Four former presidents gather under corporate media lights to present democracy as a shared moral inheritance, grounded in unity, civility, and participation. Beneath that performance lies a material history of deregulation, war, surveillance, and repression that produced the very crisis now being discussed. The interview reveals not reflection, but a ruling-class effort to manage legitimacy... Continue Reading →
Rahm Emanuel, AIPAC, and the Cracking Consensus: When Empire Can No Longer Subsidize Its Own Legitimacy
When a man of the system starts changing his tune, it’s not because he found his conscience—it’s because the system itself is under strain, and the machinery that bankrolls and justifies this violence is starting to grind and show its cracks. Look past the campaign chatter and you see the real thing: U.S. power, public... Continue Reading →