarkably well. The New York Times writeup (8/27/25) of the same August meeting at the White House remarked that, while Kushner has “never been fully gone from Mr. Trump’s orbit,” he had taken a “behind-the-scenes role in recent years.” Its brief mention of Kushner’s entanglements seemed to present them as a qualification rather than a problem:

During the first Trump administration, he led the way on Mr. Trump’s biggest diplomatic achievement, the Abraham Accords, establishing diplomatic relations between Israel and three Arab states, and has his own business and other ties to the region.

In its own writeup, Reuters (8/27/25) alluded to Trump’s previous “re-development idea to turn Gaza into the ‘Riviera of the Middle East,’” a plan that “echoed an idea that Kushner floated a year earlier to clear Gaza of its Palestinian inhabitants and turn it into a waterfront property.” It’s not just any highly influential person who can casually advocate for unrestrained ethnic cleansing and hardly be taken to task for it. But such is the beauty of being “out of the spotlight.”

An earlier Reuters dispatch (2/5/25) headlined “Trump’s Gaza ‘Riviera’ Echoes Kushner Waterfront Property Dreams” went as far as to quote Kushner’s dreams of ethnic cleansing in genocide-stricken Gaza: “It’s a little bit of an unfortunate situation there, but I think from Israel’s perspective, I would do my best to move the people out and then clean it up.” Instead of underscoring the inherently diabolical content of said pronouncement, the news agency offered the following semi-justification: “Kushner was himself a property developer in New York prior to Trump’s first term.”

‘What regulator is going to say no?’

As Kushner now strives to be the unaccountable architect of the Palestinians’ definitive demise, one would have expected a bit more noise from the media as he simultaneously met with Netanyahu in Washington and presided over the biggest-ever leveraged buyout in history—in partnership with Saudi Arabia—of the videogame giant Electronic Arts.

The Financial Times (9/30/25), never one to speak truth to plutocracy, immortalized the momentous events with the headline “Jared Kushner’s Art of the Deal.” The article detailed how, while Crown Prince bin Salman “is a keen gamer, and he’s put aside $38 billion for investments in videogame companies as part of the kingdom’s Savvy Games unit,” it was really “Kushner who opened the doors to this week’s takeover.”

The FT went on to warn that “it’s the kind of deal—with a large foreign buyer—that could attract scrutiny from regulators in Washington.” But at the end of the day, all’s well in the land of democracy, because as one “person close to the inner workings of the White House put it: ‘What regulator is going to say no to the president’s son-in-law?’”

https://fair.org/home/jared-kushner-out ... the-money/

******

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Trump turns the military inward, and America confronts its oldest fear

Originally published: The Black Press USA on October 2025 by Stacy M. Brown (more by The Black Press USA) (Posted Oct 11, 2025)

The Posse Comitatus Act was born in 1878. It was short, a single sentence, but it carried a promise: soldiers would not patrol American streets. Its origin was poisoned by the retreat from Reconstruction and the rise of Jim Crow, but its meaning grew larger. It became a vow that liberty cannot live where rifles enforce the law of civilians.

Donald Trump has ripped that vow. He sent California National Guard troops into Los Angeles, not with the governor’s consent but against it. He leaned on a statute written for rebellion when no rebellion existed. He placed armed men in neighborhoods where citizens protested his policies, and in doing so, he showed his intent: not to protect the people but to remind them of his power.

Gov. Gavin Newsom answered directly. “We didn’t have a problem until Trump got involved. This is a serious breach of state sovereignty, inflaming tensions while pulling resources from where they’re actually needed,” Newsom wrote to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. “Rescind the order. Return control to California.” California Attorney General Rob Bonta brought the charge into focus. “There is no rebellion,” Bonta stated.

The President is trying to manufacture chaos and crisis on the ground for his own political ends.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, too, rejected the claim of disorder. “This is not citywide civil unrest taking place in Los Angeles. A few streets downtown, it looks horrible,” Bass said. “Those found committing acts of vandalism will be arrested and prosecuted.” History knows the moments when presidents sent troops to face citizens. Eisenhower sent them to Little Rock. Kennedy sent them to Mississippi and Alabama. Johnson sent them to Selma. Each time, the aim was to break segregation and open the door to justice. Trump’s act is not of that kind. He brings the military not to defend freedom, but to frighten those who demand it.

At Marine Corps Base Quantico, he assembled more than 800 generals and admirals. They flew in from across the world, ordered to sit and listen. “I’m thrilled to be here this morning to address the senior leadership of what is once again known around the world as the Department of War,” Trump told them. He mocked former President Joseph R. Biden Jr., praised tariffs and border walls, and declared, “We should use some of these dangerous cities as training grounds for our military.” Hegseth followed him, railing against what he called “woke garbage” in the armed forces and boasting of the officers he had already removed. “We’ve already done a lot in this area, but more changes are coming soon,” he said.

The gathering raised alarms. Lawmakers questioned its cost and its danger, packing the country’s senior military officers into one room. Critics saw a stage, not a strategy. Yet the silence of the commanders gave Trump what he wanted: the image of a military bent beneath his vision. The Posse Comitatus Act has loopholes. Congress cut them, presidents stretched them, courts blurred them. But the spirit of the law remains clear: a democracy collapses when its soldiers police its streets. Bonta named what is at stake. “The President is trying to manufacture chaos,” he said.

This is not about keeping the peace. This is about power.

https://mronline.org/2025/10/11/trump-t ... dest-fear/#

*****

Charlie Kirk’s assassination: a tentative assessment

Stephen Karganovic

October 9, 2025

Charlie Kirk was hired to be a puppet, but by virtue of his unanticipated and inherent appeal he inadvertently developed into a player, writes Stephen Karganovic.

Three weeks after the tragic public execution of Charlie Kirk, seemingly everything is being done to ensure that no broadly accepted denouement to this appalling crime that would enable closure might emerge. Quite the contrary. By following, with slight variations, the template witnessed in previous high-profile political murders, both successful and attempted, the perpetrators are seeing to it that the crime shall not be dealt with as a regular criminal case but rather as a psychological, mass trauma inducing operation. Could that precisely have been its strategic purpose from the start? The other purpose being, of course, to physically remove a charismatic individual whose moral integrity and intolerable independent-mindedness by the time the fatal shot was fired had evidently become problematic, nullifying any tactical usefulness he may have had.

The fact that Kirk’s liquidation and its aftermath adhere closely to the template set by previous unresolved assassinations of public figures suggests strongly the uniformity of intellectual authorship of such incidents across the board. That does not indict anyone in particular. For such an indictment to be possible, targeting the real culprit rather than a pre-positioned patsy, an honest criminal investigation (which most likely will never occur, that being another distinctive characteristic of the template) is an essential prerequisite. But when crimes of this nature and of comparable impact do take place, indicting particular individuals, though important for the regular course of justice, is nevertheless secondary to the question of what purpose the crime was conceived to serve. Rather than getting bogged down in trivia, we must always in such cases return to Diana Johnstone’s overarching question which she raised concerning Srebrenica. Both there and here, beyond the issue of mere individual responsibility (which of course must always be handled lege artis in relation to any crime and particularly when, as here, the crime is politically tinged) for deeper comprehension we must always raise Diana Johnstone’s more basic question: what are the crime’s uses?

It is, of course, more entertaining and even safer to focus on relatively trivial and continually shifting details and to subject them to minute and contentious scrutiny (for some absurd examples, see here and here). Even such analyses might reach forensically significant results. But what they are unlikely to do is to provide satisfactory ultimate explanations and answers.

In the handling of the Kirk murder, on both the political and mediatic levels, we have seen over the last three weeks an incredible amount of chatter but also systematic avoidance of Diana Johnstone’s universally applicable question.

That is not to deny that superb journalistic and investigative work has been done in the attempt to solve the Kirk case and, of equal importance, to challenge the glaring incoherence of the official account, rendering it irredeemably bogus in its present, hastily cobbled form. Outstanding examples are the almost daily analytical podcasts on this subject by Candace Owens (undoubtedly to the great relief of the degenerate couple in the Elysee Palace, who are now temporarily on the back burner). Owens and her diligent staff have subjected to minute and devastating scrutiny every nook and cranny of the labyrinth of trivia, false leads, and disinformation that the Charlie Kirk murder case was tuned into from the start, and probably so by design. Other very sharp minds working in synchronisation with Owens have shined bursts of additional light on various aspects of this tragic event (here, here, and here). As a result of those magnificent efforts, we nevertheless are not much closer to a definitive unified field theory capable of explaining why Charlie Kirk was killed and the intended uses of that murder, though we remain convinced that the simplistic and forensically increasingly untenable “lone shooter” narrative is a work of naïve fiction, in the style of a long line of ludicrous official communiques issued previously in analogous situations.

A provisional hypothesis can now be ventured about what happened to Charlie Kirk and why. The definitive assessment will have to be deferred until more key facts are available, if that ever happens.

Kirk was originally hired to perform a specific and limited task, to rally the complacent university youth for the political benefit of his sponsors. By virtue of his personal dynamism and charismatic appeal, his campus crusades became successful beyond expectation. His influence rapidly spread beyond the youth to the older generation. The resonating message he ardently preached at countless campus gatherings and on massively viewed television and podcast broadcasts was of a return to America’s traditional values. With the exception of his long-time stance on the Middle Eastern conflict – a position that he was in the process of thoroughly revising in the period prior to his assassination – his traditionalist advocacy, whilst tactically convenient for the wing of the Establishment that hired him and which prevailed in the last election, was anathema to the powers that be, regarded en bloc.

Kirk’s inspiring advocacy of values that the bulk of his curators not just do not share but abhor created a dilemma of what to do with him. He was young and articulate and in order to use him for their own purposes his sponsors facilitated the creation of a nation-wide, cross-generational organisation, an apparatus that potentially could be redirected to also serve other agendas besides those of which they expressly approved. He grew too big for his breeches, even prospectively becoming Presidential material. Since John Kennedy there had never been the scandal of an independent thinker (a loose cannon from their perspective) in that office.

Charlie Kirk was hired to be a puppet, but by virtue of his unanticipated and inherent appeal he inadvertently developed into a player. That sealed his fate.

How that works was ably explained by Col. Fletcher Prouty, and corroborated with a plethora of impressive examples. Highly recommended viewing.

https://strategic-culture.su/news/2025/ ... ssessment/

*******

President Petro Confirms that Latest Boat Destroyed by US in Caribbean Was Colombian
October 9, 2025

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Colombian President Gustavo Petro. Photo: Getty Images.

The president of Colombia, Gustavo Petro, condemned the bombing of a vessel in the Caribbean by US military forces, referring to the action as a grave violation of international law. According to preliminary indications, the boat was flying the Colombian flag and carrying Colombian citizens.

In a social media post, Petro endorsed the position of US Senator Adam Schiff, who has questioned the legality of US President Donald Trump’s actions in ordering attacks on alleged drug-smuggling boats in international waters without congressional authorization. “Senator Schiff is right,” Petro stated, adding that he is holding meetings with European governments to warn them about what he considers a new theater of war: the Caribbean.

The Colombian president underscored that there are indications that the vessel blown up on October 3 was Colombian, and that among its occupants were citizens of his country. “I hope their families come forward and file complaints,” he said, calling for justice and the safeguarding of human rights.

Petro also questioned the official US narrative that justifies the lethal attacks as part of a fight against drug trafficking. The Colombian president emphasized that this is not a war against smuggling but a war for oil in which violence is being used as a tool of geopolitical domination. “It must be stopped by the world,” he said.

The October 3 attack, endorsed by US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, left four people dead, whom Washington labeled “narco-terrorists.” However, no evidence has been presented regarding their identities or their ties to criminal organizations, raising concerns about extrajudicial executions.

“This aggression is not only against Colombia but against all of Latin America and the Caribbean,” Petro warned.

In a context of growing US militarization in the region, the Colombian president urged Latin American countries and the international community to denounce these unilateral actions and defend regional sovereignty against any attempt at foreign intervention.

(Últimas Noticias) by Randolph Borges

https://orinocotribune.com/president-pe ... colombian/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Post by blindpig » Tue Oct 14, 2025 1:16 pm

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Trump Keeps Admitting That He Is Bought And Owned By The World’s Richest Israeli

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, the only thing I like about Donald Trump is his infantile tendency to say the quiet part out loud.

Caitlin Johnstone
October 14, 2025

It’s bizarre how little mainstream attention is given to the fact that the president of the United States has repeatedly confessed to being bought and owned by the world’s richest Israeli, especially given how intensely fixated his political opposition was on the possibility that he was compromised by a foreign government during his first term.

During a speech before the Israeli parliament on Monday, President Trump once again publicly admitted that he has implemented Israel-friendly policies at the behest of Israeli-American billionaire Miriam Adelson and her late husband Sheldon, this time adding that he believes Adelson favors Israel over the United States.

Here’s a transcript of Trump’s remarks:

“As president, I terminated the disastrous Iran nuclear deal, and ultimately, I terminated Iran’s nuclear program with things called B2 bombers. It was swift and it was accurate, and it was a military beauty. I authorized the spending of billions of dollars, which went to Israel’s defense, as you know. And after years of broken promises from many other American presidents — you know that they kept promising — I never understood it until I got there. There was a lot of pressure put on these presidents. It was put on me, too, but I didn’t yield to the pressure. But every president for decades said, ‘We’re going to do it.’ The difference is I kept my promise and officially recognized the capital of Israel and moved the American Embassy to Jerusalem.

“Isn’t that right Miriam? Look at Miriam. She’s back there. Stand up. Miriam and Sheldon [Adelson] would come into the office and call me. They’d call me — I think they had more trips to the White House than anybody else, I guess. Look at her sitting there so innocently — got $60 billion in the bank, $60 billion. And she loves, and she, I think she said, ‘No, more.’ And she loves Israel, but she loves it. And they would come in. And her husband was a very aggressive man, but I loved him. It was a very aggressive, very supportive of me. And he’d call up, ‘Can I come over and see you? I’d say ‘Sheldon, I’m the president of the United States. It doesn’t work that way.’ He’d come in. But they were very responsible for so much, including getting me thinking about Golan Heights, which is probably one of the greatest things ever happened. Miriam, stand up, please. She really is, I mean, she loves this country. She loves this country. Her and her husband are so incredible. We miss him so dearly. But I actually asked her, I’m going to get her in trouble with this. But I actually asked her once, I said, ‘So Miriam, I know you love Israel. What do you love more? The United States or Israel?’ She refused to answer. That means — that might mean Israel, I must say, we love you. Thank you, darling, for being here. That’s a great honor. Great honor. She’s a wonderful woman. She is a great woman.”

Sheldon Adelson reportedly gave Trump and the Republicans over $424 million in campaign funding from 2016 up until his death in 2021. His widow Miriam continued her husband’s legacy and poured a further $100 million into Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign.

On the 2024 campaign trail Trump also admitted to being controlled by Adelson cash. Here’s a transcript of those remarks:

“Just as I promised, I recognize Israel’s eternal capital and opened the American embassy in Jerusalem. Jerusalem became the capital. I also recognized Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights.

“You know, Miriam and Sheldon would come into the White House probably almost more than anybody outside of people that work there. And they were always after — and as soon as I’d give them something — always for Israel. As soon as I’d give them something, they’d want something else. I’d say, ‘Give me a couple of weeks, will you, please?’ But I gave them the Golan Heights, and they never even asked for it.

“You know, for 72 years they’ve been trying to do the Golan Heights, right? And even Sheldon didn’t have the nerve. But I said, ‘You know what?’ I said to David Friedman, ‘Give me a quick lesson, like five minutes or less on the Golan Heights.’ And he did. And I said, ‘Let’s do it.’ We got it done in about 15 minutes, right?”


Legitimizing Israel’s illegal annexation of the Golan Heights and moving the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem were two of the most controversial moves Trump made in Israel’s favor during his first term, which have now been eclipsed by his backing the genocide in Gaza and his bombings of Iran and Yemen.

And here is his, openly admitting that his billionaire Zionist megadonors have been using the access their donations bought them to push him to take drastic action in favor of Israel.

Just imagine for a second if someone had leaked documents to the press proving that Trump and received extensive financial backing from a Russian oligarch to whom he doled out favors of immense geopolitical consequence. It would be the biggest scandal in the history of American politics, bar none. But because it’s an Israeli oligarch, he can admit to it openly and repeatedly without anyone batting an eye.

During Trump’s first term his political rivals spent years pushing a bogus conspiracy theory that he was controlled by Vladimir Putin, despite his having spent that entire term aggressively ramping up cold war hostilities against Russia. Entire political punditry careers were birthed trying to create a scandal out of a narrative that could be plainly seen as false just by looking at the movements of the US war machine and Washington’s actions against Moscow.


But here’s Trump openly admitting to bending over backwards to give an Israeli oligarch whatever she wants because she gave his campaign huge sums of money, while pouring weapons into Israel to facilitate its mass atrocities and engaging in acts of war on Israel’s behalf. And it barely makes a blip in mainstream western politics or media.

This is because mainstream western politics and media understand that we are living in an unofficial oligarchic empire to which both the US and Israel belong. They never acknowledge it, they never talk about it, but all high-level politicians, pundits and operatives in the western world understand that they serve a globe-spanning power structure run by a loose alliance of plutocrats and empire managers. They understand that states like Israel are a part of said power structure, while states like Russia, China and Iran are not. So they spend their time normalizing the corruption and abuses of imperial member states while facilitating the empire’s efforts to attack and undermine the states which have successfully resisted being absorbed into the imperial power umbrella.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, the only thing I like about Donald Trump is his infantile tendency to say the quiet part out loud. He advances the same kinds of abuses as his predecessors who were no less corrupt and controlled, but he exposes the underlying mechanics of those abuses in ways that more refined presidents never would.

https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2025/10 ... t-israeli/

*******

Shutdown or shakedown? Trump fires thousands, threatens to steal workers’ wages
October 11, 2025 Gary Wilson

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Photo: AFGE.org

Oct. 10 — On Friday morning, Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought announced what federal workers had been dreading: “The RIFs have begun.” With that social media post, the Trump administration launched mass layoffs across multiple agencies during an active government shutdown — an unprecedented escalation in the war on public sector workers.

By Friday evening, pink slips were flying at the Environmental Protection Agency, the departments of Education, Health and Human Services, Homeland Security, Housing and Urban Development, and Treasury. The administration wasn’t even trying to hide its glee. Trump himself posted an AI-generated video depicting Vought as the Grim Reaper, scythe in hand, stalking through federal buildings as workers queue for unemployment.

This isn’t normal politics. This is class warfare dressed up as budget management.

The American Federation of Government Employees and the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees immediately filed an emergency request for a temporary restraining order, asking U.S. District Judge Susan Illston to halt the mass firings pending an Oct. 16 hearing. The unions are fighting an uphill battle against an administration that sees the shutdown not as a crisis to resolve, but as an opportunity to gut the federal workforce.

“These mass firings are illegal and will have devastating effects on the services millions of Americans rely on every day,” AFSCME president Lee Saunders warned.

AFGE president Everett Kelley was more direct: “In AFGE’s 93 years of existence under several presidential administrations — including during Trump’s first term — no president has ever decided to fire thousands of furloughed workers during a government shutdown.”

But the layoffs are only part of the story. The Trump administration is also threatening something even more audacious: wage theft on a massive scale.

From layoffs to wage theft

A leaked White House memo argues that furloughed federal workers — as many as 750,000 people — may not receive back pay after the shutdown ends. This would violate the Government Employee Fair Treatment Act of 2019, which Trump himself signed during the last shutdown. But the administration is claiming the law has been “misconstrued,” seizing on technical amendments to argue that back pay must be specifically appropriated by Congress.

Asked Tuesday whether furloughed workers would be compensated, Trump responded like a mob boss: “I would say it depends on who we’re talking about. … For the most part, we’re going to take care of our people. There are some people that really don’t deserve to be taken care of, and we’ll take care of them in a different way.”

This is the language of authoritarianism. The message is clear: Loyalty to Trump determines whether you eat.

Federal workers are understandably terrified. “Trump saying he won’t pay us really got me worried,” an EPA employee told reporters. “What’s crazy is that the law is there in black and white. It couldn’t be more clear that legally furloughed employees ‘shall be paid.’ There’s no room to interpret it.”

A Smithsonian worker expressed broader fears: “There could be a possibility where Trump decides he no longer wants to fund the Smithsonian. They can pretty much take down the entire Smithsonian.”

https://www.struggle-la-lucha.org/2025/ ... ers-wages/

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Shocking Trump Spain NATO Demand: Expulsion Call Reveals Financial Pressure and Legal Impossibility

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President Donald Trump in the Oval Office, where he suggested expelling Spain from NATO over defense spending.

October 12, 2025 Hour: 9:14 am


The Trump Spain NATO expulsion demand is legally impossible, analysts say, revealing a financial pressure campaign to boost US arms sales.

Expulsion Call Reveals Financial Pressure and Legal Impossibility
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The US President’s threat to eject Spain from the alliance for resisting a 5% GDP military spend is statutorily baseless, with analysts pointing to a raw financial motive: pressuring allies to buy American weapons.

WASHINGTON D.C., USA – A new Trump Spain NATO controversy has erupted after President Donald Trump suggested expelling Spain from the military alliance, accusing it of lagging on defense spending. The move, widely seen as a pressure tactic, is legally unfeasible and exposes a deeper financial strategy to benefit the US industrial complex.

On October 9, during an Oval Office meeting with Finnish President Alexander Stubb, Trump launched a direct accusation. He labeled Spain a delinquent on military spending and suggested it should be removed from NATO for not committing to a 5% of GDP defense target.

“They have no excuse not to (…) Maybe they should be thrown out of NATO, frankly,” Trump stated.

The Spanish government responded with a message of calm, defending its status as a “loyal and full-right partner in NATO.” However, the incident has ignited a fierce domestic political debate and revealed the underlying financial drivers of Trump’s rhetoric.

A Legally Baseless Threat and a Domestic Political Firestorm
Beyond the political theater, a crucial point fundamentally weakens any expulsion threat: NATO’s own statutory regulations. Article 13 of the North Atlantic Treaty only contemplates the voluntary withdrawal of member states, a provision that has been in place since 1969. There is no legal mechanism for expulsion.

“After the Treaty has been in force for twenty years, any Party may cease to be a Party one year after its notice of denunciation has been given to the Government of the United States of America, which will inform the Governments of the other Parties of the deposit of each notice of denunciation,” states Article 13.

This legal reality frames Trump’s rhetoric as a blunt instrument of political pressure. Within Spain, the comments have intensified partisan confrontation. The opposition Popular Party (PP) has seized the episode to accuse Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez of weakening Spain’s international standing.

“The problem is not Spain, but Sánchez,” stated PP leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo. Meanwhile, the government and left-wing parties are appealing to diplomatic stability and national sovereignty in the face of external pressure.

Link to the official North Atlantic Treaty on NATO’s website
Link to Spanish Ministry of Defense contributions to NATO
The Financial Core of the Trump Spain NATO Dispute
Analysts argue that the core of the Trump Spain NATO dispute is not purely strategic, but fundamentally financial. José Antonio Egido, a Doctor of Sociology from the University of Provence, explains that Spain’s resistance to hiking its military budget to 5% of GDP is, in Trump’s eyes, a “true offense.”

“Trump is obsessed with the financial question; he is aware that the US is dragging a monumental debt,” Egido told Sputnik. “So, he is always looking for ways to increase revenue. One way to do this is to blackmail his NATO allies so that they increase their defense budgets and buy military material that only the US produces.”

This resistance, Egido notes, indirectly means Spain is not funneling more money into the US military-industrial complex, despite the Atlanticist vocation of Sánchez’s Socialist government.

The Spanish government, for its part, emphasizes the strategic value of its contributions beyond mere GDP percentages. Madrid highlights its provision of troops, ships, and fighter jets to NATO missions in Eastern Europe and the Baltics, where it plays a leading role in the Baltic Air Policing mission—a deployment that analysts note carries real risks.


Geopolitical Context: Atlanticism Under Strain
The Trump Spain NATO rift is a microcosm of the larger strains testing the Atlantic Alliance. It highlights a shift from shared security interests towards a transactional view of international relations, where alliance membership is contingent on financial contributions that directly benefit the US economy.

This dynamic creates a precarious environment for European allies, who must navigate between upholding their strategic commitments and resisting what can be perceived as economic coercion. Furthermore, Spain’s independent foreign policy stances, particularly its strong pro-Palestinian position and support for an arms embargo on Israel, have exacerbated tensions with a Washington establishment that expects unwavering alignment.

These factors contribute to a resurgence of traditional skepticism toward NATO within segments of the Spanish public. The controversy underscores a growing divide between the pro-Atlanticist orientation of the political establishment and a grassroots sentiment that prioritizes sovereignty and peaceful conflict resolution over military escalation and alignment with US foreign policy objectives.

Link to SIPRI data on global military expenditure
Spain’s Defense Contributions: Beyond the 2% Benchmark
While Trump’s 5% GDP demand has dominated headlines, experts emphasize that Spain’s actual military contributions to NATO far exceed simplistic spending metrics. According to data from the Spanish Ministry of Defense, Madrid has consistently met—and in several years surpassed—the alliance’s official 2% of GDP guideline since 2023, with defense expenditures reaching 2.1% in 2024 and projected to hit 2.3% in 2025.

More importantly, Spain plays an operational leadership role in critical NATO missions. It currently commands the NATO Enhanced Forward Presence Battlegroup in Latvia, deploys F-18 and Eurofighter jets for the Baltic Air Policing mission, and maintains a permanent naval presence in the Black Sea and Eastern Mediterranean. In 2024 alone, Spain contributed over 1,800 troops to NATO-led operations—a figure that places it among the top 10 troop contributors in the alliance.

“Reducing Spain’s value to a percentage ignores its strategic geography, interoperability with US forces, and real-world risk-taking,” said Dr. Elena Martínez, a security analyst at the Elcano Royal Institute. “Rota Naval Base alone hosts four US Navy destroyers and is a linchpin for US Sixth Fleet operations in the Mediterranean.”

Thus, the Trump Spain NATO dispute appears less about genuine security concerns and more about imposing an arbitrary, inflated benchmark designed to justify increased arms procurement from American contractors.

Public Opinion and the Rise of Anti-Militarism in Spain
The controversy has also reignited a long-standing debate within Spanish society about the country’s role in NATO and its alignment with US foreign policy. Recent polls by the Centro de Investigaciones Sociológicas (CIS) show that only 38% of Spaniards support increasing defense spending, while 52% believe Spain should reduce its military commitments abroad—a sentiment amplified by Madrid’s vocal stance on the Gaza conflict and its refusal to supply arms to Israel.

Grassroots movements, including the historic “No to War” (No a la Guerra) coalition, have organized nationwide demonstrations in response to Trump’s remarks, framing them as external interference in Spain’s democratic sovereignty. “We will not let a foreign leader dictate our budget or our conscience,” declared a spokesperson for the Platform for Peace and Disarmament during a rally in Madrid.

This public skepticism stands in stark contrast to the pro-Atlanticist consensus among Spain’s major political parties. Yet, as the cost-of-living crisis persists and social spending faces cuts, the moral and fiscal justification for massive military outlays is increasingly questioned—especially when those expenditures primarily benefit foreign defense firms.

In this light, Trump’s threat not only exposes the transactional nature of his NATO vision but also risks strengthening domestic forces that advocate for a more neutral, peace-oriented foreign policy—one that prioritizes diplomacy over deterrence and national needs over transatlantic obligations.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/trump-sp ... on-demand/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Donald Trump, Avatar of his Class, Capitalism & the Decline and Fall of Bourgeois Democracy

Post by blindpig » Wed Oct 15, 2025 2:55 pm

THE TWO FUNDAMENTALS – TRUMP DOESN’T DECIDE, THE EUROPEANS ARE POLITICALLY WEAK

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By John Helmer, Moscow @bears_with

In the new podcast from Dialogue Works, Nima Alkhorshid asks if President Donald Trump has decided to sell Tomahawk missiles to the NATO allies for attacking the Russian hinterland, and why the allies are so keen to continue fighting the war when it is obvious the Tomahawk cannot turn defeat on the Ukraine battlefield into victory. Listen to the hour-long discussion here. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NY1bydj-n2g

The third question in the discussion is — what to make of Russian policy towards Palestine after the Arabs cancelled their long-prepared summit meeting in Moscow with President Vladimir Putin, scheduled for October 15, and opted instead for a summit with Trump at Sharm el-Sheikh on October 13 – from which Putin was excluded? Answer: Russian policy contradicts the US-Israeli plan for Gaza but they won’t say so in public nor will the Arabs countenance a confrontation with Trump right now. The podcast looks again at Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov’s attempt to explain the Russian reason to Arab journalists.

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Source: https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... -in-charts In the YouGov poll taken in August, public hostility towards several selected countries was measured. Russia led the table of hostility by a large margin (87% in the UK), followed by Iran (76%), Israel (69%), China (63%), and the US (51%). The intensity of this hostility towards Russia varies from country to country, with Denmark leading (94%) and Italy trailing (69%).

To follow the details in the discussion, here is the text of the Trump 20-point Gaza plan released on September 29. More detailed points of agreement for the first stage of the agreement for hostage, bodies and prisoner release can be read here.

Promising more but committing to less, here is the text of the Arab Summit declaration signed on October 13 by Turkey, Qatar, Egypt, and the US.
https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential ... rosperity/

Lavrov made his presentation to the Arab media on the same day.

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Source: https://mid.ru/en/foreign_policy/news/2053373/

According to Lavrov, “it is necessary to negotiate between the two [Israel, the Palestinians], to look for a balance of interest. The great powers, of course, are called upon to use their influence on all parties to the conflict precisely in order to encourage them to search for a balance of interest. As President of Russia Vladimir Putin said the other day: ‘We see US President Donald Trump is guided by this.’…The most important thing is that no one tries to revise the fragile wording contained in Donald Trump’s plan.”

This is a point to which US voters are indifferent. Whether Russia joins the Palestinians to oppose the second and third parts of the Trump plan, or not, makes next to no difference to most Americans. They are also indifferent to Trump’s peacemaking media promotion, according to the polls.

US voter approval and disapproval of Trump’s performance has not changed significantly as a result of the Gaza peace negotiation, according to this compilation of polling results across the US. On September 14, disapproval of Trump was running at 51.4%, approval at 45.8%; on October 13, it was 51.8% to 45.5% — statistically speaking, this is no change at all.

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Source: https://www.realclearpolling.com/polls/ ... val-rating

To date, only the CBS-YouGov national poll has been taken after Trump announced his Gaza plan on September 29. Until then disapproval for his handling of the Israeli-Palestinian war was running high.

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Source: https://www.realclearpolling.com/polls/ ... alestinian

According to the CBS-YouGov poll, Trump’s domestic policies are generating far more attention and discontent, and his “peacemaking” abroad is making little impact on voter sentiment.

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Source: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/cbs-news-p ... publicans/

https://johnhelmer.net/the-two-fundamen ... more-92560

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The US Intra-Oligarchy Struggle Intensifies

The Economic Nationalists And Authoritarians Are Winning
Roger Boyd
Oct 15, 2025

The neo-Gramscian Amsterdam School argues that there are class fractions within any bourgeois ruling class, representing differing interest groups within the class. These can both compete with each other while at the same time coming together in class solidarity to defeat external threats. What we have being seeing over the past decade in an intra-ruling class struggle between two camps. In their book Trump and the Remaking of American Grand Strategy van Apeldoorn et. al. argue that Trump represents an economic nationalist class fraction that is in conflict with the previously dominant-for-many-decades open door globalist class fraction.

The American Grand Strategy since WW2 has been Open Door Globalism, to force open foreign markets and economies to the profiteering and extractive activities of the US oligarchy. The dominant ruling class fraction included internationally oriented corporations, oil companies and financial institutions, with the period from 1945 until the 1960s benefitting from the need to rebuild the destroyed economies of Europe and Japan, and the inability of those nations to compete with the US due to that destruction. As those economies fully recovered, and the costs of the Vietnam War escalated, the US current account balance went into structural deficit through the 1960s. The move of the US to a net oil importer in 1970 only exacerbated the issue. Faced with a dwindling gold reserve, instead of deflating the economy Nixon removed the gold convertibility of the US$ and implemented a 10% import tax in 1971. By 1973 the world had moved to floating exchange rates and the dollar fell by over a third in value during that decade. With the recycling of US$’s by the OPEC countries and the US$ becoming the de facto reserve currency, the US became able to run current account deficits with impunity.

The collapse of the Warsaw Pact and Soviet Union, the opening up of China and the liberalization of India provided an absolute cornucopia for US capital through the 1990s and 2000s, while the US productive forces were gutted through financialization and offshoring. The US$ reserve currency status allowed the US to run large current account deficits while funding expensive foreign wars with debt issuance; throughout the first two and a half decades of this century. With increasing indebtedness, the primary income (net flow of profits, dividends, interest and wages) part of the current account balance eventually became negative. This was even with the return of the US to the position of a net oil exporter with the successful implementation of fracking technology from the early 2010s. The massive growth in domestic oil and gas production added significantly to the segment of the US oligarchy involved in domestic resource extraction.

The hollowing out of the US economy through offshoring and imports was negatively affecting the wealth and income of other domestically-oriented sectors such as property development, local finance and insurance institutions, retailers, domestic manufacturers etc. These sectors, together with the domestic oil sector formed the oligarch core of Trump’s coalition. They stood to benefit much more from an economic nationalism that would boost demand within the domestic economy and protect them from foreign competition. The Obama two terms were the last gasp of Open Door Globalism as it became more and more apparent that China was not going to be integrated into a US-led liberal world order. Not only that, but Chinese foreign policy was becoming more assertive and it was threatening to close the value added and technology gaps between it and the US. It was starting to become a business competitor rather than just a provider of cheap labour and a massive consumer market for US corporations.

In the first Trump administration, from 2016 to 2020, the economic nationalist forces and globalist forces were in open competition with each other for the domination of the oligarchy. This played out through the liberal media, and a courtier class that had spent decades being honed as liberal globalist, backed by the liberal globalist oligarchs (e.g. Soros). Every avenue possible was utilized by the globalists to obstruct the Trump administration and delegitimize him, including even extensive attempts to brand him as an operative of a foreign power (Russia, Russia, Russia). This also included multiple attempts to impeach him, with actual impeachment hearings in 2019. Trump lost the 2020 elections, but events were moving toward his coalition’s position and the Biden administration did not change the position with respect to China. It did trigger the Ukraine proxy war with Russia that Trump had delayed for the four years of his first term.

With the colossal spending on the corporate and financial sector bailout covered up by the COVID-19 pandemic, the US government and foreign debt continued to balloon. All the while, China gained more strength and its corporations more and more developed their own domestic and international brands that challenged the profitable positions of US brands. This was underlined by the recovery of Huawei from the sanctions and US corporate collusion that were designed to destroy it. In the Chinese market, US and Western corporations lost market share in everything from smartphones to electric vehicles to coffee shops and fast food. Russia also did not collapse as expected and started to take an increasingly dominant role in the Russo-Ukrainian conflict. This caused the economic nationalist class fraction to grow, and the resultant changing balance of power was reflected in Trump’s ability to survive one judicial and state attack after another; including a second impeachment hearing with respect to the January 6th 2021 events. The globalist wing was also stymied by the ongoing cognitive decline of its chosen president, Biden.

As Trump entered the running for the Republican presidential candidate in 2023 the politically-driven indictments designed to cripple Trump financially and politically, or even put him in jail, flew:

March 30th Falsifying Business Records (NY Supreme Court)

Related to hush money payoff to an affair partner

Found guilty on all 34 counts on May 30th 2024, sentencing stretched out until after the election. After his election, Trump received an unconditional discharge of his sentence.

June 8th Mishandling of National Security Documents (Southern District of Florida)

Charged for something that nearly all other presidents had done. On July 15, 2024, case dismissed, as Jack Smith’s appointment as special counsel ruled unconstitutional.

August 1st Attempt to Overturn 2020 Presidential Elections (Washington D.C.)

Dismissed without prejudice.

August 14th Racketeering to Overturn 2020 Presidential Elections (Fulton County)

The prosecutor dismissed due to misconduct with her boyfriend who she employed within the prosecutor’s office. Once Trump became a sitting president it became a constitutional issue of whether a state level prosecutor can prosecute a sitting president.

No matter how hard the liberal globalist media tried to brand Trump as a criminal etc., he gained the Republican nomination. He won the presidency against a lacklustre Democratic candidate who was burdened with her ongoing support for the Zionist genocide in Gaza. It does seem that Trump is now giving payback to the attorneys who went after him.



What was very evident after Trump’s inauguration is that the oligarch controlled media had been told to tone it down with respect to attacks upon Trump. The frenzied lunacy of his first term was no longer evident. As we get into the ninth month of his presidency we can see that the economic nationalist forces have gained with respect to the globalists and the courtier class and even some of the liberal globalist oligarchs are in the cross hairs. There has already been a significant cull of liberal globalists at the senior levels of state institutions, together with mass layoffs in some institutions. The takeover of Paramount by Larry Ellison’s son has also moved a large media group under the control of an ally, including the CBS broadcast network. Elon Musk had already previously taken over Twitter. With rumours that Ellison’s son may also bid for Warner Brothers, which includes CNN. Ellison and a number of other US oligarchs are also in the process off gaining control of a US only version of TikTok. Other media outfits have also settled law suits from Trump, and the heads of both Meta and Alphabet have aligned with him while publicly accepting that they colluded with the state apparatus during the Biden administration.

The murder of the right wing commentator Charlie Kirk, still shrouded in much disinformation and misdirection, has been used by the Trump to launch a war against the “ANTIFA” (anti-fascist) loose coalition and “radical leftists”. Included in this list is George Soros, his son, and their Open Society Foundation. This signals a new level of confidence in the economic nationalist wing for disciplining the declining globalist wing. The attack upon the “liberal” and “left” groups will be widespread, as noted here:

The Trump administration plans to deploy America’s counter-terrorism apparatus - including the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security and the Justice Department - as well as the Internal Revenue Service and the Treasury Department against certain left-wing groups it accuses of funding and organizing political violence, the officials said.

The effort marks an escalation in the administration’s efforts to target domestic opponents, raising alarm among civil rights groups and Democratic leaders about the use of executive power.



The push against domestic groups and their donors comes amid Trump’s attacks on law firms, universities and the media, and his deployment of National Guard troops to some Democratic-run cities. Democrats and civil society watchdogs say the move is intended to silence opposition, in addition to seeking retribution against his perceived personal political enemies.




The dire position of the US government’s finances, together with the need to intensify exploitation and looting at home in the face of increasing opposition and Chinese competition abroad, also support the need to move to the more authoritarian and fascistic approach being taken by Trump. With these ongoing changes in the balance of power within the US oligarchy it can be expected that the culling and disciplining of the courtier class will continue apace. By 2029, even if a Democratic president is elected, the new capitalist class consensus will mean that there will be very little real change in policies from those of the Trump administration.

https://rogerboyd.substack.com/p/the-us ... ntensifies

*****

Trump 2.0’s Eurasian Balancing Act Has Failed
Andrew Korybko
Oct 15, 2025

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His arrogant and aggressive behavior towards Russia, India, and China is responsible for this.

The global systemic transition to multipolarity is nowadays proceeding along a different trajectory than before due to recent shifts in the international system. Up until this point, Trump 2.0 sought resource and military partnerships with Russia and India respectively that could decelerate China’s superpower rise, which would then make it the junior partner in any “G2”/“Chimerica” deal. His Eurasian balancing act has failed, however, due to his arrogant and aggressive approach towards all three countries.

Ties with Russia took a hit after the Anchorage Summit following increasingly concerning reports about US plans to support NATO troops in Ukraine, thus spooking Putin into abandoning his country’s own Eurasian balancing act by pivoting to China. This took the form of the legally binding deal that was just clinched for constructing the Power of Siberia 2 gas pipeline. The US’ envisaged resource-centric partnership with Russia, which aimed to entice concessions on Ukraine, is now much less likely.

As for India, ties worsened during its springtime clashes with Pakistan, which saw Trump favor Pakistan and even lie about India agreeing to an alleged US-mediated ceasefire. The US then hypocritically imposed punitive tariffs on India over its continued trade with Russia despite eschewing such for China and others. All the while, Trump viciously insulted India too. Concluding that he’s hellbent on derailing its rise as a Great Power, India swiftly patched up its problems with China and distanced itself from the US.

With Russia pivoting to China via Power of Siberia 2 amidst the Sino-Indo rapprochement, the resource and military means for decelerating China’s superpower rise through partnerships with them were neutralized, thus leading to any “G2”/“Chimerica” deal now being in China’s favor instead. President Xi Jinping accordingly espoused stronger rhetoric about reshaping the world order during his speeches at the SCO Summit and V-J Day, which prompted Trump to accuse him of “conspiring” against the US.

The interim Sino-US trade deal is now in jeopardy after he just threatened the imposition of 100% tariffs on China by 1 November or earlier depending on when China imposes its export controls on rare earth minerals. Coupled with his dramatic accusation that Xi is “conspiring” against the US in collusion with Putin and Kim Jong Un, this could presage future military-strategic tensions, even if only indirectly via proxy. That would further destabilize Eurasia per the US’ traditional divide-and-rule stratagem.

In clockwise order, these could take the form of: fomenting Color Revolution unrest in Mongolia in order to undermine Power of Siberia 2; Japan, Taiwan, and/or the Philippines provoking an incident with China at sea in contested waters; obstructing China’s access to rare earth minerals in Myanmar’s Kachin State; and/or sowing instability in Central Asia via NATO member Turkiye through the new TRIPP Corridor. China’s response to these scenarios could be to arm Russia and even send troops to help it in Ukraine.

Xi saw how Trump mistreated his friend Modi despite him leading a state that could have joined the US’ anti-Chinese axis, while also watching how he’s betraying Putin in Ukraine after Anchorage, so he expects similar treatment if he agrees to a “G2”/ “Chimerica” deal. He also knows that China now has a target on its back after the latest tariffs and Trump accusing him of a “conspiracy”. It’s therefore little wonder that Trump 2.0’s Eurasian balancing act, which was characterized by arrogance and aggression, has failed.

https://korybko.substack.com/p/trump-20 ... ancing-act

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Trump Announces New ‘Kinetic Strike’ Off Venezuela’s Coast, Extrajudicial Killings Reach 27, Venezuela Continues Defensive Drills
October 14, 2025

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An image from a video released by US President Donald Trump on social media; Trump claims that it shows a lethal strike on a small boat allegedly off the coast of Venezuela, Oct. 14, 2025. Photo: Truth Social@realDonaldTrump.

Caracas (OrinocoTribune.com)—On Tuesday, US ruler Donald Trump claimed that US military forces deployed in the Caribbean Sea carried out a new attack on a small boat “off the coast of Venezuela,” without specifying a precise location, killing six people he alleged were carrying drugs.

Since Sept. 2, Trump has allegedly ordered military strikes on at least five boats in the Caribbean Sea that his regime insists were carrying drugs to the US. This latest illegal action brings the number of extrajudicial killings committed by US military forces to 27 unidentified civilians.

Through Truth Social, the White House tenant published that his secretary of war, Peter Hegseth, ordered a “lethal kinetic attack” against a small boat supposedly off the coast of Venezuela, based on information allegedly provided by US intelligence.

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“Under my Standing Authorities as Commander-in-Chief, this morning, the Secretary of War, ordered a lethal kinetic strike on a vessel affiliated with a Designated Terrorist Organization (DTO) conducting narcotrafficking in the USSOUTHCOM area of responsibility—just off the Coast of Venezuela,” wrote the US ruler. He added that “intelligence confirmed the vessel was trafficking narcotics, was associated with illicit narcoterrorist networks, and was transiting along a known DTO route. The strike was conducted in International Waters, and six male narcoterrorists aboard the vessel were killed in the strike. No US Forces were harmed.”

Trump accompanied his post with a video showing a small boat being targeted and subsequently hit by a missile or drone. The footage does not allow for the identification of the crew number or the existence or nature of any cargo. While posting videos on social media of the strikes, Hegseth and Trump have not provided details on who was killed, their nationalities, what kinds of drugs they were carrying, or exactly where they were located when murdered.

Legality and international reaction
The use of lethal military force against drug boats is unprecedented, with past US administrations relying on law enforcement to interdict drug shipments. Legal experts and lawmakers inside and outside the US have concluded that these killings are unlawful.

According to experts, this unprecedented behavior opens the door for any kind of atrocities against any human being around the world that might be wrongly targeted as a drug trafficker. For this reason, diplomats from countries in Latin America and the Caribbean have raised concerns about this new US behavior. Washington is once again violating all international regulations by arbitrarily assassinating individuals in the Caribbean without accountability.

Defensive preparations in Venezuela
Meanwhile, on Tuesday, President Nicolás Maduro activated new military drills as part of Plan Independencia 200 in the states of Nueva Esparta, Sucre, and Delta Amacuro, in the east of Venezuela.

Through social media, he announced that he will combine preparation for a prolonged, active, and creative civilian resistance program with a permanent offensive, taking initiative in all fields and areas.

“The entire military force of the Bolivarian National Armed Force (FANB) is deployed to oversee all tasks, working alongside the legitimate political and civilian authorities of the country, the states, the municipalities, and our powerful grassroots movement,” the president wrote.

He emphasized that this part of Venezuela is a strategic corridor for the comprehensive defense of the homeland, extending from the Caribbean Sea to the Orinoco and south to the border with Brazil. Finally, he noted that the machinery is being fine-tuned to achieve peace, fully exercise sovereignty, and defend the right to life of the Venezuelan people amid recent US military and rhetoric escalation.

Analysts claim that US military threats have served to unite many Venezuelans on both sides of the political aisle under the banner of patriotism and self-determination. Simultaneously, the Venezuelan military has taken advantage of the situation to improve communication and interaction channels with the Communal Power (the communes). The training of hundreds of thousands of new enlistees in the civilian militia has also raise the defensive capabilities of the country and its morale.

https://orinocotribune.com/trump-announ ... ve-drills/

*****

China dares to grow soybeans
October 15, 9:04

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Terrible news.

China is growing its own soybeans, rather than buying them from the US, specifically to create hardship for American farmers.
This looks like an economically hostile act. The US could retaliate by stopping buying vegetable oil and starting to produce its own. (c) Trump


How dare they grow soybeans themselves instead of caring for American farmers?
The hysteria following the introduction of restrictions on rare earth metals and sanctions against a number of American companies continues unabated. Meanwhile, China has so far only responded to the US in a limited way, causing waves of panic in the American market.

Trump also once again threatened to impose sanctions against BRICS countries in the form of a 100% tariff on goods from BRICS countries for their de-dollarization efforts. Ironically, the more Trump rages and threatens, the faster the actual de-dollarization accelerates.

https://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/10129310.html

Google Translator

*****

End the Epstein shutdown and F-bombing our cities!
Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence 15 Oct 2025

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Amassed millions call: END THE EPSTEIN SHUTDOWN!
Survivors and supporters shout at stadium level decibels:
“RELEASE THE FILES — BEGIN THE TRIALS!” FOR
PEDOPHILES BOTH SIDES OF THE AISLES (stop sly smiles)

Reich Cult Reality Show approval ratings dipping and slipping
Hellaciously low.
Circling the drain; Reich Cult circles-up; snorting, smoking, shooting
Something making fact-free figments of cruel imaginations flow …

Hallucinatory story after story — on our time — on our dime!
Reich Cult spinning, penning world’s finest fiction — North of
Police reports. Antisemitic Soros Santa Claus Stories. Bizarre, Border Czar, Antifa
Tooth Fairy tales of $50,000 handed out in brown paper bags, on Halloween Night!

What hallucinogen — or remote-control — causes
Wehrmacht moves — that F-bomb our beloved
Cities?
Redux Red Scare? Civil warfare? Instead of healthcare?

What hallucinogen — or remote-control — causes
Wehrmacht moves — that F-bomb our beloved
Cities? Masked J-6 gestapo, goose-stepping, prancing
Through our parks and playgrounds, and into our lives?

What hallucinogen — or remote-control — causes
Tom-foolish Führer moves — that F-bomb our beloved
Cities? Brownshirt bounty-hunters bully-raiding; Over-
Running and occupying our factories, fields and hospitals?

What hallucinogen — or remote-control — causes un-asylumed,
DEI (Drunken Evil Incompetent) Reich Ministers; And belligerent
Blondes — Lil Eva Braun(s) — forked-tongues spiked with talking
Points, to choose broiling in bunkers with bosses over truth telling?

Nothin’ goin on in our beloved cities but the usual — class-struggle.
Mostly concealed. Rarely revealed, as mass mobilization, mass
Organization of spears that pierce wet blankets of pessimism chaining
Millions to their couches. Acts proving, again, that every cook can govern …

© 2025. Raymond Nat Turner, The Town Crier. All Rights Reserved.

https://blackagendareport.com/end-epste ... our-cities
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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