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I Grew Up Wanting to Be Ruth Bader Ginsburg. I’m Coming of Age Under Trump.

I Grew Up Wanting to Be Ruth Bader Ginsburg. I’m Coming of Age Under Trump.

The Women’s March on Jan. 20, 2018, in New York City on the one-year anniversary of President Donald Trump’s swearing-in. (Spencer Platt / Getty Images)

I have aspired for a political career since elementary school, where I would pour over books about female trailblazers. As a fifth grader, I dressed up as Ruth Bader Ginsburg for Halloween and posed for a photo with a boy my age dressed in a Trump costume.

I am a high school senior now, and the playful divide that picture symbolized has become all too real. 

As Jan. 20 approaches—the one-year anniversary of Donald Trump’s inauguration—I find myself taking stock of what has shifted in that first year of his return to power. The political climate that once felt abstract or distant now shapes my classrooms, my friendships and my sense of what adulthood will demand of me.

From TikTok to the White House, a version of toxic “tough guy” masculinity has permeated our politics—one that glorifies abuse, aggression and misogyny. As these values take hold, my generation is splitting along party lines: More young men view these figures as the epitome of “real men,” while young women grapple with a future in which our voices are dismissed and ridiculed. 

Hazel Kaminsky, with the “marching to bring back hope” sign; her mother, Amanda Kaminsky, far-right side with the sunglasses; and friends at the New York City Women’s March on Jan. 21, 2017, the day after Trump’s first inauguration. (Courtesy of Hazel Kaminsky)

Recent voter turnout has made this ideological divide increasingly clear. Young men are becoming more conservative, with 56 percent of them supporting Trump in 2024, up from 41 percent in 2020. In 2024, 59 percent of young women aged 18-29 voted for Harris, marking a 31-point gender gap in youth voting. 

Behind the widening of the partisan gender divide lies a corrosive rebranding of modern-day manhood. Central to this shift was Charlie Kirk, who engaged in debate with a characteristic condescension that boys my age might easily mistake for wisdom. Insecure and impressionable, many of them were drawn to Kirk and his belief that “young men don’t like taking orders from women.” Kirk co-founded Turning Point USA at just 18 years old, with the mission of rallying young men around “traditional” conservative values that often relegate women to domestic spheres. Originally home to 1,200 registered high school chapters, Turning Point received over 50,000 new chapter requests in the days after his murder. 

The culture shaping boys online isn’t new, however. It echoes patterns long established by men in positions of political power. Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, accused of sexually assaulting 13 women and suing for their gynecological records, returned to politics this year, running (unsuccessfully) for New York City mayor. On the day of the primary election, I encountered Anthony Weiner, the former representative accused of sending sexually explicit images to a teenage girl, putting up campaign posters just feet away in a bid to fill a City Council seat. For the ease they felt in returning to public life, female politicians like Kamala Harris and Hillary Clinton still face criticism for how they laugh, dress and display emotions. In a political system that claims to reward merit, women are still judged by standards that have nothing to do with their ability to lead. This has led young men and women to expect entirely different treatment from the same political institutions. 

No figure embodies male misconduct more clearly than Donald Trump, whose long history of sexual and verbal abuse has normalized misogyny at the highest levels of government. His rhetoric towards women frequently includes words like nasty, dumb, ugly, pathetic, dirty, disgusting and crazy. The president has the unique ability to set the standard for American manhood; I worry that his behavior will convince young men that they, too, can assault and demean women and still hold prominent political careers. 

The messages young boys are absorbing from these male leaders filter down into classrooms and everyday conversations. In debate tournaments, I often notice a stark difference in the attitudes of the boys and girls I converse with. Boys tend to speak as though they are teaching me about the topic, talking extra loudly and getting defensive when I point out a flaw in their argument. I am witnessing them become more impressed by the bravado of men like Donald Trump and Charlie Kirk than concerned about their actions. 

Last November, in the days after the election, I felt firsthand the rage and sadness of women hugging each other in elevators and exchanging glances on the train. But as the months passed and Trump was sworn back into office, that grief hardened into something more enduring: the realization that this wasn’t just an outcome, but a governing reality. To many of my male classmates, it remained just another Wednesday.

This disconnect has forced me to grapple with the political reality of the country I’m inheriting. As a 17-year-old, marking one full year since Donald Trump’s inauguration, I have now spent half my life under his administration. I am growing into adulthood in a world where I may have to travel across state lines for an abortion; where I’ll be penalized more for my gender than men are penalized for their misconduct; where the very leaders meant to protect my rights are actively stripping them away. 

So now, more than ever, there is a pressing need for more women in the political sphere working to dismantle the misogyny that permeates every level of our government. We must recognize the divisive legacy of the masculine figures we have placed at the center of mainstream media and politics, and take steps to confront their normalization of the mistreatment of women.

For the girls of my generation, seeing people who look like us in decision-making rooms is vital to how we envision our place in the world. I am scared that girls are being perniciously redirected from the careers of their choosing and from positions of power within them, and that that loss is too great to quantify.

Great Job Hazel Kaminsky & the Team @ Ms. Magazine Source link for sharing this story.

U.S. public invited to weigh in on major offshore drilling proposal

U.S. public invited to weigh in on major offshore drilling proposal

New oil and gas leases could open more than a billion acres of U.S. coastal waters to development. 

The post U.S. public invited to weigh in on major offshore drilling proposal appeared first on Yale Climate Connections.

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BWW Honors Dr. Janell Green Smith – Black Women for Wellness

BWW Honors Dr. Janell Green Smith – Black Women for Wellness

Black Women for Wellness mourns the loss of Dr. Janell Green Smith, a beloved midwife, fierce advocate, birth worker, wife, daughter, sister, and friend to a tragic maternal health outcome. She dedicated her life to protecting Black women and birthing individuals, while fighting a system that has historically failed us. She assisted in hundreds of successful births. Yet, she died from complications related to childbirth. Dr. Green Smith and countless others are the reason why we keep fighting for Black women. Every life lost is too many.

Dr. Green Smith saw the disparities firsthand and worked to change them. Still, that work could not protect her. Reminding us in the most painful way that Black maternal mortality is not abstract, but heartbreakingly real. The sad truth is that education, expertise, or proximity to care does not erase the dangers Black women face during pregnancy and birth. As we honor Dr. Green-Smith’s memory, let’s continue to push for accountability, equitable care, and support for every Black mother.

Many Black expectant mothers express fear about having to rely on a broken healthcare system. Our Maternal and Infant Health (MIH) team works to provide resources to mothers in our community to reduce their apprehension and provide available support. Gabrielle Brown, Program Manager of MIH at Black Women for Wellness recently said, “Black families deserve spaces where they feel safe, seen, and fully supported during pregnancy, birth, and postpartum.” And that’s why we work tirelessly to show up for Black mothers and babies.

Let’s keep lifting Dr. Janell Green-Smith’s family, including her husband, her newborn daughter, and all who loved her in prayer. May she rest in power and her life and legacy not go in vain.

In solidarity,
Black Women for Wellness

Great Job BWWLA & the Team @ Black Women for Wellness Source link for sharing this story.

Are DJI Drones Still Banned?

Are DJI Drones Still Banned?

As of December 23, 2025, the US Federal Communications Commission barred Chinese-based drone maker DJI from importing any new drones into the United State. That might sound like you can’t buy a DJI drone right now, but that’s not true. Head over to Amazon and just about the whole DJI drone lineup is still for sale. So what gives? Are they banned or not?

The key word in the previous paragraph was any new drone. Nothing DJI has made in the past is banned. No one is taking your drone away. It’s still perfectly legal to fly a drone. And this isn’t just a DJI ban. It’s a ban on foreign-made drones, which includes those from companies such as DJI, Autel Robotics, HoverAir, and thers. That DJI is singled out in headlines has more to do with its market dominance than the way the rules are written.

I’d like to say that with the biggest competitor essentially removed from the market that US-based companies are swooping in with new drones. Actually we did say that once about Skydio, and we even liked the Skydio drone we tested, but since then Skydio has shifted away from the consumer market.

No New Drones

Courtesy of DJI

While it’s good news that the old stuff is still for sale, it’s unlikely that any new drones will arrive.

In order to sell in the United States, anything that uses radio frequency components has to be approved by the FCC. Drones use radio frequencies when flying, so they fall under FCC jurisdiction. Because none of the drone companies have had the security review they need by an approved US agency, they have all been placed on what’s called the Covered List. Companies on the Covered List do not have approval to import products into the US, effectively banning them.

There’s some evidence that wheels are turning somewhere, in a way that could spell good news for consumer drone flyers. Last week, the FCC amended its Covered List to exempt drones and components already approved by the Defense Contract Management Agency’s Blue UAS list. The FCC says in its public statement, “The DoW has determined that UAS and UAS critical components included on Defense Contract Management Agency’s (DCMA’s) Blue UAS list do not currently present unacceptable risks to the national security of the United States or to the safety and security of US persons.”

For the most part, this doesn’t really impact consumer drones, unless you were in the market for a $13.6k Parrot Anafi USA Gov edition thermal drone, but it’s better than silence, which has been the primary thing we’ve heard leading up to the December ban.

Great Job Scott Gilbertson & the Team @ WIRED Source link for sharing this story.

Akosua Serwaa’s Bid for Letters of Administration: A Legally Flawed and Sinister Move

Akosua Serwaa’s Bid for Letters of Administration: A Legally Flawed and Sinister Move

It has been reported—and personally confirmed—that Akosua Serwaa, one of the two legally recognised wives of the late highlife legend Daddy Lumba, has applied for Letters of Administration in Kumasi to gain control over his estate.

This move is not only legally questionable but appears to be a calculated manoeuvre rather than a genuine step toward estate administration.

Why the Application is Legally Flawed?

Under Ghanaian law, specifically Order 66 Rule 13 of the High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules, 2004 (C.I. 47), when a person dies intestate, the right to apply for Letters of Administration follows a clear order of priority:

1. Any surviving spouse

2. Any surviving children

3. Any surviving parents

4. The customary successor

The recent High Court declaration affirming that Daddy Lumba had two surviving wives—Akosua Serwaa and Odo Broni—means that both women hold equal priority as surviving spouses.

It is legally irregular for one spouse to unilaterally apply for Letters of Administration without the involvement, knowledge, or consent of the other. Such an application is likely to be refused by the court, as it disregards the co-equal standing of the spouses in the succession process.

Akosua Serwaa

Is There a Will? The Unanswered Question

To date, Daddy Lumba’s lawyers have not publicly confirmed whether he left a valid will. If Akosua Serwaa has not formally inquired with his legal representatives or the family regarding the existence of a will, on what basis is she assuming he died intestate?

In law, an application for Letters of Administration presupposes that the deceased died without a will. If a will exists, the proper procedure is to apply for a grant of probate, not administration.

This raises a suspicious possibility: that the application is less about administering the estate and more about probing whether a will exists. By filing for Letters of Administration, Akosua Serwaa may be attempting to “smoke out” information from Lumba’s lawyers or force disclosure about the true state of his testamentary arrangements.

The Issue of the Abusuapanin Affidavit

Another procedural hurdle is the customary requirement of an affidavit from the head of family (Abusuapanin)—in this case, 2pac—confirming the facts in the application.

While this is not an absolute legal requirement, as established in cases like Progressive Modern Company Ltd v. Esther Bonsu & Others, and remains at the court’s discretion, its absence could raise questions about the bona fides of the application.

How did Akosua Serwaa secure this affidavit, if at all? And if she did not, does the court have all the relevant facts before it?

A Sinister Undertone

Given the context—a publicly disputed marital status, unclear testamentary situation, and the unilateral action by one spouse—this application appears strategically motivated rather than procedurally proper. It seeks to bypass the co-spouse, preempt a potential will, and gain an unfair advantage in estate/property matters.

The Intestate Succession Act (P.N.D.C.L. 111) was enacted to protect spouses and children from predatory actions by extended family. Ironically, here we see a spouse using procedural gaps to potentially marginalise the other spouse—an outcome the law seeks to prevent.

Without doubt, Akosua Serwaa’s application for Letters of Administration is premature, procedurally irregular, and legally vulnerable.

It ignores the rights of Odo Broni as an equal surviving spouse, presupposes intestacy without evidence, and may be a tactical move to uncover confidential estate information. The court would be justified in rejecting this application, and the public should view it with scepticism.

The proper path forward is a joint application by both surviving spouses, after confirmation of whether Daddy Lumba died testate or intestate—not a solo move that sows confusion and distrust.

Akosua Serwaa is at it again, and when she loses in court, her supporters will start instructing Ghanaian judges and all of us.

The law is the law–I didn’t make the law.

I’ve said it from the beginning: this entire saga around Daddy Lumba has always been about his properties. We are now reaching the heart of the matter, and the true motive is becoming clear. It was never genuinely about being a wife or proving one’s status; it was a cold calculation: “The man is gone—now let me secure as much of the estate as I can.”

Great Job Chris-Vincent Agyapong, Founding Editor & the Team @ GhanaCelebrities.Com Source link for sharing this story.

A month after Epstein files deadline, only a fraction of DOJ records have been released

A month after Epstein files deadline, only a fraction of DOJ records have been released

Monday marks one month since the deadline for the Justice Department to release all of its files related to Jeffrey Epstein, but only a fraction of the records have been made public.

The delays have frustrated Epstein’s victims and brought warnings of repercussions from the co-authors of the Epstein Files Transparency Act, Reps. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., and Ro Khanna, D-Calif.

Massie claimed in a statement to NBC News on Friday that “Attorney General Bondi is making illegal redactions and withholding key documents that would implicate associates of Epstein.”

In a separate statement Friday, Khanna said “DOJ’s refusal to follow the law” is “an obstruction of justice.”

“They also need to release the FBI witness interviews which name other men, so the public can know who was involved. That is why Massie and I are bringing inherent contempt against Bondi and requested a special master to oversee this process,” he said.

“The survivors and the public demand transparency and justice,” Khanna said.

The Justice Department did not respond to requests for comment on the releases and the lawmakers’ claims. It said in a court filing last week that it had “made substantial progress and remains focused on releasing materials under the Act promptly while protecting victim privacy.”

“Compliance with the Act is a substantial undertaking, principally because, for a substantial number of documents, careful, manual review is necessary to ensure that victim-identifying information is redacted before materials are released,” the filing said.

Victims have complained that the Justice Department is protecting the wrong people. In a letter to the Justice Department’s inspector general last week, a group of Epstein survivors and relatives of victims complained that the redactions to date had been “selective.”

“These failures have caused renewed harm to survivors and undermined trust in the institutions responsible for safeguarding sensitive information,” the group said in its letter.

“In multiple instances, names of individuals alleged to have participated in or facilitated abuse appear to have been redacted, while identifying details of survivors were left visible. In some cases, survivors’ names, contextual identifiers, or other information sufficient to identify them publicly were not adequately protected,” they added.

They also complained, as have Khanna and Massie, that the Justice Department has not complied with another part of the law, which requires it to explain its redactions.

“Without it, there is no authoritative accounting of what records exist, what has been withheld, or why, making effective oversight and judicial review far more difficult,” an attorney for the congressmen argued in a filing.

The Justice Department has not commented on the request for the inspector general to step in. On Friday, lawyers for the Justice Department challenged Massie and Khanna’s request for a special master to oversee the release of the materials in a court filing, arguing the pair do not have legal standing to make the request.

President Donald Trump signed the Epstein Files Transparency Act into law on Nov. 19. The law gave the attorney general 30 days to “make publicly available in a searchable and downloadable format all unclassified records, documents, communications, and investigative materials in the possession of the Department of Justice” involving Epstein, “including all investigations, prosecutions, or custodial matters.”

On Dec. 19, the day the files were due to be made public, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said in an interview with Fox News that the Justice Department was releasing hundreds of thousands of documents that day and that it could take a “couple of weeks” for the rest to come to light.

He said the delay was needed to comply with the law’s directive that information about all of Epstein’s victims — of which the Justice Department has said there are over 1,000 — is redacted from the releases.

The Justice Department said in a court filing this month that it had posted “approximately 12,285 documents (comprising approximately 125,575 pages) in response to the Act.”

In a court filing Thursday, the Justice Department acknowledged that “millions” of pages of materials were outstanding.

“To date, the Department has employed over five hundred reviewers to review and redact millions of pages of materials from the investigations into Epstein and his convicted co-conspirator,” Ghislaine Maxwell, the filing said.

The filing did not give a total number of files that are outstanding or say when they would be made public.

The Justice Department released a transcript of an interview between a senior administration official and Ghislaine Maxwell, the imprisoned former associate of Jeffrey Epstein.

Among the documents that have yet to be released are any internal discussions about a controversial joint memo the FBI and the Justice Department released in July, in which they said they had conducted an “exhaustive” review of the files and determined that there was not evidence to charge anyone else in the case and that no further information would be released.

The memo was met with tremendous political backlash, some of it from supporters of Trump.

Epstein at various points had ties to Trump, former President Bill Clinton and the former Prince Andrew of Britain, among others. All have denied wrongdoing.

Epstein died by suicide in his jail cell while he was awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges in 2019.

Epstein had been investigated on similar charges a decade earlier but wound up pleading guilty to state charges involving a single underage victim after he reached a secret nonprosecution agreement with federal prosecutors in Florida. The deal resulted in Epstein’s serving just 13 months in a Palm Beach County jail, which he was allowed to leave almost daily via a work-release program and have his own private security detail.

Maxwell is serving a 20-year prison term for conspiring to sex traffic minors.

Ryan J. Reilly, Hallie Jackson and Joe Murphy contributed.

Prince Andrew will no longer be called the Duke of York after giving up his title in the wake of continued scrutiny surrounding his connection to Jeffrey Epstein.

Great Job Dareh Gregorian | NBC News & the Team @ NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth for sharing this story.

Construction firm Italian-Thai Development is under fire after consecutive crane collapses | Fortune

Construction firm Italian-Thai Development is under fire after consecutive crane collapses | Fortune

Italian-Thai Development, one of Thailand’s largest construction conglomerates, is in the spotlight after successive fatal incidents on its building sites.

On Jan. 14, a crane collapsed onto a passenger train in the country’s northeast, killing at least 32 people. Just one day later, another crane fell on a highway project in Samut Sakhon province, leading to two deaths. Italian-Thai Development helmed both projects, and so on Jan. 16, Thailand’s Transport Ministry ordered a 15-day construction halt on more than ten projects overseen by the company, citing a “danger to the public.”

Italian-Thai Development released a statement to Thailand’s stock exchange on Jan. 15, noting that it had started the process of assessing damage and will take responsibility by providing compensation. Fortune has reached out to Italian-Thai Development for further comment.

The construction company is also linked to the collapse of a partially-constructed skyscraper in Bangkok last March, following a devastating earthquake in nearby Myanmar. The disaster killed almost 100 people.

Following the skyscraper incident, Premchai Karnasuta, the CEO of Italian-Thai Development, was indicted alongside 22 others, on charges including document forgery and professional negligence causing death. (Executives from China Railway No. 10, a Chinese state-owned construction firm that partnered with Italian-Thai Development, were also charged.)

Italian-Thai Development, with $2 billion in 2024 revenue, ranks No. 174 on Fortune’s Southeast Asia 500 list, which measures the region’s largest firms by revenue. 

Thai businessman Uthai Vongnai and Italian engineer Giovanni Tani founded Italian-Thai Development in 1958, after the two worked together salvaging five ships that sank in the Chao Phraya River. The firm expanded to sectors like real estate, manufacturing and mining, and has had a hand in building some of Thailand’s largest public infrastructure projects, like Bangkok’s subway system.

Still, the firm has had a rocky few years. They lost a total of 6 billion Thai baht ($192 million) between 2020 and 2022, according to the Bangkok Post, in part after its work in Myanmar was stalled after a 2021 coup and imposition of military rule.  

Karnasuta, Italian-Thai Development’s CEO, was also jailed for illegal poaching in 2021, after he was caught with hunting gear and animal carcasses in one of Thailand’s wildlife sanctuaries. He was released on parole in 2023. 

Italian-Thai Development has been forced to slash costs and dump several overseas units. The firm’s market value plunged from a peak of 12 billion baht ($384 million) in 2021 to just 1 billion baht ($32 million) in 2026.

Great Job Angelica Ang & the Team @ Fortune | FORTUNE Source link for sharing this story.

Caleb Williams’ ‘ridiculous’ TD pass draws raves from his coach and teammates after Bears’ loss

Caleb Williams’ ‘ridiculous’ TD pass draws raves from his coach and teammates after Bears’ loss

CHICAGO – Caleb Williams’ last throw in regulation was a backpedaling, fourth-down rainbow that landed in Cole Kmet’s hands in the corner of the end zone for a breathtaking touchdown.

His last throw of the game was the beginning of the end for Chicago’s surprising season.

Williams almost rallied the Bears to another memorable win on Sunday night. But he threw his third interception in overtime and Matthew Stafford drove the Los Angeles Rams to Harrison Mevis’ winning field goal in a 20-17 victory in the divisional round of the playoffs.

“It’s tough. In these moments, you feel that you let your team down,” Williams said. “You feel this or that. It’s a good lesson learned for us, first time being in this situation for me and for us as a team. I’m excited for what’s to come. But obviously going to go back and watch this and figure out how I can be better, and that’s the exciting part.”

The 24-year-old Williams led Chicago to an NFL-record seven wins this season when trailing in last 2 minutes of regulation. He threw a 25-yard touchdown pass to DJ Moore with 1:43 left in a 31-27 victory over Green Bay in the first round of the playoffs.

This time, the Bears (12-7) were losing 17-10 when they got the ball back with 1:50 left in the fourth quarter. And, just like before, Williams delivered.

Facing a fourth-and-4 at the Rams 14 with 27 seconds left, Williams took a shotgun snap and surveyed the field. The No. 1 pick in the 2024 draft was forced to backpedal as the pocket collapsed, and he scampered all the way back to the 40 with Jared Verse, Josaiah Stewart and Braden Fiske all in pursuit for the Rams.

Williams turned, saw Kmet in the end zone and threw the ball in his direction just as Verse and Stewart got to the second-year QB.

“I ended up getting a little bit of pressure, so try and break contain and just break angles and slow those guys down so that when I do turn around, I can have a little bit more time possibly to find somebody,” Williams said, “and they did a good job containing me, so I just gained a little bit more depth, and I saw Cole one-on-one over there.”

Kmet wrestled with Rams cornerback Cobie Turner before hauling in the pass, sending a charge through the crowd of 60,253 on a frigid night at Soldier Field.

“It felt like a pretty easy pitch-and-catch and kind of felt like it was in slow motion,” Kmet said. “I can’t believe Caleb.”

Bears coach Ben Johnson called the throw “ridiculous.”

“There’s some things that you just can’t coach. … He’s got a knack, he’s clutch,” Johnson said.

According to Next Gen Stats, Williams’ pass traveled 51.2 yards in the air for the longest completed pass by air distance in the red zone since at least 2016. He made the throw from 26.5 yards behind the line of scrimmage; no quarterback since 2016, according to Next Gen Stats, had completed a pass from a depth of more than 22 yards.

It had a completion probability of 17.8%.

“It was the most special throw that I’ve ever seen. I’ve seen him do that so many times this year,” Bears safety Kevin Byard said.

Williams also threw a 3-yard touchdown pass to Moore on fourth down on the first play of the second quarter. But his three interceptions were costly.

The Bears had a chance to win the game in overtime. They drove to the Los Angeles 48 before Williams was picked off by Rams safety Kam Curl on a deep ball intended for Moore.

“Just a miscommunication between him and I,” Williams said. “Tried to flatten him off under the safety, and he kept it vertical from what I saw, obviously, in the moment.”

___

AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/NFL

Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

Great Job Jay Cohen, Associated Press & the Team @ KSAT San Antonio Source link for sharing this story.

How to Understand Trump’s Obsession With Greenland

How to Understand Trump’s Obsession With Greenland

European leaders are in a dither, understandably but inexcusably, about Donald Trump’s threats to take Greenland by force, and to use tariffs to slap around anyone who objects: understandably, because no previous president would ever have acted this way; inexcusably, because a clear if unpalatable solution lies right before them.

If European countries were to permanently deploy, say, 5,000 soldiers armed with surface-to-air and anti-ship missiles to Greenland, keeping them there with orders to fight invading American soldiers to the last round of ammunition, Trump would not order the paratroops and the Marines to assault that frozen wasteland—too many body bags. If they were willing to put comparable economic sanctions in place—denying American companies access to Europe’s economy, still collectively the world’s third largest—he would back down from those threats as well. Such policies go against the grain of a continent that is, to use the word popularized by the British military historian Michael Howard, debellated, but that’s the world they are in.

The Greenland episode, disgraceful and shameful as it is, should be seen in the context of Trump’s other foreign-policy escapades—the capturing of Nicolás Maduro; the bombing of the Iranian nuclear program; the attempt to rebuild and reorient war-shattered Gaza; the on-again, off-again relationships with Vladimir Putin and Volodymyr Zelensky; the tariff bazookas that get downgraded to squirt guns with China. Erratic as the president sounds, the Trumpian worldview is comprehensible and even, in some respects, predictable.

Trump is an ignorant man; unlike many other would-be or actual dictators, he does not read books and has difficulty writing more than a few badly spelled sentences on social media. But he does intuit certain truths, and one must give him credit for those, because he is not stupid and they animate his policy. Greenland really has been neglected by Denmark and, since after the American Civil War, has been coveted by the United States. The Iranian nuclear program was a regional and in some respects global menace, and, after a week and a half of Israel softening up, was vulnerable to a single heavy punch. Europe has long underspent on defense, and where American cajoling for decades had not worked, a few face slaps succeeded.

Trump’s domestic political gift is the feral instinct for weakness that characterizes most authoritarians. That instinct is shakier in international affairs, but it shapes the way in which he views the world. With an image of American industrial and military power that is rooted in the world of several generations ago, he has enormous confidence in American strength and therefore assumes that bullying is preferable to negotiation, unless you are up against someone who is as tough as you, even if less muscle-bound.

He knows what he hates in foreign affairs—the mealymouthed multilateralism of the Biden administration, its catering to deadbeat allies, and its weakness in fleeing Afghanistan. He likewise despises the caterwauling about liberal values and democracy and the long-term military commitments of the George W. Bush administration. Indeed, although he cannot get over Joe Biden—Trump’s insecurities and grievances about the 2020 election and the various prosecutions he has faced between then and now prohibit it—from a foreign-policy point of view, he is at least as anti–George W. Bush as he is anti-Biden. And he despises the reverence for deliberate decision making, consultation with experts, and the willingness to engage in the conventional diplomacy that characterizes both. He views talk of international leadership, much less its practice, as claptrap.

Above all, he has three principal instruments in foreign policy: tariffs and kindred economic sanctions, brief bombing campaigns, and commando raids. He has no tolerance for bloody battles, which is why he will not authorize an Arctic amphibious campaign that faces real opposition. If he is going to negotiate, he will use friends such as Steven Witkoff and family members such as Jared Kushner, who might have an eye for lucrative deals that will enrich the United States and privileged relatives and friends. Nothing wrong with greed-driven foreign policy, in his view.

For Trump, foreign policy is a game of checkers (he does not have the temperament for chess) played one move at a time. The notion of reputational damage is alien to someone whose image was long ago tarnished beyond repair by grifting, lying, bullying, and double-dealing. He surely thinks nothing of the price that Iranian demonstrators (and ultimately the United States) may pay for having promised assistance and then shrugged it off with the claim that the Iranian regime has stopped killing people. (It has not; it just now does so in a way that Trump can claim he cannot see.)

If Trump were a poker player, he would bluff half the time. But games may be the wrong metaphor to understand him, because unless he is up against Xi Jinping and possibly Vladimir Putin, he struggles with the idea that other people have agency. In 2015, a senior politician who knew Trump well described to me a small dinner he attended at Mar-a-Lago. Trump ordered for each guest; from his point of view, the menu and their wishes were irrelevant.

These last two qualities explain many of his failures thus far, with more to come. Chess players who think only a single move ahead invariably lose; states and peoples, even quite small ones, have agency. Not only that, they can read him—the only question is whether they have the guts and competence to stare him down, or the wiliness to outmaneuver him.

He has, for example, put Turkey and Qatar on the Board of Peace that will supposedly run Gaza—without anyone, other than the Israeli military, actually willing to take on Hamas gunmen. The Israelis are furious that two hostile countries have been placed in that position. They are likely to acquiesce formally and to undermine their efforts privately. Trump thinks he can run Venezuela by remote control, but the head of ExxonMobil recently pointed out to him that until the country has something like rule of law and reasonable security, rebuilding its oil industry is not going to be possible. He continues to threaten Canada, and Prime Minister Mark Carney flies to Beijing. Volodymyr Zelensky was supposed to bow to Trump’s wishes. Instead, the Ukrainians, with help from Europe, adroitly manipulated a supposed agreement with Russia on ending the war into a proposal that Putin will not accept.

Having a president conducting foreign policy who thinks in this way—who fantasizes about a fleet of battleships named after him and a dome as golden as the Oval Office spreading over North America, who believes he can rename the Gulf of Mexico and that it will stick after he has left office—is undoubtedly scary. But there is some comfort in it as well.

In politics, gravity still works. A man entering his ninth decade has diminishing energy and stamina, and so Trump drowses off in meetings. He has excluded all but sycophants from his inner circle, and so he hears only his version of the truth. He faces the likely loss of the House of Representatives (at least) within a year. Little cracks are visibly spreading in the unwieldy coalition that only he could create, while even populists grow uneasy at the outlandish thuggery of Kristi Noem’s masked green-shirts. Indeed, he may find himself dealing at home with bloody insurgencies of the kind he hoped to avoid abroad if he persists in allowing Stephen Miller to press for the indiscriminate roundups of immigrants, or merely people who speak Spanish or have brown skin. His successors are already jostling one another.

This era will leave lasting foreign-policy damage. One Trump term could look like a fluke; two will certainly convince many abroad that the United States has become unreliable and even dangerous. But this emergence of a new, more transactional, and less peaceful world is unfortunately something that Trump has only accelerated, not created. His hopefully wiser and more sober successors will call the Gulf of Mexico by its name and pry Trump’s name off the United States Institute of Peace. More important, they will need to figure out how to restore a modicum of decency, good judgment, and international leadership once he is gone; rebuilding America’s reputation, unfortunately, will be the work of a generation. Such pivots have happened before—in the 1940s and the 1980s, for example. Let’s hope they will happen again.

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Martin Luther King’s Most Iconic Speeches Of All Time

Martin Luther King’s Most Iconic Speeches Of All Time

UPDATED: 6:30 a.m. ET, Jan. 18, 2021:

The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., might be the greatest orator in American history. This year would have marked his 92nd birthday, but the civil rights icon’s words and speeches have grown to become timeless while greatly contributing to changing the tide of American history.

Not only did King give speeches on the urgency of achieving racial integration in the U.S. but he also gave powerful addresses on the topics of poverty and the war in Vietnam. The legacy behind those and other sentiments he expressed in life has only magnified since his assassination more than a half-century ago.

To further recognize King’s greatness and his inimitable gift of oration, keep reading to revisit five of his greatest speeches of all time.

1. I Have A Dream. This is one of the most well-known and referred to speeches in modern American history.

2. Why I am Opposed to the War In Vietnam. Many people forget about King’s strong anti-war stance. Many of the reasons he opposed the war in Vietnam relate to the subsequent conflicts in Gaza and Iraq.

3. I’ve Been to the Mountain Top. King’s final speech was prophetic. He would be assassinated shortly afterward but his words would live on and inspire people forever.

4. The Urgency of Now. In a theme later used by Barack Obama, Martin Luther King showed why racial integration couldn’t wait.

5. A Time to Break Silence. In this speech, Martin Luther King again outlined his opposition to the war in Vietnam

 

SEE ALSO:

How Much Have Black People Really Progressed Since Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Death?

All The King’s Words: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Most Riveting Quotes


Martin Luther King’s Most Iconic Speeches Of All Time
was originally published on
newsone.com

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