Friday, February 28, 2025

Diplomacy Dies on Live TV as Trump and Vance Gang Up to Bully Ukraine Leader

An excellent, spot on article from The Guardian. Despicable, sickening, and horrifying what is happening to my country and Ukraine and the world.... Molly

Volodymyr Zelenskyy at the Oval Office with Donald Trump and JD Vance on Friday. Photograph: Brian Snyder/Reuters
US president said his horrific blow-up would make ‘great television’ – the White House has never seen anything like it

By  in Washington

This is going to be great television,” Donald Trump remarked at the end. Sure. And as they slipped into the icy depths, the captain of the Titanic probably assured his passengers that this would make a great movie some day.

Trump on Friday presided over one of the greatest diplomatic disasters in modern history. Tempers flared, voices were raised and protocol was shredded in the once-hallowed Oval Office. As Trump got into a shouting match with Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy, a horrified Europe watched the post-second world war order crumble before its eyes.

Never has a US president bullied and berated an adversary, still less an ally, in such a public way. Of course the reality TV star and wrestling fan turned US president had it all play out on television for the benefit of his populist support base – and a certain bare-chested chum in the Kremlin.

Zelenskyy came to the White House to sign a deal for US involvement in Ukraine’s mineral industry to pave the way for an end to the three-year war. The president has inspired many by refusing to flee Kyiv when Russia launched its invasion – “I need ammunition, not a ride” – delivering nightly addresses to rally his people and visiting his troops on the frontlines.

But Trump, a profile in courage who dodged military service in Vietnam because of alleged bone spurs and who hid in the White House during the 6 January 2021 riot, has reportedly described soldiers who die in combat as suckers and losers. He was impeached for trying to strong-arm Zelenskyy in 2019 and last week called him a dictator.

There was a hint of trouble to come when Zelenskyy arrived at the West Wing wearing a dark, long-sleeved shirt – not a suit – and Trump greeted him with a handshake and sarcasm: “Wow, look, you’re all dressed up!”

Inside the Oval Office, which has seen much but never anything quite like this, Zelenskyy thanked Trump for the invitation. At first all was sweetness and light as they fielded questions from reporters.

There was a minor wrinkle over how much Europe support has given Ukraine, which ended with smiles, a playful but pointed tap on Zelenskyy, and ominous words from Trump: “Don’t argue with me.”

But the last 10 minutes of the nearly 45-minute meeting devolved into acrimony and chaos. Zelenskyy found himself ambushed by Trump and his serpentine vice-president, JD Vance. He was expected to sit back and take a beating from Nurse Ratched and Miss Trunchbull. He refused.

Exuding preternatural obnoxiousness, Vance said Joe Biden’s approach had failed and that diplomacy was the way forward. Noting Russia’s betrayals of trust in the past, Zelenskyy challenged: “What kind of diplomacy, JD, you are speaking about? What do you mean?”

Vance, who once declared he didn’t care what happened in Ukraine, was riled. Finger jabbing, he lectured Zelenskyy: “I think it’s disrespectful for you to come into the Oval Office to try to litigate this in front of the American media ... You should be thanking the president for trying to bring an end to this conflict.”

Uh-oh. The politicians and journalists in the room could surely tell this was going off the rails. At one point the Ukrainian ambassador would put her head in her hands. She was all of us.

Zelenskyy tried to push back, asking if Vance had ever been to Ukraine. Vance got angry and spoke of “propaganda tours”. Zelenskyy tried to answer and suggest that the US could feel threatened by Russia some day. Trump interjected: “Don’t tell us what we’re going to feel.”

The men spoke over each other. Raising his voice, the US president said: “You’re not in a good position. You don’t have the cards right now.”

Zelenskyy responded: “I’m not playing cards. I’m very serious, Mr President. I’m the president in a war.”

Trump, pointing an accusing finger and descending into his worst self from the presidential debates, admonished: “You’re gambling with the lives of millions of people. You’re gambling with world war three and what you’re doing is very disrespectful to the country, this country that’s backed you far more than a lot of people say they should have.”

TV pro tip: Trump has spent so many campaign rallies warning about world war three that the phrase has lost its shock value.

Trump and Vance tried to scold Zelenskyy like an ungrateful child. Vance – who recently went to Munich to condemn Europe as being on the wrong side in the culture wars – demanded: “Have you said ‘thank you’ once this entire meeting? No.”

Zelenskyy tried to respond. Trump told him his country was in big trouble. He went on: “The problem is I’ve empowered you to be a tough guy and I don’t think you’d be a tough guy without the United States and your people are very brave. But, you’re either going to make a deal or we’re out.

“And if we’re out, you’ll fight it out and I don’t think it’s going to be pretty … But you’re not acting at all thankful, and that’s not a nice thing.”

How sharper than a serpent’s tooth it is to have a thankless ally!

Zelenskyy looked shellshocked. Trump, the eternal showman, commented on what great TV it would be, then wrote on social media that Zelenskyy “disrespected the United States of America in its cherished Oval Office”.

No deal was done. A planned press conference was cancelled. Zelenskyy drove away empty-handed, having just endured his own diplomatic Chornobyl. As for the rest of Europe, a bust of Winston Churchill, looming over the shoulders of Trump and Vance, may have shed a tear or two.

Please go here for the original article: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/feb/28/trump-zelenskyy-shouting-match-oval-office

Robert B. Hubbell: A Day of Shame as Trump Abandons Ukraine—and Our Allies

This is an excellent article. And I am grateful for those such as Robert Hubbell who never cease in speaking truth to power.

It is hard.... it's so hard to have words... I am staying off social media like Facebook today, with it being Economic Blackout Day, but an alert came in on my phone from our local news station. So I did see the horror show between our nation's president and President Zelensky right away. Shocking. Horrifying. Terrifying. Infuriating. It felt like an intentional setup by Trump and Vance, both sociopathic fascist narcissists, to utterly humiliate and publicly beat the sh*!@ out of Zelensky. Do not underestimate the fury, the brutality, the sheer violence of narcissistic revenge when a malignant narcissist feels "disrespected." Reminded me of how my mother would get when she was enraged. Only this is on the national stage and with global implications. These are such dangerous, scary times.

It is so profoundly distressing, disturbing... and human for millions of us in America and worldwide to feel such despair and outrage and horror. And I thank one of my English friends for the despair he feels as a result of being "hard-wired to hate bullying." We need more of that to be contagious. Truly, we need to lower our tolerance for violence, heal and transform our injured instincts, and stand strongly and fiercely and continuously with those courageous human beings who are unwavering in their commitment to acting on behalf of a highest good for us all. — Molly

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in an interview with NBC News Meet the Press, in Munich, on Feb. 14, 2025.
 

Trump and JD Vance shamed themselves, the Office of the Presidency, the United States of America, and the valor of the Ukrainian people in a disgraceful display of thuggish behavior in the Oval Office. During a Friday press conference, Trump and Vance insulted, threatened, and attempted to extort Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in a way that felt like a “setup” designed to end US support for Ukraine.

As Ron Filipkowski noted on BlueSky (@ronfilipkowski.bsky.social)

Trump and Vance needed to create an incident to provide a justification for their pre-planned abandonment of Ukraine now, then separation from NATO in the near future.

Many in the media are describing the debacle as “extraordinary” and “unprecedented.” Those words conceal the truth of what happened. Reporting in the US immediately devolved into partisan scorekeeping that focused on which members of what parties were supporting or opposing Trump.

Let’s be clear about the significance of Trump's brutish behavior toward Zelensky:

  • Everyone in the world is less safe today because Trump's fragile ego and non-existent negotiating skills could not tolerate a world leader speaking the truth to the American media in Trump's presence.

  • Trump has officially switched sides in Russia’s unprovoked war of aggression against the Ukrainian people, telling Ukraine that it is on its own in defending itself against Russia.

  • Putin is celebrating in the Kremlin because his puppet Donald Trump has finally delivered the “payoff” in the corrupt bargain they struck years ago. Former Russian President Medvedev summed up Moscow’s view of the exchange, saying, “The insolent pig [Zelensky] finally got a slap down in the Oval Office.”

  • The US no longer has any allies in the world. No ally can rationally trust any promise by any representative of the United States after Trump abandoned Ukraine over its refusal to capitulate to blackmail.

The Oval Office meeting was supposed to precede the execution of an agreement in which Ukraine would grant the US the right to exploit Ukraine’s reserves of rare earth metals (which Trump repeatedly called “raw earth materials” during the press conference).

The metals exploitation deal was naked extortion: Trump had made clear before Friday’s meeting that Ukraine would lose US support in the Russian war of aggression if Ukraine did not grant the US hundreds of billions of dollars in mining rights as “repayment” for money and weapons granted to Ukraine without expectation of repayment.

Trump, as usual, was acting like a mafioso boss, extorting Ukraine (for the second time) by demanding a benefit to which the US was not entitled but which Trump believed he could extract by withholding future military support. (Trump used the same tactic in 2019 when he demanded that Ukraine fabricate evidence of Joe Biden's non-existent wrongdoing.)

When President Zelensky arrived at the White House to sign away Ukraine’s mineral rights in exchange for US military support, the day seemed promising. But when Zelensky joined Trump and Vance in the Oval Office, things quickly turned ugly.

A few excerpts from the exchange are included in The Kyiv Independent, Zelensky, Trump get into heated argument while speaking with journalists in Oval Office. As I write, there are few comprehensive summaries of the discussion, so I would appreciate it if readers could post shareable links to reliable sources in the Comments section.

I watched the exchange live. It was sickening. In general, here is how the confrontation unfolded:

In response to Trump's comments and reporters’ questions, Zelensky made the point that Ukraine could not agree to a ceasefire without security guarantees because Putin had failed to honor ceasefires on dozens of occasions in the past.

Trump said that Zelensky should “make an agreement with Russia first,” and worry about the security guarantees later.

When Zelensky pushed back, JD Vance accused Zelensky of being ungrateful for US support and said that Zelensky had campaigned for “the opposition” (Kamala Harris) by making an appearance at a US munitions factory in October 2024.

Trump and Vance then began to shout at Zelensky, berating him, claiming that Ukraine would have lost the war in two weeks without US support. Trump said to Zelensky,

You are not in a good position. You don't have the right cards right now. . . . You're gambling with World War III. And what you're doing is very disrespectful to the country, this country. It's back to you. . . . Your country is in big trouble. You're not winning ... You have a damn good chance of coming out okay because of us.

Trump also said falsely that the US wasn’t aligned with “any party” in the Ukraine war. That statement constituted a major shift in US policy because the US has been firmly backing Ukraine--until today.

In truth, Trump is aligned with a party in Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine. Trump is aligned with Russia.

During a truly remarkable portion of the press conference, Trump spoke of himself and Putin as “co-victims” of the investigations into Trump's ties with Russia, which he called the “Russia hoax.” Trump suggested that he and Putin had survived the investigations as a team. Trump said,

Let me tell you, Putin went through a hell of a lot with me. He went through a phony witch hunt where they used him and Russia, Russia, Russia.

After the press conference ended, Trump threw Zelensky out of the White House (a demand delivered by the cowardly Marco Rubio).

Trump then posted an offensive statement on Truth Social that said that Zelensky was not welcome back to the White House until he was “ready for peace”—a statement that can only be interpreted to mean “when Zelensky is ready to surrender Ukraine to Russia.”

European leaders rallied behind President Zelensky in a series of statements posted within minutes of the encounter. Trump's enablers posted self-congratulatory statements on Twitter and Truth Social.

Rebecca Solnit provided the correct analysis of the Trumpworld tweets in her post on BlueSky (@rebeccasolnit.bsky.social):

Here's what the idiots in the White House utterly fail to comprehend. They and the US came out of that argument weaker. Zelensky came out stronger, with Europe rallying behind Ukraine more than before. They came out looking like petulant idiots; he came out looking like a leader with integrity.

David Frum gave his view The Atlantic, At Least Now We Know the Truth.

Frum writes,

We’re witnessing the self-sabotage of the United States. “America First” always meant America alone, a predatory America whose role in the world is no longer based on democratic belief.

America voted at the United Nations earlier this week against Ukraine, siding with Russia and China against almost all of its fellow democracies. Is this who Americans want to be? For this is what America is being turned into. [¶¶]

Both the president and vice president showed the U.S.-led alliance system something it needed urgently to know: The national-security system of the West is led by two men who cannot be trusted to defend America’s allies—and who deeply sympathize with the world’s most aggressive dictator.

Frum’s point is correct: America hasn’t abandoned Ukraine. It has abandoned the world. Until we defeat Trump and his cowardly supporters, America is “on its own” in global politics—not because the global community has ostracized us, but because Trump has demonstrated that under his leadership, America cannot be trusted.

Hundreds of thousands of Americans sacrificed their lives to earn the trust that Trump and JD Vance squandered in 45 minutes in the Oval Office by berating the heroic leader of a brave people whose fight against Russia promotes the peace and security of the United States and its (now) former allies.

Concluding Thoughts

Trump has aligned his administration with Putin. The Guardian reported on Friday that the US has stopped treating Russia as a cyberthreat to American national security—a change in policy seemingly designed to allow Russia to infiltrate US computer networks. See The Guardian, Trump administration retreats in fight against Russian cyber threats.

The shameful incident in the Oval Office was staged for the benefit of Russia. It is no coincidence that Trump initially invited a reporter for TASS (the official Russian news agency) into the Oval Office—even as he continues to exclude the Associated Press and Huffington Post. (The TASS reporter was removed from the Oval Office when his presence was noted by other pool reporters.)

There is little more Trump could do to advance Russia’s interests at the expense of the peace and security of the United States than if he was an active agent of the Russian KGB—a theory that reputable sources have begun to publish. See The Hill, Was 40-year-old Trump recruited by the KGB?

The stakes of defeating Trump just got higher. By a lot. None of us can afford to sit on the sidelines. Each of us must become an active participant in the effort to defeat Trump's enablers in Congress—the powerbase that allows him to act with impunity in destroying US foreign relations and federal government, twin goals that have been on Putin’s “to-do” list for decades.

As a reminder, I will host a Substack livestream on Saturday, March 1 at 9 am PST and 12 noon EST. Open the Substack App at the appointed hour and click on the livestream notification. Download the Substack App here.

Please consider this the Saturday morning edition of the newsletter; I am sending it early because of the urgency of the news about Trump's abandonment of Ukraine and our allies.

Stay strong. I will talk to you tomorrow!

 

Please go here for the original article: https://roberthubbell.substack.com/p/a-day-of-shame-as-trump-abandons


Wednesday, February 26, 2025

Jackson Katz: What Donald Trump Understands About American Men

This powerful article by Jackson Katz which was first published in Ms. Magazine on October 22, 2020  is deeply relevant to today. I continue to return again and again to the illuminating words of bell hooks when she stated that we have long lived in a culture that is rooted in imperialist white-supremacist capitalist patriarchy. We cannot underestimate its impact on us all.  To empower ourselves means to understand, recognize, and — in an ongoing way shed layer after layer of the tentacles of our misogynistic racist culture and patriarchal indoctrination and instead embrace our inter-relatedness with all beings and the greater wholeness, wisdom, and sacredness of who we most truly are. — Molly

A Trump supported at a rally in Phoenix in June 2016. (Gage Skidmore / Flickr)
Trump understands something fundamental about manhood in a patriarchal culture: A lot of men fear being ‘unmanned’ more than they value democracy.

 By Jackson Katz

(Author’s note: I wrote the article below for Ms. Magazine a couple weeks before the election in 2020, but re-publish it here as part of my “Past as Prologue” series. The idea of that series is to feature articles and other pieces I’ve written over the years that have new resonance in the current moment.

A main theme of my political writing in the Trump era is that the central animating energy of Trumpism and MAGA is backlash against threats to the cultural centrality of white male identity. At this point, anyone who doesn’t see this hasn’t been paying much attention.

One way for the pro-democracy movement to fight back against the immense damage that Trump-Musk are doing — both to vulnerable people and American democracy itself — is to push back firmly against the idea that Donald Trump represents the epitome of masculine strength. It is absurd to identify this small, petty, and deeply insecure man this way.

It is true that one of Trump’s greatest political skills is his visceral understanding of other men’s fragility, and fear of not “measuring up” to some artificial (and ever-shifting) standard of “manliness.” He knows that bullies often win because so many people are afraid of them.

That’s why the anti-Trump pushback needs to be fearless in standing up to the bully, and do so publically and unapologetically. Hint to the Democrats: the failure to understand and address these gendered dynamics is a main reason why Trump won big among men — including young men, and hence won re-election despite all of his glaring deficiencies as a candidate and as a human being.

I hope you enjoy the article.

What Donald Trump Understands about American Men

Donald Trump’s many shortcomings of character, empathy and intellectual depth are well known. But he has one quality—aside from his inherited wealth—that has gotten him very far in life, most recently in politics.

He possesses an intuitive grasp of the deep-seated desires, frustrated dreams, and seething resentments of millions of American men, especially white men.

He might not identify with most of them: He admires rich tycoons and sports heroes, and regards most working and middle class men as losers.

But he knows why these men identify with him, and throughout his long career as a bombastic real estate developer and reality TV star, he found ways to monetize their affections. With his turn to electoral politics in 2015, it was only natural he would seek to alchemize their fascination with him into political support.

Trump’s unexpected victory in the presidential election of 2016 was the result of a constellation of historic cultural and political forces. But practically speaking, he won because he was able to win the votes of an overwhelming majority of the white male vote.

Just look at the numbers. Among college-educated white men, Trump beat Hillary Clinton 51 percent to 36 percent. For white men with a high school education, he won by a stunning 71 to 23 percent margin—the largest among any candidate in exit polls since 1980.

The only way he can win this time is by preserving and expanding this dramatic level of support. In fact, one of the most striking features of the 2020 election is the enormous gender gap. In a recent ABC/Washington Post poll, Joe Biden led by 23 points among women, while the candidates were tied among men.

Most analyses of this gap focus on Trump’s tanking support among women, especially suburban white women. Trump’s standing among men—especially white men, his biggest supporters—is treated as a given and is rarely discussed in any depth.

Political scientists and media commentators have long noted that Trumpism as a political movement is not as much about issues as it is about identity. This point was driven home during the Republican National Convention, which was such an unapologetic vehicle for Trump’s cult of personality that the GOP didn’t even bother to offer a party platform.

The conventional wisdom about Trumpism is that it’s driven by white racial resentment, whether in the form of opposition to immigration from south of the border, or old-fashioned anti-Black racism that sadly—more than half a century since passage of the Civil Rights Act—has never really gone away.

But, as a just-released documentary called “The Man Card” that I co-wrote and co-produced makes crystal clear, Trumpism is not just a white identity movement; it is a white male identity movement.

Donald Trump knows this. He figured out a long time ago that by presenting himself in the media as a kind of throwback playboy and tough-guy businessman, he could appeal to millions of white men—and a much lesser but still notable number of white women—who respond positively to that retro performance.

There is little evidence that Donald Trump cares even a little about the lives and daily struggles of white working and middle class men. But he instinctually understands that countless men—in an era of feminism and increasing gender fluidity—crave respect as men and long for the return of old-fashioned patriarchal authority.

Unlike the former Hollywood actor Ronald Reagan, who in the late 1970s tapped into the all-American cowboy archetype and fashioned himself as a John Wayne-like character who would restore national greatness by riding into town to rescue the culture from the feminizing forces of weak-kneed liberalism, Trump knew when he got into politics that he was more believable as a kind of anti-hero.

As New York Times television critic James Poniewozik put it, in order for Trump to have been elected in the first place, a large enough portion of America had to “accept the sales pitch” that the president did not need to be “morally admirable, or trustworthy, or empathetic, or self-sacrificing, or curious, or self-reflective, or capable of acting as though other people’s interests were as important as his own—as long as they believed he could do the job they wanted done.”

That job was reclaiming white men’s cultural centrality at the end of a dying era. As Poniewozik notes, “From his earliest days in the tabloids, the character of Donald Trump was a performance of hyperbolic maleness.”

In the 2016 campaign he implicitly and sometimes explicitly ran on masculinity “as an idea, a Strangelovian value, a vital essence to be preserved.” He marketed himself as “a political Viagra pill for a following anxious about its potency.”

Trump’s white male voter base had already been primed for his arrival by the rapid growth of conservative media over the past generation, starting with the meteoric rise of right-wing talk radio host Rush Limbaugh in the late 1980s, and the creation of the Fox News Channel under the leadership of Roger Ailes in 1996.

From the very beginning of his thirty-year run as the undisputed king of talk radio, Limbaugh, an exceptionally talented vaudevillian showman, made the denigration of feminists and an unapologetic celebration of old-fashioned white male authority central features of his bloviating and boorish stage persona. Not surprisingly, his large audience consisted mainly (but not exclusively) of white men, especially those over fifty years of age.

This was the same demographic that Roger Ailes targeted with Fox News, which became a vehicle for Ailes’s brand of angry and paranoid conservatism, in which white men were the victims of condescension and contempt from sneering elites whose liberalism, multiculturalism and feminism were “wussifying” a once-great country.

These media-savvy entrepreneurs understood that millions of white men felt disrespected and adrift in a changing country and were ready to fight back—if only they could find the right political champion to channel their resentments.

Donald Trump was that champion. For a time, his relentlessly aggressive attacks against his opponents and constant rhetorical bullying effectively silenced most opposition on the right, or in the Republican Party. No one wanted to be the next “Low-energy Jeb,” or “Little Marco”—2016 GOP rivals who Trump not only defeated, but emasculated.

A protest against Trump, May 2017. (CC)
Trump might not be a sophisticated political thinker or student of history, but he understands something fundamental about manhood in a patriarchal culture: The system remains in place because a majority of men fear being “unmanned” and losing the respect of other men more than they value abstract concepts like commitment to scientific reason, equal justice under law or even democracy itself.

It takes a great deal of self-confidence and even courage for men to withstand attacks on their good standing in the brotherhood. And as the former Republican congressman and TV host Joe Scarborough says, “We have learned all too often during the Trump presidency that there are few courageous leaders within the Republican congressional caucus or behind the pulpits of the evangelical community’s most powerful churches.”

But the popularity of a bully is fragile because it is based on others’ perceptions of his strength, not the real thing. And so the tide began to turn against Trump once he started to show signs of electoral vulnerability.

After a chaotic term marked by deep corruption and perpetual scandal, and above all by his egregiously incompetent leadership in response to the coronavirus pandemic, the voices of his critics began to grow louder.

Long before his foray into electoral politics, the bombastic real estate developer and reality TV star had been the object of ridicule and derision among progressives and especially among feminists, who were more contemptuous than impressed by his deep misogyny and cartoonish displays of masculine bravado. But something shifted when they were joined by a growing number of white men, including those with traditional “masculine” credentials.

When retired military leaders began to publicly criticize the president, including some who had worked directly with him in the White House, they provided cover for other white men to do so. They could now oppose Trump and not have to worry that doing so would make them appear soft and “unmanly”; their criticisms of him could instead be understood as stemming from differences with him on policy, and disapproval of his temperament and style of leadership.

If Donald Trump loses to Joe Biden on November 3, as most polls say is likely to happen, it will be because tens of millions of women and people of color turned out to reject his misogyny and racism, his scapegoating of immigrants, and his sowing of conflict and division—as well as his general managerial ineptitude.

But it will also be because they were joined by a critical mass of white men, who were able to resist the pressures imposed on them by the forces of white male identity politics in order to vote for the greater interest of the country and its people.

This article was first published in Ms. Magazine on October 22, 2020      

Please go here for this article: https://substack.com/home/post/p-157754149?utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web