DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou: “Finally, the Epstein Files”

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Political cartoonist Ted Rall and CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou cue up the long-awaited Epstein files vote; a Trump Administration investigation of  UC Berkeley over a skirmish at a Turning Point protest; the torture of 252 Venezuelans in El Salvador at the behest of the US; JNIM’s fuel blockade highlights the rise of Al Qaeda in the Sahel in the wake of French withdrawals.

  • DOJ Investigates UC Berkeley Protest Incident: The Justice Department announces an investigation into UC Berkeley after protesters confront Turning Point USA event attendees, with civil rights chief Harmeet Dhillon labeling demonstrators as Antifa operating with impunity. Protests outside Zellerbach Hall feature chants against Trump, a brief scatter from fireworks mistaken for gunshots, and four arrests including one violent off-campus incident. The probe may fold into ongoing UC system scrutiny over antisemitism and diversity practices, while the university condemns violence and cooperates with FBI. Will the White House babysit Turning Point everywhere they go?
  • Epstein Files Discharge Petition Reaches 218 Signatures: Rep.-elect Adelita Grijalva affixes the final signature to the bipartisan discharge petition led by Reps. Thomas Massie and Ro Khanna immediately after her swearing-in last night, triggering a seven-legislative-day countdown for the bill forcing full DOJ Epstein files release to hit the House floor. Senior aides estimate a contentious December vote, despite Speaker Mike Johnson’s pivot to opposing it and Trump downplaying the matter as a hoax. Three GOP women—Boebert, Greene, and Mace—remain supportive amid White House pressure, with Massie predicting passage and potential Johnson allowing vulnerable members to vote yes.
  • Venezuelans Tortured in El Salvador Gulag: A Human Rights Watch and Cristosal report reveals over 252 Venezuelans deported under Trump’s policy endure systematic torture, sexual assault, beatings, and inhumane conditions at CECOT mega-prison. Detainees face prolonged incommunicado detention, inadequate food, and abuses after visits by officials like Kristi Noem, with the US paying $4.7 million to El Salvador despite known abuse. Groups demand independent DOJ investigation and halt to third-country deportations, comparing it to Abu Ghraib and accusing Trump administration complicity.
  • JNIM Blockade Paralyzes Bamako, Mali: Al-Qaeda affiliate JNIM seals highways since September, imposing fuel blockade on Mali’s capital, causing soaring prices, power cuts, school closures, and resident desperation. Ambushs burn tankers, abandon vehicles clog streets, and Western nations evacuate staff as JNIM leverages discontent to pressure military government toward negotiations. Analysts see growing JNIM hold aiming for regime change in Mali and Burkina Faso, with local deals in regions allowing siege lifts for taxes and non-cooperation with forces.

DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou: “Subcontinent on the Brink”

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Political cartoonist Ted Rall and CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou react to bombings rocking India and Pakistan. Is another war, between two nuclear states, imminent? Meanwhile, IDF soldiers, haunted and guilty, testify to their atrocities in Gaza.

  • India Pledges Revenge for Delhi Car Blast: Indian police probe a deadly car explosion near Delhi’s iconic Red Fort, killing eight and injuring 20 in the bustling old quarters. Authorities invoke the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, India’s stringent anti-terror law, alongside explosives statutes, sealing the site for forensic scrutiny amid shuttered markets and halted Metro services. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, addressing crowds in Bhutan “with a heavy heart,” vows relentless pursuit of the conspirators and blames Pakistani-backed terrorists, echoing past crises like the Kashmir attack that sparked nuclear-armed skirmishes.
  • Pakistani Capital Also Bombed: A suicide bomber blows himself up outside Islamabad’s district court, slaying 12 and wounding 27 in midday chaos, with crowds fleeing as smoke billows and severed remains confirm the attacker’s fate. Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi accuses Indian-backed Afghan proxies tied to the Pakistani Taliban, amid resurgent violence and fragile Afghan ceasefires. Simultaneously, security forces thwart a hostage bid at an army college in Wana, neutralizing five militants in hours-long firefights, with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif demanding swift justice against threats to civilians. Is the South Asia powder keg about to blow?
  • E. Jean Carroll Verdict: Donald Trump petitions the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn a $5 million jury finding of sexual abuse and defamation against the writer E Jean Carroll, decrying “indefensible evidentiary rulings” that admitted testimony from other accusers. His lawyers label the 1996 Bergdorf Goodman allegations a “politically motivated hoax” lacking physical evidence, clashing with Second Circuit affirmations that upheld the verdicts. This escalates Trump’s “crusade against Liberal Lawfare,” following an $83.3 million defamation add-on and recent fraud penalty reversals. Will this three-decade old he-said she-said case stick?
  • Haunted and Guilty, IDF Soldiers Say They Committed War Crimes: Israeli troops testify in an ITV documentary to a “free-for-all” in Gaza, where standard IdF firing protocols evaporated, where commanders told troops to kill civilians on suspicion alone—targeting men aged 20-40 just for walking around. Accounts detail routine human shield tactics, dubbed the “mosquito protocol,” forcing Palestinians into tunnels for mapping, and unprovoked shootings at U.S.-backed aid sites, contributing to 944 civilian deaths per UN tallies. Influenced by inflammatory rhetoric from leaders and rabbis deeming all of Gaza a “terrorist infrastructure,” soldiers grapple with shame amid a UN genocide finding and 69,000 Palestinian fatalities.

DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou: “Democrats Win, Then Surrender”

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Like you, political cartoonist Ted Rall and CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou took note of the fact that Democrats won the elections—so why are they surrendering on the shutdown/healthcare tax credits showdown? Explore the exploding civil war within the Democratic Party.

  • Democratic Traitors Join GOP: Eight Democrats, including Sens. Tim Kaine, Jeanne Shaheen, and Angus King, join Republicans in a 60-40 procedural victory late Sunday, overcoming 14 failed attempts to push a House-passed stopgap measure. This breakthrough, emerging from round-the-clock bipartisan talks, amends the bill to bundle three longer-term appropriations, extend funding through January 30, 2026, and guarantee retroactive pay for furloughed workers—which they would have received anyway—while restoring full SNAP and Veterans Affairs funding through September. Though hurdles like House votes loom, President Trump signals optimism upon returning to the White House, declaring the deal “very close” to ending the crisis as early as this week.
  • What Next: The Senate adjourned around 11:15 p.m., reconvening at 11 a.m. this morning amid applause for the motion, with whip notices alerting House members to prepare for votes within 36 hours—their first since September 19. Defector Democrats defend the compromise in a presser, with Shaheen insisting “this was the only deal on the table” and Kaine highlighting secured SNAP relief plus a December vote on expiring ACA tax credits aiding 20 million users, despite holdouts like Sen. John Hickenlooper decrying it as yielding to “strongman” tactics without full healthcare restoration. Will a recalled House release the Epstein files?
  • Election Defendants Receive Pardon: Trump issues “full, complete, and unconditional” federal pardons for 77 allies tied to 2020 election subversion, including Rudy Giuliani, Sidney Powell, Mark Meadows, John Eastman, Jenna Ellis, and fake electors from Georgia, Arizona, and Nevada, as proclaimed by Pardon Attorney Ed Martin. This symbolic shield—covering federal charges only, excluding state cases like Georgia’s—frames the acts as rectifying a “grave national injustice” to foster “national reconciliation,” while also granting clemency to a retired NYPD officer convicted of stalking for China and MLB star Darryl Strawberry for 1995 tax evasion.
  • Nord Stream Sabotage Probe: German investigators say they have a “clear picture” linking the 2022 Baltic Sea pipeline blasts—aimed at slashing Russia’s oil revenues and Germany ties—to an elite Ukrainian military unit under then-commander Valerii Zaluzhnyi, commander of the Ukrainian Armed Forces and now ambassador to London, per a Wall Street Journal report. Tracking boat rentals, phones, plates, and a speed-camera photo identified via facial recognition, authorities issue warrants for three Ukrainian soldiers and four deep-sea divers, including unit leader Serhii K., a 46-year-old SBU veteran traced from Poland (via diplomatic BMW) to Italy, where extradition hearings loom by December. This three-year probe, threatening Ukraine’s European support, exposes rifts as Zaluzhnyi denies involvement, potentially straining Berlin-Kyiv relations amid ongoing trials.

What To Do When Your Country Sucks

In a New York Times op-ed titled “How to Be a Good Citizen When Your Country Does Bad Things,” M. Gessen asks: “When your country pursues abhorrent policies, when the face it turns to the world is the face of a monster, what does that say about you?” I applaud Gessen for raising this question and an otherwise stiflingly establishmentarian newspaper for publishing it. Still, it’s a bummer that the piece is primarily notable for raising an ethical quandary that older Americans believed to have been fully and correctly settled at least as far back as World War II.

Gessen is concerned with the current American dilemma. What should we do as the United States “builds more cages for immigrants, deploys military force against civilians in city after city, regularly commits murder in the high seas and systematically destroys its own democratic institutions?” There is no explanation for why, but Gessen traveled to Israel to ask Israelis opposed to their own government’s monstrous behavior what they were doing and what they thought they ought to be doing. (Because there is little organized resistance here?) Some Israelis emigrated, voting with their feet. Others became draft resisters. “Refusing to serve in the military is probably the most potent form of protest available to Israeli Jews,” Gessen writes. A select few offered themselves as human shields, throwing themselves between settler thugs and their Palestinian prey in the West Bank.

“To be a good citizen of a bad state,” Gessen concludes ambivalently, “…is weighing leaving against staying, moral obligation against fear, flying under the radar against taking a risk — and opting for the risk.”

There is, or used to be, a better answer. Being a good citizen requires you to do everything in your power to try to overthrow a bad state.

The end of World War II in 1945 prompted a massive reckoning with the actions of nation-states and their citizens. As the full extent of the atrocities committed by Germany, Japan and their vassals and their astonishing scale were unearthed and came to be widely understood, a consensus was quickly achieved over what constituted acceptable behavior under tyranny.

Roughly speaking, Nazi-era crimes were punished in proportion both to how grave the offenses were and to how powerful the person accused of them had been at the time they were committed. (Some notable exceptions escaped prosecution due to their influence or, as with Nazi scientists, their usefulness.) The “big fish” tried at the Nuremberg trials bore a greater burden than the rank and file to the extent that a low-level guard at a death camp might not only escape prison but might even be allowed to emigrate to the United States while the publisher of an anti-Semitic newspaper was sentenced to death. Neither the political pundits of the day nor the philosophers who enjoyed greater cultural currency than today much questioned the calculus of postwar victors’ justice.

The psychic smudge of World War II was hardly limited to high-ranking former officials. The average person who lived under Axis control, the “little fish,” would likewise spend the remainder of their lives justifying their actions and inactions after the end of the war.

In the context of Gessen’s question—what is the ethical obligation of an Israeli or American who doles out taxes to, contributes to the GDP of, and pays homage to a rogue government that gleefully carries out genocides, mass murders and torture?—it is well worth recalling what hundreds of millions of human beings throughout both the Western and Eastern worlds believed about the citizens of regimes like Fascist Italy, Vichy France and Croatia under the Ustaše. Ordinary citizens were complicit. They ought to have killed Pétain and Mussolini.

Hitler, most people concluded after 1945, could never have carried out the Holocaust by himself. He needed the close cooperation of the military, businesspeople and political elites, as well as the enthusiastic cooperation of millions of Germans and non-Germans, and, last but hardly least, the passive acquiescence of the vast majority of people who, while they may never have turned in a Jew to the Gestapo, much less shoved one into a gas chamber, never fulfilled their moral duty as a human being to actively resist the Nazi regime—to wage revolution against it.

Swiss psychoanalyst Carl Jung argued that all Germans deservedly suffered collective guilt (Kollektivschuld), whether or not they had actively participated in atrocities. Allied occupation forces agreed. The authorities dragged townspeople from areas near liberated concentration camps to view and process victims’ bodies, and ran a propaganda campaign featuring posters of Nazi concentration camps with slogans such as “These Atrocities: Your Fault!”

A moral hierarchy emerged. At the top were members of the Resistance who tried to assassinate Hitler, followed by those executed by the Nazis for their defiance. Next came Resistance guerilla fighters who made it to the end of the conflict, followed by those who helped by providing safe houses and transportation, and looking the other way when partisans passed through. Bringing up the rear in the ethical hit parade were those who did nothing either way, followed close behind by collaborators and traitors.

Then as now, apologists for the attentistes, who waited out the war by keeping their heads down and avoiding trouble, inveighed against the idea of collective guilt by pointing out that resisting a violent regime like Nazi Germany entailed great risks including death—yours as well as your family’s. Following their reasoning, even those who committed murder were blameless as long as they were following orders; the regime put a gun in their hand, placed another gun at their heads and threatened to shoot unless they shot a third person. What was a good German soldier to do under such circumstances?

The French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre refutes this take in Notebooks for an Ethics. The person in the middle is morally required to refuse. If living requires them to behave immorally and assist a monster—albeit under threat of death—they must choose death.

Gessen doesn’t go there. But 20th century ethics are clear. When your government is evil, every citizen has a moral imperative, a duty to their fellow citizens as well as to everyone else in the world being victimized by that government, to rise up and overthrow it. The people of Gaza and Venezuela can’t do it. It’s up to us.

It is tempting, in this postmodern era of moral relativism, to say that old rules no longer apply. Trouble is, we haven’t come up with new ones.

(Ted Rall, the political cartoonist, columnist and graphic novelist, is the author of “Never Mind the Democrats. Here’s What’s Left.” Subscribe: tedrall.Substack.com. He is co-host of the podcast “DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou.”)

DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou: “Senate Punts on Venezuela War”

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Political cartoonist Ted Rall and CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou updates you on the chilling US military base scare, a courtroom triumph for the nation’s most famous lunchmeat tosser, and a fierce congressional clash over war powers.

  • Kazakhstan Joins Abraham Accords: President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev signs up with Trump’s effort to bring together Muslim countries with Israel. This move reinvigorates the U.S.-led framework for Israel-Arab-Muslim cooperation, attempting to signal religious tolerance and regional integration—but there were no prior conflicts between the nations, so does this mean much? Trump is eyeing expansions to Saudi Arabia and beyond to repair Israel’s Gaza-war isolation. Can he rehabilitate the Jewish state?
  • Airline Chaos Begins: The FAA mandates airlines slashing thousands of flights starting today, grappling with air traffic controller shortages in the longest government shutdown ever. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and FAA head Bryan Bedford enforce 10% cuts at 40 high-impact airports, with carriers waiving fees and prioritizing long-haul and international over regional and domestic routes. As of 4:25 a.m. Friday, 815 cancellations and 504 delays mount nationwide, per FlightAware, while analysis shows delays surging to 25% at major hubs. What will be the economic and political impact?
  • Airbase Terror Attack: A suspicious package containing white powder forces the evacuation of a building at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland, hospitalizing multiple personnel yesterday. First responders and Hazmat teams clear immediate threats, handing off to investigators probing “political propaganda” inside, as the Air National Guard Readiness Center remains sealed. Trump visited the VIP-transit base Wednesday, heightening scrutiny on this unexplained illness cluster amid ongoing probes. Who is behind this and what’s happening?
  • Submarine Hero: Sean Dunn scores a not-guilty verdict for tossing a Subway sandwich at a federal officer during early Trump-era DC enforcement surges. Videos capture Dunn yelling distractions to shield a Latin LGBTQ nightclub from raids before fleeing, symbolizing jest-laced resistance via posters and jokes. Jurors dismiss assault claims after debating the wrapped footlong’s harmlessness, and prosecutors receive a clear message about overcharging. Is it open season on ICE?
  • Senate Abdicates War Powers on Venezuela: The Senate defeats a bipartisan bill 49-51 requiring a congressional nod for Trump strikes against Venezuela, amid secrecy over cartel boat raids killing nearly 70. Sponsors like Tim Kaine decry expansive presidential powers lacking constitutional backing, urging Congress to reclaim war authority. Only two Republicans defect, as White House briefings on legal rationales sway most, despite frustrations over covert CIA ops and Caribbean military buildup. Will the White House read this as a thumbs-up for war?

DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou: “Fly the Empty Skies”

Live 9 AM Eastern, Then Streaming On Demand

Political cartoonist Ted Rall and CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou catch you up on the one-two punch of Tuesday’s Democratic electoral sweep coupled with the understanding that voters blame Republicans for the shutdown, reduced SNAP benefits, the Obamacare benefits crisis and now, a looming crisis facing America’s aviation system.

  • Supreme Court Seems Likely to Overturn Trump’s Tariffs: The Supreme Court convenes intense oral arguments, probing Trump’s invocation of the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to slap sweeping tariffs on imports from dozens of countries, including China, Canada, and Mexico. Justices, including conservatives like Chief Justice John Roberts, Amy Coney Barrett, Neil Gorsuch, and Brett Kavanaugh, voice deep reservations about relying on declared emergencies for unchecked economic powers, questioning if such broad powers unconstitutionally delegate Congress’s authority under the major-questions doctrine. As plaintiffs—ranging from toy importers in Illinois to Democratic-led states like Oregon—argue that erratic tariff announcements spike costs and sow uncertainty for businesses, the administration counters by citing historical precedents like Nixon’s similar uses, framing a loss as “catastrophic” for U.S. economic health amid global trade wars. Markets rise on the SCOTUS news, signaling Wall Street’s displeasure with Trump’s trade policies.
  • Crisis in the Skies: The FAA will reduce flights at dozens of major airports as early as tomorrow if no shutdown deal is reached, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced. Ten percent of air traffic at 40 airports would be cut, though the details of which specific airports will be impacted was not revealed. “As we start to implement this draw down in service, it will be restricted to these 40 high volume traffic markets,” FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford said. “We’re going to ask the airlines to work with us collaboratively to reduce their schedules.” The “draw down in service” at these busy airports comes as air traffic control staffing shortages during the shutdown of have caused delays. Controllers are considered essential employees and must work during the shutdown, but are not being paid. Duffy has said some are calling in sick to work other jobs or as protest for not getting paid.
  • White House Blamed for High Prices: As Democrats celebrate the elections, Republican analysts say voters are sending Trump a message: get your eye back on the ball—here in the States. Americans, gripped by economic discontent, prioritize affordability over immigration or culture wars, citing persistent inflation, 22% electricity rate hikes in New Jersey, federal workforce cuts impacting Virginia, and the 36-day government shutdown eroding food assistance and health subsidies. Allies like James Blair and Steve Bannon urge Trump to refocus on pocketbook promises—lowering prices, implementing job-creating investments, and addressing “inherited disasters” from Biden—echoing warnings from Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene that neglecting economic populism invites electoral disaster heading into 2026 midterms.

Deprogram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou: “The War for the Democratic Party”

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Political cartoonist Ted Rall and CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou tell you what the Democrats’ elections sweep means and what comes next for the future of their party and the country.

  • Zohran Mamdani’s Triumph: Once again, “DeProgram” called the election results on the nose, within 0.5 percent. Over two million New Yorkers cast votes, doubling 2021 turnout and electing 34-year-old democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani as New York’s 111th mayor, toppling Andrew Cuomo’s dynasty-backed machine. Mamdani forges a bold coalition, rallying young gentrifiers in Bushwick alongside working-class South Asian immigrants in Queens, while flipping Bronx and Brooklyn’s Black and Latino strongholds by double-digit margins despite $40 million in superPAC smears laced with Islamophobia. This upset signals a generational revolt, with Mamdani poised to tax the ultra-rich for affordability reforms amid Trump’s shadow. Is progressivism the future of the Democratic Party?
  • Exxon’s Covert Climate-Denial Campaign in Latin America: Newly unearthed documents expose that Exxon funneled cash to the Atlas Network in the late 1990s and 2000s, bankrolling Spanish translations of denialist tracts like Fred Singer’s anti-Kyoto Treaty screeds and flying U.S. skeptics to Buenos Aires seminars on COP4’s eve to sway ministers and media. The strategy sowed doubt about global warming in the Global South, aiming to torpedo UN treaties by stoking economic fears, with $50,000 checks (equivalent to $100,000 today) fueling events that echo today’s Amazon tipping points and irreversible coral die-offs. As Brazil gears up for COP30, this revelation underscores fossil fuel giants’ enduring sabotage of planetary survival.
  • Airspace Chaos Next Week?: Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy threatens to shut down swaths of U.S. airspace next week if the 35-day shutdown persists, citing 3,000-controller shortages fueling “mass chaos” at hubs like JFK and Newark, where lines stretch hours amid fatigue-driven delays. Essential workers are still working without pay, with 393 FAA facilities hitting triggers—four times last year’s rate—forcing reduced flight volumes and risking a Thanksgiving meltdown. This brinkmanship pressures Democrats, highlighting Trump’s fiscal warfare’s human toll on travel and safety.
  • The War for the Democratic Party: Center-left Abigail Spanberger storms to Virginia’s first female governorship with 57% against Winsome Earle-Sears, while center-left Mikie Sherrill secures New Jersey’s helm by double digits, both hammering affordability and Trump cuts amid economic angst. California voters approve Prop 50, redrawing maps for five Democratic House seats, countering GOP gerrymanders as turnout surges in anti-Trump backlash. These wins—from Mamdani’s populist fire to moderate surges—expose party fractures over ideology, fueling 2026 midterm battles and a progressive-centrist showdown.

DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou: “Dick Cheney Is Dead”

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Political cartoonist Ted Rall and CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou explore the legacy of Dick Cheney, America’s most powerful modern vice president and chief architect of the “war on terror,” Israel’s top army lawyer imprisoned after she exposed IDF’s sexual abuse of a Palestinian detainee, the shakeup at the Heritage Foundation over Tucker Carlson’s interview with Nick Fuentes, and Tanzania’s sham elections and resulting street unrest.

  • Dick Cheney’s Death: Complications from pneumonia and cardiac disease kill the influential VP at 84, surrounded by loved ones praising his legacy of national service and personal virtues like fly fishing. As the neoconservative architect of post-9/11 wars including the Iraq invasion based on lies, he leaves a polarizing mark, ending his political life by criticizing Trump and endorsing Harris. Recent tributes highlight his bunker directives on 9/11 and unyielding defense of torture, shaping two decades of brutal U.S. foreign policy.
  • Israel’s Wrong Scandal: Maj. Gen. Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi’s remains in jail on fraud and obstruction charges, following a frantic beach search sparked by her disappearance post-resignation. The whistleblower leaked a video revealing soldiers’ knife sodomy assault on a Palestinian at Sde Teiman, causing severe rectal perforation and rib fractures. Weirdly, Israelis are mad at HER. The saga, also detaining ex-prosecutor Matan Solomesh, amplifies Israel’s polarization, eclipsing abuse inquiries amid Netanyahu allies’ insults like “resume the lynch.”
  • Heritage Shakeup: Chief Kevin Roberts announces reassignments amid uproar over defending Tucker Carlson’s Nick Fuentes interview. Roberts’ reaffirms anti-antisemitism efforts and anti-cancel culture stance, balancing Israel views while pushing Heritage 2.0 unity and moral conviction.
  • Tanzania Election Violence: Africa’s crises spread. President Samia Suluhu Hassan takes office privately amid 98% “win” after banning Chadema, with leader Tundu Lissu in solitary on treason charges facing execution, as over 1,000 protesters reportedly die in crackdowns—bodies piling in streets, mass graves piling up under internet blackouts. Schools close, transport stops, hospitals overflow with bullet-riddled youth, despite 2021 reforms now reversed into worse repression than “Bulldozer” Magufuli. Pope Leo calls for dialogue, AU applauds, but opposition vows endurance against the “total sham,” echoing African disputed polls in Cameroon and Ivory Coast.

DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou: “Trump Threatens to Invade Nigeria”

LIVE 9:00 am Eastern time, Streaming Anytime:

Political cartoonist Ted Rall and CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou explain why Wednesday’s landmark hearing before the Supreme Court about President Trump’s tariffs may be the most important constitutional case of our lives, how AI spending surges toward $400 billion this year on infrastructure may be a warning sign of a corporate bubble about to burst, how New York City’s big mayoral election tomorrow will widen the schism within the Democratic Party and handicaps the seriousness of Trump’s threats of “guns-a-blazing” military action against Nigeria over alleged Christian persecution.

  • Supreme Court Tariff Showdown: The Supreme Court hears arguments Wednesday on Trump’s IEEPA tariffs, deciding if the 1970s law authorizes import taxes amid global trade reshaping. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent says that Trump raised alarms on a trade crisis tipping point, justifying emergency leverage like a theoretical pre-2008 housing warning. A loss risks chaotic refunds, revenue dips brightening fiscal outlooks, and undermined deals, curbing the Oval Office’s quick “tariff switch.”
  • AI Bubble Warnings: Tech firms project $400 billion in AI infrastructure spending this year, outpacing Apollo’s moon mission costs every 10 months, yet U.S. consumers spend only $12 billion annually on services. Startup “Thinking Machines” secures $2 billion at $10 billion valuation without products, with Mira Murati dodging investor questions in absurd pitches. Hyperscalers use Special Purpose Vehicles and accounting gimmicks to hide high costs and low revenues, driving momentum in stocks detached from fundamentals as usage declines in enterprises.
  • NYC Mayoral Frenzy: Candidates crisscross New York’s five boroughs, as early voting surges past 735,000 ballots under sunny skies with 50-minute waits. Democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani mobilizes 100,000 volunteers for 200,000 door knocks, eyeing record-breaking get-out-the-vote amid barbs accusing Andrew Cuomo of being Trump’s puppet. As Mamdani prepares for victory, the progressives-vs-corporatists schism in the Democratic Party will once again explode.
  • Trump Thereatens to Invade Nigeria: Trump orders Pentagon planning for potential “guns-a-blazing” intervention in Nigeria, citing Christian persecution and halting aid. Spokesman Daniel Bwala counters that unilateral action is impossible in sovereign Nigeria, blaming misleading outdated Boko Haram reports. Violence impacts Christians and Muslims via insurgents and gangs; Tinubu rejects designation, vowing faith community protections.

I Know Mamdani Is Too Young. I Don’t Care.

In every election, the voters choose a candidate to do a job. In some races, they also have an opportunity to send a message.

Sometimes, in a change election, voters pass over the best person for the job in favor of making a statement. Although she certainly wasn’t “the most qualified person ever to run for president,” former Senator and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was clearly more politically experienced and temperamentally suited to the presidency than Donald Trump, reality star and real-estate grifter, in 2016. But Americans, especially those in the Rust Belt swing states who felt ignored as their communities were ravaged by NAFTA and opioids, were angry—and they wanted Washington to know it. Trump represented a raised middle finger to the establishment, which always expects us to be satisfied with business as usual, even when usual really sucks for a lot of people.

Not every election grants you an opportunity to send a message with your vote. Mitt Romney, whose personality and politics differed only minimally from Obama’s, offered us no way in 2012 to tell the Beltway to drop dead for bailing out Wall Street rather than Main Street after the 2008-09 financial meltdown.

New Yorkers are poised to make the 2025 mayoral race a change election with a clear message to the Democratic National Committee: the progressive base of the party will no longer be sidelined.

It’s not just about picking a mayor. If it were, former Governor Andrew Cuomo, 67, with decades of experience navigating the state capital with outsized influence over the city’s budget, would easily prevail over a 34-year-old state assemblyman.

New York voters are sending a message to the city’s business class—we hate you and your high rents and your rampant gentrification—and the DNC: not only can you not make us vote for your preferred candidate, we will vote for your least favorite candidate because you tell us not to.

Zohran Mamdani got my vote and those of most people I know. And it’s not because he’s the most qualified person for the job. By objective standards, that’s Cuomo. New York is the biggest city in the U.S., incredibly diverse and complicated, and someone who knows Albany and is willing to bully and threaten those who impede progress is often what’s required to get anything done. And while I dislike the credible butt-grabbing allegations, it wouldn’t stop me from voting for him. If we rule out scumbags, will any politicians be left?

I cast my ballot for the future boy-mayor because Michael Bloomberg financed ads claiming that socialism is dangerous and other billionaires can’t stand that Mamdani supports the Palestinians and more billionaires—so many billionaires, why not me?—say that Mamdani would cause another 9/11. The way I see it, anyone whom billionaires dislike can’t be that bad. When The New York Times and New York Post screamed that Mamdani was a socialist menace, we fell in love with him. And when the landlords began howling that they were going to leave the city, that cinched the deal.

Bye, bastards!

Mamdanism isn’t about MeToo-ing Cuomo, or lingering resentment for the corrupt Trump-loving Democratic incumbent Eric Adams, or the rise of the Millennials, or even Mamdani’s highly focused and disciplined campaign. Voters are angry. They’re tired of squalid subways and ransacked drugstores and lawless streets and greedy landlords at the same time as prices are soaring. New York was dangerous in the 1970s and 1980s, but also cool and more affordable. Normal New Yorkers feel ignored by ruling elites who insulate themselves from urban decay as they scoot from their high-rise penthouses guarded by doormen to private clubs to the first-class lounge at the airport.

Those elites shake their heads over their VSOPs as they bemoan an electorate willing to turn over the nation’s biggest city to some commie twerp. Don’t they know that state-run grocery stores are a bad idea? Do they want the bad old “Bronx is burning” days to come back because landlords can’t raise the rent to cover their costs?

We know. We just don’t care.

(Ted Rall, the political cartoonist, columnist and graphic novelist, is the author of “Never Mind the Democrats. Here’s What’s Left.” Subscribe: tedrall.Substack.com. He is co-host of the podcast “DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou.”)

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