Friday 31st of October 2025

the clown vs the "facts".......

 

“Your mom” has become the accidental protagonist of October 2025. Once a throwaway line in online debates, she now features in exchanges at the highest levels of American politics. The unlikely transformation began with S.V. Date, a journalist from the HuffPost, who repeatedly tried to ask the Trump administration difficult questions. Each time, he was met not with answers but with taunts – and, eventually, jokes about his mother.

 

The empire of irony: Why memes are America’s new propaganda
How Trump rules the US with memes and why ‘brain-numbing’ content is the future of politics

By Vitaly Ryumshin

 

The exchanges bordered on the surreal. Instead of officials speaking for the world’s most powerful government, the conversations sounded like teenagers arguing during an online game. Yet the tone reflected something deeper: the complete merger of American politics and internet culture.

It isn’t only White House staff who behave like this. Donald Trump himself runs what looks more like a meme account than the feed of a sitting president. His social media channels are flooded with AI-generated videos – sometimes absurd, sometimes aggressive, always designed to dominate attention.

When the No Kings protests erupted across US cities earlier this year, Trump responded not with appeals for calm, but with digital theatre. He posted videos of himself wearing a golden crown, flying a fighter jet, and spraying demonstrators with an unidentified brown mist. His vice president, J.D. Vance, soon joined in, releasing “royal” memes of his own. The White House, once the stage of solemn addresses, now operates like a TikTok studio.

Many in the US establishment find this behaviour degrading, a sign of immaturity unbecoming of high office. Yet critics miss the larger point: America’s political opposition is no better. The Democrats, equally addicted to meme warfare, have been fighting back with their own AI-generated absurdities. During the recent government shutdown, Republicans circulated deepfakes depicting Democratic leaders as Mexican labourers; Democrats replied with videos of cats lecturing viewers about how Trump is “destroying America.”

If one puts aside moral panic and aesthetic snobbery, it becomes clear that a revolution in political communication is under way. Politics is no longer about polished speeches or carefully scripted interviews. It has entered the age of post-irony: where complexity is replaced by accessibility, and outrage outperforms nuance.

In this sense, Trump is not the clown at the centre of the circus; he is the ringmaster. He has gathered around himself a team that understands the new language of mass communication. His 28-year-old press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, was the first to use the now-famous “your mom” retort. Having grown up online, she instinctively knows what catches fire on social media. Trump’s informal adviser – his 19-year-old son Barron – also belongs to a generation fluent in memes, irony, and viral timing.

Trump himself, for all his flaws, remains unusually open to new trends. He is one of the few political figures of his age who recognises that the digital public square is governed not by logic or decorum, but by the rules of entertainment. This is why his critics, armed with fact-checking and moral indignation, consistently lose the information war. They are trying to argue; he is performing.

A meme, even a crude one, engages emotions faster than any policy paper. It mocks, entertains, and sticks in memory. Viewers might cringe when they see “Dark Reaper Trump” stalking Democrats to a heavy-metal soundtrack, but they remember it. The content may be brain-melting, but that is precisely the point: it bypasses rational resistance.

So far, this new form of political communication remains largely an American phenomenon. Few other governments have adopted it systematically. But its logic is universal, and its spread inevitable. In Russia, the groundwork already exists. Our advertising and PR industries long ago learned to use internet humour, irony, and meme culture to sell products. Politics, however, has remained more conservative – more formal, more serious, less entertainment-driven than in the United States. 

That distinction will not last forever. By early 2025, more than 80 percent of Russians were using the internet daily. Online culture now shapes public moods, values, and even voting behaviour. It is only a matter of time before political communication catches up.

When it does, the American experiment under Trump will serve as a case study – not for imitation, but for understanding. The United States, for all its talk of freedom and democracy, has turned political life into a meme economy where attention is the only currency and ridicule the main weapon. 

Russia does not need to copy this model. But it cannot ignore it either. As digital communication becomes the battlefield of the 21st century, knowing how memes move minds may prove as essential as knowing how armies move borders.

 

This article was first published by the online newspaper Gazeta.ru and was translated and edited by the RT team 

https://www.rt.com/news/627079-empire-of-irony-us-memes/

 

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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

 

CARTOON AT TOP BY Dasha Zaitseva/Gazeta.Ru

west's illusions....

 

Russia, Reality, and the Bureaucratic Degeneration of the West

Bryan Anthony Reo, October 30, 2025


A philosophical and moral comparison between modern Russia and the West shows that Russia remains a bastion of realism, strength, and self-sacrifice, whereas the West has lost its will to live, turning into a civilization of moral weakness, illusions, and self-destruction.

 

The modern West despises Russia on a philosophical level because the West is a decaying, hollowed-out husk functioning under slave morality, while Russia is a masculine, strong polity that operates within the framework of master morality as an actor willing to make tough decisions and to sacrifice to pursue the interests associated with those tough decisions. The West wants to hurl itself into the abyss and drag Russia with it because the West has the desire to survive but has lost the will to live due to the desire being unfocused. The West is no longer “real” but is “hyperreal,” and it has a nihilistic resentment of Russia for existing in the realm of reality. 

Master and Slave Moralities: Russia’s Strength Versus Western Decay

I recently heard a British commentator declare, “Conquest is not an acceptable means by which to change borders or gain territory.” I would ask him, “Why?” and await a reasoned defense.

If (or rather when) none could be provided, I would follow up: “Is it because, three hundred years ago, your forebears excelled at conquest and you do not, and so slave morality dictates that what you are no longer willing or able to do is now suddenly ‘wrong’?” Conquest is pronounced immoral by the descendants of some of history’s greatest conquerors precisely because their societies are hollowed out, exhausted, and incapable of wielding power in the old fashion. Now, their only acceptable instruments are endless paperwork, litigation in international courts, and the elaborate rituals of bureaucratic procedure, along with incessant whining with threats of sanctions and financial maneuvering. The French apologize for being heirs of Charles Martel; the British must apologize for William of Normandy and Queen Victoria. Today, lawyers and bureaucrats are the new heroes, embodiments of physical weakness elevated into virtue.

 

The Inversion of Values: Bureaucrats as Heroes

Russia, by contrast, is disliked in the West precisely because it refuses this inversion of values. Russia is willing to fight to advance its core interests and to suffer casualties, whereas Europeans will not risk the indignity of political accusations of bias, prejudice, or worse, to defend even their own coasts against irregular migrant landings. They certainly will not risk their lives in intense infantry combat. In Russia, the world’s oldest truths—necessity, risk, and sacrifice—retain their force. In Europe, they have become abstractions, faint echoes of a distant past. The Russians serve as a living mirror, reflecting the consequences of European slave morality: as Thucydides is recorded as having said, ‘the strong do what they will, the weak suffer what they must.’

While the West wills itself to die despite its supposed desire to live, Russia acts on the world and regional stage as a society that has a telos and a purpose of being on which to focus and center its civilizational energy and its collective psyche 

This contrast is moral, psychological, and metaphysical. Russia operates within the realm of master morality, asserting will, endurance, and consequence. Western Europe operates in slave morality, sanctifying passivity, procedure, and moralizing weakness as the ultimate virtue. Brussels, had it existed when Attila crossed the Rhine, would have sent a delegation to inform him that his conduct violated international law.

 

Reality vs. Hyperreality: The West’s Self-Imposed Illusion

Russia is not Attila, but it acts according to realities of power, tradition, and human nature, while Europe has insulated itself in a bubble of privilege, only possible in the absence of external disruption. And when Russia supposedly disrupts that comfort (by being an agent of reality and acting within the realm of reality and master morality), Europeans are livid and terrified (or they simulate being this way); they are confronted by the reminder that their moral self-image is sustained by denial and illusion. Russia has no ambition or desire to sweep across Central Europe and reach the Rhine; this is not 1975, and the Soviet Union is gone, but if the Russians were intent on doing this, the most Brussels could muster would be a meek proclamation of “Please don’t do that; we will have to sanction you for the 20th time if you do. We will take your electronically frozen money.” Is this what Europeans think passes for reality today?

Russia is reality. Russia is a nation of people willing to work, endure, suffer, and sacrifice to build their future. Russia is a Guards Tank Army on the move to confront a threat to the homeland. Russia is the bearer of the torch of the Greeks, the Romans, and the Byzantines, the remnant of true traditional Western Civilization.

 

The Will to Live and the Will to Die

The West, as it is today, is a phantom, a specter, a hollowed-out, emaciated inmate who was a prisoner of his own lies, who tried to sustain himself on inversions and perversions of reality and found that his own propaganda offered him no sustenance.

The West of today is the feel-good middle-aged woman, telling a student on the playground, “Whenever you have a problem, cry about it and run to tell an adult.” Russia is the boy on the playground who refuses to be picked on and decides if another boy slaps him and tries to abuse him and denigrate him, he will resolve the problem by tackling that boy to the ground and solving the problem on his own, immediately, on the spot, with force if necessary.

In the modern world, the phenomenal world we perceive is no longer reality nor even a representation of reality; it is a copy of a copy, a second-hand imitation, a distortion. Simulation has replaced reality, and illusion has been accepted as truth. Bureaucrats, in this environment, are themselves simulations of functionaries who themselves would be standing in for statesmen: second-hand counterfeits of leadership, performing the gestures of power while reality proceeds elsewhere. Plato’s cave has deepened; we no longer even watch shadows of reality, but projections of projections, and we insist that these shadows are reality.

Russia’s engagement with the world, by contrast, reintroduces reality, force, consequence, and decisive action into a sphere dominated by imitation. Russia, as a last resort, resolves crises by direct action, even at great cost. Western bureaucrats resolve crises by denial, scheming, politicking, or procrastination, endlessly passing responsibility to the next generation, and celebrating impotence as a virtue. They are like a man unable to consummate his union with his bride, who proclaims that the union’s value lies precisely in its incompleteness. Few truly believe such nonsense; it is a ritualized defense against reality, a testament to moral inversion. The West proudly proclaims, “I am strong precisely because I am weak! My impotence is proof of my virility!” hoping that reality never challenges this nonsense and hoping against hope that an actual strong man does not happen by who proclaims, “Your weakness gives you no authority; I will not submit to you, particularly in light of how pathetic you are.”

The civilization sending their young to euthanasia clinics for being horrendously depressed by the nightmarish hell created by the agents of unreality and hyper-reality dares to presume to mock Russians who sacrificed their lives in places such as Bakhmut to advance the flag of their homeland and secure the interests of their homeland. Brussels will mock the sacrifices Russian soldiers made on the battlefield, claiming they were “fed into a meat grinder,” but Brussels gleefully helps feed European youth into euthanasia clinics as an expedient way to get rid of their restless youth population, whom they have failed in every conceivable metric.

It is as though the West desires, somehow, by some means, to live, but the will dictates that it die because as a civilization it lacks the will to live, and it is captive and beholden to the insatiable will that drives it to collapse in on itself and commit civilizational suicide through its collective apathy. The West can do as it wants, but it cannot will what it wants. There is a raw, unchanneled desire to live, but it has no direction, no telos, no higher purpose, no reason for its existence other than that it exists for its own sake and not for any higher metaphysical truth. The West desires, somehow, to live, simply to live for the sake of living, but not for the sake of something greater, some viable and meaningful telos. This is not sufficient for Western civilization (really an anti-civilization at this point) to overcome the insatiable, unrestrained will to implode and collapse in on itself. The siren song of the abyss lures in the Western world, and there is no overarching reason for the West not to sail their civilization straight at the rocks.

While the West wills itself to die despite its supposed desire to live, Russia acts on the world and regional stage as a society that has a telos and a purpose of being on which to focus and center its civilizational energy and its collective psyche. Russia exists in harmony with telos and acts within the realm of reality, not merely as an agent of appearance or representation in a pseudo-real hyper-reality as with the West.

We no longer operate in the World as Will and Representation, but rather Hyperreality as Corrupted Will and Misrepresentation. The cancerous pseudo-reality in the mind of the Western world, at least three centuries in the making, has metastasized into a systemic, widespread ailment afflicting the entire body politic. The corruption is so complete that policies that are perversions of truth, which actively promote death, are proclaimed to be the reality of life, while the reality of life is denounced as a corruption. There is nothing left in the West that is actually real or true except for the reality and truth of its comprehensive corruption. Protagoras once remarked that “man is the measure of all things,” and now we find that this relativism in the West has reached its inevitable penultimate stage where Western civilization has become Saturn, devouring its own children. The final act of this doomed civilization may be about to begin. The West does not Will toward the Good or even Will toward power; it Wills toward nothingness.

Since Russia functions as an agent of reality in a world of hyper-reality, it acts in accordance with historical precedent, human nature, and the tragic dimension of existence, principles long abandoned by the West. The lesson is clear: where Europe celebrates shadows and paper, Russia still engages with substance. Where bureaucrats simulate virtue, Russia acts decisively. And in this confrontation, the modern European self-image, its moral certainties, its procedural rituals, and its simulation of statecraft are laid bare.

 

Bryan Anthony Reo is a licensed attorney based in Ohio and an analyst of military history, geopolitics, and international relations

 

https://journal-neo.su/2025/10/30/russia-reality-and-the-bureaucratic-degeneration-of-the-west/

 

READ FROM TOP.

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.