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January 28, 2025

Pete Hegseth: A Monument to the Rot of American Leadership

Leadership in America has become a theater of illusion, where neoliberalism and neoconservatism perform as opposing forces while working hand in hand to maintain American primacy. This bipartisan alliance (unrelenting and unified) has hollowed out the core of democracy, creating a system that thrives on militarism, economic domination, and exceptionalism. Figures like Pete Hegseth, loud and unrepentant, are not outliers. They are the inevitable product of decades of failed leadership across the four estates: religion, rulers, the people, and the press.

Hegseth is not the disease. He is the latest symptom of a system in decay. The system Henry Wallace warned us about: creeping fascism dressed in patriotism, cloaked in morality, and sold to the public as inevitability.

Religion, which should be a moral check on power, has surrendered to the allure of empire. Instead of denouncing the worship of war, the clergy sanctified it. Evangelicals praised Reagan’s militarism, blessed Bush’s wars, and embraced Trump’s authoritarianism, turning faith into a weapon of control. Neoliberals invoked the language of compassion to justify policies that decimated the working class and left entire communities to wither under the weight of free-market dogma. When drones rained fire on distant villages, the clergy remained silent. When veterans stood with the Sioux at Standing Rock, where were the sermons of solidarity? The pulpit preached complicity instead of courage, turning religion into the handmaiden of power.

Rulers, draped in red or blue, have long traded the public trust for personal gain. Their allegiance is not to the people. But to sustain the mythic power of American exceptionalism. Neoconservatism wielded the hammer of militarism, with Reagan’s arms race, Bush’s Middle Eastern crusades, and Trump’s nationalism stoking endless conflict. Neoliberalism, under the guise of progress, expanded NATO, championed free trade, and gutted the working class while turning the global south into a battleground for corporate expansion. Clinton sold globalization as salvation, Obama framed drone strikes as precision justice, and Biden maintained the status quo of imperial ambition. They do not counter each other; they complement. They built the machinery of empire, and Hegseth is its inevitable operator.

The people, caught in the grinding gears of this system, have too often surrendered their power. Neoliberalism promised progress while gutting communities, leaving hollowed-out towns in its wake. Neoconservatism demanded loyalty in exchange for fear, turning dissent into treason and manufacturing compliance through militarized patriotism. These forces have numbed the people with propaganda, false promises, and economic precarity. Yet within the apathy, sparks of resistance catch fire: veterans who march for peace, workers who strike against exploitation, and citizens who refuse to buy the mythology they’re selling. They are the authentic stewards of democracy, standing against the bipartisan betrayal of leadership.

And the press? The press didn’t just fail to expose this rot; it actively built it. The media does not challenge the bipartisan alliance of neoliberalism and neoconservatism. It obscures it, pretending the two are in opposition while selling their shared agenda as the natural order. Reagan was cast as a cowboy hero, Bush as a defender of freedom, Obama as a reluctant warrior, and Trump as a disruptor of norms. Figures like Hegseth are packaged as patriots, not because they represent authentic leadership, but because they sell. The press glorifies militarism, normalizes empire, and silences dissent, making the loudest voices the only ones heard. It does not just market fascism; it renders it palatable.

Neoliberalism and neoconservatism are two hands of the same body, lifting the torch of American primacy while setting fire to justice and equality. They have cultivated the soil from which loud fascists like Hegseth have grown, turning the silent fascism of past decades into today’s overt authoritarianism. Both ideologies feed the same oppression, and all the estates sustain its existence, all while pretending to be at odds.

The failure of leadership is not the failure of one party, one institution, or one ideology. It is the collapse of the entire system meant to safeguard democracy. Religion traded morality for power. Rulers sacrificed the common good for imperial ambitions. Fear and propaganda have lulled the people into complicity. The press abdicated its responsibility as a watchdog, becoming instead the architect of consent. Together, they betray the people and the principles they pretend to serve and uphold.

Pete Hegseth is not an anomaly. He is the product of a system designed to elevate figures like him, men who conflate dominance with leadership, power with purpose, and cruelty with patriotism. Authentic leadership must reject this bipartisan marriage of neoliberalism and neoconservatism. It must dismantle the myth of American exceptionalism and foster a new ethic of service, justice, and accountability.

The question is not whether another Hegseth will rise. The question is whether we will dismantle the system that created him. Leadership in America must transform, or it will continue to betray the very people and principles it claims to serve.

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✨️🤘💖✊️✌️✨️🐴..

AND HOWz RUMBLE PRIVACY ~ Today's ENTIRE M.O.A.T.S. show was molested by ZioNaziMossadMafiaTERRORIST Spies. ZERO Rumble RESPONSE. And commercials on Galloway's channel are on triple-time to squeeze MORE MONEY out of those who can least afford to PAY-UP just to get Truth in News w/out the b.s. Ai crap commercials every 3min
~ i could go on but i digress PRIVACY

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https://discuss.techlore.tech/t/discord-is-a-privacy-nightmare/7007

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Of Butterflies & Genocide

By Lee Camp

An orange butterfly taking flight for the first time, unaware of the tempestuous unforgiving yet dazzling world it brightens. The dusty bodies of executed children. These are the two defining images of my weekend. And most painful is their lack of exceptionality. 

Ten days ago my toddler found and pointed out what looked to be a trinket hanging from a brown, fragile plant—A bright green pod hardly bigger than an adult’s thumbnail, crowned by brilliant gold dots reflecting the afternoon sun. How stunning and out-of-place it appeared. It took me a moment to figure out what it was—I had never seen a monarch butterfly cocoon before.

It feels like it doesn’t belong, an ill fitting accessory for the brown shriveling leaves of autumn. It looks more like something an Egyptian pharaoh would be entombed with, right at home alongside ornate ivory hair brushes and flashy golden necklaces. 

Later that day, in between reading about the latest unfathomable atrocities Israel committed, I read up on monarch butterflies and the best temperatures for them to survive the no doubt difficult transformation from caterpillar to majestic kaleidoscopic aerial dream bug. Sure enough I found the odds of her surviving the metamorphosis in 45° F nights on a withering splintering milkweed leaf in the direct path of rambunctious dogs and feral neighborhood children were slim. (The nearly microscopic monarch eggs have a 3% chance of enduring all the way to adult butterflies in the outside elements while they have a 90% chance when brought indoors and given the proper treatment.) 

So I took a brief pause from ingesting yet another article about a small child targeted for death by a Zik (Hermes 450) armed attack drone, nearly silent as it rains death from above. I went outside armed with a pair of scissors and some dental floss—The scissors to cut the leaf and the dental floss to tie around the top of the chrysalis (the cocoon) in order to suspend it from the inside of a small plastic container. 

Over the next week the cherry tomato-sized bauble turned a gripping rich blue like a raging sea of torment and fury. In that time several hundred innocent people were murdered by Israel—In Gaza, Lebanon, the West Bank. 

Occasionally my child, desperately curious about everything both natural and not, would take a look at the dangling chrysalis. Of course since it wasn’t moving, it held his attention 1/100th of the time a matchbox car might. Meanwhile I would peer at it and lose myself in the seething subaquatic abyss, a richness of color that called to mind a collapsing galaxy pulsating with the hopes and desires, anguish and love, pain and passion of legions. Or maybe an expanding galaxy, blossoming into such abundance. …It gripped me.

Israel holds roughly 10,000 Palestinian hostages in its prisons.

On Saturday, after one week in our home, a vibrant orange and black butterfly materialized. I imagine no matter how many times one might see this, it probably always seems magical, otherworldly. How a butterfly fit, metamorphosed, and retailored itself inside that pod I will never understand. 

As Israeli officials brainstormed new and interesting ways to stop food from reaching starving children, my small family of three walked outside to release a new butterfly into the world. I trepidatiously lowered my index finger into the container in front of the tiny flier (lepidoptera) as I saw on a YouTube video, and she crawled slowly onto it as if she knew the plan exactly. 

I then delicately, ever so carefully, held her next to a small violet flower and she snuck onto it, minding the gap. I had read that monarchs will sit still for several hours after greeting the world in order to dry out their wings (and probably take things in, recalibrating to their new reality). She did exactly that before eventually fluttering away, going about her effervescent orange journey. 

Israel fired white phosphorus at UN workers in Lebanon.

The IDF set another hospital in Gaza ablaze.

In hindsight I know why I invested so much time and thought into the growth and maturation toward freedom of a single minuscule creature. It’s tempting to say it was a metaphor for human evolution in a breathtakingly sick, ugly world. To say there’s something better coming. To say humanity sits moments away from breaking out of these stained, sullied dystopian circumstances and into a brand new gleaming reality of possibility and peace. 

But that’s not it. 

I sunk so much emotion into a bug (albeit an attractive one) as a distraction and a projection. As genocide drips down all our screens, a US-backed genocide at that, I desperately needed to help something live, to facilitate freedom and survival. I ached to show my child something beautiful while he’s still at the age before one comprehends the horrors of the evening news.

Projection won’t save the world. Momentary distraction won’t stop one Israeli bomb from falling or secure one sandwich for a single Gazan child.

But perhaps, just maybe, I’m raising a child with empathy and love for all living things. Maybe he’ll be one more person who accepts no justification for ethnic cleansing and war crimes. 

I don’t yet know how to process the moral injury of the true unfettered massacre we’re all absorbing. I don’t know if anyone does. …But there’s one more butterfly in the world. 

 

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As sure as the earth circles the sun, the US ruling elite will never stop trying to collapse Venezuela’s government in order to slurp at their sweet sweet oil and finally triumphantly announce “See! Socialism doesn’t work!” This week we yet again get to witness this redundant tiresome performance.

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As covered in Peoples Dispatch, “The wealth of the world’s top five richest men has more than doubled since 2020 while 4.8 billion people, or 60% of humanity, have been further impoverished.”

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