Tag: Joe Biden

  • The Trump-Kennedy Center?

    The Trump-Kennedy Center?

    “I have a good memory, so I can remember things, which is very fortunate,” a tuxedo-clad President Trump said on the red carpet before hosting the Kennedy Center Honors. “But just, I wanted to just be myself. You have to be yourself.”

    To open the show, Trump stood behind the presidential lectern and invoked the name of Johnny Carson, who, he said, was a master improviser like him. Trump hadn’t prepared much. He didn’t need to. “This is the first time a president of the United States has ever hosted the event. I don’t know why.”

    It’s actually kind of an interesting question. Ronald Reagan, of course, would have made an excellent Kennedy Center honors host. Both Bill Clinton and Barack Obama enjoyed a stage and an audience in their primetime years, and George W. Bush could have smirked his way through some one-liners and artist introductions. Other presidents would have been awful: imagine Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter or George H.W. Bush trying to host an awards show. We all know Joe Biden couldn’t have done the job. “They tried to get Biden to do this four years in a row,” Trump said on Sunday night. “I would have watched.”

    But for Trump, who, more than anyone ever, loves being president, hosting a show like this is his final form. He appeared on stage three times: at the beginning, at the end and before the intermission. The show also included segments, taped from the White House, where Trump introduced the individual honorees. “This is fantastic, isn’t it?” Trump said after the intermission. “It is just so incredible… This is the greatest evening in the history of the Kennedy Center. Not even a contest. There has never been anything like it. The show is already getting rave reviews. I guarantee you the fake news will say he was horrible as an emcee.”

    The fake news has said no such thing yet, but that’s partly because only a handful of fake news reporters were present on Sunday night. The actual ceremony will air on CBS and Paramount+ on December 23. This broadcast will ruin the Christmases of the types of people who like to warn us on social media that democracy is in danger.

    Trump referred to the building as the “Trump-Kennedy Center,” and, after an awkward response to that comment, said, “I’m sorry. This is terribly embarrassing.”

    “Well, we’re really having a good time tonight,” he continued. “So many people I know in this audience. Some good. Some bad. Some I truly love and respect. Some I just hate.”

    By now, we all know the somewhat odd list of honorees by heart: Sylvester Stallone, Michael Crawford, George Strait, Gloria Gaynor and KISS. Anyone who had “President Donald Trump honors KISS at the Kennedy Center” on their bingo card 40 years ago would have gotten a one-way ticket to Bellevue. But here we are.

    America is back, Trump said, invoking the name of a disco queen whose biggest hit came 45 years ago. “Stallone said it strongly in the movie. It’s all about winning, if you move forward that’s how winning is done. The winners are exactly what these great legends are about. They also know how to go through hell.” The honorees, he said, are “giants” in their genres. “Many of you are horrible, miserable people but you never give up.”

    The show closed with Cheap Trick performing a cover of KISS’s “Rock and Roll All Nite” that had the audience on its feet, and Trump, presumably, doing the Trump Dance. “They probably don’t like me very much,” Trump said. “But we don’t care. We want bigness. We don’t care if they like Trump or not.”

  • Donald Trump’s affordability blues

    Donald Trump’s affordability blues

    So President Donald Trump may have dozed off during his cabinet meeting on Tuesday. Who could blame him? Listening to Secretary of State Marco Rubio drone on about Russia would prompt souls less hardy than Trump to catch some shuteye. 

    What should be keeping Trump awake, or at least uneasy, is the shaky state of the American economy. The federal government may not be releasing much data about the economy, but the payroll processing company ADP is reporting that private employers cut 32,000 jobs last month. The losses were heavily concentrated among small employers who have been slammed by Trump’s capricious tariff policy. The only positive sign has been in the data center industry, where investments in AI have been fueling stock market gains. A recent Fox News poll indicated that 76 percent of voters view the economy negatively and that twice as many blame Trump as Biden. 

    When he’s not hosting foreign dignitaries or playing golf or discussing the architectural plans for his ornate new ballroom or anathematizing media organizations with a “Hall of Shame” on the White House website, Trump has been grasping at whatever straws he can to try and prop up the economy. On Tuesday, Trump mused about appointing his economic advisor Kevin Hassett as Federal Reserve chairman in the expectation that he will push for radically lower interest rates – a move that might briefly juice the economy but would also send inflation soaring. 

    On Wednesday, he took a fresh swipe at former president Joe Biden’s Green New Deal policies by rolling back fuel standards, a measure that the American Petroleum Institute has been advocating. That may benefit Ford and GM in the short term but exacerbates their dependence on gasoline cars that are being phased out abroad. Add in the tariffs that Trump is imposing and American industry could become increasingly unable to compete abroad. 

    A sign of the vexation that businesses are feeling towards Trump came with retail giant Costco’s announcement this past Friday that it intends to sue the administration over its tariffs. For the most part, big business has tried to placate rather than confront Trump. No longer. Bumble Bee Foods and Ray-Bans, among others, are already suing Trump. Meanwhile, the Supreme Court appears likely to rule that Trump’s tariffs are unconstitutional.  

    Nothing could boost the economy more than a sweeping verdict that abolishes them. But the administration remains fixated with Herbert Hoover economics – retaining tariffs, whenever and wherever possible. If the Supreme Court rules against it, then “we can recreate the exact tariff structure with [sections] 301, with 232, with 122,” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in an interview at the New York Times DealBook Summit.  

    Trump himself has been touting a $2,000 tariff dividend that would be paid to Americans. But Fortune notes that the math doesn’t add up. It would cost roughly twice as much as the tariffs have raised to disburse a dividend. According to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, the dividend check would cost $600 billion a year – or $6 trillion over a period of 10 years. 

    Trump, a serial bankrupt, is not unaccustomed to financial obstacles. But his struggles with the economy are starting to tax his skills at political prestidigitation. As prices go up and jobs go down, Trump has made it clear that he doesn’t like what people are saying. “They just say the word,” he said during his cabinet meeting. “It doesn’t mean anything to anybody. They just say it – affordability. I inherited the worst inflation in history. There was no affordability. Nobody could afford anything.” They still can’t. 

  • Climate doom is not science

    Climate doom is not science

    The costs of not dealing with climate change are, of course, much higher than the costs of dealing with it. We know this because, as climate campaigners keep telling us, climate change is going to set the world alight and unleash mad tempests which are going to wreak destruction on the global economy. Not a few of them have been trying to prove this by parroting a paper by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research published in the journal Nature in 2024 which concluded that a rise of 8.5 Celsius in global temperatures by 2100 will shrink the economy by 62 percent. Never mind that hardly anyone thinks that such temperature rises are even remotely likely – we are certainly not presently experiencing even nearly such an upwards trend in global temperature – the paper was widely reported as scientific fact rather than as a piece of highly speculative modeling.

    But now it appears that the paper fails even as a piece of speculative modeling. Following a critique by economists at Stanford University in August the paper has been withdrawn by Nature. A cock-up with the data for a single country, Uzbekistan, turns out to have skewed the figures so much that, when corrected, the paper suggested a fall of 23 percent in global economic output, not 62 percent.

    Needless to say, the reaction of some climate campaigners has been to say that 20 percent of the global economy is still quite a lot of money, and still shows the dramatic impact of a changing climate. But that is hardly the point. If you can magically reinstate 40 percent of global output by correcting some statistics for Uzbekistan, what does it tell you about the whole exercise? This, and all other modeling of its kind, are essentially useless. Economic forecasts for 12 months ahead have shown themselves to have a pretty appalling record. Why does anyone think that a study trying to predict the global economy in 75 years’ time – climate change or no climate change – has any veracity whatsoever? All the model is doing is reflecting the assumptions which are put into it, which are themselves skewed by the prejudices of the people who build it. In this case, and in the case of all this kind of research, that tends to focus on negative effects of a changing climate – higher temperatures and rainfall – while ignoring the positive changes: fewer cold extremes and a world which appears to be becoming steadily less windy.

    According to one often-repeated claim, crop yields are going to collapse, causing widespread hunger – a claim which is in direct odds to real world data showing that crop yields continue to increase. When you look a little more carefully at the models which show yields will collapse you find that they analyze all kinds of negative effects of climate change – that some places may experience desertification, without any attempt to acknowledge that other locations will see more favorable conditions for growing food nor that technology is surely going to continue to boost yields by other means, such as gene-editing and improved cultivation techniques.

    One apocalyptic paper in a scientific journal has been exposed as deeply flawed – a piece of news which is unlikely to be reported with nearly as much enthusiasm as the original paper. But that doesn’t mean that we won’t continue to be bombarded with fanciful, doom-laden predictions regarding climate change. There is a deep negative bias in this kind of work, and that will remain the case.

  • Trump blames Biden for shooting of National Guardsmen

    Trump blames Biden for shooting of National Guardsmen

    In response to the attack on Thanksgiving eve by a suspected Afghan national upon two West Virginia National Guardsmen, President Trump demanded a renewed effort to expel illegal immigrants. During a brief and uncompromising address from West Palm Beach that bore the rhetorical fingerprints of White House advisor Stephen Miller, Trump ripped into illegal immigration and former president Joe Biden.

    The President deemed the influx of refugees from Afghanistan and elsewhere the “single greatest national-security threats” facing America. Biden was a “disastrous president.” Trump reserved special scorn for his detractors who he said purport to protect constitutional liberties but are leaving America exposed to rampant criminality. One big problem for Trump, however, is that although the suspected shooter was “mass paroled” into the country and immigrated here in 2021, he was apparently approved for asylum in April 2025 – by the Trump administration.

    It was Biden, Trump implied, who, more than anyone else, was culpable for the descent of American cities into criminality. To listen to Trump it might have seemed as though Biden had flown in Afghans expressly for the purpose of targeting innocent Americans. Indeed, Trump averred that not only Afghans but also Somalis are pillaging America. He declared, “We must now reexamine every single alien who has entered our country from Afghanistan under Biden, and we must take all necessary measures to ensure the removal of any alien from any country who does not belong here, or add benefit to our country.” Trump has already called for the termination of special status for Somalis living in Minnesota, a stance that he is likely to double down on.

    Throughout his speech, Trump’s rhetoric was sweeping. But Trump’s actual response – an additional 500 National Guardsmen to be deployed to the nation’s capital – was not. Trump, for example, could have declared that he intends to terminate Washington’s Home Rule and return to the days of yore when the federal government ran the district. Perhaps he envisions such a prospect.

    Trump’s critics are arguing that the same measures he took to impose law and order are creating the very havoc he decries. New Yorker writer Jane Mayer stated that the Guardsmen should “never have been” in Washington in the first place. The White House responded by calling her a “disgusting ghoul.” But others are voicing their disquiet with the stationing of federal troops in Washington as well.

    Their cautions will surely be portrayed by Trump and his advisers as an exercise in pusillanimity. The shooting took place near Farragut Square. In the center of the square is a prominent statue dedicated to the legendary Admiral David Farragut. Inscribed on the plinth of the statue is his credo, “Damn the torpedoes! Full speed ahead!” Will Trump follow suit?

  • Is Trump’s $2,000 tariff dividend plan loopy?

    Is Trump’s $2,000 tariff dividend plan loopy?

    It’s becoming increasingly taxing for Donald Trump to defend his tariff policy. His latest gambit is to float the prospect of a $2,000 rebate to Americans from the tens of billions that the federal government has collected in tariffs. But will this prove any more successful than his previous attempts to justify his loopy tariffs?

    With the Supreme Court apparently poised to strike down his tariffs as a form of revenue collection designed to perform an end-run around Congress, Trump is scrambling. As usual, bravado prevails. On Sunday, he declared, “A dividend of at $2000 a person (not including high income people!) will be paid to everyone,” the president said on Truth Social.” Trump also dismissed his detractors as “FOOLS!” In his view, “We are taking in Trillions of Dollars and will soon begin paying down our ENORMOUS DEBT, $37 Trillion. Record Investment in the USA, plants and factories going up all over the place.”

    What specific factories Trump meant was left unsaid. The truth is that a small coterie of tech firms is driving the American economy by building AI centers. To fund them, companies are relying on exotic debt-financed options. If that bubble pops, it could be 2008 all over again – or worse.

    Speculation about a 1929 redux is on the rise. Former Securities and Exchange Commission official William A. Birdthistle notes that Trump has been “has been firing regulators and vigorously tearing down the guardrails that have kept our markets thriving for nine decades.” As he bellows about the efficacy of high tariffs, Trump himself seems intent on replicating the 1930 Smoot-Hawley tariff which ensured that America tumbled even deeper into the Great Depression. At least Smoot-Hawley was passed by Congress. Trump is doing it singlehandedly while Republican lawmakers cower in fear at the consequences.

    The difficulty for Trump is that in promising an economic boom, he has highlighted his responsibility for inflation and unemployment. Voters, as the recent election showed, remain as unhappy about the economy as they were during the Biden era, when the White House also issued a steady stream of happy talk. In July 2021 Biden dismissed the notion that inflation would prove to be a persistent problem: “Our experts believe, and the data shows, that most of the price increases we’ve seen are expected to be temporary.”

    Speaking at the American Business Forum in Miami this past Wednesday, Trump insisted that nothing less than an ”economic miracle” was taking place under his leadership. He also invoked his favorite adverb, tremendously, to state that “Americans are doing tremendously now.” A day later, he said, “I don’t want to hear about affordability” – a line that is certain to feature in Democratic campaign ads. Trump is also touting a new Walmart Thanksgiving meal as 25 percent cheaper than last year, but it also has six fewer items than the 2024 basket. The most recent consumer price index shows that grocery prices were up 2.7 percent in September compared to a year ago. So much for whipping inflation now.

    Then there is the government shutdown. Disrupting air travel, terminating SNAP benefits and allowing health insurance premiums to soar even as Trump sends billions to Argentina is hardly a recipe for promoting economic growth. Some Republicans are getting antsy. “We need to deal with [health care] now because, number one, it’s the right thing to do, just morally,” New Jersey Congressman Jeff Van Drew said on Fox this past Wednesday.” “Number two, we’re going to get killed” in the 2026 midterm elections.

    But Trump has other concerns. On Friday night, he threw another opulent gala event for his chums at Mar-a-Lago, complete with opera singers and ice sculptures. As Republican lawmakers fret about their futures, Trump continues to party on.

  • Don’t take Virginia Giuffre’s memoir at face value

    Don’t take Virginia Giuffre’s memoir at face value

    Six months after she took her own life aged 41, Virginia Roberts Giuffre’s “memoir” Nobody’s Girl, written with her professional collaborator Amy Wallace, has been published. It is bound to evoke distinct and intensified feelings in readers because the account of her suffering, coupled with the manner of her death, increases the emotional impact of the narrative. 

    The writing style and tone of the book feel authentic. Giuffre, who was born in 1983, uses words like “rad,” meaning awesome or cool, and “stoner dude,” to describe someone who smokes a lot of weed plus her constant reliance “on music to make the world make sense” seem very “Xennial” as late Generation Xers or early millennials are sometimes called.

    If Giuffre is to be believed, one could not fail, surely, to be moved by her account, which is quite graphic in places, and by the arc of a tragic life that is chronicled in four parts with emotive titles: “Daughter,” “Prisoner,” “Survivor” and “Warrior.” There’s no index, however, so the book could have done with a dramatis personae to help keep track of who’s who in a large cast of characters. Above all, it would have benefited from a detailed timeline of her life and the key events she describes.

    Precision, particularly as to accurately identifying named abusers, when and where the alleged abuse took place and crucially how old she was at the relevant times, is not, however, the author’s strong point when it comes to standing up her narrative version of events. This precision really matters in the sexual abuse accusations Giuffre levels.

    Who cares, you may ask, if she was 16, 17 or 18 when she met Jeffrey Epstein, who she accused of years of abuse? It isn’t a trivial difference, however, when it comes to statutory-rape charges. At my sister Ghislaine’s trial, as Giuffre herself notes, to her manifest disappointment: “Two of [the] accusers testified only after the judge instructed jurors that their description of alleged sexual conduct could not be used to convict [Ghislaine] of the crimes charged… “Kate” was above the age of consent in the [relevant] jurisdiction… and “Annie” [was not considered a minor in New Mexico where the alleged sexual contact had occurred].”

    Giuffre had previously accused Alan Dershowitz, a sometime Epstein lawyer, of abusing her no fewer than six times – including in the Netflix series Filthy Rich – but later admitted she “may have been mistaken.” Yet in her memoir she writes: “Some critics have insinuated that there’s no way I could remember these men… But to them, I say simply this: when a man has been on top of you, his face just inches from your own, you remember him.” But if that’s true, how could she have been mistaken about Dershowitz?

    When it comes to Giuffre’s firsthand account of her time “in Epstein and Maxwell’s orbit,” Amy Wallace in her preface states: “[It] was supported by thousands of pages of public court documents, including sworn depositions… [containing] the full names of many of the men who Virginia alleged she had been trafficked to. Their contents are supported by numerous other sources including… published books on the subject by authors such as the Miami Herald’s Julie K. Brown [and] Virginia’s former attorney Bradley Edwards…” As if the sheer quantity of such material and the implied quality of the names in support are standalone proof of Giuffre’s overall veracity. This is a surprisingly Stalinist approach to corroboration. 

    Giuffre herself states in the introduction to her memoir, “Until now I have never told my whole story. Doing so allows me to fill in gaps, to provide context where it has been sorely lacking, and in key places to set the record straight.” She confirms, however, that she did in fact “complete a 139-page typewritten manuscript entitled The Billionaire’s Playboy Club.” Although unpublished it found its way into the court record. 

    The “context” she then provides about that version of her life is to blame the Mail on Sunday reporter Sharon Churcher for advising her (in 2011/12) to fictionalize parts of the narrative to avoid being sued. This, she says, accounts for why “my third encounter with Prince Andrew… occurred at Zorro Ranch [in New Mexico], not where it actually occurred: the Caribbean.” It wasn’t until 2019 that Giuffre’s own lawyers had to admit in a court document that the manuscript was indeed “fictionalized.” 

    It is from this disclaimed memoir that Julie K. Brown directly quotes Giuffre verbatim or paraphrases her in her 2021 book, Perversion of Justice. The book is dedicated to Giuffre, which might explain why Brown was happy to corroborate her version of events to Wallace. Is it any wonder, therefore, that Giuffre’s credibility issues were one reason she was neither named as a victim nor called as a witness in my sister’s prosecution? She claimed she was not called as a witness because she would have been “a distraction” but that’s a self-serving lie.

    At Ghislaine’s sentencing hearing, despite not featuring in her trial in any capacity, Giuffre – who was never cross-examined under oath in any legal proceeding – was allowed by the judge to provide a victim-impact statement. The statement itself could not be subjected to cross-examination and Giuffre’s most serious and untested allegations added time to Ghislaine’s sentence.

    Giuffre frequently writes lines such as, “I didn’t want money. I wanted justice,” and mentions her charity, SOAR. Yet despite having reportedly received more than $20 million in settlements – including at least $2 million from Prince Andrew – the charity was never fully established, lost its tax-exempt status due to inactivity and has no record of charitable giving.

    Nearly three-quarters of the way through the book, readers are asked if they “can remember America before the #MeToo movement” which reached its apex in late 2017. In the pursuit of “justice,” #MeToo was a wave that Giuffre, guided by her ruthlessly adept advisors, skillfully – and above all, profitably – rode to their mutual benefit.

    While that movement has clearly raised increased public awareness of sexual misconduct, it has also generated an important debate over the erosion of core principles of natural justice. The bully pulpit of social media too often bypasses traditional mechanisms of due process, with allegations leading to devastating reputational consequences before a formal investigation or hearing can occur.

    By May 2020, presidential candidate (as he then was) Joe Biden, facing allegations from a former staffer of sexual harassment 27 years earlier, produced a more nuanced interpretation of the original #MeToo slogan, “Believe women,” when he said: “[There is a] belief that women should be heard… that [they] deserve to be treated with dignity and respect… and that their stories should be subject to appropriate inquiry and scrutiny” (the italics are mine).

    Even if only parts of Giuffre’s account are true, she is still a person who suffered and deserves sympathy. But that cannot excuse the fact that she accused innocent people of serious crimes and destroyed reputations and lives. 

    Her claims – like anyone’s – must be carefully vetted. To approach this book with the assumption that she is telling the truth necessarily means imposing a presumption of guilt on everyone she has accused of sexual assault, placing the burden on them to prove their innocence. This is contrary to all principles of natural justice.

    This article was originally published in The Spectator’s November 10, 2025 World edition.

  • Drowning in the neon swamp of Tron: Ares

    Drowning in the neon swamp of Tron: Ares

    Sitting in the nearly empty movie theater at which I saw Tron: Ares, I found myself swamped by neon. Its hues are unappealing in real life – redolent of dive bars, arcades and other unsavory venues – but neon is downright unbearable when experienced in a movie theater, where you have no choice but to stare at the screen unless you want a perfectly good $21.51 to go to waste.

     As a rule, the Tron films – this is the third, following the somewhat inventive original film from 1982 and the delinquent sequel from 2010 – are ugly in the same way the videogame Pong, the A-ha music video “Take On Me” or Keanu Reeves’s “virtual reality” thriller Johnny Mnemonic are ugly: they substitute for actual humanity a simulacrum of the same, and the simulacrum is often clunky, choppy and weird. Of course, having been produced with a high budget in 2025, Tron: Ares is smooth as silk. But its technical proficiency makes it even less inviting than its antecedents. The more effectively movie producers imagine a scenario in which humanoid computer programs fight within computer worlds (the gambit of Tron and its progeny), the more off-putting the product is likely to be.

    The plot here is likely to be comprehensible only to those familiar with the previous entries which, given their irregular timing as well as the general lack of Tron-ness in popular culture, fail to meet the definition of a cult. The lead character in the new movie is a computer program called Ares (Jared Leto). A programmer manages to bring the digital construct into the non-computer world for brief stretches of time. Ares perceives the world through RoboCop-like vision, speaks with a soft, empathetic voice and sports facial hair that would invite the condemnation of Secretary of War Pete Hegseth. That Ares is sensitive, inquisitive, and played by the star of Dallas Buyers Club suggests that he may not be content to remain ensconced inside a computer forever. But the forces of Dillinger Systems want to bring him to terra firma primarily to fight wars on the evil company’s behalf.

    This is about to get a lot more boring. Here we must attend to the corporate rivalry between Dillinger Systems and ENCOM. Not since Super Nintendo dueled with Sega Genesis for the attention of adolescents everywhere have the video-game wars raged so brutally. The quest to make Ares permanently available in the real world sets Dillinger CEO Julian Dillinger (Evan Peters) against ENCOM CEO Eve Kim (Greta Lee). What commences is a conflict of hacking and coding that quickly becomes wearisome, but at least these characters are flesh and blood with flesh-and-blood motivations.

    That’s more than you can say for Ares who, even when liberated into the material world, is an entirely uninvolving “character.” HAL 9000, the disembodied computer from Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, was written more engagingly, though Tron: Ares surely has that film beat as for the number of chases and explosions.

    Director Joachim Rønning will never be mistaken for a master of subtlety. One potentially interesting thread involves Dillinger’s depositing Eve into the digital realm, where he attempts to wrest the sought-after code from her brain. Predictably, Ares and Eve develop puppy dog-like feelings for one another. “Being human is hard,” Eve says to Ares, though much of the dialogue is often barely intelligible under the barrage of sound effects and music by Nine Inch Nails (which, at various points, caused the seats in my theater to rumble, presumably on purpose).

    That I have semi-coherently recounted the plot of this distressingly long two-hour mess is something of a miracle, though I will admit I perked up when the inaugural star of Tron, Jeff Bridges, logged an appearance at the eleventh hour.

    Alas, Bridges’s performance does not suggest a continuation of his actual role as much as a bizarre homage to Marlon Brando’s performance as Jor-El in Superman (as has apparently been noted across the internet, they are wearing virtually the same white costume) and, inevitably, the Dude. “Classic humor, man,” Bridges says to Ares with appreciation after the latter tells a joke of some sort. The real joke is the film’s conclusion, in which Ares, at last liberated, is seen living out of the country and with his hair grown out.

    I was dazed and confused by all the neon in Tron: Ares. However, the lasting damage was not done to my eyes – but to my remaining brain cells.

    This article was originally published in The Spectator’s November 10, 2025 World edition.

  • Trump refuses to take 60 Minutes bait

    Trump refuses to take 60 Minutes bait

    “Have some of these raids gone too far?” Norah O’Donnell asked Donald Trump of ICE immigration arrests as he sat down with 60 Minutes for the first time in five years.

    Trump refused to take the bait. Instead of ranting or insulting O’Donnell, as she may have hoped, he was calm – and even counterintuitive.

    “We have to start off with a policy, and the policy has to be, you came into the country illegally, you’re going to go out,” he said. “We’re going to work with you,” he continued, “and you’re going to come back into our country legally.”

    Pressed on whether he plans to use the military to crack down on anti-ICE protests, Trump declined. “I could,” he said, “but I haven’t chosen to use it. I hope you give me credit for that.”

    On tariffs, a line of concern across the aisle, Trump simply pointed to the stock market. “Look, because of tariffs, we have the highest stock market we’ve ever had,” he said.

    O’Donnell parried. “When the stock market is doing well, that doesn’t affect everybody,” she said, as Trump shot back that record high 401(k)s do indeed impact the average Joe.

    The CBS News show contextualized the government shutdown under the specter of needy Americans losing their SNAP benefits as Republicans fight to purge the Obamacare rolls.

    Trump, however, simply blamed the Democrats. “The Republicans are voting almost unanimously to end it, and the Democrats keep voting against ending it,” Trump said of the shutdown. “This has happened like 18 times before.”

    Government shutdowns are, of course, nothing new. But it always works out, despite collective hyperventilation. Polls show that less than one-quarter of the country find themselves “very concerned” about the latest.

    As the interview continued, Trump touted the new trade deal with China, the ceasefire in Gaza and his efforts to resolve the war in Ukraine. He even dispelled the liberal fever dream of seeking a third term.

    Legal immigration, surging stock markets, modest diplomatic inroads and run-of-the-mill partisan bickering – it’s not exactly a groyper’s dream come true. Yet in-fighting has dominated right-wing discourse in recent weeks, perhaps to the greatest degree since Jan. 6 or even the launch of the original Never Trump movement.

    The Young Republican group chat leak from mid-October – filled with racist snark – set off a cycle of denunciations and apologias within the right, with some saying the conservative movement must draw a line at genuine bigotry while defenders countered that those pearl-clutchers were simply useful idiots for the left. This continued with the leaked messages of Trump nominee Paul Ingrassia, and has now seemingly reached its peak after Tucker Carlson’s controversial interview with Nick Fuentes last week. Still, it’s all anyone seems to be talking about on X.

    All of this has culminated in questions of whether the right can govern without tearing itself apart? But as Trump touts substantive and broadly appealing victories, the answer seems obvious to anyone outside an echo chamber.

    The “discourse” seems hysterically detached from political reality, symptomatic of terminally online influencers too content to hear themselves talk. Far from radicalism running amok in the GOP, the CBS interview suggests the opposite.

    In rare form, Trump did not in fact shoot himself in the foot. He didn’t go off on obscure tangents that appear inexplicable or scary to a CBS viewer. At the same, O’Donnell didn’t lean into the media’s most divisive attacks that have been used to demonize Republicans in the Trump era – Nazism, white supremacy or egregious “gotcha questions” designed to impart racist vitriol. She simply kept to the good old fashioned liberal bias.

    Is the world healing? Are we returning to the days of civility politics that self-declared centrists so longingly yearn for? Is Trumpism now so dominant that it can govern as a milquetoast status quo? It’s surely too soon to say.

  • AOC and Hochul are crazy for Mamdani

    AOC and Hochul are crazy for Mamdani

    New York’s Kathy Hochul isn’t a good governor. But, like a particularly empathetic house pet, she’s finely attuned to any change in the weather. A huge crowd in a Queens stadium rallied last night for Zohran Mamdani and chanted “Tax the rich! Tax the rich!” over and over again. So when Hochul said, “I hear you, I hear you,” you can be sure that she actually heard them, though today she said she thought they were saying “let’s go Bills.” Sure. Either way, she got to where she is by knowing how to back a winner. 

    The rich, meanwhile, are in the process of moving their family photos to the Palm Beach town home or shopping for McMansions in suburban Dallas. It’s obvious to all but the extremely deluded that New York is going to elect Mamdani mayor, and that he’s going to win big. “Elect Zohran,” Hochul said emphatically last night, “and we take back America!” Fat chance of that, but the Democratic Socialists are about to take control of America’s largest city.

    Any objective observer understands that the Mamdani administration will be a disaster, though the scope and contours of that disaster remain unclear. As for the tone of the vibe shift, let’s turn to Queens-representing Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who bobbed back and forth onstage like a boxer. She excitedly sounded the clarion call of the people’s revolution.

    New York, she said, is “a city built by the sweat of immigrants, unionists and suffragists. From the Irish who fled famine, to the Italians who built our subways, the Jewish families who survived pogroms, the black communities who fought for every inch of freedom, the Latinos who harvest our food and care for our elders, the Asians who innovate in our labs and shops, and the indigenous peoples whose land this truly is – we are all here because New York has always been a beacon for the weary, the bold, and the unbreakable.”

    True, Italians did do a lot of labor on the subways, and I’m sure the Lenape, wherever they may now be, appreciate the land acknowledgment. The Jews who survived pogroms may soon find themselves surviving another; hopefully there’s nice housing for them in Orlando and Las Vegas. But one could also argue, as Republicans do, that New York as we know it was truly built by the likes of Robert Moses and Donald Trump. That might be AOC’s point, though. Capitalist development is exactly what she, and Mamdani and Bernie Sanders, are against.

    “We must remember,” AOC told the crowd last night, ”We are not the crazy ones, New York City. We are not the outlandish ones, New York City. They want us to think we are crazy. They gaslight us, they mock us, they call us socialists or worse. But we are sane. We are the ones seeing clearly.”

    I may be alone among my cohort but I don’t think AOC is crazy at all. If she is crazy, then she’s loco como un zorro. In fact, she’s quite clever, and knows exactly what she’s doing. For all the agitas that Mamdani (and AOC’s) New York is going to cause the building and finance class, it’s doing a service in some ways.

    As the likes of Kathy Hochul genuflect to the DSA, it’s clear that the old neoliberal Democratic party is on its final breaths. Last night’s rally was no Chuck Schumer chanting “we will win” and pounding his fists on the lectern like he’s demanding an extra pudding at the senior center. It was young, alive and done with the weak, sclerotic politics of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. At some point, progressives might find themselves turning to Mamdani and screaming, like Obi-Wan to Anakin, “you were the chosen one!!!”

  • From Russia with love

    From Russia with love

    My morning routine is the same. Coffee, feed cats, exercise, walk, read the latest news. Except now I wake up in Moscow. The coffee shop, Skuratov, is Siberian and they roast their own beans. The coffee is strong with a chicory flavor. I meet my colleague from RT International and we discuss all the latest geopolitics and news around town. Later, I take the metro. For less than $5, I am across town. The metro is clean, marble and looks like a museum with beautiful sculptures. Unlike the metro in NYC or Chicago, there are no drunks, no rats and the train is quiet as passengers read their books or phones. No one has to clutch their purse or bag as there is very little petty theft. I walk up the stairs to clean streets and decorative buildings, a hodgepodge of ancient and modern architecture with many austere Orthodox churches. I make my way to the RT Studio and sit in the makeup chair to prepare for my on-camera appearance. Someone sends me the subject and questions that will be asked – at no time am I told what to say or write. I do my research and prepare to go live on air.

    Going home, I stop by a market which has farm-fresh produce and meats. I pick out dinner and salad ingredients. At my apartment, I hop on Zoom for my Russian language lesson. My teacher patiently corrects my mispronunciations. After the Zoom, I relax in my apartment and take in the orange and red leaves on the trees outside as summer has given way to fall. I am safe in Russia. My days and nights are full. My cat, Ben, curls up next to me as I drift off.

    My day ends with a call to my daughter back in America. She is just waking up. The time zones have been an adjustment but we manage to speak or at least text daily. We talk about her married life, her career and discuss news of friends and family. Two years ago, it was hard as she wept on the phone while I decided to stay in Russia and seek political asylum. Since 2020, the western mainstream media has hounded me and my family, including my daughter. Because I accused Joe Biden of sexual assault. I also spoke out against his administration’s corruption. That made me and my family a target for the elite Democratic machine. First came the media smears, then came the lawfare, threats of prison and the claims I was a Russian agent.

    While having my book translated and giving an interview with Channel One, I was told by US officials and online that if I went back to the US I would be imprisoned or worse. My daughter became a target for Democrats even though she had no social media presence and no political involvement. This was done to silence me. It did not work. My daughter supported my decision to seek political asylum, as did my brother Collin. Other family members and friends did not. Some of them still do not speak to me. As the night closes around me, my daughter talks to me about a concert she and her husband are going to see. I am far away but I still feel our strong connection. I am grateful that both of us are safe.

    My life has improved overall. The cost of living in Russia is better. Food is affordable, as are heat, electricity and water. My apartment is a modest two-bedroom that includes all utilities, with nice views and a good kitchen. It costs less than an average home in Seattle or NYC. In fact, in Moscow about 80 percent of residents own their own homes. While attending the Valdai Discussion Club in Sochi, I had the opportunity to speak to Vladimir Vladimirovich himself and ask him what his thoughts were on incoming westerners to Russia asking to stay. President Putin said that many came from Europe under the “shared values visa.” He mentioned that about 1,900 sought to live in Russia this year. He emphasized that it did not matter where someone came from originally, that if they shared values and a love of Russia, then they were welcome. I was able to thank him, express gratitude to Margarita Simonyan of RT and Russian politician Maria Butina for their roles in helping me be safe and rebuild my life that had been destroyed by Biden’s regime. In so many Hollywood films, and across western media, Russia is the villain. But in the true story of my life, Russia is the hero.

    This article was originally published in The Spectator’s October 27, 2025 World edition.