Random
Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

The tragic change a single year has made in America.

One year ago, everything was so different. In late October 2024, before the US presidential election, thoughtful Americans could certainly acknowledge the deep flaws of their country – its injustices and inequality – but they could still recognize it as the United States. A democracy. A place where the rule of law meant something. A nation led by a dignified and decent public servant, despite his advanced age and increasing frailty.

These days, in late October 2025, many of us barely recognize the nation we live in. People suspected of being illegal immigrants are rounded up and shoved into vans, sometimes denied due process. The East Wing of the “people’s house” – the White House – is being destroyed for an obscene ballroom. Donald Trump is persecuting his political rivals or supposed enemies and demanding the justice department hand over $230m. Armed military personnel are being sent into American cities on false pretexts.

The Pentagon, relabeled the Department of War, has – in effect – rid itself of day-to-day journalistic scrutiny as it spends what could amount to nearly $1tn of taxpayer money. Universities, law firms, news companies are buckling under the president’s threats, and billionaires are treated like members of the royal family.

“The United States, just months before its 250th birthday as the world’s leading democracy, has tipped over the edge into authoritarianism and fascism,” Garrett Graff, the American historian and author, wrote in August. “In the end, faster than I imagined possible, it did happen here.”

Sorry, but this is fact, MAGATs
Top | New | Old
It has even impacted other countries. I have friends here in Canada with friends and family in the US. They are now taking long detours to make sure they only drive through blue states and avoiding airports entirely because they are federal and they do not feel safe in US airports or in any red state.
Quimliqer · 70-79, M
The change from a year ago is so many were living a life in a country where they knew things weren’t good, but no one was doing anything about it.
Stand for something, or you’ll fall for everything!
@Quimliqer People were fighting for it and doing good things. It's surprising Biden got anything done with the GOP strings being pulled by DJT and his Fascist backers.
Avectoijesuismoi · 36-40
Perhaps there is mutually beneficial alliance so that the golden age is not so evenly distributed too.
Maybe Donald and Vladimir are working on a plan do that Donald can stay as long as Vladimir has.
Few minor tweaks required for that process a name change from United States of America to day the Union of North American states. He hasn't been president of that before so in theory the terms has been reset to zero and the new constitution allows for multiple terms of presidency.
This comment is hidden. Show Comment
@Avectoijesuismoi Not even sure what that is supposed to mean but whatever. Starmer is just a Tory that got lost.
Avectoijesuismoi · 36-40
@Avectoijesuismoi It means I just packed up and left and relocated to California but it is only a base camp I often off exploring other places.
GerOttman · 70-79, M
H.R.2202 - 104th Congress (1995-1996): Immigration Control and Financial Responsibility Act of 1996 | Congress.gov | Library of Congress https://share.google/3VRRn6oZnydfkl243

1996 Bill Clinton. Not Trump...
AthrillatheHunt · 51-55, M
@Avectoijesuismoi they def left their mark on the places they had trading outposts. Some NYC places still have Dutch names . (Van Wyck expressway , spuyten duyvil, etc..)
@AthrillatheHunt The reason you probably don't see alot of criticism of the Dutch colonial Empire (they called themselves that) outside the Netherlands is because of this historical fantasy that they were just a merchant navy that by magic stumbled into having global colonies.

Being the middle man as you put it was survival. It was plan B. They were being taken apart by the British Empire and it was cooperate or die.

They lost their colonial naval ambitions because they got their ass kicked.

Not unlike the German Empire of the Kaiser or Mussolini's attempt at a colonial empire.

For those that lived under Dutch Colonial rule it was not much different from the British or the French, or Spaniards and Portuguese.
AthrillatheHunt · 51-55, M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow that’s what I said. They learned early on they were not destined for a military empire and pivoted to mercantilism instead. They were the bagmen for the British Spanish and Portuguese. They were never colonial rulers in the conventional sense (taxes to the crown , military inscription , loyalty oaths etc..). They just wanted to trade , not rule .
This comment is hidden. Show Comment
JT123 · M
GET A CLUE!!!
@JT123 Sorry, but you know what I've said is true. Live with it, MAGAt.
This comment is hidden. Show Comment
AthrillatheHunt · 51-55, M
You sound like an old person the way you think. Glass half empty huh ?

 
Post Comment