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Republicans put on show of unity behind Trump after assassination attempt

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Judge Cannon dismisses Documents (Espionage) case against Trump

by Vijaya Chandrasoma

The Republican National Convention was held as scheduled from Monday, July 15, in spite of the assassination attempt of Donald Trump the previous Saturday, at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. He escaped with minor injuries, but the iconic picture of Trump defiantly doing a fist pump, his bloody ear and face prominent with Old Glory fluttering in the background, conveyed an image that will go down in history – the courageous warrior, fighting for the country he loves, despite the excruciating pain he has suffered all his life with bone spurs.

The shooter, a 20-year-old registered Republican, described as “a very quiet young white man” was a poor marksman. Two inches to the left would have changed the history of the most powerful nation in the world. As Senator Tim Scott said at the Convention, “On Saturday, the Devil came to Pennsylvania with a rifle, but OUR AMERICAN LION GOT UP AND ROOOOARED!

The assassination attempt claimed the life of a hero who used his body as a human shield to save the lives of his family; and injured two other men who are currently in stable condition. Initial investigations revealed massive security failures: the crowd had noticed the gunman on the roof from where he took the shot nearly two minutes before the shooting, time which could have been used to take Trump away from the stage to safety. The Secret Service has accepted full responsibility for these security lapses, with its Director, Kimberly Cheatle saying “the buck stops with me”. Speaker Mike Johnson has called for her immediate resignation.

The US intelligence community has been receiving information over the years that Iran has been plotting the assassination of Trump as revenge for his order to assassinate beloved Iranian war hero, General Qasem Soleimani, in 2020, intelligence that has been ratcheting up in recent months. However, there was no evidence that Saturday’s shooting had any connection with Iran. Iranian authorities have also denied any such involvement.

The FBI and the Department of Homeland Security have warned of imminent retaliatory action by domestic, right-wing terrorists.

No motive for the assassination attempt has yet been identified.

The triumphant appearance on the first day of the Convention of Donald Trump, to the wildly enthusiastic cheers of his devotees, as Lee Greenwood sang “God Bless the USA”, was everything that pandered to the deepest recesses of his narcissistic ego. But strangely, Trump did not display the fist-pumping, “up yours”, combative performance they all loved and hoped for. Trump’s demeanor was strangely muted, his gait almost funereal. It’s as if his recent life-threatening experience had brought about an introspection of the inevitability of death which is round the corner for us all.

The large bandage completely covering his ear begged his speechwriter to begin his historic acceptance speech on Thursday by paraphrasing Mark Antony’s immortal words at Julius Caesar’s funeral, with “Friends, Republicans, countrymen, lend me your ear”, as suggested by a friend. Alas, the Trump camp is totally devoid of humor, especially of the dark variety.

True to form, Republicans immediately placed the blame for this dastardly act of violence on the Democrats, specifically the Biden campaign. Senator J. D. Vance, Trump’s running mate, immediately tweeted:

“Today is not some isolated incident. The central premise of the Biden campaign is that President Trump is an authoritarian fascist who must be stopped at all costs. That rhetoric led directly to Donald Trump’s attempted assassination”.

The central premise that Trump is an authoritarian fascist is not just the basis of the opinion of Democrats. Trump has, by words and deeds, always incited violence against those who have opposed him, culminating in screaming at his supporters to “fight like hell, or we won’t have a country” before they stormed the Capitol on January 6, 2021.

The last-minute selection of J.D. Vance on the ticket also had more than a hint of divine intervention. At first sight, he is the total antithesis of Trump. He is 39 years old, born of poor, working-class stock in Middletown, Ohio. He served in the Marine Corps from 2003 to 2007, including a stint in Iraq, before attending Ohio State University and Yale Law School. He worked briefly as a venture capitalist before running for the Senate in 2022. Vance was a fierce opponent of Trump in 2016 – 2018, showing excellent judgment in calling Trump “a total fraud”, a “moral disaster” and “America’s Hitler”.

Political ambition changed Vance from a Never Trumper in 2018, to a Forever Trumper after the insurrection of January 6, 2021, an event which should have firmed up his previously held views of Trump being “an authoritarian asshole unfit for the office of the Presidency”. Proving the old adage that “Politics makes strange bedfellows”.

But “America’s Hitler” and “Moral Disaster” to Trump’s running mate, in three short years? Only God, who works his wonders in mysterious ways, could have wrought a sea change of such magnitude.

Especially because Vance brings few advantages that would benefit the ticket. A marine and a Yale qualified lawyer, he has scant legal and business experience, and just 18 months at the US Senate. He is also a white man from Ohio, a state Trump won by over 8% points in 2020. The only ethnic diversity Vance brings to the ticket is through his wife Usha, the beautiful and highly educated (B.A. in history from Yale, MPhil from the University of Cambridge and JD from Yale Law School) daughter of Indian immigrants.

Trump is, if nothing else, a canny politician. He saw the one advantage no one else did in Vance that has made his past disparagement – yes, even that Trump is America’s Hitler – inconsequential, water under the bridge. Vance aced the Trump’s central VP test – that, if asked, he would overturn the results of a legal election in Trump’s favor, against the constitution, even under threat of being hanged! The original sin that Vice-President Pence had committed, when he refused to obey Trump’s treasonous instructions on January 6, 2021. The one heroic, patriotic act Pence committed in his political career, which, in Trump’s America, has condemned him forever to political limbo.

The first two days of the Convention were predictable in that all of Trump’s previous opponents, notably recent 2024 Republican primary rivals like Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis, made devotional orations endorsing Trump, one competing to find words more worshipful than the other.

The Party used all the truly phony hypocritical tricks to humanize a really evil human being. Like getting Gold Star families, who had lost their children fighting for their country, to tearfully praise a man who had called those who had made the same ultimate sacrifice “losers and suckers”. Like hearing the eldest son (Donald Jr) describing as his wonderful father (Trump), a man who had just been convicted of paying hush money for having sex with a porn star (Stormy Daniels), while his second stepmother (Melania) was pregnant with his youngest stepbrother (Barron)! And hearing Trump being described as a “normal grandpa, who gives us candy and sodas when our parents aren’t looking”. All these stories brought some cynically funny images to my mind.

The award for the most shameless lick-spittle was won by African-American Senator Tim Scott, who pipped Indian-American gasbag Vivek Ramaswamy by, literally and metaphorically, the brownest of noses.

Wednesday featured the virginal oration of J. D. Vance, the newly-anointed Vice-President on the Republican ticket, described as the future leader of the Make America Great Again (MAGA) movement. Vance was introduced by his charming Indian wife, Usha, whose speech was sincere and polished, and won the hearts of that white supremacist audience.

Vance’s speech was quite inspiring, at least at the beginning. He talked of his personal history, rising from the poverty of Middletown, Ohio, through the Marine Corps and Yale Law, to the United States Senate; his beautiful family, with a lovely, highly educated wife and three children, described above – the American Dream, in spades.

However, the rest of his speech unfortunately deteriorated into a litany of Trump-inspired lies, which gained standing ovations from the highly partisan audience, but did not pass muster with the fact checker. Vance’s personal policies were a clone of Trump’s, with extreme views on abortion and LGBTQ rights, and espousing Trump’s isolationist, anti-immigrant policies, mass deportation camps and all. He was also anti-NATO, reiterating Trump’s pledge that America will no longer give the Europeans a “free ride” in paying for their defense, threatening a military alliance that has endured for 75 years.

He was boastful, even arrogant about the unity of the Republican Party, with the full knowledge that such unity is dependent entirely on total acquiescence to the policies, however bigoted or authoritarian, of Donald Trump. He ended his speech accepting with gratitude the offer of the Vice-Presidency, vowing he will never take for granted the trust Trump has placed in him.

Thursday was the Day of the Second Coming of the Messiah, miraculously resurrected from the assassin’s bullet, forever changed from his previous life of lechery and criminality, to a future of humility and divine motivation to “fight, fight, fight” to Make America Great Again.

Trump’s speech was supposed to represent change in a man who had defied death a few days ago. A man who had been inspired to greater belief in the Almighty, who will embrace His teachings of Love towards all human beings. He started his speech, which lasted 90 minutes, the longest acceptance speech in recent history, calling for unity and a healing of the discord that is tearing the nation apart. He promised to work for all Americans during his second term.

Then he couldn’t resist going off script, becoming the same old vindictive, angry Trump. Full of hate and vitriol, whining about being the eternal victim in the greatest witch hunt in history, rambling about immigrants from foreign prisons and mental institutions invading America. He made the same promises he never kept during his first term, about having built the wall, lying about what a wonderful four years Americans enjoyed during his first disastrous presidency. Promises made without a trace of shame or embarrassment, cheered on by the most gullible crowd in the world, afflicted by serious cases of amnesia.

Donald Trump may have towered like the Colossus of Rhodes at the Republican National Convention in the adoring eyes of members of his family, his sycophants and his cult. But his acceptance speech reminded voters that, in the real world, he is the same old lying, bigoted Trump, the convicted felon awaiting sentencing on 34 felonies; in debt for over $500 million in court awarded damages for rape and defamation and millions more in unpaid legal fees; arrested, on bail and awaiting trial on other serious felonies. In short, a man who will do anything, use anyone, spew any lie, attempt any subterfuge to win an election, so avoiding accountability and imprisonment for his crimes.

The wins keep coming for Trump. On the First Day of the Convention, Florida District Court Judge Aileen Cannon, a Trump appointee, who has been using every means available to her to delay the documents (Espionage) case against Donald Trump, dismissed the case on the most questionable of grounds. The shock 93-page ruling absolves Trump of one of the most serious of legal challenges he was facing.

On the Second Day of the Convention, the Heavenly Father administered the final coup de grace, when he struck down the main obstacle in Trump’s quest for America’s renewal. The White House issued a statement on Wednesday that President Biden had tested positive for Covid, after experiencing mild respiratory symptoms, and will be in isolation, away from the campaign trail for a few days.

Leading Democrats like Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer, even President Obama have been trying to prevail upon Biden to step down. This attack of Covid, compounded by the vagaries of age, have made it crystal clear that Biden is in no physical or mental condition to manage the toughest job in the world for four more years. So far, Biden has shown no sign of retiring and handing over the leadership of the Party to a younger Democrat capable of saving America from the threat to Democracy presented by Trump. Thankfully, there is time for him to come to his senses.

Current polls, after the Convention, project that Trump will conclusively bury Biden in a landslide in November.



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Immediate industrial reforms critical for Sri Lanka’s future

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Sri Lanka’s industrial sector has historically been an engine of growth, employment, and exports. Yet today, many industries face structural challenges, outdated practices, and intense global competition. Immediate and comprehensive policy reforms are, therefore, both urgent and essential—not only to revive growth but also to secure the future prosperity of the country.

Strengthening economic growth and diversification

Industries contribute significantly to GDP and export earnings. They create value-added products, reduce import dependency, and improve trade balances. Sri Lanka’s economy remains overly reliant on a few traditional sectors, such as garments and tea. Industrial reforms can encourage diversification into higher-value manufacturing, technology-driven production, and knowledge-based industries, increasing resilience against global shocks.

Job creation and social stability

The industrial sector is a major source of formal employment, particularly for youth and women. Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) provide both direct and indirect jobs. Without reforms, job creation is limited, pushing young people to seek opportunities abroad, which drains talent and exacerbates social and economic inequality. By modernising industries and supporting SME growth, the country can create high-quality, sustainable employment, reduce migration pressures, and promote social stability.

Competitiveness and export expansion

Sri Lanka faces stiff competition from countries such as Vietnam, Bangladesh, and India in textiles, garments, and other manufacturing exports. Many local industries struggle with outdated technology, high production costs, and weak supply chains. Urgent reforms—such as improving industrial infrastructure, incentivising technology adoption, and simplifying trade regulations—are critical to enhancing competitiveness, retaining market share, and expanding exports.

Attracting domestic and foreign investment

Investors require clarity, stability, and efficient regulatory processes. Complex licensing, bureaucratic delays, and inconsistent policies deter both domestic and foreign investment. By implementing transparent and predictable industrial policies, the government can attract capital, encourage innovation, and accelerate industrial modernisation. Investment is not just about funding production—it is also about transferring technology and upgrading skills, which is essential for long-term industrial development.

Promoting innovation and technological upgrading

Many Sri Lankan industries continue to rely on outdated production methods and low-value processes, limiting productivity, efficiency, and global competitiveness. Comprehensive industrial reforms can incentivise research and development, digitalisation, automation, and adoption of green technologies, enabling local industries to move up the value chain and produce higher-value goods. This is particularly urgent as global competitors are rapidly implementing Industry 4.0 standards, including AI-driven production, smart logistics, and sustainable manufacturing. Without modernisation, Sri Lanka risks not only losing export opportunities but also falling permanently behind in technological capabilities, undermining long-term industrial growth and economic resilience.

Strengthening supply chains and local linkages

Effective industrial reform can improve integration between agriculture, services, and manufacturing. For example, better industrial policies can ensure that local raw materials are efficiently used, logistics systems are modernised, and SMEs are integrated into global supply chains. This creates multiplier effects across the economy, stimulating productivity, innovation, and competitiveness beyond the industrial sector itself.

Environmental sustainability and resilience

Global trends demand green and sustainable industrial practices. Sri Lanka cannot afford to ignore climate-friendly production methods, energy efficiency, or waste management. Reforms that promote sustainable manufacturing, circular economy principles, and renewable energy adoption will future-proof industries, improve international market access, and ensure compliance with global trade standards.

Institutional capacity and governance

Industrial reforms are not just about incentives; they require strong institutions capable of policy design, monitoring, and enforcement. Weak governance, policy inconsistency, and politicisation have historically undermined industrial development in Sri Lanka. Strengthening industrial institutions, simplifying bureaucracy, and ensuring accountability are essential components of meaningful reform.

Responding to global technological and trade shifts

The industrial landscape is rapidly changing due to digitalisation, automation, AI, and new global trade patterns. Sri Lanka must adapt quickly to benefit from global industrial trends rather than risk falling behind regional competitors. Immediate reform will allow industries to adopt modern production systems, integrate with global value chains, and improve export competitiveness.

Conclusion

Industrial policy reforms in Sri Lanka are urgent because delays threaten employment, competitiveness, and investment. They are important because a modern, resilient industrial sector is crucial for economic growth, export expansion, technological advancement, social stability, and environmental sustainability. Strategic, forward-looking reforms will not only save existing industries but also position Sri Lanka for a prosperous, resilient, and inclusive future.

(The writer is a former senior public servant and policy specialist.)

BY Chinthaka Samarawickrama Lokuhetti

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How to insult friends and intimidate people!

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Trump in Davos

US President Donald Trump is insulting friends and intimidating others. Perhaps. Following his rare feat of securing a non-consecutive second term, one would have expected Trump to be magnanimous, humble and strive to leave an imprint in world history as a statesman. However, considering the unfolding events, it is more likely that he will be leaving an imprint but for totally different reasons!

From the time of his re-election, Trump has apparently been determined to let the world know who the ‘boss’ is and wanted to Make America Great Again (MAGA) by economic measures that were detrimental even to his neighbours and friends, totally disregarding the impact it may have on the world economy. Some of his actions were risky and may well have backfired. Businessmen are accustomed to taking risks and he appears to behave as a businessman rather than as a politician. There was hardly any significant resistance to his arbitrary tariff increases except from China. He craved for the Nobel Peace Prize, claiming to have ended and prevented wars and, and unashamedly posed for a picture when the Nobel Peace Prize was ‘presented’ to him by the winner! To add insult to injury, Trump demonstrated his ignorance by blaming the Norwegian Prime Minister for having overlooked him for the Nobel Peace Prize. He should surely have known, before the Norwegian PM pointed out, that the awardee was chosen by a non-governmental committee.

Trump’s erratic behaviour reached its climax in Davos. He came to Davos determined to railroad the European leaders into accepting his bid to acquire Greenland and seemed to do so by hurling insults left, right and centre! Even before he started the trip to Davos, Trump had already imposed a 10% tariff on imports from seven European countries including the UK, increasing to 25% from the beginning of February, until he was able to acquire Greenland. In a rambling speech, lasting over an hour, he referred to Greenland as Iceland on four different occasions.

Exaggerating the part played by the US in World War II Trump proclaimed “Without us right now, you’d all be speaking German and a little Japanese”. After making a hideous claim that the US had handed Greenland to Denmark, after World War II, Trump said, “We want a piece of ice for world protection, and they won’t give it. You can say yes and we will be very appreciative. Or you can say no and we will remember”. A veiled threat, perhaps!

However, the remark that irked the UK most was his reference to the war in Afghanistan. He repeated the claim, made to Fox News, that NATO had sent ‘some troops’. but that they ‘had stayed a little back, a little off the front line’. On top of politicians, infuriated families of over 500 soldiers who sacrificed their lives in the front-lines in Afghanistan, started protesting which forced the British PM Keir Starmer to abandon the hitherto used tactic of flattery to win over Trump, to state that Trump’s remarks were “insulting and frankly appalling.” After a call from Starmer, Trump posted a praise on his Truth Social platform that UK troops are “among the greatest of all warriors”!

The resistance to Trump’s attempts at reverting to ‘unconstrained power of Great Powers’, which was replaced by the ‘rule-based-order’ after World War II, was spearheaded from an unlikely quarter. It was by Mark Carney, financier turned politician, PM of Canada. He was the Governor of the Bank of England, during the disastrous David Cameron administration, and left the post with hardly any impact but seems to have become a good politician. He apparently has hit Trump where it hurts most, as in his speech, Trump stated that Canada was living on USA and warned Carney about his language!

Mark Carney’s warning that this was a moment of “rupture” with the established rules-based international order giving way to a new world of Great Power politics and his rallying cry that “the middle powers” needed to act together, need to be taken seriously. What would the world come to, unless there is universal condemnation of actions like the forcible extraction of the Venezuelan President which, unfortunately, did not happen maybe because of the fear of Trump heaping more tariffs etc? What started in Venezuela can end up anywhere. Who appointed the US to be the policeman of the world?

With words, Trump gave false hope to protesters rebelling against the theocracy in Iran but started showing naval strength only after the regime crushed the rebellion by killing, according to some estimates, up to 25,000 protesters. If he decides to attack, Iran is bound to retaliate, triggering another war. In fact, Trump was crass enough to state that he no longer cares for peace as he was snubbed by the Nobel Peace committee! Trump is terrorising his own people as is happening in Minnesota but that is a different story.

Already the signs of unity, opposing Trump’s irrationalities, are visible. Almost all NATO members opposing Trump’s plans resulted in his withdrawal from Greenland acquisition plans. To save face, he gave the bogus excuse that he had reached an ever-lasting settlement! Rather than flattery, Trump’s idiosyncrasies need to be countered without fear, as well illustrated by the stance the British PM was forced to take on the Afghan war issue. For the sake of world peace, let us hope that Trump will be on the retreat from now.

 Mark Carney’s pivotal speech received a well-deserved and rare standing ovation in Davos. One can only hope that he will practice what he preached to the world, when it comes to internal politics of his country. It is no secret that vote-bank politics is playing a significant role in Canadian politics. I do hope he will be able to curtail the actions of remnants of terrorist groups operating freely in Canada.

by Dr Upul Wijayawardhana

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Trump is a product of greed-laden American decadence

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One wonders why the people of the US, who have built the most technologically and economically advanced country, ever elected Donald Trump as their President, not once, but twice. His mistakes and blunders in his first term are too numerous to mention, but a few of the most damaging to the working people are as follows:

Trump brought in tax cuts that overwhelmingly favour the wealthy over the average worker. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) signed into law, at the end of 2017, provides a permanent cut in the corporate income tax rate that will overwhelmingly benefit capital owners and the top one percent. His new laws took billions out of workers’ pockets by weakening or abandoning regulations that protect their pay. In 2017 the Trump administration hurt workers’ pay in many ways, including acts to dismantle two key regulations that protect the pay of low- to middle-income workers. These failures to protect workers’ pay could cost workers an estimated $7 billion per year. In 2017, the Trump administration—in a virtually unprecedented move—switched sides in a case before the US Supreme Court and  fought on the side of corporate interests and against workers.

Trump’s policies on climate change could ruin the global plans to cut down emissions and reduce warming, which has already affected the US  equally badly as anywhere else in the world. Trump ridiculed the idea of man-made climate change, and repeatedly referred to his energy policy under the mantra “drill, baby, drill”. He said he would increase oil drilling on public lands and offer tax breaks to oil, gas, and coal producers, and stated his goal for the United States to have the lowest cost of electricity and energy of any country in the world. Trump also promised to roll back electric vehicle initiatives, proposed once again the United States withdrawal from the Paris Agreement, and rescind several environmental regulations.  The implementation of Trump’s plans would add around 4 billion tons of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere by 2030, also having effects on the international level. If the policies do not change further, it would add 15 billion tons by 2040 and 27 billion by 2050. Although the exact calculation is difficult, researchers stated: “Regardless of the precise impact, a second Trump term that successfully dismantles Biden’s climate legacy would likely end any global hopes of keeping global warming below 1.5C.” ( Evans, et al, 2024). Despite all these anti-social policies Trump was voted into power for a second term.

Arguments suggesting the USA is a decadent society, defined as a wealthy civilisation in a state of stagnation, exhaustion, and decline, are increasingly common among commentators. Evidence cited includes political gridlock, economic stagnation since the 1970s, demographic decline, and a shift toward a “cultural doom loop” of repeating past ideas (Douthat, 2024, New York Times).

First, we will look at the economic aspect of the matter though the moral and spiritual degradation may be more important, for it is the latter that often causes the former . The reasons for the  economic decline, characterised  by increase in inequality, dates back to the seventies. Between 1973 and 2000, the average income of the bottom 90 percent of US taxpayers fell by seven percent. Incomes of the top one percent rose by 148 percent, the top 0.1 percent by 343 percent, and the top 0.01 percent rose by 599 percent. The redistribution of income and wealth was detrimental to most Americans.

If the income distribution had remained unchanged from the mid-1970s, by 2018, the median income would be 58 percent higher ($21,000 more a year). The decline in profits was halted, but at the expense of working families. Stagnant wages, massive debt and ever longer working hours became their fate.

Since 1973, the US has experienced slower growth, lower productivity, and a diminished share of global manufacturing, notes the (American Enterprise Institute). Despite the low growth, the rich have doubled their wealth. In our opinion this is due to the “unleash of a culture of greed” that Joseph Stiglitz spoke about.

Nobel Prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz has frequently argued that the United States has unleashed a culture of greed, selfishness, and deregulation, which he blames for extreme inequality, financial crises, and environmental destruction.

Income stagnation is not the only quality of life indicator that suffered. In 1980, life expectancy in the US was about average for an affluent nation. By the 2020s, it dropped to the lowest among wealthy countries, even behind China or Chile, largely due to the stagnation of life expectancy for working-class people. With regard to quality of life the US has fallen to 41st in global, UN-aligned, sustainable development rankings, highlighting issues with infrastructure and social systems, (The Conversation). The political system is described as trapped in a “stale system” with high polarisation, resulting in inaction rather than progress, (Douthat, New York Times).

It is often the moral and spiritual degradation that causes an overall decline in all aspects of life, including the US economy. Statistics on crime, drug and alcohol addiction, suicide rate and mental health issues in the US, which are the indicators for moral and spiritual status of a society, are not very complimentary. The Crime Index in the US is 49 while it is 23 in China and 32 in Russia. Drug abuse rate is 16.8% in the US and alcohol addiction is 18%. Mental illness in adults is as common as 23%. Only about 31% follow a religion. Erich Fromm in his book, titled “Sane Society,” refers to these facts to make a case that the US and also other countries in the West are not sane societies.

Let us now look at Joseph Stiglitz’s thoughts on greed which is the single most important factor in the aetiology of moral degradation in the US society. Stiglitz has directly linked corporate greed and the pursuit of immediate, short-term profits to accelerating climate change and economic failure for the majority of Americans. He argues that “free” (unregulated) markets in the US have not led to growth, but rather to the exploitation of workers and consumers, allowing the top 1% to siphon wealth from the rest of society. Stiglitz argues that neoliberalism, which he calls “ersatz capitalism,” has fostered a moral system where banks are “too big to fail, but too big to be held accountable,” rewarding greedy, risky behaviour. He contends that US economic policies have been designed to favour the wealthy, creating a “rigged” economy where the middle class is shrinking. In essence, Stiglitz argues that the US has allowed a “neoliberal experiment” to turn capitalism into a system focused on greed, which is harming the economy, the environment, and the social fabric.

Big oil companies spent a stunning $445m throughout the last election cycle to influence Donald Trump and Congress, a new analysis has found. These investments are “likely to pay dividends”, the report says, with Republicans holding control of the White House, House and Senate – as well as some key states. Trump unleashed dozens of pro-fossil fuel executive actions on his first day in office and is expected to pursue a vast array of others with cooperation from Congress (The Guardian, Jan 2025). 

Trump himself has accumulated wealth just as much as the rest of billionaires, and his poor voters are becoming poorer. He is greedy for wealth and power. He is carving up the world and is striving to annex as much of it as possible at the expense of sovereignty of other countries, the US allies, and international law.

Greed is an inherent human character which when unfettered could result in psychopathic monsters like Hitler. A new world order will have to take into serious consideration this factor of greed and evolve a system that does not depend on greed as the driver of its economy.

by N. A. de S. Amaratunga

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