Saturday, August 16, 2025

More Saturday Male Beauty


 

Trump's Failed Russia-U.S. Summit

Many had feared the Felon would meet with Vladimir Putin - an indicted war criminal - in Anchorage, Alaska, and betray Ukraine and give away the store to the Russian dictator.  The reality is that nothing monumental happened in terms of a deal or even a temporary cease fire in the Russian invasion of Ukraine.  There is not even a plan for a future meeting or a potential negotiations timetable. One Fox News reporter even said "Putin came in and steamrolled Trump." Yet, I suspect both men got something they wanted: the Felon created a distraction for the news  media away from the Epstein scandal and the deteriorating U.S. economy, and Putin was treated as renown world leader, rather than a murderous dictator guilty of war crimes, and had an opportunity to remind the Felon in private of the kompromat he has on the Felon.  Seemingly, the overall winner was Putin who by all appearances gave up nothing and seems dead set on his quest to restore the Russian Empire of old (at home in Russia he continues to restore the imperial palaces of the tsars and honor tsars and tsarinas like Catherine the Great that expanded Russia's empire).  With nothing seemingly accomplished, many are wondering why the summit even occurred other than the purposes cited above.  A piece in The Atlantic looks at the bizarre summit meeting:

So what was that all for? President Donald Trump emerged today from his summit with Russia’s Vladimir Putin without a deal and without much to say. Trump rarely misses a chance to take advantage of a global stage. But when he stood next to Putin at the conclusion of their three-hour meeting, Trump offered few details about what the men had discussed. Stunningly, for a president who loves a press conference, he took no questions from the reporters assembled at a military base in Alaska.

In his brief remarks, Trump conceded that he and Putin had not reached a deal to end the war in Ukraine or even pause the fighting. “There’s no deal until there’s a deal,” the president said. He characterized their three-hour meeting—vaguely—as “very productive.” Of the outstanding issues between the two sides, he admitted that “one is probably significant,” but he didn’t say what that was. “We didn’t get there but we have a very good chance of getting there,” Trump insisted. The Russian president, for his part, made mention of “agreements” that had been struck behind closed doors. Yet Putin also provided no elaboration, leaving the distinct impression that it was a summit about nothing.

If anything, Putin seemed to make clear that his demands regarding Ukraine haven’t changed. In his usual coded way, he said an agreement could be reached only once the “primary roots” of the conflict were “eliminated”—which means, basically, that Ukraine should be part of Russia. “We expect that Kyiv and European capitals will perceive that constructively and that they won’t throw a wrench in the works,” Putin said, in what sounded like a warning. “They will not make any backroom dealings to conduct provocations to torpedo the nascent progress.”

As Putin and Trump boarded their respective airplanes for their flights home, Ukraine and Europe were left guessing as to what the coming days will bring. Will more missiles fly toward Kyiv? Will a second meeting involving Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky occur? Trump was equally as vague in a Fox News interview taped after the summit, though he did suggest that the next steps in the process would be up to Zelensky. What was clear today was that Trump, who had once promised to bring the war to a close within 24 hours, left the summit empty-handed.

“Summits usually have deliverables. This meeting had none,” Michael McFaul, an ambassador to Russia under President Barack Obama, told me. “I hope that they made some progress towards next steps in the peace process. But there is no evidence of that yet.”

That the summit happened at all was perceived by many as a victory for Putin, who, after years as an international pariah, was granted a photo with a U.S. president on American soil—on land that once belonged to Russia, no less. And he was greeted in an over-the-top, stage-managed welcome that involved a literal red carpet for a man accused of war crimes. Putin disembarked his plane this morning moments after Trump stepped off Air Force One, and the two men strode toward each other past parked F-22 fighter jets before meeting with a warm handshake and smiles. After posing for photographs, and quickly peering up at a military flyover that roared above them, the two men stepped into the presidential limousine, the heavily fortified vehicle known as “the Beast.” . . . . in the backseat of the Beast, Putin had his time alone with Trump. As the limousine drove off the tarmac to the summit site, Putin could be seen in a rear window laughing.

Putin and Trump were scheduled to have a formal meeting at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, followed by lunch. But after the first meeting ran long, extending to more than three hours, reporters were abruptly rushed to the room where the press conference would be staged. The second meeting had been canceled. Had there been a breakthrough or a blowup? Putin sported the better body language: He almost glowed as he spoke to the press, offering a history lesson about Alaska, while praising the “neighborly” relations between the men. And, oddly, he got to speak first, even though Trump was the summit’s host. Trump, in contrast, seemed subdued, only perking up when Putin ended their media appearance by suggesting that their next summit be in Moscow.

“I think Trump did not lose, but Putin clearly won. Putin got everything he could have wished for, but he’s not home free yet,” John Bolton, who was a national security adviser in Trump’s first term, told me. “Zelensky and the Europeans must be dismayed. And I thought Trump looked very tired at the press event. Putin looked energetic.”

Putin seemed eager to broaden the conversation beyond Ukraine. He brought Russian business leaders to Alaska, hoping to play to Trump’s hopes of better economic relations between the two countries, and perhaps strike a rare-earth-minerals deal. He also suggested earlier this week that he would revisit a nuclear-arms agreement, perhaps allowing Trump to leave the summit with some sort of win that did not involve Ukraine. But nothing was announced on those fronts either.

The fear in Kyiv and across Europe was that Trump is so desperate for the fighting to stop, he might have agreed to Putin’s terms regardless of what Ukraine wants. That did not happen, which was cheered across the continent, and Trump said that he would soon consult with Zelensky and NATO. But Putin has shown no sign of compromising his positions. He wants Russia to keep the territory it conquered, and Ukraine to forgo the security guarantees that could prevent Moscow from attacking again. Those terms are nonstarters for Ukraine.

Summits, particularly those as high-stakes as ones between American and Russian presidents, usually take weeks if not months to plan. Everything is carefully choreographed: the agenda, the participants, the ceremony. Normally, the outcome is more or less predetermined. In the days before the actual summit, aides hash out some sort of agreement so the two leaders simply need to show up and shake hands to make the deal official. That was clearly not the case today—or in other Trump-Putin meetings.

Anchorage wasn’t Helsinki. For that, Europe can be grateful. Trump didn’t give away Ukrainian land to Russia or demand that Zelensky take a bad deal, at least immediately. But Putin did get much of what he wanted, including a high-profile summit and, most of all, more time to continue his war. When he boarded his plane to leave Alaska, he was spotted smiling again.


Saturday Morning Male Beauty


 

Friday, August 15, 2025

More Friday Male Beauty


 

The Felon's Thirst for Crisis and Power

The felon has many reasons to want crisis and chaos not the least of which at the moment is to distract the American public from the Epstein scandal that shows no sign of abating (a new Pew poll shows 70% disapproval of the manner in which the Felon's regime has handled the Epstein files).  So far, nothing has truly worked as a distraction, be it masked ICE agents seizing people on the streets, the effort to take over Washington, D C, or the assaults against America's leading universities. A more sinister motivation is the Felon's desire to rule as an autocrat, unrestrained by the separation of powers under the U.S. Constitution - which the Felon would happily suspend - or two centuries of traditions that have circumscribed presidential power.  None of this, bodes well for America's future or the rights or safety of everyday Americans some of whom are belatedly waking to the reality that we are increasingly under fascist rule.  Much of this is in keeping with Project 2025's agenda of imposing a white Christian nationalism's dogma and contempt for minorities of any kind.  But time and time again, what we are seeing is the Felon's unrestrained thirst for ever more power ( he has now created a "loyalty rating" for corporations based on their support for his ugly agenda).  No one seemingly is safe. A column in the New York Times looks at where we find ourselves:

How did the president justify the “public safety emergency” he used to deploy the National Guard to Washington and seize control of its local police force?

He said there was crime — “bloodshed, bedlam and squalor and worse.”

“Our capital city has been overtaken by violent gangs and bloodthirsty criminals, roving mobs of wild youth, drugged-out maniacs and homeless people,” said President Trump in a stark attack on the nation’s capital. The solution? Military force. “We’re going to put it in control very quickly, like we did in the southern border.” The president later described Washington as more violent and dangerous than some of “the worst places on earth.”

None of this is true. The Justice Department itself announced in January that crime in the capital is, according to data from its Metropolitan Police Department, “the lowest it has been in over 30 years.” The M.P.D. cites a 26 percent decrease in total violent crime so far this year compared with the same period a year earlier. . . . . there is no evidence to support the president’s hellish depiction of the District.

But his claims are less reason than pretext. Trump is simply enthralled by the image of a crackdown, especially on those he’s deemed deviant. Recall that he wanted to use the Insurrection Act during the protests of the summer of 2020, asking his secretary of defense, Mark Esper, if soldiers could shoot protesters “in the legs or something.” In addition, and perhaps more than anything, he wants to appear in charge, whether or not he’s accomplishing his goals.

The president’s action in the capital — the first time a president invoked the D.C. Home Rule Act of 1973 to take over the city’s police — is just the latest in a long list of so-called emergencies he has conjured up to claim unilateral authority over the American people.

In January, alleging an “invasion” of the country, Trump declared an emergency on the border as pretext for the use of federal troops for immigration enforcement. In March, he invoked the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 with the claim that a Venezuelan gang, Tren de Aragua, was conducting “irregular warfare against the territory of the United States,” a definition of “warfare” that cuts against legal precedent and the plain meaning of the word. Trump used this emergency to unleash immigration authorities on anyone deemed a “gang member,” removing them to the brutal CECOT prison in El Salvador.

And in April, he announced a theretofore nonexistent national economic emergency, invoking the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977 to “address the national emergency posed by the large and persistent trade deficit.” With this, Trump claimed the power to impose broad tariffs at his absolute discretion, beginning a trade war with much of the world.

None of these were real emergencies. There was, and is, no external crisis facing the United States. But for reasons of both personality and political ambition, Trump needs a crisis to govern — or rather, to rule. And if the actual conditions of reality will not give him a state of exception, he’ll create one himself.

Congress has, throughout the nation’s history, permanently vested the president with “vast discretionary powers to be exercised in time of war or other national emergency, usually to be determined and proclaimed by himself.”

This accretion of emergency powers continued well past the postwar period and into the present — a steady concentration of power in the person of the president. . . . By this view, Trump represents a difference of degree — albeit an extreme one — and not a difference of kind from predecessors who ignored the law, denied constitutional protections and abused presidential authority under the guise of national security.

To the extent there is a limiting force on the use of emergency or crisis powers — before, during or after the 20th century — it is a president’s commitment to the constitutional system itself.

In a nation made supposedly of laws, we have gambled on the discretion of men to keep the use of crisis authority in check. With Trump, we played a bad hand. Rather than treat emergency powers as a dangerous tool to be wielded with care and caution, this president has used them with reckless abandon as a toy — a means through which he can live his fantasies of strength, domination and authoritarian control.

Beyond the psychological impulse, there is a practical reason that Trump has embraced emergency powers and crisis government through pretense: He can’t do anything else. Look past his boastful claims of deal-making prowess and you’ll see a president who struggles to hold his own in a negotiation of equals and is too acutely solipsistic to persuade a skeptic of his own view. Even his much-vaunted (by subordinates and admirers) trade deals and agreements with institutions of higher education are less exchanges than a form of extortion, in which he uses threats of pain, punishment and legal action to impose a settlement.

The president’s [the Felon’s]most famous attribute is that nothing, for him, is ever enough. He has never had enough real estate, or enough wealth, or enough praise, adulation and worship. We should have realized, after his attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, that he couldn’t have enough power, either. He still can’t. And only time will tell what that means for our efforts to govern ourselves.

I suspect that, as Trump inevitably works to extend his personal dominion over the entire country, we’ll find renewed value in the insights of our revolutionary forbearers. We may even decide to put them to use.

Thursday, August 14, 2025

Friday Morning Male Beauty


 

More Thursday Male Beauty


 

The Trump Regime's Disturbing Definition of Human Rights

It has long been obvious to many that the Felon idolizes dictators and autocrats and, if allowed, he would like to rule in a similar dictatorial fashion here in America. He likewise has contempt for the freedom of association - unless its his supporters at one of his rallies or neo-Nazis - and freedom of speech (ask Stephen Colbert).  Countries once deemed abusive of human rights are now under the Felon's regime receiving passes while allies who have stringent human rights and anti-hate speech laws they enforce are labeled as transgressors of human rights. It's no surprise that the Felon's attitude has seeped the State Department were enumeration of abuses of and discrimination against women (including instances of violence and rape) or sexual minorities has been erased. The former of the two is no surprise given the Felon's apparent view that women are good for use as sex objects, but not worthy of protections from discrimination, abuse or sexual assault (one right wing provocateur has even stated recently that wives are obligated to give their husbands sex on demand). It goes without saying that regimes that hold human rights in low regard are smiling widely while responsible governments are dumbstruck. Given the rampant human rights abuse by ICE and the Felon's regime's disdain for due process, if Americans do not mobilize and resist, things will likely get far worse.  A piece in The Atlantic looks at the degradation of human rights standards under the Felon:

For nearly half a century, the State Department has reported annually on human-rights conditions in countries around the world. The purpose of this exercise is not to cast aspersions, but to collect and disseminate reliable information. Congress mandated the reports back in 1977, and since then, legislators and diplomats have used them to shape decisions about sanctions, foreign aid, immigration, and political asylum.

Because the reports were perceived as relatively impartial, because they tried to reflect well-articulated standards—“internationally recognized individual, civil, political, and worker rights, as set forth in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights”—and because they were composed by professionals reporting from the ground, the annual documents became a gold standard, widely used by people around the world, cited in court cases and political campaigns.

In past years, the reports were published in March or April. But this year they were delayed for several months while President Donald Trump’s political appointees, including Michael Anton, the MAGA intellectual who is now the State Department’s director of policy planning, rewrote the drafts.

Some of the changes affect the whole collection of documents, as entire categories of interest were removed. The Obama administration had previously put a strong focus on corruption, on the grounds that kleptocracy and autocracy are deeply linked, and it started collecting information on the persecution of sexual minorities. Over the past few weeks, as the new reports were being prepared, I spoke with former officials who had seen early versions, or who had worked on the reports in the past. As many of them expected, the latest reports do not address systemic discrimination against gay or trans people, and they remove observations about rape and violence against women.

But the revisions also go much further than expected, dropping references to corruption, restrictions on free and fair elections, rights to a fair trial, and the harassment of human-rights organizations. Threats to freedom of assembly are no longer considered sufficiently important to mention. In a number of instances, criticism of Israel is classified, crudely, as “antisemitism.”

Along with the category changes, entries for 20 countries were also flagged for special consideration. These were sent for review to Samuel Samson, a political appointee in the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor. Dozens of professionals have been fired or removed from that office, widely known as DRL; Samson—who is, according to NPR, a recent college graduate and an alumnus of a program designed to put conservative activists into government jobs—remains. The end result of his and others’ efforts are reports that contain harsh and surprising assessments of democratic U.S. allies, including the U.K., Romania, Germany, and Brazil, and softer depictions of some dictatorships and other countries favored by Trump or his entourage. El Salvador and Israel, I was told, required so much rewriting that these two entries help explain the long delay in the reports’ publication.

The report on Germany, a highly functional democracy, is equally strange. The State report speaks of “significant human rights issues,” including “restrictions on freedom of expression.” One specific example: German law “required internet companies, including U.S. internet platforms, to take down hate speech within 24 hours or face stiff fines.” Germans, in other words, are being called human-rights abusers because they continue to outlaw Nazi propaganda, as they have done since 1945. The Trump administration’s motives are clear here too. The goal is to please U.S. tech companies, notably X, that find it convenient or profitable to spread Nazi propaganda, and perhaps to help the Alternative for Germany, the far-right party publicly praised and courted by J. D. Vance.

But the details of the reports are less important than the overall impact. Several former officials pointed out that the U.S. has not only abandoned internationally accepted definitions of what is meant by rights, but also  any objectivity or consistency. . . . . None of them can now claim that the State Department Human Rights Report has any factual standing, or indeed that any U.S.-government document on human rights is an objective measure of anything.

In truth, some of the changes seem designed not so much to shape U.S. foreign policy as to shape U.S. domestic policy. Christopher Le Mon, a former DRL official, told me he thinks that “the domestic political agenda is really the organizing principle here.” He might be right. The administration is saying, after all, that it no longer finds electoral cheating or manipulation to be a problem; it doesn’t think the harassment of civic groups is a bad thing; it doesn’t object to discrimination against women or sexual minorities; and it will never demand transparency or accountability from the providers of internet algorithms, no matter what they choose to amplify or promote. The reports’ authors, who include some of the most ideological people in the administration, are also telling Americans what they think of the standards that both Republicans and Democrats have held up for years. Now, says Le Mon, “they’re making it that much easier to just erase human rights from what has been a long-standing, relatively bipartisan history in U.S. foreign policy.”

[T]his shift in American language puts the U.S. directly in alliance with China, whose diplomats have been campaigning for years to change the diplomatic discourse about human rights. . . . . “From Beijing’s point of view, the more such language is emasculated, the greater the CCP’s competitive advantage,” he said. Russians, North Koreans, Iranians, Cubans, and others will also find this shift an immense relief.

We knew this was coming. In a speech in Riyadh earlier this year, Trump flagged America’s new indifference to human rights, promising the Saudis and other Middle Eastern monarchs that America would stop “giving you lectures on how to live and how to govern your own affairs.” . . . . in a world of intense ideological competition, there is no such thing as neutrality. Debates about the definition of human rights will continue. The U.S. will simply play a different role in them. Tom Malinowski, a former congressman who once ran the DRL bureau, puts it best. The reports, he told me, show that the “U.S. still has a values-based foreign policy, but with twisted values.” Americans are giving plenty of lectures to other people on how to live, but to different people and with a different result.

Thursday Morning Male Beauty


 

Wednesday, August 13, 2025

More Wednesday Male Beauty


 

Supreme Court Asked to Reverse Same Sex Marriage

Anyone who took the time to peruse Project 2025 - a white "Christian" nationalist agenda to return America to 1950 - would quickly come to two quick conclusions: (i) non-discrimination protections for non-whites were targeted for erasure and (ii) gays, especially same sex marriage, were to be targeted.  Since the Felon regained the White House, diversity, federal equity and inclusion initiatives have been  ended and major universities that had such programs have been threatened and intimidated to end them. Now, the thrice divorced Kim Davis (now on marriage number four), the Kentucky county clerk who was jailed in 2015 for refusing to issue same-sex marriage licenses, is appealing her case to the U.S. Supreme Court. Davis claims that same sex marriage offends her religious beliefs and sullies the sanctity of marriage.  As is the norm with so many self-style evangelical "Christians", hypocrisy is one of Davis' key attributes. Should SCOTUS reverse its Obergefell decision, same sex marriages in many states, including Virginia, would be voided and many LGBT Americans would find their relationships discriminated against and would lose over a thousand rights that stem from the word "marriage" in statutes.  Those like Davis (who I suspect my southern belle grandmother would deem "white trash"), of course, can nothing about others and need to have a license to harm others in order to feel superior and better about themselves.  The irony is that Clarence Thomas - the dullard of SCOTUS - doesn't grasp that a reversal of Obergefell could set the stage for the reversal of Loving v. Virginia and the invalidation of his own marriage to a white woman. A piece in The New Republic looks at this disturbing development:

Same-sex marriage could soon be back on the Supreme Court docket. Kim Davis, the Kentucky county clerk who was jailed in 2015 for refusing to issue same-sex marriage licenses, is appealing her case. Davis is appealing a $100,000 jury verdict for emotional damages plus $260,000 for attorneys’ fees, reported ABC News Monday.

Davis claimed that her First Amendment rights protecting her religious freedom effectively immunized her from repercussions for denying the licenses.

“The mistake must be corrected,” Davis’s attorney Mathew Staver argued in the petition, further condemning Justice Anthony Kennedy’s majority opinion in Obergefell v. Hodges as “legal fiction.”

“This court should revisit and reverse Obergefell for the same reasons articulated in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Center,” reads one titled portion, under which Staver claims that “Obergefell was wrong when it was decided and it is wrong today because it was grounded entirely on the legal fiction of substantive due process.”

Staver’s argument alluded to Justice Clarence Thomas’s concurring opinion in Dobbs, which overturned the nationwide right to abortion established in Roe v. Wade. In his 2022 opinion, Thomas argued that the court “should reconsider” its substantive due process precedents, including contraception, same-sex marriage, and even same-sex relationships.

Gay marriage was effectively legalized in 2015, when the Supreme Court ruled in Obergefell that keeping marriage licenses from same-sex couples was discriminatory. The decision mandated that all states issue licenses to gay and lesbian couples, and required states to recognize marriages performed in other jurisdictions, as well.

Marriage equality was further protected at the federal level in 2022, when the Respect for Marriage Act became law, requiring all 50 states to recognize same-sex marriages performed in other states. It did not, however, formally legalize gay marriage, so if the Supreme Court were to take up Davis’s case and overturn Obergefell, gay marriage rights would fall with it.

Roughly 69 percent of Americans support same-sex marriages, according to a 2024 Gallup poll. Republican support for gay couples’ equal rights has dipped in recent years, however, from a record high of 55 percent in favor of it in 2021 to 46 percent in 2024.

Under Project 2025, only white, heterosexual, right wing "Christians" have rights and have a license to discriminate against others. 

Wednesday Morning Male Beauty


 

Sunday, August 10, 2025

More Sunday Male Beauty


 

The Felon Is Destroying the Future of America to Own the Libs

Throughout history great nations (and those perceived as such) have fallen through wars - think the Russian and Austria Empires - and competition with rising nations.  Sometimes the national  decline is driven or at least aggravated by bad policy decisions within a nation and/or the refusal to recognize shifts in industrial production and new technologies.  After both WWI and WWII, the United Kingdom failed to modernize numerous industries and lost its economic dominance, something that was made worse by its loss of its former colonies. Now, with China rising and striving to gain technological dominance and the European Union posing a potential counterweight, the United States under the Felon is making policy and industrial decisions that will likely harm America's future and cede leadership in rising technologies much as the UK did 75-100 years ago. Add to this the Felon's war on universities to stifle any views and ideologies that oppose the effort to take America back to the 1950's socially that will likely harm innovation, and it is a recipe for long term stagnation and decline. Much of what's happening is to "own the libs" and pander to white male grievance and perceived lost privilege. Neither motivation will make America competitive in new technologies.  A column in the New York Times looks at the harm being done:

The American economy seems to be slowing. Although the unemployment rate remains low, the jobs report released this month showed that the U.S. labor market has essentially been stalled since President Trump foisted “Liberation Day” on us in April. Yes, it’s true, the artificial intelligence sector remains white-hot, but once you look beyond it, the weather is chillier — the manufacturing sector may be shrinking, home building is slowing and most employment growth is happening in just one industry: health care.

[N]early seven months into his presidency, it’s now clear that Mr. Trump and his officials’ tax and trade policy — and their hatred for next-generation energy technologies — is distorting and, increasingly, robbing the economy of its complexity. And if he keeps at it, Mr. Trump will demote America into a deindustrialized power that relies on technology developed elsewhere and doesn’t know how to sell much more than crypto, soybeans and petroleum products.

You can see this, first, because Mr. Trump and his officials are waging a war on electricity infrastructure. This campaign is primarily driven by their opposition to the solar and wind farms that they associate with their foils, the Democrats. . . . . That war began, of course, with Mr. Trump’s signature domestic policy law, which pinched off long-running tax credits for wind and solar energy. But it does not stop there. In the past few weeks, the Trump administration has started an all-out war on renewable energy. . . . . every step of every federal permit for renewable energy must now pass under the eye of some political appointee. Another recent order has suggested that the federal government may essentially ban wind and solar farms from public land. A separate Transportation Department policy could even restrict companies’ ability to build private wind farms on private land.

Mr. Trump’s maelstrom of tariffs is further eroding our economic complexity. As more and more businesses are realizing, his trade levies are more likely to weaken domestic manufacturers than strengthen them. That’s because Mr. Trump is unpredictably imposing tariffs on everything — raw materials, factory equipment and even some Canadian and Mexican products — and then constantly changing these levies.

That makes it impossible for domestic manufacturers to plan how and where to expand capacity to avoid the new taxes. . . . . If companies must choose between paying a flat 15 percent import tariff or navigating America’s ever-shifting stack of steel, aluminum and equipment taxes, they’ll often choose to manufacture abroad.

But the clearest example of the atrophy is in the bill’s demolition of electric vehicle tax credits. E.V.s are to the 21st century what gasoline-burning cars were to the 20th century: an important “apex” industry that builds on and incorporates the work of other sectors, like steel, mining and chemicals.

Smothering the E.V. industry might have been merely a regrettable mistake for a Republican to make 10 years ago. Today, it is economic idiocy. Over the past decade, China has built a new kind of industrial economy that combines a specific stack of technologies — batteries, motors, semiconductors, sensors and software — into high-end manufactured goods like cars and drones. It is better at producing these high-end goods than just about anyone else in the world. Its electric cars, in particular, are “far superior” to what’s available in the West, according to Jim Farley, Ford’s chief executive.

Some observers even believe that China will become the world’s first “electrostate” — a country that runs on electricity, not oil. What it has already accomplished is, in some ways, more impressive: With its solar panels and batteries, China is on its way to turning energy production into something closer to a manufactured good. It is now able to sell solar panels, batteries and electric vehicles to the rest of the world as a low-cost, low-pollution alternative to fossil fuels or internal combustion vehicles.

But Americans should not miss the significance of what seems to be happening: China’s low-cost electronic technologies once augmented gasoline and internal-combustion cars; now, they are replacing them. And as Chinese companies transform the global energy market with cheap solar panels, batteries and E.V.s, America is acting like a doddering industrial giant — too hooked on oil and gas revenues, and the political power that results from them, to exercise the economic muscles it will need in the future.

The United States is good at growing food, drilling for oil and gas, making chemicals, producing software and building internal combustion vehicles of various types. We are not as good at making cost-competitive batteries, electronics, solar panels, wind turbines or E.V.s. Without a concerted effort to make us more skilled at the latter, the United States will surrender its technological edge in the very industries that have long contributed to its economic (and military) strength.

Now silicon and lithium are devouring the transportation sector — cars, trains, flight and military technology. Mr. Trump is actively trying to keep American companies from participating in the consumer side of that revolution — probably because admitting that it’s happening might hurt oil companies. So instead, he’s undercutting the new and nascent sectors of the American economy — making us less innovative, prosperous and free.

In the very short term, we will probably be fine. We will keep buying gas-guzzling S.U.V.s, building suburban homes and training A.I. models. Technology executives will keep giving glass and gold plaques to the president. In the long term, I worry that we are ill-prepared for what’s coming.

Sunday Morning Male Beauty