Everyone Must Get Droned

The Achaemenid Persian Empire. Byzantium. The Ottomans. Ancient Rome. All these regimes wielded immense power relative to their contemporaries. They dominated militarily, economically, culturally and globally in ways comparable to the United States’ current superpower status. All collapsed or were destroyed.

We Americans often forget that nothing lasts forever. And we always ignore the playwright Wilson Mizner’s advice to be nice to people on your way up because you’ll meet them on your way down.

I am terrified of what will happen to us on the way down.

Whether or not you approve of U.S. actions overseas, there’s little dispute that our policymakers routinely flout international norms, violate treaty obligations and ignore the law—our own and those of other countries. We have provided billions in military aid and weapons to Israel despite its documented violations of international humanitarian law in Gaza, making us complicit in war crimes and violating the Leahy Laws, which prohibit aid to entities guilty of gross human rights violations. Detainees, including some cleared for release, have been held for years without trial at Guantánamo in violation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights obligations on due process and arbitrary detention. American presidents often disregard the War Powers Resolution when they deploy combat troops overseas.

With the world’s most advanced and expansive military presence, technological superiority in cyber and space, control over the global reserve currency, no state or entity can credibly hold the U.S. accountable when, for example, it repeatedly bombs Venezuelan boats, killing scores of unidentified civilians who have never been charged with a crime, on extraordinarily flimsy reasoning. Of course, these extrajudicial drone assassinations follow thousands of similar U.S. killings of civilians in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Pakistan, Somalia, Syria and Yemen. No one has ever been arrested for the killings. No American drone killer has faced charges at the Hague. But whistleblowers have faced prosecution. Air Force analyst Daniel Hale was sent to prison for nearly four years for exposing drone murders.

62% of voters tell Harvard CAPS/Harris Poll they oppose Trump’s bombing campaign in the southern Caribbean. However, the number of Americans for whom droning is a major political issue (like immigration and inflation) is negligible. We disapprove. But we don’t really care. So the U.S. government keeps killing people it can’t identify. It reclassifies them as terrorists. It invents fictional terrorist organizations. It lies about what they’re doing and where they’re going and the fact that they represent no threat to us.

As noted above, America’s protected status cannot and will not last. In the future, Americans will no longer be the ones doing the killing.

Americans will become the targets.

Something else we don’t like to think about: the people and countries we are attacking now may seek revenge after we weaken and they strengthen. Motivated partly by betrayal and unpaid promises, the Visigoths under Alaric sacked Rome in 410. The Ottomans, descendants of Seljuk Turks who viewed the Byzantines as oppressors, conquered and ravaged Constantinople in 1453—an act partly seen as revenge for prior sackings by Crusaders.

Another country—a new superpower, one we’re no longer able to resist—may circle its drones over American cities, scanning faces and license plates on the streets of New York and Miami and Los Angeles and Birmingham, Alabama before blowing them to bits along with everyone and everything around them. They could launch “signature strikes,” as we do against males “of military age” and/or “behaving suspiciously” in places like Pakistan and men who happen to wear a certain color of scarf, against dozens of commuters who fit a category of their designated target profile. The dead may be someone you know. It might be you.

Liberals in that new superpower country may criticize their government for killing us without just cause. But most of their citizens won’t care. We’ll be The Other. We will have been accused of criminality. We will have it coming because, after all, we did it first. When Osama bin Laden confirmed that Al Qaeda was seeking nuclear weapons, he said that the U.S. had opened Pandora’s box, that it “was the one that had bombed people in the Far East, in Nagasaki and Hiroshima.”

Who will be able to stop them?

(Imagine the history of the last half of the 20th century had the U.S. leveraged its head start on nuclear weapons technology to push for a global ban on atomic weapons—something other, poorer nations like the USSR, would have welcomed. Or, imagine the next few decades if we exploited our dominance of drone tech to get our rivals to agree not to further develop or deploy them.)

Your son may get blown up on a fishing boat by a drone missile he never sees coming. Your neighbor may get bombed on an interstate highway. Your spouse may be slaughtered alongside you at your wedding. Adding insult to atrocity, a foreign political leader might appear on the news to smear your loved ones as “terrorists.”

There will be no one to report to the police.

There will be no one to sue.

There will be nothing you can do but seethe and cry and mourn and hurt and, depending on who and how you are, swear to exact revenge should you ever get the chance.

(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.”)

It’s Piracy Time! | DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou

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Today we discuss:

  The U.S. seized an oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela, a dramatic escalation in President Trump’s pressure campaign against Nicolás Maduro, the leader of Venezuela. Is this why we’re spending $900 million a year on defense?

  The Federal Reserve lowered interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point on Wednesday in a highly contentious decision. The split among policymakers suggested that the central bank may be done lowering borrowing costs for the time being unless there are clear signs that the labor market is weakening further. Meanwhile, President Trump is trying to persuade the public that the economy is strong.

  The University of Alabama has suspended the publication of two student-run magazines — one primarily focused on Black students and another on women’s issues — citing recent federal guidance against diversity, equity and inclusion programs on college campuses.

  Australia’s landmark new social media age law is set to go into effect, barring anyone under 16 from holding an account as the government moves to enforce one of the world’s strictest online safety measures.

Scott Stantis, cartoonist for The Chicago Tribune, is filling in for John.

Trump to Europe: Drop Dead | DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou

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  In a wide-ranging Politico interview, Trump said ideological divisions threaten to fracture Washington’s alliances with Europe. “I think [their leaders are] weak, but I also think that they want to be so politically correct. I think they don’t know what to do.” Ukraine—where Zelensky says he’s finally ready to hold elections—is the main point of contention.

  Russia has long used Mexico as a base for espionage, earning it the nickname “the Vienna of Latin America” during the Cold War. American officials say those efforts scaled up after Russia invaded Ukraine. But the U.S. says Mexico is ignoring the issue. American officials who asked about a list of GRU spies were told the Mexican officials never got it, that it was too vague or that junior officials lost it.

  Afghan fighters who served in “Zero Units” led by the CIA spiraled into despair because of inability to work, bureaucratic neglect and abandonment by the U.S. government, driving at least 4 to suicide. One was Rahmanullah Lakanwal, the man charged with shooting National Guard soldiers in DC.

  Another city goes blue: Miamians elected Eileen Higgins as mayor, the first Democrat in 28 years. Higgins, a former county commissioner, defeated Republican Emilio González, an ex-city manager who had the endorsement of Trump and Gov. Ron DeSantis, with 60% of the vote.

• NYT reports that Trump Administration weighed sending survivors of U.S. attacks on alleged drug boats to CECOT prison in El Salvador, to keep them away from American courts. Lawyers say information disclosed in a court could undermine the legality of the attacks and the political rationale.

Japanese Militarism: What Could Go Wrong? | DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou

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  Japan is threatening China militarily which is “completely unacceptable”, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi says, after Chinese jets aimed radar at Japanese aircraft. China has blamed Japan for sending aircraft to repeatedly approach and disrupt the Chinese navy.

  Powerful Senate President Hun Sen vowed that Cambodia would carry out a fierce fight against Thailand as a second day of widespread combat drove tens of thousands of people to flee border areas. Is full-scale war at hand?

  • 200,000 people have fled eastern Congo in recent days, as Rwanda-backed M23 rebels march on the strategic lakeside town of Uvira on the border with Burundi, and battling with Congolese troops and local groups known as Wazalendo. Scores have been killed. Here, too, we’re on the watch for full-fledged war.

• A bid by Paramount Skydance Corp. for Warner Bros. Discovery is backed by notable investors like Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, the Qatar Investment Authority and a less known player, Abu Dhabi’s L’imad Holding Co., founded recently and fully owned by the government. If TikTok is a matter of national security, how about this?

No More Mr. Nice Guy | DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou

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  WarSec Hegseth declares an age of American “utopian idealism” over under the new National Security Strategy, demanding that U.S. allies fend for themselves, and called for a more conciliatory approach to China.

  Oral arguments in SCOTUS over Trump v. Slaughter, which will likely strip independence from agencies have regulated American monetary policy and stock trades, transportation systems and election campaigns, consumer product safety and broadcast licenses.

Thailand bombed Cambodia in what it claimed was retaliation, leaving a peace plan presided over by Trump in danger of collapse.

• “I’ll be involved in that decision,” Trump says about Netflix buying Warner Bros for $82 billion. Will he scuttle this monopoly?

Sloppy Russian Spies | DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou

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Today we discuss:

  The death from exposure to a rare, military-grade nerve agent called a Novichok in Britain of Dawn Sturgess, 44 and a British mother of three, seven years ago, illustrates the consequences of letting spies run amok. A perfume bottle containing the poison had been discarded by a pair of Russian operatives after using it in an attempted assassination months earlier. A new report blames Putin.

  Zelensky’s government systematically sabotages oversight, creating the perfect opportunity for corruption. Ukraine has stacked oversight boards with loyalists, leaves seats empty or stalled them from being set up at all. Leaders in Kyiv even rewrote company charters to limit oversight, allowing hundreds of millions of U.S. dollars to be stolen.

• Congress is focusing on two deaths in one boat strike. But 9 other people died in that same attack, and the United States has killed 87 in all. Were any of those killings legal?

55% disapprove/42% approve of Trump’s job performance. Much of his loss is among political independents; 31% approve, down from 41% in July. The president has also lost support among men, particularly white, college-educated men. Can he right the ship?

Chicago Tribune cartoonist Scott Stantis fills in for John today.

The Charmed Caste

Americans know that they discriminate against one another by race, sex, religion, looks, income, etc. Yet they’re unaware that the United States has a caste system every bit as rigid and objectively odd as India’s—and it’s so subtle that almost no one notices it.

None of this is to say that the forms of bigotry that journalists and lawmakers focus upon aren’t real. It’s easier to be able-bodied than not, college-educated rather than not, straight instead of gay, have a clean record as opposed to appearing in a police database of a “gang affiliate.” Those drags on equity form a race-based U.S. caste system, which is bad for human beings and ought to be redressed. But they’re not the whole picture.

Missing from every analysis of Otherizing is the caste that walks among us unidentified while in plain sight: the Charmed Ones.

Take two people from the same socioeconomic cultural class. Outwardly, they seem to sit exactly at the same spot on the ladder of hierarchy. Both are, for example, 44-year-old white men with similar looks and hobbies and personalities from the same neighborhood in Akron, from middle-class families, graduated in the second quarter of their UPenn class with MBAs and went to work in the same department at the same hedge fund. They probably consider themselves to enjoy the same level of privilege and social currency.

But they’re not the same. One is Charmed, the other is not. When the Charmed one makes a mistake, he is likely to be forgiven or see his transgression brushed aside. They’re allowed to screw up. If he commits a sin too egregious to ignore, the authorities issue him a slap on the wrist. He’s allowed to move on.

The Uncharmed get breaks too. But not as often. Not as consistently. Not as big. The Uncharmed person is likelier to suffer the full weight of consequence.

The Charmed-Uncharmed divide is everywhere. A-Rod was suspended for a year and remains eligible for the Hall of Fame; Pete Rose was banned from baseball and Cooperstown for 35 years—the rest of his life. R. Kelly got repeated passes while Kesha’s career was effectively frozen. David Petraeus’ star still soars on cable news though his breach of national security was at least as serious as Hillary Clinton’s, yet she partly lost the presidency for mishandling her emails.

Journalism, the world I know best, is full of similar examples.

Mike Barnicle, canned by the Boston Globe in 1998 for plagiarism and lying to his editors, went straight to the bigger New York Daily News and has been a senior contributor at MSNBC/MS Now since 2007. Media owners and editors corruptly protect people who are useful to the local power structure. Barnicle was a mascot for Boston’s old-guard Democrats, so he was Charmed. Jayson Blair was not. Blair was middle class, Black and without patrons.

Legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin, caught jerking off on a group Zoom call with other New Yorker colleagues—including women—in October 2020, got canned by the magazine but soon returned to CNN eight months later. He’s a regular guest on cable news and recently published another bestselling book. Slick, connected and contrite enough to spin humiliation into a redemption arc, Toobin belongs to the Charmed caste. Andrew Cuomo, on the other hand, lost his bid for the New York mayoralty in large part due to accusations that he liked to grab at women’s butts. A star of the pandemic, now he’s over and done.

When I was fighting the Los Angeles Times and its secret corporate owner the LAPD pension fund, I learned that the paper had forgiven business columnist Mike Hiltzik and brought him back a mere six months after he was caught socket-puppeting fake online identities in his blog to defend his own work and attack his rivals. Hiltzik: Guilty of a serious ethical breach, Charmed. Me, smeared and fired by the Times, and then vindicated: not so much.

A certain kind of East Coast media dork has been hate-reading the soon-to-be long-running feud between Olivia Nuzzi—the 32-year-old political writer ingenue at New York magazine caught showrunning a ridiculous zipless f*ck with RFK Jr., who is married, four decades her senior and absurdly a high-ranking government official—and her ex-fiancé Ryan Lizza, a political writer who at 51 is also too old for her but not that too old. Nuzzi fessed up in a contract-fulfilling tell-half book, the emotionally-cucked Lizza lashed out on his Substack with the shocking revelations that Kennedy likes the Special K that is not a cereal and that Nuzzi actually hooked up with former South Carolina Governor Mark “Appalachian Trail” Sanford. None of this is interesting beyond doomscrolling toward economic collapse, not even the incestuous relationship between D.C. political writers and the politicians they’re supposed to be covering, not screwing. So if this is the first you’ve heard of it, don’t feel compelled to dig deeper.

I bring up the four-Z story for two reasons. One, opinion essays tend to work better when they peg to current news. Two, it’s another illustration of hidden power of the Charmed caste.

If Olivia Nuzzi were an average schmoe—schmoa? schmoette?—her career in journalism would be deader than those of the tens of thousands of reporters and editors and feature writers who have lost their jobs over the last decade despite not having personified the expressions “conflict of interest” and “presstitute” and “corrupt skank.”

Nuzzi is not normal. Because she was born into the Charmed caste, she doesn’t have to wait the usual one-year time-out before beginning her comeback. With her dignity fully in tatters and the media scandal still blazing away, she has already been invited to write for Vanity Fair even as the New York Post declares her a “glamorous blonde.” (Beauty standards may be more flexible in Australia.)

I promise to suck up to privilege. Then, please God, let me be reborn as a member of the Charmed caste.

(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.”)

Career Over for Hegseth? | DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou

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  Admiral Mitch Bradley tries to explain himself to Congress today. As Trump claims each boat bombing saves 25,000 American lives, the man Hegseth blames for the double-tap strike is on the hot seat. Meanwhile, Signalgate is blowing up. Will this weekend mark the end of the former Fox News Weekend host?

  Israel is opening the Rafah border crossing to Egypt. Egypt says it doesn’t know anything about it. It will help sick and injured Gaza’s get medical care. But is this the beginning of Israel’s plot to ethnically cleanse and annex Gaza?

Vladimir Putin to visit Narenda Modi in India to boost trade.

Will Hegseth Resign? | DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou

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  Pressure is building against Pete Hegseth. The Defense Department claims it was trying to destroy the rest of the boat, not the crew, while Hegseth blames Admiral Bradley for murdering helpless seamen. Is this the end of the line for Hegseth, or do the new neocons win again?

  Republicans are gambling that voters won’t resent them in next year’s elections for allowing Obamacare subsidies to expire, sending insurance prices to the stratosphere. Incumbents weigh the risk of a primary challenge for helping Democrats vs. the general election.

• Belgium, which holds most of the Russian assets being targeted for seizure as reparations to Ukraine, says its requests to the EU to be indemnified against Russian lawsuits and legal losses, and that other EU nations also agree to participate, are being ignored.

• Deep fake “Nudifying” software is out of control in schools around the world, where girls and female teachers are being humiliated by A.I.-generated phony nude images of themselves being passed around on smartphones by students. Schools are at a loss about how to handle it. Would cellphone bans solve the problem?

Sailin’ From Sudan | DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou

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Political cartoonist Ted Rall and CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou deprogram you from mainstream media every weekday at 9 AM EST.

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  Sudan’s military government has offered Russia what would be its first naval base in Africa and an unprecedented perch overlooking critical Red Sea trade routes, reports the WSJ.

  Negotiations between the U.S. and Ukraine focused on where the de facto border with Russia would be drawn under a peace deal. Russian President Vladimir Putin — who will meet with President Trump’s envoy today — wants the entire Donbas region.

• A lawsuit by an immigration judge fired by Trump has the potential to scramble the federal workforce and upend foundational civil rights laws. She says she was dismissed because of her gender, her status as a dual citizen of Lebanon and the fact that she once ran for municipal office in Ohio as a Democrat, all in violation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the First Amendment. The government has responded by arguing that the president’s power to oversee the executive branch under Article II of the U.S. Constitution essentially overrides that core civil rights law.

• A small, highly anticipated study shows a glimmer of hope in the long effort to control HIV without medication and search for a cure for a virus that attacks immune cells. In six participants, the virus rebounded slowly and stayed at a low level for months, and one person’s immune system kept the virus in check for more than a year and a half.

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