This article comes from “infowars.com”
Donald Trump’s election victory could scarcely have been more decisive. A generational shift, somewhere close to 1980, when Reagan took Jimmy Carter out behind the peanut shed and made sure he’d have trouble sitting down for weeks.
It’s already clear, and not just from the scale of the victory, that this isn’t a repeat of 2016. 2016 was a great outsider victory, and the sense of surprise was palpable, for all involved. Nobody really knew what to expect, including Trump himself, but his enemies were better organised, more motivated and far from exhausted, as they appear to be now. Trump took a long time to get up to speed, and when he did, his enemies—internal and external—were ready.
This, on the other hand, feels fated. The stars aligned. Trump turned his head a fraction of second before a bullet was on course to pierce his skull and paint the stage with his brains.
From the start of the campaign to the end, Trump was the president-in-waiting. It didn’t matter what the mainstream media or TikTok tried to tell you about how Kamala was “brat” or Tim Walz was the uncle we all wish we had (thank God we didn’t). On the ground, the signs were there for all to see.
We should have been paying more attention to the behaviour of the Mark Zuckerbergs and the Jeff Bezoses of the world, rather than CNN or MSNBC or J. Ann Selzer at the Des Moines Register. Zuck and Bezos had access to vast amounts of consumer data that were telling them people were going to vote for Trump in a landslide. Nothing else explains their warmth towards Trump and their visible “move to the right” in recent months.
In 2020, Bezos was saying a DNA test revealed he was Lizzo’s biggest fan, and then four years later he wouldn’t let The Washington Post endorse Kamala Harris, even at the cost of a mass walkout. Some of that newfound mojo may simply be the TRT Jeff’s been on since Leonardo DiCaprio epically mogged him in front of his new bird Lauren Sanchez, but I suspect Jeff knew which way the wind was blowing and decided to change course. Billionaires generally like to know which way the wind is blowing.
Now that Trump has won, it’s clear we’re in the middle of a serious vibe shift.
Sports stars are doing the “Trump dance” without a care.
Hollywood legend Sylvester Stallone proudly introduced the president-elect as the second coming of George Washington, at a gala dinner.
Haitians are self-deporting from Springfield, Ohio, before Tom Homan gets his enormous mitts on them, crushes them into a ball and throws them back across the Caribbean himself.
Libtards are deleting Twitter in droves, and major advertisers are returning.
A “pro-Trump voice” is being added to balance out the screeching from Whoopi Goldberg and the other harridans on The View.
The earth is healing.
Amidst the jubilation and the signs of better times to come, it’s easy to forget the Biden regime still has 60+ days to do what it does best—which, to put it baldly, is f***ing the country up, and the rest of the world too.
These are the dog days, sure. But the dog can still bite.
It was pretty clear to me that Biden-Harris would use its remaining time to do what it could to disrupt Trump’s agenda, at home and abroad, and that’s exactly what it seems to be doing, on everything from immigration to the war in Ukraine.
We’ve already heard about service personnel preparing themselves to “resist” the Trump agenda, and in particular to frustrate attempts to use the military to help carry out his program of mass deportations, which Trump has said he’ll do. A program to deport 20 million people is obviously going to have to be run along military lines.
Political enemies will still be punished. The Biden DoJ is moving to expedite the prosecution of J6ers before Trump takes office. According to NBC News, the Justice Department will focus on arresting the “most egregious” participants in the protests at the Capitol. In particular, that means individuals who committed felony assaults but have avoided arrest so far.
Informants have aided the FBI in identifying hundreds of people who were present at the Capitol on 6 January 2021. According to NBC, a further 75 people who feature on the FBI’s Capitol Violence website and are wanted for felony assault have now been identified.
During the presidential campaign, Trump said he intended to pardon some of the protesters involved in the events at the Capitol.
Then there’s Ukraine, and that’s where things really start to get bad. A few days ago, Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said the US would continue to funnel as much money as possible to keep the Ukrainian war machine alive for as long as it could. “President Biden is committed to ensuring that every dollar we have at our disposal will be pushed out the door [to Ukraine] between now and January,” Blinken said.
Far worse, though, is the approval that’s just come through for Ukraine to use American weapons in long-range strikes against targets in Russia. This is tantamount to a direct declaration of war on Russia. The Russians have said as much—if you do this, we will treat it as a declaration of war—and so far the US and its chief stooge, the UK, have resisted, because the prospect of a direct confrontation with Russia—well, we all know how that would go, don’t we? We’ve been wargaming it since the Russians first acquired nuclear capability in the early 1950s. It was called MAD for a reason.
Given everything that’s happened over the last four years, and especially events of the presidential campaign, I don’t think anything is off the table. World War III would be the ultimate hail Mary, or maybe just the ultimate f**k you against Trump, who has campaigned to bring the war to an honourable end and stop the senseless slaughter of tens of thousands of Russian and Ukrainian men.
My advice to Trump would be to get on the phone again with Putin and tell him, in the clearest possible terms, the following. This will end. The day I take office the authorisation for these strikes will be rescinded. America does not want World War III, and neither does Russia.
It’s quite an imposition to expect the Russians to tolerate strikes deep inside their territory when they’ve warned they would do no such thing. It will make them look weak, and it will of course cost them blood and treasure. But the Russians can at least know that the strikes will come to an end soon and then a negotiated peace can be reached.
The alternative doesn’t bear thinking about.