Trump’s officials are quietly concerned about his “blatant criminal behavior.” What took them so long?
It is time to stop examining the chaos and time to do something about it.
I have a source inside the Trump regime who feels, in their own words, “a little disillusioned.” This person says they signed on to the Trump team because of “DEI going too far” and because “woke culture was dividing the country,” but is now concerned about the “blatant criminal behavior” of Donald Trump. Really? His last administration didn’t show you that? Well, OK.
This source first approached me by saying, “I can provide you bonafides to show you I’m serious.” That impressed me because I didn’t think many people inside the Trump regime knew what bonafides were, let alone how to be serious.
This source’s concerns about Trump are indeed legitimate, and deserve to be heard. “Not all of us are buying everything he says,” this person told me. “We understand the problem, but we see no solution. You guys in the press, with very few exceptions, are not trustworthy. Congress can’t be trusted and the judiciary so far hasn’t been able to stop him.”
AI answer follows because I have heard this guys argument and mostly agree but not sure which video it was to link.
Chris Hedges argues that corporations and political elites often co-opt progressive or “woke” values—such as diversity, equity, and inclusion—not out of genuine commitment, but as a public relations strategy. According to Hedges, this creates the illusion of moral virtue while maintaining or even intensifying exploitative economic structures.
In his view, this performative embrace of social justice rhetoric serves to:
Deflect attention from class issues, such as income inequality, labor rights, and corporate greed.
Neutralize leftist resistance by dividing the working class—particularly by alienating poor or working-class whites who may feel left out or vilified.
Undermine solidarity among working people by framing social progress in purely cultural or identity terms while ignoring economic justice.
This theme appears in several of Hedges’ works, including “The Death of the Liberal Class” and his articles and talks, where he criticizes both the corporate world and segments of the liberal establishment for abandoning the working class.
Would you like a quote or passage where he expresses this directly?
Just so you know, you could have chosen to not post this for a cost of $0.
You don’t like an AI answer?
You don’t like Chris Hedges?
You disagree with the point?
Hmmm, good conversation. Thanks.
“Here’s what my talking parrot thinks about this issue”. Great input, if I wanted to talk to a chatbot I’d do that. This isn’t a conversation, it’s meaningless noise regurgitated by a machine.
Correct, AI responses are garbage straight up