Tag Archives: politics

From WIRED Magazine –

From Julie: When you read this article that I have put below, think about it for a minute, marvel at the evil present in these people’s actions and their bizarre ideas. When you can, read it again. Then, please send it to everyone you know, and post on all of your social media pages! And then send it out again next week , and the week after that, and the week after…..!( I have another that talks more about the origins of much of these Techie billionaires.)

Cory Doctorow warns of “enshittification,” where tech companies degrade services for profit, harming users and workers amid mass layoffs. He urges tech employees to unionize for better wages, job security, and ethical influence, countering monopolies and fostering industry accountability. This labor movement could reverse the trend and empower creators.

Written by Lucas Greene

Monday, October 20, 2025

FOR DECADES, ALLIES of the United States lived comfortably amid the sprawl of American hegemony. They constructed their financial institutions, communications systems, and national defense on top of infrastructure provided by the US.

And right about now, they’re probably wishing they hadn’t.

Back in 2022, Cory Doctorow coined the term “enshittification” to describe a cycle that has played out again and again in the online economy. Entrepreneurs start off making high-minded promises to get new users to try their platforms. But once users, vendors, and advertisers have been locked in—by network effects, insurmountable collective action problems, high switching costs—the tactics change. The platform owners start squeezing their users for everything they can get, even as the platform fills with ever more low-quality slop. Then they start squeezing vendors and advertisers too.

People don’t usually think of military hardware, the US dollar, and satellite constellations as platforms. But that’s what they are. When American allies buy advanced military technologies such as F-35 fighter jets, they’re getting not just a plane but the associated suite of communications technologies, parts supply, and technological support. When businesses engage in global finance and trade, they regularly route their transactions through a platform called the dollar clearing system, administered by just a handful of US-regulated institutions. And when nations need to establish internet connectivity in hard-to-reach places, chances are they’ll rely on a constellation of satellites—Starlink—run by a single company with deep ties to the American state, Elon Musk’s SpaceX. As with Facebook and Amazon, American hegemony is sustained by network logic, which makes all these platforms difficult and expensive to break away from.

For decades, America’s allies accepted US control of these systems, because they believed in the American commitment to a “rules-based international order.” They can’t persuade themselves of that any longer. Not in a world where President Trump threatens to annex Canada, vows to acquire Greenland from Denmark, and announces that foreign officials may be banned from entering the United States if they “demand that American tech platforms adopt global content moderation policies.”

Ever since Trump retook office in January, in fact, rapid enshittification has become the organizing principle of US statecraft. This time around, Trumpworld understands that—in controlling the infrastructure layer of global finance, technology, and security—it has vast machineries of coercion at its disposal. As Mark Carney, the prime minister of Canada, recently put it, “The United States is beginning to monetize its hegemony.”

So what is an ally to do? Like the individual consumers who are trapped by Google Search or Facebook as the core product deteriorates, many are still learning just how hard it is to exit the network. And like the countless startups that have attempted to create an alternative to Twitter or Facebook over the years—most now forgotten, a few successful—other allies are now desperately scrambling to figure out how to build a network of their own.

INFRASTRUCTURE TENDS TO be invisible until it starts being used against you. Back in 2020, the United States imposed sanctions on Hong Kong’s chief executive, Carrie Lam, for repressing democracy protests on China’s behalf. All at once, Lam became uniquely acquainted with the power of the dollar clearing system—a layer of the world’s financial machinery that most people have never heard of.

Here’s how it works: Global banks convert currencies to and from US dollars so their customers can sell goods internationally. When a Japanese firm sells semiconductors to a tech company in Mexico, they’ll likely conduct the transaction in dollars—because they want a universal currency that can quickly be used with other trading partners. So these firms may directly ask for payment in dollars, or else their banks may turn pesos into dollars and then use those dollars to buy yen, shuffling money through accounts in US-regulated banks like Citibank or J.P. Morgan, which “clear” the transaction.

So dollar clearing is an expedient. It’s also the chief enforcement mechanism of US financial policy across the globe. If foreign banks don’t implement US financial sanctions and other measures, they risk losing access to US dollar clearing and going under. This threat is so existentially dire that, when Lam was placed under US sanctions, even Chinese banks refused to have anything to do with her. She had to keep piles of cash scattered around her mansion to pay her bills.

That maneuver against Lam was, at least on its face, about standing up for democracy. But in his second term, Trump has wasted no time in weaponizing the dollar clearing system against any target of his choosing. In February, for example, the administration imposed sanctions on the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court after he indicted Benjamin Netanyahu for alleged war crimes. Now, like Lam in Hong Kong, the official has become a financial and political pariah: Reportedly, his UK bank has frozen his accounts, and Microsoft has shut down his email address.

Another platform that Trump is weaponizing? Weapons systems. Over the past couple of decades, a host of allies built and planned their air power around the F-35 stealth fighter jet, built by Lockheed Martin. In March, a rumor erupted online—in Reddit posts and X threads—that F-35s come with a “kill switch” that would allow the US to shut them down at will.

Sources tell us that there is no such kill switch on the F-35, per se. But the underlying anxiety is not unfounded. There is, as one former US defense official described it, a “kill chain” that is “essentially controlled by the United States.” 

Complex weapons platforms require constant maintenance and software updates, and they rely on real-time, proprietary intelligence streams for mapping and targeting. All that “flows back through the United States,” the former official said, and can be blocked or turned off. Cases in point: When the UK wanted to allow Ukraine to use British missiles against Russia last November, it reportedly had to get US sign-off on the mapping data that allowed the missiles to hit their targets. 

Then, after Trump’s disastrous Oval Office meeting with Volodymyr Zelensky in late February, the US temporarily cut off intelligence streams to Ukraine, including the encrypted GPS feeds that are integral to certain precision-guided missile systems. Such a shutoff would essentially brick a whole weapons platform.

Communication systems are, if anything, even more vulnerable to enshittification. In a few short years, Elon Musk’s Starlink satellites—which now make up about 65 percent of all active satellites in orbit—have become an indispensable source of internet access across the world. On the eve of Trump’s second inaugural, Canada was planning to use Starlink to bring broadband to its vast rural hinterlands, Italy was eyeing it for secure diplomatic communications, and Ukraine had already become dependent on it for military operations. But as Musk joined the Trump administration’s inner circle, a dependence on Starlink came to seem increasingly dangerous.

In late February, the Trump administration reportedly threatened to withdraw Starlink access to Ukraine unless the country handed over rights to exploit its mineral reserves to the US. In a March confrontation on X, Musk boasted that Ukraine’s “entire front line would collapse” if he turned off Starlink. In response, Poland’s foreign minister, Radek Sikorski, tried to stand up for an ally. He tweeted that Poland was paying for Ukraine’s access to the service. Musk’s reply? “Be quiet, small man. You pay a tiny fraction of the cost. And there is no substitute for Starlink.”

It isn’t just big US defense contractors that might enforce the administration’s line. European governments and banks often run on cloud computing provided by big US multinationals like Amazon and Microsoft, and leaders on the continent have begun to fear that Trump could choke off EU governments’ access to their own databases. Microsoft’s president, Brad Smith, has claimed this scenario is “exceedingly unlikely” and has offered Europeans a “binding commitment” that Microsoft will vigorously contest any efforts by the Trump administration to cut off cloud access, using “all legal avenues available.” 

But Microsoft has failed to publicly explain its reported denial of email access to the International Criminal Court’s chief prosecutor. And Smith’s promise may not be enough to ward off Europeans’ fears, to say nothing of the Trump administration’s advances. The European Commission is now in advanced negotiations with a European provider to replace Microsoft’s cloud services, and the Danish government is moving from Microsoft Office to an open source alternative.

Of course, the American tech industry has famously cozied up to Trump this year, with CEOs attending his inauguration, changing content moderation policies, and rewriting editorial missions in ways that are friendlier to administration priorities. And as always, what Trump can’t gain through loyalty, he’ll extract through coercion. Either way, the traditional platform economy is being reshaped as commercial platforms and government institutions merge into a monstrous hybrid of business monopoly and state authority.

IN THE FACE of all these affronts to their sovereignty, a chorus of world leaders has woken from its daze and started to talk seriously about the once-unthinkable: breaking up with the United States. In February, the center-right German politician Friedrich Merz—upon learning that he’d won his country’s federal election—declared on live TV that his priority as chancellor would be to “achieve independence” from the US. “I never thought I would have to say something like this on a television program,” he added.

In March, French president Emmanuel Macron echoed that sentiment in a national address to his people: “We must reinforce our independence,” he said. Later that month, Carney, the new Canadian prime minister, said that his country’s old relationship with the US was “over.”

“The West as we knew it no longer exists,” said Ursula von der Leyen, the head of the EU Commission, in April. “Our next great unifying project must come from an independent Europe.”

But the reality is that, for many allies, simply declaring independence isn’t really a viable option. Japan and South Korea, which depend on the US to protect them against China, can do little more than pray that the bully in the White House leaves them alone.

For now, Denmark and Canada are the other US allies most directly at risk from enshittification. Not only has Trump put Greenland (a protectorate of Denmark) and Canada at the top of his menu for territorial acquisition, but both countries have militaries that are unusually closely integrated into US structures. The “transatlantic idea” has been the “cornerstone of everything we do,” explains one technology adviser to the Danish government, who asked to remain anonymous due to the political sensitivity of the subject. Denmark spent years pushing back against arguments from other allies that Europe needed “strategic autonomy.” And according to a former adviser on Canadian national security, the “soft wiring” binding the US and Canadian military systems to each other makes them nearly impossible to disentangle.

That explains why both countries have been slow to move away from US platforms. In March, the outspoken head of Denmark’s parliamentary defense committee grabbed attention on X by declaring that his country’s purchase of F-35s was a mistake: “I can easily imagine a situation where the USA will demand Greenland from Denmark and will threaten to deactivate our weapons and let Russia attack us when we refuse,” he tweeted. But in reality, the Danish government is even now considering purchasing more F-35s.

Canada, too, has already built its air-strike capacities on top of the F-35 platform; switching to another would, at best, require vast amounts of retooling and redundancy. “We’re going to look at alternatives, because we can’t make ourselves vulnerable,” says the Canadian adviser. “But we would then have a non-interoperable air force in our own country.”

If allies keep building atop US platforms, they render themselves even more vulnerable to American coercion. But if they strike out on their own, they may pay a steeper, more immediate price. In March, the Canadian province of Ontario canceled its deal with Starlink to bring satellite internet to its poorer rural areas. Now, Canada will have to pay much more money to build physical internet connections or else wait for its own satellite constellations to come online.

If other governments followed suit in other domains—breaking their deep interconnections with US weapons systems, or finding alternative cloud platforms for vital government and economic services—it would mean years of economic hardship. Everyone would be poorer. But that’s exactly what some world leaders have been banding together to contemplate.

IN EUROPE, DISCUSSIONS are coalescing around an ambitious idea called EuroStack, an EU-led “digital supply chain” that would give Europe technological sovereignty independent from the US and other countries.

The idea gathered steam a couple of months before Trump’s reelection, when a group of business leaders, European politicians, and technologists—including Meredith Whittaker, the president of Signal, and Audrey Tang, Taiwan’s former minister of digital affairs—met at the European Parliament to discuss “European Digital Independence.” 

According to Cristina Caffarra, an economist who helped organize the meeting, the takeaway was stark: “US tech giants own not only the services we engage with but also everything below, from chips to connectivity to cables under the sea to compute to cloud. If that infrastructure turns off, we have nowhere to go.”

The feeling of urgency has only grown since Trump retook office. The German and French governments have embraced EuroStack, while major EU aircraft manufacturers and military suppliers like Airbus and Dassault have signed on to a public letter advocating its approach to “sovereign digital infrastructure.”

In all the European capitals, the Danish government adviser says, teams of people are calculating what elements should be folded into the effort and what it would cost.

And EuroStack is just one part of the response to enshittification. The European Union is also putting together a joint defense fund to help EU countries buy weapons—but not from the US. The EU’s executive agency, the European Commission, is patching together a network of satellites that could eventually provide Ukraine and Europe with their own home-baked alternative to Starlink. Christine Lagarde, the head of the European Central Bank, has also started talking pointedly about how Europe needs its own infrastructure for payments, credit, and debit, “just in case.”

Robin Berjon, a French computer scientist who spoke at the first EuroStack meeting, acknowledges that the project has yet “to get proper financing and institutional backing” and is “more a social movement than anything else.” If these projects succeed, they will be expensive and slow to bring online—and most will almost certainly underperform cutting-edge US equivalents. But Europe’s issues with American platforms are no longer just about ads and cookies; they’re about the very future of its democracies and national security. And in the longer term, the US itself faces a disquieting question. If it no longer provides platforms that the rest of the world wants to use, who will be left—and whose interests will be served—on American networks?
After Doctorow’s platform monopolists enshittified the user experience, they turned on the businesses that were their actual paying customers and started to abuse them too. US citizens are, ostensibly, the true customers of the US government. But as difficult and expensive as it will be for US allies to escape the enshittification of American power—it will be much harder for Americans to do so, as that power is increasingly turned against them. 

As WIRED has documented, the Trump administration has weaponized federal payments systems against disfavored domestic nonprofits, businesses, and even US states. Contractors such as Palantir are merging disparate federal databases, potentially creating radical new surveillance capabilities that can be exploited at the touch of a button.

In time, US citizens may find themselves trapped in a diminished, nightmare America—like a post-Musk Twitter at scale—where everything works badly, everything can be turned against you, and everyone else has fled. De-enshittifying the platforms of American power isn’t just an urgent priority for allies, then. It’s an imperative for Americans too.

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Filed under Personal politics

AND IN THE BEGINNING….

AND IN THE BEGINNING….

Hello my friends. It’s been a while. I had said I would try to write and post on “Politics Mondays, but honestly, lately, I’ve had a difficult time even talking to people about anything  or watching any kind of news programming, especially anything political.  I’ve I have written two exceptionally long pieces that need significant editing in which I just tried to say everything I wanted to say all at once. Then I figured it out-I need to break it up into pieces! Once I get those edited, I’ll post them another day-not such a long wait for those, I promise! In the meantime, get comfortable, get a cup of coffee or glass of wine-I’m going to tell you a story. 

There is just SO MUCH going on in just the one month that we have had this bizarre and brutal administration injustice  Washington DC creating such chaos not just in DC but all over the country. It’s been hard to keep up with all of the havoc this second Trump administration has been wreaking on every single aspect of our lives. And I get it, a lot of times, it’s hard to see how any of this stuff has anything to do with us on a normal, daily level. It is all happening so fast-as the self proclaimed anarchist Steve Bannon has bragged that he would “flood the (whatever)” in order to make sure no one can keep up with the damage being done that they can divert attention from some of the most serious and dangerous policies getting passed while we were looking elsewhere and distracted. I know my head spins when I try to figure things out! 

So, I’m going to start with some personal observations and experiences and try to post some conversations between the various awful misfortunes the people elected to help us choose to slop all over us. What they are doing in DC and the policies they are putting in place, and the f-ing dangerous clowns they have put into positions of leadership really DOES matter- and we will need some plans for what we need to do as a community before those misfortunes hit us in our most personal and spiritual selves. 

First, because I am not convinced that most people (people I know, anyway) are not as feverishly obsessed with politics as I am, so I’ll start by sharing a couple of items that will help explain my foundational beliefs and how I see things.  I may give a little space for the “other guys” if I must. We’ll see. 

My first “political” experience came when I was six years old. That was on November 22, 1963. That, of course, was the day President Kennedy was killed. To be honest, I didn’t really understand all of it, and my brother and I were just a little miffed that Saturday morning cartoons-the only time Children’s programming was on tv!-were interrupted by the “booooring” funeral of JFK.  With no other distractions, or anything else to watch, I watched bits and pieces of the dark and sad funeral procession. I was touched to see little John John give the salute to the casket, and recognized that the little girl, Caroline had a coat that looked like mine, and she was the same age as me! And now her daddy was dead. How sad she must be! At that moment, I made a connection to that little girl, I just KNEW that if we were to meet, we would be great friends. And for years I continued to try to figure out why such a horrible thing would happen. It would be something I explored until long after my childish naïveté had faded.  

Not long after that, there was an excitement that was buzzing around that suburban neighborhood, something about “the President” but I was six years old, I didn’t pay much attention to what the grown ups were talking about. But after dinner that evening, my folks bundled my brother and me into the car and drove to the airport. On the way, our parents talked to each other about what we were going to do, and I got the sense that my mother considered this a frivolous activity, but my dad insisted that there might never be another time for us to ever get to see the President of the United States so closely, and that it would be an important memory. It was history. 

When we got to the airport, we walked straight to a place where there were what seemed a lot of excited people waiting, anticipating. Then the doors were opened, and the group of us walked quickly out onto the tarmac.  forming a loosely cohesive bunch behind a rope barrier. 

For what seemed like hours, we stood and waited; I was bored and tired and couldn’t see anything but the backsides of the grownups bunched up in front of me, conversations among the adults floating over my brother and me, who whined and sat, then stood, then sat again, ready to go home.  Then, there began a quiet buzzing beginning at the door we had used to exit the building. The buzz grew a little bit at a time, gaining volume and excitement, and beginning to impact me as well. My father quickly picked me up and put me onto his shoulders, the klieg lights nearly blinding me.    The sound of the many cameras clicking and alerted me that there was a group of people approaching the airplane on the other side of the rope, walking crisply toward the airplane. I wasn’t sure where I should be looking; actually it didn’t matter much, since the only things I could see of the group were the tops of several men’s heads; the viewing audience ahead of me successfully masked the group we had come to see. But then, as if the mask had been pulled off, there was another head, almost directly in front of me at that point, a full head above the others. He looked like a meerkat soldier standing up in the middle of his troop and surveying the terrain for threats or food. 

“That’s the President! That’s LBJ!” The crowd clapped and yelled approvingly. 

The President? That’s not what Presidents are supposed to look like! This guy was OLD and he had a big nose and big ears and wrinkles and didn’t smile. Not at all like the handsome young President that died.  I was unimpressed. 

The following summer, my neighbor had a baby boy that I simply fell in love with. A baby! Babies,  I would learn, would also become a part of the woman who would come to be and remain a core part of my soul to this day.  I had been playing with him outside of their house one afternoon while he was in his little baby chair. I LOVED that little boy, and his mom, too; when she asked me if I could wait there and “babysit” him while she went to hang laundry on the line in the backyard, I was honored.  When she returned, she paid me 16 cents for my efforts, and I was very excited to have “earned” real money for a job! Into my piggy bank for a “rainy day”.

My mother asked me later what I thought I’d like to do with the money I earned from “babysitting”.  I had no idea. The only money I had ever spent at that time was to put a penny into a gumball machine at the grocery store, but it didn’t seem a very interesting way to spend such an important sum.  Then I heard somebody talking about Mrs. Kennedy, and my ears instantly perked up. She was raising money so she could build a library, the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Presidential Library, and was asking for donations from the public in order to pay for it. That was it! Mrs. Kennedy needed me! I wrote a letter to Mrs. Kennedy, taped the dime, nickel, and penny to the bottom of it, and asked my mom to send it in the mail. I was sure Mrs. Kennedy and Caroline would see and appreciate my major contribution and be happy. 

(As it turned out, I received a letter from Mrs. Kennedy thanking me for my “donation”, a letter I was obviously very excited to get, and also, someone at the Dayton Daily News wrote a tiny blurb about it in the newspaper. Pretty heady stuff for a six-year-old! I’ve kept both for over 50 years.  I saw them recently, showed them to my family, and now have no idea where they are. SMH)

My understanding of the world continued to develop through my Catholic school days- 12 years of Catholic school and, to my parents’ chagrin, I’m sure,  I left those institutions with less religion and a lot more politics. In 1968, I was a TERRIBLE representative of Hubert Humphrey in a mock election, but I didn’t know much about him or what I did know I didn’t like (except that he was from Minnesota, which is where I was born). In that election, my friend Shawn gave a dramatic portrayal of Bobby Kennedy; (MY President’s brother!) his portrayal and what Shawn taught us all about what Bobby stood for was awesome. So much so, I think I voted for him rather than for Mr. Humphrey! 

Aside from that moment of politics in middle school, what I learned from my mostly progressive teachers at Corpus Christi Elementary and Julienne/Chaminade-Julienne High School was about living lives of generosity, love, and service. What I learned is that those ideas-the ones that Jesus preached about- were the ones that I took to heart and applied to my idealistic political awareness. Decades later, it still defines how I try to live my life. Yeah, ok, so I don’t go to church anymore, but when I am asked or have to fill out a form I still answer “Catholic” when asked. 

On May 4, 1970, when I was 13 years old, I came home from school, came through the back door, and found my mother sitting at the kitchen table, the newspaper spread out in front of her, her head in her hands, weeping.  My mother was (and still is) a very capable, strong woman, and not one to cry over “little things”, so I knew instantly that something was terribly wrong.

“They’re killing them. They’re shooting our children”. What she was seeing on the front page of the newspaper was soldiers, guns out and pointing, and students running for their lives. It was the Ohio National Guard turning their guns on students at Kent State University, murdering 4 and injuring ten more. What had been a weekend of protests on campus, some anger fused with indignation over the illegal and secret invasion of the country of Cambodia in an expansion of the increasingly unpopular Viet Nam war. 

The shooting itself was scary and awful; the reaction from my mother was perplexing. We had seen the pictures and videos from the war on the news, of course, but while I knew about it in a very abstract sense, the war had not touched anyone I knew in any real way. That day, I determined to find out what those students at Kent State knew that I needed to know. I cut that article out of the newspaper, put it into a scrapbook, studied the war, talked about it whenever the opportunity arose, filled the scrapbook with more articles, and began a real love/hate relationship with our government and politics. 

By the time I was 17, about to enter my last year of high school, and just as I was beginning to feel like I had reached an understanding of the world and my place in it, everything changed. My father had accepted a new job working for the City of Akron, Ohio 400 hundred miles northeast of my hometown of Dayton, and we had to move.  It was devastating. I was angry, sad, frightened, and very alone in this world. It felt ironic that it was on August 10, 1974, the last dinner we had in our hometown was with friends while we watched President Nixon resign from the presidency. Of course he did.

The one potentially bright light in the sea of darkness in my brain was that our new address was only about 35 minutes away from Kent State University. I was determined to make my own new path, address, and life and attend the school that was a symbol for the feeling of rebellion that had been planted over the many years of my childhood but that had grown so large I was pretty sure I might explode if I didn’t find an outlet for it.  

So I went to Kent State, and met people of every political stripe-Communists, labor unions, Veterans, Musicians, Artists, and curious Freshmen. My politics became clear to me, and although I have grown and continued to learn, it’s a quote from “My President” JFK that gives the best summation of what I believe, and that I think speaks for progressive liberals in general, despite rush Limbaugh’s assessment that “today’s liberals are not like JFK was a liberal”. I call that bullsh*t. 

“If by a ‘Liberal’ they mean someone who looks AHEAD and not BEHIND, someone who WELCOMES new ideas without RIGID reactions, someone who CARES about the welfare of the PEOPLE- their HEALTH, their HOUSING, their SCHOOLS, their JOBS, their CIVIL LIBERTIES, someone who BELIEVES we can break through the STALEMATE and SUSPICIONS that grip us in our policies abroad. If that is what they mean by a ‘LIBERAL’, then I’m PROUD TO SAY I’M A LIBERAL”. 

NEXT TIME: Another quote: 

“The ignorance of one voter in a democracy impairs the security of all.” JFK

(So what happens when half the country is ignorant?)

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February 22, 2025 · 4:36 am

Libs and Cons…Part 1

I’ve been trying to understand for years now the draw that people like Newt Gingrich, Rush Limbaugh, Donald Trump, and groups like “The Proud Boys” et al. for the American right wing-especially for the CHRISTIAN right wing. I think I may have thought that it was simply because of the issue of abortion; no discussion of conservative politics ever took place in my discussions without the issue of abortion asserting itself somewhere along the way.  But with the election of Donald Trump and the repeal of Roe v Wade, the bile oozing from Republican candidates across the country is still spreading, smothering any kind of rational discussion of political policy I once believed possible between the left and right. 

Of course, the election of Donald Trump was a shock to our political system on all sides.  Republicans were shocked and delighted. We liberals were shocked to see such an ill-informed, narcissistic buffoon elected to the office of the Presidency of the United States. We suffered through four years of embarrassment as his lies, his racist and anti-semitic bloviation, his ineptitude and his obvious sense of entitlement made a mockery of our image of ourselves as Americans here and abroad. The disdain we saw on the faces of foreign allies and adversaries alike, the shifting of traditional alignments of the U.S. with other democratic governments to the “love letters” from leaders of authoritarian nations like North Korea, Russia, Hungary, and Argentina were indications of the transforming of American culture from the top down.  Even those who rarely engaged in political action or conversation have been drawn in by what Polish writer Ann Applebaum calls the “seductive lure of authoritarianism” developing in all aspects of our American life.  

The frightening part of the reign of Donald Trump, though, was not simply the alliances he discarded or insulted, or even the coarseness of his language and lies.  The frightening thing is that because of his belief that he alone knew what was best for all of us, that what he wanted to do, legally, criminally, or personally, was what we “should” also want and be satisfied with, and that nearly half the citizens in this country fell for it. The glee that many of our citizens have for following his lead, for being “allowed” to spew racist and anti-semitic rhetoric, to feel entitled to violence against those who disagreed with them, and to demand his continued presence in the White House even after 60-SIXTY!-judges, many of them judges that he himself had appointed, declared that he had not won the right to continue as President has been bone-chilling. 

Even worse, if possible, has been the acquiescence of the Republican Party to the influence of Donald Trump and his despicable stooges. That grown men, some who have been in Washington for decades, have deprecated themselves, politically, personally, and spiritually to bow down to this bloviating bully, cowering in fear that he will use his truly “bully pulpit” to call them out, revealing or lying about their loyalty to him, which means loyalty to the country, or calling into question some aspect of their “manhood”, virtue, intelligence, or whatever he recognizes as a weakness he can use to corrupt. The voting public has no such fear, as they know they are anonymous to him. The Republicans in Congress, however, so brash and self-righteous in their belief that THEIR way is the RIGHT way, cower in fear of Donald Trump’s wrath, even after his expulsion from office. 

Now, the Republicans stepping into the fray and running for offices at every level of government in their attempt to seize or maintain power are seriously emulating the example that Donald Trump set for them.  It is almost a badge of honor to be hateful, foul-mouthed, and extolling vitriol, propaganda, and violence toward those who disagree. They are angry-very angry, it seems-that their guy LOST in the 2020 election, and that means their grievances won’t be heard. So they are running themselves. And they are using every nasty trick in the old Republican playbooks ever used: they are lying outright, having learned from the “master” of propaganda Josef Goebbels, they know that a lie, repeated long enough and often enough will become “truth” to those predisposed to believe it.  They are mocking rivals for their health, for their non-religious politics, their quiet demeanor, and for “goodness”.  They are even “darkening” the skin of their African-American opponents in advertisements, believing (or knowing) that their almost entirely Caucasian base will be frightened by a candidate they see as “too black”. 

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October 31, 2022 · 5:51 pm