The Deep State

Note: Behind the green door, there is a post about the world of kitchen knives, a post about Musk’s Twitter issues and the Sunday podcast. Subscribe here or here.


One of the difficult things for most Americans to accept is that the people on the ballot every election have little role in public policy. The way the system is supposed to work is that the voters select their elected officials, who then meet and agree on new laws and changes to the law. They also pick the people in charge of the many agencies that carry out the laws passed by the elected officials. In reality, the people in those elected offices play almost no role in legislation and policy.

The easiest place to see this is in foreign policy. In the last election, there was little mention of foreign relations. Trump pledged his unconditional support for Israel, which every candidate is required to do in America, but otherwise he had little to say about what is happening in the world. Those running for House and Senate seats were mostly silent of foreign affairs, aside from pledging their loyalty to Israel. We are in a proxy war with Russia and China, and no one talks about it.

One main reason for those House and Senate candidates not saying much of anything is they have no role in the process. Many of them could not find Ukraine on a map, despite cheering wildly for Zelensky when he spoke to Congress. Only those who have been around for a decade or more understand why Ukraine is an issue. Some of them have been invited to get a taste of the side action, which is the primary benefit to sticking around in Congress for a long time.

Foreign policy is the domain of the executive, but it is obvious that the President has little role in the process. Joe Biden was a vegetable for his term in office. So much so that decisions on most things were delegated to various appointees. Jake Sullivan and Anthony Blinken ran foreign policy, but even they were only in charge of a small portion of what the world sees as American foreign policy. The reason for that is much of it is now done off the books, outside the official system.

For example, the years long effort to regime change the country of Georgia was not a White House or State Department caper, in the sense that there were high level meetings about the program or decisions made by the senior staffers. This operation was run by the informal network of formal and informal operational nodes that make up the American foreign policy community. It is not really accurate to call it American, as it now includes nodes around the West.

For example, last year the Russians raided a group of call centers operating in Russia, that were organized by something called The Milton Group, by the former Minister of Defense of Georgia, David Kazerashvili. Amusingly, these call centers were intended to operate various frauds in the West, but they also helped organize the pro-Western protests in Georgia. One center was run by an Israeli and Ukrainian citizen and the other by an Israeli and Georgian citizen.

How a normal fraud operation gets repurposed into a mechanism to topple governments is not a big mystery. It turns out that there is more money in regime change than in scamming old people out of their pensions. That money comes from the thicket of NGO’s and clandestine government operations that often operate independent from Western governments. It is unlikely that elected officials in the West had any idea who was running the Georgia caper.

One reason why this shadow foreign policy establishment remains unknown to most elected officials is much of it predates their time in politics. For example, one of the main organizers of the Georgia regime change operation was an organization called CANVAS, which operates out of Serbia. It is a spinoff of a group called Otpor, which was founded in the 1990’s when the former Yugoslavia was falling apart after the end of the Cold War. Guess where they got their money?

CANVAS now operates all over the world, targeting regimes that are coincidentally on the list of regimes targeted for a color revolution. They were involved in the effort to overthrow the Belarussian government and in the overthrow of the Ukraine government during the Obama administration. Of course, that event haunts us today. It has been made infamous for the scenes of Victoria Nuland waddling around Kiev, handing out cookies to the pro-Western protestors.

Speaking of Toria Nuland, she was not only responsible for the Ukraine catastrophe that continues to rage, but she has been a lifelong advocate for regime change as the official policy of the American government. This is why after she left the Biden administration, she landed a post at the National Endowment for Democracy, one of those semi-formal nodes in the foreign policy community. She will bring years of regime change experience to the organization.

The National Endowment for Democracy is one of those groups that has been around longer than most politicians, so it is background noise to them, but it plays a key role in what manifests as American foreign policy. It was founded in 1983 by Carl Gershman and Allen Weinstein. They worked in the Reagan administration and then formed several NGO’s, all with help from government money. Like so many NGO’s, it is a clearing house for money and international activism.

There is a good bet that there is not a single Senator involved in foreign policy oversight who has ever heard of the men who founded NED. They have no idea that there are lines in the State Department budget sending money in the form of grants and vendor contracts to groups like NED. They certainly have no idea about how the State Department encourages corporate giving to these groups. It is a world that operates in the shadows, where elected officials rarely tread.

These groups are not just operating abroad. They play a major role in building narratives in which the elected official operates. For example, there are ads on YouTube from a group called Center for Civil Liberties, that claims Vladimir Putin is kidnapping Ukrainian children. This group wants your help to stop him. If you go to their about section, you see they are supported by familiar names, like the National Endowment for Democracy and the American State Department.

What this means is those ads telling American YouTube viewers that Vladimir Putin is kidnapping Ukrainian children are, in some way, sponsored by the American government, operating through a proxy. Much of what elected official believe to be reality is the product of such operations. One point of this network of NGO’s is to help shape and control the information space. You can see why Washington is obsessed with creating narratives rather than reality.

This is just in the area of foreign policy. Every day politicians are briefed by groups they think are grassroots organization, but in fact are marionettes operated by one of the formal or informal organizations. The media is peppered with press releases and provided copy for their outlets. Most important, the organizations can introduce the right people to the right people, with “right” being the key word. If you play ball and avoid asking the wrong questions, you can be a right person.

It is why voting seems to make things worse. The people making decisions that matter to you are never on the ballot. The people on the ballot are often less informed about how things work than the voters. The reason for that is the parties select for the compliant and the incurious. Those who get too curious or refuse to play ball will find themselves with a primary opponent and no money. It is why “our democracy” is a rhetorical and literal fig leaf for the Deep State.


If you like my work and wish to donate, you can buy me a beer. You can sign up for a SubscribeStar or a Substack subscription and get some extra content. You can donate via PayPal. My crypto addresses are here for those who prefer that option. You can send gold bars through the postal service to: Z Media LLC P.O. Box 1047 Berkeley Springs, WV 25411-3047. Thank you for your support!


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Xman
Xman
1 day ago

My goodness… David Kazerashvili. Carl Gershman. Allen Weinstein. Victoria Nuland. What could they all possibly have in common?

For some reason I didn’t see any of them at church on Sunday or eating a Christmas ham, LOL.

Wolf Barney
Wolf Barney
Reply to  Xman
1 day ago

You must be one of those antisemites, which is what pattern recognizers are often called! (LOL!)

Last edited 1 day ago by Wolf Barney
pyrrhus
pyrrhus
Reply to  Xman
1 day ago

OK, so they’re all devil worshippers…What else do they have in common???

Tars Tarkas
Member
Reply to  Xman
1 day ago

Just a quick reminder… Noticing is now a felony.

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Tars Tarkas
1 day ago

Ironically, Steve Sailer, who coined the phrase, “war on noticing,” now condemns Tradissidents as antisemites for, you guessed it, noticing.

Piffle
Piffle
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
1 day ago

Steve Sailer was such a disappointment.

LineInTheSand
LineInTheSand
Reply to  Piffle
1 day ago

My take on Sailer is that, as much he may notice that races vary significantly in their intelligence and criminality, he somehow still expects that intelligent people of all races will share his disinterested respect for truth, which generally only whites have.

He believes that when he makes his observations, intelligent people of all races will abstractly evaluate his claims for their truth value alone. I think that it’s difficult for him to imagine an intelligent non-white saying, “I don’t care if what Sailer says is true, it harms the ability of my group to win.”

Citizen of a Silly Country
Citizen of a Silly Country
Reply to  LineInTheSand
1 day ago

Sailer lacks any feeling of kinship to his own people and thus can’t understand how other “intellectuals” from other races could feel any connection to the less gifted of their people. Sailer (and Charles Murray) understands group differences, but say, “So what, we’re all individuals.” The idiocy of Libertarianism. That stupidity/naivete might be acceptable from a college freshman but not from anyone over 30. Sailer’s unwillingness to acknowledge that playing as a team is both natural and effective shows that he is either a liar (actually, he is a liar for other reasons) or has a profoundly stunted intellect in… Read more »

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Piffle
1 day ago

You’re far too kind.

Citizen of a Silly Country
Citizen of a Silly Country
Reply to  Piffle
1 day ago

Steve Sailer is a liar.

Wolf Barney
Wolf Barney
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
1 day ago

There are a lot of us who have “noticed” that after Sailer stopped noticing, he received attention like he’s never had, his book published and appeared on Tucker’s show after years of relative obscurity.

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Wolf Barney
1 day ago

There’s sacks of gold Doubloons to be had if you don’t notice hard enough…

Steve
Steve
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
1 day ago

“Mongo like balloons, me take chance.”

BigJimSportCamper
BigJimSportCamper
Reply to  Steve
1 day ago

It’s ‘Mongo like candy’.
Yeesh.

The Infant Pheonomenon
The Infant Pheonomenon
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
1 day ago

“… and there is no new thing under the sun.” (Ecclesiastes 1: 9)

Citizen of a Silly Country
Citizen of a Silly Country
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
1 day ago

Sailer has noticed Jewish influence in the past, but he chalks it up to Jews being just so darn smart and hardworking as opposed to working as a team. Obviously, the former does explain some Jewish influence, but it’s the latter that matters by far the most.

Sailer refuses to acknowledge this obvious fact. He is a liar. The only question is why he’s lying. I have my suspicions – he wants to be accepted by the punditry crowd and he’s part Jewish come to mind – but who knows the real reason.

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Citizen of a Silly Country
1 day ago

But does he notice–and acknowledge–the perniciousness of Jewish influence?

TempoNick
TempoNick
Reply to  Citizen of a Silly Country
1 day ago

Sounds similar to our host here. I’ve heard him wax romantical about the so-called Jewish super brain. Sounds very Archie Bunkerish to me.

Tars Tarkas
Member
Reply to  TempoNick
1 day ago

The BS numbers thrown around are impossible and they are based on TINY non-representative samples. They have an higher average IQ than White people, but it’s more like 105 and not 112.

TempoNick
TempoNick
Reply to  Tars Tarkas
23 hours ago

Take an athlete who has God-given talent, works hard at training and practicing and honing his skills. That’s what the Jews do with intellectual pursuits. They take education seriously. I believe that is your IQ differential.

Tars Tarkas
Member
Reply to  Citizen of a Silly Country
1 day ago

I agree that he is lying, but the reason he is lying is it just a lot easier to lie. Noticing most stuff is only a 4th degree felony, while noticing small hats is a first degree felony. Nothing brings the blowback quite like noticing small hats. Even such a sacred figure (in their eyes) as Kanye West was immediately cast out and made to suffer.

Templar
Templar
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
1 day ago

TBH, I think it’s more annoyance with “noticers” pointing out Jews…and the same persons more often than not… every five seconds. Calling them “antisemites” isn’t accurate, though. They clearly have a hard-on for the nose, they never STFU about it, so clearly not hate specifically. It’s why I use “Jew enthusiast”. They’re like model train enthusiasts in that they’re too lazy to attain the productive status of actually driving a real train….but watching their toys go ’round the track and yelling “choo choo!” is sufficient.

The Infant Pheonomenon
The Infant Pheonomenon
Reply to  Tars Tarkas
1 day ago

Even worse, it’s
“immoral.”

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Xman
1 day ago

Not the end. Biden Robespierre and his Jacobins gave us the Terror, so that these guys could bring us the soft-sell of “benevolent” totalitarian dictatorship, forever: the Perfected World eternal.

Howard Luttnick- Cantor Fitzgerald
Larry Ellison- Oracle
Peter Thiel- Palantir
Larry Fink- Blackrock and its Alladin AI

America, and Musk and Trump, are merely the Horse; these four are the Riders.

Alas, I forgot to include Soros, destroyer of worlds, prophet of the Open Society.
Georgy Schwartz, Black George, our Lucifer: the High Chamberlain and right-hand-man.

(Mayorkas, Blinken, Starmer…sigh. And so very, very many of ours on their side.)

Last edited 1 day ago by Alzaebo
The Wild Geese Howard
The Wild Geese Howard
Reply to  Alzaebo
1 day ago

I worry that, “keeping track of all the illegals and H-1Bs,” is going to become the #1 talking point for the rollout of mass mandatory biometric-based digital ID.

Hemid
Hemid
Reply to  The Wild Geese Howard
1 day ago

Vote fraud, terrorism, etc., will be included among the excuses, but the present call for digital ID is just to stop people from being able to anonymously mock shit-eating Indians and low-IQ nerds like Elon. They’re being stupidly open about it, because they’re stupid (and victorious). I’ve heard that starting sometime this year if you don’t have RealID you can’t fly anywhere—if you’re an American. (I don’t fly anymore so I don’t know if that’s exactly right.) The strategic deposit of unidentifiable brown hordes in your town will continue, of course, but you can’t visit grandma or go to your… Read more »

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  The Wild Geese Howard
1 day ago

Problem-reaction-solution

Already being beta tested in other countries
Promoted by the UN Department of Migration/IOM, of course

International Organization for Migration

Official website of IOM, the leading organization within the United Nations system promoting humane and orderly migration for the benefit of all

Namibia’s failure with cbdc, the ‘nairo’, is why governments are shifting to stablecoin, such as Argentina and El Salvador

Last edited 1 day ago by Alzaebo
Brandon Laskow
Brandon Laskow
Reply to  Xman
1 day ago

Are you sure Kazerashvili is a tribesman? That’s a Georgian name.

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Brandon Laskow
1 day ago

It’s a Georgian name alright. But “David” and “Kazer” do set one’s antennae to twitchin’.

Jeffrey Zoar
Jeffrey Zoar
Reply to  Brandon Laskow
1 day ago

Kezerashvili was born in Tbilisi to a Jewish family. says wikipedia.

Marko
Marko
Reply to  Brandon Laskow
1 day ago

Should have been spelled Kazerashvily.

Also I think it’s a cognate with “Khazar”

Captain Willard
Captain Willard
1 day ago

The notorious LTC Vindman testimony was an eye-opener in this regard. He basically stated blatantly on National TV that the President couldn’t change the Deep State’s foreign policy. None of the Congresscritters in attendance seemed to have a problem with a junior Army officer openly defying the foreign policy authority of a duly-elected President. So it’s a just a sand wedge from there to Privateers running Deep State operations with no official oversight.

ProZNoV
ProZNoV
Reply to  Captain Willard
1 day ago

It can be done though. Departments may be brought to heel. No one doubts Xi controls foreign policy in China and Putin does in Russia. If the deepstate has a weakness, it is that it’s predicated on infinite money sloshing around to fund NGOs and to wet a lot of beaks. 33 trillion in debt, a trillion a year just to service it annually; all of this to try and control a corrupt country in Eastern Europe and to allow our greatest ally to stomp its neighbors with impunity when their governments collapse as the people spontaneously “rise up.” What… Read more »

Last edited 1 day ago by ProZNoV
Tarl Cabot
Tarl Cabot
Reply to  ProZNoV
1 day ago

Government is corrupt by nature, because ultimately it relies on the inherently corrupt practices of confiscation and coercion to operate. No way around it. Big government will have big corruption, small government will have small corruption.

The only way to limit corruption is to limit the funding. This is the only thing the libertarians got right.

The Infant Pheonomenon
The Infant Pheonomenon
Reply to  Tarl Cabot
1 day ago

Probably the most important book ever written on American politics is Our Enemy, the State by Albert Jay Nock.

BigJimSportCamper
BigJimSportCamper
Reply to  The Infant Pheonomenon
1 day ago

Absolutely.

Captain Willard
Captain Willard
Reply to  ProZNoV
1 day ago

Fair enough, but Xi and Putin can defenestrate folks. Short of that, it’s pretty tough unless you can get the IRS and financial police to go after the NGO money sloshing around. And of course, the IRS and financial police are all in cahoots with the Deep State.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Captain Willard
1 day ago

Non-profit, thus tax free. Immune to the IRS.
All of this hell world comes from “their” invention, the national tax on citizen incomes, with its sleights, dodges, waivers, privileges, and malincentives.

Mycale
Mycale
Reply to  Captain Willard
1 day ago

E. Michael Jones has talked about this. When Putin took control, Russia was being run by some unholy trinity of triple-parentheses oligarchs, the US State Department, and Wall Street. Putin had to take the country back from these gangsters. He had to make it clear that he is in charge now and they need to bend the knee. Xi, also, used anti-corruption measures as a way to take control of the country and ensure he was the one in charge. We need someone to take control of the country away from the deep state. Maybe this is just how it… Read more »

Andy Texan
Reply to  Mycale
22 hours ago

The Deep State is the wholly-owned subsidiary of the Anglo-American establishment. The people who set American foreign policy are mostly nameless and international in background.

Pozymandias
Reply to  ProZNoV
1 day ago

The new DOGE department may be Trump’s way to signal that he understands the real problem – if the President tells the bureaucrats in a part of the government to do something, and then they don’t do it, telling them “harder” isn’t going to get the job done. At some point you need to admit that some aspects of the government are hopelessly out of anyone’s** control and the only way to fix that is either mass arrests or some new agency that is empowered to cut off funding or fire people. The problem is that most of the people… Read more »

Xman
Xman
Reply to  Captain Willard
1 day ago

(((Vindman)))…

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Xman
1 day ago

Some of yesteryear’s badthinkers are being Vindicated…

Horace
Horace
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
4 hours ago

Only some? 🙂

ray
ray
Reply to  Captain Willard
1 day ago

Right. The President no longer is commander-in-chief. The DS is.

As for Congress, it seems to exist only to pay off the DS and themselves. Its legislative function seems not to exist.

Both Congress and the Executive now appear two or three rungs below the actual decision-making level.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  ray
1 day ago

Eventually, the System exists to defend the System.

Last edited 1 day ago by Alzaebo
ray
ray
Reply to  Alzaebo
23 hours ago

All hives do.

Zulu Juliet
Zulu Juliet
1 day ago

Remember Ashli Babbitt. Summarily executed by the U.S. government four year ago today. The man responsible for the extra-judicial murder was given a medal by Congress.

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Zulu Juliet
1 day ago

We can only hope he receives a second medal. Made of lead…

Tired Citizen
Tired Citizen
Reply to  Zulu Juliet
15 hours ago

Of course he did. It is the duty of our rulers to worship the sacred negros.

Galahad
Galahad
1 day ago

In one of his more interesting interviews, Joe Rogan interviewed a guy named Mike Benz. The 2.75 hour discussion centered largely around how the concept of democracy has been decoupled from populism. Benz used to work for the US State Department who are the public face of all of the meddlesome monkeyshines the United States engages in. One of the things that Benz notes is the conflation of “experts” in the bureaucracy with democracy itself. This is a tough square to circle because nobody votes for them and they seem to operate independently regardless of who is in office. At… Read more »

Jeffrey Zoar
Jeffrey Zoar
Reply to  Galahad
1 day ago

I have to consider the possibility that (((Benz))) is misdirection and/or limited hangout

Arshad Ali
Arshad Ali
1 day ago

Glad to see you’ve come around to accepting the reality of this malignancy we call the Deep State. It’s not going anywhere and is part of the warp and woof of the Western Empire, encoded in its DNA.

Major Hoople
Major Hoople
Member
Reply to  Arshad Ali
1 day ago

Come around?

Mycale
Mycale
1 day ago

Once you start to realize this, you really start to wonder just how fake everything really is. Like, we all know the playbook. It’s the same every time, and they even unleashed it on us in 2020. So, for example, if I go online and try to do more research about Putin kidnapping Ukrainian children, are the people who are talking about it online paid off by the CIA/NED/State/NGOs? Certainly, some of them are. But is it 20%? 50%? 99%? Are they even real people at this point, or are they bots? We saw the CIA unleash a program to… Read more »

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Mycale
1 day ago

This right here. I was watching a tiny channel on youtube, when I realized all of it- the albums, songs, singers, art, history, and voices discussing the song…were AI. Everything there was written by AI! So apply that to the larger canned narratives. When the FBI types read their own AI-generated narratives, they will believe and act on them, further feeding the learning algorithm, which will generate further narratives… For some years, Zerohedge has reported that the financial headlines are generated by AI, with the automated trading programs executing their trades in response to those headlines, as fully as we… Read more »

Last edited 1 day ago by Alzaebo
RealityRules
RealityRules
1 day ago

This video showed up on my YT yesterday. It has all the hallmarks of a GAE production. Extremely slick graphics. Total White erasure in the scenes depicting the military, microchip manufacturing, any other high tech activity. It had the look of something made before Andreesen had made up his mind what horse he would boost in the final quarter. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XTWdh1dr4ZI) Then things came up on some Internet search that lead to some Kremlinology that underlies ZMan’s article today. Case I – National Politics: Jacob Helberg appointed by Trump as Under Secretary for Economic Growth Energy and Environment. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacob_Helberg)Helberg married to… Read more »

Last edited 1 day ago by RealityRules
ray
ray
Reply to  RealityRules
1 day ago

‘2024 – ??? is going to be where we see just how organized the international oligarchy really is.’

That oligarchy of monied families does exist, perhaps best evident in the adoption of the Covid Delusion by most of the nations almost simultaneously. A colony indeed.

oldcoyote
oldcoyote
Reply to  RealityRules
1 day ago

Our only hope is that the GH(homo)AE must pull back from the hinterlands in the coming financial collapse and loses a war – or two- in their hubris and delusions about Russia and China. PNW, fren. still >85% White. Appalachia outposts are lonely islands surrounded by vast swarms of the diseased hordes of color. Pray for the north west front.

Götterdamn-it-all
Götterdamn-it-all
1 day ago

The Deep State arrived fully formed in 1863. Its talons go deep into the body politic and there is no bargaining with it. Americans and most of the world have been swept up in its maniacal energy. It is unstoppable by almost any means short of nuclear annihilation. Either it has its way or it brings down ruin on all of us. It’s out from behind the curtain and no longer even bothers to conceal its contempt for humanity. Ukraine is in everyone’s future.

Lavrov
Lavrov
1 day ago

zman, what fraction of the shady operators are tiny hats? Is it a coincidence that every individual mentioned by you is one?

Epaminondas
Member
Reply to  Lavrov
1 day ago

At this point, the difference between Tiny Hats and Judeo-Puritans is negligible. The people who don’t fall into these categories, but nonetheless slavishly follow their policies, are mere sycophants. They enjoy the ride their hegemon provides.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Epaminondas
1 day ago

Wanting to mold themselves into Us, they have molded us into Them.

BigJimSportCamper
BigJimSportCamper
Reply to  Lavrov
1 day ago

Cohencidence. Spelling is crucial in communication.

ray
ray
1 day ago

Very informative. It’s a spiritual war. The Deep State in all its forms — NGOs, bureaucracy, military institutions, etc. — wishes to accomplish its color revolutions of ‘liberal democracy’ around the world. Problem is, that ain’t the liberal democracy of John Kennedy or D.D. Eisenhower. It’s the liberal democracy of Queen Victoria Noo-land and Barack Obama. ‘It has been made infamous for the scenes of Victoria Nuland waddling around Kiev, handing out cookies to the pro-Western protestors.’ Cookies. Exactly. Vicki and the DS see themselves as On the Side of Goodness and Fluffy Angels. They’re Mom Inc., a planetary nanny.… Read more »

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  ray
1 day ago

It is spawning season for Cthulhu.”

That, right there, has got to be an instant classic. Spread it wide!

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Alzaebo
1 day ago

I imagine Vickie Nudelman has spread it wide with great regularity…

BigJimSportCamper
BigJimSportCamper
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
1 day ago

I just threw up in my mouth over that, thanks

LineInTheSand
LineInTheSand
Reply to  Alzaebo
1 day ago

“The Thing can not be described — there is no language for such abysms of shrieking and immemorial lunacy, such eldritch contradictions of all matter, force, and cosmic order. A mountain walked or stumbled. God!” Lovecraft, 1928

ray
ray
Reply to  Alzaebo
1 day ago

Generously said.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
1 day ago

Happy Insurrection Day, everybody!

Some Guy
Some Guy
Reply to  Alzaebo
1 day ago

There is debate about the extent to which Jan 6 was an insurrection. I think the people who showed up there did intend to reverse the election, but what is unusual is that they had very little violent intent.

They were so naïve that they thought by merely “petition[ing] the government for a redress of grievances” that the magic of the USA or God or Trump would set things aright.

It was the conservative equivalent of Kent State 1970 when the hippy chicks were putting flowers in the barrels of the National Guard’s guns.

Last edited 1 day ago by Some Guy
Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Some Guy
1 day ago

That’s an intersting take. I’m shocked Neil Young hasn’t composed a paean to the J6ers…”Babbitt Dead in Washington”…

ray
ray
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
1 day ago

Neil became the Establishment long ago. He and his buddies need to rebel against themselves.

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  ray
1 day ago

Not a chance, of course. Their rebellion was always a plot to become the establishment. They succeeded beyond their wildest dreams.

Moran ya Simba
Moran ya Simba
1 day ago

Over the holidays I read two books about good ol new yawker gangstas. I believe what happened was some of the hoodlums got wise and decided only amateur losers ran from authorities. The real killing was to first buy, then infiltrate, then become the law. The shakedown of the “murder inc” crew, then the war when government suddenly needed killers to watch the New York docks and then the big one, the creation of the CIA, the government s very own Murder Inc. And once you have blackmail and silent killing inside the walls, the experts at that will soon… Read more »

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Moran ya Simba
1 day ago

Rule by experts!

Maxda
Maxda
1 day ago

Nothing to disagree with here. But things are changing.

A little time and curiosity on X, Rumble, Gab, and even YouTube can now educate normie on this stuff. It’s no linger just fodder for the wacky conspiracy theorists, it’s now well documented facts that anyone can look up.

Epaminondas
Member
Reply to  Maxda
1 day ago

Facts don’t matter to sycophants.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Epaminondas
1 day ago

But numbers do. As ever, who’s got the bigger army?

The Infant Pheonomenon
The Infant Pheonomenon
1 day ago

” … American foreign policy. The reason for that is much of it is now done off the books, outside the official system.” And, at least in the case of the CIA, it has *always* been done off the books and outside the official system (beginning with the Italian national elections of 1947), as this book explains through *copious* documentation: https://www.alibris.com/Operation-Gladio-The-Unholy-Alliance-Between-the-Vatican-the-CIA-and-the-Mafia-Paul-L-Williams/book/28973726?matches=7 I can’t recommend it too highly. It ranges from the reason for the death of Billie Holiday to the true story of the real-life “French connection” to the real reasons for the invasion/occupation of Viet Nam and Afghanistan to… Read more »

Last edited 1 day ago by The Infant Pheonomenon
Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  The Infant Pheonomenon
14 hours ago

Let me guess: Opium gang
Same as Wesley Clark/Hillary’s little kerfluffle in Yugoslavia, so the Kosovar-Albanian gangs could bring in their Afghan suppliers and control the pipeline to Europe.

aka black budget funding

Sluf
Sluf
1 day ago

Well this sucks. Learned a lot from this post, that’s for sure.

usNthem
usNthem
1 day ago

It would seem there is nothing to be done. I suppose most governments are similar to one degree or another, although without the US ability to continually F things up around the world and throw around trillions of dollars they don’t have. The billions of people toiling away or wandering around are no more than ants to the s***birds in control. Happy Monday…

Jeffrey Zoar
Jeffrey Zoar
1 day ago

The double edged sword about this expansive “network” of ngos, intel agencies, and non profits is that no one person or entity is in charge or can be in charge of all of it, or even very much of it. Not only does this insulate it from elected reformers (or anyone at all) trying to redirect, repurpose, or shut it down, it also prevents one node from necessarily being able to trust other nodes. People or entities may take control of this or that portion but no one can control all of it. Nor can one part of this “system”… Read more »

Last edited 1 day ago by Jeffrey Zoar
Tars Tarkas
Member
Reply to  Jeffrey Zoar
1 day ago

That’s why we call it the swamp or the deep state.
It’s so annoying when people scoff at the concept of “Deep State” or “Swamp” There are only 542 elected officials in DC (not counting DC’s local gov) who allegedly run the leviathan federal government.
The very same people who scoff at the entire idea, talk about a part of the Deep State incessantly. Leftists are always whining about the rotations of regulators moving back and forth between the industries they are supposed to be regulating and the industry.

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Jeffrey Zoar
1 day ago

Over the last half century the academy has done such a thorough job of indoctrinating its inmates that students now arrive as freshmen pre-indoctrinated. The next four years are now spent applying the refinments and finer touches.

Jack Dobson
Jack Dobson
1 day ago

The Deep State achieved self-awareness long ago, but there seems to be a glitch in the system of late. It appears some Deep State factions have achieved individual group self-awareness and they do not necessarily work toward a unified end or goal. We have caught glimpses about this with the varied reactions to the ethnic cleansing of Gaza, to cite one example, and there seems to be an apparent chasm within the “Green” movement recently. Elites seemingly subscribe primarily to one or the other group but it may no longer be possible to be plugged into the disparate factions simultaneously.… Read more »

Ted X
Ted X
1 day ago

From ‘The Technological Society’ by Jacques Elul (1964) P.284 The Totalitarian State: Finally, technique causes the state to become totalitarian, to absorb the citizens’ life completely. We have noted that this occurs as a result of the accumulation of techniques in the hands of the state. Techniques are mutually engendered and hence interconnected, forming a system that tightly encloses all our activities. When the state takes hold of a single thread of this network of techniques, little by little it draws to itself all the matter and the method, whether or not it consciously wills to do so. Even when… Read more »

Ride-By Shooter
Ride-By Shooter
1 day ago

Mises Institute has published another reminder that conservatives are stupid and evil.

The New Hysteria: The Regime Pivots from Russians to Immigrants
Ryan McMaken

Indeed, it’s likely the regime can barely believe its good fortune on the immigration front. After years of subsidizing migrants with taxpayer dollars to balloon immigrant numbers, the regime will now be rewarded with vast new powers to “solve” the problem. 

Conservatards conserve “Progressivism” and the Deep State, too.

Last edited 1 day ago by Ride-By Shooter
Hemid
Hemid
Reply to  Ride-By Shooter
1 day ago

The libertarian combination of near-total insight and near-total wrongness is unique. It pretends to be the opposite, but it’s the max level of sucking up to power. (Not coincidentally, libertarians are nerds.) The five real Marxists still alive say that too, but they don’t understand. American ideological “identification with capital” (or whatever) isn’t classist, insecure, wishful, nostalgic, etc. It’s sadistic, vengeful. The one good thing the incoming admin might possibly do is throw out some Central American criminals. Aztec goblins traversing the continent to rape and rob you on your own government’s payroll? That was fine, not worth talking about.… Read more »

TempoNick
TempoNick
1 day ago

When you think about it, we haven’t evolved that much differently from our English mothership. Congress acts like a parliament with Party line votes, the king is a figurehead and the administrative state is the permanent government.

Dutchboy
Dutchboy
1 day ago

It is too much to hope that Trump will abandon the “Israel as 51st state” thing but I do have some hope he will back off the regime change/democracy stuff. It is expensive, futile, and dangerous. A good start would be to tell Zelenskyy that the jig is up and there will be more more swag from the USA.

Major Hoople
Major Hoople
Member
1 day ago

I thought Serbia was very loosely aligned with Russia as a fellow Slav country. What would a pro color rev group be doing operating out of Belgrade?

Tired Citizen
Tired Citizen
15 hours ago

Those who get too curious or refuse to play ball will find themselves with a primary opponent and no money. It is why “our democracy” is a rhetorical and literal fig leaf for the Deep State. When I explained this to my 78 year old mother, she just could not wrap her head around it. She will not let go of her belief that the system works and it is legitimate. “Trump” is going to make things right! He’s going to deport the illegals!”. I love my mother dearly, but no matter how hard I try, I can’t break her… Read more »

Greatfan
Greatfan
21 hours ago

Horrible circumstances we find ourselves living in. The solution? Why reinvent the wheel? The National Socialists had the answer.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
1 day ago

Wow. Astounding. Halfway thru the article now, this is some deep journalism.

So, we’re being run by a shadow industry.

Public-private has superceded established governance. The Crown corporations (chartered East India Companies) have taken over the Crown.

Last edited 1 day ago by Alzaebo
karl von hungus
karl von hungus
1 day ago

you can have a modern society or a totalitarian society, but not both. and only a modern society can operate at the scale levels of today’s nation states. and before you mention the “R” word, they weren’t totalitarian. 😛

Thomas Mcleod
Thomas Mcleod
1 day ago

I wonder what effect eliminating the not-for-profit world in its entirety would have? No more deductions for giving money to Harvard, your flavor of think tank, or your local church. The Gates foundation, the Ford Foundation, Yale’s Endowment, Joel Osteen, and Soros’s Open Society could now be taxed to non-existence.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  thezman
1 day ago

I disagree, that it would have no impact. Without the carveouts their tools have, they would not have near the reach. They need some serious dents in their armor, and I’d like to shatter the masks completely.

Last edited 1 day ago by Alzaebo
Barnard
Barnard
Reply to  Thomas Mcleod
1 day ago

The small organizations that try to help decent white Americans would be hit the hardest, by far. Some small colleges would go under, but HBCUs which already operate under great government subsidy would just be propped up even more. The worst hit would be K-12 small Christian schools which are currently the best option most families have to escape public education.

pyrrhus
pyrrhus
Reply to  Thomas Mcleod
1 day ago

It would be worthwhile, for sure.. it wouldn’t stop most of them, but it might reduce the scope of their operations….

3g4me
3g4me
Reply to  Thomas Mcleod
1 day ago

The small hats want you to think it’s just about the shekels (ala Mike Medved), but the money is only useful to the extent it buys influence/compliance. What matters is power, and that is more a function of deep and extensive connections to all the different nodes of power and influence. And those are all connected by ethnic and marital and financial ties which are global. And all that goes back centuries.

Yman
Yman
19 hours ago

if world is unstable and west decaying into failure means decades of western policy are wrong

it also means ideology and dogma that believe by white people is dead wrong

Brandon Laskow
Brandon Laskow
1 day ago

OT: A slice of the insanity permeating America in early 2025

Mercedes-Benz swerves aggressively through crowd of cyclists blocking L.A. street

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e8IQ18SB1hY

The bicyclists taking over the street, the Benz driver taking the situation into his own hands, and then the coupe de grace, the bicyclists vandalizing the Benz in a parking garage. The level of self-centeredness is dumbfounding.

It’s an early 2000’s C-Class so nothing high-end.

Jeffrey Zoar
Jeffrey Zoar
Reply to  Brandon Laskow
1 day ago

I find it remarkable that more people haven’t snapped

Ketchup-stained Griller
Ketchup-stained Griller
Reply to  Brandon Laskow
1 day ago

early 2000’s C-Class The peeps I see driving these means I probably gotnodog in this fight.

BigJimSportCamper
BigJimSportCamper
Reply to  Brandon Laskow
1 day ago

Amazing. It’s not the driver, it’s ‘Mercedes Benz’.

Greg Nikolic
1 day ago

The American government operates like an onion, with many levels to it. Tocqueville famously said that Americans are a nation of organization starters. In the foreign policy landscape there is a role for everyone from the State Department to think tanks. Speaking of think tanks, what a cushy sinecure that must be! You get a well-paying job in an academic world that touches directly on the real world. Based on your work as a policy work, you get some input into the downstream decisions that flow from Washington to the world. The only thing about think tanks that surprises me… Read more »

Not Me
Not Me
Reply to  Greg Nikolic
1 day ago
Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Not Me
1 day ago

Marketing AI testing the waters, eh? Seeing what gains traction.
Glow baby glow.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Alzaebo
1 day ago

Not Not Me, I mean the Nikolic AI. Jeez, people