Thursday, February 20, 2025

News from the Trumphalist front for a late arvo titillation turning into an endless slog through a Strangelove nightmare ...


Metaphor for the day:




A sign of hope, a final solution to what ails the planet?





Carry on regardless ...

The pond has noted any number of times how impossible it is to keep up with the news of the Cantaloupe Caligula and what his minions are up to... but he has invigorated scribblers everywhere ...

The pond thought that rather than regurgitate the latest news - like the orange turd's most recent displays of his devotion to Vlad the sociopath - it could regurgitate some of the musings on the mango Mussolini.

Parker Molloy:

Cue Parker Molloy, offering in her Substack Stop Analyzing Trump's Unhinged Ideas Like They're Normal Policy Proposals, The New York Times just ran 1,200 words gaming out the electoral math of forcibly annexing Canada. We're in trouble.

This was pleasing to the pond because it didn't just do over the MM, it did over the NY Times' coverage.

The pond has nothing against Peter Baker - he presents on MSNBC as a rather gormless nerd, a fitting companion to a sharp New Yorker scribbler of the Susan Glasser kind (civil ceremony please) - but Molloy cruelly pinned him to the wall like Nabokov handling a butterfly ...

Sometimes a piece of journalism is so wildly off-base that it perfectly encapsulates everything wrong with political coverage. Today's example comes from the New York Times's Peter Baker, who decided to treat Donald Trump's delusional ramblings about annexing Canada as a serious policy proposal worthy of electoral analysis.

Molloy offered the header as an example in her coverage of the coverage crime...




Here's how Baker opens his piece (relax, the original link to the Times yarn can be found in the archive):

As President Trump looks north and repeatedly presses his case to absorb Canada as the "51st state," politically minded Democrats who are otherwise outraged by almost everything else about his agenda find themselves contemplating a potential electoral boon should it ever happen.
Few in Washington take the prospect all that seriously, of course. Canada has made clear that it has no interest in joining the United States, and Mr. Trump seems unlikely to send in the 82nd Airborne Division to force the matter. But if the idea appeals to Mr. Trump's grandiose sense of himself as an empire-building historic figure, it could also undercut his own party's prospects.
This is journalism malpractice.
Let's be clear about what's happening: The President of the United States is openly fantasizing about forcibly annexing a sovereign nation of 40 million people. He's been repeatedly referring to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as "Governor Trudeau" and threatening our closest ally with absorption into the United States. This isn't a policy proposal to be analyzed; it's the ravings of a dangerous authoritarian.
But instead of treating this story as what it is — evidence of Trump's increasingly unhinged worldview and contempt for democratic norms — Baker decides to play electoral college calculator. He walks us through detailed scenarios about House seats and Senate majorities, complete with expert quotes about the Democratic Party's theoretical gains. It's like writing about the thermal properties of the emperor's new clothes while ignoring his nakedness....

And so on, no need to copy more, the links are there for the curious.

The Bulwark:

Instead the pond turned to Jill Lawrence in The Bulwark, a reliable haven for students of Trumpism... Seven Myths Shattered by Trump 2.0 (and One True Thing) Watching Trump, Musk, and their band of arsonists set fire to the shining city on a hill.

The entrée...

The voters who chose Trump last year because of his business prowess must have forgotten about his six bankruptcies, hundreds of stiffed contractors, $25 million Trump University fraud settlement, and terrible reputation among peers. Maybe they have an affinity for the racism, cruelty, and misogyny he brings to politics. Maybe they like presidents who grift off their supporters, encourage insurrection against their own government, or bury their first wife at their golf club. Or maybe they were upset about egg prices.
Maybe they feel like Musk’s money, or the 13 children he’s had with four women, make him a real man. Maybe they think he’s really smart to start his rampage at eleven agencies engaged in “more than 32 continuing investigations, pending complaints or enforcement actions” into his six companies, according to a New York Times investigation.
And maybe they are surprised by what is happening, as lives are upended all over America and the world. Except, what did they think would happen?

Cut to the dot point chase which led - spoiler alert to - the closer...

American dream, alive or dead?
YET ANOTHER REPUBLICAN MYTH, the myth of the perfect dealmaker, imploded. And I could go on. How about these? (And try not to laugh.)
  • Presidents have limited power and must not overstep. For Republicans, including many of the conservative judges and justices they have installed, this clearly applies only to Democrats. If Obama or Biden had tried a power grab led by an unelected government contractor using immature twentysomething tech bros to destroy agencies created by Congress, fire thousands of civil servants willy-nilly, and access private taxpayer and employee information, all without any oversight or disclosure, we’d be awash in hellfire, brimstone, and articles of impeachment.
  • Tax cuts pay for themselves. This doesn’t happen. Ronald Reagan’s tax cuts were followed by tax increases starting with him and ending with Bill Clinton, who achieved a balanced budget and a debt-reduction trajectory. George W. Bush and Trump threw that away and launched us into frightening levels of debt. Trump’s 2017 tax cuts not only are adding a projected $1.9 trillion to the deficit over ten years, more than 80 percent of the cuts went to corporations, tax partnerships, and people with high net worth. Workers saw very little benefit and black taxpayers saw even less. But Trump wants to renew his tax cuts, which expire at the end of this year.
  • Presidents should obey the law, defend the Constitution, and uphold their oath of office. Also, Trump and Musk are champions of free speech. (Okay, now I’m the one laughing.)
  • The American dream is about self-determination—people free to chart their destinies and follow their dreams. Except of course if you are a transgender teenager who needs health care, a woman who needs an abortion, a refugee fleeing violence, or anyone else who doesn’t conform to the expectations and requirements of leaders obsessed with money and power.

Here’s one true thing, no myth:
America is indeed an exceptional nation—exceptional in this current moment for the selfishness and cruelty of its leaders, their willful ignorance of recent history (from systemic racism to Nazi Germany to the Soviet Union), their rejection of pluralism, and their determination to make 330 million people speak, think, and live as they say.
Trump and Musk have set fire to “the shining city on a hill.” The only mystery is whether it will survive the flames.

The Bulwark, de nouveau:

Keeping up with The Bulwark keeping up with the arsonists at work is incredibly fatiguing ...

Just look at today's offerings (Oz time).

There was William Kristol, Andrew Egger, and Will Selber offering The Cruelty Isn’t the Point. It’s the Pleasure. Trump 2.0 is a shared sensual experience in hurting other people.

After Egger's did the sadism angle, Kristol covered the sadism in action in Betrayal, Again:

One may have thought, for one brief moment, that perhaps the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, once an eloquent voice for democracy and freedom, might resign in protest. Of course he did not. He followed President Donald Trump’s orders. He hurried off to Riyadh to try to arrange the betrayal of the brave people of Ukraine and the victory of the dictator Vladimir Putin.
The British historian Simon Schama commented, “The photo of Rubio sitting opposite Lavrov in Riyadh will forever be fixed in the historical album of infamous capitulations.”
So will the video of Rubio speaking to the press after the meeting, where he gushed that this was a moment of “incredible opportunities that exist to partner with the Russians geopolitically, on issues of common interest, and frankly, economically.”
The United States has no need to “partner” with Russia economically. But President Trump wants to partner with Putin’s Russia morally and politically—against Ukraine, and against liberal democracy.
The American president is on Putin’s side.
Trump made this perfectly clear a few hours later, in his press conference at Mar-a-Lago. He blamed Ukraine for Russia’s invasion: “You should have never started it. You could have made a deal.” And he made clear he’s going to make a deal—one that amounts to a capitulation—regardless of Ukraine’s wishes. After all, Trump said yesterday, “Russia wants to do something. They want to stop the savage barbarianism (sic).”
Ian Bond, a former British diplomat accustomed to speaking diplomatically, was brutally frank: Trump’s remarks were “some of the most shameful comments uttered by a president in my lifetime. Trump is siding with the aggressor, blaming the victim. In the Kremlin they must be jumping for joy.”
Ukraine’s President Zelensky understands the situation. “It seems like Russia and the U.S. are preparing an ultimatum to Ukraine, talking about Ukraine without Ukraine,” he said. “We didn’t accept ultimatums in 2022, when the situation was much more serious and nobody was helping us, and I have no intention of accepting any ultimatums.”
Nor should he.
And nor should we.

The immortal Rowe:

And so on ... with the immortal Rowe providing an echo of all that ...




The Bulwark, Encore:

Selber did Afghanistan, and there's always a nice screen shot as a cheap shot ...





Every other story at the top of The Bulwark page was about the deeds of the Mar-a-Lago Mafia shakedown man and his minions...





And a lot of them were outside the paywall,be it Mark Hertling's We’re Negotiating with War Criminals
No amount of diplomatic palaver can paper over Russia’s record of kidnapping Ukrainian children, executing POWs, and targeting civilians.
 
Orbe it Adrian Carrasquillo's When DHS Sends Your Son to Gitmo or Sam Stein's The DOGE Brain Drain Has Begun ...

The Atlantic:

Exhausting, which is why the pond turned to Lora Kelley in The Atlantic, talking about minion Musk in DOGE’s Fuzzy Math, The department’s current efforts—and Musk’s obsession with fraud—are not likely to make a dent in the country’s deficit.  (archive link):

Last week, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene called the national debt “one of the biggest betrayals against the American people,” suggesting that Americans’ anger about debt “gave birth to the concept of DOGE.” The idea that Elon Musk and his band of government-efficiency crusaders can bring down the debt is a tidy one. But DOGE’s current plans would hardly put a dent in the deficit.
Musk has lamented that America is “drowning” in debt, which has indeed ballooned over the past decade: As of this month, the federal debt is $36 trillion, about $13 trillion higher than it was five years ago. Debt has not been a priority of either major political party for some time, my colleague Annie Lowrey, who covers economics, told me. And despite Taylor Greene’s claims about American anger over the debt, it’s not a top-of-mind issue for people at the polls, either, Annie argued.
If Musk’s team were serious about reducing the deficit, it could explore some unpopular but effective options: reduce spending for the military and the entitlement programs that make up the bulk of the federal budget—Medicare and Social Security—or simply raise taxes, Annie suggested. Instead, what Musk and DOGE have done thus far is ravage government agencies and departments (USAID, for example, which makes up a tiny portion of the budget, and the destruction of which won’t lead to major savings). They’ve also focused on slashing the federal workforce by offering buyouts to 2 million federal workers (and, over the weekend, axing thousands more federal-agency employees); so far, salaries for the workers who have accepted the buyout offer make up a minuscule portion of the national budget in total.
Musk, Trump, and their allies have also turned to a bit of magical thinking, claiming that rooting out fraud in the government is the key to saving money. In a meandering address from the Oval Office last week, Musk claimed without evidence that USAID workers were raking in millions in kickbacks, and that people as old as 150 were claiming Social Security benefits. He wrote on X last week that “at this point, I am 100% certain that the magnitude of the fraud in federal entitlements (Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, Welfare, Disability, etc) exceeds the combined sum of every private scam you’ve ever heard by FAR.”
Stumbling upon, and reclaiming, trillions of fraudulently spent funds would be rather convenient, and crying “fraud” is a useful way for Musk and his defenders to cast DOGE’s actions as in service of the American people. Trump has touted this same shaky logic, asserting that uncovering a bunch of fraud could mean America has less debt than previously thought. Fraud does exist in parts of the government: Some people intend to defraud government programs; others accidentally sign up for benefits they’re not actually eligible for. And the government does sometimes make payment errors—federal agencies estimated that more than $200 billion was lost in fiscal year 2023 because of such mistakes, and in past years fraud losses accounted for 3 to 7 percent of the budget. But there is no evidence that lowering the deficit is as simple as tamping down on fraud—or that fraud exists to the extent Musk claims.
Plus, by whacking the bureaucracy, Musk and his team are weakening programs that are already working to tamp down fraud. All federal programs have fraud-detection mandates. The Treasury, for example, announced in October that it had recovered or prevented $4 billion in fraud losses in the prior fiscal year, in part from employing AI machine-learning. And as he rails against what he calls fraud, Musk and his associates have effectively shut down the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, whose mandate is to crack down on fraud in businesses (and which might have regulated Musk’s own companies).
The rhetorical trick of politicians referring to unpopular or disliked government spending as fraud isn’t new. But in an era of rampant scamming, claiming that the American government is swindling its own people hits on a salient national fear. Musk’s first few weeks running DOGE don’t bode well for his ability to solve the debt crisis. He may succeed, however, in further eroding trust in government, which could give him and his team even more leeway in their attempts to dismantle it.

The Atlantic, de nouveau:

Of course those numbers and calculations have already changed, and so the pond turned to this interview in The Atlantic (archive link for the full version):

The Hidden Costs of Musk’s Washington Misadventure
Max Stier wants to improve the government. Elon Musk’s campaign against civil servants is making it worse.
By Franklin Foer

As the Trump administration widened its campaign against the civil service, my mind kept turning to an old source, Max Stier, who has earnestly devoted his life to making government work better. Like his great passion, the bureaucracy, he’s relatively anonymous. In 2001, he founded an outfit called the Partnership for Public Service, a name that suggests an almost lyrical devotion to the gritty stuff of government. His organization is a font of ideas for making bureaucracy more effective. Over the years, it has trained thousands of government employees and helped agencies devise modernization plans.
Hoping to understand the damage that President Donald Trump, Elon Musk, and the so-called Department of Government Efficiency have managed to inflict, I called Stier this past weekend. What was he telling the civil servants who were calling him in a state of panic? Because he is levelheaded and committed to a nonpartisan agenda, I trusted him to deliver a measured assessment. That he seemed so profoundly alarmed was itself terrifying. The following conversation has been edited for clarity and length.
Franklin Foer: I’m sure your phone is constantly buzzing. What are you hearing?
Max Stier: I’ve fielded calls from Forest Service workers in Idaho and health-care workers in Georgia. It’s important that people know that the bulk of civil servants are not in D.C. Eighty percent of the feds are outside of D.C. They’re in every community in our country—and they used to be in a lot of communities globally too. Some people have been chased away. Some people have been directly fired, largely illegally, or put on administrative leave or sidelined. But there is no part of the workforce that is immune from this profound distraction and fear.
Read: It’s time to worry about DOGE’s AI plans
Foer: Okay, survey the totality of the wreckage for me.
Stier: There is just a series of hammer blows that have been wielded against the civil service. The so-called deferred-resignation offer is their attempt to create a stampede out the door, to make it easier for them to get rid of the apolitical expert civil service. And then, on the other end, they’re creating a system that enables them to politicize the hiring and the management of the workforce. Certainly there are parts of our government—and most obvious ones, like USAID and the Department of Justice and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau—that are taking it on the chin even harder. Some of the most frightening things are happening at the FBI.
Right now, we’re seeing the destruction of infrastructure, but also a culture that focuses on the public good and the commitment to the rule of law. What we are going to see next is the use of government authority that is possible because that culture has been eradicated—the use of government authority for improper purposes. And so when you think about what’s happening, for example, with prosecutors who were fired because they investigated or prosecuted January 6 rioters or the president himself, these events foretell the use of government authority to pursue a personal agenda and to go after perceived enemies.
One other point: Sometimes even the media describes this as an effort to cut costs. This is not an effort to cut costs. This is going to cost the American taxpayer and the American public in huge ways.
Foer: Wait, explain that to me.
Stier: If you really wanted to reshape the federal workforce, you would start with an actual investigation of all the talent that you have—and then all the talent that you need. You would develop a plan. But what they’ve done is a random exercise. They are going after people without any sense about whether they’re the best performers or the poor performers. It’s probably a little worse than that: The people who may be the most talented have a larger propensity to leave, because they’ll have more options.
And the administration is creating liabilities. It will now owe money to people who are put on the sideline for no reason, and it will have to fill gaps that are created that they don’t even understand, which will mean eventually going out to hire contractors. There will be lawsuits—and lawsuits that are meritorious. Guess who pays for that? The American taxpayer is going to be funding the defense in those cases and will pay the payoff. If your intent were to shrink the workplace in a cost-effective way, this is a crazy way to do it.
Foer: But that’s the Silicon Valley way—moving fast and breaking stuff.
Stier: That may or may not be a smart strategy in Silicon Valley. It is not in the government, because there are real consequences. People get hurt in a different way when public capability is broken. One of the challenges in our government is that when it tries to modernize technology, it has to build up a new system alongside the legacy system. That’s how it manages to keep functioning.
Our government is about creating good outcomes; it’s not about throughput. So the objective is wrong here. The public sector has accountability, transparency, reliability issues that are simply not the same as in the private sector.
Foer: All the focus has been on DOGE, understandably. But what does the focus on Musk leave out?
Stier: Most democracies count their political appointees in the tens, not the thousands. We have a government where there are 4,000 political appointees that a president makes. That’s a vestige of the spoils system that actually creates a lot of grief. Only 1,300 of them require Senate confirmation. The remaining appointees are a bit invisible. The public isn’t seeing that they are the ones doing a lot of the damage right now.

Worn out already? 

The cracking Crace in the Graudian:

The cracking Crace took time away from his UK political sketch to do a sketch of King Donald:

Even by his recent standards, Tuesday night’s stream of unconsciousness from Donald Trump took some beating. Hot on the tail of excluding Ukraine from the first round of peace talks with Russia and in effect threatening to withdraw the US from Nato, the Donald has now suggested it was Kyiv who started the war with Moscow.
More than that, he declared President Zelenskyy’s popularity ratings had slid to just 4% in his own country and that he had assumed the role of dictator by not holding elections. He ended by claiming that the US had given more than three times as much aid to Ukraine than the rest of Europe combined. You could almost hear Vladimir Putin cheering from the sidelines. He couldn’t have written the script any better. It was perfection.
It goes without saying that everything the US president had said was complete doggy-bollox. Russia first invaded Ukraine in 2014 and seized Crimea. There was then a pause in hostilities before Putin invaded a second time almost exactly three years ago.
Claiming Ukraine started the war was like believing that Poland invaded Germany to trigger the second world war. Or maybe the Poles were just suffering from false consciousness and were yet to understand they wanted to be subjugated by the Germans. Hell, maybe Trump thinks “no means no” is just some politically correct wokery and that when the Ukrainians said they would rather not become Russian what they were really saying was: “Yes, please. Do what you like.” Much like the Americans were gagging for the Japanese to bomb Pearl Harbor in 1941.
That was just the start. Trump’s claim that Zelenskyy’s approval ratings were 4% were just his delusional, senescent fantasies. The real figure is 57%: about 10% higher than the Donald’s own. And no one in their right mind is suggesting Ukraine holds elections while the war is ongoing. There again, Trump is clearly not in his right mind. His aid figures are also way off. Collectively, Europe has given Ukraine £132bn since the start of the war. America has given £114bn.
While a shrink would have a field day trying to untangle the workings of the Trump psyche – is he a narcissist or solipsist? Does he actually believe what he says or do his words have an independent existence to his brain? – it’s left to the rest of us to pick up the pieces. Much as they might like not to, other world leaders have to find a way of engaging with him. The Donald is the most powerful man on the planet and whatever he says counts for something....

The cracking Crace eventually returned to the UK to record Boris:

..The strangest response came from Boris Johnson. With Kemi Badenoch and other senior Tories strangely silent, the disgraced former prime minister popped up on X to offer his analysis. Trump was just doing his best to end the war. No one cared more about peace than the Donald. The US president had never meant for anyone to take him seriously about Ukraine starting the war or Zelenskyy’s popularity ratings. It was just his way of trying to get everyone round the table. His funny little ways. As with Boris, Trump could only be trusted to tell the truth half the time. The trick was trying to work out which half was which.
Boris ended his tweet by suggesting that Russia was desperate to have its assets unfrozen so it could hand them over to rebuild Ukraine. To think, Johnson used to consider himself Ukraine’s biggest ally. Right now, he sounded suspiciously as if he had morphed into another Kremlin sycophant. He will certainly be off Zelenskyy’s Christmas card list.

Ah, Boris, Boris ... exhausted already?

The New Yorker:

What about Emily Witt's piece in The New Yorker? Where Do Trans Kids Go from Here?, In the wake of Donald Trump’s executive order banning transition-related care for minors, hospitals in blue states began cancelling appointments—forcing families in New York and beyond to consider whether even liberal cities are safe (archive link).

Is it any wonder that Kyle Chayka came up with this for The New Yorker?

Infinite Scroll
The Second Trump Administration’s New Forms of Distraction
The first time around, the President’s bad deeds galvanized people on social media. This time, they’re looking to “flush out their brains.”(archive link)

Kyle Monson, the founder of a creative agency, felt overwhelmed by the news in the aftermath of the 2024 election. So he and his wife turned to binge-watching the reality series “Vanderpump Rules,” which follows a rambunctious crew of waitstaff around a Los Angeles restaurant, as a distraction—“to flush our brains,” he told me. The two were not previously reality-television devotees—they usually prefer higher-concept streaming dramas such as “Silo,” on Apple TV+—but they were drawn to the show’s pleasingly low stakes. It’s “a bunch of people making bad choices with no actual bearing on our lives, or any kind of impact on the world,” Monson said. In the early days of the second Trump Administration, as the new-old President and his associates have sought to dismantle large swaths of the federal government, I’ve heard similar expressions of retreat from people who had previously been paying close attention to the news. Despite the severity of DOGE’s upheaval, there is a desire to tune in to something unrelated. My informal survey asking what such distressed-but-disaffected Trump opposers were distracting themselves with turned up other reality-TV shows including “Survivor” and “Culinary Class Wars” as well as nostalgic rewatches, such as the original “E.R.”
Others have taken up more analog practices: playing drums, crocheting, reading Irish literature. Carly Eiseman, an artist in Los Angeles, returned to an activity she had taken up at other moments that she felt in crisis, including after 9/11 and during the George W. Bush Administration: sewing together patchworks of vinyl-album sleeves. “I’ve also found myself organizing and listening to a lot of records to try and be offline and not doomscroll,” she said. The need for immersive distraction seems to rise in tandem with how relentless the news is.

Well yes, but it's not just how relentless the news is, it's how relentless the pundit coverage is at the moment.

There's the collateral damage to cover, like Isaac Chotiner's interview with William Shoki, Make South Africa Great Again? How the country’s post-apartheid politics may inform the world view of Elon Musk and Donald Trump (archive link)

The relentless coverage is like being in the grip of YouTube logarithms dragging train crashes and car smashes in front of addicted eyeballs.

The NYRB:

Head off to Fintan O'Toole in the NYRB and you'll cop an extended consideration in From Comedy to Brutality, With his designs on Greenland and Gaza, Trump has signaled that his first term’s outlandish gestures are the second term’s savage demands. (Relax, there's an archive link for the addict).

Speaking of immersive distraction, O'Toole understands that the best way into a reality TV mogul is by way of the flicks, which produce some kind of flickering light, as he rehashes some of the early storylines:

In the 2020 disaster movie Greenland, the hero John Garrity (played by Gerard Butler), his wife (Morena Baccarin), and their young son are in a truck driving north from the United States into Canada. We hear on the radio an announcement from NASA:
"A nine-mile-wide fragment larger than the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs will destroy most of Europe upon impact, causing seismic events that will generate one-thousand-foot-high tsunamis and nine-hundred-degree surface winds traveling faster than the speed of sound. Within hours, all of the continents will be on fire as the impact’s molten debris rains down from the upper atmosphere."
The family manages to get on a small plane heading for Greenland. As they fly, Garrity dreams of a verdant homeland of lush groves and sprinklers watering the lawn where his wife and child are playing—the lost America from which they are now refugees. He wakes to the sun shining through the window. Then, like Noah on the ark, he spies land: “Look, see it!” An ice-mottled peninsula, its shoreline washed by a glittering sea, comes into view. A glacier gleams on a craggy, snow-topped mountain. There is more drama with hurtling meteoric fireballs and a crash landing. The family runs to an American air base and, with the military personnel and the other survivors from the plane, finds shelter in a huge underground bunker just as the asteroid is about to obliterate Europe.
The screen fades to black. Then we see scenes from the incinerated world: the white of the Sydney Opera House turned a sickly gray by its coat of ash; a twisted and decapitated Eiffel Tower leaning precariously over the dusty traces of Paris; streetscapes that look like the recent drone footage of Gaza or Los Angeles. After what we understand to be the passage of nine months, the doors of the bunker open and the Americans shield their eyes from the dazzling sunlight. Chirping birds fly over the sublime landscape. The survivors emerge into their new New World: Greenland. The next American century begins here.
On January 15, five days before his inauguration for his second term as president, Donald Trump initiated a phone call with Denmark’s prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, that was, perhaps aptly, described by the Financial Times as “fiery” and by The New York Times as “icy.” The Financial Times said that Trump “insisted he was serious in his determination to take over Greenland” and quoted a European official describing the call as “horrendous.” A former Danish official said, “It was a very tough conversation. He threatened specific measures against Denmark such as targeted tariffs” if it did not agree to sell the vast Arctic island to the US. The Danes—long-standing and loyal allies of the US—are, according to another source, “utterly freaked out by this.”
Just over a week earlier, in a show of monarchical and dynastic power, Trump’s princeling Donald Jr. had landed in his father’s plane emblazoned with the TRUMP logo in Greenland’s capital, Nuuk. He claimed that he and his party were “just here as tourists.” But his father undercut this denial of greater ambitions, posting on Truth Social:
"Don Jr. and my Reps landing in Greenland. The reception has been great. They, and the Free World, need safety, security, strength, and PEACE! This is a deal that must happen. MAGA. MAKE GREENLAND GREAT AGAIN!"
He later told reporters that he would not rule out using military force to seize Greenland.
These events shed some light on the nature of Trump’s second coming. For a start, they mark a transition of Trumpian modes from comedy to brutality. According to Peter Baker and Susan Glasser in The Divider: Trump in the White House, 2017–2021, buying Greenland was an idea Trump acquired from the cosmetics mogul Ronald Lauder. But it was not regarded within his first administration as anything other than a flight of fancy:
After an early Oval Office meeting where Trump expounded on buying Greenland, one mystified cabinet member was struck by the delusional nature of the president’s speech on the matter. “You’d just sit there and be like, ‘Well, this isn’t real.’”

O'Toole covers a lot of turf, but the pond came to life again when he went there...




Of course, of course, it's just like the pond correspondent sharing a fantasy of Rupert actually being Orson Welles playing Hearst in one of the pond's favourite movies of all time, Citzen Kane.

How astute of Fintan to beat the drum with the pond's other favourite movie of all time:

What is new, however, is the fusion of different apocalyptic visions, one religious, the other techno-utopian. The annexation of Gaza by a Christian America appeals to the belief among some fundamentalist Christians that the conversion of the Jews in Israel will set in motion the end times and therefore hasten the Rapture, in which they themselves will ascend to Heaven. The acquisition and development of Greenland dovetails with Musk’s Martian fantasia: Trump, in his inaugural address, pledged that “we will pursue our manifest destiny into the stars, launching American astronauts to plant the Stars and Stripes on the planet Mars.” Thus is Musk’s infantile obsession launched into orbit around Trump’s own colonial reveries.
This Martian mission in turn shares a genealogy with Stanley Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove (1964), in which the title character is a caricature of Wernher von Braun, the Nazis’ leading rocket scientist, who went on to work on the American ballistic missile program and on NASA’s space missions. 

And Fintan also throws in a Braun novel, and a novel detail about the source of Uncle Leon's name, before the MM began renaming him:

According to Musk’s biographer, Walter Isaacson, his unusual first name was inspired by Project Mars, a novel Braun wrote in the immediate postwar years. Braun describes the political system of the colony:
The Martian government was directed by ten men, the leader of whom was elected by universal suffrage for five years and entitled “Elon.” Two houses of Parliament enacted the laws to be administered by the Elon and his cabinet.
In the novel, the colonization of the red planet is part of God’s plan to create the Ăœbermensch, whose development was cut short by the defeat of the Thousand-Year Reich. It is “a mission whose ultimate object was planned by God Himself” to bring together “the germ plasms of rational creation in our solar system that they may thrive and grow into a higher and more noble organism.”
All of this may be insane, but it is a necessary insanity. How else is it possible for Trump and his followers to reconcile his seeming determination to speed up climate collapse with his declaration of a new golden age? In his inaugural address, Trump evoked climate-driven disasters in North Carolina and Los Angeles, showing special sympathy for members of the elite who had been victims of fires “raging through the houses and communities, even affecting some of the wealthiest and most powerful individuals in our country, some of whom are sitting here right now. They don’t have a home any longer. That’s interesting.” Yet he simultaneously promised to extract “the largest amount of oil and gas of any country on earth” and stop the transition to a carbon-free economy.
Nonetheless, “the future is ours, and our golden age has just begun.” The last time we heard this was in Boris Johnson’s inaugural speech as British prime minister in July 2019: “We will look back on this period, this extraordinary period, as the beginning of a new golden age for our United Kingdom.” That prophecy has not worn well, and even at the time it seemed ludicrous. But it is an obligatory form of nonsense in contemporary reactionary discourse. It offers the escapist promise of a future that does not match any imaginable version of the burning world we actually inhabit.
The DeepMind cofounder Demis Hassabis told Isaacson that during a visit to the SpaceX factory after the two men met in 2012, Musk explained that “his reason for building rockets that could go to Mars was that it might be a way to preserve human consciousness in the event of a world war, asteroid strike, or civilization collapse.” The preserved consciousness would, of course, be that of elite men like himself—as Strangelove explains of the underground world to which the US president and his highest officials, along with civilians selected for their “necessary skills,” will escape when nuclear war begins. “Naturally, they would breed prodigiously,” aided by the provision of ten women (selected for their sexual attractiveness) for every man. As a bonus, “there would be no shocking memories, and the prevailing emotion will be one of nostalgia for those left behind, combined with a spirit of bold curiosity for the adventure ahead!”

Just to make it compleat, just to make it Henry pluperfect, Fintan turns to the Romans:

The golden age is described by Ovid in his Metamorphoses as an impossible past in which there was no need for laws because everyone behaved sweetly and no need for work because the earth, bathed in a perpetual springtime, was so abundant. What happened to this paradise in the Christian tradition is that it was transported from earth to Heaven. It became a posthumous location—you have to expire before you get to inhabit it. As a political promise about the future, the golden age is a lightly secularized version of pie in the sky when you die.
And this afterlife is best lived in after-places. In the Trump/Musk phantasmagoria, colonization is temporal as well as spatial. It is the “post” in postapocalyptic. New spaces—a warming Greenland or Gaz-a-Lago or Mars ruled by the Elon—will be new beginnings where, as Strangelove guarantees, there will be “no shocking memories” of the horrors in which the old world died screaming. That is why these places must be unpopulated, scarcely populated, or depopulated. The slate must be clean.
This insanity runs deep, but it is important to understand that there is also method in the madness: imperial fantasies create the conditions for an imperial presidency. This latter phrase—coined by the New York Times columnist Tom Wicker—gained wide currency in the dying days of Richard Nixon’s deranged second term, when it served as the title of Arthur Schlesinger’s best-selling book of 1973. The imperial presidency whose history he traces is one that leverages supposed foreign dangers to justify domestic tyranny. In 1793 James Madison warned that “war is in fact the true nurse of executive aggrandizement.” International adventures, he wrote, inflate the persona of the president and unleash the “strongest passions, and most dangerous weaknesses of the human breast; ambition, avarice, vanity.” Five years later Madison wrote to Thomas Jefferson, “Perhaps it is a universal truth that the loss of liberty at home is to be charged to provisions against danger, real or pretended, from abroad.”

There's more, much more, as Fintan tries to cope with the insanity, tries to understand the madness and the hubris.

The pond could manage only one last gobbet before retiring exhausted (spoiler alert, it's the ending):

Legalized lawlessness is a good fit for the hybrid nature of Trumpism’s second coming. The MAGA movement has to manage a contradiction between the libertarian, antigovernment ideology of its Big Tech wing and the despotism of the fascist traditions on which it draws. The solvent is a kind of anarcho-authoritarianism that divides Americans in the same way that Western empires divided humanity into citizens of the motherland (who have rights) and subjects of the empire (who do not). For now “real Americans” are the citizens and migrants are the subjects.
This is why one of Trump’s first acts, on the night of his inauguration, was to sign an executive order that seeks to uproot the fundamental concept of American citizenship by ending the automatic entitlement to it of all those born on US soil. In doing this he is forging his own paradox—the American foreigner, the nonnational native. “Colonial subjects,” writes Elkins, “were effectively stateless people,” and that is exactly the condition to which Trump intends to reduce millions of Americans. And as Hannah Arendt showed in The Origins of Totalitarianism, once people are rendered stateless they are also “rightless”—“the scum of the earth” to whom anything can be done.
The immediate victims of legalized lawlessness in Trump’s America will be migrants. This is where the imperial presidency will first exercise its unrestrained authority. Trump has internalized the foreign danger that Madison warned could be used to make a president a monarch—the enemy is already fully within. And thus there must be, alongside the fantasy of postapocalyptic colonies, a shadow empire of extraterritorial camps into which migrants can be decanted: GuantĂ¡namo Bay, El Salvador, and what Trump says are “numerous, many” other countries. One of the minor outgrowths of European imperialism—the penal colony—is to be the main event of Trump’s revived version. Clearing a postapocalyptic Gaza of millions of people may be, at least for the moment, as The New York Times put it, “little beyond an idea inside the president’s head,” but it sits in that head alongside a much more intimate form of ethnic cleansing in America itself. Imagining Americans fleeing a global catastrophe to Greenland helps prepare the way for a forced exodus of other Americans to bleak and barren futures.

Yes, even the National Review, akin to the pond visiting a garbage dump and holding nose:

Even more telling? Head off to the National Review (that enabler of weiros and prize loons), and you'll find Jeffrey Blehar trying to explain the behaviour of the sociopathic narcissist in Donald Trump’s Dislike for Ukraine Is Deeply Personal:

Yesterday, during a press conference about the United States’ bilateral talks with Russia to end the Russo-Ukrainian War — talks which, currently at least, have bypassed Ukraine entirely, a goal Vladimir Putin long sought — Donald Trump casually averred that Ukraine actually started the Ukrainian invasion: 

“Today I heard, ‘Oh, well, we weren’t invited.’ Well, you’ve been there for three years. You should have never been there. You should have never started it. You should have made a deal.”

It was not a confidence-inspiring moment for those who believe in basic historical fact, let alone for those who know how to check calendars: Trump’s language suggested rather clearly that he resented Ukraine for failing to surrender as Russia prepared to occupy Kyiv and annex the entire country back in February-March of 2022. In case anyone was prepared to defend this as a mere slip of the tongue, Trump went ahead today and offered the world more of his thoughts about Ukraine from his Truth Social account:

"Think of it, a modestly successful comedian, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, talked the United States of America into spending $350 Billion Dollars, to go into a War that couldn’t be won, that never had to start, but a War that he, without the U.S. and “TRUMP,” will never be able to settle. The United States has spent $200 Billion Dollars more than Europe, and Europe’s money is guaranteed, while the United States will get nothing back. Why didn’t Sleepy Joe Biden demand Equalization, in that this War is far more important to Europe than it is to us — We have a big, beautiful Ocean as separation. On top of this, Zelenskyy admits that half of the money we sent him is “MISSING.” He refuses to have Elections, is very low in Ukrainian Polls, and the only thing he was good at was playing Biden “like a fiddle.” A Dictator without Elections, Zelenskyy better move fast or he is not going to have a Country left. In the meantime, we are successfully negotiating an end to the War with Russia, something all admit only “TRUMP,” and the Trump Administration, can do. Biden never tried, Europe has failed to bring Peace, and Zelenskyy probably wants to keep the “gravy train” going. I love Ukraine, but Zelenskyy has done a terrible job, his Country is shattered, and MILLIONS have unnecessarily died – And so it continues….."

I’m glad there’s clearly no character limit to posting over there, at least — in either sense of the phrase — so we got to see the unfiltered Donald. To be perfectly honest, I’m more interested in all of the people on the right who will now pretend they agree with every word of this run-on disgrace because Trump Said It Out Loud — so now it’s time to “fall in line” with the message like a well-trained myrmidon — than I am in those who actually believe it all. (What can I say? I dislike the hypocrites more, and I know who they are.)

See how he must do a dance around the crazed cultists:

I also know what many of the responses to my outrage over this will be — I have been receiving them all day on social media, after all — and I will restate the gist of them for you here: “It’s just a negotiating tactic to end the war. It’s 4-D chess. I trust in Trump, I trust in the process.” Many more on the right seem happy to go further than that and adopt Trump’s claims wholesale.
I instead am going to draw a much straighter, cleaner line to explain Donald Trump’s ferocious hostility toward Ukraine and Zelensky. Donald Trump was once impeached over Ukraine and Zelensky. You do remember that, right? I ask because I am shocked at how many seem to have forgotten — at how many are analyzing this week’s events through anything but that filter — perhaps because it was only his first of two impeachments.

Using that notion of personal ferocious hostility, Blehar does his best to swing it around in the blame game:

It’s really that simple. His tone can be explained by personal history more than anything else. Back in 2019, Donald Trump’s presidency — already under siege after a brutal midterm election in the House — was derailed by what he considers to be a spurious impeachment attempt by the Democrats. Trump was arraigned for improperly “interfering with the 2020 election” by pressuring Zelensky to probe the details of Hunter and Joe Biden’s financial entanglements with their government — entanglements we now have every reason to believe were indeed significant and deeply corrupt, certainly on Hunter’s part.
Meanwhile, the first three years of Trump’s administration had already been partially derailed by the absurd and sinister “Russiagate” hoax, involving politicized national security greybeards, the mainstream media, and the Democratic Party in a joint plot to hamstring Trump’s mandate from Day One with widely believed claims of his being on the take from Russia, which supposedly engineered his victory via “disinformation.” (It was “Russiagate” more than anything else that fueled the original “Resistance,” the belief that he was an illegitimate president fit to be undermined rather than obeyed because he “didn’t really win.”) But it wasn’t Russia per se that did anything to him; it was Russia’s being used as a club against him that dogged his first term in office. You and I may hate Putin, but as far as Trump is concerned, they have no particular beef.

But after those distractions and deflections, and the attempt to pretend that Vlad the sociopath has nothing on his patsy, and it's all just personal, even Blehar has to attempt a reality adjustment:

So forgive me if I doubt that Trump is just negotiating like a “great dealmaker” or playing the geopolitical game of a chessmaster by keeping Americans and Europeans alike shockingly off-guard with his intemperate public rhetoric. I’ve always believed him to be a much simpler man than that and, in this, at least been proven correct every time: He says things like this because this is how he feels right now. I think his attitude toward Ukraine accords with his lifelong priors, yes: Trump regards most countries as being essentially parasitic upon the United States, taking advantage of our purported self-inflicted economic “weakness” in the modern era (hence his pronounced contempt for NATO and the EU); he also reflexively disdains “weak” Ukraine vis-a-vis the historically “strong” Russians, who dominated his imagination as a youth. But more importantly, Trump hates Zelensky and Ukraine because they have become a totem for all the forces that tormented Trump for years.
That is why I also ask you to forgive me if I suspect Trump is incapable of seeing straight when it comes to America’s long-term national interests in Ukraine, as compared to his private resentments there. (This is a man whose ideal vision of government, after all, seems to be one he inherited from his mentor Roy Cohn.) I have always doubted him on this score, which is why I have always doubted his ability to serve the national interest when it conflicted with his own. Nothing Donald Trump has done this week has persuaded me otherwise.

Even in the National Review, saucy doubts and fears, and with Hunter Biden only going so far to ease the pain...

The Atlantic, encore cette chanson:

Oh wait, the pond sees that The Atlantic has moved on... 

Just look at all the introspection and agonising going on at the moment ...





Quick, before the worlds start turning above the Faraway Tree and a new land arrives...

Now Tom Nichols is headlining with Who Is Running the United States, Musk or Trump? (archive link)
In an interview with Sean Hannity, three men demonstrated that they have no idea how American democracy works.

Ah the notorious Fox interview ... 

Hannity says shit:

...and yet while Nichols quotes George W. observing that was some weird shit, he discreetly avoids mentioning Hannity stumbling over "shit" in another interview...




... because it's impossible to keep up with all the shit ...

King Donald strikes again in the Beast:

King Donald I is never ending gold for the tabloids, taking over the Beast's obsession with royalty and Megan Markle...



How they love to be titillated by their new King:




Cue another troll from the relentless trolls (archive)...




The Scammer-in-Chief:

Every other moment comes news of a new scam by the king of scams...





Furiously Frumming Away in The Atlantic:

That's why the pond can only begin to mention David Frum in The Atlantic, ranting about A Cautionary Tale for Trump Appointees (archive link)...

... the evidence of past days suggests they are all deluding themselves. Trump wants to abandon Ukraine more than he has wanted to do anything as president, except possibly protect and pardon the January 6 criminals. His aides are playing the part of William P. Rogers, even as the real action is occurring all around them.

That's not news, it wasn't news years ago. How many times can this rapidly aging joke be re-told in the 'toons?




Carry on Frumming like a furious bandersnatch...

If that’s not how they want to be remembered, they have to act fast. They have to begin by recognizing that this president wants to destroy Ukraine—and is surrounded by enablers who want to help him.
Perhaps Trump can be corralled, but if the pro-American faction within this administration wants to make itself felt, it has to be prepared to play as tough and rough as the pro-Putin faction from the president on down.
William P. Rogers was eventually fired by Nixon for his unwillingness to say and do all that Nixon wanted to defend Nixon during the Wagergate scandal. That’s the fate hanging over all those who joined this administration hoping to make it better. Trump is determined to make it worse. He’s the president, and he’s backed in his anti-Ukraine views by the people he most cares about. The noisy resignation is the ultimate weapon of the political appointee, and people inside this administration who care about America’s good name had best be prepared to use it. Otherwise, they will be used as fools and fronts in an administration that seems to be placing Russian interests ahead of America’s own.

Principled resignations? 

In Frum's idle dreams, they had to be delusional fools or wretched knaves to sign on in the first place ...the only principled resignations have come from those those who didn't join the cult, those just going about the government's business.

They were brave and were willing to step outside the tent into the cold...you'd have to be a compleat tosser and wanker and a delusional narcissist to think you could join hoping to make it better (put Little Marco in whatever category you like, but tosser will do for the pond).

At last a few 'toons:

And then there are the cartoons, covering some of the other stuff that needs covering...

It's simply impossible to keep up with all of them, from the immortal Rowe giving an anal twist to the SA steel affair (with Faux News almost in old Twentieth Century Fox mode)...




... to other minions not mentioned in all the wordage above ...

Yes, amazingly, after all that, RFK Jr. was left to be fodder for the 'toons...







The pond is standing by for a flood of Kash Patel 'toons, though the man is such a caricature of a joke he's going to be a tough 'toon nut to crack ... and with that dread thought looming, the pond has had more than enough for a late arvo post ...

Off to learn the drums, practise the ancient art of crocheting, or read Roman literature in readiness for our Henry on a Friday ... 


Arcing across the lizard Oz - the bro making plans with Nigel, and the cracking Crace v. Dougie ...

 

The reptiles seem to have hit on a new format to deal with the "news" for the hive mind placed at the top, and the extreme far right dropped down a notch ...




What's interesting, as always, is what's missing, with news that apparently envoy Kellogg has already been dropped from the role of key negotiator and Witkoff being given the guernsey ... in which case there's more going on than just the current war of words between the Cantaloupe Caligula and the hard-pressed Zelensky ...

Now the Kyiv Independent has a dog in the fight, so who knows, but with King Donald I relentlessly regurgitating Russian propaganda and offering never-ending lies embracing all their talking points, it looks like another win for Vlad the Sociopath.

Meanwhile, down in the displaced far right, the usual suspects emerged ...





The pond was vastly relieved. The hunt for petulant Peta, TV sitcom lookalike, goes on, but there was nothing in that lot to trouble the pond...

Note to Erica: with a narcissist of the pure bred quality of King Donald I, it seems that the "Me" movement must be blamed for his development (though Erica fails to explain how the "Me" movement was big in the 1950s).

And the news from Whylla sent the reptiles into a flap, for no apparent reason, except maybe ... Gutpa?

The pond was relieved because the valiant, speechless-inducing Murray was held over from yesterday, and there was also room for the dog botherer, who arced across the reptile skyline yesterday, then quickly disappeared like a spluttering Oscar Wilde rocket heading for the mud ...

So the pond can begin with the bromancer.. making plans with Nigel...some reptile fallout spinning off from Arc, though remarkably not as much as devoted lizard Oz specialists had hoped for ...

Nigel Farage has sage words of advice – for Peter Dutton and the Western world, Nigel Farage, the insurgent prince of British politics, hopes Peter Dutton will win the forthcoming Australian election … but if the Coalition want to achieve a majority, he has one piece of advice.

The reptiles clocked the read at five minutes and naturally it began with a snap of the Clacton-on-Sea oracle... (he claims to visit his seat every so often, though some think Clacton is another example of FAFO) ... Nigel Farage has offered some advice to Peter Dutton ahead of the federal election.




Nige is the compleat boofhead, which makes him perfect company for boofhead bro ... as gullible as any mark or trick or John in the company of a snake-oil seller...

Nige even had the cheek to deflect by talking about snakes ...

Nigel Farage, the insurgent prince of British politics, the cheerier, cheekier, friendlier, British Donald Trump, armed with clear messages and plain speaking, ­exudes maximum self-confidence right now.
“I think Reform UK (Farage’s Party) will win the next British election,” he tells me during an ­interview at the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship conference in London.
“Will it be me as prime minister? I don’t know. I hope so. Life’s a game of snakes and ladders. You never know what life’s going to throw up.”
Britain’s election is still three or four years away.
Dealing with something more proximate, Farage hopes Peter Dutton will win the forthcoming Australian election.
But with the Opposition Leader needing a big swing to beat Anthony Albanese and at least 18 seats before he gets to anything like a majority, Farage has one piece of advice for the Coalition.
“I like Peter Dutton. I think he’s a very, very good, solid guy. I think Dutton’s very good. If I would say anything, it’s just that the whole campaign for the Australian Liberal Party, maybe it just needs a bit more fizz.”
Then he adds: “I like drinking fizz, too.”
Given Farage’s power in the global conservative movement and his extraordinary rise since the early Brexit days, it will be ­advice Mr Dutton will surely take heed of.

Then followed a snap of the diligent boofhead bro, at work with notepad, with the reptiles careful to point out the geography of the room, so no one would confuse the boofheads, Nigel Farage, left, is interviewed by The Australian’s Foreign Editor Greg Sheridan, right, on the sidelines of the ARC conference in London




Rather than pen and pad, they could have equipped the bro with a feather or a wet lettuce leaf, with which to give Nigel a dinkum going over ...

The idea of Reform actually winning a British election when it only has five sitting MPs in the House of Commons might seem far-fetched, but a recent YouGov poll put Reform in first place, narrowly ahead of both Labour and the Conservatives.

Far-fetched? Oh that's bold, but of course it's just a way for the bro to talk up the wild ambitions of the lying, cheating, Brexiting boofhead ...

I ask Farage what is the single biggest issue for the UK, and therefore for Reform.
“The biggest issue is the impact of the population explosion on the quality of life for everybody,” Farage tells me. “There’s been a completely unplanned population increase of 10 million people in the past 20 years. There’s a huge impact on schools. The situation in housing is literally impossible. I mean Generation Rent.
“People in London live like students until they’re 40. People live with mum and dad in a way they haven’t since Victorian England. There are no more roads but 10 million more people. There’s access to health.
“Also, the impact it’s had on communities has been pretty stark. We have towns and cities where there are absolute divisions. One group of people live here, an entirely different group of people live there. There’s a lack of integration. There’s been a growth of Muslim majorities in the inner city parts of some cities, with the lowest educational standards, the highest levels of first cousin marriages, declining health, huge welfare dependency. Is it any wonder extreme ideologies can be fostered in environments like that?”
He proposes Britain should ­become a “net zero” immigration society. Some immigration would continue, but “overall the policy is not to increase the population through immigration over the next few years, to give us half a chance to adjust.”
Farage also wants to create a Britain where Brits themselves want to stay, saying: “I would also like to stop emigration.”
He runs through the types of Brits who are leaving, and he doesn’t want to lose any of them. There are the people who bought a semi-detached house in London decades ago for some thousands of pounds and find it’s now worth a million pounds. They cash in their chips, buy a nice house in Spain, where the weather is good, and they’ve got loads of money left over. The problem with losing that cohort, Farage says, is that they are big spenders in the economy.
“And of course the rich are obviously going. The Conservatives started that.”
By making the tax treatment for foreigners living in London less generous, Conservative and Labour both thought they would assist equity. Instead, they’ve seen a massive drain of millionaires, and much of their capital, from the country. Farage adds sarcastically: “We can’t have successful people in Britain because they’re bad people. Anyone who succeeds is bad, you do understand? Take that with a note of sarcasm please.”
But worst of all is the loss of 30-something entrepreneurial types. They don’t all move to Dubai, Farage says, lots go to Lisbon, or Milan, or even Athens. The cost of living is cheaper, taxes are often lower. “The whole of Europe is putting tax deals in place to grab young British entrepreneurs.”

Typical so far, and then the reptiles slip in a snap of the Clacton-on-Sea man with the allegedly reformed junkie, it being that sort of Arcing of minds, Nigel Farage and Jordan Peterson on the conference stage. Picture: Andrew Parsons/Parsons Media




It's classic bromancer, the sort of nonsense that saw him get wildly excited by Brexit like a lot of other mug punters entranced by the snake-oil sellers ...

Farage seems to be a lucky politician at the moment. As he says: “I think Donald Trump’s victory is especially good for me. If you look at the contract with the people we put at the general election last year, the policy similarities (with Trump) are quite remarkable.
“Back in 2016, we’d won the Brexit vote and suddenly I had a bit of respect. I decided to roll the dice and I backed Donald Trump. People said I was mad. I was almost the only person this side of the Atlantic who defended him.
“We’re personal friends, everyone knows that. I think there is a knock-on effect for Reform, for me. I think it will make a big difference. And if Elon Musk does his thing with the Department of Government Efficiency, that will give us a blueprint.”
Like others, Farage thinks Trump’s victory is a big moment in Western cultural politics: “I think it’s a huge push back against divisive identity politics. No one can doubt Trump does stand up for ­Judaeo-Christian values, which underpin everything our society is built on, including tolerance.”

Ah, those Judaeo-Christian values, like getting behind Vlad the sociopath and belting the shit out of Ukraine, not to mention the ethnic cleansing of Gaza by the millions ... and so forth and etc. and naturally, Nige wants to nuke the country, but to no particular point, because who needs a net-zero target when everything that's going wrong is the fault of plane vapour trails? (The pond thought it would throw that one in to honour US conspiracy theorists):

Farage strongly backs the consensus that Britain must increase its defence spending. But he is more critical of 14 years of Conservative government than he is of the Labour government of today: “The last Labour government in 2010 spent more on defence than the Conservatives spent in any of the 14 years they were there.”
Britain must substantially increase defence spending, he says, “if the Americans are to take us seriously – and without the Americans we are basically defenceless.
“I’ve sat and talked to Donald about defence, about NATO. If he thinks we’re making a fair contribution, he’ll respect us. If he doesn’t, there’s no particular reason why he should.”
Farage is a strong proponent of nuclear energy, as indeed are Labour and the Conservatives. But he would abandon the net-zero target and, he says, save billions of pounds in renewables subsidies.
Farage points out that in Labour’s 25-person cabinet there’s not one who has worked in private business. He says he will bring people with strong business experience, with strong achievements, in to government to help lead a pro-business regime.
“We have to become wealth creators again. Without business, without profit, you can forget about healthcare, you can forget about all the things the state can do to help people.
“We’re at one of those pivotal moments, it’s a bit like the mid to late 1970s. The country was falling to pieces. We were able to turn it round but it was painful. We have to do that again. If we don’t, within a decade we’ll effectively be gone.”

If that's the best advice that Nigel and the bro can offer the mutton Dutton, perhaps it's time to panic, with a gigantic roll-over in the offing ...




What a relief to have the infallible Pope providing a visual break before moving on to the real treat ... another five minute read, and pay attention, Erica, an astonishing display of narcissism, and with Doug born in 1979 it seems that the "Me" movement was also big in the 1980s ...

The narcissism cranked into gear with the header, and continued with relentless snaps of Doug ...

The truth about our decline: Douglas Murray’s talk that left 4000 people at ARC speechless, One of the questions that all ages ask themselves is what do they call the time that they are in? I would like to suggest a name for the era we should be in and the age we can help bring in: the age of reconstruction

Speechless? It pretty much left the pond speechless that Doug should think he can render people speechless, and so to the first narcissist, cringe-inducing snap ...Douglas Murray at the ARC conference. Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media




Doug went into speechifying mode, as a way of rendering the pond inert and speechless ...

One question all ages ask themselves is what do they call the age they are in. Almost every age confronts this question. Most recently the age of modernism asked what comes after modernism, and the rather unoriginal idea was postmodernism.
Postmodernism, of course, included its offspring deconstructionism, and nothing came from that. But I would like to suggest a name for the age we should be in and the age we can help bring in: the age of reconstruction.
We should be the reconstructionists. The deconstructionists knew something about how to take things apart. But, like children with bicycles, they had no idea how to put them back together. So it will be the job of people like us, the reconstructionists, to try to put that civilisation back together.

Oh for feeble fucks sake, the best this Doug can do is deploy "reconstructionist"?

Then came another narcissist snap, guaranteed to keep the pond in a speechless condition, Murray preparing for his speech Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media




Because Doug had rendered the pond speechless, it thought it might try a thought experiment, a montage, a collage, what with the cracking Crace having arced up for the Graudian in Nigel Farage, Jordan Peterson & co worship each other in alt-right heaven, Welcome to the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship conference, a fatuous echo chamber of self-congratulation.

The cracking Crace seemed even more bewildered and bemused than yet another Tottenham Hotspur loss ...

Fighting the culture wars doesn’t come cheap these days. Tickets for the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship (ARC) conference at the ExCeL Centre in London cost a discounted £450. A bargain said the organisers, as the original price was £1,500. Maybe they had a point. All 4,000 tickets were sold long before the event began. Even access to a live stream set you back £150. A meta-event where only the global elite are welcome to watch a global elite take on the global elite.
This was “alt-right” heaven. A gathering of some of the biggest names on the circuit. Douglas Murray. Jordan Peterson. Nigel Farage. Niall Ferguson. An echo chamber of self-referential congratulation. A place where people come to have their ideas confirmed, not challenged.
Time and again you heard speakers insist they were saying the unsayable. That their free speech was under attack. And yet no one is stopping them saying or doing anything. They are not under attack from the police or the government. This is not a clandestine meeting. The ExCeL Centre was rented on commercial terms. The only person being excluded from the conference is me. I emailed and texted four different ARC contacts asking for access. No one got back to me. Maybe it’s me who is saying the unsayable. In the end I coughed up for the livestream.
Over the years, I’ve watched some batshit events. This one was right up there. Men and women fighting imaginary battles against an establishment of which they are part. Fighting diversity, inclusion, equality. Anyone who looks and thinks differently to them. All the while, there is literally a war going on in Ukraine. Men and women are dying defending their democratic rights, while the US and Russia meet in Saudi Arabia to carve up the mineral rights of their country without any input from the Ukrainian government. The dictators are taking over the world.
And what did we get in London? An appearance from Katalin NovĂ¡k, a former president of Hungary, congratulating members of the audience for having had three children or more.
It was everyone’s moral duty to have children to save what was left of our civilisation. Needless to say, NovĂ¡k omitted to say she had been forced to resign after granting a presidential pardon to the deputy governor of an orphanage who had been imprisoned for his part in covering up a paedophile ring. I guess some children are more equal than others.
The morning had begun with a fanfare from a chamber orchestra and then out stepped Murray. No one has a bigger regard for Dougie these days than Dougie. He has done very well out of the rightwing speaking circuit and now believes himself to be the Divine. He seems to regard other people with mild irritation for not matching his own perfection. His sense of humour replaced by the certainty of his own resurrection. His speech pattern has become more of an extended sneer.

Never say that the pond doesn't provide context, even when rendered speechless by the speechifying Dougie ... a man big into broad ideas, broadly laid down, and rendered with all the nuance of a piece of 4 be 2...

I want to lay out two broad ideas of what we can do to bring this to pass. First, let me begin with an example. In Europe there seems to be a certain contempt for innovations that are occurring in the United States, not least at the governmental level.
There has been much whining and howling about DOGE’s attempts to not just stop government waste but actually expose it. One of its great advantages so far is you not only see a way in which a country like America might balance the budget but, in stripping away all those layers of bureaucracy, you also discover the kind of rot our societies have been willing to put up with for so long.

At this point the reptiles inserted an AV distraction, featuring the wastelands of East London, and there was the smirking Dougie again ...




That was the excuse the pond needed to cut back to the cracking Crace ...

Dougie opened with a complaint about east London. It was too ugly for him. He would have been happier talking somewhere much grander. Still, needs must. There were bills to be paid. He then moved on. We were at a tipping point. The west was in crisis.
Only a return to Christian values could save us. It was time to return to the Bible as the central building block of our civilisation. God would have approved of Elon Musk cutting USAid, he said. Now to get on with slashing the budgets of the US education department. It was only turning out illiterates.
“Ours is the greatest civilisation of all time,” Dougie declared. And it wasn’t too late to protect it. We just had to stop allowing so many foreigners into our country. He was a heartbeat away from saying that people like Kemi Badenoch could never truly be as British as someone who was born white. There again, Kemi has drunk so much of the culture war Kool-Aid, she might even agree.

Back to Dougie, rendering the world speechless...

The administration in Washington – after USAID was found to be so rotten it had to be gotten rid of entirely – is now looking at the Department of Education. In America, as in the rest of West, there is no greater task. In New York State, where I spend much of my time, an average spend for state school is now, per pupil, around $US35,000 a year.
For that sum, kindergarten through to 12 students finish with only about half of them attaining basic literacy and about half basic numeracy. So nobody can say money is the problem. You can keep throwing money at this problem, and you can still create more and more illiterates.
There are many things that can be looked at and the first is innovation. There’s an enormous amount to learn, rather than to scorn about the American experience. There are reasons why so many of the unicorn start-ups are from America. There must be something they’re doing right. In Britain we still have a situation where one in five of the working age population simply do not work. The rest of the taxpayers subsidise those people not to work. This is a great national scandal, but still something our governments don’t care to address.
To my mind, one of the great explanations for this disparity in innovation between Europe and America is very simple. It’s our attitude towards risk. In America, the idea remains that life is risky – that success is risky. But across much of the West, we’ve fallen into a kind of complacency, which is a sort of welfarism.

There has to be a cartoon for all of that, and Dougie's mind ...




The reptiles decided to introduce a snap of another prime narcissist, with the speechless-rendering narcissist... Nigel Farage with Murray Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media




Not to Erica, with Nigel-all-at-Sea, a classic narcissist hustler and snake oil seller born in 1964 and so heading past sixty, it seems that the "Me" movement carried on from the 1950s and 1960s... (what did Erica have to say about the childhood of classic narcissist Adolf? The pond admits to not knowing or caring).

At this point, the pond thought it should also provide a link to Gaby Hinsliff in The Graudian, This is Farage’s moment of reckoning: he can choose British voters – or Putin and Trump

Gabuy was agitated by Nige as Putinist ...

...Existing Reform voters are by far the most pro Trump of any party, with 54% saying they were happy to see him elected in November compared with 16% of voters overall, according to YouGov. But it is what’s left of the Conservative vote Nigel Farage needs to win over – and only 20% were happy to see this particular Republican in the White House even before it became clear exactly what he was going to do.
As the US retreats, Europe must look out for itself – so is Macron’s nuclear offer the answer?
Being painted as a Putin apologist, meanwhile, is, if anything, even more electorally toxic than being pro Trump: just ask any Labour MP forced to defend Jeremy Corbyn’s handling of the Salisbury poisonings to angry constituents. Though war fatigue has crept in lately, with 32% of Britons favouring a negotiated settlement in Ukraine rather than fighting until the Russians withdraw, that’s still a minority view; and fewer still will want to see the Ukrainians come out of that settlement badly, as Farage himself acknowledged last week by suggesting Nato membership should remain on the table for them.
So Labour should have no qualms whatsoever about punching that bruise, reminding its Reform-curious voters that Farage once named Putin as the world leader he most admires. Do they really want him anywhere near the levers of power, at a time when British troops will potentially soon be in harm’s way along a new frontline with Russia? And if any of Trump’s threatened trade tariffs come to pass, and start costing jobs in what is left of UK manufacturing industries, his British cheerleaders should be made to own that too.

Back to Dougie, intent on confirming ...

When I returned to Britain recently, I discovered the great debate was about how to kill the elderly more efficiently. I was struck that the only argument any Labour minister could make against euthanasia coming online with the National Health Service was from an MP who said she didn’t think the NHS was capable of performing euthanasia efficiently.
I mentioned at the time that this was wrong in one important respect. The NHS is a world leader in killing the elderly; it’s just they only kill the people who don’t want to die. The NHS is always said to be the envy of the world and yet no one can find a GP appointment.

The pond should interrupt to say that it has just come off watching Tilda Swinton kill herself in Pedro AlmodĂ³var's The Room Next Door, which also commits the crime of mentioning climate change, and though it's all a little obvious, with too much speechifying and emotionalism for the pond, it makes a lot more sense than Dougie ...a stupid man imagining that he's got clever insights to offer clever people ...

Clever people can sometimes say very stupid things. And in a recent interview, Yuval Noah Harari, who wrote Sapiens, was asked if there was any book he would recommend that people could read in the present to understand the future that’s coming. He said no he couldn’t think of such a book because change was going to be so incredibly fast.
That’s flat out wrong. Change has always happened. And if you want a book to guide you, how about having the book that’s guided your forebears? Now to do that, you need civilisational renewal and that includes the ability to look back.

Then came another snap, reassuring readers that Dougie not only left listeners speechless, they were turned into stunned mullets, with a differently cropped version of an already seen snap as yet another narcissist reprise, Murray’s talk left the audience stunned Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media




Stunned? Well the cracking Crace seemed stunned by it all ...

Next up was career charlatan Jordan Peterson interviewing Nigel Farage. At least that was the way it was billed. In practice, it turned out to be Jordan interviewing Jordan. Peterson is even more of a narcissist than Nige and automatically assumes he is the most important person in any room. You dread to think what would happen if you put Jordan and Dougie together. An ego death match. It’s not often Nige is the sanest person in the building. Very low bar and all that.
What Jordan most wanted to talk about was why net zero was an appalling act of wanton self-destruction. Unsurprisingly, it turned out that Jordan considered himself an expert in climate science by virtue of having no expert knowledge. It was all a myth. We should use as much oil and gas as we could. When he finally got a word in, Farage admitted he had no scientific knowledge either but didn’t consider that a drawback either. He also wanted small nuclear reactors, which he forgot to mention is a Labour policy.
Then Jordan moved on to his favourite subject. What the world needed was more heterosexual couples to get married. Homosexuality was a deviation. There was too much abortion and divorce in the world. You’d be hard pushed to hear a more unpleasant rant all year. It was too much even for Nige, who confessed he had been divorced twice. He looked nervously at Jordan before ending by saying there would be more children under Reform. Trying to win over the audience. Still, at least no one asked him about his admiration of Putin. I’ve never seen Nige more pleased to leave the stage.
It was hard to top that weirdness. But Ayaan Hirsi Ali had a good go. Her call was for more nationalism. People were wrong to say that the second world war had been caused by German nationalists. There were good nationalists and bad nationalists. Good Nazis and bad Nazis. We needed more Maga, less globalism. Donald Trump was merely the embodiment of the Christian message as written in Genesis, Leviticus and Romans.

The pond can understand why the cracking Crace failed to understand or explain the extraordinary meaning of vanilla...

We’ve wasted so much time in recent years. People have made us move at such a retarded speed. We’ve had years of talking about the most basic things that our species already knew, such as men and women and who are they. Who had time for this in the past?
The problem is there’s a cost to this – there has been a civilisational cost to be made to go at the speed of the slowest kids in the class.
One response to the era of mass migration that I’ve written a great deal about has been what I’ve called the deculturation of our societies, the idea that in order to welcome people into our societies, we effectively have to pretend we’re uninteresting and unimportant places until migration makes us interesting.
Recently a friend of mine used an analogy to explain this to me. He said that, as a boy, he had the impression that ice cream was something whose base flavour was vanilla, and all other flavours were added on top of vanilla. It was only at some point in his youth, he said, that he discovered vanilla itself has a flavour, and a very complex flavour.
The West has created an extraordinarily complex and rich flavour, and we have spent recent years pretending we have no flavour, or that flavour is something that only other people bring to us. This is, of course, flat out wrong, but it’s been something we’ve now told more than one generation of young people in the West.

Should the pond mention to Dougie that in its original addictive form, chocolate doesn't contain vanilla? 

While the pond loves vanilla, there's nothing like the adrenalin rush provided by pure dark chocolate...

Get a life Dougie, get into dark chocolate and experience true Zen ...

Such a stupid man, and then there was a snap naming all the stupids coming together, though only Jordie made the cut, At ARC 2025, thought leaders shared powerful messages on courage, happiness, and unity. Jordan Peterson explored the values of self-sacrifice and cooperation, Arthur Brooks offered insights on cultivating lasting happiness, and Philippa Stroud inspired attendees with a call to face challenges with integrity and purpose.




Back to Dougie for a last rousing gobbet ...

We’ve told them that we don’t really have anything very great, or if we do we ought not to talk about it much. I believe this is wrong because what we have in the cities of Europe and the West are the greatest civilisation the world has known.
We have a choice either to live in the wastelands or to rebuild them. Now, there are cities in Europe – I think of Budapest and I think of many German cities – where the idea is you actually can restore beauty to the built environment, and that people do not need to wander like lost souls around the wastelands looking for meaning against buildings that tell them, “you are nothing, you do not matter”.
We have the opportunity to restore not just the built environment, but the educational environment. And when we talk about our culture we must realise that it’s not just something young people should revere, but something they can add to – to understand the conversation, the poetry of mankind. To understand that just because Mozart is great does not mean you cannot build on Mozart. That just because great buildings are great does not mean you cannot add to them.
In the age of reconstruction, I would urge that our greatest task is not just to break through with innovation but to reclaim what is ours. To say that we love it, and that if people wish to join us in the veneration of this civilisation, they are very, very welcome to do so. If they don’t wish to join us, there are other places they can be.
Everybody who reveres TS Eliot reveres him in part because he told us and tells us still that a civilisation can be reclaimed even at the 11th hour. But I would say there is another possibility, which is that civilisation can also be reclaimed even at the 13th hour, in the most inauspicious circumstances.
Douglas Murray is an English author and columnist. His latest book is The War on the West (HarperCollins, Australia). This is an edited version of a speech he delivered to the Alliance of Responsible Citizenship conference in London.

Dougie didn't just render the pond stunned and speechless, he and his tribe seemed to have the same impact on the cracking Crace, turned as hapless as a Spurs fan ...

The morning ended with the historian Niall Ferguson, husband of Ali, declaring he was sorry to have missed a good war. Change only happened through armed conflict and he couldn’t wait for the next one to see off anyone who didn’t read the Bible. Or the Torah. In neo-con world, the Israelis are honorary Christians. Most incredibly of all, Niall seemed to think that SAS Rogue Heroes was a documentary series.
I think I need to lie down in a darkened room for a while.

Indeed, indeed, but the pond hopes to recover later in the day, and offer a late arvo posting on a resurgence in Trumphalism, aka all the writing about - pay attention Erica - the biggest narcissist of them all...a product of the 1950s "Me" movement ...

Now as this has all had a vaguely British flavour - how the pond has neglected the valiant British in recent Trumphalist times - so why not end with a couple of outings with James? Just as a variation on ending with 'toons. 

In the first James offered thoughts on 'The fool who thinks she's a genius', with one of the pond's favourite English comedians, Tony Hancock, who killed himself while in Australia - as wandering lost souls are wont to do - scoring a mention ...


 


In the second James wondered 'What the hell should we do now?', for which alas there's no satisfactory answer...