OVERVIEW
A stark question sits at the heart of geopolitics: what happens when personality, power, and belief collide at the very top of the global system?
This piece traces a chain from leadership character, through inner circles and elite influence, into the realm of ideology and end-times thinking, asking whether we are witnessing action in pursuit of clearly defined and rational goals, in the frame of a carefully planned and calculated strategy, or rather is this a leadership suffering from collective delusion, creating the possibility of a far more dangerous outcome to the present madness.
1. Questioning The Sanity Of The American Leadership
There is a deeper question that sits behind current events: the psychological character of the leadership at the very top of the present system.
It is not simply a matter of unpredictability, though that in itself signals instability. What we appear to be dealing with is a personality type marked by a constant need for admiration, a weak capacity for empathy, and a strong sense of entitlement. These traits can be grouped under the heading psychologists call narcissism - a pattern of behaviour centred on self-importance and validation-seeking.
Alongside this can in some circumstances and particularly in times of stress, come suspicion, paranoia, grievance, and at times a harsh, punitive or even sadistic attitude towards others.
Furthermore this is someone who openly states that he has cast aside international norms in favour of how he feels and his own sense of morality. This is extraordinary stuff and we wonder where the Constitution and its checks and balances have gone.
When such a character sits at the apex of global power, with access to immense military capability, including the red button, the stakes are obvious.
- Narcissism – a personality pattern characterised by grandiosity, need for admiration, and low empathy
2. The Inner Circle – Competence Or Conformity
Leadership does not operate in isolation. It is of course shaped, reinforced, or moderated by those closest to it.
The concern here is not simply loyalty. All leaders attract loyal followers, by the definition of leadership.
The question is whether that loyalty crowds out competence and independent judgement. When a team becomes overly aligned to one personality, it risks becoming sycophantic – echoing rather than challenging.
More than this, who is in Trump's cabinet and who are his advisors? Trump eschews trained, professional and expert advice from his administration, officers of the state selected on qualifications, experience and intelligence - he does not trust what he calls the Deep state and instead chooses a cabinet of advisors from his family members and friends become sycophants or are discarded.
So there are questions of experience and emotional steadiness here. High-pressure geopolitical environments require depth, discipline, reflection and restraint. Without these, decision-making can pass over structured analysis and planning and turn instead towards instinct, emotion and reaction.
- Sycophancy – excessive flattery or agreement with authority, often at the expense of truth
3. Power Structures – The Influence Of Elite Networks
Beyond formal government sits another layer: informal networks and influential lobbies.
Figures such as Jeffrey Epstein have become shorthand for a wider class of elites operating across finance, politics, military, industry and media. This "power elite" does not have to be a single coordinated group, but a loosely connected network of influence that aligns on shared self-interest. So we have what is referred to as the Epstein class feeding into and shaping narratives and priorities.
When such networks are aligned with conflict or escalation, it raises questions about underlying motivations and shared worldviews. Whether justified or not, the perception itself contributes to a growing distrust of elite structures.
- Elite networks – informal groups of powerful individuals influencing decisions beyond formal institutions
4. Zionism And The Armageddon Narrative
At the ideological level, attention turns to belief systems, particularly the current iteration of religious Zionism.
Zionism itself is a broad and complex movement. However, in these religious interpretations, it becomes intertwined with end-times thinking. This includes the concept of Armageddon, drawn from Book of Revelation.
Armageddon, derived from Har Megiddo (Mount Megiddo, a place in Israel), is an ancient battlefield where the final confrontation between good and evil will be fought. In these interpretations, conflict is not just political, but part of a divine sequence leading to transformation.
The culmination is the emergence of a “new heaven and new earth” - a complete reordering of reality with the establishment of the Kingdom of God on Earth.
- Eschatology – the study of end-times and final events in religious belief
5. From Theology To Geopolitics
The trouble arises when such end-times narratives seep into real-world power thinking, which - however how this is to believe - is happening.
When leaders or influential groups are guided, even partially, by apocalyptic thinking and frameworks, then conflict can take on an altogether different meaning. It is no longer something to be avoided or managed, but something that fulfils an inevitable divine destiny.
From a strategic perspective, such narratives can be used, consciously or unconsciously, to justify and sustain global dominance, an ideological scaffolding for hegemony. Narrative is after all what holds together a social and political order.
This is where the overlap between belief, power, and policy is at its most worrisome.
- Hegemony – dominance of one state or group over others, can lead to Empire
6. Madness Or Misinterpretation
At this point, two interpretations emerge:
- One sees a pattern of irrationality, even madness
- The other sees a mix of belief, strategy, and power politics
Both elements can be present at the same time, such are we humans and our systems.
But the language, tone, and apparent motivations of this leadership are deeply concerning. Not just elites outside Washington, but increasingly ordinary people outside the systems of governance, are struggling to make sense of events.
7. The Final Check and Balance – Ordinary People
If there is a stabilising force, history suggest s it may not lie within the existing Order of rules, institutions and elite networks.
In periods of excess, overreach, or ideological distortion, the people lose faith and awake and elite behaviour and actions provoke a response from civil society. People who are not invested in power structures, who have little to gain from conflict, often see things more plainly.
So the hope is that this broader base acts as a corrective. Not through grand ideology, but through something far less complex: a return to grounded judgement, a kingdom not of God or prophecy or empire, but of common sense.
- Common sense – practical, shared reasoning grounded in everyday reality
References
- American Psychiatric Association – personality frameworks
- Book of Revelation
- Armstrong, K. – history of religious movements and interpretations
- Nye, J. – power and influence in global politics
- Dalio, R. – cycles of power and internal order









