By R. Cort Kirkwood President Donald Trump and Vice President J.D. Vance took Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to the White House woodshed today. The two leaders turned the diminutive former comedian over their knees and spanked him good and hard. Vance told Zelensky he was “disrespectful” to “litigate” for more aid in front of the far-left, hate-Trump news media. After Vance was finished...
Like Tracking a Whirlwind (Trump vs. the Managerial State)
By Wayne Allensworth Keeping up with the Trump White House is like tracking a whirlwind. Donald Trump knew he had to act quickly to exploit his electoral triumph and is doing so. Here are some thoughts on what is happening: As far as a peace agreement in Ukraine goes, we have been hearing a lot about a potential deal to secure U.S. rights to rare earth metals there. Trump has said he wants...
The Return of “History”
By Wayne Allensworth The globalist Blob emerged as the Cold War ended. A transnational elite that shared more in common with each other than with the people of the countries they supposedly represented was gleeful after the Soviet collapse, anticipating the triumphal march of “democratic capitalism” (read: Woke corporatism) across the globe, destroying any organic institutions or social...
Trump’s False Assumptions About Russia (Incentives to Negotiate)
By Wayne Allensworth American Remnant supports President Donald Trump. He is fighting the good fight on behalf of our people. But Trump is receiving false or distorted information on some issues. He needs to reevaluate and think through what he says about Russia, for instance. Someone — perhaps Vice President J.D. Vance — must tell the president that his assumptions about Russia, especially its...
Trump the Disrupter (Some Advice for the new Administration)
By Wayne Allensworth President Donald Trump has wasted no time in his attempt to right the globalist course taken by Washington during previous administrations. His barrage of executive orders attests to that. Despite all of Trump’s American exceptionalism talk, his actions thus far, as well as his inaugural speech, point the nation in a different direction than some might expect. Trump isn’t...
Biden Authorizes Long-range Missile Strikes on Russia (What Will Putin Do?)
By Wayne Allensworth White House permission for Ukraine to use ATACMS missile systems to strike targets in Russia, apart from territories annexed by Moscow, was in the works for some time. President Joe Biden was reluctant to greenlight such strikes, and wished to require certain restrictions on how those missiles could be used. Russian President Vladimir Putin has warned that the use of such...
Globalist Hawks Want the Ukraine War to Continue
by Wayne Allensworth For some time, we have been reading about the United States and the United Kingdom’s possibly permitting Ukraine to use American and British long-range missiles against targets not only in the warzone, but also deep in Russian territory. The weapons mentioned most often are British Storm Shadow (France also uses a variant of this system called SCALP) and American ATACMS...
War and Remembrance (The Good War and the Bloody Shirt)
By Wayne Allensworth If there be any glory in war, let it rest on men like these — Dedication to Audie Murphy’s To Hell and Back The elaborate and politicized commemoration of the 80th anniversary of the D-Day invasion of Normandy, held on a bluff overlooking what had been Omaha Beach on that momentous day, provoked a wave of memories and emotions in me that I had not anticipated...
Ideology Skews Foreign Policy
By Wayne Allensworth Professor John Mearsheimer is a leading proponent of a realist foreign policy based on national interests and maintaining a balance of power among the major countries. In the video below, however, Professor Mearsheimer admits that the theory, which assumes that the great powers act according to a realist view of the world, doesn’t always work. A number of wildcards can skew...
The Rise of Putin and the Ukraine Endgame (A View from the Bridge)
By Wayne Allensworth It was November in Moscow, 24 years ago. I was taking a walk, killing a little time before my next meeting with one of my Russian contacts. As I had often done in the past, I walked across Red Square, past the red walls and golden domes of the Kremlin. The air was cold, but not yet frosty, and I pulled my collar closer around my neck. I was headed for the Bolshoy Moscow...


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