red750 Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago Trump has advised his choice of name-change for Greenland if he acquires it. "America is back bigger and better than ever with Red, White and Blue Land." 1
Jerry_Atrick Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago 2 hours ago, old man emu said: The problem was that Trump's advertising campaign did not reference it Actually, unlike Hitler, Trump did not only not refeence Project 2025, he actively distanced himself from it.. This is one but a plethora of references: https://www.npr.org/2024/08/22/g-s1-19202/trump-project-2025-border-immigration What does that tell you about Trump, and about those who elected him, when we could see what he was on about? 1
red750 Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago The only thing that will make Trump look good is a crematorium. 1
facthunter Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago THAT would create a bit of a Stink. JD Vance is equal polling with Trump NOW for President This is a poll of GOP voters NOW. Nev 1
onetrack Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago (edited) NEWS: Trump fires Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. C. Q. Brown. From Raw Story - "President Trump's unprecedented decision to oust Gen. C.Q. Brown as chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff along with other top military leaders triggered a Trump-era “Friday night massacre” that sent an ominous message to the rest of the U.S. Armed Forces. That’s according to The Atlantic’s Tom Nichols, who wrote in an opinion piece published hours after the Pentagon shake-up that the military was “the last piece” President Donald Trump needed “to establish the foundations for authoritarian control of the U.S. government” after installing MAGA loyalists inside the Justice Department, FBI, and intelligence services. And that sobering connection left Nichols warning readers of the dangers the “remarkable move” presents to the country. 'President Trump tonight began a purge of the senior ranks of the United States armed forces in an apparent effort to intimidate the military and create an officer corps personally loyal to him,' the anti-Trump conservative wrote. 'None of this has anything to do with effectiveness, or ‘lethality,’ or promoting ‘warfighters,’ or any other buzzwords. It is praetorianism, plain and simple,' Nichols concluded. The Atlantic commentator subjected Trump’s latest round of high-level firings to intense criticism, noting that under normal circumstances, the chairman serves a four-year term. 'The position, like that of FBI director, is meant to bridge across administrations rather than change with each incoming president—specifically so that the chairman (again, like the head of the FBI) does not become a partisan political appointment.' The end result of Trump’s Pentagon purge is a stark message 'to the rest of the military' that 'could not be clearer,' Nichols wrote Friday. 'Trump loathed Brown’s predecessor, General Mark Milley, and has floated the idea that Milley should be executed for actions he took as Chairman,' Nichols wrote, adding that the president 'believes that every senior official in the United States should be a personal appointee of the president—so long as that president is him.' (end of article)" Here's the takeaway points of the above Trump move. 1. A powerful dictator requires the full support of the military forces of the country. The dictator ensures that support, by appointing loyalists to critical positions in the military leadership. 2. Gen. C. Q. Brown is an African-American. Trumps stated aim was to remove Gen. C. Q. Brown because he spends too much time supporting DEI, and not enough time supporting "true" military aims. 3. Tom Nichols is also African-American and claims that the Trump move to oust Gen. C. Q. Brown is all part of his attempts to remove black and coloured people from positions of power, and to overturn the Civil Rights Act. 4. The group "Blacks for Trump" appears to be having some buyer remorse. I predict a wave of African-American revolt later this year and next year as Trumps wholesale firing of Govt employees turns into many personal losses and setbacks for African-Americans. https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/20/us/black-voters-trump.html Edited 10 hours ago by onetrack clarification.... 2
rgmwa Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago I think that’s optimistic. It’s not happening that fast. They may be running the country into the ground but they are still running it and there’s not a lot an unhappy population can do about that until the mid-terms. 3
red750 Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago I was sent this today. Trump’s world looks chaotic. It’s not. CLINTON FERNANDES, SMH, 19 Feb 25. A month after Donald Trump’s second inauguration and the geopolitical global upheaval that may be unprecedented, one thing is clear: The president is an American sovereigntist, not an isolationist. Once this is understood, Trump’s seemingly wild upturning of the geopolitical order makes sense. Sovereigntists are illiberal internationalists. They came of age after World War I, preventing the US from joining the League of Nations (predecessor of the United Nations). At the time, American sovereigntists regarded the league as a stalking horse for global governance, anti-colonial independence movements, black internationalists, left-wing political movements and liberal Christians. Today’s sovereigntists aim to weaken non-Western international associations that seek a more democratic international order. They make common cause with similar forces; Giorgia Meloni of Italy and Hungary’s Viktor Orban, for example. Their aim is an illiberal international geopolitical order where domestic political systems resemble ‘‘competitive authoritarianism’’ – multi-party elections embedded in a rigged legal and political environment. Under this model, the media and machinery of government are used to attack opponents and co-opt critics. Trump wants the US, not China, to write the technical standards of the global economy. Control over these standards creates lock-in effects in finance, telecommunications, space, robotics, bioengineering, nanotechnologies, and advanced materials and manufacturing methods. That means fullspectrum rivalry with China. If economic control is not possible, the plan B goal is global economic separation from China. For Trump to achieve these goals, there are three key frontlines: Eastern Europe, Middle East and Taiwan. Trump pushes for a Europe that is divided, subordinate to the US, and geopolitically inconsequential. He has long wanted to prevent the economic integration of the vast Eurasian continent, whether by Russian energy flows or China’s Belt and Road network. The economic centre of gravity in Europe is ‘‘Greater Germany’’ – an economic zone of 200 million people in interdependent economies. Austria, Switzerland, Belgium and the Netherlands are the western flank and Hungary, Poland, Slovenia and the Czech and Slovak Republics on the eastern flank. A successful Greater Germany would have connected Russia’s energy exports with the Chinese economy at the other end of a Eurasian continental front. Instead, it is now reliant on US tankers for energy. In his first term, Trump tried to weaken the EU by supporting Brexit and other Eurosceptic forces. He ordered a US troop cut in Germany while strengthening co-operation with Europe’s so-called frontier states – the Baltic states, Romania, Poland, Georgia and Ukraine. Over the weekend, Vice President J.D. Vance waded into European nationalist politics, in ‘‘an attempt to export MAGA to Europe’’, as The Washington Post observed. He urged Europe’s centrist leaders to give way to anti-migration, nationalist voices, who are also sovereigntists in their own way. He said Europe needs to spend more on defence – not to gain strategic independence, but ‘‘so the United States can focus on some of our challenges in East Asia’’. That means Vance, and by extension Trump, wants to focus on China, without diverting military resources to the European theatre. The second frontline is the Middle East, where Israel’s military strength remains vital to US strategy. Israel’s proficiency in surveillance technology can help friendlier Arab regimes stay in power by improving their ability to monitor and control their populations. In times of crisis, the US gets veto power over who can access Middle Eastern oil and on what terms: energy-rich Arab monarchies can restrict China’s access to energy supplies if the US wishes to coerce it. Their wealth can combine with Israel’s industries to create a pro-US power centre. That was the objective behind the Trump-driven Abraham Accords – the treaties signed in 2020 by Israel, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain. An important intelligence leak in October 2024 confirmed US knowledge of Israel’s nuclear weapons. Blocking Iran’s nuclear development while permitting Israel’s isn’t double standards, but geopolitics. Israel’s muscle, including its nuclear weapons, can deter Iran’s challenge to the Arab monarchies. US legislation mandates the preservation of a ‘‘qualitative military edge’’ for Israel; any weapons sales to the Middle East require certification by the US Defence Security Co-operation Agency that ‘‘[the] proposed sale will not alter the basic military balance in the region’’. Israel gets first access to US defence technology in the region. Israel relies on the US for its power but fights in its interests to ensure a pro-US Middle East. The two countries’ interests have a strategic convergence. The third frontline is Taiwan, which US army general Douglas MacArthur described in 1950 as ‘‘an unsinkable aircraft carrier and submarine tender’’. At the edge of mainland China’s continental shelf, China cannot reach the western Pacific Ocean without going through the Miyako Strait north of Taiwan, or through the Luzon Strait south of Taiwan. Both are within range of US forces in Japan and Philippines, respectively. Chinese submarines must transit shallow coastal waters before entering the deep ocean basin on the other side. Undersea sensors at key choke points allow the US to detect, track and follow Chinese submarines as they leave their bases, and sink them if ordered to do so in a crisis. According to Australia’s defence policy, that part of the world is designed to demonstrate its relevance to US goals. Trump’s shifting of the geopolitical tectonic plates may seem chaotic, but it’s not – only his style is, along with what appears to be petty score-settling and renaming of places. A shrewd geopolitical calculus is at work. He remains an American sovereigntist. The challenge for Australian policy planners, who perhaps previously mischaracterised him as an isolationist, is how to remain on the winning side of the global confrontation between a US-led West and an increasingly dissatisfied rest of the world, to whom China’s outreach may seem enticing. Professor Clinton Fernandes is part of UNSW’s Future Operations Research Group which assesses military threats, risks and opportunities. He is a former Australian Army intelligence officer. 2
facthunter Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago Yeah He's a Bloody genius just pretending to be an idiot. He's running the USA MAFIA. Nev 1
rgmwa Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago I think Trump himself is just the frontman in that effort. He’s not a strategic thinker but his instincts, competitiveness and contempt for partnership arrangements plus the inherent acquisitiveness of a real estate developer fit neatly into that scenario. He operates on a more personal level where personal grievances and a desire to dominate govern his behaviour more than any thoughts of implementing a global geopolitical plan. However no doubt that suits those sitting quietly in the background who have those global aspirations very well. 1
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