Why regime change is now imperative

America is sick and her sickness endangers the whole world. Given America’s immense power and resources, a cure must be found within. The first thing that is needed is an education teaching that hate must be avoided, that excellence does not consist in violence. To achieve this change of outlook is an immense task which America’s “Radicals” must attempt to carry out. Whether the necessary heroism will be forthcoming, I do not know. We can only hope that it may be so.Bertrand Russell, The Ethos of Violence in the Minority of One, 1965, p 607

America has, except for perhaps John F Kennedy and Jimmy Carter, had a succession of warmongering presidents since World War 2. Arguably, none of them, except for maybe Nixon and Johnson, come even close to being as unhinged and unstable as Donald Trump.

Trump may not have managed to get as many Americans killed in unnecessary acts of aggression as Nixon or Johnson, but it’s not for lack of trying. His declaration of war on Iran, which, needless to say, is unwarranted, is also blatantly illegal. Worse, Trump’s erratic conduct since the initial airstrikes on Iran began, in tandem with the genocidal Israelis. They not only conspired to kill the Ayatollah but also over 150 elementary school girls, destroyed hospitals and other civil infrastructure. The attack on Iran has spun out of control and has the potential to spiral into a calamitous Third World War.

The original pretext for starting hostilities, which Trump absurdly calls an excursion, an operation, or a war, or all three at the same time, depending on his clarity of mind at the time, was to purge Iran of its ability to manufacture nuclear weapons. The frequent repetition of this flagrant lie doesn’t seem to perturb the American population too much, since he first announced to them in June last year that “Iran’s key nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated.”

Either Americans have short memories, or they don’t understand what obliterated means. Worse, they may just have an unnatural affection for lies or war, or both. Given the American predilection for celebrity worship, tolerating lies is par for the course, and an argument could be made for a baked-in imperialist culture having a natural affinity for warmongering. A recent Pew survey indicates that 37% of Americans (not an insignificant number) support the war, giving credence to the latter hypothesis.

The Pew poll aligns with partisan voting trends in America. It confirms that around a third of the population, perhaps more, are not at all distressed at having a raving lunatic at the helm of the mighty USS Hegemony. It’s also no accident that an imperialist nation came to have a Department of War, or that the bloodthirsty wacko in charge would be an alcoholic former television presenter tasked with spreading misinformation and egregious lies. Trump’s Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, seems to genuinely salivate at the prospect of killing people.

https://youtu.be/bbm4-bT2kpQ?si=7R09v4e0b5bP5UtQ

This diabolical press conference, where both Trump and Hegseth demeaned both their country and themselves, came in the wake of their gross incompetence and mishandling of the war and the hilarious underestimation of Iran’s potential. It was a vain effort to save face after Trump declared he had won the war, only to beg for assistance from the rest of the world when Iran blocked the Strait of Hormuz to ships from nations sympathetic to Israel and America. In short, Iran has him by the short and curlies.

Meanwhile, many Americans began howling, but not about the innocent lives that were being lost in the shambolic war effort. No, it was mainly about being inconvenienced at the pumps.

When Trump was elected for the second time in 2024, he made short work of putting together an administration that surely must be the envy of Germany’s Nazi regime in World War 2. This administration has been in office for more than a year, and while there are mutterings of discontent from many Americans, these are mostly due to rising food and fuel prices. While the rest of the world is utterly shocked by America’s descent into fascism, Americans still have a disturbing, no, annoying, level of reverence for the office of the President. That tolerance for wickedness and wrongdoing is perfectly emblematic of the concept of the banality of evil as described by Hannah Arendt in 1962 during the trial of Adolf Eichmann, the Nazi war criminal.

Again, it’s no accident that someone like Donald Trump won the presidential elections in 2016 and again in 2024 despite a disastrous first term in office. I don’t think anyone has summarised the reason why he was elected twice better than Michael Jochum, a touring drummer for the metal band Korn.

I used to wonder how it was possible that Trump could have won in 2016, and then again in 2024, given how emotionally toxic and depraved he is.

I don’t wonder anymore. I think he won for that exact reason. Because he carried at least one broken shard to reflect the broken shards in millions of others.

If you’re a racist, you found your guy. If you’re a misogynist, you found your guy. If money is your only religion, you found your guy. If your heart is armored shut, you found your guy. If you mock the disabled, you found your guy. If intelligence makes you insecure, you found your guy. If you’re a sexual predator, you found your guy. If you trade in humiliation and conspiracy and filth, you found your guy. 

If you’ve never done a single hour of emotional inventory, you found your guy. If you cheat, stiff contractors, bankrupt your obligations, and call it savvy, you found your guy. If you lie as easily as you breathe, you found your guy. If cruelty feels like strength, you found your guy. If white grievance is your comfort food, you found your guy. If your ego is a black hole no title can fill, you found your guy. If warmongering fuels your ego, you found your guy, If empathy feels like weakness and dominance feels like oxygen, you found your guy.

If he’d only carried one or two of these pathologies, he might have been dismissed as just another loud, damaged man. But he carried a buffet of them. That was the appeal. Millions could locate themselves somewhere in the wreckage. They didn’t have to agree with all of it. They just had to recognize a piece of themselves in it.

It was never really about him. It was about the validation. The absolution. The permission. He didn’t invent the resentment; he amplified it. He didn’t create the cruelty; he normalized it. He gave millions the intoxicating relief of hearing their ugliest impulses echoed back at rally volume.

Trump is a symptom. The deeper illness is collective. If there’s one sentence that defines his power, it’s this: “He says the things I’m thinking.”

And that’s the part that should chill us.

Because what does it say about us that so many were thinking those things? That tens of millions of Americans harbored resentments so deep, so seething, that they were simply waiting for a demagogue to baptize them as virtue? That after decades of supposed progress on race, gender, and equality, so many white men felt so threatened, so displaced, so furious, that cruelty became a political platform?

Maybe we were living in a fool’s paradise, mistaking silence for healing, politeness for progress…

While I’m constantly reminded that not all Americans support Trump, Americans need to take collective responsibility for installing such a depraved excuse for a human being in office. Yes, there are tens of thousands of true Americans who brave arrest and harassment while protesting both the genocide in Gaza and the heavy-handed policing methods of the Trump administration. It’s not nearly enough. The number of people supporting the administration is grotesquely high. Philosopher Bertrand Russell had a forlorn hope in 1965 that education against hate and violence would cure America of its imperialist sickness.

Alas!

Regime change is a quintessentially American imperialist pursuit. It has been going on for years, but Americans barely noticed. They were too busy chasing the American dream while living off the comforts of imperialist conquest. For many other countries, however, the American Dream was a nightmare. Many countries now realise that regime change is imperative, not for Iran, but for the country that spent decades enforcing it on others.

Unfortunately, Americans cannot be trusted to change their regime from within. Old habits die hard. Americans love their pretend-democracy too much, and they also worship the corrupt two-party electoral system that nurtures it. Indeed, given how much time and effort the print and television media spend showcasing the whole electoral circus, it certainly seems like entertainment for the public.

However, Iran has exposed how fragile empires can be. Military might is illusory, especially when controlled by deranged lunatics. The Strait of Hormuz clearly demonstrates that world economies can be shaken and squeezed without the backing of multi-billion-dollar military arsenals.

#AdolfEichmann #Ayatollah #banalityOfEvil #BertrandRussell #DepartmentOfWar #DonaldTrump #HannahArendt #Iran #JimmyCarter #JohnFKennedy #Korn #MichaelJochum #Nixon #PeteHegseth #Pew
Han jagades av ICE – såg Alex Pretti skjutas i Minneapolis

José jagades av migrationspolisen när Alex Pretti sköts till döds i Minneapolis förra helgen. Nu berättar han om händelsen.

Dagens Nyheter

RE: https://mastodon.nz/@AnnaMcM/115880519720659063

"These defenders - some of whom are our workmates, neighbours, even friends and family - aren't carrying out rules. Tyrants don’t even rely on rules anymore. Instead, the defenders are methodically, impassively, searching for rules to somehow justify the tyranny.

Evil's not banal anymore. It’s flaunting itself, smirking at us through a brazen 24/7 news cycle. It’s more like our banality is making the evil possible. "

#Tyranny #BanalityOfEvil

Så blev ICE en stormtrupp i nationalismens tjänst

Sedan Donald Trump tillträdde har 220 000 personer gripits av migrationspolisen ICE och över 60 000 har placerats i låsta förvar.

Dagens Nyheter
The #BanalityOfEvil has evolved into #sponsoringevil a song at a time...
Eurovision used to be a campy joy – but it has become a cynical way to whitewash war Arwa Mahdawi
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/dec/10/eurovision-campy-joy-now-cynical-way-whitewash-war
Eurovision used to be a campy joy – but it has become a cynical way to whitewash war

The song contest continues with its mission of ‘unity and cultural exchange’ by rolling out the red carpet for Israel, even though at least four countries have pulled out in protest, writes Arwa Mahdawi

The Guardian

A quotation from Hannah Arendt

When I speak of the banality of evil, I do so only on the strictly factual level, pointing to a phenomenon which stared one in the face at the trial. Eichmann was not Iago and not Macbeth, and nothing would have been farther from his mind than to determine with Richard III “to prove a villain.” Except for an extraordinary diligence in looking out for his personal advancement, he had no motives at all. And this diligence in itself was in no way criminal; he certainly would never have murdered his superior in order to inherit his post. He merely, to put the matter colloquially, never realized what he was doing.

Hannah Arendt (1906-1975) German-American philosopher, political theorist
Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil, Postscript (1963)

More about this quote: wist.info/arendt-hannah/80707/

#quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #hannaharendt #arendt #accountability #banalityofevil #consequences #crime #evil #evilperson #evildoer #Holocaust #intent #moralityplay #motivation #villain #willfulignorance

Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil, Postscript (1963) - Arendt, Hannah | WIST Quotations

When I speak of the banality of evil, I do so only on the strictly factual level, pointing to a phenomenon which stared one in the face at the trial. Eichmann was not Iago and not Macbeth, and nothing would have been farther from his mind than to determine with…

WIST Quotations

@AlisonCreekside this is such a "#MaskOff moment", I can hear #HannahArendt scream: "I FUCKING TOLD YOU SO!"

#BanalityOfEvil

The imagery used by the US Department of Labour draws on fascist design patterns that are directly reminiscent of Nazi propaganda from the 1930s. Once again, there is no denying that there is no accounting for bad taste. Not only is there a lack of aesthetic education, but the basis of fascism remains an inexhaustible supply of uneducated stupidity and ignorance, especially in leadership positions.
https://www.thebulwark.com/p/what-we-choose-to-nazi-department-of-labor-heroic-realism-doj-january-6th

#antifa #banalityOfEvil #democracy #fascism #labour #Tradeunion #uspol

A Anti-Far Right campaign by the British Trade Union Congress on the topic of the far right. Trade unions are among the few institutions that have the resources, campaign expertise and organisational reach to counteract the extreme right.

https://www.tuc.org.uk/antifarright

#activism #antifa #banalityOfEvil #Courage #democracy #Gewerkschaft #noauthoritarianism #strike #tradeUnion #uspol

Anti-Far Right

Trade unions must join forces with community organisations and other social movements to set our alternative to the politics of hate, rooted in a society that is antiracist and inclusive for all and an economy that rewards work not wealth.

A quotation from Hannah Arendt

What stuck in the minds of these men who had become murderers was simply the notion of being involved in something historic, grandiose, unique (“a great task that occurs once in two thousand years”), which must therefore be difficult to bear. This was important, because the murderers were not sadists or killers by nature; on the contrary, a systematic effort was made to weed out all those who derived physical pleasure from what they did. The troops of the Einsatzgruppen had been drafted from the Armed S.S., a military unit with hardly more crimes in its record than any ordinary unit of the German Army, and their commanders had been chosen by Heydrich from the S.S. élite with academic degrees. Hence the problem was how to overcome not so much their conscience as the animal pity by which all normal men are affected in the presence of physical suffering. The trick used by Himmler — who apparently was rather strongly afflicted by these instinctive reactions himself — was very simple and probably very effective; it consisted in turning these instincts around, as it were, in directing them toward the self. So that instead of saying: What horrible things I did to people!, the murderers would be able to say: What horrible things I had to watch in the pursuance of my duties, how heavily the task weighed upon my shoulders!

Hannah Arendt (1906-1975) German-American philosopher, political theorist
Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil, ch. 6 (1963)

More info about this quote: wist.info/arendt-hannah/13940/

#quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #hannaharendt #banalityofevil #burden #difficulty #duty #genocide #Holocaust #killer #murder #murderer #persuasion #pity #selfcenteredness #selfdeception #selfpity #task #selfjustification