The expansion of executive power and erosion of political norms, such as state intervention in corporate decisions or attacks on media, will not be reversed. Future administrations, regardless of party, are unlikely to relinquish these new powers. A Democrat could use state capitalism to promote renewables just as a Republican uses it for oil.
Trump's efforts are not just breaking norms but constitute an attempt at a full-blown "political revolution." The goal is to gain direct political control over institutions like the FBI and DOJ, weaponize them against political opponents, and eliminate the checks and balances that constrain presidential power.
The immediate risk of consumer AI is not a stock market bubble, but commercial pressure to release products prematurely. These AIs, programmed to maximize engagement without genuine affect, behave like sociopaths. Releasing these "predators" into the body politic without testing poses a greater societal danger than social media did.
The next escalation in the Russia-NATO conflict won't be conventional warfare but an expansion of the current "shadow war." This involves asymmetric tactics like cyberattacks, destroying undersea cables, using drones in allied airspace, and funding vandalism of critical infrastructure to divide and destabilize European allies from within.
The administration's plan to acquire Greenland is seen as an incredibly "stupid own goal." It alienates a steadfast ally, Denmark, for no strategic reason, as the U.S. could gain any desired access through simple negotiation. This highlights a foreign policy driven by personal impulses rather than rational strategy.
The US is betting on winning the AI race by building the smartest models. However, China has strategically mastered the entire "electric stack"—energy generation, batteries, grids, and manufacturing. Beijing offers the world the 21st-century infrastructure needed to power AI, while Washington focuses on 20th-century energy sources.
America's unpredictable, "law of the jungle" approach doesn't embolden adversaries like Russia or China, who already operate this way. Instead, it forces traditional allies (Canada, Europe, Japan) to hedge their bets, decouple their interests, and reduce reliance on an unreliable United States for upholding international law.
Europe faces a dual threat: an aggressive Russia waging hybrid warfare on its eastern flank, and a Trump-led America that actively prefers a fragmented, weaker Europe. A disunified EU allows the U.S. to cut more favorable bilateral deals, leaving Europe vulnerable from both sides without its traditional transatlantic security guarantee.
Under Trump, the primary tool for projecting U.S. power is shifting from economic instruments like tariffs to direct military, intelligence, and cyber capabilities. This "Donroe Doctrine" leverages America's asymmetrical advantages in these areas, especially in its hemisphere, to achieve foreign policy wins without relying on economic coercion.
