11 comments

  • soared1 day ago
    This seems like one of the first very clear indications that separating your country from the US can be beneficial. The first stone unturned - will we see more countries aligning with other powers?
    • xphos18 hours ago
      I like the progress but I think the article oversell the hope here. Its not about getting to 10s of crossings a day. The previous volume of ships was 130-140 per day. If the capacity of the strait is down +90% their is going to be long lasting problems. I&#x27;ve seen as many as 3 million of the ~20 million barrals might be getting through. The 17m&#x2F;day deficit has to come from somewhere i.e more coal or increased oil prices or reduced World GDP by reduced production&#x2F;consumption.<p>Also Iran&#x27;s leverage is in the reduced world volume. If they allow 110 Ships to go through but block the 20 american-aligned (vastly over stated US-bound ships are not anywhere near 20&#x2F;day). Than the problem for the US is minimized because that would stablize oil prices a reduction of 2% of the world supply might be managable 20% is very hard to make up. Being seperated from the US does not = safety because Iran&#x27;s leverage is the world shock that will effect the US last. The US is net exporter of Oil. They also import a ton of oil from other nations though due to the Jones act (temporarily on hold). Oil is a world market if cheap oil flows Iran&#x27;s leverage is gone.
      • soared17 hours ago
        Seems reasonable that the blockade also means big negative impact on X random country -&gt; that country pressures or builds distaste for US. May be an effective way to further sway the distaste for the US across the world.
    • Jensson1 day ago
      [flagged]
      • Maken1 day ago
        The only countries going to war with Iran are Israel and USA. The other countries are negotiating with Iran and reportedly paying the toll. Also, the strait has been open to Spanish tankers since two weeks ago.
        • Jensson1 day ago
          &gt; Also, the strait has been open to Spanish tankers since two weeks ago.<p>But no Spanish tankers have gone through so that doesn&#x27;t seem to be accurate. An Iranian diplomat saying that publicly doesn&#x27;t matter when the irgc continues to shoot them. The only known European aligned tanker to have gone through is this French one we are reading about here.
        • thisislife21 day ago
          While there are reports that Iran has been charging a toll on some ships from &quot;hostile&quot; countries, there is no such report suggesting that the French, Japanese and Omani ships cited in this news report did so too.<p>In this particular case, it is a diplomatic and reciprocal gesture of goodwill from Iran - the French have publicly said that joint military operations to open the Strait is a bad a idea and diplomatic options need to be pursued for the same while the Japanese have confirmed that they won&#x27;t be sending any minesweepers to the Strait (<i>Japan Isn’t Sending Minesweepers to Middle East, Takaichi Says</i> - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.bloomberg.com&#x2F;news&#x2F;articles&#x2F;2026-03-12&#x2F;japan-isn-t-sending-minesweepers-to-middle-east-takaichi-says" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.bloomberg.com&#x2F;news&#x2F;articles&#x2F;2026-03-12&#x2F;japan-isn...</a> ). Oman, of course, has been the mediator in the early US-Iran negotiations, and has publicly said Iran cannot be blamed for the US-Israel attacks (<i>&#x27;This war is not of their making,&#x27; Omani foreign minister says of Iran</i> - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.middleeasteye.net&#x2F;news&#x2F;war-not-their-making-omani-foreign-minister-says-iran" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.middleeasteye.net&#x2F;news&#x2F;war-not-their-making-oman...</a> ) as it had accepted a new nuclear deal with the Trump administration during the negotiations (<i>Peace ‘within reach’ as Iran agrees no nuclear material stockpile: Oman FM</i> - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.aljazeera.com&#x2F;news&#x2F;2026&#x2F;2&#x2F;28&#x2F;peace-within-reach-as-iran-agrees-no-nuclear-material-stockpile-oman-fm" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.aljazeera.com&#x2F;news&#x2F;2026&#x2F;2&#x2F;28&#x2F;peace-within-reach-...</a> ). He has blamed the Trump administration for undermining negotiations and implied that they acted in bad faith.
      • tarkin21 day ago
        France has distanced itself from Israel recently; Israel is refusing to buy more French military equipment
        • YZF1 day ago
          This is just a culmination of the last two years of tension. The most recent friction is around Lebanon where France sees itself as the protector of its former colony.<p>Interesting take from Le Monde: &quot;Israel turns its back on France as Paris struggles to maintain dialogue&quot;<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.lemonde.fr&#x2F;en&#x2F;international&#x2F;article&#x2F;2026&#x2F;04&#x2F;01&#x2F;israel-turns-its-back-on-france-as-paris-struggles-to-maintain-dialogue_6752009_4.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.lemonde.fr&#x2F;en&#x2F;international&#x2F;article&#x2F;2026&#x2F;04&#x2F;01&#x2F;i...</a>
          • Sabinus1 day ago
            If the French could give Lebanon the support it needs to remove Hezbollah, relations would improve.
      • 54agfvb1 day ago
        Yes, France did: It went with Russia and China in the revised and postponed UN resolution that does <i>not</i> mention use of force to reopen Hormuz.
      • jonplackett1 day ago
        Maybe do some research before just dispatching random thoughts<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.thenationalnews.com&#x2F;news&#x2F;europe&#x2F;2026&#x2F;04&#x2F;03&#x2F;france-pushes-back-on-calls-to-force-reopening-of-hormuz-strait-as-macron-trades-barbs-with-trump&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.thenationalnews.com&#x2F;news&#x2F;europe&#x2F;2026&#x2F;04&#x2F;03&#x2F;franc...</a>
      • watwut1 day ago
        What are on about now? France explicitely and vocally refused to enter the war. That is why their tanker passed.
        • maratc1 day ago
          France also joined China and Russia in blocking Bahreini resolution that would authorise &quot;all defensive means necessary&quot; to protect commercial shipping in the strait. <i>That</i> is why their tanker passed.
          • petre1 day ago
            <i>All defensive means</i> can mean anything. Like a military escort that would shoot back at Iran in case of an attack, which amounts to further escalation.
            • maratc1 day ago
              Not arguing about what that can mean; all I&#x27;m saying is that France and Iran exchanged favours.
              • petre1 day ago
                I wouldn&#x27;t call non escalation a favour. It should be standard practice.
                • maratc1 day ago
                  I wouldn&#x27;t call &quot;letting a tanker pass in international waters without blowing it up&quot; a favour either.
        • Jensson1 day ago
          If that was true many more tankers would have passed from other countries that were more against the war.<p>France is one of few countries with large military presence in the area, that is the only thing they do more than most other countries.<p>Edit: And France even directly threatened to use force here. If you only read American news you wouldn&#x27;t know since they want it to seem like the world is on Irans side here. What we are seeing is that Iran has started buckling to these threats, not that they are giving passage to those who didn&#x27;t threaten.<p>&gt; France is advising Bahrain on a draft United Nations Security Council resolution that would authorize the use of force to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and restore global energy flows, according to three diplomats informed of the process.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.politico.eu&#x2F;article&#x2F;france-advising-bahrain-un-security-council-resolution-strait-of-hormuz-iran-war&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.politico.eu&#x2F;article&#x2F;france-advising-bahrain-un-s...</a>
          • watwut1 day ago
            Spanish tankers are going through. Filipinian and Indian too.<p>Again, what are you on about.<p>France was one of 3 countries that literally blocked UN resolution about opening straight by force. And president repeatedly called it &quot;impossible&quot;.<p>You read weird news if you thing &quot;a threat&quot; of anything is making iran to let ships pass. Money and noninvolvement do.
            • Jensson1 day ago
              &gt; Spanish tankers are going through<p>No they are not, this French ship was the first European tanker going through.
              • The Spanish tankers aren&#x27;t going through because there aren&#x27;t any Spanish tankers that operate in that region.<p>Spain has permission from Iran to send through tankers if it indeed had some.
              • vntok1 day ago
                &quot;X is doing B&quot; and &quot;Y was the first to do B&quot; can both be true at the same time.
          • expedition321 day ago
            Nobody is on Iran&#x27;s side. The world is not black and white.<p>Most countries want STABILITY not WAR. Yes Iranian regime is evil. Yes they kill people. And no that&#x27;s not worth bombing them over.<p>There are politicians who actually THINK and do CALCULATIONS. This war has probably already cost the global economy a trillion USD.
            • kakacik1 day ago
              Certain people in power dont care about global trillions lost, rather billions they earned for themselves in insider trading. Quite a few articles in recent weeks pointing out billion+ moves just before some potus announcement.<p>Also, US is certainly gaining here from high oil prices since its not an optional luxury rather a necessity for entire economies.
            • stinkbeetle1 day ago
              Many people don&#x27;t think Ukraine is worth resisting Russia over either. But as you just said, the world is not black and white. Your decree of what is and is not worthwhile to do, is nothing more than that.
        • nickserv21 hours ago
          Given French companies&#x27; past activities, a sizeable under the table payment from CMA CGM wouldn&#x27;t surprise me.
        • petre1 day ago
          France also has a problem with Israel waging war in Lebanon, a former French administered teritory. As long as Israel sticks to eliminating Hezbollah only, they&#x27;ll shut up about it, but anything beyond that, like that bridge bombing or displacing and killing civilians it&#x27;s bound to have a negative reaction from France.
      • ceejayoz1 day ago
        &gt; France and Japan never distanced themselves from USA here.<p>Trump sure seems to think France did.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cnbc.com&#x2F;2026&#x2F;03&#x2F;31&#x2F;trump-attacks-uk-france-x-posts-tells-allies-the-usa-wont-help-anymore.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cnbc.com&#x2F;2026&#x2F;03&#x2F;31&#x2F;trump-attacks-uk-france-x-po...</a><p>&quot;President Donald Trump on Tuesday warned the U.K. and France that the U.S. “won’t be there to help you anymore,” as he vented his frustration over the close allies’ refusal to join military action against Iran.&quot;
        • nickserv21 hours ago
          Which is strange given a lot of US airpower is flying out of UK airbases.
      • anigbrowl1 day ago
        Complete nonsense, easily debunked. You should be embarrassed to post this.
      • Shank1 day ago
        &gt; The current Japanese leader is also a war mongerer, so I&#x27;d bet they also threatened to enter the war on USA&#x27;s side if their ships weren&#x27;t allowed to pass.<p>The amount of misinformation foreign people have about Takaichi-san is staggering. She is by no means a &quot;war mongerer&quot; and the Japanese constitution has clear limits that prevent Japan from doing virtually anything. The reason why Japan can get a pass is because they specifically have diplomatic relations with Iran, and when she met with Trump, she promised absolutely nothing due to constitutional limits.
        • simgt1 day ago
          The most an average person in the west knows about Takaichi is that she &quot;said&quot; Japan would go to war with China for Taiwan. That&#x27;s of course not true, but the person you&#x27;re replying to also thinks Spain is on Iran&#x27;s side. They are clearly misinformed or lying to fit their narrative.
        • Jensson1 day ago
          Why would she promise anything to Trump? She just wants Iran to let them through, USA isn&#x27;t blocking anyone here, USA isn&#x27;t a part of that conversation.
        • b0rtb0rt1 day ago
          why are you adding japanese honorifics when the rest of your post is in english?
          • adrian_b1 day ago
            In non-English texts it is not unusual to see English honorifics like Sir, Lord, Lady, Duke etc. or even Dr., Mr., Mrs.<p>Similarly, in English texts it is not unusual to see foreign honorifics besides the actual names.<p>It is quite frequent for someone who otherwise does not speak another language to address foreigners as they would be addressed in their own language in formal situations where politeness is expected, e.g. using Herr or Frau for a German, and so on, or using Takaichi-san or Takaichi-sama (more formal) instead of translating that to Mrs. Takaichi.<p>I think that when speaking about a prime minister, formal language is not inappropriate.<p>Trump is probably the most obvious chief of state whose name would look completely inappropriate in the context of using formal polite language, but this should have been an exception.
            • supplementing your points: Japanese seem to prefer dropping the honorifics when in English:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.ph&#x2F;OI3S2" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.ph&#x2F;OI3S2</a><p>I&#x27;ve also heard that it&#x27;s still common to address one&#x27;s peers with -<i>kun</i> in parliament.<p>In GP&#x27;s case it sounds rather quaint, but also endearing (like referring to a neighbor or a long lost schoolmate in the third person)<p>Pedantry: Takaichi is her father&#x27;s surname. (I had to look that up, tbh)
  • jghn1 day ago
    Last week the US stated they didn&#x27;t need any of the oil, and that if other countries wanted it they could go figure it out themselves. Looks like they have. And yet the US is now back to threatening Iran if they don&#x27;t open up the oil.
    • e2le1 day ago
      We are 1 Year and 3 months into this current administration, 2 years and 9 months remain. Despite the short period in office, so much damage and chaos has being caused by one individual and the sycophants who surround him.<p>It is a fact that the reputation of the USA has being damaged, perhaps not repairable for decades or more. This will have consequences.<p>Perhaps, I hope, Americans will take action to save the democratic norms and institutions that so many of them have claimed to cherish. Before he has dismantled and replaced too many to salvage. Or perhaps they have work tomorrow.
      • temp88301 day ago
        Approximately the same things were said about Dubya Jr&#x27;s war with invisible WMDs. If you&#x27;ve forgotten - listen to some songs that came out at the time. It&#x27;s not about a particular president, it&#x27;s that the US seems to have a systemic dependency on starting these wars.
        • LeFantome1 day ago
          Your point seems to be that the US has not changed. Regardless, the world thinks it has.<p>The “coalition of the willing” is not behind the US this time.
          • anjel1 day ago
            And so this Easter day a new oxymoron is born: the coalition of the unwilling.<p>Do with that, in terms of foreign policy, what you will.
            • layer81 day ago
              The unwilling don’t particularly coalise.
            • watwut1 day ago
              Why is that oxymoron? You can, in fact, have a coalition focused on not doing something.
              • Jensson1 day ago
                Yeah, its called home owners associations, NIMBY etc.
        • chaostheory1 day ago
          Back then we had approval from our coalition. We also shared the spoils, which the Russians noted.<p>Also, none of the Bush’s ran on an “America First” isolationist political campaign. Even own base is fracturing because of this.
        • SecretDreams1 day ago
          Information, both good and bad, is a lot more accessible this time around. It has been a dramatic accelerator to worldly views of America in the wake of their recent actions.<p>There are political similarities between the two aforementioned wars, but the social and technological backdrops are quite different, and they&#x27;re working against US public perception. Furthermore, decorum is entirely gone this time around, which isn&#x27;t helping.
        • kakacik1 day ago
          Whole world would weep with joy if somebody like Bush jr would come into power now. Even when talking about that cocaine nepo kid of his cia chief father. I recall those times and emotions well from european perspective, not everybody here is 20-something.<p>These 2 are incomparable on any level. If you want to say it can always get worse that I can agree with.
        • and we&#x27;re still experiencing damage from that war, and it&#x27;s getting worse because of some things that it changed (patriot act, creation of homeland security, etc)<p>we&#x27;ve faced two major recessions since then and may very well be entering our third<p>at this point it seems we&#x27;re just trying to find out where the breaking point is
      • simgt1 day ago
        How many people voted for that &quot;one individual causing chaos&quot; again? 70 million? He&#x27;s also backed by billionaires and an administration that seems to be just as unhinged. It&#x27;s not one person causing chaos, it&#x27;s a whole country with its violent culture. The scale changed slightly, but it&#x27;s also nothing new.
        • This. There are really two explanations here. Either the US hasn&#x27;t been a democracy in the first place. Or the majority of the US voters prefer autocratic amoral psychopaths running their country.
          • MarsIronPI18 hours ago
            &gt; Either the US hasn&#x27;t been a democracy in the first place.<p>Well, it really wasn&#x27;t, and still isn&#x27;t. It&#x27;s a republic: the people decide who make the laws and who executes them. In between these choices there&#x27;s never really been anything for the people to do but ask their representatives to do things.
          • pas1 day ago
            Brits also voted to leave the EU where they had the absurdly privileged position of picking (almost freely) which rules applies to them, while benefiting from others applying them fully.<p>...<p>Democracy is only as good as the people doing the voting, who are about as good (as the rules they don&#x27;t protest againsts) and the content they consume, which is about as good as certain groups make it to be.
            • WickyNilliams23 hours ago
              B-b-but the bananas, and the bureaucrats!!<p>What&#x27;s particularly amazing about Brexit is that many of its chief architects have not been shamed or exiled from society for spinning a yarn that fell apart when confronted with the smallest slither of reality. No, instead, the primary advocate may very well be our next prime minister.
              • rkomorn23 hours ago
                A slither of reality sounds snaky... and I ended up googling it and Google AI convincingly says both that it exists and also that it is confused with &quot;sliver of reality&quot;, and its examples of &quot;slither of reality&quot; point to pages that use &quot;sliver&quot; instead.<p>What a time to be alive.
                • WickyNilliams21 hours ago
                  Oh lol. Good catch. Wrote that with my morning coffee in hand where it appears my brain was still asleep
          • Gud1 day ago
            The US is only nominally democratic. You get politicians bought and paid for. Perhaps there are counter examples, but not many.<p>Only democracy in the western world where there is so much money involved in the elections, is the USA.
            • robocat1 day ago
              The influence of money is a weakness of any democracy. Maybe look at other democratic countries. Definitely seen it here in New Zealand.
              • Gud15 hours ago
                It is absolutely not necessary to spend billions to become president of Germany, in fact it is probably illegal...
                • robocat3 hours ago
                  I believe the influence is hidden in countries where smaller amounts have a bigger impact.<p>A few million can have an outsized influence in New Zealand. Which can mean other countries interfere (not just wealthy broligarches). There was a significant controversy in the 2005 New Zealand elections regarding budgets. It is alleged US fundamentalists funded the Exclusive Brethren Church to produce pamphlets in support of the National Party, by smearing both the Labour Party and the Green Party. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;2005_New_Zealand_election_funding_controversy" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;2005_New_Zealand_election_funding...</a><p>Peter Thiel was given a New Zealand passport by our National Party (maybe by being chummy, although obviously his wealth helped him). The only reason he might not influence NZ politics would be if he doesn&#x27;t give a shit about our politics.<p>The wealthiest person born in New Zealand is Graeme Hart worth ~USD10G ranked by Forbes at about #340.<p>For the New Zealand 2023 General Election, political parties officially spent a total of about USD8M.<p>There&#x27;s a lot of scope for malign influence here.
        • freewilly2317 hours ago
          exactly. and i think a lot of things have always been this way in the mighty usa. the only difference is, that the donald behaves like a brazen clown, not trying to hide anything, so it is easier for everyone to see what&#x27;s going on.
      • augusto-moura1 day ago
        Thing is, that is not just the individual, the world lost the trust in the american vote. Trump was elected twice, it is easy to imagine that another megalomaniac might be elected next.<p>In a democratic system, the ruler is a reflection of the majority of the population. Of course it can change during the course of the administration (as seen in the approval ratings), but the trust is lost and most countries now believe that, one way or another, the majority of the US population agree with some of the ideas behind Trump. The damage will not stop by the end of Trump&#x27;s administration, it is truly the end of multilateralism as we knew it
        • jmye1 day ago
          &gt; the majority of the US population agree with some of the ideas behind Trump<p>And will happily vote for it again and again, provided the better next to the name is an R, no matter how they answer approval polls.<p>This is what happens when your entire media (social and traditional) and tech ecosystem is complicit and encouraging.
      • csa1 day ago
        &gt; It is a fact that the reputation of the USA has being damaged, perhaps not repairable for decades or more.<p>The MAGA base does not care about the international reputation of the US. They lean heavily towards isolationism (irrationally, imho).
      • aaa_aaa1 day ago
        Not one individual. You forgot the ones put the yoke.
      • andy_ppp1 day ago
        If you could design a perfect plan to destroy the United States, Donald Trump, probably through sheer buffoonish incompetence seems to be implementing it.
        • SilverElfin1 day ago
          I don’t think he’s incompetent. He’s actually quite good at extracting wealth for himself&#x2F;family&#x2F;donors&#x2F;friends out of whatever the administration is doing.<p>Iran is a distraction from the Epstein files, and the fact that many from the Trump circle appear in it - Trump himself, some of his children, Elon Musk, Steve Bannon, Peter Thiel, etc.<p>The war with Iran is also a way to make a few more suspicious trades on the market swings, especially the ones following each speech or decision. It would be easy to time trades if you know what will happen because you’re deciding it.<p>The US may be destroyed but it’s because it’s just collateral damage to the billionaires and Epstein class. Not because they’re incompetent. We need to contain their wealth and power with totally new laws.
          • throw3108221 day ago
            You mistake for competence his greed and that of those who surround him. I don&#x27;t think there was a plan to profit from the disaster; rather, they&#x27;re so incompetent that they even lack the basic self-control to avoid publicly taking advantage of the mess they unwillingly caused, however bad and dangerous that might be.
            • Jensson1 day ago
              I imagine Trump wanted to do some fun new things when he is old and will soon die. Its not many who get to experience what it feels like to start a war and kill world leaders, and when you are gonna die soon anyway why not?
              • sieste1 day ago
                I think this is the correct lense. He&#x27;s a malignant narcissist on his way out, with absolutely nobody to stop him.<p>I&#x27;m genuinely worried that he secretly wants to go down in history as the crazy guy who set the oil fields on fire and dropped a nuke on Tehran or something.
                • throw3108221 day ago
                  Not sure what moves Trump- could be any of that or more. What we all know is that Netanyahu and Kushner found this and used it to get what they wanted. This is not Trump&#x27;s war, he&#x27;s not the initiator and he doesn&#x27;t have goals of his own (though at times he might believe he does). It actually contradicts what he campaigned on for years.
      • &gt; take action to save the democratic<p>Im beting 1000 USD that Trump comes up with whatever story&#x2F;issue&#x2F;incident to &quot;manipulate&quot; all upcoming elections to his favour
        • petre1 day ago
          If the doesn&#x27;t turn up as the first US president to actually be impeached. You&#x27;ve got other two who got assasinated. The right to bear arms mskes that sort of thing a bit easier than impeachment.
          • ceejayoz1 day ago
            Andrew Johnson was the first US President to be impeached.<p>Clinton too, then Trump twice.
            • petre1 day ago
              Didn&#x27;t go through. None of them were removed from office.
              • ceejayoz1 day ago
                &gt; None of them were removed from office.<p>Correct. But that&#x27;s not because they weren&#x27;t impeached.<p>Impeachment is part of the process; three presidents have been impeached, Trump twice. Then comes the trial, and conviction&#x2F;acquittal.
      • gosub1001 day ago
        My hope is that this will show weaknesses in our supposed &quot;checks and balances&quot; that can be patched later. If that means it takes an act of congress to even fire a single military weapon, so be it. That&#x27;s just one example, but basically &quot;they&quot; need to backtrack and find every &quot;hack&quot; trump used and plug it so this never happens again.
        • pjc501 day ago
          Checks and balances mean nothing when the same party controls house, senate, president, and supreme court.
          • gosub1001 day ago
            I disagree. Plenty of republicans are vociferously disagreeing with Trump over Iran and Epstein. But even if your premise is true, what if the two-party system were constructed or manipulated by a foreign government with the express intent on dividing us? Maybe that should be addressed as well?
            • jmye1 day ago
              &gt; Plenty of republicans are vociferously disagreeing with Trump over Iran and Epstein.<p>Until they have to take a meaningful vote. Because it’s bullshit.
          • Jensson1 day ago
            And the military. Who the majority of soldiers supports matters a lot since they have the final say when leaders cannot agree. Trump does a lot to gain favor with the military, democrats doesn&#x27;t do much for them.
        • LeFantome1 day ago
          What “checks and balances”?<p>The SCOTUS ruled that presidents cannot be held accountable.<p>The constitution is pretty clear. Trump does not have the authority to invade Iran. Yet he did. What are you planning to patch?<p>Despite everything, Trump has 35-40 percent approval right now. You cannot patch that out.
          • gosub1001 day ago
            the ones that were printed in my middle school government McGraw Hill textbook...
            • ceejayoz1 day ago
              “First, your return to shore was not part of our negotiations nor our agreement, so I must do nothing. And secondly, you must be a pirate for the Pirate&#x27;s Code to apply, and you&#x27;re not. And thirdly, the Code is more what you&#x27;d call guidelines than actual rules.”<p>Turns out that last bit is how the US was setup. Oops.
        • freedomben1 day ago
          Agreed, but the problem is that whichever party is in power wants to expand presidential authority, and only the minority party wants to reign it in. When the president flips, usually so do the parties in power. Plus you have to be enough majority to override a presidential veto. I don&#x27;t see this ever workign out :-(
      • swarnie1 day ago
        &gt; 2 years and 9 months remain<p>You think.<p>Peaceful transfers of power are always tricky in younger democracies.
        • Arubis1 day ago
          My strong suspicion is that the current POTUS will leave the White House in a box. My hope is that this precedes the next election cycle.
          • Do you think the ThielVance will leave peacefully?
            • bebop1 day ago
              They don’t have the cult of personality to hold on to power in the same way djt does.
              • Who needs personality when you got your own stormtroopers with guns?
                • MarsIronPI18 hours ago
                  You need to stop the people with guns from killing you and your stormtroopers. That&#x27;s what the Second Amendment is for.
                  • mrguyorama12 hours ago
                    The people who bay loudest about that second amendment have long signaled that they will kill to keep Trump in power. They&#x27;ve been salivating for an excuse to shoot democrats for decades. They have been openly advocating for the murder of democrats for ages. Democrat politicians were literally murdered in the past few years and they don&#x27;t give a fuck, because they support it.<p>Trump is already well beyond the confines of the Constitution. If the 2A crowd gave a fuck about rights other than larping soldiers, they would have already marched on him. He has openly declared that guns should be taken away from people and that having a gun on you at a protest should justify shooting you. The 2A crowd continues to support him fully.
                    • MarsIronPI7 hours ago
                      &gt; He has openly declared that guns should be taken away from people and that having a gun on you at a protest should justify shooting you.<p>OK, I&#x27;m calling you on this one. Source please.
                      • mrguyorama5 hours ago
                        Donald Trump&#x27;s first term included him saying, literally &quot;Take the guns first, due process second&quot;<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.c-span.org&#x2F;clip&#x2F;white-house-event&#x2F;user-clip-donald-trump-take-the-guns-first-go-through-due-process-second&#x2F;4717030" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.c-span.org&#x2F;clip&#x2F;white-house-event&#x2F;user-clip-dona...</a><p>Here&#x27;s about the second claim<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;time.com&#x2F;7358403&#x2F;nra-trump-clash-gun-carrying-rights-pretti-federal-agents&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;time.com&#x2F;7358403&#x2F;nra-trump-clash-gun-carrying-rights...</a><p>&quot;He shouldn&#x27;t have been carrying a gun&quot; says Trump about someone fully in compliance with US law, who never even drew his weapon. &quot;You can&#x27;t walk in with guns&quot;. It&#x27;s up to you to look up discussions about Kyle Rittenhouse and what republicans and Trump supporters believed about bringing a gun to a protest not very long ago.<p>Elected twice by the &quot;(2A rights) SHALL NOT BE INFRINGED&quot; crowd. You can bet they will continue to support him.
          • Jensson1 day ago
            The standard dictatorial takeover of a democracy is to keep the elections and the presidency, but to add a supreme leader above the president, similar to what Iran or Russia or China is doing. So Trump would no longer be president, he would be supreme leader joining what the other world powers are doing.
            • ceejayoz1 day ago
              &gt; add a supreme leader above the president, similar to what Iran or Russia or China is doing<p>This is trivially debunked.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;President_of_Russia" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;President_of_Russia</a>
        • OneMorePerson20 hours ago
          Honest question, which modern democracies (there&#x27;s been a few different forms) besides the UK are older than the US?<p>The word younger is implying to me that US would be considered the youngest in a list of current democracies, which I wasn&#x27;t aware of.
      • iJohnDoe1 day ago
        Worst case there will be another Republican president from the same tribe. We could be in for the same exact chaos and damage for another four years. This could go on for a long time.<p>Remember, Republicans get out and vote. They would rather suffer and destroy America just so the democrats don’t win.
        • gffrd1 day ago
          &gt; They would rather suffer and destroy America just so the democrats don’t win.<p>This is true.<p>Which raises the question: could Democrats use this reality (whatever they touch is poisoned, in eyes of the other side) to steer the result a bit?
        • ronnier1 day ago
          I think a large part of why they do this and vote the way they do is because of comments like yours. Hacker news, Reddit, award shows, movies, universities, etc all have a constant drum beat of disdain and hate towards them. I think this motivates them into voting even if the vote is against their own interest.
          • kdheiwns1 day ago
            I think we&#x27;re beyond the point of &quot;you can&#x27;t criticize them. That&#x27;s mean and motivates them.&quot; At what point is the line drawn? Should it be in bad taste to criticize Orban supporters because it makes them support him more? What about Erdogan? Putin? Kim Jong Un? And why is it one sided that they can&#x27;t be criticized, but it&#x27;s all fair and good for their own leaders to demonize everyone? It&#x27;s a silly double standard and people see through it now. Concern trolling stopped being effective years ago.
            • Jensson1 day ago
              If you want to win elections, yes. You never convince voters by telling them that they are evil people. Its fine to say Trump is evil, its not fine to say Trump voters are evil because those voters will now be much less likely to vote for you. They can&#x27;t take back their votes, they already voted for Trump before, so they will just not vote for you when you attack them like that.
              • amalcon1 day ago
                Republicans have been calling democratic voters baby-killers for the entire time I have been aware of what a republican is. This sort of behavior has only gotten worse over time. They still manage to win elections.<p>I get that there are real asymmetries here, but I really don&#x27;t think there are substantial blocs of swing voters who use &quot;who has insulted them less&quot; as a real factor. If that were the case, Trump would not have made the gains he did in 2024.<p>The important thing is to make people feel welcome in your coalition. It is clearly possible to do that either with or without being nice. It&#x27;s just a different skillset.
                • Jensson1 day ago
                  [flagged]
                  • jibal1 day ago
                    If you have to lie to make a point, maybe the point is invalid. And the same goes for your other comments on this page ... they have no truth to them. Low quality trash comments like &quot;[Newsom] does seem wildly corrupt though with extreme exceptions in bills for his friends and backers, more than other politicians I&#x27;ve seen&quot; and &quot;Betting sites are trusted third parties&quot;.<p>I will ignore further bad arguments and baseless claims from this source.
                  • Which Democrat leaders are &quot;attacking white men a lot&quot;?
              • thisislife21 day ago
                What you say is insightful and true. The west, America in particular, has a genuine problem today with its politics of polarising people to extremes. It partly has to do with how politics is done online in the internet, through the creation of &quot;echo chambers&quot; where no &quot;dissent&quot; is tolerated.
              • kdheiwns1 day ago
                Dems have tried the strategy of pandering to republicans for decades. That strategy in 2024 backfired and made Dems not care about the election. The whole time republicans ran a campaign saying that blue haired democrats are harming kids and they&#x27;re burning down cities and someone needs to lock them up all up. Republicans had a great election year.<p>Again, one sided. People are tired of it. More importantly, people are growing tired of the tolerance for the people who support the current happenings. Look around about what people who stayed out of the 2024 election said and it&#x27;s that Dems were milquetoast and tried to be friendly and play both sides. Look around and see why republicans were fired up to vote. It&#x27;s because they loved the demonization of Dems.<p>The funny thing is you can criticize the supporters. It&#x27;s no problem. You can criticize Bush voters and everyone will agree with you. Why? Because nobody voted for Bush. Yet he won two elections. Meaning those people regretted their vote and now completely hide that they voted for him. They also retroactively hate the Iraq War, despite supporting it in 2003 and saying anyone who opposes it is unamerican. But those people will now say Dems started the war.<p>Trying to pull those people over is like trying to wrestle with a greased pig. No kind words will ever be enough to grab them. They&#x27;re incredibly loyal to their side no matter what, and will deny ever supporting it the moment social pressure builds up too much. But interestingly, they also respect anger and vitriol against those they feel betrayed them. Republicans loved voting for Trump because he said he was against neocons and the Iraq War and all those people who voted for them. If Trump ever falls out of favor, those people who once supported him won&#x27;t be begging for leniency. They&#x27;ll put on a new hat and demand revenge against him and his supporters. They don&#x27;t want a both aisles softy. They&#x27;ll just pretend they were always against him.
                • Jensson1 day ago
                  &gt; That strategy in 2024 backfired and made Dems not care about the election<p>Are you saying democrats didn&#x27;t vote for Kamala since Kamala didn&#x27;t call Trump voters evil? What are you on about? I see no reason why you should call Trump voters evil.<p>As I said its fine to call Trump evil, but why call the voters evil? What purpose does that serve?
                  • ceejayoz1 day ago
                    &gt; Are you saying democrats didn&#x27;t vote for Kamala since Kamala didn&#x27;t call Trump voters evil?<p>Dems were disillusioned by the Biden administration&#x27;s lack of meaningful effort to nail the previous administration&#x27;s criminals to the wall. Merrick Garland was an absolute failure.<p>Add in things like cozying up to the Cheneys, and the incorrect assumption Trump II would be similar to Trump I.
              • jibal1 day ago
                I&#x27;m not about to bite my tongue for this absurd cowardly fallacious reason.
          • yongjik1 day ago
            Everything Trump has done since he was re-elected made Democrats hate him more, and more publicly, and you know what, despite that Trump&#x27;s ratings have steadily fallen.<p>If your thesis is true, you&#x27;d expect Trump&#x27;s ratings to go up.<p>As far as I can see, partisan hatred doesn&#x27;t matter, because pretty much everybody speaking and listening to such rhetorics have already made up their minds. The battle is fought in the middle, and these people don&#x27;t care about latest Truth Social posts. They care about the price of gas.<p>Trump fucked with the one thing people will not forget about, because their livelihood depends on it. It&#x27;s going to be... interesting.
          • watwut1 day ago
            Everything republican party do and everything republicans vote for ... are fault of the opposition. Always. Republicans are little helpless souls having no choice but cause maxinum harm as long as opposition in any for exists.<p>Look at what that party collectively stands for now, who they kick out and who they keep. They all stand behind trump.
            • devinplatt1 day ago
              I learned recently that there&#x27;s actually a name for this concept. Murc&#x27;s law states that in American politics, only Democrats are assumed to have agency.<p>Presumably democratic reforms could help change the dynamic if they changed the incentives. Right now, it&#x27;s a politically viable strategy to just obstruct the other party when out of power, and politically unviable strategy for Congress to oppose a president from the same party. Both of which lead to a lot of dysfunction.<p>As an example, if Congress had multimember districts with an appropriate voting system (e.g. ranked choice voting for all members at the same time), then you can effectively nullify the power of gerrymandered voting districts (the current system, where effectively politicians choose voters rather than the other way around). Doing so would elevate the influence of general elections over party primaries. Then representatives would be less afraid of challenges in those primaries, which is currently one of the major disincentives in opposing the president of the same political party (fear of being &quot;primaried&quot;).
              • Jensson1 day ago
                That is just progressive vs conservative, ie changing things vs conserving things, humans are biased to conserve things unless the set of changes are overwhelmingly better.<p>So conservatives win when progressives push for too many changes, not changing things is the default. So saying that the democrats lost the election by pushing too fast is not weird, that is just how humans works.
                • devinplatt1 day ago
                  There&#x27;s definitely an asymmetry in how the systemic dysfunction benefits the Republican party over the Democratic party. (Overall the system benefits both parties though since it entrenches partisanship.)<p>I&#x27;d argue that the asymmetry has less to do with change vs. no change and more to do with the Republican party currently being an &quot;anti government&quot; party (pivoting to that post New Deal). So less is expected of them in terms of functional governance.<p>With respect to change: I&#x27;ve heard a lot of commentary that the Republican party today is more of an instigator of change than the Democratic party (being seen as a defender of the status quo), despite the traditional alignment of Republican&#x2F;conservative&#x2F;no change. Democrats are seen as pro-institution and Republicans anti-institution.<p>In case it matters, I personally don&#x27;t identify with a political party. I just want functional government and politics and I see a lot of dysfunction. I&#x27;m an engineer so naturally I gravitate towards systemic solutions to systemic problems.
                • bigbadfeline1 day ago
                  &gt; That is just progressive vs conservative, ie changing things vs conserving things.<p>Conserving distraction == wars, progressive distraction == LG, then B, then T, there are still letters in the alphabet to progress to - mandatory for school children to study in detail.<p>Conserving inflation same as progressive inflation, the small group benefiting form it - the same too.<p>Changing presidential candidates a few months before election and doing everything to let the other side win? Very progressive.<p>Promising no-more-wars and delivering more-wars? Very conservative.<p>Moral of the story - while &#x27;progressive&#x27; and &#x27;conservative&#x27; are used haphazardly, lacking precise and concrete definitions in terms of specific, measurable goals and commitments, using them for political analysis is just mud in the eyes.
            • qwerpy1 day ago
              Unironically yes. I lived in the Seattle area and witnessed firsthand the effects of state&#x2F;county&#x2F;city Democrat rule. Gifted programs cancelled, streets full of homeless and drug addicts. Hateful people yelling at and flipping me off as I take my kids to daycare for the heinous crime of driving a Tesla. I’m a well educated highly paid minority, the kind of voter that Democrats take for granted. I voted Republican down the ballot last election.
              • wrs1 day ago
                Are you familiar with the phrase “cutting off your nose to spite your face”?
                • qwerpy1 day ago
                  Assuming that people vote a certain way out of spite is narrow-minded. Talk to people outside of your bubble and try to understand them instead of reducing them down to caricatures. I don’t judge people on the left the way that I get judged by them. I genuinely think that my choice of political party is better for my family’s quality of life.
                  • aurareturn1 day ago
                    I agree. I would vote republican locally, but I&#x27;d vote for anyone to replace Trump and his circle.
              • nozzlegear1 day ago
                You witnessed the firsthand effects of NIMBY rule, which both parties have in abundance.
              • Nursie1 day ago
                Well let me be the first to thank you for the extra dollar a litre on my fuel, the extra hundred or so dollars a month on my mortgage and the impending recession that your choice has imposed upon me here in Australia.<p>Thanks so much for voting in Trump and his enablers.
                • aurareturn1 day ago
                  Rather than blame this voter, why don&#x27;t we put some blame onto the democrats. In San Francisco, progressive democrats have wasted billions on homeless and crime but with little to show for.<p>Sometimes democrats do push too far left. Far left is not that much different than far right.
                  • nozzlegear1 day ago
                    Horseshoe theory is real, but much like Seattle, SF&#x27;s biggest problem is politically active NIMBYs (and SF has more than most places). Democrats and Republicans both have NIMBYs, it transcends political boundaries.
                    • aurareturn1 day ago
                      NIMBYs aren&#x27;t causing homeless problems.
                      • nozzlegear1 day ago
                        &quot;I don&#x27;t want affordable apartments or housing in my backyard because it lowers my property value&quot; is a pretty clear amplifier of homelessness.
                        • aurareturn1 day ago
                          You do realize that normal people who can&#x27;t afford a city will just move to a cheaper area right?
                          • ceejayoz1 day ago
                            Cool.<p>Who staffs your stores when everyone moves away? Who mows the lawn? Who builds the houses?
                          • nozzlegear1 day ago
                            That&#x27;s not at all incompatible with what I said though, right?
                  • Nursie1 day ago
                    Because, uh, Democrats didn’t do this?<p>I don’t really give a rats ass who runs the internals of your country, and what goes on in San Francisco seems like a you problem. Due to voters like this, Trump is now my problem many thousands of miles away.<p>Don’t underestimate just how much ill will he is generating around the world, especially in allied nations, by insulting leaders and pushing up all of our energy prices.
                    • qwerpy1 day ago
                      Strange that when Democrats mess things up “they didn’t do that” or “that’s a you problem” but when the other side does something you’re very quick to assign specific blame. One-sided thinking like this is why no one can find common ground anymore and politics has veered off into extremes.
                      • Nursie1 day ago
                        There’s nothing strange or one-sided there at all.<p>One party or other mismanaging San Francisco or Seattle has zero effect on me here in Australia. A madman waving his dick around overseas and insulting everyone does though, and is costing me hundreds of dollars a month.<p>And you voted for it. Thanks.
              • watwut1 day ago
                So, you did not voted for centrists and chosen to vote for nazi salute throwing radicals ... because there are non meek leftists groups.<p>The only way to win against Trump voters like you is to ignore them, because people like you will choose nazi until nazi are the only game in town.
                • qwerpy1 day ago
                  [flagged]
                  • watwut1 day ago
                    I said &quot;win against Trump&quot;. That you identify so much with Trump that you twisted it into &quot;against me&quot; is telling.<p>That you dont care about overall damage because &quot;I am rich so others suffer&quot; just confirms what I already think about Trump voters.
                    • qwerpy17 hours ago
                      Did you forget what you wrote?<p>&gt; win against Trump voters like you
          • LeFantome1 day ago
            One third of Americans voted Democrat.<p>One third voted Republican.<p>One third did not vote.<p>I hold the last group most responsible.
            • shrubby1 day ago
              One group voted for nicely speaking tax free zillionaires. Another one voted for hate speaking zillionaires.<p>Third one didn&#x27;t want to vote for zillionaires.<p>Perhaps next time there&#x27;ll be someone to vote not representing the zillionaire-class?
            • It&#x27;s hard to blame it on people not voting for options that suck and do not represent their political stance.
            • cowboylowrez10 hours ago
              Not me, trump should have at most received 1 to 2 percent in either primaries or the general election, even in 2016 we knew what sort of fellow he was, at least the folks who could read more than a paragraph in a sitting.<p>The primaries were the worst, at least the generals you get conservatives voting party lines, the primaries are where &quot;conservatives&quot; decided that trump was their guy. just go back and read up on republicans descriptions of trump before they had to get in line in the wake of the trump victories. I exclusively hold the trump voters in the primaries responsible. We&#x27;re the sort of country of laws that traditionally says any loser can run for office, its our job as a society to keep at least a plausible set of standards for who we want in office. &quot;Conservatives&quot; who went trump either failed to do their due dilligence, or they are aligned with trumps value system which common decency prevents me from describing in any detail.
          • jibal1 day ago
            That&#x27;s a completely intellectually bankrupt argument that blames good people for the actions of bad people. It doesn&#x27;t have a shred of fact or logic to support it.
          • ceejayoz1 day ago
            Bless your heart, you&#x27;re doing the cartoon.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.dailykos.com&#x2F;stories&#x2F;2018&#x2F;8&#x2F;8&#x2F;1786532&#x2F;-Cartoon-You-made-me-become-a-Nazi" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.dailykos.com&#x2F;stories&#x2F;2018&#x2F;8&#x2F;8&#x2F;1786532&#x2F;-Cartoon-Y...</a><p>Why are all the Democrats Fox News (and the actual <i>President of the United States</i> himself) does a &quot;constant drum beat of disdain and hate towards&quot; not doing the same thing? Why is this only a concern on one side?
        • none25851 day ago
          It may even be Trump again! Wouldn&#x27;t be surprised if we see some movement towards removing presidential term limits. They weren&#x27;t always in place and they can be removed again.
        • b0rtb0rt1 day ago
          why is it that democrats always assume they are the correct side and that everyone else agrees with them?
      • Cyph0n1 day ago
        1. A non-trivial proportion of us voted for Trump.<p>2. Blatantly kidnapping and assassinating heads of state is the culmination of US foreign policy and <i>not</i> an anomaly. The machine is working as designed.<p>The only foreign policy blunders I would attribute to Trump are the completely unnecessary spats with Canada and Denmark&#x2F;the EU, although neither blunder seems to have made a dent in the ass kissing.
      • shrubby1 day ago
        [flagged]
        • cyberge991 day ago
          Honest? Trump is the most dishonest president in history. He literally says two diametrically opposite things: - we don’t need any oil - open up the strait or else severe consequences Which is it? Only fools think his opacity is a feature not a terrible bug.
          • shrubby1 day ago
            Honest in the moral corruption and the endgame of the current political system, which is the power from the many to the few to the one ultimate authoritarian messiah.<p>But yeah, lots of lies that emphasize the honesty of the endgame.
      • nozzlegear1 day ago
        &gt; <i>Perhaps, I hope, Americans will take action to save the democratic norms and institutions that so many of them have claimed to cherish. Before he has dismantled and replaced too many to salvage. Or perhaps they have work tomorrow.</i><p>I&#x27;m going to take action by voting in November. Or are you suggesting revolution is more prudent, that I should put my life on the line right now because the global economy is a little fucky?
        • vntok1 day ago
          Interesting question. Do you believe that waiting is fine because the election will be fair in November?
          • nozzlegear1 day ago
            Yes? I&#x27;ve been a poll worker for every election since 2018, I have no reason to believe they won&#x27;t be this time around. Do you have reason to believe that Trump isn&#x27;t just full of hot air, bluster and bullshit like usual (TACO)?
            • hackable_sand1 day ago
              I think you are confused.<p>Yes, the mechanical process is hard to fuck up.<p>That is not the unfair part.<p>As long as I have been alive there has not been a fair election on US grounds.
              • AnimalMuppet1 day ago
                You&#x27;re going to have to define what you mean by &quot;a fair election on US grounds&quot;, because that statement sounds like utter BS.
            • vntok1 day ago
              Well yes, of course. For example this a month or so ago seems worrying: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.lemonde.fr&#x2F;en&#x2F;international&#x2F;article&#x2F;2026&#x2F;02&#x2F;14&#x2F;trump-threatens-to-bypass-congress-and-order-new-voting-laws-ahead-of-midterms_6750474_4.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.lemonde.fr&#x2F;en&#x2F;international&#x2F;article&#x2F;2026&#x2F;02&#x2F;14&#x2F;t...</a><p>&gt; US President Donald Trump, on Friday, February 13, <i>threatened to try to bypass Congress and force new voting laws</i> ahead of the November midterm elections, where his Republican Party fears losing control of the legislature. Trump said he would soon <i>issue an executive order</i> attempting to impose the rules if Congress does not pass a law requiring photo identification to vote and other nationwide reforms.<p>&gt; &quot;There will be Voter ID for the Midterm Elections, <i>whether approved by Congress or</i> not!&quot; Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform. &quot;If we can&#x27;t get it through Congress, there are Legal reasons why this SCAM is not permitted. I will be presenting them shortly, in the form of an Executive Order,&quot; he wrote.
              • convolvatron1 day ago
                that makes absolute sense. on one hand legally voting process is delegated to the states, and we can argue about to what degree congress might be able to impose federal standards. but an executive order has absolutely no bearing on the situation legally.<p>but if you believe, as many people claim to, than an executive order is actually a federal law, then if some blue state decides to ignore such an executive order, then you can claim that the election process was tainted, illegal, and illegitimate. maybe you can even round up all the ballots in order to perform an &#x27;investigation&#x27;. maybe send federal officers to check IDs. all kinds of things.
        • bathtub3651 day ago
          The sooner regime change comes in the US, the better.
    • Spooky231 day ago
      It’s the same grift all over again. The market will drop 2-3% Monday. Jared and Jr will load up on options, WTI puts, and whatever other BS they do.<p>Then Tuesday we’ll announce that “good talks have happened” and bridge day is delayed. Maybe they’ll roll out the Shah’s nephew or whatever and pave the way for an announcement of a transitional government.<p>They’ll push the strikes until late in the week or early next week to maximize volatility - next Friday is the April options expiry. It likely the Treasury is intervening in the oil markets, so there’s likely a counter-trade there as well.<p>I’ve 3x’d my salary on this trade as an observer, the insiders are printing cash. Eventually the credibility of the office of the POTUS will erode to a point where it is going to blow up, we probably have another 3-5 rounds of this.
    • It is the weekend, of course there is a threat. Tomorrow there will be a deal.
    • throw9494491 day ago
      New deal: There is a toll 5 million usd per tanker, and oil must be paid in RNB not USD.<p>Basically Iran put sanction on US. I guess Trump expected fight or something.
    • ndiddy1 day ago
      &gt; And yet the US is now back to threatening Iran if they don&#x27;t open up the oil.<p>Trump&#x27;s most recent statement ( <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;truthsocial.com&#x2F;@realDonaldTrump&#x2F;posts&#x2F;116351998782539414" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;truthsocial.com&#x2F;@realDonaldTrump&#x2F;posts&#x2F;1163519987825...</a> ):<p>&quot;Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran. There will be nothing like it!!! Open the Fuckin’ Strait, you crazy bastards, or you’ll be living in Hell - JUST WATCH! Praise be to Allah. President DONALD J. TRUMP&quot;
      • rchaud1 day ago
        There was a time when The Onion might have run a headline like &quot;Concerned over low troop morale, President converts to Islam to inspire spirit of martyrdom&quot;. No more.
      • morkalork1 day ago
        He&#x27;s thiiiiiisss &gt;&lt; close to threatening to drop a nuke on Tehran isn&#x27;t he
        • rockemsockem1 day ago
          [flagged]
          • morkalork1 day ago
            If you&#x27;re going to judge people&#x27;s quality of online commentary, I can think of a &quot;bigger fish to fry&quot; than myself. They&#x27;re even quoted in this very thread!
      • vkou1 day ago
        Given the events of the past month...<p>Are we at a point where we can conclusively say that the United States is a country that wants to wipe Iran off the face of the Earth?<p>Bombing them into the stone age where they belong, complete destruction of them, no quarter, decapitation strikes, bridge day, etc?
    • Matl1 day ago
      Israel wants to completely destroy Iran so than no one would be willing to in any way challenge its occupation of Palestine, nor its ambition to expand into Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Egypt and beyond.<p>Then there&#x27;s an element of extremist Christian ideology from Pete H. etc.<p>Hormuz has little to do with it, it&#x27;s just an excuse to destroy Iran.<p>Trump has been convinced that the Iranians are after him, plus there&#x27;s the Epstein kompromat that the Israelis have on him. He&#x27;s the only US president compromised enough to destroy Iran for them, war crimes and all.
      • postsantum1 day ago
        The oil narrative is what worked after Iraq war and I am afraid it will work now
    • Hamuko1 day ago
      &gt;<i>And yet the US is now back to threatening Iran if they don&#x27;t open up the oil.</i><p>Because no matter how much they pretend it doesn&#x27;t affect the US, oil is a global market.
    • &gt;And yet the US is now back to threatening Iran...<p>It&#x27;s not you specifically, but there&#x27;s a broader sociological problem where we anthropomorphize countries and then claim they are doing things.<p>The average person in the US is not threatening Iran, and rationally the US cannot be said to be threatening Iran. What&#x27;s happening is that an elite clique of Epstein-adjacent legacy-power-trolls (aka The US Government) are threatening Iran.<p>The US does not have legs, arms, or hands, it cannot <i>do</i> anything. This turn of phrase in which the US (or any country) <i>does</i> something is a semantic-contraption of legacy-power designed to make citizens (whether left, right, or undecided) feel psychologically-responsible for the actions of a entrenched-class of elite-warmongers who do not represent them; and have not represented them for, likely, thousands of years.
  • tarkin21 day ago
    Israel recently refused to buy more French military equipment, and France&#x27;s relations with Israel is at a low; I&#x27;m wondering it was the reason the French vessel was allowed through.
    • LunaSea1 day ago
      Israel also recently killed three UN soldiers and bombarded positions a few meters away from french soldiers. The french ministry of defence wasn&#x27;t exactly thrilled with this.
    • clydethefrog1 day ago
      They announced they will veto military actions to open Straight of Hormuz in the UN security council.
    • alephnerd1 day ago
      France hasn&#x27;t bought Israeli weapons systems and vice versa for years, so it&#x27;s just a quick populist win with 0 practical implications either way.<p>That said, French and Israeli vendors like Thales, IAI, Dassault, Rafael, Elbit, etc still collaborate closely becuase they are both OEMs, vendors, and JV partners in Indian defense deals that integrate both into Indian weapons systems - especially as both are integrated (along with Russian and indigenous weapons systems) with what is become Indians version of the Iron and Steel dome [0][1]. Vietnam is mandating the same thing as part of their 2045 Drone manufacturing strategy [2].<p>And both MIC ecosystems still collaborate together on defense deals back in Armenia, Cyprus, and Greece.<p>Most countries that historically had a Soviet&#x2F;Russian kit are now mandating French+Israeli interoperability becuase of India&#x27;s success at using it to replace older Soviet or Russian systems where possible.<p>[0] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.thalesgroup.com&#x2F;en&#x2F;news-centre&#x2F;press-releases&#x2F;thales-and-bharat-dynamics-ltd-agree-initial-supply-man-portable-air" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.thalesgroup.com&#x2F;en&#x2F;news-centre&#x2F;press-releases&#x2F;th...</a><p>[1] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.israeldefense.co.il&#x2F;en&#x2F;node&#x2F;64841" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.israeldefense.co.il&#x2F;en&#x2F;node&#x2F;64841</a><p>[2] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.intelligenceonline.fr&#x2F;asie-pacifique&#x2F;2026&#x2F;03&#x2F;02&#x2F;plan-drones-2045--la-liste-secrete-des-entreprises-mobilisees,110669919-art" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.intelligenceonline.fr&#x2F;asie-pacifique&#x2F;2026&#x2F;03&#x2F;02&#x2F;...</a>
      • YZF1 day ago
        I think there has been some low volume defense trade in both directions.<p>What some people seem to forget is that France and Israel also compete over some of the same defense deals. There was these incidents where France banned Israeli companies from some defense shows:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.politico.eu&#x2F;article&#x2F;france-bans-israeli-companies-from-euronaval-arms-show&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.politico.eu&#x2F;article&#x2F;france-bans-israeli-companie...</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.france24.com&#x2F;en&#x2F;live-news&#x2F;20250616-france-blocks-access-to-israeli-arms-stands-at-paris-air-show" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.france24.com&#x2F;en&#x2F;live-news&#x2F;20250616-france-blocks...</a>
        • alephnerd1 day ago
          Yep, but the biggest customer and JV partner for both the French and Israeli MIC (India) ensures that they cooperate, as India has forced both to create JVs owned and operated by Indian SOEs and transfer IP and manufacturing capacity as a result.<p>And French and Israeli companies are fine with that - as can be seen by Thales [0], Safran [1] and Rafael (IL) [2] working on Indian JVs for India&#x27;s Rafale [3] and Tejas [1] requirements.<p>It&#x27;s cheap for French politicans to make pronouncements (and given how competitive the 2027 election is going to be, Macron has no choice but to resort to such populism in order to try and poach some amount of LFI voters to Renaissance&#x2F;En Marche), but France Inc ignores it and carries on because business is more important.<p>It&#x27;s the same reason why Dassault bluntly rejected German input on SCAF [4] and why France&#x27;s Safran and Russia&#x27;s UAC are working with India&#x27;s HAL to indigenize the SJ-100 [5]. And now that the UAE has pulled out of Dassault&#x27;s F5 program [6], they are even more dependent on India.<p>As I&#x27;ve mentioned before on HN, French and American business culture are very similar.<p>Even Vietnam is starting to turn the screws on France, especially now that En Marche&#x27;s Stephanié Do has now become a lobbyist [7] for FPT&#x27;s defense arm [8] which is partially owned by Vietnam&#x27;s KGB (the MPS&#x2F;BCA).<p>It&#x27;s the same kind of arm-twisting China used in the 1980s-2000s and 1990s-2010s respectively to force Israel [9] and Russia [10][11] to transfer IP for China&#x27;s J-XX program, except both India and Vietnam are applying such arm-twisting on France in addition to Israel and Russia.<p>And Macron and all the other centrists politicans cannot do anything against Dassault, Thales, etc lest they switch to supporting Bardella and RN like Bolloré [12] and Stérin [13] are doing. Macron himself is only in power because Arnault [14] and his son-in-law (and CEO of Scaleway) Xavier Niels [15].<p>[0] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.asdnews.com&#x2F;news&#x2F;aerospace&#x2F;2022&#x2F;07&#x2F;21&#x2F;iai-selected-dassault-aviation-produce-wing-movable-surfaces-new-falcon-10x-business-jet" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.asdnews.com&#x2F;news&#x2F;aerospace&#x2F;2022&#x2F;07&#x2F;21&#x2F;iai-select...</a><p>[1] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.bloomberg.com&#x2F;news&#x2F;articles&#x2F;2025-11-25&#x2F;india-to-make-air-to-ground-weapon-at-home-with-france-s-safran" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.bloomberg.com&#x2F;news&#x2F;articles&#x2F;2025-11-25&#x2F;india-to-...</a><p>[2] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gbp.com.sg&#x2F;stories&#x2F;rafael-eyes-ice-breaker-spike-lr2-missile-production-in-india&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gbp.com.sg&#x2F;stories&#x2F;rafael-eyes-ice-breaker-spike-lr2...</a><p>[3] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;aviationweek.com&#x2F;defense&#x2F;aircraft-propulsion&#x2F;dassault-gears-rafale-output-uptick-indian-production" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;aviationweek.com&#x2F;defense&#x2F;aircraft-propulsion&#x2F;dassaul...</a><p>[4] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;aviationweek.com&#x2F;defense&#x2F;aircraft-propulsion&#x2F;dassault-ceo-says-france-not-interested-dual-fcas-idea" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;aviationweek.com&#x2F;defense&#x2F;aircraft-propulsion&#x2F;dassaul...</a><p>[5] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;idrw.org&#x2F;original-sam146-engine-likely-to-power-indian-superjet-100-variant&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;idrw.org&#x2F;original-sam146-engine-likely-to-power-indi...</a><p>[6] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.latribune.fr&#x2F;article&#x2F;defense-aerospatiale&#x2F;defense&#x2F;17299117455885&#x2F;financement-du-rafale-f5-comment-la-france-a-fache-les-emirats-arabes-unis" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.latribune.fr&#x2F;article&#x2F;defense-aerospatiale&#x2F;defens...</a><p>[7] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tst-consulting.fr&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tst-consulting.fr&#x2F;</a><p>[8] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.intelligenceonline.fr&#x2F;asie-pacifique&#x2F;2026&#x2F;04&#x2F;03&#x2F;une-ex-deputee-macroniste-recue-chez-l-operateur-technologique-prefere-de-la-securite-publique-vietnamienne,110693381-bre" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.intelligenceonline.fr&#x2F;asie-pacifique&#x2F;2026&#x2F;04&#x2F;03&#x2F;...</a><p>[9] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;1993&#x2F;10&#x2F;12&#x2F;world&#x2F;israel-selling-china-military-technology-cia-chief-asserts.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;1993&#x2F;10&#x2F;12&#x2F;world&#x2F;israel-selling-chin...</a><p>[10] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;thediplomat.com&#x2F;2010&#x2F;12&#x2F;how-chinas-jets-threaten-russia&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;thediplomat.com&#x2F;2010&#x2F;12&#x2F;how-chinas-jets-threaten-rus...</a><p>[11] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;asia.nikkei.com&#x2F;politics&#x2F;international-relations&#x2F;russia-up-in-arms-over-chinese-theft-of-military-technology" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;asia.nikkei.com&#x2F;politics&#x2F;international-relations&#x2F;rus...</a><p>[12] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.mediapart.fr&#x2F;journal&#x2F;culture-et-idees&#x2F;dossier&#x2F;la-croisade-culturelle-de-vincent-bollore" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.mediapart.fr&#x2F;journal&#x2F;culture-et-idees&#x2F;dossier&#x2F;la...</a><p>[13] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;2026&#x2F;03&#x2F;22&#x2F;world&#x2F;europe&#x2F;pierre-eduoard-sterin-france-far-right.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;2026&#x2F;03&#x2F;22&#x2F;world&#x2F;europe&#x2F;pierre-eduoa...</a><p>[14] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.lemonde.fr&#x2F;en&#x2F;politics&#x2F;article&#x2F;2023&#x2F;08&#x2F;07&#x2F;how-bernard-arnault-the-world-s-richest-man-is-expanding-his-empire_6083553_5.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.lemonde.fr&#x2F;en&#x2F;politics&#x2F;article&#x2F;2023&#x2F;08&#x2F;07&#x2F;how-be...</a><p>[15] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.lemonde.fr&#x2F;en&#x2F;les-decodeurs&#x2F;article&#x2F;2022&#x2F;07&#x2F;10&#x2F;uber-files-when-the-company-courted-french-billionaires-hoping-for-vip-lobbyists_5989666_8.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.lemonde.fr&#x2F;en&#x2F;les-decodeurs&#x2F;article&#x2F;2022&#x2F;07&#x2F;10&#x2F;u...</a>
      • petre1 day ago
        &gt; Most countries that historically had a Soviet&#x2F;Russian kit are now mandating French+Israeli interoperability becuase of India&#x27;s success at using it to replace older Soviet or Russian systems where possible.<p>Elbit also has previous experience retrofitting Soviet MiG-21s to operate with NATO munitions.
        • alephnerd13 hours ago
          Yep, because India demanded Israeli munitions (which are NATO compatible) be interoperable with the MiG-21 and other Russian&#x2F;Soviet jets India had in the 1990s.<p>India was the 2nd largest MiG-21 operator in it&#x27;s heyday and the only one that also operated NATO compatible munitions.
          • petre2 hours ago
            &gt; India was the 2nd largest MiG-21 operator in it&#x27;s heyday and the only one that also operated NATO compatible munitions.<p>Elbit also did retrofitting for Romania, although they operated a relatively small MiG-21 fleet (25..36) which are now decomissioned and replaced by F-16s. The MiG 31 LanceR could use use both NATO and Russian&#x2F;Soviet armament such as the R-60M, R-73, Magic 2, or Python III missiles.
  • 54agfvb1 day ago
    That is a good move from Iran. The EU is tired of US induced wars, tired of Greenland threats and just wants to focus on its economy.<p>In a US war you always have to ask yourself if you do exactly what the US wants in secret. Here it could very well be that the Gulf monarchies are deliberately weakened and the EU&#x2F;Japan&#x2F;China are cut off from fossil fuels, so they are even more dependent on the US.
  • andy_ppp1 day ago
    There’s every chance that the US loses the trust of the GCC countries and they choose to spend their oil money away from the US should all of this madness ever calm down.
    • rchaud1 day ago
      It&#x27;s extremely unlikely without a common currency and a military alliance with larger, more populous states like Egypt and Iraq. The former would be unacceptable as it would represent a competitor to the Petrodollar, and the latter would be a threat to Israel.
      • andy_ppp1 day ago
        One of the conditions Iran has placed on ships travelling through the strait of Hormuz is that the oil is traded&#x2F;purchased in RMB.
  • ogogmad1 day ago
    Just about a week ago, Trump was joking about Pearl Harbor on TV while the Japanese PM was sitting right next to him. What&#x27;s more, she&#x27;s a nationalist.
    • skeletoncrew21 day ago
      I only give Trump about 25% credit for that joke, the reporter tee’d it up too much. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;m.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=fFmA0xlINGg&amp;ra=m" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;m.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=fFmA0xlINGg&amp;ra=m</a>
    • throw9494491 day ago
      Remember that video about ethnical clensing gaza, beach resort casinos and golden Trump statues? Real estste crypto bro version of hitler!
      • andy_ppp1 day ago
        If only Hollywood had have let Trump be in more films than Home Alone 2, none of this would have happened!
        • lifestyleguru1 day ago
          That&#x27;s a revenge for not letting him to play his character in Back to the Future.
          • fhdkweig1 day ago
            Or in Super Mario Bros 1993
  • zzzeek1 day ago
    The US , when finally back in control by reasonable adults, will need to offer great concessions to Iran in order to extricate from the effects of a disastrous, illegal (both from a US as well as an intentional standpoint) and of course, completely, utterly failed war. And it might be just that Iran gets to be a permanent toll collector for the global economy.
    • Jensson1 day ago
      &gt; The US , when finally back in control by reasonable adults<p>Betting says next president will be Gavin Newsom or JD Vance or Marco Rubio, so I wouldn&#x27;t bet on that happening anytime soon. It is weird how so bad people bubble up in american politics.
      • morgoo19 hours ago
        We&#x27;re 2 1&#x2F;2 years away from the next election...
      • rsynnott18 hours ago
        I flatly refuse to believe that people will vote for _JD Vance_. Trump, like him or loathe him (I’d be firmly in the ‘loathe’ camp) has a style&#x2F;personality which is appealing to some people. Vance, by contrast, is a non-entity.
      • dyauspitr1 day ago
        I wish with all my heart it’s going to be Newsom. Perfectly center left just like I like it.
        • hackable_sand1 day ago
          Ugh<p>Newsom should be elected to count all the grains of sand on the California coastline. He can be comped in trail mix and given an upturned boat for shelter.
        • feb0120251 day ago
          I can assure you that no &quot;center left&quot; president will be fixing any problems in the middle east anytime soon
        • Jensson1 day ago
          He does seem wildly corrupt though with extreme exceptions in bills for his friends and backers, more than other politicians I&#x27;ve seen. He is probably better than Trump or JD Vance but that isn&#x27;t saying much.<p>I too mostly agree with his populist center takes, but that doesn&#x27;t mean he is reasonable.
      • zzzeek1 day ago
        none of those three people will be president
        • Jensson1 day ago
          Then you can get rich by betting against it, so most people seem to disagree with you. And in a democracy most people decide who the next leader will be.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.oddschecker.com&#x2F;politics&#x2F;us-politics" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.oddschecker.com&#x2F;politics&#x2F;us-politics</a>
          • rawgabbit1 day ago
            If I interpret the odds correctly the site is saying Newsom has 22% chance and Vance has 20% chance. These odds seem rather low.
            • Jensson1 day ago
              Still above 50% chance one of the 3 people I mentioned will become next president according to the betting odds.
          • zzzeek1 day ago
            betting markets aren&#x27;t &quot;most people&quot;
          • vntok1 day ago
            Why would you assume that the parent (1) has a gambling addiction, (2) has enough side money they can lock into a far-away bet and (3) wants to place a bet that will more than probably never pay anyway because it won&#x27;t be insured nor escrowed by a trusted third party?<p>Buying or selling stocks of companies owned by MAGA henchmen is probably much safer.
            • Jensson1 day ago
              &gt; Buying or selling stocks of companies owned by MAGA henchmen is probably much safer.<p>Not if you are 100% sure, which the poster seemed to be. Its not gambling if its a sure case. So you saying this is a risky bet means you disagree with the person.<p>&gt; wants to place a bet that will more than probably never pay anyway because it won&#x27;t be insured nor escrowed by a trusted third party?<p>Betting sites are trusted third parties.<p>Anyway, I wasn&#x27;t telling him to bet on it. My point is that it is weird to say those for sure wont be the next president when most bettors are betting on those being the next president. You saying this is a risky bet means you disagree with him as well.
              • vntok1 day ago
                &gt; Not if you are 100% sure, which the poster seemed to be. Its not gambling if its a sure case. So you saying this is a risky bet means you disagree with the person.<p>This is incorrect. You can be sure, certain even, of a specific outcome, and yet still be scammed out of your money by the entity that took your bet.<p>&gt; Betting sites are trusted third parties.<p>No they aren&#x27;t, lol. Of course they aren&#x27;t. Many are illegal, most operate from shady jurisdictions, all have unclear T&amp;Cs and so on.
    • vrganj1 day ago
      No matter who controls the US in the future, it will never go back to the position it once had globally.<p>It&#x27;s been actively harming it&#x27;s allies, threatening them with invasion and conspiring with their enemies.<p>The rest of the world cannot afford to give the American people the benefit of the doubt.<p>After Trump I, there was hope it was just a fluke. Trump II is much worse and cements the unreliability of the American voting public.
      • nozzlegear1 day ago
        Never is a long time. Look at where Germany was after both WWI and WWII, and where it is now; it&#x27;s demonstrably possible to cause irreparable damage to everyone around you, and then rise back to the top (multiple times!). The only questions are timeline and scale.
        • stevenwoo1 day ago
          Germany got a new type of government. The 2&#x2F;3 required in USA for significant change will be insurmountable short of a disaster on order of second Great Depression since plurality of American voters can’t see past next paycheck, no Democrat that can win Presidential primary has any kind of revolutionary vision, it’s all muted, even Bernie got squashed by centrist voters eventually and he was not even that far to the left IMHO - he even stayed away from race or gender issues.
          • nozzlegear18 hours ago
            Hillary Clinton was to the left of Bernie Sanders in 2016, because free trade reduces global stratification and being against trade and immigration like Bernie was (and is) to protect American jobs is elitism.
            • stevenwoo17 hours ago
              I think you are only right on gender and race issues. That might have lost Sanders some voters in primaries. Unfortunately neoliberalism was adapted wholeheartedly by Bill Clinton and Blair and kinda inherited by Hillary, is not remotely left leaning belief.
              • nozzlegear15 hours ago
                I&#x27;m mostly being tongue-in-cheek (I should&#x27;ve added &#x2F;s but it&#x27;s too late to edit it in now). As a former Bernie volunteer and caucuser turned neoliberal globalist shill, I just like to poke at DNC conspiracies by pointing out that Bernie was a flawed candidate and that, even today, he isn&#x27;t very left-leaning at all on some issues like immigration, visas and trade.
            • Our_Benefactors17 hours ago
              &gt; Hillary Clinton was to the left of Bernie Sanders in 2016<p>No, this is so factually untrue as to be offensive.<p>Hillary is a party stooge through and through, it’s why she was essentially installed as the 2016 dem candidate, in spite of voter preferences. They did Bernie dirty
              • nozzlegear17 hours ago
                &gt; <i>Hillary is a party stooge through and through, it’s why she was essentially installed as the 2016 dem candidate, in spite of voter preferences. They did Bernie dirty</i><p>No, this is so factually untrue as to be offensive. I caucused and volunteered for Bernie in 2016. He lost the primary vote fair and square, but he dragged himself and his supporters to the convention kicking and screaming as if there was some chance he could overcome a mathematical defeat. Superdelegates never even entered the equation. All he did was instill a conspiracy in his diehard supporters.
            • ratrace18 hours ago
              [dead]
        • rchaud1 day ago
          Germany changed its constitution, banned its former ruling party, and actively explores and teaches their school kids about their crimes. The US on the other hand has a chunk of its electorate flying Confederate flags and voting for politicians who think US history textbooks should be more &quot;pro-American&quot;.
          • nozzlegear18 hours ago
            I&#x27;m not saying the country is perfect right now. We need a third Reconstruction.
            • mrguyorama11 hours ago
              We need a <i>first</i> reconstruction. We voted in Confederate sycophants ASAP to undo the very first, and spent the next 100 years pretending that slavery wasn&#x27;t still happening.<p>Yet again we have instead voted in people who for some reason think the literal aristocracy system of the antebellum south was anything worth protecting, despite the southern US being so dysfunctional it could barely support a war of it&#x27;s own making.
        • vrganj1 day ago
          Germany wasn&#x27;t and isn&#x27;t the world&#x27;s hegemon.<p>I don&#x27;t think that position is recoverable the same way.
          • nozzlegear18 hours ago
            It was the hegemon of Europe though, and it is once again – at least economically. I don&#x27;t know much about European culture to say how popular German pop culture is there though.
            • vrganj17 hours ago
              The &quot;hegemon of Europe&quot; was the <i>&quot;Franco-German engine&quot;</i> for the longest time.<p>The engine has stalled though and the center of gravity is shifting East (Poland) and South (Spain, Italy).<p>United in diversity, as is our motto.
        • feb0120251 day ago
          Look at where Germany is now?<p>They&#x27;re a total non-player on the world stage. They completely kowtow to the US. Hardly a good example
          • nozzlegear18 hours ago
            &gt; <i>They&#x27;re a total non-player on the world stage.</i><p>It&#x27;s the biggest economy in Europe and the de facto &quot;head country&quot; of the EU.
        • evilduck1 day ago
          You also have to consider the outside intervention forcibly imposed upon Germany, after being defeated in war both times, and how the first round of that contributed directly to WWII. It&#x27;s not exactly a playbook to copy verbatim.
          • nozzlegear18 hours ago
            I&#x27;m on the record that America needs a third Reconstruction era.
      • bdbdbdb1 day ago
        This. We all thought Trump was a crazy accident but the fact that he almost beat Biden, and then did beat Harris, means we just can&#x27;t trust Americans to put sensible people in charge. Assuming a democrat takes the office next, they will inherit an economy in tatters, a failing infrastructure and a broken strategic alliance. They&#x27;ll have four years to try to fix all of that while the republicans blame them for everything they&#x27;ve inherited, and four years from that the American people will have largely forgotten how Trump and his minions trailed dog shit all through the house and they&#x27;ll vote for the next right wing dick that&#x27;s been groomed for the job - probably Pete Hegseth, or Don Jr, or Mark Wayne Mullin
        • SoftTalker1 day ago
          Neither Biden nor Harris were sensible candidates. Democrats could have easily beat Trump by running a more appealing&#x2F;less polarizing candidate. Didn&#x27;t even have to be both. Obama was polarizing but he was appealing and he won comfortably.
          • adrian_b1 day ago
            As a non-American I have always wondered about the criteria used by Americans to vote for their presidents.<p>Clinton and Obama had various defects, but at least both of them looked like presidents and talked like presidents.<p>On the other hand, both George Bush Junior and Trump (of course especially the latter), looked like clowns and talked like clowns.<p>I have never understood their appeal to the masses. I understand the discontent of those who have voted against the Democrat &quot;elites&quot;, but the fact that anyone could look at Trump and believe that he is the right man for the job seems unbelievable, regardless of how inept were his opponents.
            • donkyrf1 day ago
              It&#x27;s easier to understand if you live in America.<p>Your reference to Democrat &quot;elites&quot; shows you have a hint of it... in this country that term never applies to a Republican -- even if they were born rich, went to Ivy League schools, and were handed a career and a professional network on a platter.<p>It is almost _exclusively_ used to denigrate women, minorities, or men who support progressive causes.
              • bdbdbdb9 hours ago
                I don&#x27;t understand
          • bdbdbdb1 day ago
            &gt; Neither Biden nor Harris were sensible candidates.<p>I just can&#x27;t fathom how you can think this. How 25% of your country can think this. How 50% thought it wasn&#x27;t worth voting for either.<p>America has lost its marbles
      • petre1 day ago
        If Xi put a break on China&#x27;s growth, Trump surely did throw US influence and soft power straight into the bin. The only winner is China.
    • jMyles1 day ago
      &gt; The US , when finally back in control by reasonable adults<p>This rings as &quot;make America great again&quot;, just with a different mythology standing-in for &quot;again&quot;.<p>The US (or at least the US _state_) hasn&#x27;t been in control by reasonable adults in over a century, or arguably ever.<p>What is finally becoming obvious is that this particular landmass is much too large to be under the control of a single state, and now that we have instant communications and ubiquitous cameras, even the arguments (laid out eg in the federalist papers) are no longer dispositive.<p>Calm and careful deprecation of the US as a state needs to top the new agenda.
    • sneak1 day ago
      &gt; <i>The US , when finally back in control by reasonable adults</i><p>Everyone reasonable seems to be holding their breath in anticipation of this eventually happening.<p>What if it doesn’t? What if all of this is a symptom of an underlying deterioration that extends deeper and beyond the current administration? It’s not Trump that made Americans A-OK with wars of aggression; Obama blew up as many kids using drones as Trump put into cages. What if the next few are the same, or worse? What do we do if this <i>isn’t</i> a temporary excursion but the new normal for the US and A?
      • thyristan1 day ago
        &gt; What if it doesn’t? What if all of this is a symptom of an underlying deterioration that extends deeper and beyond the current administration? It’s not Trump that made Americans A-OK with wars of aggression; Obama blew up as many kids using drones as Trump put into cages. What if the next few are the same, or worse? What do we do if this isn’t a temporary excursion but the new normal for the US and A?<p>In the cold war, there was the &quot;Evil East&quot; and the &quot;Good West&quot;, and this opposition forced at least some token &quot;goodness&quot; and a certain predictable behavior on both sides. It also forced both sides to have some firm principles they adhere to. Now the cold war is over, and while it did change more in the formerly East, the West, at least in some parts, also learned a few things. Among them that principles are negotiable, especially without a closed opposing bloc with the opposite principles. Doing business with China and Russia not only made people rich, it also moved Western culture more towards the Eastern ones, more than anyone would like to admit. Starting to see things from the Eastern perspective also induced the West to over time to not just understand the former enemy better and learn the &quot;good stuff&quot;. We started to find things like strong autocratic leadership, compromises on human rights, ignorance of international laws and treaties, and wars of aggression and conquest more acceptable and even preferable.<p>So I don&#x27;t think this is just temporary.
        • ted_bunny1 day ago
          None of that is new or imported from the Asiatic Hordes. It&#x27;s just more visible now.
          • selimthegrim1 day ago
            Funny that you use those words; Trump seems to be champing at the bit to bring back the Asiatic Barred Zone
      • Yeah, that&#x27;s what I&#x27;m afraid of. The US saw what Trump did during his first term, and four years later, after relative calm, they were like &quot;nah, let&#x27;s go back to Trump.&quot; That&#x27;s the new normal. In fact, things will be worse during the next election, with even more of the media owned by unhinged billionaires intent on robbing as much as possible from normal people.
        • ted_bunny1 day ago
          I don&#x27;t think the electorate ran back into Trump&#x27;s arms. Kamala was an egregiously poor candidate. He didn&#x27;t win, she lost.
          • jjtwixman1 day ago
            But Trump was even more egregiously poor. That’s what Americans don’t seem to understand. They’ve revealed to the whole world that they are a retarded people.
            • ted_bunny22 hours ago
              Well, revealed it even more.<p>All they had to do was put a little daylight between their platforms. Show that they believe in something different. But that is not their role in the Ratchet Effect.
              • jjtwixman19 hours ago
                I don’t think it’s helpful to treat the American people like children and do silly things like blame the democrats for Trump, especially for a people that is usually so obsessed with personal responsibility. The Americans voted for the retarded senile paedophile and they got him. It says something truly awful about the American people, mind, but personal responsibility extends to the political sphere, too, not just the private or economic one.<p>The American people are to blame for Trump. They got what they voted for.
      • nozzlegear1 day ago
        &gt; <i>Obama blew up as many kids using drones as Trump put into cages.</i><p>Obama didn&#x27;t deliberately target kids using drones.
        • faizmokh1 day ago
          He is bruh. Just because he apologized or worded it differently doesn&#x27;t mean it&#x27;s okay.
    • b0rtb0rt1 day ago
      &gt; when finally back in control by reasonable adults<p>no one even knows who was really in control during the previous administration. quite a few idiotic and destructive policy changes were made during that administration too
    • lifestyleguru1 day ago
      &gt; The US , when finally back in control by reasonable adults<p>There is no way back, as there is no way back to the world before covid or before the 2008 global crisis. They say about Russian history &quot;it was bad and then it got worse&quot;. Over and over, for hundreds of years. Vlad and Donnie are friends now.
  • cybermango1 day ago
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  • zozbot2341 day ago
    [flagged]
    • dyauspitr1 day ago
      &gt; This is a moment that ALL Americans, Republican, Democrat, Independents, everybody<p>You lost me here. He wouldn’t say this.