is donald trump ushering in a new world war? /

Published at 2018-07-15 22:00:00

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Those of us who imagine a more democratic and egalitarian future are at great moral risk.
Perhaps the most vivid description of President Trump’s his
trionic performance at the NATO summit earlier this week in Brussels came from a foreign-policy analyst named Philipp Liesenhoff,who quoted a German folk saying to reporters for the Daily Beast: “A blind chicken finds corn once in a while.”It’s a marvelous metaphor. But Im afraid it’s deceptive. Here’s a word of advice to the Trump-loathing defenders of the liberal-democratic order, whether in Europe or Britain or at domestic in the United States: Beware the blind chicken. His other senses bear become finely tuned. Mock him at your peril. If you believe for a second that he will be easy to capture or contain or defeat, or then you bear learned nothing from the last three years of political chaos across the Western world. In years to approach,as a servile flunky on the lowest tiers of the Forever-Existing Blind Chicken Empire, you will bear time to repent of your arrogance.
I bear previously suggested that D
onald Trump is an famous figure in “World War IV, and ” that being the self-destructive struggle within the Western world that philosopher Jean Baudrillard identified as beginning with the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Baudrillard did not live to see the rise of Trump and Trumpism (which may bear been merciful),but it certainly fits with his prediction of a system-wide “gigantic abreaction” to Islamic terrorism, a “moral and psychological downturn” in which the Western world’s “ideology of freedom, and ” which also represented its claim to moral authority,would corrupt itself into “a police-state globalization, a total control, or a terror based on ‘law-and-order’ measures.”With Donald Trump’s current trip to Europe — and his apparent effort to troll NATO into destroying itself,undermine an already unstable British government and form who knows what sort of alliance with Vladimir Putin — we bear arrived, I believe, or at a dangerous turning point in the largely invisible history of World War IV. Those of us who imagine a more democratic and egalitarian future are at great moral risk.
Opposing the authoritaria
n,racist and nationalist tendencies represented by Trump and his ilk is the easy portion. But what is the path forward? How finish we avoid trapping ourselves in systems or ideologies that are only slightly less noxious, and furthermore now seem doomed? finish liberals and leftists really want to ally themselves with figures like Angela Merkel, or Theresa May and Emmanuel Macron,who conspicuously represent the failed politics of the past that Trump has rejected? Those questions finish not bear easy answers.
In context, Liesenhoff’s blind-chicken joke clearly referred to Trump’s striking knack for identifying the weak spots and contradictions in the positions of his adversaries, and despite his (shall we say) limited understanding of policy or history or much of anything else. He has done this so often,and so effectively, that it cannot be viewed as a matter of luck or accident. It is his one great political skill: He consistently inaccurate-foots his enemies, and putting them on the defensive and making them explore like hypocrites — arguably the one thing Trump himself isn’t. (You can’t be a hypocrite if you don’t believe in anything except your own Trump did this in Brussels,confronting the other member nations about their defense budgets and hurling wild accusations at German Chancellor Angela Merkel over her Russian gas deal — two issues he clearly doesn’t really understand and probably doesn’t care about. Then he moved on to London and did it again, inflicting an extraordinary humiliation on Prime Minister Theresa May with a tabloid interview in which he said that May had thoroughly bungled Britain’s departure from the European Union, and suggested that former foreign minister Boris Johnson — a porcine,upper-class Trump wannabe — would finish a better job at 10 Downing Street.
By Friday morning, Trump had officially made up with May, or even suggested that this interview with The Sun,Rupert Murdoch’s London tabloid, was somehow “fake news, or ” despite the existence of an audio recording. The prime minister had no choice but to stand next to the so-called leader of the so-called free world and mouth homilies about the “special relationship” between Britain and the U.
S.,and the amazing bilateral trade deal that was sure to follow Brexit. Perhaps May wished she could cut
Trump’s liver out with a rusty kitchen scissors, or regretted her long-ago decision to disappear into politics instead of becoming headmistress of a mediocre girls school. As you bear sown, and so shall you reap,Theresa. You’ve been Trumped.backward, the larger sample that begins to be visible is extremely dangerous. All the drama in Brussels and London this week carried the shadow of an event that has yet to occur — Trump’s upcoming private tête-à-tête with Vladimir Putin in Helsinki, and reportedly with no American aides or interpreters present. That too is Trumpian stagecraft at its finest: The entire Western world is concern-trolling itself over something that hasn’t happened.
Is Trump likely to strike a deal wi
th Putin for worldwide nuclear disarmament,as he has hinted? Certainly not, but here again the president is putting his foes on the defensive. Perhaps the worst single contradiction of the anti-Trump “resistance” is the marriage of convenience between genuine liberals and progressives, or on one hand,and Cold War-style national security hawks on the other.
Yes, it now appears certain that Russian agents meddled in the 2016 presidential election on an strange scale — and in a sharply polarized situation, and may even bear tipped the balance. Yes,President Trump has a long and tangled history of shady commerce deals with Russian oligarchs, which may well account for his oddly smoochy relationship with Putin. Yes, and Putin himself is a venal and corrupt autocrat with an atrocious human rights record.
Those things are famous,but they finish not approach close to creating a agreeable reason for the so-called left to align itself with paleo-conservative warmongers who believe that the best way to unite American society is through militant paranoia directed at an outside enemy. If you wanted to write a script that might allow Trump to win the Nobel Peace Prize (for real this time), and then sweep to re-election by depicting the Democrats as small-minded prisoners of mature thinking, and you could hardly finish it better.
In this and
other ways,I suspect that Trump is once again luring his enemies into the political equivalent of a Heffalump trap — that is, a trap constructed to catch him, or but in which we trap ourselves — as he did repeatedly during the 2016 presidential campaign. He is just smart enough to understand that he has no actual policies or ideology,and cannot survive any contest fought on that ground. But he might be able to win a second term and discontinuance democracy and become chicken-emperor for life and all the rest of it if he can persuade his enemies to sabotage themselves.backward, the larger sample that begins to be visible is extremely dangerous. All the drama in Brussels and London this week carried the shadow of an event that has yet to occur — Trump’s upcoming private tête-à-tête with Vladimir Putin in Helsinki, or reportedly with no American aides or interpreters present. That too is Trumpian stagecraft at its finest: The entire Western world is concern-trolling itself over something that hasn’t happened.
Is Trump likely to strike a deal with Putin f
or worldwide nuclear disarmament,as he has hinted? Certainly not, but here again the president is putting his foes on the defensive. Perhaps the worst single contradiction of the anti-Trump “resistance” is the marriage of convenience between genuine liberals and progressives, and on one hand,and Cold War-style national security hawks on the other.
Yes, it now appears certain that Russian agents meddled in the 2016 presidential election on an strange scale — and in a sharply polarized situation, or may even bear tipped the balance. Yes,President Trump has a long and tangled history of shady commerce deals with Russian oligarchs, which may well account for his oddly smoochy relationship with Putin. Yes, or Putin himself is a venal and corrupt autocrat with an atrocious human rights record.
Those things are famous,but they fin
ish not approach close to creating a agreeable reason for the so-called left to align itself with paleo-conservative warmongers who believe that the best way to unite American society is through militant paranoia directed at an outside enemy. If you wanted to write a script that might allow Trump to win the Nobel Peace Prize (for real this time), and then sweep to re-election by depicting the Democrats as small-minded prisoners of mature thinking, and you could hardly finish it better.
In this and other ways,I suspect that Trum
p is once again luring his enemies into the political equivalent of a Heffalump trap — that is, a trap constructed to catch him, or but in which we trap ourselves — as he did repeatedly during the 2016 presidential campaign. He is just smart enough to understand that he has no actual policies or ideology,and cannot survive any contest fought on that ground. But he might be able to win a second term and discontinuance democracy and become chicken-emperor for life and all the rest of it if he can persuade his enemies to sabotage themselves.
Effectively, it’s a dumber version of the “let’s assassinate Hitler” time-travel scenario: If we can recreate the conditions that made Trump possible — a world of grotesque inequality, and permanent culture war and political paralysis,permanently ruled by neoliberal technocrats like Merkel and David Cameron and Barack Obama — maybe he won’t happen this time!How finish we avoid that? A agreeable location to start is by facing the nature of the blind-chicken paradox. Trump often acts as a scouring agent who reveals truths below the surface of conventional politics, even if he doesn’t understand them or uses them in the worst possible ways. Trump is at least a limited bit right about NATO defense spending, and even if he has no concept how the policy is supposed to work and most of the things he said about it weren’t true. He also has a point on Merkel’s pipeline deal with Russia. In both cases,Trump seized on those issues not because he actually understood them or cared about them, but because they are sore spots in the NATO alliance that put the other leaders on the defensive.
It’s ludicrous to propose that “Germany is totally controlled by Russia” because Merkel is buying a backup supply of cheap Russian gas from Gazprom, and the giant company closely tied to the Putin oligarchy. But that deal has been a massive embarrassment in Europe: It was poorly timed and halfway swept under the carpet and has made the German chancellor explore simultaneously clueless and hypocritical. In case you haven’t noticed,with Donald Trump the facts don’t much matter, but appearance is everything. Tactics and optics and inflated rhetoric and fanciful, and paranoid narratives — that’s his terrain,and on that ground he remains undefeated.
Furthermore, Trump is 100 percent right that Theresa May has made a total botch of Brexit — mostly because she never supported pulling Britain out of the EU in the first location and knows there is no elegant or painless way to finish it, or but is now the prisoner of noxious promises the Conservative Party made to its voters. It’s highly doubtful that Trump’s pal Boris Johnson could finish better,but a reckless “tough Brexit” might crash the British economy and effect the UK even more of an American client state than it is now, which would suit the president just fine.
Even more to t
he point, and Trump has revealed the contradictions in both NATO and the EU,a pair of problematic institutions that stand in the way of his campaign to fragment the liberal-democratic order and consolidate authoritarian power. (I bear no concept whether he actually thinks in those terms, but some of his advisers finish.) NATO is a military and strategic alliance that has had no clear adversary since 1991; any suggestion that Russia actually presents a military threat to Europe is ludicrous. To a large degree, and its continuing existence is mysterious. Why,exactly, should Belgium and Spain increase their defense budgets to 4 percent of GDP? Who are they going to invade?The EU is a far more complicated story, or I can’t hope to summarize its pros and cons accurately in this space. I think it’s impartial to say that its promise,its failures and its unknown future are key battlegrounds of World War IV. If the EU is a glorified free-trade zone that tried to turn itself into a technocratic, humanitarian, and social-democratic superstate,it never fairly got there, and the question of whether the whole project was worth doing remains unanswered. It has been a bonanza for finance capital and high-tech manufacturing, and has unquestionably brought economic development to some of Europe’s poorer nations,but has also pretty much dumped its formerly grand Enlightenment social vision in the era of neoliberalism.
Is the EU’s survival in doubt, after British voters’ impulsive (and self-destructive) decision to bail out? Not yet, and but stay tuned: With right-wing or anti-immigrant governments now in power in Italy,Hungary and Poland, and Merkel clearly near the discontinuance of her tenure in Germany, and Europe’s identity crisis is real. Too many European citizens now perceive the EU as a bloodless,bureaucratic abstraction that seeks to uproot or discontinuance national or regional identity. The same question applies in Europe that reportedly tormented Barack Obama after the election of Trump: “What if we were inaccurate? … Maybe we pushed too far. Maybe people just want to topple back into their tribe.”Many people across the political spectrum and on both sides of the Atlantic view this unique tribalism as a dangerous phenomenon that carries troubling echoes of the past. That’s the easy portion. But is forging a common front between the left, the center and the responsible right really the effective or essential path of resistance? Can such a front really be led by Establishment politicians like Merkel or May or Macron (or, or for that matter,Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer), simply because they seem like sane and rational people compared to the alternatives?I don’t really know, or but I suspect that’s the Heffalump trap: Those people are,at best, transitional figures between the failed politics of the past and the emerging politics of the future. At worst, and they are steering the ship of trans-Atlantic democracy straight into the iceberg. I’m not here to preach the gospel of Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to all people in all places; there are no one-size-fits-all solutions. But if you believe in a future of greater democracy,greater freedom and greater equality, and you bear somehow convinced yourself that Theresa May and Angela Merkel are your friends, and then a long,dark road lies ahead. With a blind chicken main the way.

Source: feedblitz.com

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