thesaker | Just hours ago Donald Trump was finally sworn in as the President of
the United States. Considering all the threats hanging over this event,
this is good news because at least for the time being, the Neocons have
lost their control over the Executive Branch and Trump is now finally in
a position to take action. The other good news is Trump’s inauguration speech which included this historical promise “We do not seek to impose our way of life on anyone, but rather to let it shine as an example for everyone to follow”.
Could that really mean that the USA has given up its role of World
Hegemon? The mere fact of asking the question is already an immensely
positive development as nobody would have asked it had Hillary Clinton
been elected.
The other interesting feature of Trump’s speech is that it centered
heavily on people power and on social justice. Again, the contrast with
the ideological garbage from Clinton could not be greater. Still, this
begs a much more puzzling question: how much can a multi-millionaire
capitalist be trusted when he speaks of people power and social justice –
not exactly what capitalists are known for, at least not amongst
educated people. Furthermore, a Marxist reader would also remind us that
“imperialism is the highest stage of capitalism” and that it makes no sense to expect a capitalist to suddenly renounce imperialism.
But what was generally true in 1916 is not necessarily true in 2017.
For one thing, let’s begin by stressing that the Trump Presidency was
only made possible by the immense financial, economic, political,
military and social crisis facing the USA today. Eight years of Clinton,
followed by eight years of Bush Jr and eight years of Obama have seen a
massive and full-spectrum decline in the strength of the United States
which were sacrificed for the sake of the AngloZionist Empire. This
crisis is as much internal as it is external and the election of Trump
is a direct consequence of this crisis. In fact, Trump is the first one
to admit that it is the terrible situation in which the USA find
themselves today which brought him to power with a mandate of the
regular American people (Hillary’s “deplorables”) to “drain the DC
swamp” and “make America”, as opposed to the American plutocracy, “great
again”. This might be somethhing crucial: I cannot imagine Trump trying
to simply do “more of the same” like his predecessors did or trying to
blindly double-down like the Neocons always try to.
I am willing to bet that Trump really and sincerely believes that the
USA is in a deep crisis and that a new, different, sets of policies
must be urgently implemented. If that assumption of mine proves to be
correct, then this is by definition very good news for the entire planet
because whatever Trump ends up doing (or not doing), he will at least
not push his country into a nuclear confrontation with Russia. And yes, I
think that it is possible that Trump has come to the conclusion that
imperialism has stopped working for the USA, that far from being the
solution to the contradictions of capitalism, imperialism might well
have become its most self-defeating feature.
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