"The experience underway in the United States, even if we don't know exactly what it will be, is revolution. Is it a revolution in the strict sense? Is it a counter-revolution?"
So spoke the French historian and philosopher Emmanuel Todd in his April Moscow lecture, From Russia With Love.
"This [Trump revolution] is, in my opinion, linked to defeat. Various people have reported to me conversations between members of the Trump team, and what is striking is their awareness of defeat. People like J.D. Vance, the Vice President, and many others, are people who understood that America had lost this war".
This American awareness of defeat, however, contrasts markedly with the Europeans' surprising lack of awareness - rather it is denial - at their defeat:
"For the United States, it is fundamentally an economic defeat. The sanctions policy showed that the financial power of the West was not omnipotent. The Americans were reminded of the fragility of their military industry. The people at the Pentagon know very well that one of the limits to their action is the limited capacity of the American military-industrial complex".
"That America is in the midst of a serious revolution, right now - easily comparable to the end of the USSR - is understood by a few". Yet our preconceptions - political and intellectual - often prevent us from seeing and assimilating the import of this reality".
Todd, to his credit, admits the difficulty with perception readily:
"I must admit that when the Soviet system actually collapsed, I was unable to foresee the extent of the dislocation and the level of suffering this dislocation would cause for Russia. My experience taught me one important thing: The collapse of a system is as much mental as economic ... I didn't understand that communism was not only an economic organization but also a belief system, a quasi-religion, that structured Soviet and Russian social life. The dislocation of belief would lead to psychological disorganization far beyond economic disorganization. We are reaching a situation of this type in the West today".The psychological dislocation caused by 'defeat' may explain (but not justify) the West's 'curious' inability to understand world events: The almost pathological dissociation from the real world that it displays in its words and actions: It's blindness - for example, to the Russian experience of history and to the long history behind Shi'a defiance in Iran. Yet, even as the political situation deteriorates ... there is no sign of the West becoming more reality-based in its understanding - and it is very likely that it will continue to live in its alternative construction of reality - until it is forcibly expelled.
Yanis Varoufakis has pointed out that the reality of the prospect of U.S. economic 'defeat' was clearly spelled out by Paul Volcker, former chair of the Federal Reserve, when he said that what holds the entire globalist system together had been the massive flow of capital from abroad - running to more than $2 billion every working day - that sustained America's comfortable, low inflationary lifestyle.
Today, with the U.S. in an era of unsustainable structural budget deficits, Trump is laser-focused on America's financial core: The Treasury bond market (America's lifeline) and the stock market (America's wallet). Both are fragile. And any external pressure could trigger a chain reaction:
"In short, America is no longer confident in its own financial fortress. And China is no longer playing by the old rules. This isn't just a trade war — it's a war for the future of global finance", Varoufakis states. Which is why Trump threatens war on anyone seeking to supplant or bypass the U.S. dollar trading monopoly.
Trump's "reciprocal tariffs" therefore were never about balancing trade. What they amount to is an attempt to restructure creditors. "It's what you do in bankruptcy", as one commentator wryly notes. The demands for greater contributions from NATO states is precisely an exercise in demanding creditor revenue - as was Trump's Gulf trip).
The purpose of the New Cold War primordially consists in choking off China's rise. This aim effectively represents common ground amongst all factions of the Establishment - protecting the dollar system from collapse.
The notion of the U.S. recovering its former position as a world-class manufacturing centre is largely a diversional narrative crafted for domestic purposes. In 1950, the U.S. manufacturing labour force made up 33.7 percent of the domestic economy - a figure that has dwindled to less than 8.4 percent today. To revert would take a generational shift.
So, aside from the China consensus, the Ruling Strata is split - with the likes of JD Vance, and the economic team of Stephen Miran and Russel Vought, concerned more by the risk of U.S. overreach undermining the dollar primacy, whilst the hawks advocate reinforcing the dollar hegemony, with clear demonstrative 'shows' of U.S. military muscle.
The re-structuring of creditors underpins too Trump's hurry to do a 'deal' with Russia - one that could bring quick business opportunities and positive capital flows (and collateral) onto the U.S.' capital account. A deal with Iran potentially could even yield Trump's apotheosis of U.S. energy dominance, resulting in new revenue inflows that would buttress confidence in the dollar.
In short, Trump's agenda is not long-term strategic. It is the short-term corralling of aggregate demand for the dollar as the only currency which people demand, albeit even though they do not want to buy anything from the country creating the dollars.
The crucial flaw is that Trump's crude transactionalism is shredding his credibility as a serious geo-political actor and consequently compelling others to hedge against the dollar.
In short, the collapse in credibility caused by Trump's disdain for reading; for intel briefings; and his reliance on the he or she who last whispered in his ear, lends to policy flip-flops, and a general desire for others to disengage as far as possible from the unpredictable Trumpland.
Emmanuel Todd warns that the classic response to a collapse in the belief system and the particular psyche that has animated the economic paradigm "is anxiety - rather than any state of freedom and well-being. The beliefs that accompanied Western triumphalism are collapsing. But as in any revolutionary process, we do not yet know which new belief is the most important, which belief will emerge victorious from the process of decomposition".
Revolutions though they generally destroy, their focus is to harness the energies sufficient to eradicate the institutions that were too rigid to integrate into the demand for change that provoked the revolution in the first place.
In this context, the pursuit of a New Cold War against China precisely is centred around U.S. anxiety (as Todd maintains) - primarily the fear that China's building of a digital 'super highway' for money will prove to be much more advanced than the rickety road that is the American dollar road.
Today that super-wide highway may not be so widely used. That's now. But already there is a migration from the old road to the Chinese Super highway, as Varoufakis underlines to the Chinese.
For the American Establishment, the Chinese 'super-highway' constitutes a 'clear and present' danger to its hegemony. The anxiety is not really about Chinese intellectual property or 'IP theft'. It is the fear that the U.S. cannot keep up with the new financial ecosystems being constructed by China, or the sophistication of the digital yuan.
This anxiety is aggravated - not least - because the Fintech overlords of Silicon Valley are at daggers drawn with the big Wall Street clearing banks (who want to preserve their antiquated systems). China has the advantage here, as its financial and tech sectors are fused, as one.
The fear is plain: Should China succeed, the U.S. would lose its 'magic weapon' of monetary dominance:
"And here is the 'revolution':No fireworks, no Western headlines. Just one quiet early morning in Beijing where the dollar's crown slipped. The world's financial plumbing just got a reroute — through the China [super highway]"
"For the first time ever, China's CIPS (Cross-Border Interbank Payment System) surpassed SWIFT in single-day transaction volume. A red banner flashed across Bank of China's HQ at 1:30AM on April 16, 2025".
"CIPS [as Zerohedge tells it] processed a jaw-dropping ¥12.8 trillion RMB in just one day — roughly $1.76 trillion USD. That volume, if verified, overtakes the greenback-dominated SWIFT system in sheer daily cross-border throughput".
Yes - It's all about money.




Reader Comments
Given the above quoted figures me thinks you could be pissing in the wind, I’m sorry to say.
People are very sheepish and not terribly prone to even want to think for themselves, and prefer to just ask questions and wait for answers than seek them out. Not everybody, but too many people need guidance, I think. Without something filling that place evil shit takes a seat. The right propaganda can do that for people.
The wrong propaganda is what got us here, IMO. It was predictable, and it's a mess, but what can you do? TV is god.
I think many of us could tell by the weather this wasn't going to end well. Even if it ultimately ends well, it's still going to have to go through an era of violence in order to get there.
The problem I see is that conservatives (and people in general) are still being led by the government through the media, and not for the better, but for more of the same. Just slap Dan Bongino's face on your cover-up and conservatives are good to go, like they've never been lied to before in their life, and can't imagine somebody they love actually lying to them...do these people have kids, I wonder?
I mean, if I can accept that my beautiful baby girl just lied to me about tossing her dinner in the garbage or feeding it to the dog, I can get over the idea that Dan Bongino, the Assistant Director of the FBI, might be full of shit too when he says, "He killed himself. I saw the file." Yeah, OK, Dan. I'll just ask the dog.
But, no. Main stream conservatives will have none of that. Dan is a saint.
It's every bit as bad as the liberal's TDS to listen to conservatives tell me to "just trust the government." it's fucking weird hearing it, even though I knew it was going to be just like this. The conservatives will be just as toxic as the liberals, if not worse...I'll try to enjoy it while it lasts, but I'm certain this will go off the deep end.
We need better propaganda.
To summarise China’s rise.
China would have ultimately gained supremacy, however the exceptionalism and arrogance of Uncle Sam’s financial henchmen including the tech & industrial brokers overplayed they’re hand not only here but world wide, I believe a partnership would have been possible if rational personnel had been at the tiller however that ship has sailed forever, I only see dark clouds ahead.
Did you know that my refrigerator had a leak - and being the refrigerant is flammable it took some bs technician out of Mount Airy to come here and tell me he don't have the damn filter it takes - and I inquired with said technician - are you trained in dealing with flammable materials particularly with respect to welding - so I've been without a refrigerator going on two weeks now - and Lowes can shove it!
~
So - flick my bic if you don't mind - but butane has to be the stupidest refrigerant ever - sort of like going backwards in time - hells bells - ammonia would be better - at least it ain't as flammable - and R11 and R12 - they were created for a reason - and other chemicals are so much better than butane in the fridge is what I think. I also think Lowes can shove it up their a-holes - I don't plan on being a customer again - cause poor customer service demands response - and Navy Seals ought know bout that 7!
Peace and hope your malady gets healed - assuming that is what you desire!
BK
~
Give me 134a I reckon - he said he has them filters - but he didn't have one for the fridge he was well-informed of in advance and that is effing BULL SHIT - and Lowes is now on my list of places to ignore. And "customer service" it seems is now a distant memory - as it is - the only entity I got to deal with is some stupid as AI bot named itself Richard and stated - I'm with Sears repair service - I ain't kidding around - and fuck you Lowes selling me this stupid warranty that I went against my normal policy of NOT getting - cause I been around the block on this shit before - same difference with insurance companies - they hardly insure - oh no - they just choose to have poor customer service and make everything a damn pain in the ass and waste all of our time!
1234yf is propane. There is a lot of older techs in this field who are leaving because they also feel using flammable refrigerant is dumb.
And those used to have semisubterranean cellars, with a temperature below +10°C all around the year. The farmer's fridge, no electrical energy required. Although I was too young for beer when I lived there ...
Anyhow, I’m done with Lowes. Local is the way to go - it is worth it. ~
Regards,
BK
It took Trump almost two days to publicly acknowledge that he didn't know about his western forces substantially damaging part of Russia's nuclear triad in the East of Russia.
Is this plausible deniability or is Trump really not that 'with it'? Whatever it is, Trump's lack of awareness is a problem for everybody on this planet.
Wine tasters have been a historically relevant feature in government for a very long time, for good reasons. I'm not saying Trump is stoned, IDK, but Biden sure AF was.Obviously, such a conspiracy isn't that far fetched. It's happened before. A lot, thus people used to have wine tasters.
Maybe this needs to be a thing again?
You and I don't count for much in their eyes. Not much at all.
My friend's dad was conned by a nurse into destroying his own life by using prescription drugs to make him weak-willed, feeble-minded, and easily suggestible. That's pretty sinister, if you ask me, and parents have been doing that to their kids for decades...husbands to their wives, and even Bill Cosby did it too.
I'm just saying that it happens a lot, and weird behavior can often be explained by drugs. Biden was obviously handled completely by virtue of his mush-mind. IDK if that was a natural and organic mush-mind, or if it was enhanced by some Dr. Feelgood...for "freedom and democracy."
It's not a weird or new conspiracy by any stretch of the imagination. And, I'm not saying a complete square like Donald Trump would knowingly take any kind of drug. I don't think the guy likes strong coffee. Pretty girls are, or were, obviously his soft spot, not drugs or wine. I'm not saying he's a saint either. What I'm saying is what I said.
Give me a women with a mind strong and potent 8 days of the week - and if you got that and she is "perty" - well that is just a bonus I reckon.
So - no offense meant - none ought be taken....
but perty girls are a dime a dozen - a women with a strong mind - now that is something special assuming she ain't trying to be like a man....and she knows others have strong minds as well.
If the two get together - man and women - women and man - likeminded and working together - then that can be a match made in heaven! And that is POTENT.
~
Myself - I like a strong cup of brew in the morning - I like my women strong-willed and fierce! But - lets be honest - tis a 2-way relationship now - ain't it?
What does it mean?
The nurse I mentioned used stuff that was more subtle, with no tell-tale high, like paxil, and other mood "stabilizers" to fuck with his head, like parents might do to a child that was too bothersome to care for...except she put it in his whiskey without saying anything. Suddenly, he didn't give a shit about anything anymore and would just go along with whatever narrative this woman would illustrate for him. The result was sad and senseless home-wrecking abandonment.
Personally, a beer or two, some dancing and interesting conversation has always worked for me, as far as chicks went. I'm not sure why some people would need to use anything stronger. Women aren't that complicated, and neither are we, probably. I don't see how chemically clubbing a chick over the head to drag her back to the cave is at all necessary.
If you're funny looking, then you're in luck too, I think. There are funny looking chicks too, and they are not bad people, and can just as easily make good lovers, wives and mothers. I think it's OK to let yourself be surprised this way.
Normally, I would say people worry too much about their peckers (that's slang for penis...now I'm trolling, no offense), but these days there seems to be reproductive issues going on with young people. They are a lot sexually retarded and not making the kind of connections they need to be making. The whole social order is retarded too. Who even knows what a "family" is these days?
I'm glad I wasn't born recently.
As for mickeys - those who think they are giving them to others unbeknownst must not realize that acts of that nature have a way of coming back to HAUNT you - Cosby is exhibit #1 in this regard.....
but I guess he let his pecker do the thinking or his pecker determined his driven ambition to eff her - and that is a shame - cause I liked Fat Albert and to a lesser extent the Cosby show - but it just goes to show - some individuals are driven by their peckers and cunts I reckon. Same difference for fuck sake.
ya know - just like spirits are in the wind - and innocence killed - demands justice - and in good time justice is delivered - cause spirits of this nature are MOST fearsome, ruthless, and determined - Justice demands it - especially in the land of spirits!
If you give somebody a mickey so you can fuck them over - then it is remembered - and sooner or later - retribution will be delivered.
You can bank on it. So don't do that.
d
u
h
I'm amazed at how messed up things are now. I really had no idea when I was in my twenties. I thought the grown-ups had a more solid thing going. I wasn't too worried about the world falling apart, but wow. It sure is strange, and not in a good way.
'Schopenhauer Exposed the Dark Truth About Women (That Men Still Ignore)' [Link]
As a man married just once going on 34 years I still believe in love over mere biology!
I hope supergirl knows.
Crooke sees the Trump team's approach as short term. My theory is we are seeing the steps in a plan to establish a multi-polar world based on cooperation, sovereignty, and financial stability. Why? In Trump's speech to the Arab world he indicated an acceptance of a different ideology; the USA would no longer play the role of regime change to make other countries "democratic".
The globalist power structure is doing everything it can to destabilize the world to hold onto its power. How do you know? Merz, Macron.
Very inconvenient truths, which is why the elites hate him, and send trolls like the pathetic PretzelDent here to trash him. This is the crucial point here. The West, with all its "brilliant" economists, bankers, industrialists and the other money lenders' henchmen fell for their own narrative of "money equals wealth". Consequently they abolished most of their actual production, thinking they ccould control all the production and trade of the world through financial means - a.k.a. central banking. They fully believed their absurd "GDP" numbers that put Russia right below Spain in economic power, thus they were fully confident the Russian state would crumble under the financial-economic pressure after a few weeks, they could carve up the
cakebear's skin, and move on the the next victim - China. What a total f**k-up !1.China has 331 companies listed on the U.S. stock market that are worth 800 billion dollars. Notice their worth is in DOLLARS.
2. The statement that "In 1950, the U.S. manufacturing labour force made up 33.7 percent of the domestic economy - a figure that has dwindled to less than 8.4 percent today. To revert would take a generational shift" leaves out that manufacturing production has increased since then. The labor force dwindled due to advancements in technology and so that part of the labor force shifted into other jobs.
3. How is that when Trump made a negative statement on China last week it caused their stock market to lose trillions of Yen, if the U.S. has no power over China?
4. Being the world currency requires the country to take on debt when foreign countries start using dollars as savings(Buying treasury bonds) because more dollars must be added into circulation and to create money requires debt being created.
What is happening here? Well obviously the US gov is being pushed purposely into default. It is NOT a consequence of foolishness or hubris(as this article from "strategic culture" attempts and "fails" propaganda wise)...
Companies owned by Chinese investors include:
General Motors. ... Spotify. ... Snapchat.... Hilton Hotels. ... General Electric Appliance Division and AMC.
No American or European or Australian company (or any other non-Chinese company) can own a Chinese factory directly.
The ability to offer an IPO in the United States is good for the Chinese economy because it provides a way for Chinese enterprises to raise capital in dollars.
Look up Softbank Group.
Hmmmm.....So that's where you learned this AI tactic. Your teacher would be proud.
Pandering generally means adapting your message to a specific audience.
Pandering does not necessitate lying. It utilizes verbiage selected to appeal to a specific audience
.Many of ‘the masses’ hate, fear and resent ‘the elite’ for perceived differences in education, advantages of birth, economic status and resentment at being ‘looked down upon.
’Avoid facts, focus on opinions and feelings.“Smart media speaks to hearts."
Don't thank me. You were propagandized by the time I got here.
Wow. That's like calling the kettle black. Hello projection.
The Attack on Apollo's Temple: [Link]
-Aldous Huxley, "Words and Behaviour", The Olive Tree (1936)
General Motors, Spotify, Snapchat, and Hilton Hotels are all American owned companies.
But, whatever.
Now Holiday Inn - was started by this fella - My neighbor used to drive his daughter around....he knew Kemmons personally and I believe him unlike many of the poster here who seem to be full of shit.
My wife's aunt lives in property near memphis he developed - best I can tell - he was a good man - just as my neighbor is - his wife recently passed........and are you sure Hilton Hotels is "american"?
Those companies are said to be listed on the Stock Exchange, but controlling shares are actually American...except Spotify. That one is actually Swedish, so I am wrong about that one. Ooops? They aren't "Chinese," though.
~
When we drove there with some friends I guess it was about a year ago - we went to Elvis's place - you know "Graceland" - we rented an electric vehicle to go visit my wife's aunt in Mississippi - we went to the place of that American author - I think it was Falkner's place - university was there....then we went to Tupelo and such...and really - Memphis gals are fond of me! I like Tennessee - I like Kentucky - I don't mind Mississippi - and the pool table at Graceland - the room of it - that is fixed in my mind as well as the stairs there with all the mirrors and such....what it must have been. [Link]
[Link]
Notice it says China's government owns part of it.
Never waver, acknowledge no doubt; always blame, never credit; debase, defame, dehumanize.
Defame: Damage their good reputation and name. Continually trivialize their name.
Demonize: Make them bad people whom everyone hates. Use ad hominem and smear attacks until anything they do or say is considered bad.
Dehumanize: Frame them as sub-human. They are a “thing.” They don’t deserve rights.
Its as if you all have been brainwashed into using propagandist machines.
Their purpose is to ridicule, diminish, defame and demonize, to make people either mock or hate the target. They function through the use of emotional terrorism. When people witness unprovoked attacks on others, they instinctive seek safety, but the only safety is the attacker. To avoid attack themselves they seek shelter within the crowd, thereby indirectly supporting the attacker. People, fearing being "tarred with the same brush" will avoid those branded as wrong, artificial intelligence or a troll. This is how bullies gather followers and sycophants. Such followers are eventually transformed into thugs and attackers while the instigating bully avoids responsibility and blame.
"Iconic American Companies Actually Owned By The Chinese" does just that right?
IT'S A FIRST
SUCK IT UP.
REVULSIVE COWARDS
RACE to the BOTTOM