Forsidebilde av showet The Mother of Exiles

The Mother of Exiles

Podkast av Her beacon burns brightly, igniting the Counter-Attack.

engelsk

Teknologi og vitenskap

Tidsbegrenset tilbud

2 Måneder for 19 kr

Deretter 99 kr / MånedAvslutt når som helst.

  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • Gratis podkaster
Kom i gang

Les mer The Mother of Exiles

Each episode of The Mother of Exiles exposes Donald J. Trump’s authoritarian regime and reveals the strategies, ideas, and actions that fuel the Counter-Attack. Learn, defy, and rise against the regime. robinliberte.substack.com

Alle episoder

28 Episoder

episode Chronicle 7: The Security State Doesn’t Begin With Force cover

Chronicle 7: The Security State Doesn’t Begin With Force

Reading Time: 30 mins TL;DR * Authoritarian systems do not begin with open force; they begin with quiet legal and administrative changes that weaken oversight and normalize expanded authority. * Federal enforcement deployments over the past year functioned as tests, teaching the state how much force it could use without triggering effective democratic restraint. * Minnesota marks the point where those precedents are applied directly, bringing enforcement, resistance, and institutional conflict into everyday civic life. * Democratic backsliding advances through delay and normalization, not sudden rupture, allowing power to operate through existing institutions rather than breaking them. * The United States now sits in an enforcement phase of democratic backsliding, where reversal remains possible but becomes harder as enforcement becomes routine. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit robinliberte.substack.com [https://robinliberte.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

26. jan. 2026 - 14 min
episode Series 04: Order, Authority, and the Promise of Stability cover

Series 04: Order, Authority, and the Promise of Stability

Description This is Episode 04 of the 10-episode After The In-Between Time series. This episode examines how political systems respond when democratic participation becomes strained, and how promises of order and stability gain force under those conditions. It traces how authority consolidates, how legitimacy is redefined, and how democracy is repositioned rather than removed. By treating fascism as a mode of systemic reconfiguration rather than an ideological exception, the episode shows how continuity is maintained beneath apparent political change, and how the range of available responses narrows once order becomes the governing priority. Runtime: 12:30 minutes Reading Time: 10 minutes TL;DR * Democratic fatigue establishes the conditions under which democracy is repositioned within the system. * As participation strains, political legitimacy shifts toward order, stability, and performance as organizing priorities. * Authority consolidates in response to delay, fragmentation, and coordination pressure within existing institutions. * Fascism is analyzed as a systemic reconfiguration of authority and legitimacy within continuity, rather than as an ideological anomaly. * Once order becomes the governing priority, the range of available political responses narrows even as democratic forms remain visible. Transcript SECTION 1 — Democratic Fatigue Democratic fatigue was fully discussed in Episode 03, Democracy Inside the System, which provides the foundation for this episode. Under a state of democratic fatigue, public participation in democracy continues, but its ability to influence has narrowed. Democratic processes repeat, but outcomes feel limited. The effort required to remain engaged exceeds what engagement can reliably provide. When sustained participation produces limited change, expectations adjust. People remain inside democratic systems, but they lower what they expect those systems to deliver. That adjustment creates the conditions this episode examines. Fatigue does not remove democracy from view. It changes how democracy is positioned within a society and opens space for other forms of authority to claim effectiveness, coherence, and stability. That’s what we’re experiencing with the Trump regime. SECTION 2 — The Promise Shifts As democratic participation becomes harder to sustain, the language used to justify political authority changes. Legitimacy becomes associated less with involvement and more with performance. Process gives way to results. Deliberation is retained within constraints set by coordination and execution. Stability becomes a primary political promise. Order is framed as a condition required for systems to function without interruption. Continuity is treated as a public good in itself. These promises respond directly to the strain experienced by citizens. When decision-making appears stalled, speed becomes valuable. When outcomes feel uncertain, predictability becomes reassuring. When participation feels burdensome, authority that reduces complexity appears efficient. Democratic language continues to circulate within the changing system. Elections continue. Institutions remain in place. Legitimacy is still described using familiar terms. What changes is which qualities are treated as essential. Participation becomes conditional. Debate is increasingly procedural. Dissent is tolerated so long as it does not interfere with the system’s operations. Order is treated as a condition that democratic processes must abide by. As this logic settles in, heavy-handed authority is justified as necessary for continuity. Concentrated decision-making is presented as practical and efficient. Limitation is presented as protective. The promise offered is the continuation of existing arrangements with less interruption: fewer delays, fewer visible conflicts, and fewer demands on participation. Because these promises emphasize continuity, they align with existing institutional and economic arrangements. Capital continues to circulate throughout the system. Administrative systems continue to operate. Risk is managed rather than redistributed. At this stage, democracy remains visible while its operational role narrows. SECTION 3 — Authority as Solution As order and continuity become governing priorities, authority is reframed as a solution. Concentrated decision-making at the top is treated as a response to accumulated delays, institutional bottlenecks, and systemic failures within democratic systems. The response focuses on decision speed and enforceability: the ability to decide quickly, implement consistently, and maintain alignment across administrative and economic systems. Authority is presented as a way to keep such systems operating under pressure. Legislative processes are described as too slow for the pace of deregulated markets, infrastructure management, and crisis response. Deliberation is framed as incompatible with urgency. Negotiation is recast as an obstacle to execution. Decision-making is centralized within executive offices and insulated institutions. Executives acquire broader discretion as long as their vision and management align with those above them. Regulatory and judicial bodies are encouraged to coordinate with executive direction rather than challenge it. Each shift is described as necessary to maintain continuity. Authority is framed as an administrative response to systemic stress. Its language emphasizes decisiveness, discipline, and command. Control is treated as a requirement for stability, and compliance is framed as necessary. Democracy remains present, but its role in the political process changes. Participation primarily supplies legitimacy after decisions are made. Elections function as mechanisms of selection rather than direction. Accountability is evaluated through output, order, and continuity rather than shared control. This reconfiguration limits where democratic participation can meaningfully affect outcomes. Authority fills the space created by fatigue and delay, promising coherence and continuity. The result is structural. Authority becomes the organizing principle around which democratic forms are repositioned. SECTION 4 — Fascism as Systemic Reconfiguration Under sustained pressure, some systems reorganize authority more completely. Fascism is one such form of reorganization. It develops through changes in how authority is held, how legitimacy is defined, and how organization is enforced across political, economic, and social institutions. Under fascism, authority is concentrated and unified. Decision-making is centralized. Institutional plurality is reduced in favor of a single commanding center. Legitimacy is tied to performance, order, and national coherence. Stability functions as proof of correctness. Continuity becomes the primary measure of success. Democratic forms may remain visible, while their role is altered. Participation is directed toward affirming unity, and opposition to the system is treated as a source of radicalism. Pluralism is managed as a condition requiring control. This arrangement narrows the range of acceptable outcomes. Economic and social coordination are brought under tighter control. Labor, capital, and institutions are aligned toward centralized objectives. Conflict is handled through discipline and enforcement. This form of reorganization typically follows periods of instability. It presents itself as a restoration of the nation, with command and control of most aspects of life positioned as a way to reduce delay and uncertainty. The defining feature of fascism is the consolidation and insulation of authority. Decision-making becomes durable. Legitimacy is anchored in continuity. Change proceeds only within limits set by centralized power. It functions as a mode of continuity beneath apparent rupture. Structures are rearranged, authority is intensified, and stability within the existing system remains the objective. SECTION 5 — Democracy Deferred or Displaced As authority consolidates, democracy changes position within the system. It remains formally present while decision-making moves into insulated institutional settings. Its public-facing role centers on validating outcomes rather than shaping them. Democratic participation is organized around discrete moments. Electoral procedures continue on formal schedules, with their competitive scope and consequences increasingly constrained. Public input is invited after agendas and boundaries have already been set. The public’s ability to shape outcomes shrinks even as democratic forms remain visible. Decisions with the greatest structural impact are developed earlier in the process, within executive offices, security frameworks, and aligned institutions. Participation occurs after those decisions have been narrowed. Under these conditions, democracy functions as confirmation. Participation registers acceptance. Consent follows action. Legitimacy accumulates through acknowledgment rather than authorship. The burden of legitimacy shifts onto the public, even as its capacity to shape outcomes continues to contract. Democracy remains embedded in the structure. Its public-facing role continues to center on registering consent. Power is organized within insulated decision-making centers, and democratic processes record public alignment with decisions made within those centers. SECTION 6 — Structural Continuity As authority consolidates and democratic participation is repositioned, continuity becomes easier to identify. Existing arrangements of ownership, administration, and economic coordination persist. The relationship between state authority and economic power remains intact, even as political form changes. Institutions adjust their posture rather than their basic composition. Personnel rotate through leadership roles. Procedures are modified to support centralized decision-making. Structural relationships endure. This persistence reflects the system’s capacity to reorganize while preserving its core functions. Administrative systems continue to manage labor, resources, and compliance. Markets continue to operate, and capital continues to circulate. Decision-making becomes more insulated. Authority is buffered from disruption. Reversal becomes less frequent. Uncertainty is reduced through centralized command and enforced coordination. Visible changes can be substantial. New symbols appear. New language circulates. Authority becomes more explicit and more concentrated. At the same time, the operating environment remains familiar. Economic hierarchies persist. Production continues. Extraction and accumulation proceed under revised political conditions. Continuity operates at the structural level. Political form adapts to preserve system function. Authority intensifies to secure stability. Democracy is repositioned to sustain legitimacy. The tension between stability and participation remains present and is managed through containment, insulation, and control. SECTION 7 — Ending By the time authority consolidates to this degree, the shift appears procedural and routine. It is embedded in the everyday mechanisms through which decisions are made, justified, and enforced. Order has been delivered as a governing priority. Stability organizes political evaluation. Continuity is maintained through insulation, coordination, and command. Democracy remains present within this arrangement. Its language circulates. Its rituals persist. Power moves through narrower channels. Decisions take shape earlier, within restricted settings, and across fewer points of challenge. Participation follows those decisions, and legitimacy is sustained through public alignment and acceptance. Once these patterns take hold, they become self-reinforcing. Authority organizes decision-making. Stability becomes the standard by which outcomes are judged. Democratic forms remain in circulation, but they operate within boundaries already set. From inside this arrangement, the system appears settled. Choices narrow. Alternatives feel abstract. Power moves along established channels, and legitimacy follows behind it. The significance of this structure lies in how it shapes the range of responses that remain available after order has been restored. If this piece shook something in you, please subscribe and share, but also talk to your family, friends, and neighbors. This fight to save democracy ends when people stop engaging. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit robinliberte.substack.com [https://robinliberte.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

22. jan. 2026 - 12 min
episode Chronicle 06: What Happens When Leaders Seize The Economy cover

Chronicle 06: What Happens When Leaders Seize The Economy

Preview This 10-minute audio blog examines what happens when economic policies stall growth and political leaders face a choice: change course or find someone else to blame. This Chronicle traces how attacks on the Federal Reserve follow a familiar historical pattern in which leaders seize economic authority to avoid responsibility—and what that choice has produced before. Reading Time: ~9 minutes TL;DR * Trump’s escalating attacks on the Federal Reserve are rooted in economic stagnation and the need to assign blame for policy-driven failures. * Independent economic institutions often become targets when leaders seek control without accepting responsibility. * History shows this pattern clearly in Nazi Germany, military-dictatorship–era Chile, and post-Soviet Russia. * Politicizing economic authority weakens institutions, distorts markets, and deepens long-term instability before collapse is visible. * Naming the pattern and resisting normalization matter while institutional independence still exists. 1. What Is Happening Now In recent weeks, Donald Trump has escalated his public and institutional attacks on Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. He has accused Powell of incompetence, openly discussed removing him, and allowed a criminal investigation into the Federal Reserve’s headquarters renovation to be framed as mismanagement and dishonesty. At the same time, his administration has intensified its broader campaign against the Federal Reserve’s independence. These events are not isolated. They are happening in the context of a stagnant economy, rising uncertainty, and growing public frustration with the cost of living and economic instability. 2. The Pressure to Assign Blame When an economy stalls, political power looks for somewhere to place responsibility. In this case, the White House has chosen the Federal Reserve. This episode is about that choice. 3. Policy, Consequences, and Scapegoats The administration’s economic agenda has relied heavily on tariffs, trade disruption, and aggressive political intervention in markets. Those policies have slowed growth, raised costs, and undermined confidence. Rather than acknowledge those effects, the administration has redirected blame toward the institution responsible for monetary policy. The Federal Reserve is a convenient target because it sits at the intersection of visibility and insulation. It has immense influence over economic conditions, but it is designed to operate independently of day-to-day politics. That independence makes it easy to portray as unaccountable when outcomes disappoint. By attacking the Fed Chair, political leadership can project decisiveness, claim economic control, and redirect public anger away from its own policy choices without formally owning responsibility for the results. 4. A Familiar Authoritarian Pattern This tactic is not unique to this regime or this moment. When leaders confront economic stagnation created by their own policies, they often move to subordinate independent economic institutions rather than revise those policies. Central banks, finance institutions, and regulatory bodies become targets because they stand between political authority and economic control. History shows that once those institutions are brought to heel, blame can be reassigned and power can be consolidated, even as underlying economic problems deepen. This is not new, and it has appeared before when leaders facing economic failure sought to bring independent economic institutions under political control. 5. Historical Case Study: Nazi Germany In Nazi Germany in the early 1930s, severe economic hardship preceded political consolidation. The collapse of the Weimar economy, driven by the Great Depression, mass unemployment, debt crises, and the destabilizing effects of earlier reparations and austerity, produced widespread public discontent and fear. That economic distress created the conditions under which Adolf Hitler and the Nazi regime moved to bring the economy under centralized political control. Independent financial institutions were subordinated to the state, monetary and industrial policy were aligned with regime priorities, and economic management became an instrument of political authority. In the long term, this consolidation distorted markets, militarized production, suppressed corrective feedback, and contributed to economic collapse alongside catastrophic human consequences. 6. Historical Case Study: Military Dictatorship–Era Chile In military dictatorship–era Chile, economic hardship and instability were used to justify centralized political control over the economy. Inflation, capital instability, and public fear were framed as existential threats requiring authoritarian intervention. Under Augusto Pinochet, the military regime dismantled democratic oversight and brought economic power under direct state and military control by banning independent unions, suspending collective bargaining, fixing labor conditions by decree, and restructuring the economy through privatization enforced without public consent. Central economic decisions were insulated from accountability and backed by military repression. In the long term, this consolidation produced extreme inequality, entrenched elite control, social repression, and lasting damage to Chile’s democratic and economic resilience. 7. Historical Case Study: Post-Soviet Russia In post-Soviet Russia, prolonged economic hardship and instability created the conditions for centralized political control over the economy. The economic collapse of the 1990s, marked by hyperinflation, asset stripping, wage arrears, and public insecurity, generated widespread demand for order and stability. Under Vladimir Putin, the state reasserted control over key economic sectors by subordinating the central bank, bringing major energy companies under political authority, and using taxation, regulation, and criminal prosecution to discipline or remove independent economic actors. Markets were reorganized to serve regime priorities, and economic power became inseparable from political loyalty. In the long term, this consolidation produced stagnation, corruption, capital flight, and an economy highly vulnerable to shocks, sanctions, and political miscalculation. 8. The Pattern Reappears in the United States In the United States today, economic stagnation and rising public frustration have created pressure on political leadership to explain deteriorating conditions. Trade disruption driven by tariffs, elevated prices, and policy uncertainty has weakened growth and confidence, producing the same kind of public unease seen in earlier cases. Rather than confront the role of those policies, the Trump regime has moved to place economic authority under tighter political control by targeting the independence of the Federal Reserve and its chair. Investigations, threats of removal, and performance-based accusations function to subordinate monetary authority to executive power. The result, already visible, is institutional weakening, loss of credibility, and an economic system increasingly shaped by political loyalty rather than corrective feedback. 9. What Changes When Economic Authority Is Politicized When economic authority is politicized, damage occurs long before any visible collapse. Independent institutions lose credibility, policy signals become unreliable, and decision-making shifts from corrective feedback to loyalty and fear. Markets respond to uncertainty rather than confidence, and households absorb the cost through higher prices, reduced investment, and prolonged instability. Over time, the system becomes less capable of self-correction because dissent and expertise are treated as obstacles rather than safeguards. The result is an economy that appears controlled in the short term while becoming more fragile, more distorted, and harder to repair. 10. Drawing the Line What is happening here has a name, and refusing to name it is how it takes hold. When political power damages the economy through its own policies and then moves to seize control of the institutions designed to limit that damage, accountability collapses inward. Authority no longer answers to the public; it answers to itself. That is the boundary that has been crossed, and crossing it turns neutrality into complicity. This moment will not announce itself as a crisis. It will normalize through repetition and fatigue, and it will condition people to accept control as correction and punishment as management. That normalization is the danger. The framing deserves public resistance. Language that disguises blame as oversight and power grabs as accountability deserves refusal. What is being done warrants clear naming, and the reasons for it warrant a clear statement. This conversation belongs in public life and private life alike, among family members, coworkers, and neighbors. It belongs in circulation, repetition, and defense wherever it is pressured into silence. Investigations and threats should not be permitted to launder responsibility for economic failure. This does not end when indicators improve or markets recover. It ends when people refuse to surrender economic authority to political fear. Remain engaged and remain defiant. Do not let this become normal. In defiance and in solidarity, I am, Robin Liberte’, The Mother of Exiles. Activist. Artist. Author. If this piece shook something in you, please subscribe and share, but also talk to your family, friends, and neighbors. This fight to save democracy ends when people stop engaging. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit robinliberte.substack.com [https://robinliberte.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

19. jan. 2026 - 9 min
episode Series 03: Democracy and the Price of Engagement cover

Series 03: Democracy and the Price of Engagement

Description This is Episode 03 of the 10-episode After The In-Between Time series. This episode examines how democracy operates inside an existing economic system: how participation is shaped in advance by time, cost, risk, and institutional sequencing. Rather than asking whether democracy exists or should exist, this episode traces how engagement functions under constraint, why outcomes arrive late, and why strain accumulates even when democratic procedures remain intact. Runtime: ~5:30 minutes Reading Time: 5 minutes TL;DR * Democracy operates inside an economic system that shapes time, risk, and survival before participation ever begins. * Participation isn’t a single act; it requires sustained involvement that carries uneven and cumulative costs. * Democratic processes move episodically, while economic systems move continuously, causing participation to arrive late. * Outcomes persist across cycles due to institutional buffering, memory, and momentum, not conspiracy or intent. * As strain accumulates, disengagement and volatility emerge as predictable structural responses, not moral failures. Transcript Democracy and the Price of Engagement How participation is shaped by time, cost, and sequencing People talk about democracy as if it floats above the economy.As if it exists on its own terms. Democracy operates within an existing system. It lives inside an economic structure that shapes time, risk, attention, and survival long before anyone reaches a ballot. That system does not cancel democracy. It conditions it. Before a single vote is cast, participation has already been shaped: Who has time to show up. Who can afford to lose a day’s wages. Who can take a risk without catastrophic consequences. Who must keep working to stay alive. These conditions function as structural filters on participation. Participation is often imagined as a single act: A vote cast. A meeting attended. A form signed. In practice, participation requires sustained involvement. It asks people to return again and again: to hearings scheduled during work hours, to processes that move slowly, to systems that demand persistence without guaranteeing return. Each encounter carries a cost: Missed income. Administrative risk.Employer scrutiny. Fatigue that accumulates rather than resolves. Those costs are not evenly distributed. For some, participation is inconvenient. For others, it is destabilizing. Participation carries measurable and unequal costs within the system. Over time, those costs shape who remains engagedand who exits, not all at once,but gradually. Democracy promises equal voice. Capitalism distributes unequal capacity. These two realities coexist in lived political practice. This is why participation declines without anyone banning it. Why turnout falls without repression. Why disengagement looks like apathy but functions like exhaustion. When survival depends on private capacity, civic engagement becomes unevenly distributed. And this is where democracy begins to strain. Belief alone does not generate time, security, or leverage. Inside the system, democracy becomes procedural: You can vote. You can speak. You can assemble. But those acts occur on a schedule. Democratic time is segmented. Episodic. Bound by calendars, deadlines, and delayed implementation. Economic time is different. It is continuous. Responsive. Anticipatory. Markets adjust before votes are cast. Institutions adapt before reforms arrive. Decisions are priced in long before participation registers. So democratic input often arrives after trajectories have already been set. Outcomes carry forward through institutional buffering. Capital maintains momentum across cycles. Institutions accumulate memory. Markets absorb shock faster than publics do. Policies move through layers of procedure. Conditions shift underneath them. By the time corrections arrive, effects are already distributed. This lag is structural. The dynamic is driven by timingrather than intent. Democracy operates episodically. Capitalism operates continuously. One responds. The other preconfigures. This is why reform feels real but limited. Why victories arrive narrow and fragile. Why reversals happen quickly. The system proceeds without adjusting its pace to democratic processes. And so democratic ideals mutate. Participation becomes symbolic. Choice becomes constrained. Representation becomes distant. The field of available options is narrowed before participation even occurs. What remains viable is what fits existing incentives, existing constraints, and existing momentum. Choice persists, but its scope contracts. Inside the system, democracy becomes a stress test. It reveals where power actually sits. Who can wait. Who can absorb loss. Who can exit, and who cannot. Strain accumulates quietly. Dissatisfaction grows without rupture. Legitimacy erodes without collapse. Everything appears functional—until it doesn’t. And when democracy fails to deliver material change, disengagement emerges when participation no longer produces intelligible outcomes. Some withdraw. Some radicalize. Some look for authority that promises speed instead of consent. This response follows predictably from structural conditions. Democratic decisions are made inside processes that continue moving without waiting for participation, consent, or legitimacy. That tension never resolves. It only becomes more visible. That visibility is the condition we are now in. If this piece shook something in you, please subscribe and share, but also talk to your family, friends, and neighbors. This fight to save democracy ends when people stop engaging. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit robinliberte.substack.com [https://robinliberte.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

15. jan. 2026 - 5 min
episode Chronicle 05: How Power Is Being Reorganized cover

Chronicle 05: How Power Is Being Reorganized

This 7-3/4 minutes audio blog examines how three separate developments: elite ideological shifts, withdrawal from international institutions, and the normalization of unilateral pressure, fit together as part of a broader reorganization of power in U.S. governance. Rather than treating these moves as isolated or routine, it traces the structure they form when read side by side and places that structure in historical context. The focus is not prediction or prescription, but clarity: how power is being exercised in the United States now, and what becomes visible when the pattern is seen as a whole. Reading Time: 7 minutes TL;DR * Three recent developments: elite anti-democratic ideology, withdrawal from international institutions, and unilateral pressure on other states, form a coherent pattern when read together. * Ideas associated with the Dark Enlightenment gained influence among political and technological elites, narrowing how legitimacy and accountability are defined. * The United States withdrew from sixty-six long-standing international agreements, reducing external constraint and shared obligation. * Pressure toward other countries increasingly emphasized resources, strategic position, and hemispheric dominance rather than cooperation. * Read structurally and historically, these moves reveal how power is being reorganized in U.S. governance without spectacle or crisis framing. Chronicle 05: How Power Is Being Reorganized Democratic rejection, institutional withdrawal, and the use of unilateral force in U.S. governance Part 1: Present Signals A pattern emerged last week: three developments reported separately pointed in the same direction. An ideology that rejects democratic legitimacy circulated among political and technological elites. Often referred to as the Dark Enlightenment, it treats democracy as a failure rather than a value. Popular participation in it is framed as noise. Elections are treated as destabilizing rather than legitimizing. Governance is recast as an engineering problem, best handled by insulated decision-makers, technical expertise, and concentrated authority. Order, speed, and hierarchy are elevated as virtues. Accountability narrows to performance rather than public consent, and legitimacy is measured by output rather than representation. At the same time, the United States formally withdrew from 66 international organizations and agreements it had participated in for decades. The administration announced exits from United Nations affiliated bodies and international climate institutions through executive action. The decisions were implemented quickly, without extended legislative process or multilateral consultation. Membership was terminated. Funding was halted. Participation in shared decision-making structures ended. The result was immediate and concrete. Fewer binding commitments, fewer venues for coordination, and fewer external constraints on U.S. policy. Alongside those withdrawals, the language of the U.S. toward other countries hardened. The administration publicly signaled willingness to use force beyond Venezuela with Greenland, Colombia and Mexico repeatedly appearing in a similar threatening way. The posture was framed inside a revived Monroe Doctrine, branded as “The Donroe Doctrine.” It aligned with the 2025 National Security Strategy’s stated intent to reassert U.S. political and economic interests, and protect access to key geographies and strategically vital assets. Venezuela’s oil and Greenland’s strategic location were treated as key assets to secure, and Mexico and Canada, where border security, trade leverage and geography were framed in terms of pressure and dominance. Taken individually, each of these actions could be treated as routine. Read together, they reveal a shift in how power is being exercised. Long-standing anti-democratic ideas gained institutional relevance within the regime. What matters is not any single decision it’s made, but how these moves fit together while still being described as ordinary. Part 2. Historical Examples The alignment of theory, policy, and action is not unprecedented. In fact, it’s the standard operating principle for how government should work, until government works against the better interests of its people and their neighbors. In the early 1930s, Nazi Germany rejected liberal democracy as illegitimate and destabilizing. Authority was centralized, and legitimacy shifted toward order and national performance. In 1933, the country withdrew from the League of Nations, casting international oversight as incompatible with national renewal. Expansion followed. Germany annexed Austria and dismantled Czechoslovakia through pressure and threat, securing industrial capacity, labor, and strategic depth. During the same period, Imperial Japan elevated hierarchy and national unity over democratic participation as military elites gained influence. After criticism of its occupation of Manchuria, Japan withdrew from the League of Nations. Expansion across East Asia followed. Access to oil, rubber and raw materials was treated as essential to economic stability and military readiness. Territorial control was pursued as a necessity tied to survival. Fascist Italy pursued a parallel sequence. Liberal democracy was rejected in favor of centralized authority and national hierarchy. When international institutions condemned Italy’s invasion of Ethiopia, sanctions were dismissed as illegitimate interference. Expansion pursued territory, resources and prestige through open military force and disregard for international norms. Taken together, these cases reveal a shared structure rather than a shared ideology. Governing ideas hostile to democratic constraint gained authority first. International systems were exited or rejected next, removing shared rules and external scrutiny. Pressure followed outward, focused on territory, resources, and strategic position. These regimes did not coordinate their actions but the sequence aligned and reshaped how power was exercised while each step was still presented as reasonable and limited. Part 3: The Present Difference History clarifies structure rather than outcome. It shows how the alignment of governing ideas withdrawal from international institutions and pressure on foreign countries has reshaped systems before without dictating how it must unfold again. What distinguishes the present moment is the distribution of power. The United States now operates from a position of global economic, military, and institutional dominance. Its capacity to shape markets, project force, and set terms extends across regions and systems limiting other nations’ ability to constrain it. In the 1930s, Germany, Japan and Italy acted in a multipolar world. Withdrawal from international institutions increased friction. Expansion into other sovereign nations provoked resistance. Power was contested. Pressure escalated into confrontation because no single country could enforce its will without consequence. The present day operates differently. Withdrawal from international institutions does not generate an immediate response, particularly if it’s the United States withdrawing. Pressure can be applied through tariffs, sanctions, security threats, and unilateral policy changes without producing immediate military confrontation. These tools allow strategic objectives to be pursued incrementally, through leverage and procedure, but who is willing and able to take such action against the U.S.? Today, power is enforced through unilateral action, but international rules are followed when they align with US interests and ignored when they do not. International bodies are used to legitimize decisions already made or bypassed entirely, leaving outcomes to be determined by those who can impose economic, political, or military costs, not by who has agreed to them. What is happening now does not arrive as a crisis. It’s unfolding slowly through institutional withdrawals, policy decisions, and public threats that appear manageable, if not reasonable, when viewed as separate stories. Read together, they show how power is being organized and exercised at the global scale, a new world order unfolding before our very eyes. In defiance, and in solidarity, I am, Robin Liberté, The Mother of Exiles. Activist. Artist. Author. If this piece shook something in you, please subscribe and share, but also talk to your family, friends, and neighbors. This fight to save democracy ends when people stop engaging. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit robinliberte.substack.com [https://robinliberte.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

12. jan. 2026 - 7 min
Enkelt å finne frem nye favoritter og lett å navigere seg gjennom innholdet i appen
Enkelt å finne frem nye favoritter og lett å navigere seg gjennom innholdet i appen
Liker at det er både Podcaster (godt utvalg) og lydbøker i samme app, pluss at man kan holde Podcaster og lydbøker atskilt i biblioteket.
Bra app. Oversiktlig og ryddig. MYE bra innhold⭐️⭐️⭐️

Velg abonnementet ditt

Mest populær

Tidsbegrenset tilbud

Premium

20 timer lydbøker

  • Eksklusive podkaster

  • Ingen annonser i Podimo shows

  • Avslutt når som helst

2 Måneder for 19 kr
Deretter 99 kr / Måned

Kom i gang

Premium Plus

100 timer lydbøker

  • Eksklusive podkaster

  • Ingen annonser i Podimo shows

  • Avslutt når som helst

Prøv gratis i 14 dager
Deretter 169 kr / måned

Prøv gratis

Bare på Podimo

Populære lydbøker

Ofte stilte spørsmål

Flere spørsmål og svar
Kom i gang

2 Måneder for 19 kr. Deretter 99 kr / Måned. Avslutt når som helst.