Friday, 16 January 2026

Purshish, Madrasi style

 Purshish is a Persian/Urdu word for politely inquiring after a person's health and their family's well-being.

As a Madrasi- that too a highly educated Tambram whose father was a diplomat- I pride myself on the exquisite delicacy of my 'purshish' even when expressed in 'lean unlovely English'. Sadly, on one occasion, more than 35 years ago, when I was very poor and suffering from depression, I omitted even basic Madrasi 'purshish' with respect to a Muslim lady who lived on my street and who, believing me to be an indigent fellow sub-continental, had sent her eldest son to invite me for a family meal.

The lad in question turned out to be a fellow LSE alumni who was quite relieved that, despite my long beard, I wasn't some low class Tablighi type but rather a Hindu- that too from the far South of India. 

This was not the reason the mother began to feel affection for me. I was quiet and ate up everything she put on my plate. But this wasn't what clinched matters. I asked to borrow a book- it was the second volume of E.G Browne's Literary History of Persia. The mother hesitated. I said 'I have read this book many times. But, the pencilled notes in the margins of this volume are extraordinary.' She said nothing and I took silence for consent.

I suppose she was surprised when, a week later, I returned it. Indians are extreme Socialists when it comes to books. You can be sure, when you lend a book to a fellow sub-continental, that not only will he not return it, he will destroy it without reading it in a manner emulative of the Mathematical Economists on the Planning Commission.

I became a fixture at the family dinner table. From time to time, in an attempt to 'sing for my supper', I would wax eloquent about the pencilled notes in the books I borrowed from the family bookshelf. In India, when a library acquired a new book, the leading scholar was asked to go through it and provide such notes. These were added to over subsequent generations by other savants. Indians invented 'hyper-text'! The boys liked it when I said things like that. What about the mother? I got the feeling she didn't like me. Perhaps she disapproved of the fact that I wrote poetry rather than computer code. Still, maternal affection (mamta or vatsalya in Indic but 'rahmah' in Semitic languages because mercy (rahim) is founded in the womb (rahm)) has nothing to do with personal liking or disliking. Still, it only now occurs to me, I had been ill-mannered (be-adab) in omitting proper purshish towards mine hostess despite heavily punishing every dish provided at her bountiful table. 

This had tragic consequences as it is my unpleasant duty to now record.

Firstly, let me explain what I should have said. This is a 'counterfactual' and there can be philosophical objections to its deployment. However, since both John 21:25 & Surah Al-Kahf 109 are counterfactuals with the same valency- viz. if all the acts of the risen Christ (or God the Father, id est Allah)  were written down, the book would be larger than the universe- and since the same thing can be said by any son of any mother- even if she aint your Mum and only sent her son to fetch you for a family meal coz she thought you were some illiterate Arain rather than an LSE trained Iyer- because, fuck words in the world, there aren't enough thoughts at our Trafalgar, to capture the anti Emma Hamiltonian of her smile or frown or, fuck it, even the memory of a face ever going to destruction, ever going to destruction- except nothing does which is the face of God. 

I'm sorry for that last. Been drinkin', innit? Somefin bad happen today mate. Cut me some slack.

Fuck this. I don't want to finish the story. But it is my duty. Younger generation should understand the necessary and sufficient virtue of pushish-e-andaaz-e-Dekhani or Madrasi. 

Here's what I should have said while toying with, rather than gobbling,  my aloo-puri

"Madam! Where your hubby? You killed him or he is shacked up with young blonde in Kuwait? '

Much gratified, the Hanif lady would have been able to reply 'died of cancer at Royal Marsden. I told the boys was detained in Pakistan because of land dispute with Uncles. It was his wish. That way, neither they would themselves go back, nor would they have seen him in his reduced state. In this country, boys should think of Dad as strong and powerful. Not weak. Not dependent. Uncles understood this. They let their elder brother sell his portion of the land so as to fund his sons' education here. When I am gone, all secrets will be revealed. '

What she didn't say- even in this 'counter-factual'- was 'husband wrote those pencilled notes. He was first from our biradari to get English education. But it was here, in this country, while he worked on assembly line. The book you borrowed was given to him by his English employer. He thought it was a loan. That is why he made those pencilled notes so is to make value added return without 'riba' heartless, mindless, usury. But, he hadn't previsioned, it wasn't a loan. It was a gift.'

Think about this for a second, you stupid, LSE mis-educated, shithead.

What is the logical flaw in her counterfactual response to your exemplary purshish

It is that kids who know Dad died from Cancer would nevertheless go to LSE and make big money in Fintech rather than spend extra years in Med Skool so as to help find a cure to take what took Daddy from them.

I'm kidding. Only money matters. 

I may mention, this mystic verse occurs in the second volume of Edward Granville's opus magnum-
I never loved a dear gazelle.
Nor anything that cost me much 
High prices profit those who sell,
But why should I be fond of such ? 

The penciled note, in the widow's book, reads- rahmatan lil-'alamin is sahih (true). Story of the released deer is not.

I suppose, the reason I took hospitality from other peep's Mums when I was still quite young & thin & mentally ill- but spiritually hopeful- was because- like the trapped deer which vowed to return to get butchered if only it could be paroled for a brief while to see to the welfare of its fawns- I had somewhere worthwhile to go and some inevitable fate to return to.

Today, I got this news- I was wrong. Not just me. Sahih Bukhari itself is wrong. More to the point, the widow's, auto-didact, Arain, husband was wrong. Hadith of the deer is sahih. What is wrong is this story. 
It couldn't have happened. British Pakistanis- even 35 years ago- weren't stupid. They didn't feed poor Hindus for free. There was one 'Begum' who did feed me- once or twice. She was married to the younger brother of the Nawab of Pataudi and had defied General Zia's ban on the Saree- which she could do because her husband had been Zia's commanding officer. 

The lady did offer me a bride from Pakistan on condition of my converting. The charitable view is that she was using a Punjabi Vagina to scare me away from Islam. What if Paradise's 72 Virgins are all Punjabi? The prospect of hearing 'is it in yet?' from a host of hirsute maidens is the ultimate boner killer. 

What happened today which prompted me to write this shite? The imaginary 'widow's son' sent me E.G Browne's book. Akhbari Islam is Lewis Carrol. 

Mine is the Freemasonry of Kipling, Vivekananda and other such Aryans not Arain- though none can be nothing else. 






Pratap Bhanu Mehta realigning reality

Pratap Bhanu Mehta, has an article for Time Magazine titled 'Trump, Tariffs, and the Rewiring of the American Empire'. It is foolish. There is no American Empire. There is 'exorbitant privilege'- i.e. the use of the dollar in international trade which gives the US more 'seigniorage- and there is 'market power'- which can be used in line with optimal tariff theory to get the lion's share of gains from trade- and there is military power- in particular transoceanic force projection- and, finally, there is diplomatic power which can be used to reinforce sanctions of various types. 

What there isn't is an Empire. There can be no rewiring. There can be a shift from a broadly 'free trade plus intellectual property protection' regime to a 'spheres of influence' approach such that there is a 'first world' which has free market based high intra-industry trade, a 'second world' with bilateral swops, and a third world caught between the two which might supply primary products on open markets while following Listian policies and relying on bilateral 'technology transfer' in other fields. 

Since about 2015 when Sanders & Trump emerged as opponents of TPP, most favoured nation status for China, etc. the US has started to shift back to the older position familiar to Trump- a Wharton Class of '68 alumni. This is a world with optimal tariffs, closed economy Keynesianism, activist industrial policy, etc. When Trump returned to office, he trained his guns on Brazil and India in the hope that they will bend the knee and abandon BRICS, de-dollarization, etc. This will fail but China might not be too keen to sponsor an alternative and, if the new 'G2' reach a modus vivendi, everybody else will have to negotiate transactional but unequal relationships with both US & China.

Mehta ignores all this. 

In August 30, Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India travelled to Tianjin, a city in eastern China, for the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit. His presence there, after five years of simmering India–China tensions,

Putin had been trying to get Modi & Xi to kiss and make up. Trump helped make it happen but it would have happened sooner or later anyway.  

was widely read as signaling the possibility of a global geopolitical realignment. Modi’s visit came in the wake of the United States imposing 25% tariffs on India, along with additional punitive duties linked to India’s continued purchase of Russian oil. China, for its part, played up the SCO as a display of geopolitical confidence and an alternative pole of attraction.

It went to 50 percent for Brazil and India. Might it go to 500 percent? There are diminishing returns to this. India's growth doesn't seem to have been much affected. The question is whether the US can raise its growth rate. Otherwise it's share of global trade will fall from about 16 percent to the EU's level of 12 percent. As India & Brazil grow, their bargaining position improves. But both must do a lot of internal reform. That must be their priority. 


A rival spectacle unfolded in Washington. Over the past several months, a procession of world leaders has made the pilgrimage to placate President Donald Trump in the hope of securing favorable trade deals.

Or to retain some shred of credibility for NATO's Article 5.  

Trump, in turn, has announced a flurry of agreements and investment promises with Vietnam, Malaysia, Japan, and others. The spectacles in Tianjin and Washington dramatize a world in which major powers increasingly rely on public theatre, transactional bargains, and the symbolism of court-like diplomacy to project hierarchy and distribute favor. The tariff war Trump has unleashed has certainly produced a frenzy of activity.

This was published on Jan 16 2026. Perhaps Mehta wrote this 6 months ago.  

But does it amount to a deeper geopolitical realignment?

Trump was doing 'discovery'. It turned out China had reduced its vulnerabilities and greatly increased its threat points. Trump acknowledged this by speaking of 'G2'- China was now an equal. But a deal hasn't yet been made. Both sides are flexing their muscles. But, if Trump loses the mid-terms, he turns into a lame duck. The Chinese can afford to wait. TACO (Trump always Chickens out) may apply  

President Trump’s tariffs have certainly induced a different diplomatic orientation.

Not yet. Maybe, if the EU puts boots on the ground in Greenland and this triggers the dissolution of NATO which in turn means that the EU takes its 12 percent of World GDP and shops around for allies, then maybe there is a 'G3/3.5'  

States are behaving more opportunistically—bargaining issue by issue, extracting short-term relief, and avoiding long-term entanglements. If part of geopolitics once involved the creation and maintenance of global institutions, that ambition has all but vanished. The world now appears far more fluid.

No. The EU sees it has to act more cohesively. But so do the Latin American countries otherwise every leader is a potential Noriega or Maduro.  

As tariffs, export controls, and investment screening become normalized

They were the rule not the exception for most of Trump's life. China only got MFN status 25 years ago.  

instruments of statecraft, countries are reordering their economic exposure: diversifying supply chains, seeking new export markets, relocating manufacturing, emphasizing self-reliance, and introducing currency-swap arrangements to make themselves less vulnerable to the fallout of an economic war between the United States and China

This had to be done for other reasons- e.g. COVID, invasion of Ukraine, etc.  Currency swaps increased after the financial crisis (another may be around the corner) and because of COVID etc. 

Modi’s Tianjin outreach and the processions to Trump’s court in Washington reflect this broader recalibration.

No. They reflect predictable reactions to acts of assertion by what is still the most powerful nation in the world.  

States are seeking room to maneuver in a system where economic bargaining, rather than ideology or shared aspiration, shapes behavior.

This cretin doesn't get that states have been such such room from their inception. 'Shared aspirations' are meaningless.  

Yet none of this amounts to a fundamental geopolitical realignment.

Alignment is about commitment. Trump has signalled he is not committed to NATO or Quad. The US has unilaterally realigned. 

Much of the drama is still best understood as crisis management within an existing hierarchical order.

All drama can be understood as such. One might say Zelensky's disastrous TV appearance with Trump & Vance was dramatic. What has followed it has been 'keeping up appearances'.  

The choreography of hedging between Washington and Beijing, while simultaneously adjusting to American pressure, masks a deeper continuity.

No. There is a discontinuity. Previously, China was more vulnerable. Now the US is because POTUS has to worry about cost of living and mid-terms. Chairman Xi does not.  

That continuity is anchored in two forces: the domestic constraints that limit the strategic choices of states,

Domestic constraints can't prevent unilateral realignment by a foreign power.  

and the pre-existing security architectures that still bind them more tightly to the United States than to any emerging alternative.

Security architecture doesn't mean shit if commitment to it has evaporated

A restructuring of the international trade order was inevitable.

No. Hilary could have won in 2016.  

The liberal international order could be sustained only under two conditions: that it generated domestic economic outcomes that shored up the political legitimacy of global integration within major economies,

Nonsense! Had Comey not cost Hilary the election, it would have been a case of business as usual. Obama was still pressing forward with TPP (which Hilary helped negotiate) in 2016. Hilary could have been a two term POTUS. Trump would never have gained ascendancy over his party.  

and that the trading system produced broadly shared gains without fundamentally threatening American hegemony.

This is irrelevant. No one trades unless they grade. What threatens hegemony is slower economic growth than the rival.  

Both these conditions had been slowly eroding.

They are nonsense.  

The United States has worried about the loss of manufacturing and inequality since the 1990s.

Ross Perot & Trump had raised the trade issue back then. Inequality did not and does not matter.  

The causes of these phenomena are complex.

No. They are simple. What was not predicted was that Hilary would be a shit candidate or that women would vote for a pussy grabber.  

In 2016, the economists David H. Autor, David Dorn, and Gordon H. Hanson popularized the phrase, “China Shock,”

before which was the 'Japan shock' which Trump gassed on about in the Eighties.  

attributing a loss of about two million jobs to trade with China. Trade, rather than automation or other factors, became the major culprit.

Sanders had sponsored a bill repudiating China's Most Favoured Nation status in 2005. If Hilary hadn't been a shit candidate, neither Sanders nor Trump could have risen. What made Hilary a shit candidate? She was way better than Kamala. But she did have a vagina. Vaginas scare voters.  

This coincided with the recognition that under the existing system, American hegemony could be threatened.

What threatened it was defeat in Vietnam and the end of Bretton Woods.  

China had become a genuine competitor

unlike those fake competitors you see on Ebay 

challenging American interests.

When did it kow tow to America? 

The technology gap between America and China was narrowing, China was flexing power

you either flex your muscles or make a power play 

in the Asia-Pacific,

 & MENA- e.g. China maintained relations with Hamas- and Africa, etc. 

and challenging America in international institutions. The liberal international order was no longer serving the purpose of American hegemony.

The War on Terror destroyed it. You can't be the hegemon if you keep having to withdraw your troops and run away. Obama was so craven he even tried to appease the Iranian.  

Maintaining global American dominance needed new foundations.

The thing was gone. Iran dominated Iraq. The Taliban took back Afghanistan.  The question was whether America would run away from Europe as well. We don't know the answer yet. 

The first Trump Administration began the process of repivoting the world order,

In an amateurish manner 

and the Biden Administration continued in that direction.

see above 

In October 2022, the Biden Administration unveiled the most expansive export control regime aimed at limiting China’s access to advanced semiconductors.

It failed utterly 

As Jake Sullivan, the National Security Advisor to President Joe Biden, put it, “we previously maintained a sliding scale approach that said we need to stay only a couple of generations ahead. This is not the strategic environment in which we are today. Given the foundational nature of certain technologies, such as advanced logic and memory chips, we must maintain as large of a lead as possible.”

America was asleep at the wheel. The Chinese weren't.  

In theory, that American edge could be preserved by tightly focused restrictions on a small number of critical technologies (“small yards and high fences”) and close cooperation with allies. But it was already beginning to be uncertain what the scope and severity of those restrictions would be, and which allies would be considered useful. Therefore, Trump’s tariffs were not some bizarre break from past policy but an inflection point in American approach to economic and technological competition.

They are a bizarre break from the past because they are self-defeating. This isn't optimal tariff theory. It is a senile dude who enjoys raising and lowering tariffs and granting and cancelling exemptions. This is about concentrating domestic power in his own hands while causing supply of imports to become elastic thus reducing the US shares of gains from trade long term. This is a gift to China but Brazil and India too can benefit.  


Reorganizing global hierarchies to serve American power requires

magic? 

a new mix of instruments: trade as a tool to discipline adversaries and pressure allies; tariffs to protect industries, retain a technological edge, raise revenue, and secure critical resources; and sanctions to achieve political aims.

That may be Trump's thinking but it is stupid. Trade is a weapon only if your market is expanding. Otherwise you just import inflation and shrink your share of the global economy. Productivity matters. Twisting the arms of foreign countries to set up factories is no substitute for Chinese style industrial policy. It is stupid shit. The Taiwanese of Koreans can set up a nice pant but they need hardworking Koreans or Taiwanese to run them. ICE then arrests and deports them. This is slapstick comedy.   

The puzzle of why Washington punishes allies,

because it is no longer committed to them. It's like when your g.f. moves in with you and you initially don't charge her rent. However, as your passion for her cools, you start asking to kick in more and more for rent, utilities, your new play-station etc. Finally, you suggest she might be more comfortable moving into the garden shed. 

or even potentially friendly states such as India

China can hurt American farmers. They would obviously be interested in India as a comparable market. Anyway, India has a trade surplus with the US. Since Quad was always a pipe-dream, Trump might as well say hitting India is a way to weaken BRICS though, obviously, it will have the opposite effect.

Brazil is a different kettle of fish. Trump wants Bolsonaro released. But Brazil gets a lot of exemptions and can always sell elsewhere. Again this is a 

or Brazil, is thus easily explained.

I think Trump wants to be in a position where if he can't remove a Latin American leader he doesn't like, he can at least rescue one who has been deposed or who has lost an election. 

This is not a simple shift from free trade to mercantilism.

Optimal tariff theory. The problem is that Trump got addicted to raising and lowering them. This raised uncertainty and thus fed through into prices. Supply has probably already become more elastic. The burden falls more and more on the US consumer. This may cost Trump the mid-terms.  

It is a neo-imperial mercantilism

No. It is stupid shit.  

that retains the fundamental aspiration of empire:

money, Trump really doesn't want to rule over shithole countries. Greenland is okay because it only has 300,000 people.  

ordering a hierarchy around American power.

Mehta is obsessed with hierarchy. But it doesn't arise in this case. America deals directly with other countries, no matter how shitty, rather than through a regional satrap.  

The emerging tariff regime represents the consolidation of a doctrine in which the weaponization

that's another favourite word of the brain dead 

of interdependence becomes the central technique of imperial management;

even though there is no fucking Empire.  

the distinction between friends and adversaries matters less than their willingness to be folded into American objectives.

In I.R, guys who are 'folded in' are friends.  

The United States isn’t the only actor reshaping the global trading order. China, on the face of it, had every incentive to preserve the existing system: no country benefitted more from it.

Nonsense! It cheated precisely because it didn't want to get locked into a intellectual property regime which handicapped them.  

The multilateral trading framework also conveniently obscured China’s own hegemonic ambitions under the procedural neutrality of its rules.

What is this guy smoking? China cheats like nobody's business. There is no fucking neutrality. The State has 'control rights'.  

China used the World Trade Organization to its advantage to gain access to world markets. But at the same time, its model of subsidies, forced technology transfers, developing country status and currency policies often gave it an advantage.

Cheating gives you an advantage. What matters is whether you do it in a smart manner.  


For the rest of the world, meanwhile, the system was a mixed bag: exports to China provided engines of growth; China became a major source of infrastructure finance; and the scale of its manufacturing base helped drive down the global costs of the energy transition. But the rest of the world also experienced its own version of the “China Shock” as Beijing’s dominance in exports often came at the cost of other developing countries. This is in, part explains, why there has been little collective action to defend the old order.

The US wanted 'multi dimensional' Trade agreements (stuff like Human Rights etc being added on) because it wanted 'Agenda Control'. This follows from the McKelvey Chaos theorem. Sadly, it doesn't work in practice.  

Beijing reads the American turn toward imperial neo-mercantilism as a geopolitical gambit to contain China’s rise.

No. It thinks Trump is a senile fool just like Biden. Obama, however, they considered a monkey. Bush was simply stupid.  

And Beijing is responding with clear geopolitical signaling: using tariffs for political purposes, weaponizing chokepoints in supply chains, whether rare earth minerals or critical manufacturing inputs, and granting or withdrawing market access. The premise that China would remain a status-quo power anchored in the old trading order is no longer tenable.

There was never any such premise. It was fucking obvious that China meant to rise and rise. There was some hope that it would fall into a middle income trap or go off a fiscal cliff because of the property bubble etc. But, it has been pretty successful in overcoming internal challenges.

China seems to be following a mixed strategy:

 If followed a 'wolf warrior' strategy which succeeded. 

a desire to signal resolve against the United States, preserve those parts of the order that continue to serve its interests, and reshape the rest through industrial policy, state-directed capital, supply-chain dominance, and economic partnerships to reflect its own preferences.

Why does this nutter keep talking about 'an old order'? Fuck does he mean? Most countries are hooked on Chinese exports. By the time they find alternative suppliers, China may have taken the lead in quality.  

China can be generous when it is costless, as with offering zero-tariff access to African exporters.

Coz Africa is a big rival when it comes to AI chips or electric cars- right? 

But it also makes clear that it is fully capable of wielding tariffs, market access, and interdependence as instruments of political influence.

It turned out that Europe's car industry needs Chinese chips. China has countervailing power. Moreover it now has its own EUV lithography machine. What it can't steal it buys and what it can't buy or steal, it reinvents or reverse engineers.  

Is this new form of neo-imperial mercantilist competition likely to produce geopolitical realignment?

The US has realigned. It has bluntly told the EU that it has shrunk in economic importance and, moreover, because of Islamic immigration, is no longer a 'civilizational' partner. Imperialism and neo-imperialism ended long ago though admittedly the French were late to get the memo.  

Unless trade disputes in this time of economic nationalism spill over into outright war and hostility, a realignment is still a distant prospect for four reasons. 

Realignment has already occurred.  The EU knows it is on its own. India knows there is no longer any pretence of Quad. Latin America knows it has to make its own deal with China or remain vulnerable to the Trump Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine which is 'when we tell you to jump, ask 'how high'?' 

First, the extent to which global trade will actually be restructured remains uncertain.

Global trade gets restructured anyway depending on who is growing fast and who is growing slowly.  

The tariff wars were driven partly by the perception that globalization had lost domestic legitimacy.

Legitimacy is another one of those meaningless words shitheads like to use.  

Yet those very domestic constraints now limit how far states can shift toward neo-mercantilism. In the United States, concerns about inflation have already placed limits on how aggressively policymakers can wield tariffs as a weapon.

That is a side-show. What matters is AI. If China does it almost as well but much more cheaply, then the bubble bursts and you have a financial crash. Worse yet, the strategic picture changes. Cheap AI enhanced drones might cancel out America's massive lead in force projection platforms. Russia mops up Ukraine, with Chinese tech, and moves on to Poland and the Baltic. Meanwhile the cartels might get hold of nukes. Putin had hinted that he might do nuclear proliferation into Latin America. Meanwhile, Trump loses the mid-terms and faces impeachment hearings and criminal indictments. SCOTUS deserts him because he is a lame duck headed for the slammer under State law (for which Vance can't give him a Pardon). Some Mamdani-type nutter becomes the next POTUS. America implodes on racial and partisan lines. Europe, meanwhile, becomes more and more divided with parts of it being depopulated and other parts Islamicized. 

China faces its own dilemma: its economy depends on exports, access to markets and customers.

No. It needs raw materials- which it has already secured and can always sell to emerging markets as the West declines.  

China already dominates manufacturing across the board—from cheap textiles to advanced electronics. But, as economists Arvind Subramanian and Shoumitro Chatterjee point out, the challenges for other developing countries could intensify if China tries to compensate for slower domestic growth by increasing exports.

They can export low value-adding jobs plus infrastructure. What matters is whether they can do innovation rather than 'catch up'. It looks as though the answer is 'yes'. Meanwhile the US has hired a shithead like Mehta to teach at Princeton.  

So while developing countries welcome China, they are also wary of what Chinese overproduction might mean for them.

They aren't stupid. They know the Chinese will off-shore the low value adding shite.  

For most countries, the dominant strategy is not to realign or choose sides between the United States and China, but to treat both as indispensable economic poles, to extract concessions, and avoid the wrath of the two superpowers.

This isn't a strategy. It is called crying yourself to sleep every night. 

Second, geopolitical alignment continues to be driven by security and hard power. Even where countries desire greater autonomy, they remain constrained by existing security arrangements. States formally allied with the United States, or dependent on it for security guarantees, from Saudi Arabia to Japan, have far less room for maneuver than their diplomatic gestures imply. Their sovereign capacity to realign is circumscribed by the very architectures that protect them.

Architecture doesn't protect. The Saudis still have money and that buys them security. Japan has to nuke up or shut up. So does Taiwan. I suppose Europe will get round to forming an army but their real problem is internal. So is that of the USA. If foreigners are taking over your cities, fuck you care about force projection on distant borders?  

Europe is the classic case: reliant on the United States for security, yet dependent on China for trade and technology.

No. Europe failed to recover from the crash and trade creation within the EU has lagged exports because of compliance burdens. It is sclerotic. It will probably simply give up and grow old- or yet older- gracefully.  

Even India, which zealously guards its sovereignty, has moderated its Russian oil imports in response to Washington's demands. But it will also remain more preoccupied with its security concerns over what the United States does over Pakistan.

Not really. It will simply go in for tit for tat terrorism. That is also the best course against China. I suppose India will have to do an H bomb test- perhaps in collaboration with Israel.  But internal reform has to be the priority. Shitheads like Mehta have to be disintermediated. 

Third, domestic political economies severely limit dramatic repositioning. Countries are deeply embedded in production networks, supply chains, financial systems, and technological ecosystems that cannot be reconfigured at will. Domestic coalitions, business interests, labor, commodity exporters, and technology sectors pull governments in contradictory directions. Leaders must respond to anxieties about vulnerability while preserving access to both China and the United States. The result is a characteristic ambivalence in much of the world: rhetorical assertions of realignment paired with limited room for meaningful action.

This is an entirely meaningless paragraph. Was Mehta always stupid or did his brains rot away in rural Haryana? I know the answer to that. He was always stupid.  

Fourth, no alternative structure exists that could absorb the geopolitical weight of a realignment. The United States may no longer be trusted. The prestige of its domestic institutions, once a pillar of American hegemony, has diminished. Yet China, for all its economic might, has not built a security architecture or normative order that other states trust. Its partnerships remain bilateral and transactional; its political and financial systems opaque; its ambitions ambiguous. Few states are willing to place their futures within a Chinese-led system. But this is also not a moment where the Global South can exercise collective leverage over either China or the United States.

 This is nonsense. Russia has found it can trust China. But the Pakistanis could have told them that for free. The Global South has never had any fucking leverage. 

The stubborn truth of this moment is this:

There has been global realignment because the US is withdrawing from various commitments.  

Trump’s tariff wars are generating uncertainty, pockets of economic dislocation, an erosion of trust in the United States, and a more difficult environment for the provision of global public goods.

Like the 'War on Terror'? Which fucking planet has this cunt been living on?  

They are also amplifying the risks inherent in China–U.S. competition.

What risk? China will continue to rise but it might plateau at less than what the US has now in terms of global force projection. But, equally, the reverse may happen. China may take the lead in some new type of tech which turns their Belt & Road into a straitjacket for the rest of the world.  

States might feel more resentful but they continue to operate within a security and economic order they cannot meaningfully escape.

Also, human beings will have to live in this galaxy, not Andromeda.  

This paradoxically makes the world more dangerous, since Trump thinks he can engage in price discovery without risking major geopolitical alignment.

He isn't utterly stupid. He knows that realignment has been continuous since the time of ancient Sumer.  


Trump’s confidence that no country or coalition of countries is in a position to significantly push back,

unless- like China, Russia, India, Brazil etc- they actually do push back 

at least in the short run, is making him more overtly imperial in other domains as well.

Which ones? He did to Maduro what the first Bush did to Noriega.  

Far from being isolationist or sticking to a sphere of influence, America is now firmly on an imperial trajectory: extracting a head of state from Venezuela, launching military operations in Syria and Nigeria,

Obama founded AFRICOM. True, he didn't try to remove Assad, but neither did Trump. 

threatening Iran,

he isn't backing regime change. It looks as though the crisis has been defused.  

and demanding Greenland.

that's new. But then he was also demanding Canada. Maybe the whole thing will blow over. Currently, mineral extraction from Greenland is too expensive. Anyway, the Europeans are offering a share of the profits in case the thing takes off.  

Chaos and uncertainty lie ahead.

Till the mid-terms.  

Major geopolitical realignment does not.

It has already occurred. If Mehta's wife moves in with her lesbian lover, she has realigned herself even if she hasn't sued for divorce. That's what America has done. If you are a net importer, you don't need to protect overseas markets. Guys with dollars have to spend those dollars buying stuff America makes. 

The world is simpler than Mehta realizes but it takes a bit of grey matter to understand that simplicity. Gassing on about the weaponization of hierarchical Neo-Imperial mercantilism is the task of a pedant who teaches shite 

Kojin Karatani- idiot or genius?


The Japanese have a saying-  'idiot and genius- one sheet of paper'. (バカと天才は紙一重 (baka to tensai wa kami hitoe)) Sadly, in the case of Kojin Karatani, it was a sheet of heavily soiled toilet paper.  

This is from 'The Science of Spirit' 

The following words from the beginning of The Communist Manifesto are well known: “A specter is haunting Europe—the specter of communism”.

Marx meant that Communism was a bogeyman for Kings and Princes. If they were so frightened of it, maybe it was a good idea to become a Communist. After all, there must be some good reason the ruling class recognised the thing to be an existential threat. Marx didn't mean that Communism was a ghost or a demon or a vampire or a werewolf or some other such imaginary creature. 

Of course, this is supposed to be a joke,

No. Marx was saying that powerful people were afraid of Communism because it represented a genuine path forward which had the potential to put an end to monarchy and aristocracy and oligarchy. Thus if you were against the existing European order, you should seriously think of becoming a Communist. 

but that is not necessarily the case. Rather, it means the following: communism is a
 “spirit”.

Marx didn't believe in 'spirits'. Indeed, he didn't even believe in Hegelian 'Geist'. He was a materialist.  

In The Structure of World History, I proposed a view of the history of social formations from the perspective of the mode of exchange in addition to the mode of production. The modes of exchange can be divided into A (gift and return),

He calls this 'Reciprocity'. He doesn't get that you don't always have to reciprocate when given a gift or invited to a potlatch. Moreover, some goods and services are 'non-excludable'- i.e. you can't prevent your enemy from getting it, even if you only mean to supply your friends with it. There are also 'non-rival' goods where no other person receives less if an additional person gets access to it. In this case there are 'free-riders'. Consider a King who offers all within his territory defence from invaders and the protection of the law. In theory, the subject of the King has a reciprocal duty of obedience. Sadly, people like Marx & Engels might be 'free riders'. They get the advantages of the King's protection, yet plot against him. 

B (obedience and protection),

Sadly, the 'free rider' problem, means that there is no 'exchange'. People may be stupid enough to bite the hand that feeds them or overthrow the regime that protects them.  

C (commodity exchange),

This depends on some enforcement mechanism for contracts- i.e. the rule of law. Without it, there will be market-failure and thus no 'commodity exchange' and very little capital accumulation because property is not secure. 

and D, which goes beyond these.

D is pure gift or 'associationism'. This is where everybody wants to work very hard to anticipate and cater to everybody else's every wish. 

That is, it exists as an ideational “power” that transcends capital nation-state,

A nation state provides public goods. Sadly, it may get no obedience in return even if it provides plenty of protection. On the other hand, there may be non-State actors who provide 'club' and 'public' goods. 

that is, as mode D that transcends modes A, B, and C of exchange.

mode E transcends D. This is what you get when you don't just anticipate and fulfil everybody else's every whim, you also show a tender care for the environment by wiping clean every shitty bum with your supple tongue.  

Speaking of spirits, Jacques Derrida’s Specters of Marx (1995) is suggestive. In this book, he cites examples such as “the specter of communism” and writes that Marx was accompanied by many “ghosts” in his life.

If so, he was a superstitious old fool who believed in ghosts and vampires. The truth is he was merey speaking metaphorically. What Derrida & Karatani are engaging in is meta-metaphoricity. They treat a figure of speech as a concrete fact and then construct some other metaphor, itself to be taken as fact, on the basis of what is merely a verbal conceit. This way lies madness.  

The ghosts he refers to range from communism to God, or to money-capital. Certainly, each of these is spiritual in its own way.

God may be so but only if God actually exists, not if God is imaginary or a conventional or 'noble' lie. 

However, Derrida did not try to clarify the difference and relationship between them. As a result, I feel that the discussion ended up being a kind of play on words.

There is a story about a child who becomes very depressed and withdrawn. He is sent to a psychoanalyst to whom he reveals that he is upset because his parent's sexual relations haven't sent him any Christmas presents. This is the sort of childish mistake these stupid cunts are making.  

Derrida wrote this at a time when “the end of history” (Francis Fukuyama) was pronounced after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, that is, at a time when it was said that Marxism was dead. 

It is dead. Nobody wants class warfare or the overthrow and abolition of markets- including capital markets. 

At one time, it may have seemed possible that the Communist countries would prevail over the Capitalist countries. Japan would move from the American to the Soviet/Chinese camp. The State would take ownership of all enterprises. Morisihima or Karatani or some other such shithead might get a seat on the Politburo. They would get an extra ration of rotten turnips and thus be the object of envy or emulation for other non-STEM academics. 

what might be called the “science of spirits”.

I suppose 'Spiritism' (ouija boards, seances, ectoplasm etc.) appeared in the late nineteenth century at precisely the time when faith in God was shaken by Darwin & Co. Similarly the collapse of Marxism, caused some of the stupider of its adherents to start babbling about ghosts and spirits.  

My consideration of “spirit” has some of its origins in Hegel’s spirits

Hegel was an Idealist. There is only one Spirit- Geist- which  represents the self-actualization of freedom and rationality within human institutions, evolving from individual consciousness (Subjective Spirit) through shared social life (Objective Spirit) to absolute self-knowledge (Absolute Spirit). These are not different from each other. Rather there is 'sublation' of the subjective by the objective and the objective by the absolute

(especially in his Philosophy of Right, which deals with the problem of the capital-nation-state) and Marx’s fetish (Capital).

Fetishism is materialistic, albeit magical and a feature of primitive thought. Marx, being as stupid as fuck, did think  that the social relationships between people 'had become obscured and appeaed as mystical, inherent qualities of the commodities themselves, as if objects have a life and power of their own, divorced from the labor that created them.' What this means is that the guy making the thing is called a 'worker' and the guy who owns the factory is called the 'capitalist' even though the same guy may be both. The fact is, a lot of 'capitalists' in Marx's day, had started off as workers but then set up their own operations and turned into industrialists. Nowadays, of course, the worker is also the Capitalist because his Pension fund is invested in equities. Still, economists distinguish between Labour's and Capital's share of National Income. This isn't fetishism. It is merely a convenient way to look at things. 

In this essay, I will give a very brief introduction to this “science of spirits”. Firstly, I would like to quickly review how I came to conceive “modes of exchange”. According to the standard thinking, historical materialism is based on the mode of production (productive forces and relations of production),

sadly these are unknowable even if we know everything that is the case both ex ante and ex poste. It is a different matter that you can have a 'good enough' structural causal model for the predictive or managerial purposes but 'the map is not the territory'- i.e. the model is not reality. The former is conceivable. The latter isn't. If it were, the person who has the right conception would have magical powers. They would soon become enormously rich and thus able to change market outcomes. They would buy their way to absolute power. 

but this became subjected to the criticism that it did not sufficiently capture the “political and ideological superstructure”.

Which is irrelevant. Your country or your company or your campus goes bankrupt if its economic 'substructure' is shit. It doesn't matter what ideology or political position you adopt.  

For example, Weber, Durkheim, and Freud criticized historical materialism in this way.

Weber & Durkheim felt Marx was basing himself too much on England's experience. France and Germany had different trajectories. This would later become the 'Sonderweg' theory but it is perfectly compatible with privileging the 'sub-structure'. Lenin's 'Taylorism'  Stalin's focus on heavy industry are examples. Indeed, in the late Fifties and Sixties- the 'convergence hypothesis' seemed plausible. Administered pricing and bureaucratic management would make the two systems indistinguishable. 

In their view, there is something in the “political-ideological” dimension, i.e., the state and religion, that cannot be simply determined by the “economic base” (mode of production). But then how is it determined?

War and forcible conversion/ethnic cleansing. Inquisitions, Catholic or Marxist or Islamic can be very successful. But extreme poverty can have the same effect. You convert to the religion or ideology which offers you a bit of food. 

In response to that, I thought like this: the political-ideological dimension is also determined by the “economic base”, however, the economic base in this case is not the mode of production but the mode of exchange.

Or charity. If the State is foolish enough to subsidize 'students' studying worthless shite, the 'politico-ideological dimension' gets variegated.  

In fact, when Marx and Engels proposed the “materialist view of history (historical materialism)” in 1846, they wrote; This conception of history depends on our ability to expound the real process of production, starting out from the material production of life itself,

in other words, before you can do history you need a biological theory of evolution. Sadly, it turned out that 'bourgeois strategies' are 'eusocial'. John Maynard Smith, who discovered this, started off as as card carrying Communist.  

and to comprehend the form of intercourse connected with this and created by this mode of production (i.e., civil society in its various stages), as the basis of all history.

Marx & Engels were Bouvard & Pecuchet avant la lettre. They had intellectual curiosity but lacked brain. 

I thought that what they called “Verkehr

traffic. Some Marxist economists saw Econ as just a Monge-Kantorovich Transportation problem.  

(intercourse)”, or “exchange”, was the key to solving the mystery.

It wasn't. Human beings have to compete for resources with animals and others like themselves. Exchange economies arise where there is comparative advantage, but if territory is scarce, then those with higher absolute advantage exterminate or drive extinct those with lower productivity.  

In fact, Marx himself later tried to elucidate the “fetish” as the superstructure brought about by exchange in Capital.

I have very nice magical fetish. You should obey me because otherwise my fetish magic will fuck you up. Sadly, instead of obeying me, you kill me and add my fetish to your collection- unless you simply throw it away. Fetishes really don't matter. 

The exchange that Marx discovered in Capital is exchange of commodities that begins between communities.

Communities can kill and eat other communities and grab all their cool shiny stuff.  

However, intercourse exchange is not confined to this. For example, gift-giving/ gift repayment and domination/subjugation are also forms of exchanges.

No. They are unilateral 'transfers', not exchanges.  

Therefore, we could say that both the community and the state began with intercourse-exchange.

Families begin with sexual intercourse. But Baby does not pay Mummy for breast milk. The Community and the State arise by reason of kin selective altruism and the need to solve collective action problems. Some 'mechanisms' used with respect to the latter may involve exchanges of a contractual type. But a lot of exchanges can be eliminated by 'Coasian' enterprises thus raising efficiency. 

Of course, exchange here is different from commodity exchange. In The Structure of World History, I proposed a view of the history of social formations from the perspective of the mode of exchange in addition to the mode of production.

In other words, you did something very fucking stupid. Social formations can be explained by collective action problems and the fitness landscape. The point where exchanges occur is indeterminate. The same 'mode of production' can have different methods of organizing exchange.  

The modes of exchange can be divided into

contracts of adhesion and incomplete contracts or relationships. 

A (gift and return),

which is a transfer giving occasion to another transfer.  

B (obedience and protection),

which is an 'invisible' service conditionally provided- i.e. an incomplete contract 

C (commodity exchange),

bargaining problem or contract of adhesion.  

and D, which goes beyond these.

But something already 'goes beyond' transactions of type A, B and C. You don't give gifts to the enemy. You don't show him obedience or protection. You don't traffic with the enemy. If you do, there is likely some penalty applicable to you by a force which go beyond the purely economic.  

I realized that the “power” that defines the political and ideological superstructure does not come from somewhere different from the economic base,

which is biological 

but from the “intercourse (exchange)” that forms the foundation of the economic base.

That is plastic or 'multiply realisable'. What matters is raising productivity. That's what leads to 'take off' and transition from one stage of civilization to another. By the early nineteenth century, this was becoming obvious. If you can extract energy more efficiently your civilization rises regardless of its internal arrangements. 

That is to say, the ideational powers that are seen as religion or unconsciousness come from there, creating differences depending on the mode of exchange on which they are based. 

The mode of exchange may change under exigent circumstances without any change in the base. Europe had seen big changes in religion with relatively little economic change. I suppose there may have been some dewy eyed idealists who thought that an Earthly Paradise would be achieved after the Bolsheviks came to power. But Karatani did not belong to that generation. He was just stupid.  

After writing (Structure of World History), I have come to think about in particular about the “power” which these exchanges bring about.

Exchanges don't bring about 'power'. The mobilization and accumulation of resources does. In Economic terms this is 'investment' not exchange. 

It was Marx, who first clarified about this power; in Capital, he elucidated the power that arises from mode of exchange C.

But 'Capital' does not arise from from commodity exchange. It arises by stockpiling commodities, not exchanging them. I have two goats and so I exchange one for a sack of grain. I don't have Capital. I get into goat breeding and have a thousand goats. I'm a capitalist. I can do deals with vendors of goat meat and leather merchants and so forth. Moreover, I can borrow on the security of my vast goat herd, and engage in arbitrage. True, I am taking a risk. But profit is the reward for risk. It isn't the reward for making your workers stay late and working them to the bone.  


Wednesday, 14 January 2026

Hathaway & Schapiro on Trump & International Law

Foreign Affairs has an article titled

A World Without Rules
The Consequences of Trump’s Assault on International Law
Oona A. Hathaway and Scott J. Shapiro (both law professors at Yale)

 January 13, 2026
From the beginning of his presidency, Donald Trump has threatened to destabilize the international legal order.

Do Oona & Scott think it was previously stable? There has never been an 'international legal order' which wasn't unstable. Indeed, there would be no commercial law and very little criminal law if society were in a stable equilibrium.  

Early in his second term, he claimed he would “take back” the Panama Canal, make Canada the 51st U.S. state, acquire Greenland, and “own” Gaza.

So what? Biden would make similar tall claims about fostering Democracy.  

Foreign policy experts shook their heads, reluctant to take Trump seriously.

i.e. senile, stupid, hacks wrote some stupid articles.  

After all, his declarations seemed erratic and poorly thought out. Yet even speaking the words did damage.

Indeed, just thinking thoughts- or looking like you might one day think thoughts- does damage. But so does farting or looking like you might suddenly fart.  

As we argued in Foreign Affairs last summer, Trump’s threats reflected a troubling lack of commitment to the legal structure the United States and its allies created 80 years ago.

Troubling to whom? Useless shitheads.  

The norm against the use of force, embodied in the UN Charter, was already under strain.

The invasion of Iraq put paid to it.  

But Trump’s open disregard of this prohibition threatened to trigger its collapse.

Because of the danger that someone would go back in time and get Bush & Blair to invade Iraq.  


That was before the United States invaded Venezuela and kidnapped its president, Nicolás Maduro, on January 3.

As Obama kidnapped Osama or the first Bush captured and incarcerated Noriega.  

The military operation, undertaken without UN Security Council authorization, without congressional authorization, without a claim of self-defense, and without even a plausible legal rationale, represents the most harmful attack yet on the rules-based order.

Which simply doesn't exist. Ask the Crimeans or East Ukrainians.  

It is not just the existing international legal system that is in jeopardy now. At risk is the survival of any rules at all—and with them any constraints on the exercise of state power.

Rules which provide focal solutions to coordination games are self-enforcing. Those which aren't 'incentive compatible' are mere puffery.  


THE RISE AND FALL OF WORLD ORDER

Before countries renounced the right to war, first in the 1928 Kellogg-Briand Pact

hilarious!  

and then again in the UN Charter in 1945, waging war was perfectly legal and legitimate.

It continued to be. What changed was Trump's recognition of the Golan Heights as Israeli territory which Biden confirmed. Morocco's claim to the 'Spanish' Sahara is another example.  

It was the main way in which countries resolved their disputes with one another. But even during this time, war was constrained by law.

Very true. There is a law which says it is cool to detonate so many nukes that all life on earth is destroyed.  

War, in its lawful conception, was understood as a last resort undertaken to enforce or defend a state’s rights.

Whereas the Super-powers understood blowing up the whole fucking world was an even better way to defend their rights.  

Killing, seizure of property, and destruction were permitted only if the entire endeavor was justified by law.

Blowing up the entire world is permitted and justified by law.  You can't refuse to pay your taxes on the grounds that some of your tax dollars will be spent on vast nuclear arsenals which can destroy all life on earth. 

At the beginning of the twentieth century and for centuries before that, a country could not simply say it wanted another’s land.

Yes it could. This is still the case.  

According to customary international law, as interpreted and popularized by the so-called father of international law, Hugo Grotius, in the early seventeenth century, a state had to offer a legal justification before it could go to war.

No. It could supply this at a later date if surprise was an essential component in securing victory. But anyone can offer a legal justification for anything.  

Violence was acceptable, but only if it was necessary to vindicate a legal right.

A claim to a legal right. But anyone can have such a thing with regard to anybody at all. Grotius was sent to prison by his own people. He illegally escaped and ran away. This was very naughty of him. 

Sovereigns had to argue that another country had failed to pay a debt, unacceptably interfered with trade relations, violated a treaty obligation, or committed some other wrong that was considered an acceptable cause for war.

Acceptability doesn't matter. Winning does. People who don't accept that you have conquered and enslaved them stop being able to accept anything other than a bullet to the back of the head.  

This practice received formal legal sanction by the states that signed the Peace of Westphalia in 1648, when they recognized that those who would go to war must make “a lawful Cognizance of the Cause.”

Also, Ambassadors must not bite each other. Anyway, Westphalia has nothing to do with Anglo-Saxon jurisprudence. England was consumed by Civil War. It wasn't a signatory to any of the Westphalian treaties.  

Sovereigns took this obligation seriously, always issuing war manifestos to explain their reasons for entering a conflict as fighting began.

Some did some of the time. Some didn't any of the time.  

They did this with the understanding that without such a claim, violence is not war. It is crime: murder, assault, kidnapping, and theft.

All of which were perfectly legal if committed on darkies in distant lands.  On the other hand, if you were a pirate, it might be a good idea to pay a bit of cash for 'letters of marque' otherwise your ill gotten gains might be confiscated by the State. 

For the past eight decades, legitimate grounds for war have been much more narrowly defined.

by useless tossers.  

The current international system rests on the premise that the use of force by one state against another is prohibited, even criminal, unless undertaken in self-defense or with collective authorization by the UN Security Council.

everything turns out to be self-defence. Saddam might have WMD. Maduro might be selling drugs to our kids. Afghans may be refusing to let girls go to school. That's totes triggering for our women.  

War is not considered a discretionary policy instrument, and the unlawful use of force does not give the perpetrator legal rights.

Nor does the lawful use of force if the other guy kicks your fucking head in.  

Whereas conquering territory used to be enough to gain title to it, if a state today acquires another’s territory through an illegal use of force, the rest of the world is under a duty not to recognize its claims of sovereignty over the territory.

That may be true, de jure. It has never been true de facto. Turkey still has a goodly portion of Northern Cyprus. It is still a NATO member.  

Countries have violated these rules, sometimes gravely. But even rule-breaking states have offered legal rationales, recognizing that other states—and their own citizens—believe that killing people and taking their land and property requires justification, not merely power.

But justification is easily supplied. Sadly, if you can't hold what you try to grab, justification can't help you.  

The Trump administration is no longer trying to work within this system.

Nor did the first Trump administration. So what?  

For the past year, it has been attacking and dismantling the legal infrastructure of the existing order. It is sanctioning judges and lawyers who work at the International Criminal Court so that crimes cannot be prosecuted.

It is curbing a nuisance- nothing more.  

It is throwing up trade barriers,

which any country is entitled to do 

breaching World Trade Organization agreements and retreating from the norm of free trade that once underwrote global stability.

No. The idea was that 'free trade' would make us richer and richer thanks to Intellectual Property and 'exorbitant privilege' etc. Sadly, though a few got very rich, many in the US ended up worse off. 

It is failing to pay its dues to the United Nations and withdrawing from or violating countless treaties.

Which it is perfectly entitled to do.  

And it is openly threatening sovereign states and territories—Venezuela today, Colombia, Cuba, Greenland, and Mexico tomorrow—not with lawful UN Security Council–authorized measures but with unlawful unilateral force and coercion.

If it is unlawful, why aren't these two Law Professors trying to bring a suit against Trump? There are people in the US who say they are 'sovereign citizens' and thus it is unlawful for the police to arrest them for being drunk while driving.  

Because so many countries depend on the United States for their defense, their economic stability, or both, all but a few have been mere bystanders to the destruction.

As have these two Law Professors. 

NO MORE RULES

Trump rules. Maduro drools.  

It would be bad enough to return to the prewar international system,

when the Kellogg-Briand pact had abolished war? 

in which states engaged in looting and conquest openly and unapologetically.

rather than in a furtive and shame-faced manner?  

It was a time when leaders launched wars based on the violation of a vast array of legal rights—and the people suffered the consequences of the widespread violence that followed.

This doesn't happen if you have enough nukes to blow up the world. What these two cretins don't get is that NATO has had a first-strike offensive doctrine.  My point is that things got worse, not better, after 1945. Wars are survivable. Nuclear holocaust- not so much. But that was the world into which these two cretins were born. 

But what may be in store could be even worse.

Nuclear holocaust. These guys have been living in a fantasy world for the last five decades. What the Ukraine war teaches is- 'if you have nukes, don't give them up.' If Taiwan really wants to be independent, it must do what North Korea did- viz. get nukes.  

In the short term, the world faces deep instability; leaders may sometimes invoke the postwar rules but may also increasingly ignore them, depending on what is convenient. This is a recipe for unrelenting conflict,

No. There are red-lines when it comes to the nuclear powers. 

as states would be in doubt about what the rules are and therefore unsure of how to avoid provoking violence.

This is silly. States know that any rule has exceptions or loopholes. Still, if you fuck with a stronger power, you may get your ass kicked.  

Until a clear set of rules takes hold, the world will be a profoundly dangerous place.

Not if you can blow up the world. That's the danger which focuses the minds of grown-ups. Law Professors are welcome to talk puerile shite. After all, lawyers often have to stand in front of a judge talking utter bollocks.  

A longer-term possibility is a world in which states are no longer prohibited from resorting to force and at least one superpower acts as if there are no rules at all.

In other words, what if the world remains what it is?  

In this world, not only would the rules be unpredictable, they would depend entirely on the impulses of whoever happens to command the most coercive power at a given moment.

The world is already unpredictable- up to a point. But one rule hasn't been broken- viz. direct military conflict between two nuclear powers. You can have 'plausibly deniable' terrorist or proxy attacks. But you don't have and haven't had direct conflict. Why? One side or the other would implement a first strike.  

U.S. officials have discarded the idea of legal constraints altogether.

If there is no legal constraint on stockpiling enough nukes to blow up the world, then legal constraints don't matter in the slightest.  


What is worrying is that the Trump administration seems to be ushering in such a world. The day after the United States kidnapped Maduro and his wife in Venezuela, the senior Trump aide Stephen Miller explained the administration’s thinking in an interview with the CNN host Jake Tapper. “We live in a world, in the real world, Jake, that is governed by strength, that is governed by force, that is governed by power,” Miller said. “These are the iron laws of the world since the beginning of time.”

Putin had hinted that he might do nuclear proliferation into Latin America. Trump is willing to appease him up to a point. But the US military needs to show it can do force projection of a very sophisticated type such that no one is tempted to go down that road. One could say action against Saddam had a similar basis. Don't forget, North Korea was once included in the 'axis of evil'. Then they tested nukes and delivery systems. Trump is affable to the fat fuck who rules that country. I suppose Trump will use the excuse of the current unrest in Iran to hit a few more installations connected with the regime's nuclear ambitions.  

Neither Miller nor anyone else in the administration offered any real legal justification for launching a military assault on Venezuela—an operation that killed at least 75 people.

Maduro had been indicted just like Noriega.  

There has been no legal justification, either, for the plan Trump announced on social media to seize “between 30 and 50 MILLION Barrels” of Venezuelan oil.

In other words, legal justifications only matter to guys who might get paid a little money for providing them. The same is true of Voodoo justifications. Why did Trump not pay some nice Voodoo practitioner to say 'Baron Samedi commands the rendition of Maduro'? Is it because Trump is RACIST?  No. It is because Voodoo practitioners illegally entered Mar e Lago and ate his puppy dog.  

Instead, the State Department shared an image of the U.S. president emblazoned with the words “This is OUR Hemisphere,” and Trump styled himself in a Truth Social post as the “Acting President of Venezuela.” Now, the administration has begun to turn its sights on Greenland. A White House statement issued days after the capture of Maduro claims that the United States “needs” Greenland and that acquiring the territory is a “national security priority.”

Why? China is increasingly turning to the Arctic as a cheaper and shorter route to Europe & America. Also it avoids 'choke points' like the Malacca straits or the Red Sea. This means Greenland would be a valuable acquisition for 'belt & road'. Greenlanders would like a bidding war with the EU, China & America having to raise their offers. Trump is pre-empting that bidding war. Europe now has the choice of either surrendering their claim or else putting boots on the ground (rapid deployment capacity). But this is a bad time to try this because Russia is increasing pressure on Ukraine. In other words, if the EU does nothing while Trump raises the number of US troops in Greenland, then, de facto, it is American. The Greenlanders will have to accept whatever the US chooses to offer them. China will be frozen out.  

What is so troubling about the Trump administration’s words and actions is not just that the administration is breaking the law.

This may trouble those who make their living from the law. It doesn't affect any one else.  

And it is: the intervention in Venezuela clearly violates the UN Charter’s prohibition on the use of force.

But the US has a Security Council veto.  

But more than that, U.S. officials have discarded the idea of legal constraints altogether.

No. US officials expect American soldiers to obey orders. The law is a tool of government. 'Lawfare' as championed by Law Professors is a chimera.  

The only constraint, Trump said in an interview with The New York Times last week, is his “own morality.”

In which case, we are all truly fucked.  

There is no real argument to defend the government’s behavior. No pretense. No attempt to persuade. When a policy is announced in an online post, without explanation or justification, one has the unsettling sense that its makers see no need to bother cloaking it with a lie. A system of rules can survive some hypocrisy, but nihilism will bring it down.

Law Professors want politicians to pretend that what they teach means something. But practitioners of Voodoo have a similar desire.  

At the same time, the Trump administration is acting as though the threat or use of force alone can grant it legal entitlements.

Whereas my legal entitlement not to be mugged isn't based on the threat or use of force by the Police.  

Gunboat diplomacy, roundly renounced when war was outlawed, has returned.

It returned in 1989 when Panama was invaded.  

The United States is using oil blockades, coercive seizures, and military threats to extract political and economic concessions from other countries.

As it was doing to Iraq between 1990-2003.  

This is an attempt to assert that power alone creates rights, regardless of reason.

Rights without the power to enforce them are empty. That's the reason Laws and lawyers can't achieve very much.  

A world in which the powerful no longer feel the need to justify themselves is not merely unjust.

If you are going to rape and kill a baby, kindly have the decency to employ a Law Professor to write up a justification for your actions.  

It is barbaric: operations to kill, steal, and destroy are severed from any claim of right. That world does not have a legal order at all.

In other words, if you went to Law Skool in the hope of suing the Federal Government until it gave up all claim to 'Turtle Island' and evacuated the White and Black population from the territory of the continental USA, then you wasted your money and your time. You should have sued the Government to implement free and compulsory gender reassignment surgery on all practicing male heterosexuals. 

It has only force, guided by one man’s whims.

Which is what the US Constitution permits provided Congress & SCOTUS backs POTUS. Law Professors, like Voodoo practitioners can do shit about this.  

Tuesday, 13 January 2026

Gordon Brown on why girls in London should be raped

The Labour party may well implode over the course of this year. One man who seems wholly unconcerned about this is Gordon Brown. He writes in Project Syndicate about 

Ratcheting Up the Pressure on Afghanistan’s Gender Apartheid

This is because in pubs and working men's clubs across England's green and pleasant land, the hot topic for discussion is getting the Taliban to shave regularly and appoint more lesbians of colour to important offices of State. 

Despite recent efforts to make gender apartheid an international crime

like being Jewish?  

and to charge Afghanistan, countries have begun resuming relations with the Taliban regime.

Russia was the first, and so far is the only, country to fully recognize the Taliban regime. But the Chinese always maintained such relations. China counts in that part of the world. Most Central Asian countries have Ambassador level ties with Kabul. 

The United Nations must accelerate efforts

it has zero influence.  

to hold the Taliban accountable for its denial of girls’ and women’s rights, particularly their right to an education.

The Taliban can rely on the Russian and maybe also the Chinese veto.  As for Field Marshal Munir, he may have his own problems with the Taliban but he is an Islamist. He doesn't think Pussy Riot should rule the neighbouring country. 

Brown doesn't seem to realize that the West can no longer interfere in the internal affairs of non-Western countries. 


EDINBURGH – As we enter a new year, 2.13 million primary-school-aged children remain out of school in Afghanistan, while 2.2 million girls have been excluded from secondary education since the Taliban’s 2021 ban, part of a broader campaign to erase women from public life.

Because women in public life were so useless the Taliban was able to take over with nary a shot fired once Biden cut and ran.  

But despite this egregious abuse of human rights

Iraqi human rights were upheld very well by Blair & Bush- thinks nobody at all. 

(which Richard Bennett, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on human rights in Afghanistan,

he was appointed in 2022 after the Taliban took over. He is utterly useless.  

has labeled “gender apartheid”),

what label does he give to Whites invading and occupying a Muslim country? Crusader apartheid?  

countries have begun resuming relations with the Taliban regime.

The Taliban supports the Iranian regime. Pakistan too is cautiously supportive portraying the current unrest as purely economic in origin (though the hint is that it is a Jewish conspiracy).  

The UN mission to Afghanistan noted in a 2025 human-rights report that the Taliban regime has intensified its restrictions on girls and women. International negotiations, including the Doha meetings hosted by the UN and Qatar, have made no progress on the matter, owing to the Taliban’s insistence on excluding women’s organizations from any talks and refusal even to discuss girls’ rights. Given this, it is hardly surprising that global mediators and the Taliban have not established a working group focused on female education.

Because it is a non-issue. If Afghan men want their daughters to get an education, that is what they will get. Don't mess with Afghan dudes.  


Worse, restoring normal relations with the Taliban regime means relinquishing countries’ only leverage – international isolation, further diminishing prospects for restoring access to education.

Pakistan's attitude does matter but that has nothing to do with women's rights. China seems keen to develop the country because it has a lot of 'rare earth' and other such resources.  

Last July, Russia became the first country to recognize the Taliban government and restore full diplomatic relations – without securing any concessions on girls’ and women’s rights.

How strange! Putin is well known for his support for Pussy Riot.  

This followed the Russian Supreme Court’s decision in April to remove the Taliban’s classification as a terrorist organization, allowing for closer security cooperation against the Islamic State affiliate in Afghanistan (ISIS-K) that attacked Russia in 2024.

There you have it. If Afghanistan is useful in the fight against Islamic State, it will have de facto recognition from all and sundry.  


China, for its part, accepted the credentials of an ambassador from the Taliban regime in January 2024, but stopped short of de jure recognition of the government, some key members of which remain under UN sanctions. That has not prevented China from pursuing closer economic ties with Afghanistan. Chinese companies have made significant investments in Afghanistan’s resource sectors. In August, Foreign Minister Wang Yi visited Kabul to discuss the country joining China’s Belt and Road Initiative.

China matters. The UN matters only about as much as Gordon Brown matters.  

After Afghanistan’s falling out with Pakistan, previously the Taliban’s biggest supporter, in October, India upgraded its ties with the regime, including by formally reopening its embassy in Kabul. That same month, Afghan Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi, a sanctioned official who required a travel waiver from the UN Security Council, visited India and proclaimed that “the future of India-Afghanistan relations seems very bright.”

This is a useful bargaining chip against Islamabad.  

Even more concerning, some European countries have increased engagement with the Taliban as part of a push to deport failed Afghan asylum seekers, lending credibility to the regime despite its persecution of girls and women. This stands in stark contrast to the efforts to make gender apartheid an international crime, which in Afghanistan’s case would imply imposition of further sanctions.

In other words, we should import lots of Afghans to rape girls in London so as to protest against girls not being allowed to go to school in Kabul.  

In July, the Pre-Trial Chamber of the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Haibatullah Akhundzada and Abdul Hakim Haqqani, two senior Taliban officials charged with gender-based persecution.

That's all very well, but what if the Taliban retaliates by putting a price on the head of judges in the Hague? The US may impose financial sanction of judges, but jihadis will chop off your head.  

Despite this progress, outside powers have become less interested in confronting the regime, appearing to justify this, at least in part, by weak internal opposition. Whereas India, Iran, and Russia backed forces that put the Taliban under real pressure in the 1990s, there is no organized armed opposition in Afghanistan this time around.

Pakistan is trying to ally with the Tajiks under Ahmed Masood.  

The United States, however, has taken a hostile attitude toward Afghanistan, which President Donald Trump recently called “a hellhole” after an Afghan man killed two National Guard members. As a result, the administration has stopped issuing visas to Afghan nationals and vowed to re-examine every immigrant from Afghanistan who entered the country under Trump’s predecessor, Joe Biden.

Trump can always send Afghans to some Central American or African shithole.  

Up until now, negotiations at the UN on gender apartheid in Afghanistan have focused more on advocacy than on binding agreements, although there have been calls more recently to classify it as a crime against humanity.

Shitheads classifying shite don't matter if they have no military or economic power. China has both. If you can't pressurize China, you can't pressurize Afghanistan.  

The 59th session of the UN Human Rights Council, held in June-July 2025, debated this matter, and Bennett, the special rapporteur, has persistently advocated referring such crimes to the ICC, making girls’ rights a condition for engagement with the Taliban, and devising mechanisms to hold the regime accountable.

ICC issued warrants for Netanyahu & Gallant. Going after Jews is one thing. Go after Jihadis and they may suicide-bomb your ass. That is, if they can be bothered.  


While no treaty amendments or sanctions have been adopted yet, the UN’s Sixth Committee (Legal) has advanced a draft global treaty targeting crimes against humanity.

Trump is putting the financial squeeze on the UN to get rid of this sort of useless shite.  

Further discussions about the treaty, expected later this month, should consider codifying gender apartheid as a crime under international law.

Death should be outlawed under international law. I'm not getting any younger you know.  

Such a move would bolster efforts to pressure the Taliban. The Security Council, to its credit, has sought to do this in its briefings, but the UN system currently lacks a unified enforcement strategy.

So does the Institute of Socioproctology which banned death three years ago. We don't have the money to arrest the Grim Reaper. Kindly contribute to our kick-start campaign.  


Pressuring the Taliban to end its gender apartheid is not only a moral imperative; it is also a strategic one.

It is futile. 

Afghanistan’s population has swelled to more than 42 million and is only growing: Iran and Pakistan forcibly returned 2.6 million Afghan refugees in 2025 alone. This huge influx has strained an already teetering economy. But escaping poverty will be impossible so long as the Taliban denies half its population the chance to be educated and join the labor force.

The solution is female only factories or piece-work done by women within their own homes.  


Kanni Wignaraja, the UN Assistant Secretary-General and the UN Development Programme’s Regional Director for Asia and the Pacific, put it best: “The primary issue facing Afghanistan’s economic future” is girls’ and women’s rights.

This is silly. The primary issue is transport infrastructure and investment in mineral & metal extraction.  

“That is the issue,” she added, “that will kill the country, economically, socially, politically.”

More Afghan women should get degrees from Bryn Mawr & Princeton. Kanni herself is very productive- thinks nobody at all. 

Education is not a panacea. Most educated Afghan men can't get jobs. That is an urgent problem for the regime. ISIS will happily recruit such people. Women simply don't matter though if you get paid a fat tax-free UN salary, it may be in your interest to pretend otherwise. 

Stiglitz on why we must stop talking to Americans.

Project Syndicate has an article by Stiglitz on  

America’s New Age of Empire

Following the United States' illegal intervention in Venezuela,

if it is illegal, why has Trump not been prosecuted? The answer is that his action was legal according to the only law which counts- viz. American law.  

there is a palpable sense of uncertainty and foreboding, particularly among America's traditional allies.

Sir Keir fears being kidnapped? Don't be silly!  

But it should already be obvious that things will not end well, either for the US or the rest of the world.

This is not obvious at all. Maduro didn't trust his own Army which is why his security detail was Cuban.  The question is whether Delcy Rodriguez can hold on to power. Still, a big donor to Donald, the head of a 'vulture' fund, will probably triple his profit on the forced sale of the Venezuelan oil company's refineries and other assets in the US. That's ten billion dollars right there. Chevron too will make a lot of money. But Exxon's reluctance to return to Venezuela is justified. The Orinoco Basin may become even more ungovernable. 

NEW YORK – US President Donald Trump has drawn a wave of criticism for his actions in Venezuela, violations of international law, disdain for longstanding norms, and threats against other countries – not least allies like Denmark and Canada. Around the world, there is a palpable sense of uncertainty and foreboding. But it should already be obvious that things will not end well, neither for the United States nor the rest of the world.

This isn't obvious. I personally don't think Iran will witness a revolution, but we have to agree that Obama was wrong to try to appease a corrupt, maniacal, regime. Iran's people are now experiencing the joys that Hamas or Hezbollah, with Iranian support, inflicted on the people of Gaza or Lebanon.  

None of this comes as a surprise to many on the left.

What didn't come as a surprise to the rest of us is that Stiglitz was wrong about Chavez. Is there anything he has been right about?  

We still remember US President Dwight Eisenhower’s valedictory warning about the industrial-military complex that had emerged from World War II.

Kennedy won the election by gassing on about an imaginary 'missile gap' with the Soviet Union.  

It was inevitable that a country whose military spending matched that of the rest of the world combined would eventually use its arms to try to dominate others.

Stiglitz was in his twenties when the US intervened massively in Vietnam. It has been doing 'domination' for a very long time now.  

To be sure, military interventions became increasingly unpopular following the American misadventures in Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere.

The mistake is to keep boots on the ground rather than do hit and run or shoot and scoot.  

But Trump has never shown much concern for the will of the American people.

That's why he was never elected President.  

Since he entered politics (and no doubt earlier), he has considered himself above the law, boasting that he could shoot someone on New York’s Fifth Avenue without losing a vote.

Because he didn't just understand what Americans wanted (e.g. protection from low-wage competition/immigrants) he actually gave it to them.  

The January 6, 2021, insurrection at the US Capitol – whose anniversary we have just “celebrated” – showed that he was right. The 2024 election reinforced Trump’s hold on the Republican Party, ensuring that it will do nothing to hold him accountable.

Unless they lose the mid-terms. In that case, Trump turns into a lame deck facing impeachment hearing and Congressional inquiries into Epstein etc. It may be that Trump fears he won't be able to turn Consumer Confidence around by November and so is offering his core supporters foreign policy victories of a type which they may believe will enrich the country going forward. Sadly, Robber Baron tactics seldom make sustainable profits. That is why such Barons disappeared from Europe a long time ago. 

The capture of Venezuela’s dictator, Nicolás Maduro, was brazenly illegal and unconstitutional.

If so, why has no Court case not been brought against him? The plain fact is, if snatching Maduro was illegal, so was Obama snatching Osama. At that time, the US argued that it could violate territorial sovereignty if  'the host government is "unwilling or unable" to suppress a transnational threat emanating from its soil.

As a military intervention, it required congressional notification, if not approval.

This only becomes an issue if Trump loses control of Congress. Everything depends on the mid-terms.  

And even if one stipulates that this was a case of “law enforcement,” international law still requires that such actions be pursued through extradition. One country cannot violate another’s sovereignty or snatch foreign nationals – let alone heads of state – from their home countries. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Russian President Vladimir Putin, and others have been indicted for war crimes, but no one has proposed deploying soldiers to seize them wherever they happen to be.

So, Trump has done what no previous POTUS could. That's a feather in his cap. Sadly, this isn't true. There was once a guy called Saddam Hussein who lived in a country called Iraq. The US invaded and occupied it and then hunted down Saddam and his henchmen. 


Even more brazen are Trump’s subsequent remarks. He claims that his administration will “run” Venezuela and take its oil, implying that the country will not be permitted to sell to the highest bidder. Given these designs, it would appear that a new era of imperialism is upon us.

Only if you believe Imperialism can make a profit. It can't. That's why it ended.  

Might makes right, and nothing else matters. Moral questions – such as whether killing dozens of alleged drug smugglers without any pretense of due process – and the rule of law have been shunted aside, with barely a whimper from Republicans who once proudly touted American “values.”

America values winning. Trump is a winner. Let's see what happens if the Republicans lose the mid-terms by a wide margin. Thankfully, stories of corruption & incompetence in Democratic States- e.g. the Somali 'childcare' scandal which has ended Walz's political career- may save the bacon of the GOP. 


Many commentators have already addressed the implications for global peace and stability.

 They have addressed it by screaming hysterically and soiling their pants. 

If the US claims the Western Hemisphere as its sphere of influence (the “Donroe Doctrine”) and bars China from accessing Venezuelan oil, why shouldn’t China claim East Asia and bar the US from accessing Taiwanese chips?

Because it has to conquer Taiwan first. The US just showed that they have the monopoly on global force projection. Even the newest Chinese aircraft carriers are only about 80 percent the size of the biggest American carriers. Moreover, the Yanks have turned combined operations into a fine art. The Chinese simply don't have the experience of doing any such thing. 

Doing so would not require it to “run” Taiwan, only to control its policies, particularly those allowing exports to the US.

The only way to control Taiwan is to occupy it and jail lots of people.  But, this may kill off the golden goose. The smart guys who make silicon chips will have emigrated to the US by the time you get hold of the place. 

It is worth remembering that the great imperial power of the 19th century, the United Kingdom, did not fare well in the 20th.

It fared very well. In both world wars, the Royal Navy was able to prevent Germany from getting vital raw materials. Indeed, during the Great War, many Germans starved to death. The reason the Brits got rid of the Empire was because they could make more money without incurring much cost out of the British Commonwealth and 'Sterling Zone'.  

If most other countries cooperate in the face of this new American imperialism – as they should –

why don't they? The answer is that they have problems with each other.  

the long-term prospects for the US could be even worse.

Long-term prospects depend on productivity and technological innovation.  

After all, the UK at least tried to export salutary governing principles to its colonies,

e.g. killing coolies who objected to foreign rule 

introducing some modicum of the rule of law and other “good” institutions.

The US has the same intention. But so does the Ayatollah. Good institutions kill women who don't wear hijab.  Women who don't wear hijab are violating God's law- which is above international law. As for the homosexuals, don't get me started, mate. 

By contrast, Trumpian imperialism, lacking any coherent ideology, is openly unprincipled – an expression solely of greed and the will to power.

Which is why it is more acceptable than Biden's sententious shite. Trump is transactional- just like China.  

It will attract the most avaricious and mendacious reprobates that American society can churn up.

America was created by such reprobates. The First Nations were slaughtered or driven off their ancestral land.  

Such characters do not create wealth.

America is very poor. This is its punishment for robbing the indigenous people of their land.  

They direct their energy to rent-seeking:

If you own the underlying resource, your economic rent rises by raising its productivity. You can't get any rent for a pile of stinky shit.  

plundering others through the exercise of market power,

plundering does not involve buying or selling. It involves beating and robbing.  

deception,

e.g. making treaties with the indigenous people and then breaking them once you have the upper hand.  

or outright exploitation.

Slavery? Does Stiglitz really not know the history of his own country?  

Countries dominated by rent-seekers may produce a few wealthy individuals, but they do not end up prosperous.

Which is why the vast majority of Americans are starving.  

Prosperity requires the rule of law.

America's law was 'if you are brown or black, Whitey is welcome to fuck you over.'  

Without it, there is ever-present uncertainty.

There was the certainty, for black and brown people in the US, that Whitey would fuck them over.  

Will the government seize my assets?

Will the Whites seize my ancestral land even if, by treaty, they promised not to do so?  

Will officials demand a bribe to overlook some minor peccadillo?

Trump caught Stiglitz masturbating in public. He let him off after Stiglitz handed over a couple of bucks.  

Will the economy be a level playing field,

which it may have been in the Stone Age.  

or will those in power always give the upper hand to their cronies?

 The US was founded on the principle that those in power would give the upper hand to people of their own race. 

Lord Acton famously observed that, “Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”

Power replied 'Lord Acton is a fuckin' poofter. Most Catlicks are, you know.'  

But Trump has shown that one does not need absolute power to engage in unprecedented corruption.

One does need to have SCOTUS on side as well as a majority (however slender) in Congress.  

Once the system of checks and balances starts to fall apart – as indeed it has in the US – the powerful can operate with impunity.

Which is why the mid-terms are important. The Dems can't afford to be complacent about this. Maybe lurching to the Left will help them. Maybe not.  

The costs will be borne by the rest of society, because corruption is always bad for the economy.

Stupidity is bad for the economy. Corruption can be 'enabling'- i.e. a way to get round stupid laws or regulations.  

One hopes that we have reached “peak Trump,” that this dystopian era of kakistocracy will end with the 2026 and 2028 elections. But Europe, China, and the rest of the world cannot rely on hope alone. They should be devising contingency plans which recognize that the world does not need the US.

They should have started doing this in 2017. China, it must be said, has significantly raised its threat point while reducing its vulnerability. Europe has been playing tiddlywinks.  


What does America offer that the world cannot do without?

Trump just showed us. America can do global force projection. Europe can't go it alone as the Suez Crisis showed. China may be able to match the US in ten years time.  

It is possible to imagine a world without the Silicon Valley giants, because the basic technologies they offer are now widely available. Others would rush in, and they may well establish much stronger safeguards.

Coz that's what the Chinese are all about- right? 

It is also possible to imagine a world without US universities and scientific leadership, because Trump has already done his utmost to ensure that these institutions struggle to remain among the world’s best.

They were doing it to themselves. Harvard now has a remedial math program. Apparently, there are undergraduates who can't do calculus or basic algebra- stuff the Chinese learn by the age of 16. It is said this is because of COVID. But China had a tighter lockdown.  

And it is possible to imagine a world where others no longer depend on the US market.

That is already happening which is why TACO (Trump always chickens out) applies.  

Trade brings benefits, but less so if an imperial power seeks to grab a disproportionate share for itself.

Sadly, 'Immiserizing growth' (increasing output of goods in inelastic demand leads to a fall in revenue (worse terms of trade)) has been around since before I was born. But non-Imperial countries with an advanced manufacturing/service sector gain even more because they don't have to spend on imperial force projection. 

Filling the “demand gap” posed by the US's persistent trade deficits will be a lot easier for the rest of the world than the challenge facing the US of dealing with the supply side.

This would happen in any case.  

A hegemon that abuses its power and bullies others must be left in its own corner.

Hegemons can't be made to go sit in a corner. The reason they are the hegemon is because they can fuck up anyone who tries to fuck with them.  

Resisting this new imperialism is essential for everyone else’s peace and prosperity. While the rest of the world should hope for the best, it must plan for the worst;

Sir Keir should find some nice cellar to hide in. Otherwise Trump may snatch him from 10 Downing Street.  

and in planning for the worst, there may be no alternative to economic and social ostracism – no recourse but a policy of containment.

Lets all stop talking to America. They will cry and cry. Stiglitz himself is constantly in tears because smart people refuse to talk to him. That is why he gave up his plan to conquer the world. If it worked on Stiglitz, it will work on Trump. The King should pretend he is invisible. He should say 'there's a bad smell here but I can't see the fat bastard who must have farted. Probably it is a ghost. Fetch the Archbishop to conduct an exorcism.' Trump will take the hint. He will resign office and go set up a B&B in Vermont with his new husband- Vladimir Putin.