By Philip Giraldi
February 07, 2020
"Information
Clearing House" -
One
of the more interesting aspects of the nauseating
impeachment trial in the Senate was the repeated
vilification of Russia and its President Vladimir
Putin. To hate Russia has become dogma on both sides
of the political aisle, in part because no
politician has really wanted to confront the lesson
of the 2016 election, which was that most Americans
think that the federal government is basically
incompetent and staffed by career politicians like
Nancy Pelosi and Mitch McConnell who should return
back home and get real jobs. Worse still, it is
useless, and much like the one trick pony the only
thing it can do is steal money from the taxpayers
and waste it on various types of self-gratification
that only politicians can appreciate. That means
that the United States is engaged is fighting
multiple wars against make-believe enemies while the
country’s infrastructure rots and a host of
officially certified grievance groups control the
public space. It sure doesn’t look like Kansas
anymore.
The fact that opinion polls
in Europe suggest that many Europeans would rather
have Vladimir Putin than their own hopelessly
corrupt leaders is suggestive. One can buy a whole
range of favorable t-shirts featuring Vladimir Putin
on Ebay, also suggesting that most
Americans find the official Russophobia narrative
both mysterious and faintly amusing. They may not
really be into the expressed desire of the huddled
masses in D.C. to go to war to bring true U.S. style
democracy to the un-enlightened.
One also must wonder if the
Democrats are reading the tea leaves correctly. If
they think that a slogan like “Honest Joe Biden will
keep us safe from Moscow” will be a winner in 2020
they might again be missing the bigger picture.
Since the focus on Trump’s decidedly erratic
behavior will inevitably die down after the
impeachment trial is completed, the Democrats will
have to come up with something compelling if they
really want to win the presidency and it sure won’t
be the largely fictionalized Russian threat.