Sunday, November 24, 2024

 

Source: SheerPost

LONDON—There is an old, often-told story about a front-page article one of the big dailies here once ran as severe weather hit in these parts. “Storm in Channel, Continent Cut Off,” the headline read. Nobody is certain any newspaper ever published any such story with any such headline. The majority view is that it is an apocryphal tale meant to suggest the Anglocentric sensibility you sometimes find among the English. 

People cite some specifics from time to time: It appeared in The Times in the 1930s. No, it was in the Daily Mirror in the 1940s. “A common date and name I’ve seen,” a reader remarked some years ago in AskHistorians, a portal carried on Reddit, “is The Daily Telegraph somewhere in 1929.” 

I have always been inclined to the view that there’s a home truth in this chestnut but no literal truth to it. With the reporting coming out since the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Israel’s prime minister and defense minister on Nov. 21, however, I have to wonder about The Telegraph. “ICC puts its reputation on trial by chasing Netanyahu,” is the headline that appeared in its Thursday evening editions. The subhead is just as hourglass upside-down: “Pursuit of democratically elected individuals who have been supported by the West will test court’s legitimacy.”

There will always be an England, as the old song goes. 

The court has not released the documents pertinent to its warrants. On Thursday it simply cited “reasonable grounds” that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant “intentionally and knowingly deprived the civilian population in Gaza of objects indispensable to their survival.” This is legal language alleging that the Israelis systematically used starvation as a weapon of war, an open-and-shut war crime of which the terrorist regime is open-and-shut guilty. But given the slaughter and atrocities the world has witnessed in real time, my guess is there are probably a lot more in the charges to come out of Khan’s investigations. 

The ICC issued a third arrest warrant for Mohammed Deif, Hamas’s top military commander, for “crimes against humanity and war crimes.” In my read this was pro forma, a pre-emptive response to charges that Khan’s findings are one-sided.  However culpable Deif was for the events of Oct. 7 a year ago, he will never face trial: The Israelis announced over the summer that they killed him in an air strike last July. The court said simply that it cannot verify his death. And so the warrant. 

The Western powers and the Zionist state have been bracing for these warrants since Karim Khan, the court’s chief prosecutor, requested them last May. The Netanyahu regime instantly termed Kahn’s recommendations an antisemitic disgrace. “Outrageous,” proclaimed President Biden, a professed Zionist who has accepted many millions of dollars from the Israel lobby. Tell me something new under the sun, please. The interesting thing here is that this kind of carrying on no longer goes anywhere. 

The main argument as the world awaited the warrants—and why did the court take so long, we have to wonder—has been jurisdictional: Israel is not among the ICC’s 124 members, and the Zionist regime asserts its leadership is therefore not subject to the court’s rulings. The Biden regime, also not a member, has supported this contention—all by its lonesome, per usual. This, too, has not held up, to state the obvious. 

There has also been quite a lot of funny business obscured from public view. Last month the Daily Mail, the London tabloid, reported that a woman on the ICC staff had accused Khan of sexual harassment. Khan immediately termed the accusation disinformation, welcomed an impartial investigation, and called for a separate  investigation into the origin of the charges. Anyone with a well-maintained bullshit detector and a familiarity with the disgusting tricks American and Israeli intelligence have in their bags could detect what this was all about. 
For the doubtful, here is a passage from The New York Times account of this affair, published Nov. 11. It is worth quoting at some length. Warning: You are about to undergo severe exposure to The Times’s obfuscatory language:

The Daily Mail reported in October that a female colleague had accused Mr. Khan of harassment, an allegation he denied. The Guardian later reported that Mr. Khan had tried to suppress the accuser’s claims, which he also denied.

After being made aware of the allegations, Ms. [Paivi] Kaukoranta, president of the assembly representing 125[sic] nations that recognize the court’s authority, said in late October that the court “seeks the consent of any alleged victim of misconduct before proceeding with an investigation,” but after a conversation with Mr. Khan’s accuser, the court “was not in a position to proceed.”

Days later, Mr. Khan said on social media that the matter had been “closed” by the court’s oversight body without an investigation because no complaint had been made, and that the “alleged aggrieved person” had declined the option of an investigation. Mr. Khan also said he sought an investigation into how the information, which he called “disinformation,” had been made public. The court, based in The Hague, did not say on Monday what had changed in recent weeks to prompt an investigation.

Translation: The ruse fell apart but this cannot be reported plainly enough to be easily understood. Do you have to love The Times or what?

Later last month the ICC announced that Iulia Motoc, the Romanian judge presiding in the Netanyahu–Gallant case, had been abruptly removed on medical grounds. No further details: “The personal medical situation of Judge Motoc is entitled to medical confidentiality,” the court statement said. 

We know nothing more of Iulia Motoc or Iulia Motoc’s health. There are no conclusions to be drawn in this case. We know only these two things. One, as soon as Judge Motoc’s removal was announced there were widespread expectations that the ICC’s judgment on Khan’s case would be deferred, as the Netanyahu regime had hoped, and possibly by up to six months. Motoc was quickly replaced by Beti Hohler, a Slovenian elected as a judge last year, but the swiftness of the new appointment appears not to have been foreseen. So the question remains in the Iulia Motoc case. Cui bono? 

Two, there is an extensive, thoroughly criminal matter of Israel’s long efforts to subvert the ICC and those of its staff pertinent to the Zionist state’s interests. Karim Khan, as soon as he announced last May that he was seeking arrest warrants, asserted forthrightly, “I insist that all attempts to impede, intimidate, or improperly influence the officials of this court cease immediately.” It has long been known that the U.S. has been unshy in its underhanded efforts to disrupt the ICC, but we now know far more about Israel’s operations in this line. 

Credit where due. I will let +972, the Israeli investigative journal, explain what it found via a joint project conducted with Local Call, another Israeli publication, and The Guardian:

For nearly a decade, Israel has been surveilling senior International Criminal Court officials and Palestinian human rights workers as part of a secret operation to thwart the ICC’s probe into alleged war crimes, a joint investigation by +972 Magazine, Local Call, and The Guardian can reveal.

The multi-agency operation, which dates back to 2015, has seen Israel’s intelligence community routinely surveil the court’s current chief prosecutor Karim Khan, his predecessor Fatou Bensouda, and dozens of other ICC and UN officials.

It goes on from here in great and useful detail, giving us the full depravity of the Zionist regime’s inventory of corrupt practices and unnatural acts. From The Guardian’s report:

The country deployed its intelligence agencies to surveil, hack, pressure, smear and allegedly threaten senior ICC staff in an effort to derail the court’s inquiries….

The surveillance was ongoing in recent months, providing Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, with advance knowledge of the prosecutor’s intentions. A recent intercepted communication suggested that Khan wanted to issue arrest warrants against Israelis but was under “tremendous pressure from the United States,” according to a source familiar with its contents….

Netanyahu has taken a close interest in the intelligence operations against the ICC, and was described by one intelligence source as being “obsessed” with intercepts about the case. Overseen by his national security advisers, the efforts involved the domestic spy agency, the Shin Bet, as well as the military’s intelligence directorate, Aman, and cyber-intelligence division, Unit 8200….

The +972 report is available here, The Guardian report here, and Local Call’s, in Hebrew and English, here. Each has its own way into the joint investigation and they are all worth reading. 

As I argued elsewhere last February, after South Africa first presented the ICC with evidence of Israel’s genocidal conduct in Gaza, the Zionist regime simply cannot survive in international public space. It must accordingly spare no effort, however infra-dig, to… well, to defecate in it whenever it finds itself hauled into it. So it has been since the court announced the warrants last week. 

The official statement from Netanyahu’s office read:

Israel rejects with disgust the absurd and false actions and charges against it by the international criminal court, which is a biased and discriminatory political body. 

Note the lower-casing of the ICC’s name — a subtle touch. How will the court ever survive this?

And further:

There is nothing more just than the war that Israel has been waging in Gaza since the seventh of October 2023, after the terrorist organization Hamas launched a murderous attack against it, and carried out the greatest massacre committed against the Jewish people since the Holocaust. The decision was made by a corrupt chief prosecutor trying to save his own skin from the serious charges against him for sexual harassment, and by biased judges motivated by antisemitic hatred of Israel.

I’m surprised the first “antisemitic hatred” trope is so far down in Bibi’s diatribe. But again, a nice touch that he references the harassment charges against Karim Khan well after they have been discredited. Say it often enough and you are bound to fool a few of the least alert among us. 

Benny Gantz, a sometime rival of Netanyahu but now part of his “war cabinet,” on “X:”

… moral blindness and a shameful stain of historic proportion that will never be forgotten. 

Isaac Herzog, the Zionist regime’s president:

This is a dark day for justice. A dark day for humanity. Taken in bad faith, the outrageous decision at the ICC has turned universal justice into a universal laughing stock. It ignores the plight of the 101 Israeli hostages held in brutal captivity by Hamas in Gaza.

And from Yair Lapid, the opposition leader in the Knesset, a prime minister for six months before Netanyahu formed his extreme-right coalition in 2022 and “a centrist” — yes, a centrist in Israel’s political constellation:

Israel is defending itself against terrorist organizations that attacked, murdered and raped our citizens. These arrest warrants are a reward for terrorism. 

Shameful stains, dark days, bad faith, rewards for terrorists, and so on, slathered on with trowels. I quote this unserious stuff to give an idea of just how far the Israeli leadership has wandered from reality.  

My fav in this line for its all-around oddity is from Netanyahu’s office. The PM described the warrants as: “an antisemitic decision equivalent to the modern Dreyfus trial.” I will take this opportunity to remind readers that Dr. Lawrence has previously diagnosed Netanyahu as suffering a form of clinical psychosis. This remark, reeking of self-dramatization, suggests the paranoiac delusions may be worsening and will go into Dr. Lawrence’s Netanyahu file.

Alfred Dreyfus was an Alsatian-born military officer of Jewish background who served as an artillery officer in the French army during the later decades of the 19th century. When, in 1894, he was accused, found guilty, and sent to Devil’s Island as a spy for the Germans, the case became a cause célèbre for its exposure of the antisemitism then rife among the Third Republic’s military and political elites. By the time Dreyfus was found an innocent scapegoat and brought back to France, all kinds of prominent writers, actors, artists, and political figures had rallied to his side—Émile Zola most faithfully, but also Anatole France, Sarah Bernhardt, Clemenceau, and others. Dreyfus died, in 1935, something of a hero, at least in some quarters.  

A lot of people, even murderous racists, are heroes in their own minds. But what could possibly be Bibi’s point here? It seems to me he has given us a glimpse — fleeting, indirect — into a part of his psyche we never see, the part still capable of suffering injury when so much of the world, more or less all of it, is repulsed by his barbarism. It turns out Bibi Netanyahu, I’ll be damned, craves acceptance. He wants to be seen as good and innocent and unjustly framed, awaiting redemption, like Dreyfus. He wants others to buy into his heroism. 

Reactions on the American side were predictable even when extreme. In a curiously curt statement President Biden, loyal as ever to the Israel lobby if not the interests of the United States, called the warrants “outrageous.” And, with that rhetorical flourish the Democrats lately seem to think persuasive, added:

Let me be clear once again: Whatever the ICC might imply, there is no equivalence — none — between Israel and Hamas. We will always stand with Israel against threats to its security.

Here I defer to John Whitbeck, the international attorney based in Paris, who remarked via his privately circulated blog after the White House issued Biden’s statement:  

One thing I can agree with in the outraged and outrageous Israeli and American reactions to the arrest warrants issued by the International Criminal Court… is that there can be no moral equivalence between the Israeli government and Hamas. Indeed, there can be no moral equivalence between those enforcing an illegal occupation, as Israel’s 57–year occupation of the State of Palestine has been definitively declared to be by the International Court of Justice, and those resisting that occupation, as is their legal right, including by armed action, under international law.

There is simply no beating Tom Cotton, the Arkansas Republican and the stupidest senator now serving on Capitol Hill, on these kinds of occasions. Here is Cotton with his batteries fully charged: 

The ICC is a kangaroo court and Karim Khan is a deranged fanatic. Woe to him and anyone who tries to enforce these outlaw warrants. Let me give them all a friendly reminder: The American law on the ICC is known as The Hague Invasion Act for a reason. Think about it.

Has America ever had a Scheisskopf of this … this foolishness weighing in on matters of state? Can you believe that just a short while ago Tom Cotton’s name came up when Trump was thinking about his nominee for secretary of state?

For the record, the Bush II regime passed “the Hague Invasion Act” in August 2002 — note the date, as the conduct of the U.S. military in Afghanistan was already attracting critics — as an early artillery round fired at the ICC, which had been founded via a treaty signed in Rome a month earlier. Its formal name is the American Servicemembers Protection Act, and it authorizes the use of military force — yes, military force — to rescue any American or citizen of a U.S. ally the court has put under arrest. Hence the diabolic nickname.

Lindsey Graham, the South Carolina Republican, is not quite as stupid as Tom Cotton, although this is a close call. Here is Graham waving the Israeli flag after the warrants were announced:

I will be introducing legislation that puts other countries on notice—If you aid and abet the ICC after their action against the State of Israel, you can expect consequences from the United States. Any nation that joins with the ICC after this outrage is a partner in a reckless act that tramples the rule of law.

Let us think about all this, as Tom Cotton urges. 

Tom Cotton and Lindsey Graham would make good headline writers at The Telegraph, it seems to me. They have the same lack of proportion as whoever it was who suggested that the ICC, having issued its warrants, had come to its day of reckoning, whereupon its legitimacy hangs in the balance. Cotton and Graham get it precisely as upside down as that down-table copy editor. 

These warrants have a profound significance you will never read about in The Telegraph or any other mainstream newspaper and never hear about from any corporate or state-funded broadcaster. Straight off the top, Bibi Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant will be able to travel to the U.S. whenever they please; they can even address joint sessions of Congress and receive standing ovations, as Bibi has done four times now. But travel elsewhere in the world will be complicated at the very least. 

I saw over the weekend that Viktor Orbán, Hungary’s wild-card premier, has pointedly invited Netanyahu for a state visit to Budapest. O.K., that’s Orbán singing to the world he’ll do it his way. But there are 123 other members of the ICC, as earlier noted, and it will be one or another degree of risk for Netanyahu or Gallant to travel to any one of them.

Already these warrants reveal—or cause in their own right—cracks in the Western alliance’s façade. Apart from the U.S., the whole of the Atlantic world and all of its appendages are signatories to the Rome Statute. Now what? It is the obvious question. 

A little to my surprise, the Starmer government here was very quick to declare very publicly that it “respects the authority of the ICC” and will abide by its ruling. On paper this means the U.K. will arrest either of the two accused were they to set foot on British soil. Whether that would come to be in practice is another matter; it is hard to imagine the Brits crossing Washington on a question of this magnitude. But in my view Britain has just told Bibi and his defense minister, “Please don’t come. Please don’t make a mess for us.” 

At bottom I read the warrants as a formal, legal announcement in behalf of the vast majority of nations that the new world order many of us now anticipate—the post–American world order, the order that is to follow the Americans’ awful, disorderly “rules-based order”—is to be accepted as an historical inevitability. International law, to put this point another way, is to be restored after its decades of abuse at the hands of the Americans and their most loyal clients. In this way the warrants declare a kind of confrontation—between the old and the new, between law and lawlessness, between hegemony and global parity as a 21st century imperative.   

The issue raised concerns isolation. And, per usual, the policy cliques in Washington are overplaying their hands. Israel, having made a pariah of itself to the extent it wasn’t one already, is a lost cause in this regard. The Americans have long marched resolutely toward a state of isolation by way of their continuing pretense to global hegemony. Standing with Israel at this time, while they were bound to do no other, shoves the Americans good and hard further into their corner. 

It will be interesting to see how the Europeans navigate the-world-after-the-warrants in months and years to come. I take the Starmer government’s swift declaration of its intent as an interesting portent. The major European powers may decide they simply cannot stand with the Zionist regime and the Americans against the ICC. If this turns out to be so, the warrants issued last week could mark a decisive turn in trans–Atlantic relations. It is plausible.       

Think of the ICC’s warrants as a great storm in a channel flowing between the U.S. and Israel and the rest of the world, and then ask yourself, Who is cut off?

 

Source: Common Dreams

Let’s look at the political scene from Trump’s viewpoint.

Sitting in his luxurious Mar-a-Lago palace receiving the daily obeisant supplicants eager to heed his every word and praise exuberantly his megalomania, Donald J. Trump can hardly believe his good fortune.

Starting in the 2015 presidential race against 16 GOP primary opponents, Trump’s vituperative attacks were unleashed. Never in American history have words from a politician’s mouth ever metastasized into such unchallenged electoral victory and domination. His daily, hourly bullying verbal abuses flooded THE MASS MEDIA, which faithfully transmitted to tens of millions of people like clockwork—lying or false statements and tweets in the tens of thousands.

Looking over his gigantic domain astride the country and soon the world, Trump can recount the pillars of his elected dictatorship.

The Supreme Court in their impeachable June 2024 unconstitutional decision (Trump v. United States) has decreed that the president’s “official conduct” (undefined) is immune from criminal prosecution for whatever they do. This 6-3 decision already fortifies Trump’s previous determination notoriously declared in July 2019 when he exclaimed, “Then, I have an Article II, where I have the right to do whatever I want as president.” And he did just that, violating with impunity federal criminal statutes (See the December 18, 2019, Congressional RecordH-12197), violating the Constitution, defying over 125 congressional subpoenas, and according to John Bolton, his national security adviser, making “obstruction of justice a daily practice in the White House.”

Who is going to challenge him? He believes correctly that it will not be the Supreme Court or Congress.

Second, Trump has control of Congress with the Republican majority in the House and Senate, however narrow. Congress is thus far showing no sign of resisting his demands for utter submission. House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) has already signaled this abdication of his constitutional duty for checks and balances. Senate Majority Leader Senator John Thune (R-S.D.) is more circumspect. However mindful he is of the Senate’s constitutional duty of “advice and consent” regarding Trump’s nominees, Thune has to worry about being overthrown and replaced at any time as Senate majority leader by hovering Trump loyalists.

Trump wants the Senate to declare a recess for more than 10 days to get his team of Cabinet and agency nominees appointed without the usual confirmation hearings. This is an extreme demand. As constitutional law specialist, Bruce Fein asserts: “Such contrived recesses serve no legitimate constitutional purpose. That would make such official acts voidable,” i.e., unenforceable.

This illegal escape hatch for Trump is unlikely to materialize for some of his nominees whom the Senate majority will want to reject. Why? Because, for example, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s nomination for secretary of health and human services will be vigorously opposed by Big Pharma, the Big Food processors, the health insurance giants, and the Big Global Warming Polluters (fossil fuels) industries whom he has long criticized and sued when he was an effective environmental lawyer. He doesn’t have much support from Democratic senators due to his statements about vaccines and their side effects. Guessing, I expect the Senate will turn him down following a conventional nomination hearing.

The military-industrial giants will oppose Tulsi Gabbard as Trump’s director of national intelligence. She is seen as too extreme a critic, too inexperienced, and likely not to “get along by going along” with the entrenched national intelligence agencies like the CIA and NSA.

Trump’s choice for secretary of defense, Fox News host Pete Hegseth, a veteran, with no managerial experience, has made harsh statements about military leadership, women, and Muslims. He evinces wanting to go on a vengeance kick and not on a mission to do what Trump has campaigned for, which is ending “endless wars.” The 47 Democratic senators are likely to be joined by enough Republican senators to block his nomination.

Trump’s choice of Chris Wright, head of a fracking company and a climate-denier, as secretary of energy, will get the full backing of the oil, gas, and coal industries leading to an affirmative vote in the Senate.

None of these problems bother Trump. Just as was the case with former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), who was forced by disclosures, regarding his sexual aggressions and other negatives, to take himself out of the running nomination for attorney general, Trump will find plenty of replacements willing to run a Justice Department which lets him do whatever he wants with impunity.

At the end of the day, what matters to Trump is getting what he wants. He is warranted in such confidence. Who is going to challenge him? He believes correctly that it will not be the Supreme Court or Congress. The state legislatures will be on the defensive due to his willingness to cut grants and federal contracts to the states, including critical Medicaid services for millions of needy Americans, along with other traditional social safety net programs.

The labor unions, worrying about a third of their membership being Trumpsters, among other inhibitions (See, Election Day Delirium by Chris Townsend), are not much of a factor, as they have tethered themselves (with few exceptions) to the Democratic Party bureaucracy. The citizen groups will file their lawsuits and wait for the expected court delays that spell “Justice delayed is justice denied.”

As for the mainstream media CEOs, Trump knows they want higher ratings and more readers so he has given them daily fodder for outrageous epithets, falsehoods, braggadocios, and empty promises. In return, media outlets have faithfully published his crazed bloviations. The media has also reported his many corruptions, lies, ignorance of facts, bigotry, sexual escapades, and indictments —to no avail. The MAGA crowd just gets bigger. All the exposés, helped by blunders of prosecutors and partisan Trump judges, have fallen off Teflon Trump like water off a duck’s back.

He has procrastinated releasing his full medical history, contrary to his promises in 2016, 2020, and 2024. He has also resisted releasing his tax returns. He now has not complied with ethical reports during the transition from President Joe Biden’s regime to his regime. Der Fuhrer Trump believes the rules that his presidential peers have followed do not apply to him.

There is a little light at the end of the tunnel. Democratic state attorneys general will sue and block some of Trump’s violative decisions. Some state prosecutors will go after the burgeoning corruption of Trump’s nominees and their corporate collaborators eager to raid the honey pots of Uncle Sam.

The biggest risk to Trump’s domination will be Trump himself and what damage he will be unleashing that workers, consumers, and communities, even those who voted for him, will feel intensely.

But the biggest risk to Trump’s domination will be Trump himself and what damage he will be unleashing that workers, consumers, and communities, even those who voted for him, will feel intensely. The assault on their health, safety, and economic well-being may weaken Trump’s support. Once people start thinking that MAGA is really MABA (Make America Betrayed Again), the polls should start sliding propitiously from the sky-high expectations of the Paradise that Trump promised every campaign day.

At his core, Trump is not all that much different than his worst predecessors. He continued several Bush/Obama wars overseas in his first term, intensifying his backing of war criminal Bibi Netanyahu. He later swallowed his campaign criticism of price-gouging drug companies. And of course, he loves Wall Street, Houston, (the fossil fuel giants), the corporate welfarists, tax escapes of corporate crooks, those who cheat consumers and crush workers’ rights. Remember that is the way he behaved during his former failed business exploits. Nobody stopped him then and he believes the stars of his destiny will not let anyone stop him now.

Trump is at his core a corporatist and a corporate statist, who pushes bloated military budgets, lawlessness, and police powers, all of which are the frameworks of American fascism.

Buckle your seat belts people, and start the civic resurgence. (See my piece, Rise Up: Congress is Yours for the Taking in the new issue of the Capitol Hill Citizen).

Source: Common Dreams

America is a country of undoubted vast strengths—technological, economic, and cultural—yet its government is profoundly failing its own citizens and the world. Trump’s victory is very easy to understand. It was a vote against the status quo. Whether Trump will fix—or even attempt to fix—what really ails America remains to be seen.
 

The rejection of the status quo by the American electorate is overwhelming. According to Gallup in October 2024, 52% of Americans said they and their families were worse off than four years ago, while only 39% said they were better off and 9% said they were about the same. An NBC national news poll in September 2024 found that 65% of Americans said the country is on the wrong track, while only 25% said that it is on the right track. In March 2024, according to Gallup, only 33% of Americans approved of Joe Biden’s handling of foreign affairs.
 

At the core of the American crisis is a political system that fails to represent the true interests of the average American voter. The political system was hacked by big money decades ago, especially when the U.S. Supreme Court opened the floodgates to unlimited campaign contributions. Since then, American politics has become a plaything of super-rich donors and narrow-interest lobbies, who fund election campaigns in return for policies that favor vested interests rather than the common good.
 

Two groups own the Congress and White House: super-rich individuals and single-issue lobbies.
 

The world watched agape as Elon Musk, the world’s richest person (and yes, a brilliant entrepreneur and inventor), played a unique role in backing Trump’s election victory, both through his vast media influence and funding. Countless other billionaires chipped into Trump’s victory.
 

Many (though not all) of the super-rich donors seeks special favors from the political system for their companies or investments, and most of those desired favors will be duly delivered by the Congress, the White House, and the regulatory agencies staffed by the new administration. Many of these donors also push one overall deliverable: further tax cuts on corporate income and capital gains.
 

Many business donors, I would quickly add, are forthrightly on the side of peace and cooperation with China, as very sensible for business as well as for humanity. Business leaders generally want peace and incomes, while crazed ideologues want hegemony through war.
 

There would have been precious little difference in all of this with a Harris victory. The Democrats have their own long list of the super-rich who financed the party’s presidential and Congressional campaigns. Many of those donors too would have demanded and received special favors.
 

Tax breaks on capital income have been duly delivered by Congress for decades no matter their impact on the ballooning federal deficit, which now stands at nearly 7 percent of GDP, and no matter that the U.S. pre-tax national income in recent decades has shifted powerfully towards capital income and away from labor income. As measured by one basic indicator, the share of labor income in GDP has declined by around 7 percentage points since the end of World War II. As income has shifted from labor to capital, the stock market (and super-wealth) has soared, with the overall stock market valuation rising from 55% of GDP in 1985 to 200% of GDP today!
 

The second group with its hold on Washingtons is single-issue lobbies. These powerful lobbies include the military-industrial complex, Wall Street, Big Oil, the gun industry, big pharma, big Ag, and the Israel Lobby. American politics is well organized to cater to these special interests. Each lobby buys the support of specific committees in Congress and selected national leaders to win control over public policy.
 

The economic returns to special-interest lobbying are often huge: a hundred million dollars of campaign funding by a lobby group can win a hundred billion of federal outlays and/or tax breaks. This is the lesson, for example, of the Israel lobby, which spends a few hundred million dollars on campaign contributions, and harvests tens of billions of dollars in military and economic support for Israel.
 

These special-interest lobbies do not depend on, nor care much about, public opinion. Opinion surveys show regularly that the public wants gun control, lower drug prices, an end of Wall Street bailouts, renewable energy, and peace in Ukraine and the Middle East. Instead, the lobbyists ensure that Congress and the White House deliver continued easy access to handguns and assault weapons, sky-high drug prices, coddling of Wall Street, more oil and gas drilling, weapons for Ukraine, and wars on behalf of Israel.
 

These powerful lobbies are money-fueled conspiracies against the common good. Remember Adam Smith’s famous dictum in the Wealth of Nations (1776): “People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices.”
 

The two most dangerous lobbies are the military-industrial complex (as Eisenhower famously warned us in 1961) and the Israel lobby (as detailed in a scintillating new book by historian Ilan Pappé). Their special danger is that they continue to lead us to war and closer to nuclear Armageddon. Biden’s reckless recent decision to allow U.S. missile strikes deep inside Russia, long advocated by the military-industrial complex, is case in point.
 

The military-industrial complex aims for U.S. “full-spectrum dominance.” It’s purported solutions to world problems are wars and more wars, together with covert regime-change operations, U.S. economic sanctions, U.S. info-wars, color revolutions (led by the National Endowment for Democracy), and foreign policy bullying. These of course have been no solutions at all. These actions, in flagrant violation of international law, have dramatically increased U.S. insecurity.
 

The military-industrial complex (MIC) dragged Ukraine into a hopeless war with Russia by promising Ukraine membership in NATO in the face of Russia’s fervent opposition, and by conspiring to overthrow Ukraine’s government in February 2014 because it sought neutrality rather than NATO membership.
 

The military-industrial complex is currently—unbelievably—promoting a coming war with China. This will of course involve a huge and lucrative arms buildup, the aim of the MIC. Yet it will also threaten World War III or a cataclysmic U.S. defeat in another Asian war.
 

While the Military-Industrial Complex has stoked NATO enlargement and conflicts with Russia and China, the Israel Lobby has stoked America’s serial wars in the Middle East. Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu, more than any U.S. president, has been the lead promoter of America’s backing of disastrous wars in Iraq, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Syria.
 

Netanyahu’s aim is to keep the land that Israel conquered in the 1967 war, creating what is called Greater Israel, and to prevent a Palestinian State. This expansionist policy, in contravention of international law, has given rise to militant pro-Palestinian groups like Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis. Netanyahu’s long-standing policy is for the U.S. to topple or help to topple the governments that support these resistance groups.
 

Incredibly, the Washington neocons and the Israel Lobby actually joined forces to carry out Netanyahu’s disastrous plan for wars across the Middle East. Netanyahu was a lead backer of the War in Iraq. Former Air Force Command Chief Master Sergeant Dennis Fritz has recently described in detail the Israel Lobby’s large role in that war. Ilan Pappé has done the same. In fact, the Israel Lobby has supported U.S.-led or U.S.-backed wars across the Middle East, leaving the targeted countries in ruins and the U.S. budget deep in debt.

In the meantime, the wars and tax cuts for the rich, have offered no solutions for the hardships working-class Americans. As in other high-income countries, employment in U.S. manufacturing fell sharply from the 1980s onward as assembly-line workers were increasingly replaced by robots and “smart systems.” The decline in the labor share of value in the U.S. has been significant, and once again has been a phenomenon shared with other high-countries.
 

Yet American workers have been hit especially hard. In addition to the underlying global technological trends hitting jobs and wages, American workers have been battered by decades of anti-union policies, soaring tuition and healthcare costs, and other anti-worker measures. In high-income countries of northern Europe, “social consumption” (publicly funded healthcare, tuition, housing, and other publicly provided services) and high levels of unionization have sustained decent living standards for workers. Not so in the United States.
 

Yet this was not the end of it. Soaring costs of health care, driven by the private health insurers, and the absence of sufficient public financing for higher education and low-cost online options, created a pincer movement, squeezing the working class between falling or stagnant wages on the one side and rising education and healthcare costs on the other side. Neither the Democrats nor Republicans did much of anything to help the workers.
 

Trump’s voter base is the working class, but his donor base is the super-rich and the lobbies. So, what will happen next? More of the same—wars and tax cuts—or something new and real for the voters?
 

Trump’s purported answer is a trade war with China and the deportation of illegal foreign workers, combined with more tax cuts for the rich. In other words, rather than face the structural challenges of ensuring decent living standards for all, and face forthrightly the staggering budget deficit, Trump’s answers on the campaign trail and in his first term were to blame China and migrants for low working-class wages and wasteful spending for the deficits.
 

This has played well electorally in 2016 and 2024, but will not deliver the promised results for workers in the long run. Manufacturing jobs will not return in large numbers from China since they never went in large numbers to China. Nor will deportations do much to raise living standards of average Americans.
 

This is not to say that real solutions are lacking. They are hiding in plain view—if Trump chooses to take them, over the special interest groups and class interests of Trump’s backers. If Trump chooses real solutions, he would achieve a strikingly positive political legacy for decades to come.
 

The first is to face down the military-industrial complex. Trump can end the war in Ukraine by telling President Putin and the world that NATO will never expand to Ukraine. He can end the risk of war with China by making crystal clear that the U.S. abides by the One China Policy, and as such, will not interfere in China’s internal affairs by sending armaments to Taiwan over Beijing’s objections, and would not support any attempt by Taiwan to secede.
 

The second is to face down the Israel lobby by telling Netanyahu that the U.S. will no longer fight Israel’s wars and that Israel must accept a State of Palestine living in peace next to Israel, as called for by the entire world community. This indeed is the only possible path to peace for Israel and Palestine, and indeed for the Middle East.
 

The third is to close the budget deficit, partly by cutting wasteful spending—notably on wars, hundreds of useless overseas military bases, and sky-high prices the government pays for drugs and healthcare—and partly by raising government revenues. Simply enforcing taxes on the books by cracking down on illegal tax evasion would have raised $625 billion in 2021, around 2.6% of GDP. More should be raised by taxation of soaring capital incomes.
 

The fourth is an innovation policy (aka industrial policy) that serves the common good. Elon Musk and his Silicon Valley friends have succeeded in innovation beyond the wildest expectations. All kudos to Silicon Valley for bringing us the digital age. America’s innovation capacity is vast and robust and an envy of the world.
 

The challenge now is innovation for what? Musk has his eye on Mars and beyond. Captivating, yet there are billions of people on Earth that can and should be helped by the digital revolution in the here and now. A core goal of Trump’s industrial policy should be to ensure that innovation serves the common good, including the poor, the working class, and the natural environment. Our nation’s goals need to go beyond wealth and weapons systems.
 

As Musk and his colleagues know better than anybody, the new AI and digital technologies can usher in an era of low-cost, zero-carbon energy; low-cost healthcare; low-cost higher education; low-cost electricity-powered mobility; and other AI-enabled efficiencies that can raise real living standards of all workers. In the process, innovation should foster high-quality, unionized jobs—not the gig employment that has sent living standards plummeting and worker insecurity soaring.
 

Trump and the Republicans have resisted these technologies in the past. In his first term, Trump let China take the lead in these technologies pretty much across the board. Our goal is not to stop China’s innovations, but to spur our own. Indeed, as Silicon Valley understands while Washington does not, China has long been and should remain America’s partner in the innovation ecosystem. China’s highly efficient and low-cost manufacturing facilities, such as Tesla’s Gigafactory in Shanghai, put Silicon Valley’s innovations into worldwide use … when America tries.
 

All four of these steps are within Trump’s reach, and would justify his electoral triumph and secure his legacy for decades to come. I’m not holding my breath for Washington to adopt these straightforward steps. American politics has been rotten for too long for real optimism in that regard, yet these four steps are all achievable, and would greatly benefit not only the tech and finance leaders who backed Trump’s campaign but the generation of disaffected workers and households whose votes put Trump back into the White House.