Finally, whether the US elites can accept this or not, the US Empire is coming to an end. With Hillary, we would have had a Titanic-like denial up to the last moment which might well have come in the shape of a thermonuclear mushroom over Washington DC. Trump, however, might use the remaining power of the USA to negotiate the US global draw-down thereby getting the best possible conditions for his country. Frankly, I am pretty sure that all the key world leaders realize that it is in their interest to make as many (reasonable) concessions to Trump as possible and work with him, rather than to deal with the people whom he just removed from power.
If Trump can stick to his campaign promises he will find solid and reliable partners in Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping. Neither Russia nor China have anything at all to gain from a confrontation or, even less so, a conflict with the USA. Will Trump have the wisdom to realize this and use it for the benefit of the USA? Or will he continue with his anti-Chinese and anti-Iranian rhetoric?
Only time will tell.
The fact that politicians pretend that votes provide approval for a candidate's agenda, however, remain a convenient fictions for candidates β especially presidential ones β who , despite routinely garnering votes from under 30 percent of the eligible voters β and under 20 percent of the population overall β nevertheless claim to have the approval of "the people."
At least 95% of incumbents in Congress typically retain office. That is a higher proportion than in the SuΒpreme Soviet of the defunct USSR, and a lower turnover rate than in Britainβs hereditary House of Lords where people lose their seats only by dying.And they say we don't have an aristocracy.
As it turns out, a surprising amount of science coverage could be described as little more than marketing for elite research centers. A few commentators have acknowledged part of the problem; Nature magazine, for instance, expressed concern that journalists act as βcheerleadersβ who perform a βpublic-relations serviceβ for scientists, and so the magazine called on scientists to help the press βcast a fair but skeptical eyeβ over the scientific enterprise.It's always easier to just cover press releases unedited than do actual work.