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The collapse of the old geopolitical order.

“The old world is dying, and the new world struggles to be born: now is the time of monsters.”

-Bart De Wever, the Belgian Prime Minister, quoting Antonio Gramsci.

Trump's America may or may not take Greenland. They may or may not use force, but either way, this current crisis marks a landmark change in world politics. And - as Mark Carney correctly analyses - it's not a transition but a rupture. One by one, Western leaders are arriving at the painful but inevitable conclusion that Donald Trump's America is no longer a geopolitical ally. In fact, for various reasons, it's our most serious geopolitical threat.

Greenland is not the only issue, but it's the issue that has brought this to a head. The USA, until very recently considered the 'leader of the free world', is happy to invade and take over the territory of a sovereign ally because it wants to loot its mineral wealth and has calculated that its former allies lack the strength or will to stand up to it. It pays no heed to international law, its own laws or any prior agreements and does not care one iota about damage done to anybody else.

Obviously, we need to talk about using tariffs and gunboat diplomacy, but the agenda runs even deeper. America's latest national security strategy explicitly mentions that it wants to bolster hard-right 'nationalist' parties and has pretty much written the great replacement theory narrative into official state strategy doctrine. They have told us who they are, and we should listen. America projects strength and Europe projects weakness, says Scott Bessent. Maybe it's time for Europe to project strength?

The EU, combined with Britain and Canada, can be a significant power in a new tri-polar world order. Individually, none of these nations can stand up to Trump in negotiations, but collectively, they have close to a fifth of the world economy and can have tremendous negotiation power.

Though I am not a fan of either, Emmanuel Macron and Mark Carney are the leaders who have first grasped the geopolitical urgency of the situation and know that appeasing a bully is a path to ruin.

[media=https://youtu.be/6Lvu6WPuRS0]

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/jan/21/mark-carney-davos-canadian-prime-minister-donald-trump-new-world-order

My native Britain also needs to embed itself within this resistance and threaten Trump tariff for tariff, tax for tax, one for all and all for one.

This is not just about Trump. The Republican Party generally thinks the same. JD Vance, Stephen Miller, Marco Rubio or whoever will offer continuation of US policy. If there are still somewhat free elections in America (and there may well not be), then a Democrat might not win and might not fully roll back what Trump has done (domestically or internationally). To say the least, we can't rely on this, and we have to adjust. And now.

In addition, Western nations need to begin the process of completely decoupling their military and security apparatuses from America. A task particularly urgent in Britain, as spelt out by Zack Polanksi, the British Green Party leader.

https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/uk-politics/2026/01/trumps-threat-to-greenland-must-be-a-wake-up-call-for-britain

Yes, the old world order had plenty of hypocrisies and the rules were often broken, particularly by America itself. However, what is happening now is not the same. It's the end of old assumptions, and this is a dangerous time. Now there are no rules left to break, just brute force and a decaying world superpower led by people with boundless cynicism. This is the reality, and we adapt or die.
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Persephonee · 26-30, F
I think your last paragraph might be among the most important, not for tl;dr reasons (!) but because it recognises that the "rules" were never really there at all. It was convenient for America to uphold them (some of the time) - and ignore them when not. And the rest of us in the western world bought into the idea of a rules based order because we got to make all the rules.

Trump is unmitigatedly appalling but aside from everything he very definitely didn't do courtesy of his nice friend Jeffrey, I sometimes wonder whether his worst crime isn't just finally saying all the quiet parts out loud. All that's really different is making an attempt at a naked land grab directly rather than doing it by proxies.

Either way, maybe we all ought to go do confession just in case lol
Burnley123 · 41-45, M
@Persephonee Given my age and my politics, it probably wouldn't surprise you to learn that I was on demonstrations against the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. American-led war crimes that our own government was complicit in.

Also, when we were a world superpower in the 18th and 19th centuries, we were absolutely a colonialist bully. The annexation of India (as one example) was a far worse crime than anything Trump has done.

Having said all this, I do think that what is happening now is a profound change. Trump does say the quiet bit our loud, but what he is doing is even worse.
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Burnley123 · 41-45, M
@BabyLonia I agree. Over a longer period of time, we probably killed more people, and we definitely enslaved more: Both literally and figuratively.

Hitler derived inspiration from his own genocidal racism and also from two other nations: Britain and America. Britain's colonial expansion is something he envied, and he saw parallels with his attempted conquest of the USSR and the subjugation of native Americans.