Electoralism/Democratism

What I Got Wrong About Trump

Last year, before the election, many people, friends and enemies alike, called me every name under the sun because I maintained that the regime wanted Trump and that Kamala Harris was a jobber. As people were telling others to ‘get into the crystal’, I was publishing articles asking if Trump is now part of the swamp. Notably fewer people call me names now as the sheer level of Trump’s betrayals become impossible not to notice. The latest, Trump ordering his fans to watch the vile Mark Levin on Fox and buy his book, a week after telling people he no longer wants them as followers if they care about Jeffrey Epstein running an elite paedophile blackmail operation, is surely a step too far. In the background to all issues, of course, is Israel. However, ‘told you so’ victory laps are boring and so in this article, I wish to focus not on what I got right but what I got wrong about Trump.

For a start, while my analysis was always predicated on Trump being backed by Zionists, there was still an open question as to whether Trump’s allegiance was tactical or total. I thought he was still his own man. I entertained the possibility that he might fall out with Netanyahu, that he would not go to war for him, that there would be a limit – a red line – to the support. I was wrong to entertain any of these possibilities: Trump’s allegiance is total and slavish. Even as complete regime toadies, such as Piers Morgan, are breaking with Israel over their evil actions, Trump becomes even more entrenched. There is no gap between Trump and Mark Levin or Douglas Murray or Joel Berry or any of the other Team Epstein scumbags in their network. These are the enemy, Trump is the enemy: when someone tells you who they are, believe them. Tucker Carlson has exposed and highlighted the extent to which nearly the entirety of the GOP are little more than paid spokespeople by a foreign lobby. He has embarrassed Ted Cruz, shone a spotlight on Epstein’s alleged Mossad connections, and repeatedly booked loud Israel critics, who are demonised as Nazis by Team Epstein, such as Darryl Cooper. More eyes are open to this issue than ever before, and hence they have started – in droves – to turn on Trump. Trump seized on a CNN report suggesting his ratings are up, but Nate Silver shows they are down, across the board, on every issue while The Economist has him on -14%. Since the bombing of Iran, it has rapidly become clear that Trump is a captured asset who acts almost solely for Israel. The base get nothing, you lose, good day sir. As people like Nick Fuentes have noted nearly daily, even those things people cling to, such as mass deportations, are not really happening, and even those, under the hood, are disguised actions for the sole benefit of Zion.

There is, in fact, something we might call Trump’s Law: any action done by Trump is done for the benefit of Israel in some way. Thus, the attacks on South Africa back in May, which were ostensibly about the ANC’s persecutions of Afrikaners, were actually because South Africa was the nation that lodged the case for genocide against Israel at the ICJ. Similarly, just this past week, Trump levied a 45% tariff on Brazil, ostensibly for its persecution of Jair Bolsonaro. In actuality it is because Lula accused Israel of premediated genocide a month ago. Once you spot this pattern, like understanding how a magic trick works, you will not be able to un-spot it. Trump’s Law is total.

The second thing I got wrong about Trump is that he would maintain the excellent instincts that have built up his unprecedented and loyal following over the past decade, and these would be used to bring a sense of togetherness and unity in America. Remember, I thought Trump would rule as Reagan in order to calm things down and save the regime, which, after all, is what putting the woke away was meant to be about. That may well have been the plan, but things have not worked out like that at all, partly owing to the fact that Trump has been so captured by Zionist interests, but perhaps even more so because Trump’s mental health appears to be deteriorating. Since January, Trump has not been the same man we’ve known for so long, but rather erratic, unfocused, quasi-imperialistic, and, dare I say it, even insane. Yes, we’ve had the tax cuts and Reagan-esque policies, but the first six months of Trump 2.0 have been anything but calm. In fact, since at least the assassination attempt, Trump has broken rule 4 of the Notorious BIG’s ‘Ten Crack Commandments’: ‘never get high on your own supply’. Surrounded by sycophants, toadies, manipulators and worm tongues, Trump has seemed increasingly in his own world, divorced from reality, and out of touch with the American people who put him into office. From the unmitigated disaster of ‘Liberation Day’ (remember that?), and the humiliating u-turns which follows, to threatening to annex Canada, threatening to bomb Moscow, and threatening to bomb Beijing, Trump appears to have gone mad. One imagines he has Pete Hegseth in his ear whispering, ‘fantastic move, Mr President, genius play sir’, as bluff after bluff is called. Most of the world now concludes, correctly, that America is a basket case which can no longer be trusted in any respect.

My expectations for Trump 2.0 were low: I thought the regime wanted him, that he was containment, and that at the barest minimum, he would stop the war in Ukraine. At the time of writing, the war in Ukraine is still going and all Trump can do is rage impotently at Putin. On the domestic front, Trump has not even managed to be competent containment, he has flushed his legacy down the drain, thrown away ten whole years of good will and fierce loyalty, and he has done it all for Israel. Will he be rewarded for his efforts by his masters? I would not bet on it. As soon as his usefulness is over for them, they will seek to destroy him because these are people incapable of honour: every deal will be broken, every boundary tested and violated, every ally backstabbed. The relationship is not between equals but between master and slave. They are incapable of ‘playing fair’. The only option for people who want the best for their nations is to realise no ‘deal’ is even possible. Trump, inadvertently, has brought all this to light and into focus. The data is in, we have the answers now. Your attitude as a patriot must be one of total opposition until politicians realise that unconditional support for Israel is unacceptable and a non-starter. It must be a friend-enemy issue. ‘If you support Israel, you lose my support’. ‘If you support Israel, we are no longer political friends’. No compromises, no negotiations. That is the position. I have supported Rupert Lowe, for example, but if Lowe becomes yet another Israel shill, it’ll be a no vote, or even a vote for Corbyn just to send a message. If the sole political formula of the regime is ‘support Israel at all costs’, it is this and this alone that must be rejected and broken. Until this happens, until there is a total rejection of Zionist infiltration in our politics, nothing will change. It’ll be the same disappointment as Trump has turned out to be again and again.


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