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Krystal Ball:
Bush Trump divide healed 🤝 

Everyone can stop pretending that Trumpism represents a break from traditional Republican war mongering and class war for billionaires.

- - 

tweet: NOW - Trump, Condoleezza Rice and Susie Wiles shake hands and walk off together after White House event.

Krystal Ball: Bush Trump divide healed 🤝 Everyone can stop pretending that Trumpism represents a break from traditional Republican war mongering and class war for billionaires. - - tweet: NOW - Trump, Condoleezza Rice and Susie Wiles shake hands and walk off together after White House event.

Krystal Ball...

tweet: https://x.com/krystalball/status/2030064251138699454

#Iran #USA #Israel #EndlessWar
#USpol #Palestine #EUpol all for #Israel

#Epstein #EpsteinWars
#Video #Politics #War #KrystalBall #BreakingPoints
#GeorgeWBush #NeoConservatives

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An illegal act of war against Venezuela We need to be done with the childish taunting that people who question the military operation "support" Maduro.

An illegal act of war against Venezuela:

conservatibbs.substack.com/p/an-illegal...

The Constitution is clear that Congress is the body that declares war.

#Venezuela #NeoConservatives #AmericaFirst

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Trump Is Making Me Miss the Neocons If you doubt neoconservatism is dead, take note of how little attention not only President Donald Trump but even the American press is giving Edmundo González _._ González won Venezuela’s 2024 presidential election _._ Now exiled to Spain, he’s ready for his close-up. But if the bookers at CNN and Fox News and MS NOW have been calling, I can find no video evidence. The poor guy is devolving, right before our eyes into a trivia question. It’s enough to prompt nostalgia for—God help me— President George W. Bush’s _“_commitment to the global expansion of democracy _,”_ a central pillar of what became known as the Bush Doctrine. Not that I ever fancied these principles as Dubya or the neocon hawks whispering in his ear applied them, but at least they demonstrated a proper regard for democratic governance. To jog your memory: The anti-Chavismo __ Plataforma Unitaria Democrática party, or PUD, chose González after President Nicolás Maduro barred the Nobel Peace Prize laureate María Corina Machado from running for president. There’s no doubt that González won the election— _The Washington Post_ calculated that he got __twice as many votes as Maduro—but Maduro, in a maneuver one worries Trump may someday emulate,__claimed victory and refused to leave office. The United States _,_ the __European Parliament _,_ and various other countries recognized González as the rightful winner. Since the invasion, Machado and French President Emmanuel Macron _ _ have urged that González be installed as president. González himself posted a video online Sunday saying _, “_ As the president of Venezuela, I call on the security establishment to enforce the mandate that the people elected on July 28, 2024.” Hardly anybody covered this; I learned about it from reading _The Jerusalem Post_. (There was also, I later learned, a five-paragraph squib in _The Wall Street Journal_.) Is that any way to treat Venezuela’s rightful president? To the limited extent American reporters ask why Maduro’s (and Hugo Chavez’s) Partido Socialista Unido de Venezuela party, or PSUV, remains in power after Trump’s invasion and removal of their standard bearer, it’s to suggest that Venezuela’s president should be Machado _—_ who, yes, probably would have won the presidency had Maduro let her run. Still, she was not the victor. The problem is not only an American president who can’t be bothered to justify an oil-motivated invasion by paying lip service to the promotion of democracy, but a press corps that no longer expects democracy to matter in the conduct of American foreign policy. That expectation was killed by the Iraq War, in which, as I noted yesterday, the price of deposing a dictator and establishing some semblance of democracy was 9,000 American lives and $3 trillion. Still, it’s one thing to understand that expanding democracy abroad isn’t worth paying that price (especially when the war is really about oil). It’s quite another to believe democracy is _never_ worth paying any price or bearing any burden, even when these are pretty close to zero, as seems the case in Venezuela. _The Washington Post_reported Sunday that Trump vetoed Machado as president because he’s annoyed she accepted a Nobel Peace Prize that he believes he should have won. (On Monday, Machado offered to give him the medal.) But Trump’s lunatic grudge doesn’t apply to González. Apparently, Trump threw his support to Maduro’s vice president, Delcy Rodríguez, because the CIA told him only Rodríguez, Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello, and Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino could maintain order. Never mind that Cabello and Padrino were indicted alongside Maduro for drug offenses (and presumably will continue to commit them as Trump allows them to consolidate power). How’s this for references: _The New York Times_calls Cabello “the face of the country’s repression apparatus.” Padrino is Venezuela’s top military official; his parents named him after Vladimir Lenin, according to _The Wall Street Journal_ , and, after an infantry training trip years ago to Fort Benning, Padrino said he’d witnessed “the monster in its entrails.” Did I mention the State Department is still offering a $25 million reward for Cabello’s capture and a $15 million reward for Padrino’s? We’re a long way from the justification (if you prefer, posturing) that shipped our troops to Iraq. “We need to strengthen our ties to democratic allies and to challenge regimes hostile to our interests and values,” said the 1997 manifesto for the Project for A New American Century, a neoconservative group that guided Dubya’s Iraq strategy. That word “challenge” ended up doing a lot more work than perhaps even the signatories anticipated. But the overall sentiment was hard to argue with. “Lasting peace is gained as justice and democracy advance,” Dubya said in November 2003. “We will raise up an ideal of democracy in every part of the world.” Wouldn’t it be nice to hear an American president say that now? I don’t want to take this argument too far. As Peter Steinfels pointed out in his classic 1979 book _The Neoconservatives_, the neocons’ idealism about promoting democracy abroad accompanied a certain wariness of it at home. Answering Al Smith’s dictum that “the only cure for the evils of democracy is more democracy,” Samuel Huntington wrote in 1976 that “applying that cure at the present time could well be adding fuel to the flames.” As for Bush, Trump’s electoral strategy of disenfranchisement through bogus voter-fraud claims was born in Bush’s White House. The Bush Doctrine that sang the praises of democracy less attractively rejected multilateralism (more Trumpism avant la lettre) and rationalized pre-emptive military attacks. But Trump doesn’t even pretend to care about democratic values—he flamboyantly abjures them. As ___TNR_ _’s_ Michael Tomasky observed earlier this week, Trump is affirmatively against _“_ the idea that America’s military might needs to be tethered to some positive-sum goal that positions the United States as a force that fosters global security and Western democracy…. War is fine, provided it’s just about what everything is, to him, really all about: raw power in the service of plunder and conquest.” Even when Trump takes the legalistic high ground that this intervention was merely a police action to arrest an indicted drug criminal, consider that when President George H.W. Bush claimed the same thing in Panama about Manuel Noriega he made sure that Guillermo Endara, whose ascent to the presidency Noriega had blocked, got sworn in on the day of the invasion. Poppy Bush’s invasion defied domestic and international law just as much as Trump’s, but Panama has been a democracy ever since. Venezuela will remain a dictatorship. Were neoconservative sermons about advancing democratic ideals abroad inconsistent when applied only to foreign nations? Certainly. But at least they acknowledged some need (most famously in Jeane Kirkpatrick’s famous essay “Dictatorships and Double Standards”) to justify these inconsistencies. For all its many faults, there was an idealistic strain to neoconservatism, and an intellectual rigor that made it somewhat accountable to respectful counter-argument. I find myself sorely missing these things now. I bet González does, too.
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The New Neoconservatives Bari Weiss gate-keeps the right against antiwar conservatives. Sound familiar? The post The New Neoconservatives appeared first on The American Conservative.
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You’d have to sell your soul to THE DEVIL to follow an individual like donald j. trump. He knows it. They know it. I know it. Now you know it, too. #evil #fascism #USA #trump #NEOconservatives #RussianPropaganda

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You thought #neoconservatives were bad?

Think again. And just wait for the next #neofascist quagmire. 🗺️

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Norman Podhoretz Was the Ultimate Neocon My late father knew Norman Podhoretz (_Alav Hashalom_) when they were both counselors at a Jewish summer camp in upstate New York. This would have been in 1946, maybe 1947. Assigned to write lyrics for an official camp song, they got in trouble for making satirical reference to the management’s pompous boast that it served “a cultured clientele.” I never knew the man (my dad was three years older and they didn’t stay in touch), but I kind of like Podhoretz for that. It was a rare departure from his defining characteristic—a lifelong slavish adherence to a succession of orthodoxies. Podhoretz was a quick study who believed the secret to success as an intellectual was to master some highly disciplined mode of thought and never deviate from it. Because this approach is obviously very confining, any thinkers and writers of any worth who start down this path break free of it. Podhoretz’s approach was different; when one orthodoxy no longer suited his purposes, he exchanged it for another, and then another. Podhoretz eventually settled into neoconservatism, an intellectual movement that began as a liberal critique of the New Left counterculture, hardened into anti-liberalism, then degenerated into an indiscriminate military interventionism. You don’t hear much about neoconservatism these days because the Iraq War discredited it starting around 2005. (Though Donald Trump’s latest folly, a potential regime change war in Venezuela, threatens a revival.) Podhoretz was perhaps neoconservatism’s last surviving active practitioner, and certainly the last survivor of an earlier milieu of Upper West Side liberal intellectuals known as “the family,” from which Podhoretz exited noisily with the 1967 publication of his memoir, _Making It_. _Making It_ is a better book than is remembered, mostly for the way it captures Podhoretz’s youthful resistance to assimilation into the _goyische_ ruling class. His tutor in these matters was a high school English teacher he calls Mrs. K. who mentored him between the ages of 13 and 16. “My grades were very high and would obviously remain so,” Podhoretz writes, “but what would they avail me if I continued to go about looking and sounding like a ‘filthy little slum child’ (the epithet she would invariably hurl at me whenever we had an argument about ‘manners’)?” Podhoretz carried this identitarian resistance into Columbia, which sought to make of him “a facsimile WASP,” and what he writes about that is thrilling. But Podhoretz also came to regard academic achievement as a kind of cynical game, and what he writes about that is just depressing. Podhoretz’s cynicism comes across most fully when he relates how, in graduate school, he shifted his intellectual loyalty from his mentor Lionel Trilling at Columbia (of whom Podhoretz had been “capable of an effortless imitation of the master’s style”) to F.R. Leavis, who taught Podhoretz on a fellowship in England: > I listened to him, I watched him, I studied his books. I appropriated his opinions and made them mine…. [B]efore the end of my first year at Cambridge, the master’s ultimate accolade was bestowed upon me: he invited me to write for [the scholarly journal Leavis edited,] _Scrutiny_. What Podhoretz describes here goes well past the influence of a great teacher on a bright student. By his own testimony, Podhoretz engaged in systematic and fully-conscious mimicry, a sort of Chat GPT before its time. Podhoretz believed that in _Making It_ he was telling an ugly truth about how everybody gets ahead in life. In fact, the book’s brutal reviews said, he was telling an ugly truth about himself. Wilfrid Sheed compared _Making It_ to a seedy strip tease: > Norman likes money (tiny bump), Norman likes to be well-regarded (desultory twirl of tassel). Sorry men, no refunds. It’s only on the way home that we realize that we have seen a rather dirtier show than we thought. Podhoretz’s eventual response to such vilification was to abandon literary criticism altogether for political commentary; to convert to neoconservatism; and to bring _Commentary,_ the magazine published by the American Jewish Committee that he edited for 35 years, along with him. In 1976, Podhoretz co-founded The Committee on the Present Danger to oppose détente policies with the Soviet Union initiated by President Richard Nixon. In 1980 Podhoretz argued that the United States was surrendering to Soviet military superiority when in fact the Soviet military was falling apart; within a decade it would lose Afghanistan to _mujahideen_ , and not long after the country itself would cease to exist. What at first sounded like liberal apostacy quickly matured into alignment with the hard right. By the end of the 1970s he was a Reagan Republican. New information made little impression on him. Podhoretz responded to the 1993 Oslo peace agreement by writing that Israel was “becoming less sensible and less pragmatic.” In 2007, Podhoretz published a book titled _World War IV: The Long Struggle Against Islamofascism_ even as an American troop surge was turning the tide in a long Iraq War most Americans wished they’d never started. In 2022, Podhoretz said “I am perfectly prepared to believe the 2020 election may have been stolen.” Never mind that his own son John, who’d succeeded him as editor of _Commentary_ , called 2020 “a staggering repudiation of Donald Trump.” When Podhoretz _père_ subscribed to an orthodoxy, he didn’t make adjustments. “The Neocons Were Right” writes David Brooks in the December issue of _The_ _Atlantic_. If you add to the end of that headline the words “About Trump,” I’ll agree; apart from Norman Podhoretz, it’s been hard to find anybody previously affiliated with neoconservatism who can stomach Trump. Brooks’s essay praises not late-stage war-mongering neoconservatism but an earlier phase when it embraced moral agency and asked tough questions about failing liberal domestic policies like deinstitutionalizing the mentally ill. Even then, though, neocons were short on answers and deferred to the paleoconservative antigovernment solution: Shut it down. The only affirmative neoconservative policy I can name is to wage war. In Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush, the neocons found presidents willing to do their bidding, bankrolling an illegal war in Nicaragua in the 1980s and waging a pointless war in Iraq in the aughts. Both presidents turned away from the neocons in their second terms. Still, Norman Podhoretz’s ardor for the cause never flagged. He’d found his team and he didn’t know any other way to play.
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The State of American Conservatism The competing legacies of Barry Goldwater and William F. Buckley still shape American political discourse, but the relationship between their conservatisms is more complex than commonly portrayed.
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Neoconservatism vs. Neoliberalism - What's the Difference? | This vs. That What's the difference between Neoconservatism and Neoliberalism? Neoconservatism and Neoliberalism are both political ideologies that emerged in the late 20t...

Neoconservatives vs. Neoliberals.

Both are terrible for the Economy, Economic Justice, and the Working Class.

#Neoconservatives #Neoliberals #politics #ideology #economics #economy #justice #workingclass #explanation

thisvsthat.io/neoconservat...

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THE POWER OF NIGHTMARES (The Rise of the Politics of Fear)/BBC Documentary (2004)
THE POWER OF NIGHTMARES (The Rise of the Politics of Fear)/BBC Documentary (2004) YouTube video by RW Scott

21 years on & imo still the most insightful examination of the history of 9/11 & critique of the war on terror. every American should watch it. feel free to share/copy/preserve. #911attacks #islamism #neoconservatives #waronterror #history www.youtube.com/watch?v=hhHS...

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Trump’s Pro-Israel McCarthyism Is Already Boomeranging The trouble with McCarthyism is that once it gets going, it ensnares unintended figures. We’re seeing this with Trump’s crackdown on speech criticizing Israel. #McCarthyism #Trump #Israel #ForeignPolicy #FreeSpeech #Neoconservatives

Trump’s Pro-Israel McCarthyism Is Already Boomeranging

The trouble with McCarthyism is that once it gets going, it ensnares unintended figures. We’re seeing this with Trump’s crackdown on speech criticizing Israel. #McCarthyism #Trump #Israel #ForeignPolicy #FreeSpeech #Neoconservatives

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#ICE #NEOCONSERVATIVES #fascist #browshirts

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Trump and the viable road to peace in Ukraine 'I did not vote for him and have been critical of most of his moves. But in regard to the war...I believe he is on the right track'

Piece by former Ambassador #JackMatlock. Some will say he's a #Putin apologist. He is a diplomat, after all. It's about the big picture, ending the "new" Cold War wrought by #neoconservatives starting in the #Clinton admin. Good riddance to very bad policy. responsiblestatecraft.org/trump-ukrain...

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The pattern of trying to draw the #UnitedStates directly into wars begun by #Israel is an old 1, & so far unsuccessful. Not even #Neoconservatives are stupid enough to take THAT bait. #BenjaminNetanyahu is taking a real gamble as he tries to save his political career.

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US Decided To Have War With Iran! Act 1: Setting The Stage To Play The Victim.
US Decided To Have War With Iran! Act 1: Setting The Stage To Play The Victim. The direct and open attack of US and UK forces on military bases in Yemen are the start of the war with Iran that the Neocons have been wanting to fight for ...

'#US Decided To Have War With #Iran! Act 1: Setting The Stage To Play The Victim'

www.youtube.com/watch?v=vGjS...

#NeutralityStudies #MiddleEast #Mideast #MiddleEastPolicy #MideastPolicy #Israel #Gaza #Palestinians #Palestine #Apartheid #Genocide #Yemen #Neocons #Neoconservatives

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Shocking Apathy: A Glimpse Into The Cold Minds Of Sullivan and Zakaria
Shocking Apathy: A Glimpse Into The Cold Minds Of Sullivan and Zakaria Jake Sullivan and Fareed Zakaria recently wrote lead-essays in Foreign Policy, Washington's Nr. 1 Grand-Strategy magazine. The level of revelations is quite ...

'Shocking Apathy: A Glimpse Into The Cold Minds Of Sullivan and Zakaria'

www.youtube.com/watch?v=iXeG...

#NeutralityStudies #Neocons #Neoconservatives #Ideology #JakeSullivan #FareedZakaria

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