| Trump seems “gripped by the stubbornly ignorant belief, even after four years in office, that NATO is some sort of protection racket, in which our European allies come to Washington like quivering shopkeepers and make an offering to the local mob boss from their weekly receipts,” writes The Atlantic‘s Tom Nichols.
“NATO funding doesn’t work that way, of course, and while European leaders no doubt had their arguments in private with Trump while he was president, it is highly unlikely that the leader of a major power ‘stood up’—as if in some sort of audience with Trump—to ask him if he’d stop a Russian invasion of a country ‘delinquent’ in its accounts.”
Nichols’ take—that it’s unlikely that this conversation happened at all, or at least that it went the way Trump told it—seems correct. But the most notable takeaway here isn’t whether his anecdote really happened; it’s that Trump felt comfortable signaling his disloyalty to NATO, and that he did it this way. A careful, well-informed critique of NATO this was not.
Movement in Trump cases: It’s going to be a big week for Donald Trump. On Thursday, Judge Juan M. Merchan is likely to schedule the criminal trial for Trump’s alleged hush money payments to porn star Stormy Daniels, meaning the former president’s team will now know exactly how it may interfere with their campaign schedule. (Merchan may dismiss the case altogether.)
Then, on Friday, a ruling is expected in Trump’s civil fraud case, issued by Judge Arthur F. Engoron. The civil fraud case deals with whether Trump misrepresented his net worth to banks and insurers.
Also on Thursday, “the Georgia prosecutor who accused Mr. Trump of conspiring to overturn the 2020 election will face a hearing about her romantic relationship with a lawyer she hired to work on that case,” reports The New York Times. Trump may attend that hearing as well. |
“Trump seems “gripped by the stubbornly ignorant belief, even after four years in office, that NATO is some sort of protection racket, in which our European allies come to Washington like quivering shopkeepers and make an offering to the local mob boss from their weekly receipts,” writes The Atlantic‘s Tom Nichols.”
Serious? That’s exactly what NATO is, is a goddamn protection racket. Anyone who trusts anything written in the Altlantacist imperialist (Dugin) Atlantic is a goddamn fool.