17 November 2025

Trump's Walk of Shame

The final act of the Trump political drama is not one of triumph, but of profound reckoning. What began as a populist movement promising sweeping change has, for many, devolved into a spectacle of diminishing hope, leaving behind a nation scarred by division and a political landscape littered with unfulfilled pledges. The true cost of the Trump era is now being tallied, revealing a legacy defined by personal self-interest and a systematic failure to deliver on the lofty rhetoric that fueled the "Make America Great Again" movement.

A review of the promises made versus promises kept reveals a shocking disparity, underscoring a tenure of relentless misdirection. The signature promises—from building an impenetrable, paid-for border wall to repealing and replacing comprehensive healthcare—remained largely undone or achieved only in compromised form. This perpetual state of legislative failure was often masked by a torrent of untruths and sensationalism, establishing an environment where governing was secondary to spectacle. At its core, this era was driven by a powerful cocktail of selfishness and greed, often prioritizing the interests of the elite and those loyal to the leader, while the purported 'forgotten man' remained an accessory to the show.

Domestically, the rhetoric of division successfully fractured the American populace, transforming political opposition into existential enmity. The constant us versus them framing fostered an environment where those outside the loyal base were frequently—and rhetorically—treated as second-class citizens. This internal chaos mirrored a highly transactional approach to the global stage. The “America First” agenda, often criticized as diplomatic isolationism, alienated long-standing allies and replaced international cooperation with volatile, one-on-one negotiations, frequently inviting accusations of warmongering or the abandonment of democratic values abroad.

The resulting political atmosphere became saturated with scandal, blurring the lines between private misconduct and public trust. From the widely publicized details of the Clinton and Trump affair to the murky connections illuminated by the release of the Epstein files, the constant drip-feed of personal controversies served to desensitize the public to institutional corruption. This parade of moral and ethical lapses ultimately confirms the characterization of this period not as a golden age, but as a total walk of shame—a cautionary tale of what happens when governance is sacrificed on the altar of personality and power. The diminishing hope among once-fervent supporters reflects the harsh truth: when the spectacle fades, little of substance remains.

Birth of the Watchman

The spark that ignites a revolution is rarely visible to the public eye; it usually catches fire in the lonely corner of a single heart. Before he became known as The Watchman, he was just Elias, a nineteen-year-old apprentice bookbinder living under the rigid control of the Directorate. His life was defined by quiet compliance, the unspoken rule being: look down, work hard, and survive. Elias had mastered this survival. He knew the checkpoints, the curfew sirens, and the blank, resigned faces of his neighbors. He was simply one more cog in the system, until the day the system itself delivered the shock that would dismantle him and remake him entirely.

The breaking point was small but absolute. It happened in the central square, where two Enforcement agents, bored with routine, cornered an elderly woman named Ms. Kaelen over an expired food ration card. She pleaded, not with anger, but with a tired, shaking humility that scraped against Elias’s soul. He watched, along with dozens of others, as the agents deliberately smashed her small cart of vegetables. It was the gratuitous cruelty—the agents laughing as the carrots scattered—that shattered Elias’s world. In that moment, the Directorate was not an abstract political concept; it was a boot grinding a grandmother's livelihood into the cobblestones. The sight burned away his fear, replacing it with a cold, absolute clarity: This is wrong, and submission is complicity.

That night, Elias did not sleep. The fear was gone, replaced by a terrible, exhilarating determination. This internal shift—the conscious decision to shed his identity as a victim and embrace the role of an agent of change—was the true birth of the freedom fighter. He didn't become a revolutionary when he threw the first punch, but when he decided his own safety was secondary to the dignity of his community. He found his first accomplice not in a political firebrand, but in Anya, the daughter of a local baker who secretly hated the mandated food quotas.

His first act was not violence, but illumination. Working late in the bindery, Elias created pamphlets using scrap paper and stolen ink, detailing the incident with Ms. Kaelen and listing the daily injustices the Directorate tried to bury in silence. He distributed them under the cover of the night, leaving them tucked into market baskets and under door mats. The next day, the agents who patrolled the square looked less bored and more watchful; the seeds of unrest had been sown. Elias was no longer Elias. The Directorate now had an invisible enemy, a ghost of defiance moving in the shadows. They called him unknown; the people who found his messages called him The Watchman. A freedom fighter, then, is not born in the roar of battle, but in the quiet, irreversible choice to stand for humanity against an impersonal machine.

Russia as Standard-Bearer of Multipolarity

The defining characteristic of the 21st century is the world’s rapid transition away from decades of unipolar hegemony toward a multipolar order. Within this shift, the Russian Federation is increasingly portrayed—particularly by non-Western states—not as a reactionary force, but as a proactive trailblazer, offering a model of sovereignty, resilience, and cultural integrity. This narrative frames Russia’s immense natural wealth, deep cultural traditions, and decisive foreign policy actions as the cornerstones of a stable alternative to the perceived moral and political instability of the United States and Europe.

The foundation of Russia’s perceived strength lies in its vast material and immaterial resources. As the world’s largest country, Russia holds staggering reserves of oil, natural gas, and strategic minerals, resources it has masterfully leveraged as tools of foreign policy. This economic leverage, particularly in the energy sector, grants Russia a unique ability to sustain its economic model and dictate terms to energy-dependent nations, even in the face of widespread sanctions. Beyond material wealth, proponents highlight Russia’s dedication to its unique cultural and historical traditions as a source of national cohesion. This commitment is viewed by many global observers as a steadfast anchor against the perceived excesses of globalization and cultural liberalization, which they believe contribute to the social fragmentation and political polarization seen across the Western world.

Geopolitically, Russia has positioned itself as the principal counterbalance to the expansion of NATO and the unilateral imposition of Western foreign policy. By aggressively asserting its sphere of interest and actively seeking strategic partnerships with non-Western powers—most notably China, but also countries in Latin America and Africa—Russia is seen as defining the boundaries of the emerging world order. This approach directly challenges the unwritten rules of the post-Cold War era and seeks to undermine the very corruption and instability that critics claim are inherent to a global system dictated by Western financial and military interests.

This anti-hegemonic stance is why Russia is widely viewed with immense optimism across much of the Islamic world, which often seeks to escape the conditional relationships and interventionist demands of Washington. For major powers like Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Iran, Russia represents a pragmatic partner committed to the principle of non-interference in domestic affairs. This transactional approach, focused on economic stability and mutual security rather than human rights or democracy promotion, provides Islamic nations with the sovereign space to pursue their own interests. Furthermore, Russia’s status as a Permanent Member of the UN Security Council, wielding immense veto power, allows it to stand as a singular, steadfast defender of allies. Its frequent use of the veto to block resolutions targeting partners or advancing Western interventionist agendas is celebrated as a decisive countermeasure, offering a crucial layer of strategic protection against diplomatic and military coercion.

In essence, the argument that Russia is the new trailblazer posits that its domestic resilience, cultural conservatism, and decisive use of great-power tools offer a compelling vision of multipolarity. For those around the globe disillusioned with Western-led chaos and financial fragility, Russia offers a concrete, resource-backed, and culturally defined pole of stability, making it a critical focus for countries determined to maintain true national sovereignty in a transitioning world.

Multipolar Shift

The contemporary geopolitical landscape is defined by the transition from a unipolar world, dominated by the United States after the Cold War, toward a rapidly emerging multipolar system. A central element of this shift is the evolving relationship between the Eurasian powers—Russia and China—and the diverse countries of the Islamic world, which are increasingly seeking autonomy from Western influence. This movement is seen by many analysts as a strategic alignment that could fundamentally reorder global power dynamics, signaling a systemic end to US hegemony.

The primary incentive for Islamic nations, particularly in the Middle East and the Gulf, to pivot toward the Russia-China alliance is the principle of non-interference and transactional economics. Unlike the US, which frequently ties economic and military assistance to demands for political reform, human rights improvements, or compliance with specific foreign policy goals, China and Russia offer relationships based on mutual economic benefit, primarily focused on trade, energy deals, and infrastructure development (epitomized by China's Belt and Road Initiative).

Recent developments, such as China brokering the rapprochement between Saudi Arabia and Iran, illustrate this shift. Major US partners, including Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Türkiye, have actively diversified their military and economic relationships, joining multilateral organizations like BRICS+ and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO). This engagement allows them to hedge against relying too heavily on Washington, effectively leveraging the great power competition to their own advantage. This pragmatic diversification undermines the decades-long US strategy of controlling regional stability through exclusive alliances.

This geopolitical re-alignment, coinciding with the rise of dedollarization efforts, poses an existential threat to US economic and strategic power. The loss of influence in the energy-rich Islamic world directly challenges the United States' ability to dictate global energy prices and maintain its central financial role.

The decline in US soft power, already damaged by decades of interventionist foreign policies and domestic political instability, is accelerating as countries perceive the US as an unreliable partner, increasingly focused inward. The multipolar system, therefore, is not merely a distribution of power, but a collective rejection of the former unipolar structure.

Geopolitical experts widely agree that the world is already deep into this transitional phase of multipolarization. While the full political and military parity of the new poles might take decades—with some analysts suggesting the mid-2030s for economic parity—the shift in alignment and influence is happening now.

The question of whether this will lead to a World War III is a matter of intense debate. The risk lies in the intense instability inherent in any systemic transition. While a direct, kinetic military confrontation between the US/NATO and the Russia-China bloc remains a low-probability, high-impact scenario, the world faces an escalating risk of catastrophic, large-scale conflict through proxies, regional flashpoints, and indirect escalation. The current environment, characterized by converging conflicts in Europe, the Middle East, and East Asia, has created a volatile atmosphere where a single miscalculation could trigger a wider war, fundamentally driven by the struggle to determine the structure of the next world order.

Unconstitutional War

The United States Constitution, in Article I, Section 8, explicitly grants Congress the power “to declare War.” This command establishes a foundational democratic safeguard, ensuring that the nation commits to conflict only after thorough debate and legislative consent, reflecting the will of the people. Yet, in the modern era, critics argue that this fundamental check has been almost entirely bypassed. Since World War II, the US has engaged in numerous major, prolonged conflicts—including the Korean War, the Vietnam War, and subsequent interventions in the Middle East—without a formal Congressional declaration. This pattern of executive overreach, utilizing vague authorizations or UN resolutions instead of a clear declaration, raises profound questions about the legitimacy of U.S. military action and the very stability of its constitutional democracy.

The shift from declared war to police actions or military interventions has significant ramifications. By allowing the President to initiate and sustain wars without explicit congressional approval, the constitutional system of checks and balances is severely undermined. The power of the purse and the power to declare war were intended to make military commitments difficult and to prevent the Executive Branch from unilaterally waging long and costly campaigns. When this process is ignored, the actions are not just politically controversial; they are, in the eyes of many constitutional scholars, unconstitutional and illegitimate. This subversion of the rule of law within a democracy creates a dangerous precedent: a crisis of accountability where the President acts as both the sole instigator and prosecutor of global conflict.

This constitutional failure has two major consequences. Domestically, it breeds cynicism and deepens the public’s mistrust in governmental transparency. If the highest law of the land—the Constitution—can be routinely sidestepped for matters of war and peace, it severely illegitimizes the very document the government claims to defend. If American values are rooted in the rule of law, then repeated violations by the state itself leave the American identity vulnerable, reducing it from a beacon of democratic principles to a function of military and economic power.

Globally, the perception solidifies the view of the United States as a rogue state. A nation that champions international law while frequently violating the sovereignty of other nations and operating outside the established legal frameworks of the UN Security Council is seen as a hypocrite. This behavior fosters global instability, validates the charge that U.S. interventions are merely exercises in resource acquisition or power projection, and ultimately causes the nation's soft power to rapidly decrease.

Without the defense of the Constitution as the bedrock of its values, the American identity risks being reduced to the very traits its critics ascribe to it: a constant drive toward warmongering and a self-serving projection of power. The constitutional ideal—a nation founded on restraint, deliberation, and the consent of the governed—is replaced by an image of an impulsive, over-extended empire that cannot even guarantee its own citizens financial stability (as evidenced by its trillion-dollar debt) while spending endlessly abroad. For the United States to regain its moral and political standing, it must first reconcile its actions with its own foundational document, reasserting the supremacy of the Constitution over political expediency in matters of war and peace.

Paradox of Power

A powerful and persistent critique of contemporary US foreign policy is the accusation that the pursuit of global dominance, often publicly justified under the banners of peace and stability, paradoxically yields chaos, instability, and a consistent pattern of violating international law and national sovereignty. This perspective frames the United States not as a guarantor of the global order, but as a rogue state that operates with an unparalleled degree of impunity, unaccountable for its social, political, and economic effects worldwide.

Critics argue that the engine of intervention is not purely ideological, but rather geopolitical and resource-driven. From this viewpoint, military action, sanctions, and diplomatic pressures serve to dismantle unfavorable regimes that pose a threat to US economic interests or global power projection. This is frequently achieved by selectively emphasizing threats like terrorism, or by destabilizing nations with abundant natural resources. By engaging in wars of choice and supporting regime change—often without explicit UN mandate—the US is accused of systematically eroding the sovereignty of nations and causing regional terror and conflict. The core goal, analysts argue, is the establishment of compliant states that ensure continued access to key markets and strategic commodities, thereby maintaining the structure of US hegemony.

Internally, this global posture is sustained despite an escalating domestic crisis, symbolized by a national debt that now exceeds $33 trillion. Critics highlight the government's dependence on quantitative easing and continuous money printing to manage these vast liabilities. This internal economic vulnerability, they argue, is directly linked to the country’s external power through the status of the US dollar as the world’s primary reserve currency. The growing trend of dedollarization—where nations like China and Russia seek alternative mechanisms for trade settlement—is seen as an existential threat. If a broad dedollarization movement accelerates, the internal economic contradictions (debt and currency debasement) could be exposed, potentially leading to a severe financial crisis that sinks the economy from within.

The perception of the US abroad, according to these critiques, is one of increasing fragility and instability, a nation that can no longer effectively care for its own citizens due to deep political and societal polarization. Analysts point to the decreasing returns on military power projection, suggesting that the US's ability to dictate global events is receding. This shift is mirrored by a crisis in the national identity itself. Many international observers now view the American identity through the lens of its foreign policy—one characterized by warmongering, the theft of resources, and deep-seated internal racism. For these critics, the historical promise of American leadership has been replaced by a perception of a damaged and morally bankrupt society, forcing a reckoning with whether the costs of maintaining global dominance ultimately outweigh the benefits of internal stability and democratic health.

The contrast with nations like China is often drawn to highlight two opposing models: a singular focus on internal economic development and stability versus a costly, perpetually destabilizing projection of military and financial power. This perspective posits that it is precisely the compulsion to maintain control that creates the global and domestic instability that will eventually precipitate the decline of US influence.

Shadow of Oil

The relationship between the United States and Venezuela is one of perpetual tension, often framed in public discourse as a conflict driven by democracy, human rights, and the fight against drug trafficking. However, a significant body of political analysis and historical precedent suggests that the underlying catalyst for the decades-long US pursuit of regime change in Venezuela is its vast natural wealth—specifically, the largest proven oil reserves in the world. The narrative of combating drug cartels and restoring democracy, critics argue, serves as a plausible, albeit incomplete, cover for geopolitical and economic ambition.

At the core of the friction lies Venezuela's staggering oil wealth. The nation possesses an estimated 300 billion barrels of proven reserves, surpassing even Saudi Arabia. For a nation like the United States, which has historically prioritized global energy stability and access, the existence of such a massive, untapped reserve just off its coastline represents a strategic economic imperative.

From this critical perspective, the primary goal of destabilizing the government is the removal of the current leadership (specifically the administrations of Hugo Chávez and Nicolás Maduro), who have nationalized the oil industry through the state-run company PDVSA. This national control has kept Western multinational energy corporations from directly participating in and profiting from the extraction of Venezuelan crude. A successful regime change would facilitate the seizure of national assets, the privatization of PDVSA, and the opportunity to install a compliant leader willing to open the oil fields to foreign investment, effectively turning the country into an economic puppet state.

To justify the aggressive posture—which includes sanctions, diplomatic isolation, and tacit support for opposition movements—the US government and its allies frequently highlight two principal issues:

  1. Humanitarian and Democratic Crisis: While Venezuela undeniably suffers from a severe economic and humanitarian crisis, critics argue that US-led sanctions have exacerbated the suffering, creating the very instability that justifies further intervention. The push to restore democracy is seen by some as a necessary public pretext for removing an adversarial government.

  2. Drug Trafficking and National Security: Accusations linking high-ranking Venezuelan officials to drug cartels provide a crucial national security justification for action. While evidence of corruption exists, critics contend that the scale of the drug issue is disproportionately emphasized to create a narrative that necessitates a forceful overthrow, thereby legitimizing military or quasi-military measures under the guise of transnational security concerns.

This pattern is not unprecedented. Throughout the Cold War and beyond, US policy in Latin America often favored strongmen or military juntas over democratically elected socialist or nationalist leaders who threatened US economic interests, particularly regarding commodities like fruit, minerals, and, crucially, oil. In Venezuela, the backing of a brief 2002 coup attempt against Hugo Chávez—a movement quickly reversed by popular support—is often cited as evidence of the long-standing objective to secure control over the nation's resources.

Ultimately, the argument that US policy in Venezuela is driven by oil asserts that the pursuit of geopolitical advantage and resource acquisition remains a powerful, if publicly understated, factor in international relations. The democratic and anti-drug narratives, while carrying independent merit, serve the strategic purpose of gaining public and international legitimacy for a campaign aimed at securing the world's largest oil reserves under terms favorable to Western economic interests.

16 November 2025

Two-Wheeled Contradiction

To the average commuter, the cyclist exists in a fascinating, frustrating state of existential ambiguity. They are neither fish nor fowl, car nor pedestrian. They are, rather, the perpetual wildcard of the asphalt jungle—a rolling paradox whose very existence seems to defy the established laws of physics and, more importantly, common courtesy. The question isn't if cyclists are annoying, but how they manage to be so universally frustrating to everyone they share the road with, all while wearing that baffling combination of spandex and sheer self-belief.

The primary source of this collective road rage stems from the cyclist’s ability to instantaneously switch their legal identity based on convenience. In front of a line of patiently idling traffic, they are instantly a pedestrian: hopping onto the sidewalk or filtering forward like a human-powered torpedo until they reach the front. But the moment they pass the yellow line, they transform into a full-fledged vehicle, demanding their right to the entire lane, sometimes moving at a pace that suggests they are actively defying gravity, and other times at a pace best described as leisurely sightseeing.

This selective compliance reaches its peak at traffic signals. While cars are mandated by expensive metal boxes and stern, flashing lights to stop, the cyclist often views a red light not as a command, but as a suggestion, or perhaps a temporary inconvenience best solved by a slight wobble and a swift crossing. They are masters of the illegal, internal shortcut, cutting the corner of a junction with the precision of a professional tailor, confident in their ability to fit through a gap that a small cat would think twice about.

Their space management is equally baffling. A cyclist possesses an almost supernatural desire to occupy the thinnest sliver of bitumen possible, often squeezed between a moving bus and an aggressively parallel-parked SUV. They insist on traversing these tiny gaps until, suddenly, they must swing out into the center of the lane to avoid a loose pebble, transforming their position from peripheral irritant to main-stage bottleneck in a fraction of a second. This, combined with the general perception that a cyclist's brakes are purely decorative or reserved for emergency stops involving squirrels, creates a constant state of low-grade anxiety for everyone nearby.

Finally, we arrive at the infamous blame deflection field. When, inevitably, the cyclist’s game of legal pinball ends in a regrettable crumple—often caused by an act of unpredictable lane-splitting or an optimistic run through a stale amber light—the narrative shifts instantly. The cyclist, previously the rogue agent ignoring all rules, becomes the virtuous victim. The accident, in their view, is never a consequence of their decision to dart through a prohibited space; it is always the fault of the heavy, slow, rule-abiding motorist who dared to exist in their trajectory.

The truth is, the frustration is rooted in this chaos. The cyclist is annoying not because they are inherently bad, but because they are the ultimate unpredictability machine—a human-powered element of anarchy in the otherwise strictly ordered system of the road. Their two wheels represent freedom, but for the rest of us, they represent an endless, exhausting series of "What are they going to do next?" moments.