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professional clown vs professional president....Russian President Vladimir Putin is “a professional” who has learned how to handle Western sanctions, but he understands that more could come if the Ukraine conflict is not settled, US President Donald Trump has said. Speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One on Friday, Trump confirmed that the two leaders discussed potential sanctions during Thursday’s phone call. “I would say he [Putin] is not thrilled with it, but you know, he’s been able to handle sanctions, but these are pretty biting sanctions.” The Russian president, he added, is fully aware that the US could ramp up the pressure. “You know, he’s a professional. It may be coming,” he added. In a one-hour phone call, Putin and Trump discussed the Ukraine conflict, the volatile state of affairs in the Middle East, and Russia-US cooperation, according to Kremlin aide Yury Ushakov. Ushakov said Trump raised the issue of ending the hostilities as soon as possible, adding that while Moscow is open to finding a political solution, it will not back down from its goals, including addressing the root causes of the conflict. Later, Trump said he was “unhappy” with the lack of progress towards peace. US lawmakers have introduced a bill that proposes a 500% tariff on imports from countries that continue to purchase Russian oil and energy products. Introduced by US Senator Lindsey Graham and backed by at least 81 senators, it also proposes extending sanctions on Russia, including its sovereign debt. Last month, Graham claimed that Trump told him “it’s time to move the bill” to a vote. At the time, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Graham’s views are “well known to the whole world,”adding that “he belongs to a group of inveterate Russophobes,” and that he would have imposed new sanctions on Russia long ago if he were in charge. “Would that have helped the [Ukraine] settlement? That is a question that those who initiate such events should ask themselves,” Peskov said. The US imposed sanctions on Russia in 2014 following the start of the Ukraine crisis. After the conflict escalated in 2022, they were drastically expanded to include financial and energy sanctions, as well as asset freezes. Russian officials have described the sanctions as “illegal,” while highlighting Russia’s economic resilience, arguing that they have strengthened domestic production. https://www.rt.com/news/621026-putin-professional-trump/
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
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David O'Halloran
MAGA buyers’ remorse and the trouble with Christian nationalismFor those who do begin to question, the challenge is not to nudge them leftward or toward some ideologically approved alternative. The challenge is simply to stay in the discomfort long enough for something more honest to emerge.
Every movement that trades in certainty eventually produces a subset of disillusioned former believers. The MAGA movement, particularly its Christian nationalist variant, is no exception. What began for many as a confident reclamation of “Christian values” has, for some, become a site of discomfort or even regret. The flags are still waving, but the quiet questions are growing louder: What, exactly, did we sign up for?
This phenomenon, call it MAGA buyers’ remorse, presents both a cultural and moral problem. Not only for those experiencing it, but for the broader Christian community still reckoning with the movement’s legacy. For those who bought in early and are now uneasy, the experience is not just political disappointment. It is cognitive dissonance between professed beliefs and observed outcomes.
In therapeutic circles, this kind of internal conflict is a key site of change. Motivational interviewing, a counselling method developed to help people explore and resolve ambivalence, offers a useful framework for understanding what’s happening. Its basic premise is deceptively simple: people are more likely to change when they feel heard, not judged; when they discover their own reasons for change, not when those reasons are imposed.
This is worth bearing in mind for anyone hoping to have a good-faith conversation with a former MAGA adherent. It’s tempting to seize on their uncertainty as an opening to win an argument. But motivational interviewing suggests that a better approach is to ask, “What did you hope for?” and “How does that compare to what you’ve seen?” The goal isn’t to punish someone for getting it wrong; it’s to help them articulate what still matters to them. In other words, you don’t dismantle a belief system by tearing it down. You let it collapse under the weight of its own contradictions.
But what of those who experience no such contradiction? What of the Christians who remain untroubled by the movement’s authoritarian tendencies, its hostility to outsiders, its casual relationship with truth? Here the question becomes more pointed: Were they ever operating within a recognisably Christian framework at all?
It is not a new observation that Christian nationalism often functions as a form of cultural identity rather than religious conviction. It’s concerned less with the teachings of Jesus than with the preservation of a mythic national past. It values strength over mercy, loyalty over conscience, dominance over humility. Whatever else it is, this is not Christianity in any meaningful theological sense. It’s a civic religion with a thin Christian varnish.
There are obvious historical precedents for this kind of fusion: Franco’s Spain, certain strains of Afrikaner Calvinism, even American Civil Religion more broadly. But the fact that it’s familiar doesn’t make it any more coherent. Theologically, the MAGA-inflected Christian nationalism lacks the self-critical capacity that is central to Christianity. There is no notion of sin as shared condition. No sense of the cross as a critique of power. No space for repentance, except by outsiders. In this version of faith, the other is always wrong, and the tribe is always right.
This is why buyers’ remorse is such a fragile and interesting space. It suggests that, somewhere, a conscience is still functioning. That a person is trying to reconcile what they hoped to find in MAGA with what it became. That is not a moment for derision, but for clarity. The question is not whether they were ever “real Christians”, as if faith could be audited like a bank account. It’s whether the movement they once followed ever reflected the values they claimed to hold.
For some, the answer is now becoming obvious. For others, it never will. But for those who do begin to question, the challenge is not to nudge them leftward or toward some ideologically approved alternative. The challenge is simply to stay in the discomfort long enough for something more honest to emerge.
And perhaps, eventually, something better.
https://johnmenadue.com/post/2025/07/maga-buyers-remorse-and-the-trouble-with-christian-nationalism/
WAITING FOR A BETTER CLOWN?... WOULD A SENILE PRESIDENT DO?....
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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.