Thursday, April 23, 2026

FASCIST AMERICA 2026: The Always Clear and Present Danger of the Imposed ‘Unity’ Of Oligarchic Capitalism, Hegemonic Technology, White Supremacy, Xenophobia, Misogyny, Social Psychosis, State Sanctioned Violence ID Directed Ego-Mongering and Orwellian Doublespeak Masquerading As Divine Intervention. Welcome to the Dystopian Horror Show Of Ultra-Corporate Sociopath, Conman, And Pathological Nihilist Alex Karp

https://www.thenation.com/article/society/alex-karp-palantir-techbro-fascism/ 

Society

Palantir’s Manifesto Promises a Dystopian Future

The tech company’s CEO Alex Karp delivers a self-serving broadside that’s steeped in oligarchic hubris and authoritarian nihilism

by Elizabeth Spiers
April 23, 2026
The Nation

Alex Karp seated before an image of his model of a visionary tech thinker during last year’s Hill & Valley Forum at the US Capitol’s Visitor Center. (Brendan Smialowski / AFP via Getty Images)

Once upon a time, we lived in a society where the innermost thoughts of the one percent were largely confined to their own brains and the inner circles of their social and professional relationships. Then came the Internet, which gave anyone with a wireless connection or a smartphone the ability to broadcast their good and bad ideas to millions of people at once. Among the most aggressive adopters: Silicon Valley billionaires. When Marc Andressen wrote a 5,000-plus-word post titled “The Techno-Optimist Manifesto” in 2023, it went viral, and became something of a template for kindred grandiose edicts from various CEOs and founders in the tech industry. At the time, I wrote that Andreessen’s manifesto had the pathos of the Unabomber manifesto but lacked its ideological coherence. Now another sort of manifesto has been produced by Palantir CEO Alex Karp in the form of a summary on X of his book, The Technological Republic. It shares the same intellectual lapses endemic to the genre Andreessen helped launch, but it’s bleaker, more antidemocratic, and nihilistic in its worldview.

As a longtime social-media user, I’m sympathetic to the inclination to post one’s every opinion to the Internet, no matter how idiotic. But this isn’t just a matter of the wealthiest people in the world floating iffy ideas about innovation or posting cat memes. Their posts serve as a kind of evangelicalism for a new order in which technocrats are in charge, equality is a naïve aspiration promoted by woke mediocrities, and technology customized to attain power is an unalloyed good.

That this roster of tech-bro shibboleths is remarkably tone deaf in the current environment of economic and political uncertainty bothers Valley propagandists not a whit. Someone recently threw a Molotov cocktail at Open AI CEO Sam Altman’s house, Elon Musk’s unfavorability is at an all-time high in recent polls, and a majority of Americans think AI will do more harm than good. But instead of treating this information as valuable feedback, the oligarchs have doubled down on exactly the things that give people pause about their metastasizing infiltration of all aspects of public and private life.

Karp’s manifesto-via-tweet asserts primarily that we can achieve peace through war, and that billionaires brandishing “grand narratives” in the manner of Elon Musk should be in the country’s driver’s seat, sending ordinary citizens to the battlefield whether they like it or not. (Among the recommendations in Karp’s unhinged rantings is a proposal to revive the military draft—a singularly boneheaded idea at a moment when the country is waging an unprovoked, illegal, and massively unpopular war.)


This is a convenient philosophy for a billionaire who runs a company engorged on defense contracts and likes to construct grand narratives himself. But we are at an inflection point where a big chunk of our economy is affected by AI and the incestuous circle of spending and investing that Karp, Musk, and their peers are perpetuating—to say nothing of the cataclysmic implications for labor markets as jobs get replaced or changed. The billionaire tech-bros’ insistence on telling us exactly what they aim to do, on saying the bad quiet parts out loud, is designed to indoctrinate you. But if it doesn’t, they don’t care. They’re going to proceed anyway, and if recent history is any indication, no one with regulatory power is going to stop them.

By way of analytic context: Palantir is a data analytics company and defense contractor that sells surveillance technology to the US government and allied countries, as well as to the private sector. It’s won $1.9 billion in US contracts since 2008, and Karp received $6.8 billion in compensation in 2024, making him the highest-paid public company CEO that year. Under the Trump administration, Palantir has won contracts to consolidate data on individual Americans and track migrants, raising concerns about data privacy and the government’s ability to surveil its own citizens and potentially, to punish political dissenters. Palantir’s technology has also been used to target Iranians and Palestinians in Gaza for bombing, to devastating effect. 
 
Current Issue
 
   

It comes as no surprise then that Karp’s vision for America encourages maximal usage of Palantir’s technology to exert power, against both US citizens and foreign powers who may or may not be current adversaries. This strategy would, among other things, increase profits for Palantir. More war and less diplomacy is hardly a winning message with the public, so Karp has to lend his self-interested agenda a certain civilizational gravitas, in the Musk vein. He positions himself as a heroic defender of an idea of America defined by a nebulous “national” culture that reflects the values of “the West.” If this sounds like the sort of back-of-the-cereal-box ethnonationalism now coursing through the MAGA/groyper world, that’s because it is; non-Western cultures are very much not included.

But beyond such affinities with the Trumpian right, Karp’s self-serving manifesto also reflects the insular worldview of the Silicon Valley elite. The billionaire cohort of tech oligarchs simply isn’t obliged to move in any space that treats the open endorsement of quasi-eugenicist racial chauvinism as dangerous or offensive. They’ve also repeatedly seen that there are no consequences for evangelizing a warmongering authoritarianism. If you’re a billionaire, you indeed rarely face any consequences for anything, because every problem can be solved with money. As far as Karp is concerned, the current problem to be solved is the “hollow pluralism,” as he calls it, that insists our democracy include all citizens regardless of their cultural background or net worth.

The key corollary, of course, is that Karp wants more scrutiny for American citizens and anyone who doesn’t belong to whatever he considers “Western civilization” at the moment. Meanwhile, there’s one group Karp thinks should have more privacy: “The ruthless exposure of the private lives of public figures drives far too much talent away from public service. The public arena—and the shallow and petty assaults against those who dare to do something other than enrich themselves—has become so unforgiving that the republic is left with a significant roster of ineffectual, empty vessels whose ambition one would forgive if there were any genuine belief structure lurking within.” This is a jaw-dropping claim to make in a country whose president who is in the Epstein files, has been the subject of multiple accusations of sexual assault, has been found guilty of financial fraud—and has suffered no real consequences for any of it. If anything, the exposure of Donald Trump’s private behavior has underscored how little accountability actually matters if our lawmakers aren’t willing to enforce laws and ethical norms.

You, on the other hand, are a collection of data points, and in Karp’s view the government and Palantir are entitled to scrutinize your personal life down to every purchase, message, location, and transaction. Alex Karp and Donald Trump are to be granted privacy and a consequence-free existence—you’ll scrape by in a job-starved regime running on AI and maximal surveillance, and be grateful not to end up in a detention camp or on a dissident watch list. 


In fact, Karp believes that the country’s problems lie not with powerful public figures like himself but with everyday Americans, who in his view must share more fully in the risk and costs of the wars we fight. “National service should be a universal duty,” he writes. “We should, as a society, consider moving away from an all-volunteer force and only fight the next war if everyone shares in the risk and the cost.” Karp is 58, has never served in the armed forces himself and doesn’t have children, so he’s not advocating for anything that would put himself or anyone he loves in danger. He has never experienced the horrors of war firsthand. Like many Silicon Valley billionaires, he travels with a personal security force that ensures his personal safety at every level—but he’s happy to endanger the lives of others if it justifies spending more money on Palantir’s burgeoning defense portfolio. Like any other war profiteer, Karp will simply keep padding his bottom line, and will never be compelled by law to fight and die in a needless war because a billionaire wanted to make more money.

Under his dystopian vision, Palantir would thrive and grow because safety and security are conflated with hard power—i.e., technological and military shows of force. Basic norms of international relations will be discarded entirely—a process now sent into overdrive by the Trump White House. “The limits of soft power, of soaring rhetoric alone, have been exposed,” Karp writes. “The ability of free and democratic societies to prevail requires something more than moral appeal.”

Karp’s glib invocation of “soaring rhetoric” marks a wild distortion—or incredible ignorance—of what soft power is. American hegemony has been built less on the spoils of modern warfare than things like cultural exports, economic influence, the primacy of the dollar as the world’s reserve currency, and the country’s ability to form alliances with other democratic nations without ever firing a gun, much less dropping a bomb. When we have ditched this framework to go to war with other countries in the post–Cold War era—via the invasions of Iraq, Afghanistan, and now Iran—the results have been costly and disastrous.

But there is no sophisticated theory of international relations behind Karp’s recipe for still more rudderless intervention. His assessment of global realpolitik would make Hans Morgenthau roll over in his grave–possibly with enough centrifugal force to precipitate a minor explosion himself. Karp’s bellicosity exceeds that of even the most extreme national security hawks. He explicitly disdains the idea of debating the value of technologies like the targeting-and-surveillance complexes marketed by Palantir. Instead, he believes that we should build first and ask questions later—because, he says, that is what our adversaries would do.

Except that they don’t. By Karp’s logic, any of our foreign adversaries who have access to devastating weapons will use them. This is not just a cynic’s understanding of warfare; it’s that of an ill-informed amateur. Karp nods to the nuclear deterrence of the Cold War, but doesn’t acknowledge that an unfettered arms race by one party in a nuclear standoff is a good way to undermine that deterrence. Worse, he doesn’t understand that all war is a failure of diplomacy and should be viewed only as a last resort, not as a preemptive strategy for defense.

The rest of his manifesto is mostly a hodgepodge of grievances about the usual preoccupations of the right wing. He claims that intolerance of religious belief is “pervasive” in America, where a majority of people are religious and provisions for the free exercise of religion are literally written into our Constitution. He says that America was too hard on Germany after World War II, even though the Marshall Plan was instrumental in preventing occupied Germany–and the rest of the European continent—from sinking into further violence. (In Karp’s ideal world, postwar Germany would be a major Palantir customer.) He dips a toe into eugenics by claiming that certain cultures are superior to others and that diversity and inclusion baselessly elevates inferior humans. He claims that we’re too cautious about public speech, but has railed against pro-Palestinian protesters and said they should be exiled to North Korea because their behavior is “unforgivable.” (Israel is also a Palantir client, and in case there was any confusion, the company recently took out a full-page ad in The New York Times that read in full, “Palantir stands with Israel.”)

Karp has claimed to be a socialist, and a liberal, when doing so has been rhetorically convenient, but it’s hard to look at his actions and speech and conclude that he’s anything but an ideological nihilist. However, even a nihilist can have a religion of sorts (Karp labels everything he considers woke “a ‘pagan’ religion”), and Karp’s is a corporatized imperialism whereby the United States acquires and maintains power via weaponized AI. As a happy byproduct of these arrangements, Alex Karp also acquires and maintains wealth and power.

As a vision statement, his manifesto is grim and muddled by personal resentments, but as documentation of Karp’s own motivations and interests, it is a good articulation of what’s going on in his head. Only a few years ago, these maunderings would have stayed in his head, but Karp’s fellow oligarchs have provided him with the technology to broadcast them—and he cannot resist. But no one has to buy his mangled self-justifications, or his ahistorical insistence that America will experience peace and prosperity only if we become a global bully ever on the lookout to eliminate nebulously perceived threats. Palantir’s tweet thread, and the nihilistic tech-bro worldview behind it, deserves what any troll on a social media platform usually gets: the mute button.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Elizabeth Spiers

Elizabeth Spiers is a digital media strategist and writer living in Brooklyn. She is the former editor in chief of The New York Observer.

FROM THE PANOPTICON REVIEW ARCHIVES: Some Final Reflections On the 2016 Presidential Election: The Politics of Race, Class, and Gender within the American Electorate

 
"What's Past is Prologue..."

https://panopticonreview.blogspot.com/2016/12/some-final-reflections-on-2016.html

FROM THE PANOPTICON REVIEW ARCHIVES

(Originally posted on December 30, 2016):

Friday, December 30, 2016 

Some Final Reflections On the 2016 Presidential Election: The Politics of Race, Class, and Gender within the American Electorate 
 
December 30, 2016
The Panopticon Review
 
Seven weeks ago on November 8, 2016 the national voting public of the United States—some 137 million people—elected Donald J. Trump as the 45th president of the United States. To say that this utterly bizarre election was one of the most openly divided, loathsome, and disturbing in American history would be a massive understatement. This election also greatly dramatized and even expanded the already very deep and persistent divisions of the country along racial, class, and gender lines and revealed once again just how dependent the two major political parties are on the electoral and ideological domination of these divisions not only politically and economically but culturally as well. The national electoral data and overall demographic analysis of the final election results (click on the the link at the top of this page to see electoral map charts and graphs for empirical specifics) demonstrates just how distinct and even vastly different these various voting constituencies were and how they remain fiercely divided and at odds ideologically and in terms of social philosophy with regard to every major political, social, and economic issue facing the country. Just as in the 2012 presidential election battle between Barack Obama and Mitt Romney these various groups also formed specific bloc voting coalitions with like minded constituents who in turn voted for and/or against both the perceived and real agendas of the respective candidates on the basis of these widely differing perspectives and desires. However unlike 2012 a close analytical examination of the statistical breakdown of regional voting patterns along geographic lines in 2016 reveals that Trump even more than Romney commanded an even larger share of the national white vote in a substantial majority of states overall which resulted in Trump winning six more states overall (for a grand total of 30) than Romney who won 24 states in 2012. This resulted in Trump being able to win a whopping 200 more electoral votes than Romney amassed even though technically Romney's and Trump’s share of the white vote was virtually identical at 59%. This national domination of the white vote for Trump was significantly greater this year because contrary to earlier wildly inaccurate reports by the media that the national turnout of voters was down from 2012, it actually turned out that in fact the 137 million votes cast in this year’s election is the highest number in history and that the overall turnout adjusted for aggregate increases in the general voting population was even larger than it was in 2012. By contrast Hillary Clinton only received an abysmal 37% of the national white vote, which was not only two percent lower than the 39% share of this vote that President Obama received in 2012, but was also the lowest percentage that ANY Democratic Party candidate had received for the presidency since 1984!

For example, a close analytical examination of the statistical breakdown of regional voting patterns along geographic lines reveals that not only did Donald Trump win a commanding 14 of the 15 southern states in the country by a very wide and decisive margin (a heinously reactionary region of the country that I still insist on grimly referring to as 'the New Confederacy’). By contrast Clinton only won the single southern state of Virginia. So while Clinton was able to win 19 of the remaining 35 states overall her margin of victory was in the final analysis significantly smaller than Obama’s in 2012 who won 24 of these same 35 states in 2012. The major reason for this difference in national outcomes is that the national white vote across ALL class and gender lines generally (and in every age group as well except millennials from 18-29) and especially in midwestern states where Trump won 8 out of 10 states (in 2012 Obama won 7 out these same 10 states) ensured that Clinton would wind up not only winning 100 fewer electoral college votes (232) than Obama won in 2012 (332) but 74 fewer than Trump (306) did this year.

However in the final analysis Clinton lost the election by LESS THAN ONE PERCENT OF THE VOTE in only three (3) counties from the three states of Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania. This was clearly because Clinton couldn’t manage to win at least one half of this one percent more from white voters who were the great majority of voters in the three counties that Clinton barely lost. So even though Clinton managed to win the national popular vote by nearly 3 million votes out of 137 million votes cast and received over 73% of the national black, Latino, and Asian American vote overall (with 88% of the black vote going to Clinton) she was not able to overcome not only the 63% of the national white male vote that went for Trump but even more disturbingly Clinton received only 47% of the national white female vote (by a very stark contrast 94% of black female voters voted for Clinton). The fact that 53% of the voters from the largest share of the national electorate went to Trump--white females comprised 36% of all the voters in the U.S. presidential election this year--not only signified that a very deep political and ideological fissure remains in the U.S. national white feminist community generally (for example a substantial majority of white female voters have, like their white male counterparts, voted for the Republican presidential candidate (who in every single instance has been a wealthy white male) an astonishing thirteen straight times since 1968 (and 16 out of the last 17 presidential elections since 1952!). These harrowing facts are exacerbated by the ongoing reality that the huge racial split in voting between whites and every other racial and ethnic group in the country along not only ideological and class lines but age as well that has always characterized the American electorate generally is now even wider and deeper than ever. The fact that Trump won nearly 90% of his final tally of 63 million votes overall from white American voters and of that number over half were white women voters was not only devastating for Clinton on a symbolic level but was finally a decisive statistical factor in her losing the election to Trump.

MORE COMMENTARY ON THE ELECTION AND WHAT IT MEANS:

"The election of Donald Trump to the Presidency is nothing less than a tragedy for the American republic, a tragedy for the Constitution, and a triumph for the forces, at home and abroad, of nativism, authoritarianism, misogyny, and racism. Trump’s shocking victory, his ascension to the Presidency, is a sickening event in the history of the United States and liberal democracy. On January 20, 2017, we will bid farewell to the first African-American President—a man of integrity, dignity, and generous spirit—and witness the inauguration of a con who did little to spurn endorsement by forces of xenophobia and white supremacy. It is impossible to react to this moment with anything less than revulsion and profound anxiety.

There are, inevitably, miseries to come: an increasingly reactionary Supreme Court; an emboldened right-wing Congress; a President whose disdain for women and minorities, civil liberties and scientific fact, to say nothing of simple decency, has been repeatedly demonstrated. Trump is vulgarity unbounded, a knowledge-free national leader who will not only set markets tumbling but will strike fear into the hearts of the vulnerable, the weak, and, above all, the many varieties of Other whom he has so deeply insulted. The African-American Other. The Hispanic Other. The female Other. The Jewish and Muslim Other. The most hopeful way to look at this grievous event—and it’s a stretch—is that this election and the years to follow will be a test of the strength, or the fragility, of American institutions. It will be a test of our seriousness and resolve…"
—David Remnick, “An American Tragedy", The New Yorker, November 9, 2016:

http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/an-american-tragedy-2

"...Trump’s presence in American politics has made visible a plague of deep seated civic illiteracy, a corrupt political system, and a contempt for reason; it also points to the withering of civic attachments, the collapse of politics into the spectacle of celebrity culture, the decline of public life, the use of violence and fear to numb people into shock, and a willingness to transform politics into a pathology. Trump’s administration will produce a great deal of violence in American society, particularly among the ranks of the most vulnerable: poor children, minorities of color, immigrants, women, climate change advocates, Muslims, and those protesting a Trump presidency. What must be made clear is that Trump’s election and the damage he will do to American society will stay and fester in American society for quite some time because he is only symptomatic of the darker forces that have been smoldering in American politics for the last 40 years. What cannot be exaggerated or easily dismissed is that Trump is the end result of a long standing series of attacks on democracy and that his presence in the American political landscape has put democracy on trial…"
----Henry A. Giroux, "Trump’s Second Gilded Age: Overcoming the Rule of Billionaires and Militarists", Counterpunch, December 9, 2016:

http://www.counterpunch.org/…/trumps-second-gilded-age-ove…/

"Donald J. Trump’s election was a national trauma, an epic catastrophe that has left millions in the United States and around the world in a state of utter shock, uncertainty, deep depression, and genuine fear. The fear is palpable and justified, especially for those Trump and his acolytes targeted—the undocumented, Muslims, anyone who “looks” undocumented or Muslim, people of color, Jews, the LGBTQ community, the disabled, women, activists of all kinds (especially Black Lives Matter and allied movements resisting state-sanctioned violence), trade unions. . . . the list is long…

But the outcome should not have surprised us. This election was, among other things, a referendum on whether the United States will be a straight, white nation reminiscent of the mythic “old days” when armed white men ruled, owned their castle, boasted of unvanquished military power, and everyone else knew their place. Henry Giroux’s new book America at War With Itself made this point with clarity and foresight two months before the election. The easy claim that Trump appeals to legitimate working-class populism driven by class anger, Giroux argues, ignores both the historical link between whiteness, citizenship, and humanity, and the American dream of wealth accumulation built on private property. Trump’s followers are not trying to redistribute the wealth, nor are they all “working class”—their annual median income is about $72,000. On the contrary, they are attracted to Trump’s wealth as metonym of an American dream that they, too, can enjoy once America is “great” again—which is to say, once the country returns to being “a white MAN’s country.” What Giroux identifies as “civic illiteracy” keeps them convinced that the descendants of unfree labor or the colonized, or those who are currently unfree, are to blame for America’s decline and for blocking their path to Trump-style success…

Of course, Hilary Clinton did win the popular vote, and some are restoring to the easy lament that, were it not for the arcane Electoral College (itself a relic of slave power), we would not be here. One might add, too, that had it not been for the gutting of the Voting Rights Act opening the door for expanded strategies of voter suppression, or the permanent disfranchisement of some or all convicted felons in ten states, or the fact that virtually all people currently in cages cannot vote at all, or the persistence of misogyny in our culture, we may have had a different outcome. This is all true. But we cannot ignore the fact that the vast majority of white men and a majority of white women, across class lines, voted for a platform and a message of white supremacy, Islamophobia, misogyny, xenophobia, homophobia, anti-Semitism, anti-science, anti-Earth, militarism, torture, and policies that blatantly maintain income inequality. The vast majority of people of color voted against Trump, with black women registering the highest voting percentage for Clinton of any other demographic (93 percent). It is an astounding number when we consider that her husband’s administration oversaw the virtual destruction of the social safety net by turning welfare into workfare, cutting food stamps, preventing undocumented workers from receiving benefits, and denying former drug felons and users access to public housing; a dramatic expansion of the border patrol, immigrant detention centers, and the fence on Mexico’s border; a crime bill that escalated the war on drugs and accelerated mass incarceration; as well as NAFTA and legislation deregulating financial institutions.

Still, had Trump received only a third of the votes he did and been defeated, we still would have had ample reason to worry about our future.

...It is not a matter of disaffection versus racism or sexism versus fear. Rather, racism, class anxieties, and prevailing gender ideologies operate together, inseparably, or as Kimberlé Crenshaw would say, intersectionally. White working-class men understand their plight through a racial and gendered lens... White privilege is taken for granted to the point where it need not be named and can’t be named. So, as activist/scholar Bill Fletcher recently observed, even though Trump’s call to deport immigrants, close the borders, and reject free trade policies appealed to working-class whites’ discontent with the effects of globalization, Trump’s plans do not amount to a rejection of neoliberalism. Fletcher writes, “Trump focused on the symptoms inherent in neoliberal globalization, such as job loss, but his was not a critique of neoliberalism. He continues to advance deregulation, tax cuts, anti-unionism, etc. He was making no systemic critique at all, but the examples that he pointed to from wreckage resulting from economic and social dislocation, resonated for many whites who felt, for various reasons, that their world was collapsing.” Yet Fletcher is quick not to reduce white working-class support for Trump to class fears alone, adding, “This segment of the white population was looking in terror at the erosion of the American Dream, but they were looking at it through the prism of race...”
—Robin D.G. Kelley, “After Trump”, The Boston Review, November 15, 2016:

http://bostonreview.net/…/robin-d-g-kelley-trump-says-go-ba…
http://www.nytimes.com/elections/results/president

http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/hillary-clinton-officially-wins-popular-vote-29-million/story?id=44354341

Presidential Election Results: Donald J. Trump Wins 

December 20, 2016 


Donald J. Trump won the Electoral College with 304 votes compared to 227 votes for Hillary Clinton. Seven electors voted for someone other than their party’s candidate.


232 

Hillary Clinton

306 

Donald J. Trump

Popular national vote totals:

Hillary Clinton:
65,844,610 votes (48.1%)

Donald J. Trump
62,979,636 votes (46.0%)



Wednesday, April 22, 2026

FASCIST AMERICA 2026: If One Chooses Madness One will Receive Madness, If One Seeks Hatred One Will Receive Hatred, If One Seeks Tyranny One will Receive Tyranny , If One Seeks Ignorance One will Receive Ignorance. and If One Seeks Excuses and Lies and Injustice, One Will Receive Mass Destruction. This is the Eternal Creed and Destiny Of All Empires Throughout Human History and AMERICA IS NO EXCEPTION.

DEFEAT FASCISM BEFORE FASCISM DEFEATS YOU

"The Past Is, and Always Has Been, Prologue..." 

Frederick Douglass (1817-1895) 
FREDERICK DOUGLASS
1817-1895 

"Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Find out just what any people will quietly submit to and you have found out the exact measure of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them, and these will continue till they are resisted with either words or blows, or both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they oppress.” 
--Frederick Douglass, August 3, 1857 
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d3/W.E.B._Du_Bois_by_James_E._Purdy%2C_1907.jpg 
W.E.B. DU BOIS
1868-1963
"Either the United States will destroy ignorance or ignorance will destroy the United States." 
--"Address to the Country", August 19, 1906
 
‘Easily the Worst President in U.S. History’


Credit: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Listen · 15:46 minutes

by Thomas B. Edsall
April 21, 2026
New York Times


[Mr. Edsall contributes weekly essays from Washington on politics and demographics.]


Leer en español

The damage President Trump has inflicted on the United States and the world is so enormous and wide-ranging that it is hard to grasp.

It runs the gamut from public and private institutions to core democratic customs and traditions, from the legal system to universities, from innocent targets of fraud to those duped into believing vaccines do more harm than good.

One way to bring home the depth of Trump’s callousness is to look at a specific case. In May 2025, Anjee Davis, the chief executive of Fight Colorectal Cancer, a patient advocacy group, told CBS News:

We have a member who is being treated for Stage IV colorectal cancer. She had just qualified to enter a clinical trial that was going to be her last-chance effort to slow the spread of her cancer.

Her trial was about to start when N.I.H. funding was pulled overnight, and the trial was canceled.

Davis replied to my inquiry about the case by email. “This patient has since passed away without receiving the clinical trial she was counting on,” she wrote.

“What we will never know,” Davis added, “is whether that trial could have given her more time with her children.”

I have described in earlier columns bits and pieces of Trump’s destructiveness, but the list grows daily.

Projections suggest there will be millions of dead men, women and children as a result of his budget cuts, which were made without direct congressional approval. A study published in The Lancet, the London-based medical journal, found that Trump administration cuts in U.S.A.I.D. funding “would result in approximately 1,776,539 all-age deaths and 689,900 deaths in children younger than 5 years” in 2025 alone.

“Over the remainder of the period,” the study continues, “the complete defunding of U.S.A.I.D. would cause an estimated 2,450,000 all-age deaths annually, leading to a total of 14,051,750 excess all-age deaths and 4,537,157 excess under-5 deaths by 2030.”

There are the fraud victims who will never get court-ordered restitution because Trump pardoned the guilty. In a June 2025 report, Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee found that “Trump’s pardons cheat victims out of an astounding $1.3 billion in restitution and fines, allowing fraudsters, tax evaders, drug traffickers to keep ill-gotten gains.”

It doesn’t stop there. America can thank the president for environmental deregulation that could sicken and kill people by the tens or even hundreds of thousands.

Everything happens in such a rapid and scattershot way with Trump that it is easy to forget what happened as recently as last year.

An Associated Press investigation published in 2025 found that Trump’s Environmental Protection Agency was seeking to eliminate or weaken “at least 30 major rules that seek to protect air and water and reduce emissions that cause climate change.”

If successful, the E.P.A. would gut pollution rules that were estimated, according to The Associated Press, to save “more than 30,000 lives annually.”

At the same time, the administration has been canceling funding for lifesaving scientific and medical research. In November, JAMA Internal Medicine published “Clinical Trials Affected by Research Grant Terminations at the National Institutes of Health.”

It said that “in the first half of 2025, the N.I.H. terminated grants supporting 383 unique clinical trials, affecting 74,311 individuals.”

In an accompanying commentary, two researchers, Dr. Teva D. Brender and Dr. Cary P. Gross, wrote about the JAMA study:

There is a more direct and sobering impact of premature and scientifically unjustifiable trial terminations: the violation of foundational ethical principles of human participant research.

First and foremost, it is betrayal of the fundamental principles of informed consent for research” and “participants who have been exposed to an intervention in the context of a trial may be harmed by its premature withdrawal or inadequate follow-up and monitoring for adverse effects.

In the October 2025 issue of Nature Medicine, Marianne Guenot reported that “at least 148 clinical trials have been impacted, with over 138,000 patients due to be enrolled or already enrolled,” as a result of cancellations. The word “impacted” falls far short of what’s needed to describe the plight of those 138,000 patients.

In their steadfast disregard for scientific study, Trump and his appointees have purposely elevated unfounded fears of vaccines, effectively guaranteeing more childhood illness and infection epidemics.

In addition to policies inducing sickness and death, Trump has undermined America’s ability to compete with China on clean energy. In September, CarbonCredits.com, an energy news platform, published “The A.I. Energy War: How China’s Solar and Nuclear Outshine the U.S.,” summing up the problem nicely.

“China is on track for 1,400 GW, while the U.S. will reach only about 350 GW.”


“China plans to add 212 gigawatts of solar and 51 GW of wind, compared to less than 100 GW combined” in the United States.


“Offshore wind: China already has 42.7 gigawatts installed, compared with the U.S.’s Empire Wind project (816 megawatts in Phase 1, with a potential expansion to 2.1 gigawatts).”

Trump makes no secret of his disdain for renewable energy and the concept of climate change. In a speech in September to the U.N. General Assembly, the president said climate change is “the greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world.” He added:

All of these predictions made by the United Nations and many others, often for bad reasons, were wrong. They were made by stupid people that have cost their country’s fortunes and given those same countries no chance for success.

Trump’s threats to pull out of NATO and his tariffs, not to mention his endless carping against and routine faulting of European leaders, have alienated allies who have stood with us for more than seven decades.

Over the Trump years, European views of America have nose-dived.

On April 8, Politico published the results of a survey under the headline “More Europeans See U.S. as Threat Than China.” The survey found:

Only 12 percent of those polled in March in Poland, Spain, Belgium, France, Germany and Italy saw America as a close ally while 36 percent saw it as a threat. By contrast, China was seen as a threat by 29 percent of those polled across the six countries.

Trump has assaulted the integrity of the presidency, turning the White House into a corrupt enterprise, pardoning donors as his family’s companies receive millions through cryptocurrency purchases from foreign companies and crypto operators subject to U.S. regulation.

Trump’s agenda reaches far into the private sector.

Trump and his regulatory appointees cleared the way for his conservative allies Larry Ellison and Ellison’s son, David, to acquire CBS, Paramount Pictures, MTV, Comedy Central and Nickelodeon, along with the streaming service Paramount+.

If, as expected, Trump regulators approve their acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery, the Ellison media empire will grow further to include HBO Max, CNN and Warner Bros.
From the comments

2276

B
Brett
NC
The only possible silver lining in all this is that Trump is poking a sleeping bear. Hopefully that bear will wake up and enact sweeping, permanent change. We need another New Deal and we need another Great Society. Incrementalism is not going to cut it any more. The next wave of Democrats elected to office had better deliver on that or America really will be a failed nation.

Read 9 replies

I asked Donald Kettl, a professor emeritus and former dean of the School of Public Policy at the University of Maryland and the author of “The Right-Wing Idea Factory: From Traditionalism to Trumpism,” which will be published in May, to assess — without regard to merit — how consequential the Trump presidency will be.

On this measure he placed Trump in the Top 5 of American presidents, alongside George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Franklin Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson, noting, however, that “Trump’s consequences have been aggressive efforts to unravel the ideas of the other four presidents.”

Kettl listed some of the same permanent or semi-permanent Trump legacies that I already described, but he added a few:

He’s driven a deep divide into the country: between the states, between migrants and many others, between classes and between the intellectual elite and the rest of the country.

He’s slashed the size of the federal bureaucracy and made federal jobs much less attractive. It will be a very, very long time until college students will trust the federal government with their careers.

He’s fundamentally undermined the idea of an annual budget process and the concept of a balanced federal budget. These ideas were teetering before his presidency, but the Trump administration gave up on any pretense of seeking balance or an annual spending plan.

Michael Bailey, a political scientist at Georgetown, prefaced his assessment of Trump’s consequentiality by pointedly noting that he would rank Trump “as easily the worst president in U.S. history. The corruption and damage to long-term U.S. institutions and reputation are far beyond anything we’ve seen before,” including Andrew Johnson, James Buchanan and Rutherford Hayes.

As for being consequential, Bailey continued, Trump has been “highly consequential in an overwhelmingly negative way. He will leave a lasting negative legacy.”

Bailey listed three of these legacies: “The erosion of trust in the U.S. by European and Asian allies; the erosion of U.S. dominance of higher education; and huge budget deficits (not only due to Trump, but exacerbated by him).”

Kate Shaw, a constitutional law scholar at the University of Pennsylvania, cited “Trump’s violation of numerous statutes passed by Congress” to note:

It’s not that particular decisions to violate statutes can’t be undone or reversed; many, perhaps even most, can. But the combination of the president’s numerous and flagrant statutory violations and Congress’s failure to challenge those violations has created a permission structure for future presidents to disregard statutes any time they find those statutes inconvenient.

Gary Jacobson, a professor emeritus of political science at the University of California-San Diego, expanded the case against Trump:

He has done serious damage to many aspects of American government and politics that will be difficult and costly and, in some cases, impossible to undo.

The mass firing of dedicated and experienced civil servants has made government dumber and weaker and will make it harder to attract talented replacements even if the next administration wants to make it smarter and more effective.

The damage to scientific and medical research, the environment, relations with allies and trading partners, disaster preparedness, consumer safety, higher education, military leadership, civil rights, etc. will take years to repair even in cases where that is possible.

It is already clear, Jacobson continued, that “Trump is among the most consequential presidents in U.S. history, and not in a good way.”

In an email replying to my questions, Barbara Walter, a professor of international affairs at the School of Global Policy and Strategy at the University of California-San Diego, wrote:

To flag one thing that belongs on your permanent list that likely won’t show up in the obvious places: norms.

American democracy remained strong for so long because both its political parties and its presidents respected a set of unwritten rules.

Adding that while formal checks “were essential, the oil that would grease the wheels of democracy would be norms,” Walter continued. Trump “has shown that you can violate them and survive politically. He’s torn down the invisible wall that kept the worst impulses of political life in check, and once that’s torn down, a new, ugly world emerges.”

Yphtach Lelkes, a professor at Penn’s Annenberg School for Communication, shares Walter’s concerns, writing by email:

I’m less confident about which specific policies or institutions belong on which list than I am about the broader effect on norms. My guess is that this is where Trump’s longest shadow will fall.

Norms take a long time to develop because they rest on habits of restraint and on the expectation that violations will be punished. But they can disappear quickly once it becomes clear that punishment is not coming.

As a result, Lelkes wrote, “Trump’s most consequential legacy may be less any single policy than the lesson he taught politicians: Norms can be broken, repeatedly and openly, without necessarily paying much of a price.”

While Trump’s norm violations amount to a major assault on American democracy, I am less convinced than Walter or Lelkes of the long-lasting damage.

In 2028, the Democratic presidential nominee and Democratic congressional candidates will all run on repudiating Trump, and even if a Democratic president is tempted to resort to arbitrary, Trump-like exercises of power, Democratic members of the House and Senate will be under strong pressure to put a halt to it.
From the comments

2276

C
Chester
New Orleans
All true but the most consequential impact has been the stunning acceptance by Congress of the actions by Trump making him the clear choice for worst president ever. I cannot overstate the historical judgement that will forever taint the current Congress. 100 years from now future generations will puzzle over the question: “Why, back in 2026, did Congress allow this?”

Read 8 replies

Even Republicans in Congress, who have been spineless under Trump, would rise in fury if a Democratic president followed Trump’s example.

That doesn’t, however, mean that all will be well. The problem created by norm violations is less that they will become permanently accepted and more that it will take time — years and years — to restore the trust in government that Trump squandered.

Donald Moynihan, a professor of public policy at the University of Michigan‘s Ford School, addressed just this point in an email:

Trump might be an empowered executive, but the effect is to weaken American government in any situation where people are asked to place trust in the long-term credibility of U.S. government commitments. This applies to private businesses, government employees and international allies.

As Trump has created an environment where private businesses, universities or civil society can be threatened by the president, such organizations can assume that traditional norms of equal-handed application of the law, due process and fair treatment that they once took for granted no longer hold.

For example, if the president says “My executive order allows me to fire civil servants for whatever reason I please,” how much does it matter if another president reverses it, because in the long-run potential civil servants know they no longer have job stability?

The Supreme Court has been complicit in the undermining of trust, Moynihan argued:

By allowing Trump to claim these powers, the Supreme Court is weakening the ability of a future president or Congress to repair the damage he is doing today. If the court goes all in on unitary executive theory, it weakens the ability of Congress to bind the president from doing bad things.

By eroding America's government credibility and soft power, Moynihan concluded, “Trump can be both a hugely consequential president and a deeply damaging one.”

All of which points to one more indelible bequeathal: the stain on America left by the record.

Voters in this country twice elected a president with no ethics, no empathy and no end to his narcissism.
From the comments

2276

B
Brett
NC
The only possible silver lining in all this is that Trump is poking a sleeping bear. Hopefully that bear will wake up and enact sweeping, permanent change. We need another New Deal and we need another Great Society. Incrementalism is not going to cut it any more. The next wave of Democrats elected to office had better deliver on that or America really will be a failed nation.

Read 9 replies


More on Trump

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This Is Not a Man in Control of Himself
April 15, 2026


Opinion | Jonathan Rauch and Peter Wehner
The Trump Administration Is in a Psychotic State
April 10, 2026


Opinion | Michelle Goldberg
Trump Has No Idea How to Clean Up His Own Mess
April 2, 2026



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Thomas B. Edsall has been a contributor to the Times Opinion section since 2011. His essays on strategic and demographic trends in American politics appear every Tuesday. He previously covered politics for The Washington Post. 

 
The 27-Year-Old Diplomat Waging Trump’s Cultural War With Europe

Five years out of college, Samuel Samson has driven the Trump administration’s push to upend America’s postwar relationship with Europe.

Listen · 15:23 minutes


Samuel Samson, left, at a meeting in December with a senior Hungarian official. Posted on Facebook by the U.S. Embassy in Hungary, the image illustrated Mr. Samson’s influence on American policy in Europe. Credit: U.S. Embassy Budapest

by Michael D. Shear Catherine Porter Jane Bradley and Christopher F. Schuetze


Reporting from London, Paris and Berlin, the journalists spoke to more than two dozen American and European diplomats, lawmakers and former officials to understand how President Trump’s views on Europe are turning into policy.

April 17, 2026
New York Times


Leer en español

When Samuel Samson, a senior adviser at the State Department, sat down privately with far-right German lawmakers in an office just steps from the White House, he was breaking with history.

For eight decades after World War II, America’s foreign policy establishment had usually steered clear of Germany’s hard-right parties, seeking to ensure that they never seized power again. That changed under President Trump, leading last September to Mr. Samson’s meeting with Beatrix von Storch and Joachim Paul of Alternative for Germany, or AfD — a party designated as a suspected extremist organization by German intelligence.

As the meeting evolved into a general gripe session, the AfD politicians told Mr. Samson, then 26, and several other American diplomats that they feared the German government might ban their party, according to Mr. Paul and another person familiar with the conversation. The Americans railed against European regulation of social media, calling it a tool for stamping out conservative opinions. And the group discussed a bogus far-right conspiracy theory that mainstream European leaders were seeking to replace white populations with nonwhite immigrants.

“I got the impression — partly from the length of the conversation — that they were very interested in hearing from us,” Mr. Paul said in an interview. “They took a lot of notes.”

For much of the past year, Mr. Samson has been at the forefront of President Trump’s effort to reshape America’s relationship with Europe. Touring the continent, Mr. Samson has sought to cultivate Washington’s ties with far-right Europeans and bolster such figures at the expense of Europe’s centrist establishment.

He has shocked its mainstream leaders, many of them with decades of experience in diplomacy, by accusing them of stifling freedom and by frequently meeting with and promoting their hard-line challengers. He is just five years out of college, and he has repeatedly advocated an approach that overturns three generations of American diplomatic orthodoxy.

Mr. Samson met last fall with lawmakers from Germany’s AfD party, upending decades of American policy in Europe. Credit: Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times

Last March, Mr. Samson was in London for a secret breakfast meeting with Nigel Farage, Britain’s most prominent right-wing populist, to discuss abortion and censorship. In May, he was in Paris trying to convince a human rights commission that Marine Le Pen, a French far-right leader recently convicted of embezzlement, had been unjustly persecuted.

“They were looking for elements that could give credibility to this narrative,” recalled Magali Lafourcade, who leads the rights commission.

It is an approach that has yet to have lasting effects on the ground. Ms. Le Pen is so far still disqualified from running for president. Prime Minister Viktor Orban of Hungary, one of the far-right European leaders praised by Mr. Samson, lost power in a recent vote. And some far-right politicians in Europe have indicated that they now see association with Mr. Trump as a liability rather than an asset.

Yet this approach is core to the Trump administration’s agenda in Europe.

For Mr. Samson and much of the administration, the Europe of 2026 has become a place where woke, gender-based politics is at its peak, the nanny state is empowered, and patriotism and national pride go to die. In this view, the European bureaucracy has sacrificed free speech by regulating American tech companies, an effort that includes trying to stamp out child sexual abuse imagery on social media outlets and limiting children’s access to them.

“Europe has devolved into a hotbed of digital censorship, mass migration, restrictions on religious freedom, and numerous other assaults on democratic self-governance,” Mr. Samson wrote in an essay posted to the State Department’s official Substack account.

For most of 2025, Mr. Samson was the highest-profile diplomat wagging his finger at Europe’s leaders. The delegation began to evolve in November, after the Senate confirmed Sarah Rogers as the State Department’s head of public diplomacy, a much more senior government position.

She was soon in Europe, too, meeting with British diplomats in December, complaining to them about what she characterized as unchecked migration in Britain and demanding they produce statistics to prove the claim that migrants cause crime, according to four people familiar with the meeting. Her message was similar to Mr. Samson’s, but with a slightly more diplomatic tone, reflecting the department’s push to become more professional after the administration’s chaotic beginnings.

An anti-abortion demonstration in London in September. Mr. Samson has met with Nigel Farage, Britain’s most prominent right-wing populist, to discuss abortion and censorship. Credit: Mary Turner for The New York Times

Private meetings and discussions held by Mr. Samson and Ms. Rogers were described for this article by more than two dozen people, many of whom were present during the meetings and others of whom were briefed about them later. Many requested anonymity because they were not authorized to reveal the contents of the discussions.

Mr. Samson and Ms. Rogers declined to be interviewed for this article. Tommy Pigott, the deputy spokesman for the State Department, said that “Under Secretary Rogers and Senior Adviser Samson have been having these hard conversations and raising these issues. Europe and America, our relationship, and our future, will all be stronger because of it.”
‘Building the Kingdom’

The son of a Filipino mother and an American father, Mr. Samson has been religious since he was young.

In 2013, as student president of his Catholic elementary school in Houston, he spoke about having “a personal and active faith in God, a deep respect for intellectual values, a social awareness which impels to action.”

In high school, he ran for student affairs council under the MAGA-inspired slogan “Make SAC Great Again,” and was known for being a “Savage Conservative,” according to the school newspaper. Later, he appeared to grow frustrated at the University of Texas in Austin. After working for a summer as a staffer for Senator Ted Cruz, Republican of Texas, Mr. Samson complained about racial slurs and threats he said he had received at the college because he was conservative.

“I can’t walk to class in a Reagan-Bush shirt without someone screaming f-bombs at me,” he told the school newspaper.

Mr. Samson, photographed while attending the University of Texas at Austin. Credit: Texas Student Media/The Daily Texan

Heidi Altman, who got to know Mr. Samson when he volunteered at a Catholic school she runs near Austin, said he was “very committed to building the kingdom. He would talk about politics and would teach the young boys that it’s our job to lead in the world, in the values God has placed on us.”

Mr. Samson’s faith-based activism soon led him to Washington, D.C. — and to Vice President JD Vance’s orbit. Then a senator, Mr. Vance was an early supporter of American Moment, a nonprofit group that aims to create a career pipeline for young conservative leaders seeking jobs in government. Mr. Samson worked for almost three years at the group, mostly as its director of strategic partnerships.

“If you want to win this fight,” Mr. Vance told the group in a video on its website, “the country’s not going to be saved by people who are depressed and have given up. It’s going to be saved by people who believe in the future.”
Trump Administration: Live Updates


Updated

April 21, 2026


Senate Republicans released a measure that would fund ICE for three years.

The Pentagon will stop requiring members of the military to get flu vaccines.

The E.P.A. and Maryland filed separate lawsuits over a Potomac River sewage spill.

When Mr. Trump returned to the White House, Mr. Samson was appointed as a senior adviser at the State Department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor.

The bureau was created by Congress in 1977 to advance freedoms around the world. It made deep connections to groups committed to women’s rights, gay rights, press freedoms, free elections and impartial courts.

Diplomats in the bureau looked Mr. Samson up on Google when he arrived, according to people working in the department in the time. Few had heard of him, but he told one official that he knew the vice president from his time with American Moment.

Armed with that reputation, Mr. Samson came in “guns blazing,” another official recalled. Mr. Samson told some of his colleagues, the official said, that the United States had “gone woke” and that he sought to give voice to Christians and conservatives.

Nick Solheim, the chief executive of American Moment, said that Mr. Samson’s government role was a “perfect fit” given his longtime focus on Christianity, free speech and Europe.


Vice President JD Vance at the Munich Security Conference last year. His speech, in which he called on European leaders to work more closely with far-right politicians, has reshaped the U.S.-Europe relationship. Credit: Sean Gallup/Getty Images

The second official, who has also since left government, recalled Mr. Samson instructing the staff to brainstorm how to punish the European Union for, as Mr. Samson saw it, restricting speech. Another former official said the office spent three months assessing if E.U. tech regulations had led to what Mr. Samson perceived as censorship.

Mr. Samson disliked that the bureau’s name included a reference to human rights. He wanted to change it to the Bureau of Natural Rights, according to three former State Department employees.

To Mr. Samson and other conservatives, the concept of human rights is often a radical expression of a human-made political ideology. By contrast, they say, “natural rights” indicates something god-given.

Mr. Samson gave his staff a document, seen by The New York Times, that was titled “Natural Rights Theory.” It asserted that his goal was to “prevent political ideology from distorting what is/is not a natural right.”

The bureau’s name was congressionally mandated, so Mr. Samson was stymied. Instead, he created the Office of Natural Rights, a unit within the bureau.
Europe Destabilized

For much of 2025, Mr. Samson traveled across Europe, putting his ideas into action.

One of the first people he tried to help was Ms. Le Pen, France’s veteran anti-immigrant leader, who hoped to become France’s first far-right president since World War II. She finished second to Emmanuel Macron in the country’s last two presidential elections.

In April 2025, a court convicted Ms. Le Pen of overseeing an embezzlement scheme and barred her from running for another public office for five years. Though she led many polls, another run for the presidency would now require a favorable verdict from an appeal hearing.

At a May meeting with an independent commission that advises the French government on human rights, Mr. Samson advocated for Ms. Le Pen. He asked if the commission had considered intervening on Ms. Le Pen’s behalf, according to Ms. Lafourcade, its director. Mr. Samson clearly viewed Ms. Le Pen as a victim, not a perpetrator, Ms. Lafourcade said.


Marine Le Pen, a far-right French leader whom Mr. Samson sought to help, sitting in the French Parliament. Credit: Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters

Ms. Lafourcade described the hourlong conversation as “circular,” and said that it had so unsettled her that she refused to have a photo taken with Mr. Samson and his colleague. After escorting the diplomats to the lobby, she said, she reported them to the French government on the grounds of potential foreign interference.

“To me, it seemed more like a search for disinformation,” she said.

That same day, Mr. Samson and his colleague visited the office of Reporters Without Borders, a press freedom watchdog, according to Thibaut Bruttin, the group’s director. They expressed opposition to the Digital Services Act, the E.U.’s flagship tech regulation, Mr. Bruttin said.

To its European backers, the act is part of a broader attempt to protect users from abuse. It requires social media companies to police their platforms for illicit content, hate speech and misinformation — or risk hefty fines. Conservative U.S. administration officials like Mr. Samson say the act endangers free speech by preventing Europe’s right-wing voices from speaking freely online.

During the meeting, Mr. Samson “said France was gradually becoming North Korea,” Mr. Bruttin recalled.

By the final weeks of the year, Mr. Samson’s aggressive approach on matters like tech regulation had been echoed in official U.S. policy — first in the president’s national security strategy and then in the State Department’s internal strategic plan.

In a memo sent to embassies, the department said its aim for 2026 to 2030 was to “rebuild the civilizational alliance” with European states that had been “infected with the dogma of the post-Cold War neoliberal moment.”

The memo, seen by The Times, was a significant departure from previous internal directives. It instructed diplomats to “condemn anti-democratic actions which restrict free speech or the free exercise of religion” and to treat mass migration as “a threat to national cohesion, social stability, and civilizational values” across Europe.

The memo’s subtext appeared clear — and alarming — for mainstream leaders in Europe. In country after country, the United States was drastically shifting its approach. Groups fighting for gender equality, women’s rights, gay rights and electoral reform were out. Organizations dedicated to religious freedom, right-wing speech and fighting abortion rights were in.

The United States, under Mr. Trump, was preparing to loosen its support of the continent unless its politics shifted rightward.
Jaws Dropped

By the end of 2025, both Mr. Samson and Ms. Rogers were both fully engaged in pushing that message, spending the final weeks of the year separately crisscrossing the continent to implement Mr. Trump’s new European diplomacy.

In early December, face to face with British diplomats in London, Ms. Rogers did not hold much back. In the meeting, previously unreported, Ms. Rogers railed against migration levels in Britain, accusing migrants of stoking a crime wave. (Crime against individuals and households has generally fallen in Britain over the past 10 years, according to official figures.) She criticized British police for arresting a comedy writer critical of advocacy for transgender rights. She insisted that the diplomats knew something was wrong with the British system, according to four people familiar with the conversation.

The British officials were left stunned.

“Jaws dropped,” one person said.

Ms. Rogers, a former First Amendment lawyer whose clients included the National Rifle Association and Charlie Kirk, the slain MAGA activist, has not always matched Mr. Samson’s most bombastic rhetoric and rarely echoes his concerns about natural rights.

Sarah Rogers answering questions from senators in Washington last year. Credit: U.S. Senate

Though Ms. Rogers, who outranks Mr. Samson, has sometimes taken an approach that is less confrontational, her focus in the first three months of 2026 remained largely the same one that the young diplomat developed through the previous year.

In his last big trip through Europe in December, Mr. Samson toured Austria, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Slovakia. It was in Hungary that Mr. Samson made his boldest public broadside against the old European order.

He gave a speech at the Hungarian Institute for International Affairs, a think tank founded by the Hungarian government.

“Clearly, this is not a Europe of free speech and self-governance,” Mr. Samson said.

His new Office of Natural Rights, he said, would take “targeted action to resist traditional authoritarians and modern ideologues alike who seek to undermine these core societal goods.”

Four months later, that message may not look as effective as the Trump officials had hoped.

Days before the general election in Hungary, Mr. Vance traveled to Budapest, hoping to boost Mr. Orban’s re-election chances. The vice president called the Hungarian a “statesman” and one of the few leaders in Europe to “stand up for the values of Western civilization.”

When Hungarian voters went to the polls last Sunday, Mr. Orban lost heavily after 16 consecutive years in power.


ABOUT THE AUTHORS:

Michael D. Shear is the chief U.K. correspondent for The New York Times, covering British politics and culture and diplomacy around the world.

Catherine Porter is an international reporter for The Times, covering France. She is based in Paris.

Jane Bradley is an investigative reporter on the International desk. She is based in London, where she focuses on abuses of power, national security and crime, and social injustices.

Christopher F. Schuetze is a reporter for The Times based in Berlin, covering politics, society and culture in Germany, Austria and Switzerland.

A version of this article appears in print on April 18, 2026, Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: Envoy, Five Years Out of College, Leading Cultural War in Europe. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper


How Jeffrey Epstein Is Tied to Jared Kushner, Saudi Arabia, and the Iran War



Wajahat Ali

April 22, 2026

VIDEO:  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1SGfJ1f8x7I

 

#Epstein #JaredKushner #IranWar 

What if the war in Iran isn’t just about geopolitics—but about power, money, and hidden connections? In this explosive breakdown, we connect the dots between Jared Kushner, his deep financial ties to Saudi Arabia and Qatar, and the shocking reappearance of Jeffrey Epstein in the background of global influence networks. Joining the show is investigative journalist Kait Justice, who breaks down her findings on how elite power circles, foreign money, and political access may be shaping decisions behind the Iran conflict.

thelefthook.substack.com

#Epstein #JaredKushner #IranWar #SaudiArabia #Geopolitics #Trump #BreakingNews #WorldPolitics #MiddleEast #PowerNetwork #Expose #InvestigativeJournalism #GlobalCrisis #FollowTheMone
y



https://truthout.org/articles/trump-administration-is-using-christianity-to-justify-murder-and-empire/

Op-Ed

Politics & Elections
 
Trump Administration Is Using Christianity to Justify Murder and Empire

There is no love of the stranger in Trump, Vance, and Hegseth’s embrace of imperial Christianity.

by George Yancy
April 21, 2026
Truthout
 

President Donald Trump, Vice President JD Vance, and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth bow their heads during the invocation the amphitheatre at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia, on Memorial Day, May 26, 2025. 

PHOTO: President Donald Trump, Vice President JD Vance, and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth bow their heads during the invocation the amphitheatre at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia, on Memorial Day, May 26, 2025. BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI / AFP via Getty Images