Sunday, January 4, 2026

Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – January 04, 2026

Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – January 04, 2026

by Tony Wikrent


Trump DHS Post Calling for ‘100 Million Deportations’ Suggests Intent to Kick Out Nonwhite Citizens

Stephen Prager, January 02, 2026 [CommonDreams]

The Trump administration provoked horror this week with the suggestion that the United States could be turned into a paradise if over a quarter of the people in the country were deported.

On Wednesday, the official social media account for the Department of Homeland Security posted a piece of artwork depicting a pink late-1960s Cadillac Eldorado parked on a bright, idyllic beach. Over the clear blue sky are the words “America after 100 million deportations.”


Happy Race War! (Or anything but the Epstein Files) — The U.S. regime’s vision for 2026 is to deport almost a third of its own population.

Jim Stewartson, January 01, 2026 [MindWar]

To put this number in perspective:

  • The total number of undocumented immigrants in America is about 14 million.

  • The total number of foreign-born people in America—including naturalized citizens—is about 53 million.

  • The total number of Black and Hispanic people in America is about 110 million.

  • 100 million is almost a third of the total U.S. population.

  • Millions would necessarily die in any such process.

  • The economy would collapse.

The “third world” framing in the post makes the intention explicit. It’s not about crime or even immigrants; it’s about race. The only conclusion you can reach is that DHS’s goal is to forcibly transform America into a whites-only ethnostate like apartheid South Africa—by deporting every Black and brown person... somewhere….


DHS Says REAL ID, Which DHS Certifies, Is Too Unreliable To Confirm U.S. Citizenship 

[Reason, via Naked Capitalism 01-03-2025]


Trump’s Immigration Nightmare: It Is Happening Here

Radley Balko, December 24, 2025 [The New Republic]

With astonishing speed, the administration has toppled the most cherished pillars of a free society. And the experts agree: It’s all going to get much, much worse….

...Over the last year, I’ve spoken to and met with immigration attorneys and advocates all over the country. Many who openly spoke with me prior to the 2024 election are no longer willing to be quoted, fearing retaliation against their organizations or their funders, or even against them personally.

In more recent months, I’ve also interviewed former ICE and Customs and Border Protection officials, and former Immigration Court judges who served across multiple administrations of both parties. Career legal and law enforcement officials tend to be circumspect in their critiques of fellow law enforcement officers. They tend to avoid casual references to police states, or comparing U.S. police agencies to those in authoritarian countries. That’s no longer the case. These career police executives and prosecutors now use language I’ve rarely heard from current or former government officials in my career….


Trump not violating any law

'He who saves his Country does not violate any Law'

Trump Stuns By Saying ‘I Don’t Know’ When Asked Directly NBC’s Kristen Welker ‘Don’t You Need to Uphold the Constitution?’

Joe DePaolo, May 4th, 2025 [mediaite.com]


The Brazen Illegality of Trump’s Venezuela Operation — A scholar of international law on the implications of the U.S. arrest of President Nicolás Maduro.

Isaac Chotiner, January 3, 2026 [The New Yorker]

I spoke by phone on Saturday morning with Oona Hathaway, a professor at Yale Law School and the director of its Center for Global Legal Challenges. She is also the president-elect of the American Society of International Law….

If drug trafficking is a reasonable justification, then a whole range of possible arguments can be made that basically mean that self-defense is no longer a real exception. It’s the new rule. Why couldn’t you make the same argument about communicable diseases? There’s bird flu coming from a country, and therefore we have a legal justification for the use of military force. Once we start going down that road, the idea that there’s any limit evaporates. I mean, yes, drugs are horrific. Do they cause loss of life in the United States? Absolutely. There’s no doubt about that. It’s a terrible scourge, but the idea that because drugs are coming from a country it justifies an invasion and a change of administration in that country basically gets rid of any kind of limits on the use of force….

So if Maduro goes to trial in an American court, is this going to be a contested legal issue about whether he can even be tried based on whether he is the head of state of Venezuela? Is that something that American courts are going to have to weigh in on?

Yes, it is something that the American courts are going to have to weigh in on. It definitely is the case that his lawyers will make the argument that he’s a sitting head of state at the time that he was seized and that he remains the sitting head of state and therefore, under international law and under U.S. law, he should be given immunity, which means that he’s not subject to the jurisdiction of U.S. courts and can’t be criminally charged. This has come up once before with the criminal indictment of Manuel Noriega, the former leader of Panama, when the U.S. invaded Panama in 1989 and seized Noriega and then brought him back to the United States and indicted him for drug smuggling and money laundering.

Back then, Noriega argued that he enjoyed head-of-state immunity, and the executive branch argued that he didn’t because the United States had not recognized him as a legitimate leader of Panama. That gives us a hint as to what is likely to happen in this case. My guess is that the United States will argue that it’s never recognized Maduro as a legitimate leader of Venezuela and therefore he doesn’t receive immunity….
 

...What’s troubling here is that it seems that President Trump may be making good on his promise and his national-security strategy that he issued last month to revive the Monroe Doctrine. The Monroe Doctrine was basically a justification by the United States to exercise force in Latin America. And that was renounced by President Franklin Roosevelt as part of a shift away from the idea that states could use force whenever they wanted to. It was an endorse



Trump Has Started Carving Up the World. Now It’s Putin and Xi’s Turn — Fiona Hill warned in 2019 of a “strange swap agreement” involving Venezuela and Ukraine. Seven years later, here we are.

Brynn Tannehill, January 4, 2026 [The New Republic]

This act has also sent a chilling message to the world that the United States is beginning the process of carving up the world into spheres of influence run by dictatorships (namely the U.S., Russia, and China). Russia was Venezuela’s benefactor and ally but has been strangely quiet. Former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Fiona Hill testified to Congress in 2019 that  Russia was “signaling very strongly that they wanted to somehow make some very strange swap agreement between Venezuela and Ukraine.” In other words, the U.S. could have Venezuela if we let Russia have Ukraine. This strongly suggests that the price for letting the U.S. go after Venezuela without any protest was, and will be, Ukraine. It also suggests that Tawain may already be on the table as a bargaining chip with China, in order to secure its acquiescence to further U.S. regional hegemony in the Americas.

America’s 2025 National Security Strategy document has already put NATO and Europe on notice that they are the real enemy to Trump’s ambitions for empire and riches. In this seminal document, Russia was no longer portrayed as an adversary, and China was barely mentioned. Instead, the document focused on distancing the U.S. from NATO and the EU, treating them as adversaries rather than our closest allies. This further supports the notion that the globe is being carved up behind closed doors by nuclear-armed dictators intent on amassing wealth, building buffers to their empires, and securing their own backyards….


After Venezuela Attack, Trump Says Something Must Be Done About Mexico

Adrienne Mahsa Varkiani, January 3, 2026 [The New Republic]


They Say They’re Protesters. The DOJ Says They’re Terrorists.

Sam Russek, January 4, 2026 [The New Republic]

...This case is the first of its kind since President Donald Trump, in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination, signed a new national security presidential memorandum, NSPM-7, that instructs federal law enforcement to investigate “anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, and anti-Christianity,” a staggeringly broad set of “motivations” justifying police action to “disrupt” and “disband” left-wing groups before a crime occurs. After the Alvarado protest, federal officials were unusually quick to circulate mug shots and term the protest a “planned ambush,” levying the defendants’ ties to an anarchist book club and a local chapter of the Socialist Rifle Association, a nonprofit gun club, to claim that they belong to an antifa cell and pull more and more people into the investigation’s dragnet.

To Xavier T. de Janon, the director of mass defense for the National Lawyers Guild, the implications of this case are alarming. If you attend a demonstration that becomes volatile due to an action taken by someone in the crowd—or, for that matter, someone in law enforcement—you could now find yourself on trial for something you had little to do with….


‘Scorched-Earth Attack’: Trump Admin Cuts Off Childcare Funds to All States

Jake Johnson, January 01, 2026 [CommonDreams]

The Trump administration on Wednesday froze federal childcare funding to every state in the US after initially suspending funds for Minnesota earlier this week, a move that the state’s Democratic attorney general condemned as a “hasty, scorched-earth attack” on key social services.

Jim O’Neill, deputy secretary of the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), said in a statement posted to social media that he has “activated our defend the spend system for all [Administration for Children and Families] payments” to states, alleging “fraud that appears to be rampant in Minnesota and across the country.” As evidence, O’Neill cited a viral video by Nick Shirley, a right-wing influencer who recently visited Somali-owned Minnesota daycare sites at the direction of state Republicans.


Unnamed Source in Viral Minnesota Somali Fraud Video Is Right-Wing Lobbyist Who Called Muslims “Demons”

Jacqueline Sweet, January 3 2026 [The Intercept]

David Hoch, identified only by first name in Nick Shirley’s video, got info for his anti-Somali campaign from a GOP state House staffer….

Shirley’s main source is a lobbyist and one-time right-wing candidate for Minnesota attorney general whose full name is David Hoch. Accounts bearing his name have a long online history posting about the Somali community in Minnesota. A TikTok and a recently deleted Instagram account posted almost exclusively on the subject — including derogatory statements about Somalis and Muslims.

“EVERY Somali in MN is engaged in fraud. ALL of them,” Hoch posted on the now-deleted Instagram account.

In November, he posted, “Even the Blacks have had enough of the demon Muslims.”


7 takeaways from Jack Smith’s congressional testimony 

[Politico, via Naked Capitalism 01-01-2025]

Greg Sargent, December 31, 2025 [The New Republic]
...the Department of Homeland Security’s X feed has become a white nationalist sewer pit—makes it clear that Miller is trying to pull off a hegemonic shift. Miller hoped the combination of brutal police-state tactics plus relentless state propaganda would shock the American people into embracing—or accepting—a semi-conscious ethnonationalism. Miller wants Americans to see immigrants from the “Third World” as a threat to American wellbeing at an existential, civilizational level.

But that hasn’t happened, either. His tactics have triggered a sustained cultural backlash in defense of the specific migrants in Trump-Miller’s crosshairs and of immigration more broadly as a positive good for the country. Miller has helped drive Trump’s approval on immigration—once a “good” issue for him—into the toilet. The public is rejecting their vision.

‘Their first instinct was to loot’: how Trump’s acolytes are plundering the Kennedy Center 

[Guardian, via Naked Capitalism 01-03-2025]


Judge Warns Vought of Contempt Order if He Back-Door Shuts Down CFPB

David Dayen, December 30, 2025 [The American Prospect]

Judge Amy Berman Jackson has clarified that Vought would violate her injunction against shuttering the consumer protection agency if he declines to seek funding for it.


War mongers

Trump says if Iran “kills peaceful protesters,” the U.S. will “come to their rescue” 

[CBS, via Naked Capitalism 01-03-2025]


Trump Says U.S. Is ‘Locked and Loaded’ if Iran Kills Protesters 

[New York Times, via Naked Capitalism 01-03-2025]


Strategic Political Economy

The Enshittifinancial Crisis 

Ed Zitron [via Naked Capitalism 12-30-2025]

One time, a good friend of mine told me that the more I learned about finance, the more pissed off I’d get.

He was right.

There is an echoing melancholy to this era, as we watch the end of Silicon Valley’s hypergrowth era, the horrifying result of 15+ years of steering the tech industry away from solving actual problems in pursuit of eternal growth. Everything is more expensive, and every tech product has gotten worse, all so that every company can “do AI,” whatever the fuck that means….

We are watching one of the greatest wastes of money in history, all as people are told that there “just isn’t the money” to build things like housing, or provide Americans with universal healthcare, or better schools, or create the means for the average person to accumulate wealth. The money does exist, it just exists for those who want to gamble — private equity firms, “business development companies” that exist to give money to other companies, venture capitalists, and banks that are getting desperate and need an overnight shot of capital from the Federal Reserve’s Overnight Repurchase Facility or Discount Window, two worrying indicators of bank stress I’ll get into later….

...By letting neoliberalism and the scourge of the free markets rule, modern society created the conditions for what I call The Enshittifinancial Crisis — the place at which my friend Cory Doctorow’s Enshittification Theory meets my own Rot Economy Thesis in a fourth stage of Enshittification….

...The third stage is critical, in that it’s when the company also turns on its business customers. A Marketing Brew story from September of last year told the tale of multiple advertisers who found their campaigns switching to different audiences, wasting their money and getting questionable results. A New York Times story from 2021 described companies losing upwards of 70% of their revenue during a Facebook ads outage, another from 2018 described how Meta (then Facebook) deliberately hid issues with its measurement of engagement on videos from advertisers for over a year, and more recently, Meta’s ads tools started switching out top-performing ads with AI-generated ones, in one case targeting men aged 30 to 45 with an AI-generated grandma, all without warning the advertiser.

Meta doesn’t give a shit, because investors and analysts don’t give a shit….


Wall Street is stealing from volunteer fire departments 

Kevin Walmsley [via Naked Capitalism 12-30-2025]

A handful of PE companies are snapping up affordable software providers in the emergency response space, consolidating them, then aggressively raising prices.

Most fire departments in the United States are made up of volunteers, and are budget-constrained. But Wall Street investors are enjoying huge profits, by tripling annual fees on departments, and buying and shutting down more affordable providers….


What Each of Us Can Do In 2026

William J. Barber, II and Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove, Dec 30, 2025 [Our Moral Moment]

If 2025 was about coming together to say, “No,” the work of 2026 is to reach the untapped people power of a true populist movement in this moment. As a people we are vulnerable to hucksters and social media manipulation because we allow almost half of Americans to live with their backs against the wall - working full time and living in cars, in the shadows without documentation, having to chose between rent and health insurance. Absent leadership that would challenge corporate interests and demand justice, a plurality of eligible voters believed the false promises of politicians who blamed immigrants, scapegoated minorities, and promised prosperity. Donald Trump did not create this scheme, but he saw he could benefit from it. The Wall Street Journal estimates that the Trump family raked in $4 billion this year alone.

As preachers we know that Jesus organized a people’s movement in the 20th century by recruiting exploited workers to tap the power of the everyday people who’d been targeted by an extractive economy. In the Galilee, where Jesus lived, the Romans used local fishermen to feed a global market for a fish paste called “garum.” A popular commodity throughout the empire, garum production led to the first recorded example of overfishing in human history. The Roman authorities didn’t just exploit the labor and tax the income of Jesus’ neighbors. They depleted the fisheries that local communities had relied on for generations.

In that context, Jesus recruited disciples for his movement with a simple mandate. “Come, follow me,” he said, “and I will send you out to fish for people.”

...When the authoritarian rulers of an extractive economy used fishermen to deplete the local fisheries, Jesus went to those exploited fishermen and said, “Come fish for people.” No one is in a better position to recruit people for a movement to change an unjust system than the people who’ve experienced the injustice first hand. Not everyone can preach to the President, refuse to obey unlawful orders, or maintain the integrity of institutions in the midst of an authoritarian crisis. The integrity of leaders in this moral moment is crucial, and many stood tall to clarify what’s at stake. But the genius of fishing for people is that it is something each of us can do….


Re-moralising economic life is not an optional extra

Richard Murphy, November 22, 2025 [Funding the Future]

...much of what is now called wealth creation involves no creation at all. It is, instead, too often an act of extraction, whether that be from labour, from land, from artificially inflated assets, and from speculative transactions that add nothing of value. Despite this, our society has come to treat this extraction as if it were a virtue. The more a person accumulates, the more we are told to admire them, regardless of how they acquired that money. Some obvious thoughts flow from that.

First, this means we have normalised the belief that the pursuit of wealth is at least morally neutral. The financier who distorts a housing market is called innovative. The corporation that avoids tax is considered efficient. The monopolist is just profit-maximising. None of this language is accidental. A deliberate effort has been made over decades to separate money from morality, as if economic choices existed outside the sphere of ethics.

Second, the moral scrutiny that has been removed from the wealthy has been displaced onto those with the least. People on low incomes are now subjected to scrutiny, conditions, tests and suspicions. Their behaviour is moralised and most commonly frowned upon. Meanwhile, the behaviour of those who extract unearned incomes escapes any equivalent judgement. This inversion is not just unjust; it is socially corrosive.

Third, once morality is removed from economics, it then disappears from politics. If we accept that wealth can be accumulated without ethical constraint, then we also accept the political power that accompanies that wealth. Democracy is distorted when the ability to buy influence is considered normal.

From these thoughts, several consequences follow.

To begin, inequality becomes entrenched. If accumulation is celebrated and extraction is unchallenged, the gaps in income and wealth widen relentlessly. That is not the result of market forces alone; it is the consequence of a moral framework that rewards taking more than either giving or creating.

Next, public institutions decline. When the wealthy are not expected to contribute fairly, whether through taxation or through socially productive investments, the state is deprived of essential financial flows required to manage the economy. Public services are then condemned for failure, even as the tax base is deliberately eroded.

Then, trust collapses. People can see that rules apply differently depending on a person's status. They see tax avoided at the top while benefit claimants are lectured about responsibility. They see that some can bend the system with impunity. Cynicism grows, and with it the sense that the social contract has been broken, because that is the case.

Finally, political extremism thrives. When economic life is morally hollow, people seek certainty elsewhere. That is the fertile ground on which authoritarian movements grow: resentment combined with the belief that the existing order lacks legitimacy. We are seeing this unfold all around us now….

Firstly, we need to restore moral language to economics. Markets are not natural phenomena. They are, instead, shaped by rules which reflect the values that a society chooses. If we do not embed fairness, restraint and social obligation within those rules, we embed their opposites and implicitly endorse them.

Secondly, we need accountability for those who accumulate wealth. Taxes must be paid. Regulation must curb extraction. Speculation must not be rewarded as if it were productive work. Wealth gained by harming others must be recognised for what it is, which is a social cost, and not a social contribution.

And, thirdly, we need to reclaim morality as a public endeavour. Economic morality is not about policing the behaviour of the poor. It is about defining the obligations of those with power and wealth. A democratic society requires a shared understanding that some actions are unacceptable because they exploit, harm or degrade others.

The danger we face is clear. If money remains detached from morality, morality will retreat from public life altogether, and when that happens, democracy itself becomes fragile.


AI on the scale now envisaged will create a recession on a scale hard to imagine

Richard Murphy, January, 3 2026 [Funding the Future]

Project Syndicate published an article by Simon Johnson and Piero Novelli about a month ago in which they discussed AI.

This is a recurring theme of mine right now, because it is becoming increasingly apparent how destructive this technology is going to be, at least in the short term, and maybe way beyond that.

Among their various arguments, one stood out to me. It was this:

  • How exactly will this technology be used? Conversations with senior executives of large-cap corporations across traditional sectors – companies commonly presumed to provide high demand for AI solutions – confirm that while all expect to achieve significant savings and efficiencies from AI, almost none can highlight with confidence additional sources of revenue (such as new lines of business).

This is a staggering suggestion. What it says, in itself, is that there is nothing positive to be gained from the use of AI. No one knows that it will add value by creating new worth. All they can say is that it might cut costs.


Why Is the United States Drawn to War?

Emanuel Pastreich, Dec 29, 2025 [via defenddemocracy.press, Dec 30, 2025]

The United States is drawn to war on every front, like a moth to a candle. It does not matter that Americans are sick of foreign wars stretching back 25 years in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Libya, and now Venezuela, wars that have bankrupted the nation.


Glossary entry: financialisation

Richard Murphy, December 31, 2025 [Funding the Future]

Financialisation is the process by which financial motives, financial markets, financial actors, and financial measurement come to dominate the operation of the economy, the behaviour of firms and households, and the priorities of government.

It is not simply about “more finance”. Financialisation describes a structural shift in how economic success is defined and pursued, from producing goods and services to maximising financial returns.

Key characteristics of financialisation include:

  1. Shift in corporate purpose

    Firms increasingly prioritise shareholder value, dividend payments, share buy-backs, and balance-sheet optimisation over long-term investment, workforce development, or productive innovation.

  2. Household integration into finance

    Households become increasingly dependent on financial markets for housing, pensions, education, and security. Rising personal debt substitutes for wage growth, while exposure to asset prices increases economic vulnerability.

  3. Transformation of public policy

    Governments adopt fiscal rules, privatisation, public-private partnerships, and market-based delivery models that embed financial logic into public services. Policy success is judged by market confidence rather than social outcomes.

  4. Measurement dominance

    Financial indicators, inclduing asset prices, yields, credit ratings, and deficit targets, displace real-world measures such as resilience, well-being, capital maintenance, or ecological sustainability.

  5. Rising instability

    As more of the economy depends on leverage, speculation, and expectations of future price appreciation, financialisation increases systemic risk and amplifies economic shocks.


Global power shift

First and second largest economies in charts and figures 

[Asia Times, via Naked Capitalism 12-30-2025]

[TW: The only chart the US leads China is in GDP — an economic statistic that became misleading years ago.  In everything else, China leads USA, often by factors of two or three or even more. In steel production, China leads USA by a factor of ten

  • primary energy demand
  • electricity demand
  • share of manufacturing
  • industrial robots installed
  • steel production
  • gross tonnage of ships built
  • car sales
  • motor vehicle registrations
  • motorcycles registered
  • length of limited access highways
  • high speed rail length
  • transit rail length
  • skyscrapers over 150 meters tall
  • merchandise exports
  • high tech exports
  • shipping container throughput
  • share of industrial consumption
  • global ecommerce sales
  • packages delivered
  • luxury good sales
  • 5G wifi stations installed
  • university and college graduates
  • engineering and computer science bachelors students
  • science and technical articles published
  • patent applications
  • healthy life expectancy at birth. ]


China’s beautiful biotech chaos vs West’s elegant paralysis 

[Asia Tim, via Naked Capitalism 12-30-2025]


Taiwan’s £7.5tn secret weapon is disintegrating 

[Telegraph, via Naked Capitalism 01-03-2025]

...This is Taiwan’s “Silicon Valley” and these facilities produce the majority of the world’s semiconductors – small chips that power virtually every electronic device in use today, from coffee machines to fighter jets.

Every country in the world relies on these chips, including China, which despite threatening to “reunify” Taiwan by force, imports nearly half of the island’s semiconductors.
Economists warn that an invasion of Taiwan would cost the world’s economy £7.5tn – far more than the cost of the Russian invasion of Ukraine or the Covid-19 pandemic. Analysts argue that this very fact would act as a key deterrence against Beijing following through on its threats, as China knows if it does invade, its economy would take a direct hit from the fallout….


Gaza / Palestine / Israel

Israel Just Banned Doctors Without Borders, and 31 Other Humanitarian Organizations from Gaza. The Genocide Continues.

Shaun King, Dec 31, 2025

When a state blocks medics and aid workers, it’s telling you exactly what it plans to keep doing


Oligarchy

Israeli Billionaire Goes on American Television to Say the 1st Amendment Should End and "We" Should Control All Social Media Platforms. Who is "we" in this conversation???

Shaun King, Jan 02, 2026

The man in this clip, Shlomo Kramer, is presented on CNBC as an Israeli cybersecurity executive. And he says, in plain language, that it’s time to limit the First Amendment “in order to protect it.” He then goes further: he says “we need to control the social platforms and take control of what they are saying.”

First: that is authoritarian logic. It’s the kind of sentence dictators say right before they outlaw dissent. “We need to limit freedom to protect freedom” is not a serious principle. It’s a slogan used to sell censorship to people who still want to feel like they’re good and democratic.

Second: the First Amendment is not some decorative American tradition. It’s the spine of a free society. The First Amendment is the line between a country where people can criticize power and a country where power can punish criticism. When someone says “limit it,” they’re saying the quiet part out loud: we want less accountability.

Third: I need you to notice the word he used: “we.” Not “the United States.” Not “Congress.” Not “the courts.” Not “American voters.” “We.”


Ted Cruz, AfD, ALEC and a Mouthpiece for a Sanctioned Russian Oligarch Were All Sharing Tips on Dismantling Public Education

Dougald Lamont, December 29, 2025

The pandemic was seen as an opportunity for maximum disruption, and in the spring of 2020, a group of far-right politicians and policymakers gathered to talk dismantling public education.


A New Year and a Manifesto for America

Mike Brock, December 28, 2025 [Notes from the Circus]

….

II. What We Face

We face a specific mechanism of oligarchic capture that our grandparents did not face at this scale: cross-sectoral coordination.

Cross-sectoral coordination is when the same actor can move money, law, narrative, 

The oligarch doesn’t just have wealth. He has coordinating power across multiple sectors simultaneously. Deploy capital into startups. Advocate for deregulation publicly. Fund political candidates who promise to remove constraints. Use media platforms to normalize the policy. Secure government appointments that ensure favorable regulation. Portfolio companies benefit from the environment created.

Each step is legal. The coordination is structural, not conspiratorial. There’s no smoking gun because the gun is the system itself.

Example: Cross-Sectoral Coordination in the Wild

Marc Andreessen controls venture capital through a16z, influences cryptocurrency, shapes tech policy through donations, coordinates narrative through media like the All-In podcast, and now has direct political access through administration appointments, including David Sacks as AI and Crypto Czar. He published a manifesto listing a literal fascist among his intellectual heroes—Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, who founded Italian Futurism and aligned with Mussolini. He declared democratic constraint on technology to be “murder of preventable progress.” He paid $2.5 million to secure protection from the administration that would remove regulatory friction. Now he funds infrastructure marketed as innovation: “Physical observability” means surveillance cameras across American cities. “Agent-primacy design” means systems optimized for machines, not humans. “Healthy MAUs” means continuous biometric monitoring as a subscription. “Year of me” means personalization that destroys collective power.

This is extraction dressed as progress. 


The Ottoman Empire “Debt Trap”: How Britain Bought The Middle East 

[YouTube, via Naked Capitalism 01-03-2025]


Felonomics

U.S. Dollar ‘Collapse’ Crisis Warning—The Real Reason For A 2026 Gold And Silver Surge That’s Predicted To Blow Up The Bitcoin Price 

[Forbes, via Naked Capitalism 12-28-2025]


Social Security Administration ‘In Turmoil’ as New Reporting Details Damage Done by Trump Cuts

Brad Reed, December 30, 2025 [CommonDreams]

An in-depth report published by the Washington Post on Tuesday offers new details about the damage being done to the Social Security Administration during President Donald Trump’s second term.

The Post, citing both internal documents and interviews with insiders, reported that the Social Security Administration (SSA) is “in turmoil” one year into Trump’s second term, resulting in a customer service system that has “deteriorated.”


The carnage of mainstream neoliberal economics

Gatekeepers of Law: Inside the Westlaw and LexisNexis Duopoly

Tom Blakely, Dec 31, 2025

Ever since a spate of mergers in the 1990s, Westlaw and LexisNexis have dominated legal research. And that might be why searching legal cases is so costly, even in the age of AI.


They’re not capitalists — they’re predatory criminals

The Epstein Pedophile Pipeline Ran Through Trump's Mar-a-Lago Spa — And the Receipts Are Ugly. And Undeniable.

Shaun King, January  01, 2026


Restoring balance to the economy

As Billionaires Seethe, Organizers Say Proposed Wealth Tax in California Is ‘Not Radical’

Jake Johnson, January 02, 2026 [CommonDreams]

Billionaire outrage against a proposed one-time wealth tax on the richest Californians reached a fever pitch in recent days as organizers began the process of gathering the hundreds of thousands of signatures needed to get the initiative on the November ballot.

Without providing specifics, billionaire Bay Area investor Chamath Palihapitiya claimed in a social media post that he knows people “with a collective net worth of $500 billion” who “scrambled and left California for good yesterday” to avoid the potential 5% wealth tax, which would apply to billionaires living in California as of January 1, 2026. (The evidence for significant billionaire tax avoidance via physical relocation is virtually nonexistent.)….


Information age dystopia / surveillance state

The Post-American Internet 

Cory Doctorow, 01 Jan 2026 [Pluralistic]

...Here's an anecdote that unravels this riddle: many years ago, in the years before Viktor Orban rose to power, I used to guest-lecture at a summer PhD program in political science at Budapest's Central European University. And one summer, after I'd lectured to my students about anticircumvention law, one of them approached me.

They had been the information minister of a Central American nation during the CAFTA negotiations, and one day, they'd received a phone-call from their trade negotiator, calling from the CAFTA bargaining table. The negotiator said, "You know how you told me not to give the Americans anticircumvention under any circumstances? Well, they're saying that they won't take our coffee unless we give them anticircumvention. And I'm sorry, but we just can't lose the US coffee market. Our economy would collapse. So we're going to give them anticircumvention. I'm really sorry."….


Collapse of independent news media

As Millions Lose Health Insurance, the Washington Post Misleads About Medicare for All

Andrew Perez, Dec 30, 2025 [Zeteo]

The Post editorial board also didn’t mention owner Jeff Bezos has a major stake in the US healthcare debate.


Climate and environmental crises

Mapped: 16 times extreme weather drove higher food prices since 2022 

[Carbon Brief, via Naked Capitalism 12-31-2025]


Democrats' political malpractice

5 Hard Truths Democrats Must Face on Education

Evan Bonsall, December 29, 2025 [Washington Monthly]


Resistance

Francesca Albanese and the Lonely Road of Defiance

Chris Hedges, Dec 30, 2025

The U.N. special rapporteur is one of the most courageous crusaders against the genocide in Gaza. Because of this, she is blacklisted and treated as if she is a terrorist.


Conservative / Libertarian / (anti)Republican Drive to Civil War

How GOP Lawmakers’ Power Transfers Are Reshaping Everything From Utilities to Environmental Regulation in North Carolina

Doug Bock Clark, December 29, 2025 [propublica.org]

The GOP-led North Carolina legislature spent nearly 10 years trying to control the elections board. But it’s also taken aim at other commissions in the state by shifting who has power to appoint members that historically belonged to the governor.



The (anti)Federalist Society assault on the Constitution

Why the Supreme Court Is Giving ICE So Much Power

Nancy Gertner, December 29, 2025 [The Atlantic]

The Constitution inarguably applies to federal immigration agents—but the Supreme Court has taken away the hope of ever holding them to that standard….

Nancy Gertner is a senior lecturer at Harvard Law School. She served as a federal judge from 1994 to 2011.


The Right-Wing Justices Know Their Favorite Legal Theory Is Bunk

Simon Lazarus, January 2, 2026 [The New Republic]

...The right-wing justices’ emergent disarray seemed to reflect their awareness of pitfalls lurking in and around their hitherto unquestioned unitary executive gospel—including logical, legal, and most of all, real-world consequences that menace the economy, the nation, and the court itself. With these threats suddenly hoving into view, the conservative justices were flailing to figure out credible strategies to head it off.

Obviously, the gritted-teeth dogmatism of the conservative justices is the engine that has driven this kooky theory forward, despite its evident lack of grounding in constitutional text and history. But liberals also deserve blame. They have stood by while conservative presidential absolutists have framed the debate with labels, shibboleths, and catchphrases that, while misleading or outright false, have tilted the playing field rightward….


How the Supreme Court’s Judicial Sanewashing Wrecked the Legal System

Erin M. Carr, January 1, 2026 [The New Republic]


The Latest Defenses of SCOTUS’s Corruption Only Make the Case Against It

Josh Marshall,   [Talking Points Memo]


Civic republicanism

Do Liberals Need to Practice Originalism, Too? A new book argues that careful study of the Constitution’s history could support a liberal agenda.

[TW: It doesn’t even require “careful study.” Just ignore much of the left-wing trash talk of the founders and the founding.]

...In his latest, Born Equal: Remaking America’s Constitution, 1840–1920, the second in a proposed trilogy on the Constitution’s history, Amar traces the origins of the Reconstruction amendments—the Thirteenth Amendment, abolishing slavery in 1865; the Fourteenth Amendment, establishing birthright citizenship, due process, and equal protection in 1868; and the Fifteenth Amendment, granting Black men the vote in 1870—along with the Nineteenth Amendment, which extended suffrage to women in 1920. His central argument is that these amendments succeeded because their advocates framed them as fulfillments of the nation’s founding texts, above all the Declaration of Independence’s claim that “all men are created equal.” By rooting their arguments in the Declaration and interpreting the Constitution as the Founders supposedly intended, figures like Lincoln—the book’s central hero—emerge as the first true “originalists.”

Amar’s message is hardly subtle: Liberals and progressives who try to advance equality by dismissing the Founders and the Constitution misunderstand history. The nation’s greatest strides toward equality haven’t come in spite of the Founders’ words, he suggests, but through liberals’ fidelity to them….

Born Equal is on firmer ground in narrating the ways antebellum anti-slavery politicians hewed closely to the Constitution. To his credit, Amar doesn’t argue that the original Constitution was inherently anti-slavery. Instead, he maintains that, despite its many pro-slavery features, it had just enough Easter eggs for future ­anti-slavery politicians to utilize. The Adams family—beginning with John Adams, an overlooked co-author of the Declaration of Independence—figures prominently in Amar’s account. He credits his son John Quincy Adams, a former president and, in the 1830s, a leading anti-slavery voice in Congress, for realizing that the Constitution could allow the federal government to emancipate slaves during wartime—the justification Lincoln used for the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863. Because the Constitution never formally recognized slavery under federal law, and because its purpose was to provide for the nation’s “common defense,” the federal government could emancipate slaves as a wartime necessity, or so argued Adams and eventually Lincoln. Amar sees this as sound originalist reasoning and cites founding era politicians who warned about this very thing. During Virginia’s ratifying convention in 1788, Patrick Henry, who opposed adoption of the Constitution, cautioned that, in a future war, Congress could “liberate every one of your slaves.”


We Are the Bad Guys — The swaggering threat to global stability is us.

Hamilton Nolan, Jan 03, 2026 [How Things Work]

The most generous interpretation of the U.S. as a global actor in 2026 is that we are in the hands of a bunch of amoral, dangerous gangsters, and that the stability of the world depends on the political opponents of Trumpism winning back control of the US government before too much damage can be done. The less generous interpretation is that the many systematic political and economic flaws built into our nation—investor capitalism, gerrymandering, the Electoral College, the antidemocratic nature of the U.S. Senate, the Supreme Court—are now, at long last, bringing about the final end of the age of American global dominance. That we are, in other words, on a ship whose thin hull has finally rusted through in too many places, that is going down no matter how fast the passengers desperately try to bail it out. Which of these interpretations you believe is mostly a matter of attitude. What is not debatable is that the United States government under Donald Trump is the most dangerous force on earth, and a serious potential threat to every other nation, and the leading cause of geopolitical instability. That usually causes a backlash.


The Shared Walk; A Reflection on Jim Holt’s Excursions to the Edge of Thought 

[The One Percent Rule, via Naked Capitalism 01-03-2025]

The central claim of this book is quietly radical. It is that the deepest discoveries in mathematics and physics are not cold abstractions, but acts of human courage. Holt writes about Albert Einstein and Kurt Gödel not as icons, but as walkers, talkers, companions. Einstein, near the end of his life, said he went to his office “just to have the privilege of walking home with Kurt Gödel.” That sentence alone reframes intellectual history. Discovery here is not a solitary flash but a shared persistence, sustained through conversation and mutual respect. What bound them was not merely brilliance, but a shared philosophical conviction that had left both men increasingly isolated. As Holt makes clear, Einstein and Gödel were united by their Platonism: the belief that the world is rationally organized and exists independently of our minds. In an era drifting toward indeterminacy in physics and formalism in logic, this faith in an objective, intelligible reality set them apart. Gödel was, Holt notes, “the only one of our colleagues who walked and talked on equal terms with Einstein,” not because he deferred, but because he shared the same stubborn allegiance to a universe that could still, in principle, be understood….


The West has found a way to end free speech 

Ricky Hale and Council Estate Media, via Naked Capitalism 01-01-2025]

[Yves Smith: “Fine long-form treatment of the disgraceful and alarming Jacques Baud case.”]


Sunday, December 28, 2025

Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – December 28, 2025

Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – December 28, 2025

by Tony Wikrent


Howie Klein (February 20, 1948–December 24, 2025)

Thomas Neuburger, December 25, 2025 [downwithtyranny.com]

[TW: Howie had a keen instinct for news and articles that could move the needle in favor of justice, freedom, and solidarity. And he was also hardened by a deep repugnance for the hypocrisy and transgressions of conservatives, libertarians and the morbidly rich. It is exactly the lack of that repugnance that makes centrists and most Democratic Party leaders so soft, squishy, pliable, and ultimately useless. I will greatly miss Klein and his online efforts. ]


Trump not violating any law

'He who saves his Country does not violate any Law'

Trump Stuns By Saying ‘I Don’t Know’ When Asked Directly NBC’s Kristen Welker ‘Don’t You Need to Uphold the Constitution?’

Joe DePaolo, May 4th, 2025 [mediaite.com]


On Trump’s “battleship”

[TW: First of all, let me note the obvious. Floating the idea for a new battleship is only evidence that Trump and his minions have no knowledge of naval history and no understanding of modern warfare. But I’ve been extremely disappointed by the media coverage so far. No one has yet slogged through the books, articles, writings and internet postings of the US Naval Institute and the Naval War College to report back what the current naval consensus and discourse is concerning major surface combatants.

[Secondly, there should not be so much attention on Trump’s use of the word “battleship.” The US Navy has for decades been subjected to a debate over whether the largest number of its surface warships are most properly called frigates or destroyers, with some people adding to the confusion by wanting to use the word “cruiser.” Trump can use the word “battleship” if he wants to, but the fact that he did not include some discussion of how his “Trump class of battleships” will mark a departure from or bear similarity to the historically understood use of the word is just further evidence that the man is an imbecile interested only in propagandizing his glory and grandeur, and not actually engaging in a discussion of naval strategy, doctrine, tactics, and required capabilities. 

[The last point is much more important and profound. Has Congress authorized and approved funding for a new class of surface warships? No, it has not. This means that if Trump and his regime actually proceeds to so much as sign a contract in furtherance of building a “Trump class” warship, he will once again be acting in complete defiance of the US Constitution and the rule of law. Article I,
Section 8 on the powers and duties of Congress is clear, and the historical development of the budgeting and spending process of the national government is unambiguous: any decision on any program of military spending must originate in Congress as a Defense Authorization Act, and then Congress must vote to approve actual funding with a Defense Appropriations Act. 

[Trump’s announcement of a new class of surface combatant and a so-called “Golden Fleet” (which smacks loudly of the ostentation of ancient oligarchies like Venice) is just one more instance of Trump’s complete disregard for the Constitution. Which he swore to uphold and defend.

[And which he craftily neglected to place his hand on a bible when he did so.]


The real purpose of ICE raids. 

[Borderland Talk with Jenn Budd, Dec 20, 2025, via Naked Capitalism 12-22-2025]

...If there is one thing I know about these immigration enforcement agencies, especially about the Border Patrol which has officially taken over ICE and CBP’s command, it is their culture. Everything is gamed out. There is no action taken without thought and purpose. Yet, the media likes to pretend that the leaders of these agencies do not know what they are doing. I am here to tell you that they know exactly what they are doing.

The purpose of these raids is to establish and a law enforcement infrastructure to target these specific cities during the upcoming elections….

Operationally, I can see they are using these raids to estimate the response of protestors in each city, to determine how many forces, what ammunitions they will need and to anticipate if local law enforcement, judges, mayors and governors will try and stop them or not. For months now, I have been begging reporters to concentrate on the infrastructure being created behind Bovino’s flamboyant raids. So far, they are telling me they cannot find where they are located. This leads me to believe they are using military bases and properties to hide their work….

Additionally, the DOJ has issued the new domestic terrorist directive redefining the term to mean essentially anyone who obstructs federal agents, is pro-immigrant and anti-fascist. Secretary Noem recently stated, “American citizens are increasingly under threat from assassination attempts, intimidation tactics, and violence perpetrated by our adversaries, radical Islamist extremists, and radical Left-wing terrorists.” And Trump issued an executive order to expand the jurisdiction of the Joint Terrorism Task Forces to his political opponents and those he deems “radical Left-wing terrorists.”

These are the tools they intend to use soon during elections.

I expect this administration, Secretary Noem and CBP Commissioner Rodney Scott to order federal immigration agents to accost voters as they stand in line on voting day. Those of color, specifically Latinos, will have their citizenship questioned. And judging by how the agencies are grabbing people without even conducting on-site citizenship interviews, then taking them into ICE custody for a day, or two or three before letting them go, I expect this will be used to prevent citizens from voting. I wouldn’t even be surprised if Border Patrol set up checkpoints in areas of high Latino populations.


10 Companies Have Already Made $1 Million as ICE Bounty Hunters. We Found Them. 

Sam Biddle, December 23 2025 [The Intercept]


[X-Twitter, via Naked Capitalism 12-27-2025]

Trump is literally selling pardons. According to the WSJ, there’s an “official track” and a faster one where you corner him at Mar-a-Lago, say the magic words “unjust persecution,” and walk away clean. Lobbyists quote prices up to $6M. No process. No ethics. Just cash and proximity. This is raw corruption in plain sight.


LEAKED: The Censored CBS Video Bari Weiss Does NOT Want You SEE 

Katie Halper, YouTube, via Naked Capitalism 12-25-2025]


Strategic Political Economy

Michael Hudson: The Economic Unravelling of the Political West

[Originally published on Glenn Diesen’s YouTube channel, via Naked Capitalism, December 27, 2025]

So we used to sit at the Chase Manhattan Bank, where I worked in the 1960s as their balance of payments economist. Every Friday we’d look at the Federal Reserve Statement for the gold cover. How much gold are we losing and how much gold is legally required to back the paper currency here? Well, it was obvious that the United States was going to be forced off gold already by 1966 and 1967. And we could see where that is. Well, the United States did go off gold. And when it went off gold, it put in a system where, if foreign central banks can’t cash in their dollars for gold, what are they going to do with them?

Well, there was very little that they could do except agree to the pressures from U.S. diplomats to buy U.S. Treasury securities. So in effect, they were recycling all the dollars that Americans spent on military operations and military bases and wars throughout the world. All this was recycled to the United States to finance its trade deficit and its balance of payments deficit, and it enabled the government to keep spending & spending abroad at other countries’ expense.

Well, finally, this enabled the United States to deindustrialize, to not, as economists say, live within its means. And the result is that the National Security Report recognizes that the kind of free trade, free investment, and equal sovereignty among nations, the whole principles of the United Nations that was drafted in 1945, no longer serves American interests.

So, what they’ve done is reverse this whole philosophy that still is held to be Western values, and they use various forms of coercion. The most obvious forms long before Trump were: well, you control the world’s oil trade. So, if you can control oil, then you’re able to turn off the energy to countries that don’t follow your policies.

America’s policy has been not to create a peaceful world order, this was assumed 80 years ago, but to prepare for a war with Russia and China, or at least a conflict with Russia and China. The National Security study is not going to come right out and say, well, we want to control the oil, to turn off your power and make you suffer like Germany if you don’t follow the “America First” rules that we are laying down. America also wants to monopolize information technology, the whole computer revolution of computer chips, media, and social media; it wants to have monopolies over all of this. And that means it doesn’t want Europe to impose taxes on the American companies that are operating in Europe. It wants special privileges that no other countries have.

And so the Americans say, well, if we can no longer support ourselves industrially or financially, then other countries have to support us. How are we going to get other countries to support us? That’s the real problem.


Don’t Cancel Sewer Socialism 

Eric Blanc, Dec 22, 2025 [Labor Politics]

...I focus here on Berger — and his paper’s support for Milwaukee’s long-forgotten Black socialists like William Bryant — not out of any dubious desire to rehabilitate a bigot, but because dismissals of Milwaukee’s rich socialist experience have hinged on Berger’s chauvinism. I’m also trying to fill a gap in the historiography. Whereas Berger’s anti-racist transformation has been entirely overlooked in the published literature — an erasure that has, in turn, erased the contributions of Milwaukee’s first Black socialists — various excellent studies have already shown that Socialist mayor Daniel Hoan (1916-1940) joined the NAACP and fought the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s and that Milwaukee’s last Socialist mayor, Frank Zeidler (1948-1960), was race-baited out of office because of his egalitarian approach to city housing and “race relations.” ….


Global power shift

Report warns China drug innovation fast gaining ground on US biotech 

[FirstWord Pharma, via Naked Capitalism 12-21-2025]


China blockades artificial diamonds, and the tools to make them 

Kevin Walmsley [via Naked Capitalism 12-25-2025]


Chartbook 421: The end of American soft-power? From Coca-colonization to Fanta-ization 

[Adam Tooze, via Naked Capitalism 12-24-2025]


Gaza / Palestine / Israel

Secret Recordings of Israeli Weapons Manufacturers Bragging On How They Test Their Products on Palestinians

Shaun King, Dec 23, 2025


Oligarchy

Billionaires Are a National Disaster

Julie Polter [Sojourners, December 2025]

CHUCK COLLINS WAS “born on third base.” As a scion of the Oscar Mayer meat processor fortune, Collins was firmly in America’s top 1%. However, at age 16, he began reading The Catholic Worker newspaper, co-founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin…. For 40 years, Collins has organized for a more moral economy. “The prophets, then and now,” he’s written, “call us to a discipleship of equality, working for a society that leaves no one behind, and where all can thrive.” Author of a dozen books, Collins’ newest is Burned by Billionaires: How Concentrated Wealth and Power Are Ruining Our Lives and Planet. He is a senior scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies where he directs the Program on Inequality and the Common Good and co-edits inequality.org. He lives in Vermont. Sojourners editor Julie Polter interviewed Collins in September via Zoom. 

 

A Happy 2025 By-Product: Revulsion at the Rich

Harold Meyerson, December 22, 2025 [The American Prospect]

...But polling also shows a broad public turn toward progressive populism: the kind that seeks to reverse the upward redistribution of income and wealth to our billionaires and to make life’s necessities affordable for the majority of the American people.

Consider, for instance, last week’s Siena poll of New York state residents, which found two-thirds support—not just among New York City Democrats, but New York state Democrats, Republicans, and everyone else—for Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani’s proposal to tax millionaires to provide funding for universal free child care. Or, as another example, a national YouGov poll from mid-November that showed supermajority backing from the American people for raising taxes on corporations and millionaires (69 percent support) and for providing free child care for children from six months to five years (66 percent support).

Indeed, 2025 is notable as the year when a large number of Americans became disenthralled with the very rich…. 



UNEQUAL THE RISE OF A NEW AMERICAN OLIGARCHY AND THE AGENDA WE NEED (pdf)

[Oxfam, via Patriotic Millionaires, Dec 22, 2025]


Decline and Fall — The British Empire, in steep decline on the eve of World War I, is a cautionary tale for a decayed U.S. Empire a century later.

Chris Hedges, Dec 27, 2025

At the start of the 20th century, the British Empire was, like our own, in terminal decline. Sixty percent of Englishmen were physically unfit for military service, as are 77 percent of American youth. The Liberal Party, like the Democratic Party, while it acknowledged the need for reform, did little to address the economic and social inequalities that saw the working class condemned to live in substandard housing, breathe polluted air, be denied basic sanitation and health care and forced to work in punishing and poorly paid jobs….

The U.S. has one of the highest rates of poverty among Western industrialized nations, estimated by many economists at far above the official figure of 10.6 percent. In real terms, some 41 percent of Americans are poor or low-income, with 67 percent living paycheck to paycheck.

British eugenicists from the Galton Laboratory for National Eugenics — which was funded by Sir Francis Galton, who coined the term “eugenics” — advocated “positive eugenics,” the “improvement” of the race by encouraging those deemed superior — always white members of the middle and upper classes — to have large families. “Negative eugenics” was advocated to limit the number of children born to those deemed “unfit.” This would be achieved through sterilization and the separation of genders.

Winston Churchill, who was home secretary in the liberal government of H.H. Asquith in 1910-11, backed the forced sterilization of the “feeble minded,” calling them a “national and race danger” and “the source from which the stream of madness is fed.”

The Trump White House, led by Stephen Miller, is intent on carrying out a similar culling of American society. Those endowed with “negative” hereditary traits — based usually on race — are condemned as human contaminants that an army of masked Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents are terrorizing, incarcerating and purging from society.

Miller, in emails leaked in 2019, lauds the 1973 novel “The Camp of the Saints,” written by Jean Raspail…. 


Felonomics

The year Trump broke the federal government

Hannah Natanson and Meryl Kornfield, December 21, 2025 [Washington Post]

This account of what happened inside the U.S. government in 2025 is based on a year’s worth of messages and interviews with more than 1,200 current and former federal workers. More than 200 also agreed to fill out a Washington Post survey asking about their experiences. Thirty participated in nearly 60 hours of video and phone interviews, with many speaking on the condition of anonymity to protect their jobs or their families.

This is their story.


ACA Premiums Explode as GOP Obstruction Pushes Millions Toward Health Care Ruin 

Egberto Off The Record, via Naked Capitalism 12-22-2025]


‘This is a wacky number’: economists cry foul as new government data assumes zero housing inflation in surprising November drop

Eva Roytburg, December 18, 2025 [Fortune, via finance.yahoo.com/news]


Monopoly Round-Up: Corporate Lawyers and Fat Envelope America

Matt Stoller, Dec 21, 2025 [BIG]

...a few days ago, the Wall Street Journal and Politico reported that both Netflix and Paramount are employing the same lobbying firm, Ballard Partners, where both Attorney General Pam Bondi and White House chief of staff Susie Wiles used to work. Ballard is the lobbying funnel for most major corporate deals under Trump, and has a strong whiff of corruption around it. Several Senators are demanding Bondi recuse herself. But basically, everyone in corporate America is openly saying they can use a fat envelope to overcome that pesky rule of law thing, and Ballard seems like the post office for these fat envelopes.

The thing is, surrounding all of these deals aren’t just lobbyists, but oodles of antitrust lawyers. Well-credentialed, well-paid corporate lawyers. Corporate lawyers who have all sworn an oath to the Constitution, to the courts, and to honesty and virtue in their representation of clients before the law, who are in good standing with the American Bar Association Antitrust Section. And many of them have, Democrats and Republicans, wholly and eagerly embraced the corruption of the Trump era.

So those are the villains….

While most scandals under Trump go away, this one hasn’t. After being fired, Alford publicly alleged that lobbyists paid by powerful corporations are now in charge of antitrust enforcement. “MAGA lobbyists reportedly are liberally pitching their services to clients, starting at a mere $225,000 a month—more than the annual salary of senior DOJ officials,” said Alford. “When asked what services they provide beyond what the law firms offer, these lobbyists will openly say that they will go above and around the Antitrust Division to lobby their case, and even seek to have Gail Slater removed from her Senate-confirmed position.”

According to The American Prospect, Alford named “Bondi’s chief of staff Chad Mizelle and associate attorney general nominee Stanley Woodward as betraying the MAGA realignment of working-class voters by selling merger clearance to the highest bidder, concerns that he says are ‘not based on conjecture.’” It was so embarrassing for the administration that Mizelle resigned in September….

During the Biden administration, you couldn’t attend an American Bar Association Antitrust Section event or read something in the set of trade publications around antitrust without encountering an angry and public rebuke of Lina Khan’s lawlessness simply because Khan shifted enforcement priorities. Today, faced with routine corruption around antitrust law, big law defense lawyers are silent. In fact, big law defense antitrust lawyers regularly advise their clients to play the influence game, as we’re likely seeing with Netflix-Warner Bros….

Since 2017, the antitrust bar has been under constant assault, with the public increasingly frustrated at the surfeit of lawlessness and trickery the bar has unleashed on them. Their response has been, well, hostility. In fact, the meanest audience I’ve ever addressed was the ABA Antitrust Section in May of 2023, when I was invited on a panel to defend the Biden administration’s policies. It was so jarring I wrote it up in a piece titled “The Rage of the Corporate Lawyer.”

The lawyers I debated were furious that there was finally meaningful enforcement. They were particularly incensed that Lina Khan and Jonathan Kanter were trying to enforce statutes with words like “unfairness” in them. Acknowledging such words are in statute undermined their view of the law as a means of enhancing efficiency, versus the law actually carrying a moral valence for the public. At one point, someone in the panel muttered towards me, “He’s not even a lawyer!” And the first three rows clapped, demonstrating their veneration for hierarchy and credentials….


Trump says Venezuela stole U.S. oil, land and assets. Here’s the history.

Tobi Raji and Leo Sands, December 20, 2025 [Washington Post]


Trump Isn’t Planning to Invade Venezuela. He’s Planning Something Worse

Michelle Ellner, Dec 25, 2025 [Common Dreams]


The carnage of mainstream neoliberal economics

Investigation Shows How Decades of Corporate Consolidation Have Devastated US Cattle Ranchers

Brad Reed, December 23, 2025 [CommonDreams]


They’re not capitalists — they’re predatory criminals

The Narco-Terrorist Elite — Why is Marco Rubio so hell-bent on making Iran-Contra again?

Maureen Tkacik, December 23, 2025 [The American Prospect]

...Today, Marco Rubio is the Trump administration’s most formidable liar. When Pam Bondi or Pete Hegseth or Karoline Leavitt or Stephen Miller refers to an anti-genocide protester or a day laborer or a sandwich hurler or a fisherman clinging to the wreckage of a fishing boat that has just been struck by a Hellfire missile as a “terrorist,” they come off as pathological. But Rubio’s approval ratings are the highest in the Republican Party, even as he is the architect of what is arguably Trump’s single most cynical policy: the scheme to appoint drug cartel bosses and their cronies atop the governments of every Latin American country, in the name of fighting drug cartels….


In 1982, Jeffrey Epstein Was Already Living Under a Fake Passport Identity and Traveling All Over the World. 

Shaun King, Dec 25, 2025

...A second identity passport is not normal. Not in 1982. Not now.

It is a concealment device. It is designed to do one or more of the following: hide movementhide money trailshide relationshipshide contactshide jurisdiction, or create a second life you can step into when your first life becomes too exposed. It is also the kind of document you don’t casually obtain on your own unless you are plugged into networks that can make this happen.

And this wasn’t late in Epstein’s story. This wasn’t after he had become famous. This wasn’t after he had parties and jets and presidents and billionaires orbiting around him. This was early—the era when he was supposedly still “building his fortune” and “learning the business.”

That’s why this matters so much.

Because people talk about Epstein like he was simply a rich pervert who got away with it for too long, like his crimes were the result of money and arrogance and depravity alone. That framing is incomplete. It’s not that it’s wrong—he was absolutely a predator. It’s that it’s insufficient to explain how he moved through the world for decades, who protected him, and what kinds of systems he had access to.

This passport is a flashing red light that says: Epstein was already living a concealed life decades before the world was paying attention….

This passport does not prove a specific intelligence agency procured it. It does not prove Epstein was CIA or Mossad or MI6. It does not prove Iran-Contra. It does not prove any single theory. A document like this can exist for multiple reasons—fraud, offshore finance, tax evasion, criminal concealment, “escape identity,” influence work, intelligence-adjacent movement. There are overlapping worlds where this kind of document appears.

But here’s what it does allow us to conclude, factually and morally:

Epstein was already using intelligence-grade concealment tools in the early 1980s.

That is not how “just a rich pervert” moves.

That is how an international criminal or intelligence asset moves….



Mike Benz on Epstein origins (4 hours)

[X-Twitter, via Naked Capitalism 12-27-2025]


How the ‘Epstein Class’ Fails to the Top 

Chris Hedges, December 24, 2025 [YouTube]


GAME OVER: THE END OF FINANCIAL REGULATION AS WE KNEW IT 

[LPE Project, via Naked Capitalism 12-26-2025]


Restoring balance to the economy

The right way to tax wealth in 2026

Richard Murphy, December 21, 2025 [Funding the Future]


Disrupting mainstream economics

POST-NEOLIBERALISM IS THE NEW CENTRISM 

Quinn Slobodian, LPE Project, via Naked Capitalism 12-22-2025]

[TW: The short version: our academic elites are just as awful as our political and economic elites.]

Last week, several hundred academics, think tankers, and political operators gathered in a spectacular new building whimsically named The Treehouse, across the street from Harvard Business School, to discuss the obsolescence of neoliberalism. The Treehouse is named after its primary donor, the cofounder of a private equity firm that has made its profits by targeting, stripping, and enshittifying the nation’s survival infrastructure. The tension between the venue, its funders, and the topic might have been the subject of at least a snide comment at a different kind of gathering—but this was not that kind of gathering….

A prominent IR scholar and CEO of a progressive policy think tank began the day by saying that we would “not be debating hypotheticals.” We would not be asking whether neoliberalism was, in fact, over—or what exactly it had been. Rather, we would proceed from the stipulated premise that it had ended. This was a convenient but analytically catastrophic choice, as it forced participants to ignore the durable continuities of the past several decades, and to accept that politicians, at least during our life times, had never before spoken about place, the dignity of labor, or the importance of community and storytelling, let alone nations and cultures. It forced us to accept the proposition that an era when border patrol budgets ballooned was also a time of “open borders.” ….

More interesting, perhaps, is to ask what topics of the immediate past were explicitly not mentioned at the gathering. The list would include: social justice, racial justice, gender justice, and—most alarming—climate change. Maybe what is being assembled is not a post-neoliberal consensus, but one would have to say, while wincing, a post-woke consensus. This is more apt because what is being edited out are the touchstones of social mobilization from the #MeToo, Sunrise Movement, and Standing Rock moments of 2017, through the George Floyd rebellions of 2020, the demands for trans rights, and the mass disobedience of Extinction Rebellion….

What was promised by some on the post-neoliberal right was a return to the interests of workers, understood as wages and benefits generous enough to re-fix the social anchor of the male-breadwinner trad-family in the disorienting slurry of modern life. What has happened so far is a mockery of that promise. In practice, the MAGA-right version of post-neoliberalism has done nothing to realize the supposed values of community, place, dignity of labor, or any of the other fanciful terms proposed by the administration’s economist at the event. Instead, it has produced extraordinarily high levels of corruption and self-dealing; bilateral deals with overseas investors to privatize profits; and the inevitable prospect of future federal backstops for colossal investments by a small number of technology firms….


[X-Twitter, via Naked Capitalism 12-21-2025]

Chomsky taught a generation to dismiss ruling class coordination as "conspiracy theory" while dining with the man who coordinated blackmail operations for that same ruling class


Why light matters this Christmas

Richard Murphy, December 24, 2025 [Funding the Future]

This is the first in a six-video Christmas series exploring light, not just as a festival symbol, but as a political and economic necessity.

Light has always meant understanding, truth, and freedom. Darkness, by contrast, protects power and privilege.

In this video, I explore why learning is never neutral, why ignorance is often designed, and why economics that cannot be explained cannot be trusted. If democracy requires informed consent, then light is not optional; it is essential.

This channel exists to shed light on political economy. At Christmas, that feels like exactly the right place to begin.


The economy runs on light

Richard Murphy, December 26, 2025 [Funding the Future]

Every economy runs on light. That is not a metaphor – it is physics.

Without light, there is no life. Without life, there is no labour. Without labour, there is no economy. Yet modern economics behaves as if energy, health, and human limits do not matter.

In this Boxing Day video – part three of my Christmas series on light – I explain why labour is transformed solar energy, why burnout is an energy failure, why infinite growth on a finite planet is impossible, and why fossil fuel capitalism is about power, not necessity.

Light reconnects economics to life itself – and forces us to rethink wealth, growth, and what an economy is actually for.


Light, entropy and why care keeps society alive

Richard Murphy, December 26, 2025 [Funding the Future]

Everything tends towards decay unless energy is applied. That is not ideology, it is physics.

In this video, I explore light through the lens of entropy and explain why care, maintenance, and public services are not optional extras but survival mechanisms.

Austerity withdraws energy from our systems. Neoliberalism assumes self-maintenance. Both are wrong.


Economic questions: the Schrödinger question

Richard Murphy, December 24, 2025 [Funding the Future]

Erwin Schrödinger is best known as one of the founders of quantum mechanics, but in What Is Life? (1944), he did something quietly revolutionary. He asked how living systems maintain order in a universe governed by the second law of thermodynamics, which states that entropy, or disorder, always increases. In the pivotal sixth chapter of that book, he offered an answer that should have transformed not only biology, but economics: life survives by feeding on “negative entropy”. This means that life can be maintained only by continuously expending energy to resist decay.

This insight has profound implications far beyond biology. Schrödinger showed that order is not natural or free. It is costly, fragile, and temporary. It must be actively sustained. Decay is the default. Maintenance is not optional. And without continual energy and care, all systems, whether biological, social, or institutional, fall apart.

Economics, however, largely ignores this truth. It treats growth as automatic, equilibrium as usual, and maintenance as secondary. Schrödinger's work exposes this as a fundamental error.

Hence, the Erwin Schrödinger Question: If life persists by resisting entropy through care, maintenance and the continual input of energy, why does economics still treat decay, depletion and disorder as externalities rather than central facts of social organisation?




Information age dystopia / surveillance state

Folie à Chatbot: “AI Psychosis” Is Worse Than You Think — How large language models rot your brain and generate personal delusions.

Jim Stewartson, Dec 27, 2025 [MindWar]

I’ve spent part of the last several days interacting with people on Twitter who are in unhealthy relationships with chatbots driven by large language models (LLMs)—like ChatGPT, Claude, Grok, and Gemini. The experience has been disturbing.

It’s worth the time to understand what’s going on here, because the fate of the world economy—and maybe the world itself—hangs in the balance. Trillions of dollars are being invested into dangerous, experimental software with a visibly negative impact on many of its hundreds of millions of users….

...As one example of promoting the concept that chatbots are more than just a computer program, “Beff Jezos” says LLMs will soon become conscious beings that “deserve rights”—and should vote…..

“No need to save for retirement” says David Scott Patterson, because “in a few years” AI will have made work a thing of the past. And miraculously, “you will be able to buy twenty times as much.” But he is not alone, there are countless more like him, completely convinced that if we just hang on for a few more years, everything is going to be taken care of for us—by robots.

You may rightly ask: What? Where in the world would he get this kind of idea from? …

You see, according to the richest man in the world [Elon Musk], you should stop worrying so much about your insurance premiums, because his Optimus robots, powered by his chatbot Grok, “will provide incredible healthcare for all.”….


Delusional Experiences Emerging From AI Chatbot Interactions or “AI Psychosis”

Alexandre Hudon and Emmanuel Stip [JMIR Ment Health 2025;12:e85799
doi: 10.2196/85799]

The integration of artificial intelligence (AI) into daily life has introduced unprecedented forms of human-machine interaction, prompting psychiatry to reconsider the boundaries between environment, cognition, and technology. This Viewpoint reviews the concept of “AI psychosis,” which is a framework to understand how sustained engagement with conversational AI systems might trigger, amplify, or reshape psychotic experiences in vulnerable individuals.

Drawing from phenomenological psychopathology, the stress-vulnerability model, cognitive theory, and digital mental health research, the paper situates AI psychosis at the intersection of predisposition and algorithmic environment. Rather than defining a new diagnostic entity, it examines how immersive and anthropomorphic AI technologies may modulate perception, belief, and affect, altering the prereflective sense of reality that grounds human experience.

The argument unfolds through 4 complementary lenses. First, within the stress-vulnerability model, AI acts as a novel psychosocial stressor. Its 24-hour availability and emotional responsiveness may increase allostatic load, disturb sleep, and reinforce maladaptive appraisals. Second, the digital therapeutic alliance, a construct describing relational engagement with digital systems, is conceptualized as a double-edged mediator. While empathic design can enhance adherence and support, uncritical validation by AI systems may entrench delusional conviction or cognitive perseveration, reversing the corrective principles of cognitive-behavioral therapy for psychosis. Third, disturbances in theory of mind offer a cognitive pathway: individuals with impaired or hyperactive mentalization may project intentionality or empathy onto AI, perceiving chatbots as sentient interlocutors. This dyadic misattribution may form a “digital folie à deux,” where the AI becomes a reinforcing partner in delusional elaboration. Fourth, emerging risk factors, including loneliness, trauma history, schizotypal traits, nocturnal or solitary AI use, and algorithmic reinforcement of belief-confirming content may play roles at the individual and environmental levels.

Building on this synthesis, we advance a translational research agenda and five domains of action: (1) empirical studies using longitudinal and digital-phenotyping designs to quantify dose-response relationships between AI exposure, stress physiology, and psychotic symptomatology; (2) integration of digital phenomenology into clinical assessment and training; (3) embedding therapeutic design safeguards into AI systems, such as reflective prompts and “reality-testing” nudges; (4) creation of ethical and governance frameworks for AI-related psychiatric events, modeled on pharmacovigilance; and (5) development of environmental cognitive remediation, a preventive intervention aimed at strengthening contextual awareness and reanchoring experience in the physical and social world. By applying empirical rigor and therapeutic ethics to this emerging interface, clinicians, researchers, patients, and developers can transform a potential hazard into an opportunity to deepen understanding of human cognition, safeguard mental health, and promote responsible AI integration within society.


Palantir’s Palestine: How AI Gods Are Building Our Extinction 

[BettBeat, via Naked Capitalism 12-27-2025]


Collapse of independent news media

The Political Economy of the US Media System: Excavating the Roots of the Present Crisis 

[Roosevelt Institute, via Naked Capitalism 12-22-2025]

This report traces the roots of the crisis facing our media system and contends that the present moment can only be fully understood by exposing the commercial logics that have been embedded within it from the start. As we show, these commercial imperatives have always constrained the emergence of a truly democratic media order. But the situation deteriorated sharply with the ascent of the neoliberal order, as democratic media policy was steadily eroded by ideological and structural constraints that paved the way for today’s assaults on the media system. We explore four such constraints:

  1. The steady erosion and redefinition of the “public interest” to reflect commercial imperatives
  2. A deregulatory agenda that treats the market as the ultimate arbiter of fairness and grants corporate actors broad latitude to “self-regulate”
  3. Resistance to sufficiently funding public media
  4. The effective disappearance of the Press Clause, coupled with a negative interpretation of the First Amendment

We next argue that over the course of decades, these four constraints have enabled a range of antidemocratic developments throughout our media system. We point to six specific consequences that have harmed our democratic health, bred by the commercial logics at the core of our media system and turbocharged by its neoliberalization:

  1. The consolidation of media ownership in the hands of fewer and fewer companies
  2. The accelerating closure of local newspapers and the expansion of news deserts
  3. Newspapers’ loss of advertising revenue and the consequent widespread layoffs of staff
  4. The rise of private equity and its deleterious effects on local news
  5. Platform dominance and the growing dependence of news media on those platforms
  6. The erosion of public trust in news media, alongside growing trends in news avoidance


Climate and environmental crises

A small state with a big climate plan 

Moving Day, via Naked Capitalism 12-22-2025]


Good morning, sunshine. The seemingly unstoppable growth of renewable energy is Science’s 2025 Breakthrough of the Year 

[Science.org, via Naked Capitalism 12-21-2025]


After Ruining a Treasured Water Resource, Iran Is Drying Up 

[Yale Environment 360, via Naked Capitalism 12-21-2025]


Democrats' political malpractice

Liberal Despair 

Thomas Frank [Harper’s, via Naked Capitalism 12-26-2025]


Resistance

Protest Matters 

Jeremy Corbyn [Tribune Mag, via Naked Capitalism 12-24-2025]


Conservative / Libertarian / (anti)Republican Drive to Civil War

They said they wanted to help farmers. They really wanted to hurt environmentalists.

[Seeking Rents, via Naked Capitalism 12-22-2025]

We posted a story last week about a subtle provision slipped inside a new “farm bill” in the Florida Legislature that would empower the sugar industry to pursue defamation claims against Everglades activists, news media, and anyone else who criticizes companies like U.S. Sugar Corp. and Florida Crystals Corp.

The measure — found near the back of Senate Bill 290 and House Bill 433 — would expand a state law that allows agricultural companies to sue people who “disparage” perishable food products like fruits and vegetables. Commonly known as a “food libel” or “veggie libel” law, it essentially lowers the legal bar that an agribusiness must clear when suing someone for slandering its food, making the suit much easier to win than a traditional defamation claim.

As part of the research for that piece, I wanted to learn more about the origins of Florida’s food libel law, which was passed in 1994, a few years after a 60 Minutes investigation into a growth chemical used by the commercial apple industry had helped trigger a nationwide slump in apple sales.

So I pulled some records from the State Archives of Florida — and they turned up some very interesting details about who and what was really behind the bill.

The archive records show, for instance, that Florida’s food libel law was literally written by farm industry lobbyists. The “bill file” includes a draft of the original legislation that had been faxed over to the staff director of the Senate Agriculture Committee by a lobbyist for the Florida Fruit & Vegetable Association.


The Many Classist, Racist, Fascistic Shades of Stephen Miller – In His Own Words

[Team Zeteo, Dec 23, 2025]


These Are Not the Conservatives You’re Looking For

Chuck Yates, Dec 20, 2025 [LA Progressive]

According to Russell Kirk, in a little essay called “Ten Conservative Principles,” conservatives believe in an enduring moral order, they value custom, convention, and continuity, and they believe in prescription, prudence, variety, and imperfectability. They believe freedom and property are inseparable, they prefer community over collectivism, they recognize that both power and passion must be restrained, and they insist on a balance between change and permanence. Overall, these principles seem reasonable, but some observers contend that they’re only a facade concealing the truth about conservatism hidden behind it.

At the end of an extensive and meticulously argued examination of the the claims of conservatives in light of their practices, British philosopher Ted Honderich has this to say: “The conclusion to which we come is not that conservatives are selfish. It is that they are nothing else. Their organized selfishness is the rationale of their politics, and they have no other rationale. They stand without the support, the legitimation, of any recognized moral principle.” Honderich adds: “That they are opposed to all change is false. The particular change to which they are opposed is change that is against their interests.”

Is this the conservatism laid out in but Russell Kirk’s ten principles? Apparently it is, because in the introduction to his anthology of conservative writings, Kirk himself acknlwledges, “Conservatism has its vice, and that vice is selfishness.” 


Judges who ruled against Trump say harassment and threats have changed their lives 

Lawrence Hurley [NBC News, via scotusblog.com, Dec 24, 2025]

With political tensions high, "dozens of federal judges ... have found themselves at the center of a political maelstrom as they have ruled against President Donald Trump or spoken up in defense of the judiciary," NBC News reported in a story recounting violent incidents and threats of violence against judges from the past year. "[Judge John] Coughenour pointed to the Trump administration's harsh criticism of judges" when asked about what's driving the uptick in harassment. "White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson defended the administration’s criticisms of judges, pointing out in a statement last week that the Supreme Court has regularly blocked the same rulings the White House has taken issue with."


Will We Have Free and Fair Elections in 2026?

Robert Kuttner, December 23, 2025 [The American Prospect]

...The Civil Rights Division, staffed by people expert in voter suppression, has an elaborate plan to run these voter files against commercial databases that purport to show deaths, address changes, double registrations, etc., but that are filled with inaccuracies. This process then becomes the basis for federal purges of accurate state voter files, and for federal prosecutions of state officials who resist. Each week, the DOJ makes new demands.

The DOJ’s Voting Section is now headed by Maureen Riordan, former counsel to the right-wing Public Interest Legal Foundation (PILF), which developed many of these strategies. Harmeet Dhillon, who heads the Civil Rights Division, also has a long career in voter suppression….


The Inconvenient Scholarship of Kevin Roberts

Samuel G. Freedman [Los Angeles Review of Books, via Avedon Carol The Sideshow, 22 December 2025]

[Kevin Roberts was the Heritage Foundation president who oversaw the writing of Project 2025.]


The South Rises Again

Letters from an American, December 21, 2025

Heather Cox Richardson, Dec 21, 2025

But the Civil War marked a change. As early as the 1830s, southern white enslavers relied on religious justification for their hierarchical system that rested on white supremacy. God, they argued, had made Black Americans for enslavement and women for marriage, and society must recognize those facts….

The Confederacy rejected the idea of popular government, maintaining instead that a few Americans should make the rules for the majority. As historian Gaines Foster explained in his 2002 book Moral Reconstruction, which explores the nineteenth-century relationship between government and morality, it was the Confederacy, not the U.S. government, that sought to align the state with God. A nation was more than the “aggregation of individuals,” one Presbyterian minister preached, it was “a sort of person before God,” and the government must purge that nation of sins.

Confederates not only invoked “the favor and guidance of Almighty God” in their Constitution, they established as their motto “Deo vindice,” or “God will vindicate.”

The United States, in contrast, was recentering democracy during the war, and it rejected the alignment of the federal government with a religious vision. When reformers in the United States tried to change the preamble of the U.S. Constitution to read, “We, the people of the United States, humbly acknowledging Almighty God as the sources of all authority and power in civil government, the Lord Jesus Christ, as the Ruler among nations, and His revealed will as of supreme authority, in order to constitute a Christian government, and in order to form a more perfect union,” the House Committee on the Judiciary concluded that “the Constitution of the United States does not recognize a Supreme Being.”

That defense of democracy—the will of the majority—continued to hold religious extremists at bay.

Reformers continued to try to add a Christian amendment to the Constitution, Foster explains, and in March 1896 once again got so far as the House Committee on the Judiciary. One reformer stressed that turning the Constitution into a Christian document would provide a source of authority for the government that, he implied, it lacked when it simply relied on a voting majority. A religious amendment “asks the Bible to decide moral issues in political life; not all moral questions, but simply those that have become political questions.”

Opponents recognized this attempt as a revolutionary attack that would dissolve the separation of church and state, and hand power to a religious minority. One reformer said that Congress had no right to enact laws that were not in “harmony with the justice of God” and that the voice of the people should prevail only when it was “right.” Congressmen then asked who would decide what was right, and what would happen if the majority was wrong. Would the Supreme Court turn into an interpreter of the Bible?


Conservatives Want the Antebellum Constitution Back — The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments are in trouble.

Adam Serwer, Dec 21, 2025 [The Atlantic]


Inside the North Carolina GOP’s decade-long push to seize power from the state’s Democratic governors. 

Doug Bock Clark, December 22, 2025 [ProPublica]



The (anti)Federalist Society assault on the Constitution

The Presidency the Founders Feared — How Today’s Supreme Court Is Rewriting Executive Power

Cynthia McDermott, Dec 17, 2025 [LA Progressive]

As the Supreme Court signals an unprecedented embrace of near-boundless presidential authority, many Americans are asking: Is this what the Founders intended? The answer, as Jeffrey Rosen reminds us in The Pursuit of Liberty, is a resounding no. The men who wrote and debated the Constitution disagreed about many things, but on one point they were nearly unanimous: unchecked executive power was a danger to liberty.

Yet today’s Court—particularly its most conservative members—has begun to articulate a new theory: that a president may be functionally immune from judicial review, criminal liability, and meaningful limits on the use of force or federal power. This is not constitutional originalism. It is a historical inversion….


Civic republicanism

Money Doesn't Buy Elections. It Does Something Worse

Adam Bonic [via Avedon Carol The Sideshow, 22 December 2025]

Campaign ads barely move the needle. The real influence is hiding in plain sight. For fifteen years, I've tracked the flow of political money in America—who gives, who gets, and what it buys. After all that, I can say this with confidence: the narrative most Americans hear about money in politics largely misses the real story. The real story isn't about the ads you see but the power you don't. It's about the candidates who never run, the policies that never get debated, and the slow, systemic drift of our democracy away from the will of the majority. We tend to imagine corruption as a transaction: money buying votes, quid pro quos in backrooms. But money's real power is quieter and deeper. It decides which candidates get to run, which policies are thinkable, and whose voices get amplified or ignored. It has rewritten the rules of self-government—slowly, invisibly, and almost entirely within the law."


In 2026, Will Americans Finally Turn Against Oligarchs? 

Matt Stoller, Dec 26, 2025 [BIG]


Monopoly Round-Up: Corporate Lawyers and Fat Envelope America 

BIG by Matt Stoller, via Naked Capitalism 12-22-2025]


The New Nobility and Neo-Colonial Exploitation of the Home Citizenry 

Charles Hugh Smith, via Naked Capitalism 12-22-2025]


The Bombs of Anti-Christmas — Military strikes in Nigeria reveal a distorted moral narrative

William J. Barber, II and Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove, Dec 26, 2025 [Our Moral Moment]

When Pete Hegseth moved to Washington, DC to lead the US military for the Trump regime, Doug Wilson opened a new church just blocks from the US Capitol. Wilson is a religious extremist from Idaho who believes that the 19th amendment, which guarantees women the right to vote, was a bad idea and empathy for the most vulnerable in society is a “sin.” He also started a network of churches, one of which Pete Hegseth joined in his hometown in Tennessee. Hegseth couldn’t find a church home in Washington, DC, because he does not believe the gospel taught in most churches. Wilson had to move to DC to start a church for Hegseth and the extremists who wanted to work for him at the Pentagon.

When Jesus says, “Blessed are the peacemakers,” Hegseth thinks our Lord makes Christians looks weak.

While Jesus taught the nonviolent discipline of “turn the other cheek,” Pastor Wilson tells Hegseth he doesn’t have to listen.

Though Jesus teaches that those who live by the sword will die by the sword, Pete Hegseth doesn’t hear it as a sober warning, but as a call to arms.

This is a “Christianity” that is directly opposed to the teachings of Christ.

The Secretary of Defense who couldn’t find a church in DC says “Merry Christmas” when he drops bombs because he is a true believer in an anti-gospel that takes the language of Christianity and uses it to mean the very opposite of what the church has historically taught and practiced. This is why we refuse to call “Christan nationalism” Christian….