General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsTrump Is Not a Nationalist. He's Something Worse.
This week, Honduras inaugurated a new president, Nasry Asfura, a construction magnate backed by seemingly strange bedfellows: members of the notorious MS-13 gang and President Trump. Mr. Trump had urged Hondurans to vote for Mr. Asfura days before MS-13 gang members posing as election observers threatened to kill anyone who didnt vote for that candidate. Amid weeks of election uncertainty and protests, Mr. Trump warned Hondurans of hell to pay if they chose a different outcome. Mr. Asfuras victory marks the success of Mr. Trumps campaign to resuscitate a political party tainted by its widely known ties to cartels.
The story of how Mr. Trump came to intervene in Honduran politics and align himself with a foreign terrorist organization is essential for understanding the world he is trying to build. He has been meddling in multiple elections in Latin America, and recently captured Venezuelas president, Nicolás Maduro, in a military operation to have him face federal drug trafficking charges. Hes now threatening to arrest the president of Colombia on suspicion of drug trafficking and to bomb cartels in Mexico. His actions may seem contradictory. But there is a coherent logic to them: They expand territorial power for a class of transnational elites who believe theyre above the law.
Last month, Mr. Trump pardoned one of the countrys best-known convicted drug traffickers: Juan Orlando Hernández. Mr. Hernández was the president of Honduras from 2014 to 2022; in that time, there was a steep surge in migration from that country to the United States as families fled his narco-state. In 2024, he was sentenced to 45 years in prison for his role in what the U.S. Department of Justice called one of the largest and most violent drug trafficking conspiracies in the world. He was convicted of conspiring to distribute hundreds of tons of cocaine, reportedly boasting of plans to stuff the drugs up the gringos noses. In explaining his pardon, Mr. Trump relied on a conspiracy theory circulating in conservative circles: that Mr. Hernández was a political prisoner of former President Joe Bidens. It was, in Mr. Trumps words, a witch hunt.
But Mr. Trumps real motivations are hidden in plain sight. Not long after his second inauguration, the Claremont Institute, an influential conservative think tank in California, published a call for him to pardon Mr. Hernández. So did Mr. Trumps longtime friend and fellow felon Roger Stone in a blog post, written with Shane Trejo. Both argued that the pardon would hurt President Xiomara Castro, a democratically elected progressive and the first woman to be president of Honduras. They wrote that it would re-empower the right-wing party, presumably by rehabilitating it.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/29/opinion/prospera-honduras-trump-pardon.html?
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This is about building a global elite that are immune to all laws and controls.
Chilling.
Joinfortmill
(20,449 posts)dutch777
(4,956 posts)Coventina
(29,427 posts)wiggs
(8,721 posts)aggiesal
(10,634 posts)BlueTsunami2018
(4,913 posts)It was always there but they at least tried to make up somewhat plausible cover stories for the imperialism and the fascism was soft.
This fucking guy is just blatant about it.
I suppose in a way its good to finally get it out in the open even though its a bit of a shock to most people. This is how the rulers have always conducted themselves in world affairs, its just rarely this open and yes, honest.
Maybe people will wake up to the fact that our whole system is fucked to the core and weve never been the good guys we pretend to be as a country.