Wednesday 4th of December 2024

only the future can tell us....

In finalising his cabinet, Donald Trump has come to resemble an American Caligula, the Roman emperor rumoured to have considered appointing his beloved stallion as consul. So unorthodox have been the president-elect’s appointments that I half expected him to nominate his golf cart as the new transportation secretary.

 

Trump is America’s Caligula. His mission is to destroy what made America great

 

BY Nick Bryant

 

Certainly, there’s been a “bread and circuses” feel to the staffing of the new administration, a phrase coined in Roman times to describe how leaders won the approbation of the populace not through the proficiency of public servants but by something more performative. Crowd-pleasing gimmickry. Attention-grabbing stunts. How fitting, then, that the formation of Trump 2.0 should coincide with the release of Gladiator II.

After selecting Robert F. Kennedy Jr, a vaccine sceptic, to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, and Linda McMahon, a wrestling impresario, to become education secretary, Trump now wants Kash Patel to head up the FBI. This mega-MAGA 44-year-old, who served during Trump’s first term as a White House “political enforcer”, has a side hustle in selling pro-Trump merchandise. As well as penning Government Gangsters: The Deep State, the Truth, and the Battle for Our Democracy, he has written a children’s book, The Plot Against the King, which, as The Atlantic reported, features “a wizard named Kash who sets out to save King Donald from the sinister machinations of Hillary Queenton”.

At least the American republic can breathe a sigh of relief that former Florida congressman Matt Gaetz will not become attorney-general. A MAGA diehard who promotes himself on his website as “Trump’s Ultimate Defender”, he fell victim to what it is tempting to call “Gaetzgate”, a scandal combining accusations of sexual misconduct and drug use. Now, though, from a perch at the FBI, Patel could become “Trump’s Ultimate Prosecutor”.

 

It’s not just who Trump has appointed. Arguably, the larger story concerns who he wants to fire. His war on what he calls the “deep state”, a supposed shadowy network of government bureaucrats out to thwart him, is likely to result in the banishment of thousands of nonpolitical public servants. Trump believes he can do so with the flourish of his Sharpie pen, by signing an executive order that makes it easier to sack federal employees. The scheme goes by the Orwellian-sounding tagline “Schedule F”, and comes straight from the pages of the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025.

To carry out this purge, Trump has appointed Elon Musk and the gadfly-like pharmaceuticals billionaire Vivek Ramaswamy to head a Department of Government Efficiency, which, despite its name, will operate outside the official bounds of government. Musk has promised to “send shockwaves through the system”. The goal set by Ramaswamy is to eliminate 75 per cent of the federal government. Trump himself has likened their work to the Manhattan Project, the program that developed the atomic bomb.

Never before has the modern American state, which came into being in the 1930s when Franklin Delano Roosevelt created a swath of New Deal agencies to combat the Great Depression, come under such assault. To the MAGA faithful, the Trump restoration will bring about a governmental reformation. His re-election is often framed as a threat to US democracy. Just as real and present is the threat to US government.

Trump’s choice to head the National Institutes of Health, one of the world’s foremost medical research centres, exemplifies this scorched-earth approach. Dr Jay Bhattacharya, a Stanford physician and economist, was a vehement opponent of lockdowns during the COVID pandemic. His thoughts on readying America for the next global contagion are blunt and severe. “Effective pandemic preparedness,” he wrote on social media in January. “Step 1: Fire all the people responsible for pandemic preparedness.”

As with most aspects of Trumpism, the assault on government has not come out of nowhere. For Republicans, this has been the direction of travel for decades. Ronald Reagan first made his political name in the mid-1960s with a rhetorical attack on government, which he kept on regurgitating until he won the presidency. “Government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem,” became the most ringing line of his 1981 inaugural address.

After the Reagan Revolution came the 1994 Republican Revolution. It was led by Newt Gingrich, the party’s first House speaker in 40 years, whose anti-government bombast was even shriller. This history partly explains why Trump survived his role in the January 6 insurrection. Many Republicans viewed it not as an attack on democracy but as an attack on government: a Trump revolution.

What often gets forgotten in this assault on government is the government’s central role in making America great in the first place. The New Deal agencies helped save US capitalism during the Great Depression, while an expanded federal government helped the US play a victorious role in World War II. At times of crisis, such as the 2008 financial crash, even staunch ideological conservatives became operational liberals and sought government assistance.

The Australian cultural critic Robert Hughes understood the link between the might of the state and the might of America. In noting how the desert-like American Southwest could never have been settled without massive government spending on water engineering, he wryly observed: “They are less the John Wayne than the Welfare Queen of American development”. Trump, in drawing an analogy with the Manhattan Project, must surely have known he was referring to a government program.

 

Trump’s last attempt to bulldoze the apparatus of government ended in failure. When he left office in January 2021, the federal government was actually slightly larger than the day he took office. But this time he intends not only to “drain the swamp”. His intention is to nuke it.

Nick Bryant, a former BBC Washington correspondent, is author of The Forever War: America’s Unending Conflict with Itself.

https://www.smh.com.au/world/north-america/trump-is-america-s-caligula-his-mission-is-to-destroy-what-made-america-great-20241202-p5kv0h.html

 

GUSNOTE: NICK BRYANT SHOULD HAVE WRITTEN THE FOREVER WAR: AMERICA'S UNENDING CONFLICT WITH THE REST OF THE WORLD, WHICH IT WANTS TO OWN... TRUMP IS PLANTING SOME BOMBS UNDER THE AMERICAN SYSTEM WHICH HAS BEEN ATROCIOUS SINCE AFTER WORLDWAR TWO... WHETHER HE'S SUCCESSFUL OR NOT ONLY THE FUTURE CAN TELL US....

 

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

 

PLEASE DO NOT BLAME RUSSIA IF WW3 STARTS. BLAME YOURSELF.

 

 

 

shaking it up.....

 

Trump and Musk are ready to shake up America
What can we expect from the ‘bromance’ of the two billionaires?

 

By Vitaly Ryumshin

 

It’s often said that a king is shaped by his entourage. This saying may be as old as time itself, but it applies perfectly to US President-elect Donald Trump. Right now, however, there’s only one person truly pulling the king’s strings – Elon Musk. Since the November 6 election, the Tesla tycoon has become the most influential figure in America – and perhaps even the world.

Musk’s road to power took four long years. Before 2022, Trump and the South African billionaire were rivals (in 2020, the Space-X founder even supported Biden). But when Musk bought Twitter, rebranded it as X, and gradually leaned into the Republican fold, the winds shifted. By early 2024, Musk had met Trump, publicly endorsed him in July, and begun campaigning. By the end of the year, the two had become inseparable.

Now, Musk is basically joined at the hip with Trump. They attend MMA fights together, watch space launches, and share McDonald’s burgers. Musk is now a fixture at the Mar-a-Lago estate, advising the future president on appointments, and even apparently speaking to foreign leaders on his behalf – he was allegedly present when Trump spoke to Vladimir Zelensky and is reported to have secretly met the Iranian ambassador.

Trump’s old advisers are getting nervous. On November 18, Axios reported that Musk had clashed with Boris Epshteyn, a longtime Trump ally, over Matt Gaetz’s nomination for US Attorney General. After the dispute, Gaetz’s nomination was pulled and CNN claimed that Trump’s team have asked that Epshteyn be investigated for alleged fraud – over alleged bribes to lobby for positions within the new administration.

Musk’s influence is undeniable, and the media has already dubbed him the “co-president of the United States” or more cheekily, the “broligarch.” Musk himself embraces the title of “first buddy” (a nod to the first lady).

This isn’t without controversy. Musk’s ruthless business tactics are legendary, and he has Trump’s full trust. The billionaire has promised to audit the entire US government, aiming to cut up to $2 trillion in spending. God only knows what he’ll come up with next.

It’s fascinating to watch the American political establishment panic. And let’s be honest – this drama could work to Russia’s advantage. The more chaos in Washington, the better for Moscow. But don’t get too excited just yet.

There are differing views on Trump’s leadership. Some see him as a weak head man, easily swayed by flattery, while others view him as a potential autocrat, quick to toss aside anyone who crosses him. The truth, as always, lies somewhere in between. Trump runs his inner circle like a boss, with some figures holding much more sway than others.

Musk certainly falls into this inner circle. But he’s not alone. Trump’s family – especially Donald Trump Jr. – is also a key influence. Trump Jr. has been instrumental in connecting his father with allies like JD Vance, Robert Kennedy Jr., and Tulsi Gabbard, and he’s helping to handpick cabinet members. His influence is on par with Musk’s, even if it’s quieter.

The Wall Street tycoons Trump has befriended also play a major role. In fact, for them, Trump has compromised on his conservative values, even proposing Scott Bessent, a former George Soros manager, for treasury secretary. Musk lobbied for Howard Lutnick to join the administration, but he eventually landed at the Commerce Department. These examples show that while Musk’s influence on Trump is substantial, it’s not all-encompassing –his power doesn’t extend beyond Trump’s inner circle.

There are also questions about how long the Trump-Musk partnership will last. Both are unpredictable, volatile personalities. Trump has a history of falling out with his favorites (just look at his rocky relationship with Florida Governor Ron DeSantis). Musk and Trump have plenty of potential points of conflict – from electric cars (Trump’s not a fan) to more serious matters like government spending cuts.

But that’s a problem for the future. For now, let’s sit back, grab some popcorn, and watch this unfolding spectacle.

This article was first published by the online newspaper Gazeta.ru and was translated and edited by the RT team

 

https://www.rt.com/news/608563-trump-musk-ready-shake-us/

 

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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

 

PLEASE DO NOT BLAME RUSSIA IF WW3 STARTS. BLAME YOURSELF.