Friday, 29 May 2026
FIVE WAYS THE EU WILL TRAMPLE YOUR FREEDOM THIS YEAR 2026
Saturday, 23 May 2026
WELCOME TO THE GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH
1. The Greatest Political Show On Earth
There was a time when governments tried to present themselves as sobre administrative machines. Politicians wore dark suits, spoke in measured tones, and pretended that governance was a rational process conducted quietly behind polished doors. That world has not entirely disappeared, but it is fading fast.
Modern politics increasingly resembles theatre.
Governments today blend:
• governance
• branding
• entertainment
• permanent campaigning
• media spectacle.
The distinction between politician, celebrity, influencer, salesman, and performer has become more abd more blurred. It is now form over substance. Television began the transformation. Social media accelerated it. Politics is now conducted not so much through institutions and policy papers, but more through images, narratives, emotional performance, and getting continuous public attention.
If this is true, it wasn't Donald Trump who invented political theatre. He simply understood it earlier, more instinctively, and more openly than most of his rivals, perhaps it was his character, perhaps it was his earlier experiences in entertainment and business. While critics still analyse politics as if it were an academic seminar or legal proceeding, Trump often approaches it more like a travelling circus, complete with ringmaster, strongmen, fire eaters, barkers, illusionists, and loyal carneys working the crowd beneath the big top.
OK, the comparison is humorous, but it also contains an uncomfortable truth. Modern political success increasingly depends not merely upon competence, but upon the ability to dominate attention. In the media age, spectacle itself has become a form of power.
---
THE CARNEYS
1. Donald Trump — The Ringmaster
Every circus needs a ringmaster, and no one has ever played the role with more conviction. Trump stands at centre ring in top hat and tailcoat, cracking the whip, bellowing through the megaphone, and ensuring that every eye in the tent remains fixed on him at all times. He does not perform a single act himself — he does not need to. His act is the show. He sets the narrative, announces the next spectacle before the last one has finished, and keeps the crowd in a state of permanent excitement. Whether the audience is cheering or booing, their attention belongs entirely to him. In the circus, the ringmaster's power has nothing to do with any particular skill. It rests entirely on his ability to command the room.
2. Pete Hegseth — The Strongman
Every circus has a strongman: loud, physical, projecting raw aggression, here to reassure the crowd that their side has the muscle. Hegseth flexes his way through the performance - chest out, jaw set, animal-print costume barely containing the performance of toughness. He picks the fights, fires up the crowd, and keeps the enemies clearly identified. In the classic circus tradition, the strongman does not need to demonstrate intelligence or subtlety. His role is simpler and more primal: to make the audience feel protected, threatened, and thrilled in quick succession. The bulldog on the chain is not incidental ... it is the whole message.
3. Scott Bessent — The Magician
The magician's job is to make uncomfortable realities vanish. Bessent performs his act in a top hat of his own — quieter than the ringmaster's, more refined — conjuring reassurance from economic turbulence. Tariffs? No problem. Short-term pain? Long-term win. Markets will love it. The smoke curling from his cabinet of "Economic Illusions" is not an accident of the act; it is the act. Every magician depends on the audience's willingness to be fooled, and on the brief, dazzling interval between the moment something disappears and the moment anyone asks where it went.
4. Marco Rubio — The Fire-Eater
Fire-eaters perform acts of controlled danger. They breathe fire, they warn of threats, they are always on television. Rubio occupies this role: warming up the crowd with geopolitical alarm, gesturing dramatically at China, Iran, and a world more dangerous than the audience realises. The fire-eater does not resolve the danger - he performs it. His purpose in the show is to generate heat, sustain tension, and ensure the audience remains convinced that the world outside the tent is sufficiently frightening to justify everything happening inside it.
5. Pam Bondi — The Knife Thrower
(This section needs deliberately updating)
Knife-throwing requires precision, nerve, and a target. Bondi takes the role of legal weapon deployed with surgical intent - throwing legal daggers, targeting the enemies, the caption notes: the law is the weapon. In the circus, the knife thrower's art is about controlled menace: the knives land just where they are intended to. The target does not move. The crowd holds its breath. The act is not really about justice; it is about demonstrating that the performer has perfect command of something genuinely dangerous.
6. Kristi Noem — The Lion Tamer
(This section needs deliberately updating)
The lion tamer enters a cage of wild things and walks out again unharmed, performing composure under pressure. Noem's circus role is border security and illegal immigration - the savage animals that must be brought to heel. She tames the chaos, the image insists, keeps America secure, and sends the beasts back to the cage. The lion tamer is always photographed with a whip and a look of absolute authority, because the audience needs to believe that someone, somewhere, has the dangerous creatures under control.
7. Elon Musk — The Human Cannonball
The human cannonball is the most spectacular and least controllable act in the circus. He is loaded into the apparatus, launched at high velocity across the tent, and lands ... or doesn't ... somewhere in the vicinity of the target. Musk performs this role as Special Government Employee: maximum risk, maximum explosion, maximum disruption, the caption noting that if it explodes, we learn faster. The human cannonball does not plan carefully. He generates an enormous amount of attention, a great deal of noise, and occasionally hits something useful. The crowd gasps either way.
8. Howard Lutnick — The Barker
The barker never performs himself. He stands at the entrance, sells the vision, hypes the deals, and keeps the cash flowing. Lutnick's Commerce Secretary role fits the character precisely: everybody who enters the tent gets the pitch. Tariffs! Deals! Jobs! Made in America! The barker's art is the art of perpetual salesmanship - he does not need the promises to be delivered, only to be made loudly enough, and often enough, that the crowd keeps buying tickets.
9. JD Vance — The Tightrope Walker
The tightrope walker's entire performance consists of not falling. One wrong step and the whole thing ends badly; the caption puts it plainly. Vance navigates the wire between populism, establishment acceptance, and nationalism - live, loud, unpredictable - staying for the show through pure balance and nerve. The tightrope walker does not advance, does not retreat. He simply maintains his position above the crowd, performing the act of political survival in real time, and hoping the wire holds.
10. The Communications Team — The Clown Car Brigade
No circus is complete without the clown car: a vehicle from which emerge, improbably, far more figures than physics should allow, all talking at once, all performing chaos, all confusing the crowd into exhausted laughter. The communications team - flooding the zone, spreading fake news, confusion, distraction - serves this function precisely. Message is chaos. Chaos is the message. The clowns are not failing at communication; they are succeeding at a different kind entirely.
Attention is power
Spectacle is strategy
Welcome to the greatest show on Earth.
PEACE IN THE GULF FROM LOCAL CONTROL OF HORMUZ
Friday, 15 May 2026
GOLD WILL KEEP THE SHIP AFLOAT
Wednesday, 13 May 2026
IS AMERICA A REPUBLIC OR AN EMPIRE
Tuesday, 12 May 2026
WHO ARE THE NEOCONS AND WHAT DO THEY WANT
Tuesday, 5 May 2026
HOW POWER SHIFTS IN TRANSITIONS BETWEEN EMPIRES
1. HOW POWER SHIFTS TRANSITIONS BETWEEN EMPIRES
Summary
Empires do not hand over power cleanly. They overlap, compete, and adapt. Some transitions are rapid, driven by military collapse, others unfold slowly through economic and institutional change. The consistent pattern is that power shifts when a new system proves more effective at organising trade, finance, and production. The modern world accelerates this process, but does not change its underlying logic.
2. THE IDEA OF EMPIRE AND TRANSITION
History can be read as a sequence of dominant systems rising and falling - it is about systems and transitions between systems. But systems rarely disappear overnight, they weaken, fragment, and are gradually overtaken by new structures that operate more effectively.
The transition phase is not a moment but a period of overlap. During this period, the old system still functions, but the new one is already expanding beneath it, preparing to gobble it up - the basic pattern to recognise is the competition for trade routes, land and resources... the winner is the one with the most efficient systems.
Empire - a political structure in which a central authority governs multiple territories and diverse populations beyond its original base
Transition period - the span of time during which one dominant system declines while another emerges and expands
3. RAPID TRANSITIONS — WHEN FORCE DECIDES
The shift from the Achaemenid Persian Empire to the Macedonian Empire shows how quickly a system can collapse under decisive military pressure.
The Persian system fell around 330 BCE under the campaigns of Alexander the Great. Within roughly a decade, political control across a vast region had been reconfigured.
This type of transition depends on overwhelming advantage and weak opposing institutional resilience. Once the governing elite is removed, the system can disintegrate rapidly.
Military supremacy - the ability of one force to decisively defeat another across multiple regions and battles
4. SLOW TRANSITIONS — WHEN SYSTEMS EVOLVE
The movement from the Roman Republic to the Roman Empire followed a very different path.
From the late second century BCE to 27 BCE, Rome experienced prolonged instability, including civil wars and political breakdown, before Augustus established a new imperial structure.
Here, the system did not collapse first. It adapted under pressure and eventually transformed into something more centralised.
Institutional inertia - the tendency of established systems to resist change even when they are no longer functioning efficiently
5. COLLAPSE WITHOUT SUCCESSOR
The fall of the Western Roman Empire in 476 CE did not lead to an immediate replacement.
Instead, Europe fragmented into smaller kingdoms over the following centuries. Stability only gradually returned between roughly 600 and 800 CE.
This kind of transition produces a vacuum rather than a direct handover.
Fragmentation - the breakdown of a central authority into multiple smaller and competing political entities
6. LONG TRANSITIONS — PRESSURE OVER TIME
The shift from the Byzantine Empire to the Ottoman Empire took place over roughly 250 years.
In the 11th century the empire experienced a major catastrophe in which most of its distant territories in Anatolia were lost to the Seljuks following the Battle of Manzikert and ensuing civil war. Then the Sack of Constantinople by the forces of the Fourth Crusade in 1204 further weakened Byzantium allowing Ottoman expansion gradually into its territories, culminating in the fall of Constantinople in 1453.
This was not a sudden collapse, but a prolonged process of erosion and encroachment.
Geopolitical encroachment - the gradual expansion of one power into the territory and influence of another
7. THE DUTCH INTERLUDE — THE FIRST MODERN SYSTEM
The transition from the Spanish Empire to the British Empire via the Dutch cannot be understood without recognising the central role of the Dutch Empire.
In the seventeenth century, the Dutch built a new kind of power - through the Dutch East India Company and the financial markets of Amsterdam, they created systems capable of mobilising capital, coordinating global trade, and managing risk at scale.
This marked a shift away from conquest towards system-based power.
Joint-stock company - a business structure in which ownership is divided into tradable shares
Capital markets - systems that channel savings into investment through instruments such as shares and bonds
8. DUTCH TO BRITISH — COMPETITION AND ABSORPTION
The transition from Dutch to British dominance unfolded between the mid-seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries.
The Anglo-Dutch Wars reflected direct rivalry for control of trade routes, although this is better appreciated as a story of transfer of power.
The Glorious Revolution brought William III of Orange to the English throne, linking Dutch financial expertise with British state power.
The creation of the Bank of England in 1694 formalised this integration.
Britain did not simply defeat the Dutch. It absorbed their model and scaled it.
Institutional transfer - the adoption and adaptation of systems, practices, and knowledge from one power by another
Scale advantage - the ability of a larger system to operate more efficiently due to size, resources, and reach
9. INDUSTRIAL TRANSITION — BRITAIN TO AMERICA
The shift from the British Empire to the United States represents the first fully industrial transition.
Britain peaked in the late nineteenth century. By the end of World War II, the United States had assumed global leadership.
This transition took roughly 70 to 80 years and was driven by industrial capacity, financial depth, and the shift from sterling to the dollar.
Reserve currency - a currency widely used in global trade and held by central banks as a store of value
10. WAR AND ACCELERATION
The broader transfer of power from Europe to the United States occurred between World War I and World War II.
In just three decades, European empires exhausted themselves through war and debt, while the United States expanded economically and financially.
We can say that war compresses time by forcing rapid structural change.
Total war - a conflict that mobilises entire societies and economies, not just military forces
11. IDEOLOGICAL COLLAPSE — THE END OF THE BIPOLAR WORLD
The decline and collapse of the Soviet Union between the 1970s and 1991 marked another rapid transition.
The system weakened economically and lost ideological credibility. Once belief eroded, collapse followed without direct conquest. America became the unchallenged global hegemon and began expanding into former Soviet sattelites.
Ideological legitimacy - the degree to which a population accepts or can be persuaded to accept the beliefs and authority of a governing system
12. THE CURRENT TRANSITION — AN OPEN QUESTION
Today, many analysts argue that the world is moving from a US-led system towards a more multipolar structure involving China and others.
There is clear evidence of economic rebalancing, financial diversification, and emerging regional power structures, most recently Iran as a fourth "superpower", a regional hegemon seeking to replace Israel - but interpretations for America differ.
Some see gradual decline. Others see adaptation and renewal. It remains unclear whether a single successor will emerge or whether power will be distributed from The West to another region ie Asia.
Multipolarity - a global system in which several states hold significant power as cooperants or rivals, rather than one dominant centre
13. PATTERN RECOGNITION — WHAT DRIVES TRANSITIONS
Across all cases, the same structural drivers recur. Control of resources underpins material strength. Control of finance determines flexibility and endurance. Control of military power affects security. Control of narrative sustains legitimacy and cohesion.
Power shifts when a new system integrates these elements more effectively.
Legitimacy - the perceived right of a system to govern, accepted by both elites and the wider population
14. FINAL REFLECTION — SYSTEMS, NOT JUST STATES
Empire transitions are not simply about one country replacing another. They are about the emergence of more effective systems for organising the world.
The Dutch innovated. The British integrated and scaled. The United States industrialised and financialised. Each step built on what came before.
Power shifts when a new model works better.
What marks out the modern era is the speed and global reach of this process of new empire formation.
References
The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers — Paul Kennedy
The Changing World Order — Ray Dalio
The First Modern Economy — Jan de Vries
Why Nations Fail — Acemoglu and Robinson
IMF and World Bank historical datasets
THE FIRST MODERN TRANSITION - DUTCH TO BRITISH EMPIRES
Sunday, 3 May 2026
TRIFFIN'S DILEMMA - BUST THE ECONOMY OR BUST THE CURRENCY
3 May 2026
1. Triffin’s Dilemma – Overview Of The Financial System
Dollars go out to buy real goods.
Those dollars pile up abroad.
Foreign holders need somewhere safe and liquid to park them.
They buy Treasuries and US financial assets.
That finances the next round of US deficits.
America gets the goods.
The rest of the world gets paper claims.
The problem comes when the paper claims grow faster than America’s real productive capacity - the collateral to honour them.
That is Triffin’s dilemma in the real world
… the music has not stopped yet.
Reserve currency – a currency held globally to settle trade and store value.
Triffin’s dilemma – the structural conflict between supplying global liquidity and maintaining confidence in that currency.
2. Why America Wanted This Arrangement In The First Place
At the Bretton Woods Conference, John Maynard Keynes proposed a neutral global currency, the Bancor, administered through a multilateral system, the IMF. The United States rejected this proposal and instead placed the dollar at the centre of the new order.
Of course there were objections based on a dislike, delay and bureaucracy. But the true US logic was power. A neutral currency spreads influence out - most suitable for a multi-polar decentralised world. A national reserve currency concentrates it - granting America what Giscaird d'Estaing called "the exorbitant privilege".
If the world must hold your currency, you gain two advantages that are structural rather than temporary. The first is financial. The United States can run persistent deficits and fund them in its own currency because the rest of the world requires dollars to function. This is that exorbitant privilege - the ability to borrow cheaply and continuously without the constraints faced by other nations.
The second is political. When global trade, finance, and reserves are denominated in your currency, you sit at the centre of the system’s plumbing. You can grant access can or deny it. Control with sanctions - a financial act rather than a military one. Issue swap lines dependent on good behaviour. This has been demonstrated repeatedly in the cases of Iran, Russia, and Venezuela.
Exorbitant privilege – the ability of a reserve currency issuer to finance deficits in its own currency without immediate external constraint.
There are two ways to interpret this choice of America's. One is that it was a deliberate construction of dominance, for hegemony. The other is that it provided a stable anchor in a fractured post-war world. And both contain elements of truth.
Reference: Eichengreen, B. (2011), Exorbitant Privilege
3. Why Every Country Wants Reserve Currency Dollars, Even When Trading With Each Other
Consider a transaction between two countries with volatile currencies, consider the risk. Exchange rates move. Contracts stretch over time. This means profit margins can easily disappear between agreement and settlement.
On the other hand, a shared and stable reference currency removes that uncertainty. Prices are set in it. Payments are made in it. Surpluses are stored in it. Why not peg your currency to the US dollar for extra stability... never mind you lose control over your monetary policy?
The dollar occupies this role not because it is politically preferred, but because it is liquid, stable, widely accepted, and embedded everywhere in global systems - it is the indispensable and hard to replicate plumbing. Once a currency reaches that position, it becomes difficult to displace it.... even when America weaponises its currency
Network effects – the tendency of a system to become more dominant as more participants use it.
This creates inertia, users accept the pain of complying with America's wishes. Even if alternatives exist, the cost of switching for all participants at once is high. The system persists because it already exists.
Reference: IMF COFER database
4. How America Supplied The World With Dollars — And Why It Outsourced Its Factories
For America to control the world and be the rule-giver, the global hegemon, it must supply the world with dollars so that users can make transactions and safely store their reserves. How can the United States supply the world with the dollars it needs? The United States must spend more abroad than it earns. It does this by running a persistent trade deficit.
Trade deficit – when a country imports more goods and services than it exports.
So a trade deficit is not necessarily a policy failure. It is the mechanism by which global liquidity is supplied. The world cannot accumulate dollars unless they are first created and sent out from America.
The trade deficit came about because of a structural shift in production. Manufacturing moved to lower-cost countries. The physical process of production relocated, but of course ownership of the companies stayed on the New York Stock Exchange. The real pivot point came when China join the WTO.
American firms retained control of capital, branding, and distribution. The labour and industrial base shifted abroad. The result was a divergence between the location of physical production and the location of financial returns.
For industrial regions, this was often bad news. Aswhere for asset owners, it could be highly profitable. The system redistributed not just goods, but income and power.
Reference: World Bank; OECD global value chains
5. Why The Dollars Always Come Back — And Why No Individual Is Forced But The System Has No Choice
When a foreign exporter receives dollars, there is no obligation to hold them. They can be exchanged, spent, or invested elsewhere. At the level of the individual actor, choice remains intact.
At the level of the system, however, the dollars do not and cannot disappear. They must be held collectively by someone. This is a consequence of the balance of payments identity.
Balance of payments – the accounting framework recording all transactions between a country and the rest of the world.
A US trade deficit necessarily produces a matching inflow on the capital account, the TGA Trading and General Account. The dollars used to purchase imports reappear as investments in US assets - FDI.
They tend to concentrate in the deepest, safest and most liquid markets. US Treasury securities, dollar funding markets, and large-scale equity markets provide that depth, sometimes prime real estate.
The result is not coercion but "gravity". Dollars flow back because the system channels them there.
Reference: Federal Reserve Flow of Funds; BIS
6. The Crucial Distinction: Which Dollars Are New (expansion of the money base) And Which Are Not
Not all dollars are the same in economic terms. When deficits are financed through monetary expansion, new dollars enter the global system. The total stock increases, the monetary base expands.
Monetary expansion – an increase in the overall supply of money.
When those dollars return as investment into US assets, no new money is created. The same dollars are reclassified as claims on the United States. (Remember what a clain is: prior to Nixon closing the gold window in 1971, a dollar could be exchanged for its equivalent value in gold.)
Over time, this leads to an accumulation of financial claims that may expand more rapidly than the underlying productive base, the collateral supporting the monetary base. The distinction between creation and recycling becomes central to understanding the system’s dynamics.
7. Why The Growing Gap Between Claims And Reality Eventually Destroys Confidence
The system functions as long as confidence holds it is after al based on "promises to pay". Dollar assets represent claims on the future productive capacity of the United States - this is from where investors imagine America's debts can be repaid.
A useful metric is the debt-to-GDP ratio, which compares total obligations to economic output.
Debt-to-GDP ratio – a measure of how large a country’s debt is relative to its economy.
If debt grows faster than output over extended periods, each claim is backed by a smaller share of real production. This is currency debasement, a gradual process rather than a sudden break, the dollar base expands faster than the physical base and so each dollar is these valued in terms of its purchasing power.
The risk emerges when creditors begin to question whether the claims they hold can ever be honoured in real terms. The shift is typically slow, but once it accelerates, it can become self-reinforcing - and eventually we get a run on the currency.
Reference: IMF Fiscal Monitor; US Treasury
8. Triffin’s Dilemma Stated Precisely
The dilemma can now be expressed in full. To provide global liquidity, the United States must run deficits and issue increasing amounts of debt. But to maintain confidence, it must avoid excessive expansion of that debt.
These requirements are incompatible over the long term. America's is a debt base financialised economy. As the Debt to GDP ratio increases, confidence in government promises wears thin and investors require higher interest rates two compensate for reduced purchasing power and risk.
What is the Fed to do? Increase interest rates two attractor lending needed to fund its budgets... and break the economy with recession? Or offer lower interest rates to save its fiscal budget, be obliged to print, and debase the currency through inflation?
If the supply of dollars is restricted, global trade and finance face a liquidity shortage. Countries dependent on dollar funding experience immediate stress. Trade contracts. Credit tightens.
If the supply continues to expand, debt accumulates and confidence erodes gradually. The system weakens from within.
The original Bretton Woods system broke under this pressure in 1971 with the Nixon Shock. The removal of gold convertibility altered the form of the system, but not the underlying tension.
Reference: Federal Reserve history
9. Concluding Perspective
Robert Triffin understood the destination early. And the dilemma is that there is no third option: trash the economy with a recession or trash the currency with inflation.
If you stop issuing dollars the world runs short, trade seizes, credit freezes, and you get a deflationary depression - the economy is trashed.
If you keep issuing dollars to meet the world's insatiable demand, the gap between claims and reality widens until confidence breaks and you get inflation, potentially runaway inflation with result the currency is trashed.
Triffin saw that the system forced America to choose, eventually, between those two forms of destruction. And that the longer the choice was deferred - by trust, by inertia, by the absence of alternatives - the more violent the eventual reckoning would be.
What made him remarkable is that he saw this not at the moment of crisis, but at the moment of maximum confidence. 1960. America at the height of its industrial and military power. The dollar seemingly unassailable. And one little Belgian economist doing the arithmetic and concluding: this ends badly, and the mechanism is already running.
He anticipated breakdown within a decade. The timing proved wrong, but the logic has endured. The system persists because there is no fully credible alternative, because global trade depends on continuity, and because confidence erodes slowly. And in the absence of imaginative alternatives, we have war.
The imbalance between real physical output and financial claims continues to widen, and that tension remains at the centre of the system. MAGAnomics was the way out....but ....










