Print this article [bws_pdfprint display=’print’]
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License •
ALL CAPTIONS AND PULL QUOTES BY THE EDITORS NOT THE AUTHORS

| Traducir—Translate! | |
| Make fonts bigger>>> | Resize text-+= |
Trump DEFIES Supreme Court Order To CORRECT Wrongful DeportationDue Dissidence Streamed Apr 14, 2025 The team examines the recent Constitutional clashes between Trump and some challengers, who are beginning to step forth to push back against his de facto unconstitutional tyranny. |
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License •
ALL CAPTIONS AND PULL QUOTES BY THE EDITORS NOT THE AUTHORS

| Translate! | |
| Make text bigger or smaller—> | Resize text-+= |
The Western Media seem to think that Trump gave Putin his marching orders —just because Putin is articulate, civil and polite —if, as they say in Russian—“nuanced".
There are at least 10,000 Ukrainian soldiers, mercenaries, and NATO personnel trapped in Kursk. Trump asked Putin to show mercy. Putin replied that he would follow the law.
Technically, all these people are terrorists, including the NATO people. Those who committed crimes will be punished. I doubt that Trump understood—he has trouble with sentences longer than 10 words,
Vladimir Putin:
Another fundamental point: as we are all aware, our forces recently conducted a series of rapid, daring, and effective operations, culminating in the defeat of almost all enemy force groupings in the Kursk Region. Let me reiterate: under Russian law, all Ukrainian military personnel, especially foreign mercenaries who entered our territory and committed crimes against civilians, shall be, and are, legally classified as terrorists.
Their atrocities must be identified, documented, and meticulously investigated. I instruct prosecution bodies, including military prosecutors, to fully deploy this work in liberated territories – in Sudzha and other localities – in coordination with relevant services. These criminals, punishers, and those who issued unlawful orders and abused civilians must be identified and brought to justice.
No plea bargain is being offered.
It is clear that Trump and his people have no sway with Putin. Acting as if they had all the cards and can force Russia to comply – as they seem to be doing – is just foolish because, as I have said before, that will just harden Russian resolve.
Larry Johnson and Mark Sleboda seem to agree with many of the points that Brian Berletic and I have been making for some time—Trump 2.0 is really the same as Trump 1.0, maybe worse.
In any case, Trump and his merry band of ZioNazis are not in this game for peace but for profit with their pretense of power—” doing a “deal”. The empire may be collapsing, but they don’t notice. Trump is not very observant. Yes, the Donald likes to let it all hang out — which is what happens to old guys who forget to zip up their trousers. I should know. It is not a sign of character.
Every failing empire has people like this —as I explained in a previous “special article” drawing on World Systems theorists like Wallerstein and Arrighi and many others going right back to Adam Smith.
But not everyone in the AltM community – including the Duran—seems to understand this, thinking the US is more resilient than it is—as you can see in the video below.
I do not mean to disparage the two A’s — they are very smart and informed people with insight and intelligence—but they spend too much time reading the MSM, especially FT and Bloomberg and listening to chatter in the “City”.
Others look at history, as Michael Hudson, Richard Wolff, and the World Systems theorists do— and “get it”.
Alex Krainer gets it, too.
I have put all these videos together — point / counterpoint (yes, I studied music).
Watch the videos - compare, and draw your own conclusions, which may be different from mine. Make your own music.
He is not interested in peace – just profit.
Worst of all, he is no better than Biden or Obama.
Yes, the special article moves on. Today, untangling more Western disinformation, including (Sir) Bill Browder, Navalny, the Panama Papers, Putin’s “girlfriend” and other tabloidy nonsense. Demonization is not random, there is a logic to it, direction and purpose.
Chappy
Yesterday I posted a Chappy video. As I said, he is a different boy today. The cat who hissed and spat, now purrs and gets under the covers to sleep with me at night alongside Ichi.
Every new president gets a grace period after coming into office
Trump also. But for the Donald, the honeymoon has been short.
He said a lot of things. He made a lot of promises. And he's not delivering. Nothing has been consummated.
He promised to be a peacemaker-- but he's keeping the war going in Ukraine when he could easily stop it --and he has started a new war in the Middle East by bombing Yemen and encouraging Israel to attack Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon once again-- threatening also to attack Iran, despite Iran’s mutual security treaty with Russia and its support by China.
The simple fact is that the US could stop the war in Ukraine any time it liked. And it could bring peace to the Middle East just as easily and perhaps even more swiftly.
In the case of the Ukraine, all it has to do is stop the supply of weapons, technology and intelligence to Kiev--not just what it itself supplies directly-- but what its allies supply. Its allies do design and manufacture their own weapons— but almost all them make use of components licensed from the US.
Here, the US has power.

Sweden's Saab Gripen easily outclases the F-16 in performance. It can also take off from multiple types of runways, including country roads.
For example, what if Canada opts to buy the Saab Gripen, which is made in Sweden, but uses an American engine and systems. Can the US torpedo the sale?
Of course, it can.
Normally, licensing agreements are complex, as I saw here in Japan when I worked in the Defense Industry. But Washington doesn’t care about “agreements” much— and they can make things very difficult if you don’t do as they tell you.
Europe and the Anglosphere may complain, but they will never defy Washington.
Cut off from arms, technology and intel, the Ukraine would be unable to continue the fight very long, but Israel depends even more completely on US money and weapons – as the Israelis themselves acknowledge, and they would fold immediately.
If the US cuts the Zionists off – they are defenseless— and they will go bankrupt fast as well. That would be the end of the genocide against Gaza, the war against the Houthis and Lebanon, and the threat of war with Iran. In fact, that would be the end of Israel as it is now constituted.
But Trump won’t do anything so rational.
I guess Jared Kushner would lose too much money.
Trump is no peacemaker. For “peace” he wants a piece – a big one. He’s the guy who pigs the pizza. In the Ukraine, Trump wants the war to go on— at least long enough to force Russia to divide up Ukraine. Half for me. Half for you. But, at the same time, he wants to stoke fear in Europe to sell more weapons and components to the Europeans.
On the domestic front, Trump promised to make things better by dumping Bidenomics. That was a good idea, of course. But Trumpenomics is arguably worse-- with tariffs and privatization set to induce a recession, which will spread globally – except for Russia, China, and perhaps major BRICS players.
As I wrote before, it’s 1929 all over again.
One of the few countries doing well at that time was the Soviet Union, which sparked socialism in the US, and no small interest in Marxism.
The US is like the Titanic. The band keeps playing on, and not many from the lower decks will make it to a lifeboat, of which there are not many. Under Bidenomics, the ship would have taken longer to sink, with people taking longer to notice it was damaged. Under Trumpenomics, the ship is going down fast.
Nobody likes to talk about social “class” anymore. The Titanic had three classes. First, Second, and Third, (steerage). You and I are in steerage. It’s not really comfortable, but we think we can survive. The ship is unsinkable, right? Get your water wings.
More and more people see Trump as the Captain who piled on steam despite the icebergs when he didn’t have to (or so the legend goes).
Not that we had any choice. Kamala Harris? Trump? What really is the difference?.
Both would accelerate the decline of the US. Both are swamp critters, just different kinds. Both have reptilian appetites.
And just in case you were wondering, Russia has resumed attacks against Ukrainian energy systems after the latest Ukrainian violation of the energy attack ceasefire in Sudzha.
Investigative Committee identifies several AFU fighters who killed residents of Russkoye Porechnoye![]() A member of the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation interrogates a Ukrainian soldier suspected of rape, murder, and other war crimes. The Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation has identified several Ukrainian militants involved in the mass murder of civilians in the village of Russkoye Porechnoye in Suzhansky district of Kursk Region. This was announced by the official representative of the IC of the Russian Federation Svetlana Petrenko. As indicated in the agency, employees of the Investigative Committee inspected the sites of war crimes, established the involvement of militants of the Armed Forces of Ukraine (AFU) from the 92nd separate assault brigade, as well as questioned one of them - Yevgeny Fabrisenko. Also involved in the massacre of residents of Russkoe Porechnoye are the commander of the 11th company of the Ukrainian 4th Battalion with the call sign Kum and three militants with the call signs Motyl, Provodnik and Artist. "They are suspected of committing a terrorist act (item "b" part 3 of article 205 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation), rape (items "a", "b" part 2 of article 131 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation) and violent acts of a sexual nature committed by a group of persons by prior conspiracy (items "a", "b" part 2 of article 132 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation)," Petrenko said. The Investigative Committee found that Evgeny Fabrisenko and militants with call signs Kum, Motyl, Conductor and Artist in September 2024 illegally crossed the Russian state border and entered the Kursk region. During the fighting in the region's Sujan district, Fabrisenko was detained by the Russian military. During interrogation, the militant confessed that he and other AFU fighters had committed such crimes as rape, violent acts of a sexual nature, as well as murder. According to the agency, between September 28 and November 24, 2024, Fabrisenko, together with Motyl, Provodnik and Painter, killed 14 people - 11 men and three women - in Russkoye Porechnoye by order of Kum. The AFU fighters also raped and committed violent acts of sexual nature against eight women, who were then killed. After that, the accomplices moved the bodies of 22 victims to the basements of private houses in the village. At present, the employees of the Investigative Committee, in cooperation with the military of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation, removed the bodies of the murdered civilians from the places indicated by Fabrisenko. After that, the necessary expert examinations have been appointed. The already organized investigative measures in the Kursk village demonstrate the mass nature of war crimes that were committed by AFU fighters. Against this background, the IC staff appeal to all those who know anything about the crimes of Ukrainian militants against the population of Russkoe Porechnoye, and also urges to contact representatives of the investigative team by phone number: 8 (4712) 54 83 26. During the preliminary investigation, the commanders of the AFU formations who gave criminal orders, as well as other accomplices of war crimes will be identified. In addition, a criminal legal assessment will be given to the actions of the Ukrainian fighters. Earlier, on January 19, the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation opened a criminal case over the fact of killing civilians by AFU militants in the Kursk village of Russkoye Porechnoye in Suzhansky district. The criminal case was opened under paragraph "b" of part 3 of Article 205 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation ("Terrorist act resulting in intentional infliction of death to a person"). The AFU attacked the positions of the Russian Federation in the border areas of the Kursk region on August 6, 2024. The situation in the region was recognized as a federal emergency. The liquidation of the Ukrainian militants who invaded the Russian territory is underway. The special operation to protect Donbass, the beginning of which was announced by the President of the Russian Federation on February 24, 2022, continues. The decision was taken against the background of the worsening situation in the region. Переведено сервисом «Яндекс Переводчик» |
He is rumored to live here with a friend.

She was a gymnast. Now a commentator. Very popular in Russia. Unlike Western politicians, Putin keeps his private life private, though. So nobody really knows much about this.
How are these things relevant to the “Special Article”. Guess will have to read it, to find out!
Buy us (Chappy, Ichi and their pet, me) a coffee and get on the mailing list. Click here.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License •
ALL CAPTIONS AND PULL QUOTES BY THE EDITORS NOT THE AUTHORS

| <• Choose your language • Elija su idioma | |
Resize text-+= |
Irrational hatred of Trump is, yes, “deranged”— since the “Left”, which is mostly center-right demi/semi/hemi/ hybrid liberals, hate him for mostly the wrong reasons—summed up in a vague notion of toxic “populism”.
Trump is indeed a “populist”. But “toxic” for other reasons. In fact, “populism” is a meaningless epithet because all politicians, left or right, good and bad are “populists” in one way or another—all claiming to represent the “people”.
The question always is: “which people?”
The Donald represents the filthy rich - tech billionaires, Zionists, and property development tycoons. These are the real people for him. Losers don’t count.
Populism is not always — but can be—very selective and discriminatory.
But Trump is both. Obviously. And so are the Democrats. Obviously, And the United States of America as a culture. Obviously.
Who runs the asylum? They are all mad.
One Nation under God? And what God is that?
Trump says of himself:
When I look at myself in the first grade and I look at myself now, I'm basically the same. The temperament is not that different.
As I have said before, quoting Wordsworth, “the child is the father of the man”.
What you were at 6 is often indicative of what you will become, because your basic personality is established between 2 or 3 years of age and 5 or 6. That can be good or bad. Genetics, epigenetics, family relationships and environment all matter. Remember I said, childhood character is “often indicative” of adult identity— many people do change later for the better. Or get much, much worse.
Trump was a badly behaved kid. And now a badly behaved adult.
“Trump Derangement” therefore is not entirely without a basis, his demonization is deserved.
The West has sought to pillory him because he has made Russia great again. But Putin is resilient and always has been. He is a survivor.
Unlike Trump, he was brought up in a working-class family.
Putin was a man of the People. He can share their pain.
According to The Guardian, the 23-room "Gone with the Wind mansion," as neighbors called it, where he lived for most of his childhood with his parents and four siblings, boasted a swimming pool, a cook and a chauffeur, and two Cadillac convertibles in the driveway. The cars belonged to Trump's father, Fred Trump, who, of course, amassed a fortune in the real estate business that would enable the younger Trump to launch his own lucrative career.
Trump had three older siblings and a younger sister. His cold, authoritarian father wasn’t really around much since he was focused on building his fortune. From school age on Trump was an aggressive bully—who would beat up other kids with the help of friends. He used alliances.
His sense of entitlement was immense. He continually acted out and was manipulative, much disliked by his teachers, So much so, his father eventually sent him to a military academy, which only appeared to make things worse.
He equates his time in the academy with military service, LOL.
From a very young age, Donald Trump was taught there were only two kinds of people in this world: winners — or “killers” — and losers.
It was a lesson imparted by his father, Fred, a stern and demanding real estate developer. Donald was determined to end up a “killer.”
He learned to manipulate the system — to win.
But he was small for his age and a target for bullying — the reverse of the Donald.
He could get into a fight with anyone … He had no fear. It never occurred to him that the other boy was stronger and might beat him up …
The lack of fear is noteworthy, as is the willingness to challenge aggression. Putin had a sense of honor. He would not back down. And you can see that today, too.
There are two kinds of fear in children. One is created by physical threat and pain. The other is generalized and emotional —occasionally stemming from abuse - more often from issues in a family constellation, when they a child must compete for love from one or both parents, leading to repressed anger and reactive or proactive aggression.
This fear can produce chronic behavioral symptoms as a result of altered neurochemical response in the brain, mediated by genetic factors .
The behavior is exacerbated by threat. And conscience is diminished.
Nowadays, most people think of Queens as a multicultural, cosmopolitan hub. But the Queens that I grew up in—the Queens that shaped Donald J. Trump—was far from a tolerant melting pot. During the 1960s and 1970s, Queens was a borough defined by tribalism, racial segregation, and simmering resentments. And it is precisely these feelings that Donald Trump has channeled throughout his presidential campaign. He conjures up a vision of a country that’s out of control, in the process of succumbing to inner-city crime, violence, and danger.
To many people on both sides of the aisle, Trump’s rhetoric sounds not just offensive but oddly retro—Archie Bunker mouthing off in his wing chair. (What “inner cities” is he referring to, exactly?)
Trump grew up in an island of wealth and influence on the edge of a threatening sea of have-nots —the “mean streets” that Putin had to survive. There, the Donald’s privilege could not protect him—nor did he have the courage to fight alone.
He still lives on an island of wealth. He always has his allies, formerly attack dogs like Bolton and Haley who turned and bit him. Now, his allies are better behaved - so far. How long before they, too, turn on him [is anyone guess!]
He is still aggressively reactive and proactive, seeking to coerce and extort and throw others off balance– which is what “the art of the deal” is — manipulation—neither honest nor honorable.
His community —his “people” are still the rich and powerful and he still looks down on weakness seeing it as something to exploit, and fears what he does not understand. His nativism is a projection of emotional insularity as is his grandiosity.
Zionists have power - they are friends. Palestinians have no power. They are therefore superfluous. Hence, Gaza is to be the New American Riviera. A few Palestinians can remain — as servants. The rest can flee — or die.
So Trump is all about aggrandizement. Maybe he thinks someone will love him for that.
MAGA? It is not about making America great - it is about making that kid, number 4 out of 5 great. Not that he ever was.
Books and programmes about espionage like The Shield and the Sword took hold of my imagination,” he explained later. “What amazed me most of all was how one man’s effort could achieve what whole armies could not. One spy could decide the fate of thousands of people
He joined the KGB because it fit his goals and his character—and most important of all, is imagination and ideals:
His character fitted the kind of work the KGB did. He liked to stay in the background and observe others rather than to be the centre of attention himself. He was disciplined and pragmatic.
Most people say he is rather shy.
Doesn’t sound like Trump. Who seeks attention.
But Putin is a populist also. His “people” are all the peoples of Russia. And those people recognize that and love him.

You don’t need to study psychology to understand people like Trump or Putin. Just look . Think and feel.
“I see therefore I think therefore I am”

This article is partly based on research on Putin for my special article — still underway.
By Julian Macfarlane · Launched 3 years ago • Confused by the media? Look here
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License •
ALL CAPTIONS AND PULL QUOTES BY THE EDITORS NOT THE AUTHORS


The wildfires in California replicate the massive fire storms in the boreal forest in Canada and Siberia, the lungs of the earth. Our addiction to fossil fuel has ignited an age of fire.
The apocalyptic wildfires that have erupted in the boreal forest in Siberia, the Russian Far East and Canada, climate scientists repeatedly warned, would inevitably move southwards as rising global temperatures created hotter, more fire-prone landscapes. Now they have. The failures in California, where Los Angeles has had no significant rainfall in eight months, are not only failures of preparedness — the mayor of Los Angeles, Karen Bass, decreased funds for the fire department by $17 million — but a failure globally to halt the extraction of fossil fuel. The only surprise is that we are surprised. Welcome to the age of the “Pyrocene” where cities burn and water does not come out of the hydrants.
The boreal forest is the largest forest system on earth. It circumnavigates the Northern Hemisphere. It stretches across Canada and Alaska. It travels through Russia where it is known as “the taiga.” It reaches into Scandinavia, picks up again in Iceland and Newfoundland, and moves westward across Canada, completing the circle. The boreal forest has more sources of freshwater than any other biome, including the Amazon Rainforest. It is the lungs of the earth, able to store 208 billion tons of carbon, or 11 percent of the world’s total. Yet it has been steadily degraded, assaulted by deforestation and the extraction of the tar sands in Alberta, Canada — which produces 58 percent of Canada’s oil and is the U.S.’s largest source of imported oil — man-made drought and rising temperatures from carbon emissions.
Almost two million acres of boreal forest have been destroyed by extraction industries and timber companies. They have scraped away the topsoil and left behind poisoned wastelands. The production and consumption of one barrel of tar sands crude oil releases between 17 and 21 percent more carbon dioxide than the production and consumption of a standard barrel of oil. The oil is transported thousands of miles to refineries as far away as Houston, through pipelines and in tractor-trailer trucks or railroad cars.
This vast assault, perhaps the largest such project in the world, has accelerated the release of carbon emissions that, unchecked, will render the planet uninhabitable for humans and most other species. There is a direct line from the destruction of the boreal forest and the raging wildfires in California.
The boreal forest system has, for over a decade, seen some of the planet’s worst wildfires, including the 2016 Wood Buffalo (aka Fort McMurray) wildfire, which consumed nearly 1.5 million acres and which was not fully extinguished for 15 months. The monster wildfire, which was, according to journalist John Vaillant, about 950 degrees Fahrenheit — hotter than Venus — destroyed thousands of homes and forced the evacuation of 88,000 people. The fire ripped into Fort McMurray with such ferocity and speed that residents barely escaped in their cars as buildings and houses were instantly vaporized. Flames shot 300 feet into the air. Fireballs rolled up into the smoke column for another 1,000 feet. It was a harbinger of the new normal.
More than 100 climate scientists have called for a moratorium on the extraction of tar sands oil. Former NASA scientist James Hansen warnedover a decade ago that if the tar sands oil is fully exploited, it will be “game over” for the planet. He has also called for the CEOs of fossil fuel companies to be tried for “high crimes against humanity and nature.”
It is hard to get a sense of the scale of the destruction unless you visit, as I did in 2019, the Alberta tar sands. I spent time with the 500 inhabitants of Beaver Lake, the Cree reserve, most of whom are impoverished and live in small, boxy prefabricated houses. They are victims of the latest iteration of colonial exploitation, one centered on the extraction of oil that is poisoning the water, soil and air around them.
Beaver Lake, as I wrote at the time, is surrounded by over 35,000 oil and natural gas wells and thousands of miles of pipelines, access roads and seismic lines. The area also contains the Cold Lake Air Weapons Range, which has appropriated huge tracts of traditional territory from the native inhabitants to test weapons. Giant processing plants, along with gargantuan extraction machines, including bucket wheelers that are over half a mile long and draglines that are several stories high, ravage hundreds of thousands of acres.
“These stygian centers of death belch sulfurous fumes, nonstop, and send fiery flares into the murky sky,” I wrote. “The air has a metallic taste. Outside the processing centers, there are vast toxic lakes known as tailings ponds, filled with billions of gallons of water and chemicals related to the oil extraction, including mercury and other heavy metals, carcinogenic hydrocarbons, arsenic and strychnine. The sludge from the tailings ponds is leaching into the Athabasca River, which flows into the Mackenzie, the largest river system in Canada.”
Nothing in this moonscape, by the end, will support life. “The migrating birds that alight at the tailings ponds die in huge numbers,” I noted. “So many birds have been killed that the Canadian government has ordered extraction companies to use noise cannons at some of the sites to scare away arriving flocks. Around these hellish lakes, there is a steady boom-boom-boom from the explosive devices.”
The water in much of northern Alberta is no longer safe for human consumption. Drinking water has to be trucked in for the Beaver Lake reserve. Cancer and respiratory diseases are rampant.
John Vaillant, author of “Fire Weather: On the Front Lines of a Burning World” describes the tars sands landscape:
…mile upon mile of black and ransacked earth pocked with stadium-swallowing pits and dead, discolored lakes guarded by scarecrows in cast-off rain gear and overseen by flaming stacks and fuming refineries, the whole laced together by circuit board mazes of dirt roads and piping, patrolled by building-sized machines that, enormous as they are, appear dwarfed by the wastelands they have made. The tailings ponds alone cover well over a hundred square miles and contain more than a quarter of a trillion gallons of contaminated water and effluent from the bitumen upgrading process. There is no place for this toxic sludge to go except into the soil, or the air, or, if one of the massive earthen dams should fail, into the Athabasca River. For decades, cancer rates have been abnormally high in the downstream community.
The out-of-control fire storms and blizzard of swirling embers, he chronicles, are what we are witnessing in California, a state which normally experiences wildfires during June, July, and August. Neighborhoods burn “to their foundations beneath a towering pyrocumulus cloud typically found over erupting volcanoes” and fires generate “hurricane-force winds and lightning that ignites fires miles away.”
These cyclone-like fires resemble the firebombing of Hamburg or Dresden during World War Two, rather than forest fires of the past. They are almost impossible to control.
You can see an interview I did with Vaillant here.
“Fire wants to climb,” Vaillan told me. “[W]e all know heat rises. It’s rising up into the treetops and it’s sucking in wind from underneath because it needs oxygen all the time. So the fire, it’s helpful to think of it as a breathing entity. It’s pulling oxygen in from all around and rising into the architecture of the trees and so there’s this rushing chimney-like effect. Where the fire is in a way happiest, most energetic, most charismatic, and dynamic is up in the treetops, and then it’s pulling in wind from down below. As that heat builds, as the whole tree is engaged, you have this increasing heat and increasing wind which then builds on itself so it becomes almost a self-perpetuation machine. If you have hot enough, dry enough, [and] windy enough conditions, those flames will then begin to leap from treetop to treetop.”
The heat releases vapor, hydrocarbons from the fuels around it, which is why we see “explosive fireballs and massive surges of flame coming out of big boreal fires because that’s the superheated vapor rising up and then ignited. Imagine an empty gas can — even though there might not be a lot of liquid in it, it will still explode in a spectacular fashion. Well, that’s really what the fire is enabling in the forest, for all those hydrocarbons to release in this gaseous cloud that then ignites. That’s when you see, especially a boreal fire, in full run. It’s called a Rank 6. It’s comparable to a Category 5 hurricane.”
When houses and buildings become very hot they, like trees, release hydrocarbons. Vaillant calls modern buildings “incendiary devices.” They are packed with petrochemicals and often sheathed with petroleum products like vinyl siding and tar shingles. When fires push temperatures to over 1,400 degrees the vinyl siding, tar shingles, glues and laminates in the plywood vaporize.
“The modern home is in fact more flammable than a log cabin or a 19th-century home that’s made mostly out of wood, mostly furnished with cotton-stuffed furniture or horse hair stuffed furniture, things that we think of as antiques now,” Vaillant said. “But the modern home is really in a way a giant gas can and we don’t think of that when it’s 75 degrees. But when it’s 300 degrees because of the radiant heat coming off a fire, or 1,000 degrees because of the radiant heat coming off a boreal wildfire, it turns into something completely different.”
“All of us alive today have grown up in the petroleum age,” Vaillant said. “It feels normal to us the way I think people smoking on airplanes and in doctors’ waiting rooms felt normal to people in the 1950s. We’re completely habituated to it, to the point that it’s invisible to us. But if you really stop and think about how petroleum is rendered and what it in fact is, it’s literally toxic at every stage of its life. From the moment it’s drawn from the ground through the incredibly polluting refining process, into our cars and where it’s burned…Petroleum will kill you in every form, whether as a liquid, as a toxic spill, as a gas, as an emission. It’s strange to think that we have surrounded ourselves and persuaded ourselves that this profoundly toxic substance is an ally to us and an enabler of this wonderful lifestyle that we live that is now being compromised in measurable and visible ways by that very energy source.”
We have harnessed the concentrated energy of 300 million years and set it alight. We are addicted to fossil fuels. But it is a suicide pact. We ignore the freakish weather patterns and disintegration of the planet, retreating into our electronic hallucinations, pretending the inevitable is not inevitable. This vast cognitive dissonance, fed to us by mass culture, makes us the most self-deluded population in human history. The cost of this self-delusion will be mass death. The devastation in California is the harbinger of the apocalypse.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License •
ALL CAPTIONS AND PULL QUOTES BY THE EDITORS NOT THE AUTHORS

| <• Choose your language • Elija su idioma | |
Resize text-+= |

President-elect Donald Trump named Florida Senator Marco Rubio as his nominee for Secretary of State, an abhorrent choice that shows Trump’s claim to be a peace candidate to be a complete illusion.
The New York Times reported that, since he was first elected to the U.S. Senate in 2010, Rubio has “staked out a position as a foreign policy hawk, taking hard lines on China, Iran, Venezuela and Cuba in particular.”
Supportive of the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq, 2011 U.S. bombing of Libya and genocidal U.S.-Saudi war on Yemen, Rubio has further expressed unalloyed support for Israel’s war in Gaza, claiming that Hamas was to blame for Palestinian civilian deaths.[1]
The New York Times emphasized that Rubio has been among the most outspoken senators on the need for the U.S. to be more aggressive on China.
While sitting on the Senate Intelligence Committee, he demanded that the Biden administration block sales to Huawei, the Chinese telecommunications giant, after it released an artificial intelligence processor chip-powered laptop.
Sanctioned by the Chinese government for supporting an anti-Chinese uprising in Hong Kong, Rubio introduced the “Taiwan Peace Through Strength Act” that would fast-track U.S.-Taiwan military coordination, and has called for Taiwan to increase its defense spending, which is not a majority view in Taiwan.[2]

Marco Rubio with Taiwan’s anti-China President Tsai Ing-wen in June 2016. [Source: en.wikipedia.org]
Zhu Junwei, a former researcher in the People’s Liberation Army and director of American research at Beijing’s Grandview Institution think tank, told the Australian Financial Reviewthat Rubio’s appointment would “be a nightmare coming true.”
Rubio’s selection is also a nightmare for Cubans, given his stature as a leader of Miami’s anti-Castro Cuban expat community.
Falsely claiming that the Castro/Díaz-Canel regime has served as a puppet for Communist China, Iran, and most recently Russia, Rubio’s overriding priority as Secretary of State will be to achieve Washington’s long-standing goal of overthrowing Cuba’s socialist government by expanding on an already crushing embargo, and by supporting dissident movements through the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) and other State Department-linked agencies.
The son of Cuban immigrants, Rubio asserted on the campaign trail that his family came to the U.S. to escape persecution by Fidel Castro’s government. However, a review of government immigration records revealed that Rubio’s parents actually came to Miami in 1956 in order to escape persecution by U.S.-backed dictator Fulgencio Batista whom Castro overthrew.

Marco Rubio’s parents, Mario and Oriales, center, on their wedding day in Havana in 1949. [Source: nytimes.com]
Rubio’s grandfather Pedro Victor Garcia went back to Cuba after the Cuban Revolution to take a job in the Cuban Treasury Ministry, though later had a falling out with the Castro regime.
During Rubio’s 2016 presidential run, The New York Times quoted from a Havana resident living on the street where Rubio’s father grew up who gave Rubio a vigorous thumbs down when asked about him. Héctor Montiel, 66, said that, “if Marco Rubio becomes president, we’re done for. He’s against Cuba in every possible way….Rubio and these Republicans, they are still stuck in 1959.” Echoing similar sentiments, Alain Marcelo, 46, told The New York Times: “He [Rubio] wants to kill us!…Viva Fidel. Rubio’s our enemy!”
Born in 1971, Rubio was an indifferent student who played football at Tarkio College in Missouri before earning degrees from the University of Florida and the University of Miami School of Law.
Rubio’s dishonesty was evident when he claimed to be unaware of his brother-in-law Orlando Cicilia’s direction of a $75 million cocaine smuggling ring from his home in West Kendall, Florida, in the 1980s where Rubio lived as a teenager.[3]
Rubio’s introduction to right-wing politics came as an intern in the office of rabid anti-Cuba hawk Ileana Ros-Lehtinen after working in a law firm run by Al Cardenas, a Cuban-born kingmaker and ally of the Bush family.
Following his election to the Florida State House, Rubio became a “foot soldier” for then-Florida Governor Jeb Bush who helped him defeat Charlie Crist for a seat in the U.S. Senate.

In September 2005, Marco Rubio inherited a sword presented to him by then-Governor Jeb Bush, right, christening Rubio as the incoming Florida Speaker of the House. Said one legislator in attendance during the ceremony: “He was immediately tagged as a guy who was going places.” [Source: politico.com]
From the beginning, Rubio’s political career was bankrolled by the billionaire Fanjul family, Cuban exiles supportive of a hard-line policy towards Cuba who owned American Sugar refining, the largest sugar-processing conglomerate in the world.
Over the years, Rubio has done many favors for the Fanjuls, including supporting large government subsidies for their business, keeping wages low, protecting them from being held accountable for abhorrent labor practices, and eviscerating environmental laws that have enabled them to pollute Florida’s Everglades.
During the first Trump administration, Rubio was said to have served as the “virtual Secretary of State for Latin America.”
In this capacity, he supported harsh sanctions and regime-change operations targeting left-wing governments in Nicaragua, Bolivia and Venezuela among others that tried to assert control over their countries’ natural resources and place limits on multi-national corporations.
In an interview with The New York Times about Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, Rubio stated: “He’s picked a battle he can’t win. It’s just a matter of time. The only thing we don’t know is how long it will take—and whether it will be peaceful or bloody.”
In 2019, as part of an opening salvo, Rubio recognized rightist Juan Guaidó as Venezuela’s leader, even though Guaidó was largely unknown to the Venezuelan population.
Guaidó is a protégé of Leopoldo López, a notorious right-wing figure with whom Rubio is also close, who triggered violent anti-government protests in Venezuela in 2014.
Journalist Anya Parampil noted that the Trump administration’s step to recognize Guaidó—whom she calls an “imperial incubator baby”—was unprecedented as never before had the U.S. offered legal recognition to a new government before an actual change in leadership had taken place.
The venality of Guaidó and members of his entourage was apparent when money for a planned uprising staged along the Colombia border—to be financed from “humanitarian aid” provided by USAID under the rubric of refugee relief—was embezzled.
Known locally as the “Bay of Piglets” in reference to the bungled CIA-directed invasion of Cuba in 1961, Operation Gideon was another foiled plot led by a former U.S. Green Beret, Jordan Goudreau, to capture and kill Maduro.
Goudreau worked for a Florida-based mercenary company called Silvercorp USA, which was contracted to oversee training and weapons procurement for Operation Gideon.
Rubio tried to legitimate right-wing insurrection by claiming that Maduro headed a criminal syndicate made up of high-ranking military and regime officials involved in a series of illicit operations, ranging from drug trafficking and money laundering to gold smuggling and widespread embezzlement of government funds.

Wanted poster issued as part of regime-change operation backed by Rubio. [Source: consortiumnews.com]
Venezuelans are afraid today that they could be the target of a U.S. military invasion, which Rubio said he would not rule out. Maduro has even requested prayers from the Pope.
Other left-leaning Latin American leaders may also need prayers. Rubio supported a violent coup attempt against Nicaraguan leader Daniel Ortega and Bolivian socialist leader Evo Morales, and has characterized Brazilian leader Lula da Silva as “the latest far-left leader who whitewashes the criminal nature of the Maduro narco-regime.”[4]
Rubio’s attacks on the Biden administration for adopting a supposedly “weak foreign policy” toward “tyrants in our region” is generally a signal that he will support more aggressive regime-change operations in Latin America that could lead to war.

Flanked by supporters of regime change in Cuba and other left-leaning Latin American countries, Senator Marco Rubio speaks outside the White House during a news conference in September 2022 on U.S. policy toward Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua and Colombia. [Source: americasquarterly.org]
Hypocritically, Rubio supports the most authoritarian government in Latin America, that of Nayib Bukele in El Salvador, which human-rights groups have accused of carrying out arbitrary detentions, forced disappearances, and torture. Salvadoran lawyers documented thousands of cases of innocent people who were caught in the dragnet with no legal recourse as part of Bukele’s overzealous war on crime.[5]
Rubio praised the latter for bringing security to El Salvador that could allow in his view for greater foreign investment, which is the main priority of Rubio and the class that he serves.

Marco Rubio and El Salvador’s authoritarian leader Nayib Bukele. [Source: radioysky.com]
Trump’s selection of Rubio follows a wider pattern of his selecting war hawks despite claims of being a candidate for peace.
For the position of National Security Adviser, Trump has chosen Mike Waltz, a Republican from Florida, a former Green Beret known for taking a tough line on China and Iran and who has repeated Trump’s calls to allow Israel to “finish the job” in Gaza.
An early supporter of the U.S. proxy war in Ukraine, Waltz was one of the few members of Congress to suggest the U.S. send “military advisers” into the country following the February 2014 U.S.-backed Maidan coup that overthrew pro-Russian leader Viktor Yanukovych, and once said he wanted to “take the handcuffs off of the long-range weapons we provided Ukraine.”
The New York Times reported that, in 2020, in the days after Mr. Trump authorized the drone strike that killed Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani of Iran, Mr. Waltz was included in a small group of Republicans invited to the White House who received a briefing on the strike.
Having served multiple combat tours in Afghanistan, Waltz vehemently opposed President Biden’s withdrawal of troops from there, having stated in 2017 that “the US should be ready to remain in Afghanistan for several generations until the very ‘idea’ of radical Islam is defeated.’”

Michael Waltz [Source: nytimes.com]
Trump has selected Elise Stefanik (R-NY) as U.S. ambassador to the UN. Stefanik, a protégé of ultra-conservative former House Speaker Paul Ryan and former aide to George W. Bush, made a name for herself interrogating university presidents for allegedly being too soft on anti-genocide protesters whom she baselessly claimed were anti-Semitic.

Stefanik. Charging antisemitism, she was the designated Congressional tormentor of college presidents, eventually causing several to resign.
Journalist Dave DeCamp described Stefanik as a “hawkish swamp monster whose political career was primed in some of the most odious neo-conservative think tanks in Washington.”
Stefanik’s racist views were evident in her repeated warnings about immigrants “swarming our streets.” She has ridiculously accused the UN of being plagued by “anti-Semitic rot” while proposing blocking funding for the UN agency for Palestinian refugees at a time of growing desperation of the Palestinian population.

[Source: en.wikipedia.org]
Stefanik’s views on Israel-Palestine parallel those of former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee, Trump’s selection as U.S. ambassador to Israel, who has voiced strong support for Israel’s war on Gaza.
Newsweek reported that Huckabee’s selection led to rejoicing among Israel’s right-wing settlers and advocates of Israel’s territorial claims in the occupied West Bank, which Huckabee supports.
An evangelical Christian, Huckabee believes that God granted historic Palestine to Israel, putting him on the same wavelength as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, with whom he is close.[6]

Mike Huckabee promoting pro-Israel rally on Fox News. [Source: youtube.com]
For years, Huckabee led paid tour group visits to Israel, which were advertised in conservative news outlets. During his 2008 presidential campaign, Huckabee said that Palestinian identity was “a political tool to try and force land away from Israel.”
In 2017, he said that he thought Israel had title deeds to Judea and Samaria, biblical terms for the West Bank that are used by far right-wing proponents of a Greater Israel like Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, the man currently in charge of Israeli settlements who congratulated Huckabee for his selection on X.[7]
Huckabee is a long-standing war-hawk, having supported the Iraq War when he was governor of Arkansas. In 2007, Huckabee was named by Judicial Watch, a conservative political watchdog group, as the sixth most corrupt politician in the U.S.
Judicial Watch’s report quoted from the Associated Press, which stated that “[Huckabee’s] career has…been colored by 14 ethics complaints and a volley of questions about his integrity, ranging from his management of campaign cash to his use of a nonprofit organization to subsidize his income to his destruction of state computer files on his way out of the governor’s office.”
These comments do not inspire confidence in Huckabee’s leadership qualities, which fit with the debased moral standard one has come to expect from Donald Trump and other politicians in the second U.S. Gilded Age.[8]
For Defense Secretary, Trump has nominated Fox News host Pete Hegseth, a combat veteran of the Afghan and Iraq Wars and two-time Bronze Star recipient who served as a guard at the infamous Guantánamo Bay torture house, which he defended against criticism.
Heading a Koch Brothers financed veterans organization that tried to “rally the country to complete the missions in Iraq and Afghanistan,” Hegseth successfully lobbied for the pardons of Lieutenant Clint Lorance and Major Mathew Golsteyn during Trump’s 1st administration, and pushed support for Navy SEAL Edward Gallagher, each of whom were facing charges or convictions related to war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan.
With Hegseth now running the Pentagon, there will likely be limited rules of engagement in combat zones and far fewer military prosecutions for war crimes.

Hegseth. Another infantile warhawk awash in testosterone. But he has a point in terms of disliking the feminisation of the army. Not to mention that wokism is essentially a fraud.
In his book The War on Warriors: Behind the Betrayal of the Men Who Kept Us Free (Northampton, MA: Broadside Books, 2024), Hegseth railed against efforts to expand the diversity of the U.S. military and recruit women and members of the LGBTQ+ community, which he claims has left the military “weak and effeminate.”
Trump said that Hegseth’s book “reveals the leftwing betrayal of our warriors, and how we must return our military to meritocracy, lethality, accountability, and excellence.”[9]
However, a genuine left-wing viewpoint would not prioritize greater diversity in the U.S. military but cuts in military spending and the deployment of the military purely for defensive purposes and not to sustain the U.S. empire.

Donald Trump being interviewed by Defense Secretary nominee Pete Hegseth. [Source: nypost.com]
Hegseth’s book advances a fascist “betrayal narrative” that scapegoats liberals for allegedly undermining the U.S. Armed Forces and their supposedly heroic operations, which Hegseth celebrates in other books he has written.[10]
The Nazis adopted a similar narrative in blaming liberals, Jews and pacifists for undermining the German army in World War I.[11]
In the U.S. case, its Armed Forces have been on the front lines of imperialist wars that have resulted in countless deaths and the ruination of entire countries to the benefit of parasitical military contractors and Wall Street and oil industry billionaires who want to open up foreign countries to economic plunder—something Hegseth, of course, does not discuss.
Hegseth’s promotion of a dangerously nostalgic view of the U.S. military and its supposed past golden age while railing against liberal cultural values is a toxic brew portending disasters yet to come. One of the chapters recycles the tired conservative argument about U.S. soldiers having had their “hands tied by politicians, lawyers and ‘woke’ military leaders,” which Hegseth suggests has prevented them from achieving victory in America’s endless wars.
Hegseth wrote that the wars never end “because we are not allowed to fight [them] properly. We do not bring the enemy to their knees until they will give up. Just look at the pressure on Israel. They need to go into Gaza and kill every member of Hamas. Politicians have their schemes. I make the argument in the book that rules of engagement need to be loosened to kill the bad guys. This is what Trump did against ISIS. We fight an enemy that does not play by the rules.”
These comments reflect an extreme right-wing view that, essentially, advocates for genocide. In another passage Hegseth echoes old colonialist tropes by writing that America’s enemies fight like “savages.”
Hegseth goes on to claim that American enemies have no regard for human life, though American military operations are known to have caused massive loss of life among foreign civilians, whose lives the military has little regard for and U.S. media rarely if ever report on.[12]
As horrible as Hegseth is, it is unlikely that he could do much worse in his new position as General Lloyd Austin, former head of the U.S. Central Command and board member of Raytheon, a leading weapons contractor that Austin rewarded with over $10 billion in Pentagon contracts in just his first six months as Defense Secretary alone.

General Lloyd J. Austin III at his confirmation hearing. [Source: euractiv.com]
Hegseth interestingly wants to rename Defense Department back to its original moniker, the War Department, and implement a 10-year ban on generals working for defense contractors after retiring from the military.
As CIA Director, Trump has nominated John Ratcliffe, former Director of National Intelligence (DNI) and House member from Texas who served as a partner in a law firm with John Ashcroft, George W. Bush’s Attorney General who is infamous for his support for torture and evisceration of civil liberties in the so-called War on Terror.
Known for his ultra-conservative voting record in Congress, Ratcliffe supported a bill, signed into law by Barack Obama, establishing greater cybersecurity cooperation between the U.S. and Israel and authorizing the Department of Homeland Security to work more with Israel on border control and maritime and aviation security.
Graduate of Notre Dame and Southern Methodist University, Ratcliffe is a supporter of sweeping government surveillance powers, having lobbied for the extension of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which allows the government to spy on American citizens without a warrant.
In 2023, Ratcliffe and several other former Trump officials, including Mike Pompeo and Bill Barr, sent a letter to House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) to support the extension.
Dave DeCamp reported that Ratcliffe is known as a Trump loyalist for pushing back against unfounded allegations about Russian election interference in his role at the DNI.
Fitting a tradition of advancing disinformation to whip up the public against a foreign enemy being targeted for regime change, Ratcliffe has pushed claims about Iran allegedly hacking Trump campaign computers and plotting to kill the president-elect, charges Tehran has strongly denied.
Ratcliffe has used the allegations to call for the U.S. to join Israel in taking a harder line against Iran.
Like Rubio, Ratcliffe is also a China hawk and has called for the U.S. to prepare for a “confrontation” with Beijing.
Ratcliffe wrote in an op-ed published by The Wall Street Journal in December 2020: “If I could communicate one thing to the American people…it is that the People’s Republic of China poses the greatest threat to America today, and the greatest threat to democracy and freedom worldwide since World War II.”
Ratcliffe’s selection is a good indication of the Trump administration’s pivot to China and Iran as targets for regime change and war rather than Russia.
A New York Times report highlighted that as DNI Ratcliffe “approved selective declassifications of intelligence that aim[ed] to score political points,” and “made public assertions that contradicted professional intelligence assessments,” which does not inspire confidence that he will end the politicization of intelligence work.[13]
A wild-card appointment by Trump designed to cater to elements of his base that are anti-war is the selection of Tulsi Gabbard as DNI to replace Avril Haines.
Gabbard criticized Kamala Harris during the 2020 Democratic primaries for her hawkish foreign policies and anti-Russia obsession and gave an anti-war speech at the 2023 Rage Against the War Machine rally in Washington, D.C., warning about the dangers of nuclear war breaking out as a result of U.S. military provocations in support of Ukraine.[14]

Tulsi Gabbard at the anti-war Rage Against the War Machine rally in Washington, D.C., in February 2023. [Source: Photo courtesy of Jeremy Kuzmarov]
Abigail Spanberger (D-VI), a former CIA agent who has served three terms in Congress declared in a post on X that she was “appalled” by the selection of Gabbard, stating that “not only is [Tulsi] ill-prepared and unqualified, but she traffics in conspiracy theories and cozies up to dictators like Bashar-al Assad and Vladimir Putin.”

Abigail Spanberger, a CIA Democrat, who was upset by Tulsi Gabbard’s appointment as Director of National Intelligence. [Source: huffpost.com]
Notwithstanding these Neo-McCarthyite attacks, Gabbard’s appointment is encouraging compared to the others. But overall, we can expect business as usual at the CIA, Pentagon, and Foggy Bottom in spite of much hullabaloo that Trump was a victim intent on reigning in the “deep state” and spreading peace.

REFS

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License •
ALL CAPTIONS AND PULL QUOTES BY THE EDITORS NOT THE AUTHORS
