21 October 2025
Debunking Trump’s Megalomaniacal Fantasy
C’mon folks. We all give President Trump credit for bearing down on stubborn international adversaries to get them to temper their conflicts. We must also concede, for some of us begrudgingly, that federal programs beneficial to the public at large will sometimes be better administered by state or municipal bureaucracies.
But the shameless indignities displayed by the Trump
administration and outlined by Michelle Goldberg in the 10/20/2025 New York
Times (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/20/opinion/trump-degredations-maga.html?searchResultPosition=1)
are insulting to all of us Americans. Not only does the president himself
engage arrogantly in scurrilously demeaning his political enemies, but he also blithely
expects his supporters to accept his self-serving manner of running our
government’s affairs.
There must be a reason his yes-men and women acolytes, with whom he has
loaded his cabinet and other senior administrations positions, are sacrificing
their future credibility by participating in Trump’s megalomaniacal
fantasy. Maybe they anticipate joining
a subsequent fascistic U.S. regime. They
may have been promised a guaranteed (even escrowed) financial bounty that
assures them a comfortable retreat when
a semblance of liberal democracy is restored to America.
19 October 2025
Democrats’ Main Problem
Democrats’ main problem, as implied by Chris Hayes in the 10/19/2025 NYT, is that they continue to focus on the content of political messages rather than on getting the attention of enough voters to win in the electoral college. Only if the federal electoral system is constitutionally changed will the substance of issues matter in national elections as much as the style in which they are presented.
Life is short. Playing up to the mass media-corrupted public now requires entertainingly convincing them of ways to shorten the time they must wait for ultimate rewards. It also means finding resources to achieve that.
18 October 2025
No Kings Follow-up
Indeed, the turnout of the 2025 No Kings rally was impressive. Presumably, that makes the critical next step easier. Now a sustained movement equivalent to the suffragette or equal rights campaigns has to be formed to change the direction of our government.
Domestic Tranquility vs Immigration Enforcement
Recent violent abductions of suspected illegal immigrants in Chicago, Los Angeles, and other U.S. cities by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents have employed tactics that violate the peaceful ambience of those communities. Local state and municipal police forces are responsible for maintaining civil order on behalf of their residents. However, local law enforcement has, so far, been notably absent from preventing ICE’s harassment and brutality, which have been captured on social media, not to mention reported by broadcast and cable news reports.
10 October 2025
Dispelling The Tariff Anomaly
The initial result of President Trump’s autonomous imposition of an average 18.6 percent tariff on imported products has been a surge in U.S. government revenues without expected inflationary consequences, surprising most economists. What this really means is that America can afford to pay more for goods manufactured abroad because they get additional value from allowing its workforce to concentrate on higher technology production.
Rather than producing Halloween costumes, for example, the U.S. designs and integrates sophisticated spooky year-round diversions. Rather than manufacture standard speed boats, the U.S. engineers and builds water transportation systems that combine high efficiency, advanced materials, luxury features, and wide mission diversity. These sorts of accomplishments take time and expertise to achieve. On the other hand, the everyday consumer goods that can easily be made, particularly in less developed foreign countries, are an important part of America’s international imports, which generates much of the recently ballooning tariff receipts.
The low inflationary impact of the tariffs will not last long. The executives of foreign suppliers realize that in the long run products like theirs (e.g., the Model T, the VCR, and others) will disappear from use. So, to preserve their share of the market for as long as it lasts, they are absorbing much of the cost of the tariffs. All of those who stay in business in the future, however, will incorporate the cost of import taxes on new products into their respective prices, making tariffs just another ingredient in the final price that American consumers will end up paying for. As imported goods get more consumer-friendly, their prices will go up, along with the anount of tariffs on them.
Until that time and afterwards, tariffs will have paid for a large share of government expenses but only by shifting more of that burden towards the lower income segments of society, for whom the tariffs are a more significant drain on their budgets. That strategy will have rewarded the financial backers of Trump's authoritarian regime by reducing pressure to increase their income taxes. It won't improve the general welfare. A coalition of concerned activists from a wide spectrum of classes and occupations needs to be mobilized by a charismatic leader to resurrect the country’s liberal democracy that favors the common people.