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Mon, 05 Jan 2026 09:15:00 +0000 Production For Security 2026
Production For Security 2026
Submitted by Peter Tchir of Academy Securities
ProSec 2026
We will do a “traditional” outlook for 2026, covering all major markets, but we really wanted to highlight ProSec and
Read more.....
Production For Security 2026
Submitted by Peter Tchir of Academy Securities
ProSec 2026
We will do a “traditional” outlook for 2026, covering all major markets, but we really wanted to highlight ProSec and define more carefully what we think it means for you as corporations, policy makers, and asset managers.
Production for Security:
RESILIENCY. We haven’t used the word “resiliency” as much as we could have and will use it more going forward. Being resilient, whether at the nation, state, or corporate level, will become a fixture in decision making.
ProSec is already in the process of supplanting “traditional” ESG as an overarching theme in decision-making and planning.
As much as we’ve tried to instill our view on how big, broad, and important the scope of ProSec is, we have failed to do that – so far.
While not critical to ProSec we do believe that as the world adopts a “Pre-War ” mentality, it helps accelerate ProSec as it imbues a degree of “sacrifice for the greater good” while also imparting a sense of “urgency.”
ProSec is already going global and getting left behind on this initiative will be problematic for countries, companies, and investors .
Resiliency as a Driving Force Behind ProSec
To some degree we can describe ProSec as being the answer to “What If?”
What if global shipping is disrupted?
It has happened for reasons “out of our control .” COVID was not on anyone’s radar screen. Even the Evergreen blocking the Suez Canal was an “unforeseen” accident. Will markets react the same the next time around to companies exposed to that risk? What if some companies have “planned” for this and have more robust supply chains – less use of shipping, using a variety of shipping lanes, only shipping with countries they are very close to – physically or politically? If a “competitor” has prepared and you haven’t, and it occurs again, it is difficult to see markets being as “understanding” as they were when it was deemed farfetched.
Legend has it that the disaster recovery plan for one incredibly large hedge fund was to use other offices as disaster recovery sites . It had the advantage of being global, so if something happened in a region that took out the main office, and the disaster recovery site, it would still be covered. It had the advantage of all sites being up to date. Nothing worse than getting to the disaster recovery site and realizing that the internet is too slow and you were running obsolete versions of software. The plan made a lot of sense. It did not cover the contingency of grounding all U.S. flights for days. To the extent the story is true (and I have no reason to doubt it), I can assure you that this fund revamped their plans to cover even more contingencies as well as other highly unlikely, but still possible scenarios. They increased their RESILIENCY as they absorbed new information.
It happened because a “bad actor” behaved badly. Prior to the invasion of Ukraine by Russia, we could explain being “asleep at the switch” in terms of this type of risk. Iran and its proxies attacking more aggressively in the Middle East has not caused major disruptions, but it has caused some level of disruption, and seemed like a more foreseeable event than Russia’s invasion. The U.S. has just “blockaded” Venezuela. Actually, we did not “blockade” Venezuela as that is an act of war according to international law, but we have changed the nature of doing business with Venezuela.
The People’s Armed Forces Maritime Militia (PAFMM ). We used GROK for some of this information, but it is all very consistent with topics we’ve discussed in the past. Let’s start with this map from GROK attributed to npr.org to explain some potential risks.It (PAFMM) often operates in coordination with the PLA Navy (PLAN) and China’s Coast Guard (CCG) as part of a "joint defense" approach involving military, law enforcement, and civilian elements. In peacetime, it contributes to gray-zone tactics—coercive actions short of open warfare—such as swarming disputed features, harassing foreign vessels, or establishing a de facto presence to bolster territorial claims in the South China Sea and East China Sea. Western analyses describe it as enabling China to advance its interests while maintaining plausible deniability, as vessels appear to be civilian. Chinese sources emphasize its role in leading fishing activities, collecting oceanic information, supporting island/reef construction, and participating in drills for national defense and disaster relief.
They have had as many as 400 ships active at any one time. According to GROK the “professional” component consists of 100-200 purpose-built boats (presumably larger and more sophisticated ones). There have been estimates that the total number of ships available is in the thousands . While not set up to attack, in the traditional sense, they can make sea travel perilous, not only by getting in the way, but also by dumping things like nets and logs overboard to foul propellors, etc. The main focus today is Taiwan, because of our dependance on Taiwan for chips (a recurring theme of our 2026 Outlook), but it seems almost naïve to believe that there isn’t a bigger risk to shipping than just the concern around Taiwan’s chips (which in and of itself is a risk unless we become more “resilient” or diverse in our chip businesses). We didn’t even touch on China’s control, ownership, and equipment in many ports across the globe as a potential future risk, but it certainly is.
While we might not lose sleep every night worrying about shipping lanes, it seems prudent to plan for the worst if the cost to diversifying shipping lanes is small .
Considering the latest National Security Strategy, the potential safety of shipping should be a consideration when building new facilities. That gives the nod to North, South, and Central America, especially if you are not already overly exposed to the region.
What if the flow of processed or refined rare earths and critical minerals is cut off?
Clearly this would be a risk if shipping with China is disrupted. But given what we’ve seen with the trade negotiations, it seems easy to play out scenarios where China decides to curtail shipments of their own volition.
These scenarios are by no means the base case, but do you really believe they have a zero probability of occurring? That there is no set of circumstances in the next few years under which China decides it is in their best interest to reduce shipments of these materials? Antimony is used in every munition and we remain highly dependent on China for this.
I am more focused on the refined and processed versions. China controls about 60% of the extraction/mining of what is broadly categorized as rare earths and critical minerals. They control about 90% of the processing and refining.
They can shut us off from the raw resources, but we could, in most cases, source them elsewhere. However, what good does it do if we have to ship them to China to be refined and processed?
I know I don’t always do a good job of highlighting the importance of these “things.” It is almost easy to dismiss some as they are “only a small part” of a bigger item . When we think “big picture,” it is easy to forget the importance that these little parts play in the grand scheme of things. Often, they are not just a little portion, but a large portion – when you are talking about batteries for instance.
With the help of OpenAI I have tried to bring the CEO of Whirlpool’s comments (made during COVID) to life.
This is maybe too “casual” or even too “obvious” as of course a washing machine needs a door, but that doesn’t make the point irrelevant (just my choice of graphics).
So much of our industrial production could grind to a halt, just because some small amount of processed/refined rare earths or critical minerals (that we depend on China for) doesn’t make it to our factories. It doesn’t only have to be to our “domestic” factories; this applies to factories anywhere around the globe, maybe even within China, if they decide to go down this path. Again, it isn’t our base case, but becoming more RESILIENT, aka ProSec, goes a long way towards mitigating this risk.
While we don’t need to be completely “self-sufficient,” the more we can produce on our own, the more likely China won’t try to cut us off.
Energy and electricity production.
We need to think about resiliency . We need realistic and cost effective contingency plans. The “irony” of this is the more independent one becomes, the less chance one becomes the target of an adversary or competitor. It is effectively Economic Deterrence.
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Economic Needs
Of all the things I learned in college, being able to open a bottle of beer with another beer and Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs might be the two most useful things I learned (though to be honest, growing up in Canada, I think we learned the beer bottle thing in high school, but I digress).
I don’t know what “self-actualization” really is, but Universal Basic Income seems right up there. I previously thought we were in the “Esteem” stage. That let us think about things differently. The concern I have is that we were being overly “altruistic” in our vision because we thought we had the levels below us covered. The crumbling foundation is what has become apparent, first gradually, and then suddenly.
We have published on many of these themes going back to 2018. They aren’t completely new.
COVID did change a little of how we think and behave, especially towards China.
The Biden administration saw the need for the CHIPS ACT.
But all of these things seemed more like an attempt to patch a crack, rather than determining that the entire foundation might be crumbling and needs to be completely redone!
ProSec and ESG are Compatible
Despite how the previous section might come across, much of what “we” were trying to achieve with ESG will remain in place. But the lens through which we look at ESG will be changing with “true” Sustainability (Resiliency, Independence, Security, etc.) taking center stage.
The ProSec Industries.
Let’s take a “quick” look at how we see the ProSec economy developing around specific industries.
This chart is intended to do a few things:
Make you wish that I’d figured out how to use AI to make this chart more professional.
Highlight the industries with some sense of relative importance (column width).
Highlight how much can be done easily (green), with some effort (yellow), facing some real hurdles (orange), and some that might not be achievable (red).
Biotech and Pharma.
As a “talking point,” reducing healthcare costs is easy. The complexity of the system makes it difficult. Same for “manufacturing at home.” On the surface it is “easy,” but there are a lot of difficulties. Hundreds, and even thousands of drugs are produced. We can kind of get away with saying “steel” and it covers the topic reasonably well (though purists would argue about the type of steel, etc.). But “drugs” is just too vague. There are the components, the base, and precursor drugs. There are the complex drugs we actually ingest or take. There are drugs with multiple delivery methods. The delivery methods themselves are sometimes separated from the drug itself. Patents. There is a focus here, but it is so complex that I think only slow progress will be made.
For the “green” section of this industry, look no further than the GLP-1 drugs. They have the benefit of being topical and potentially have incredibly widespread application. Certainly, interest in them is widespread. The combination of “big and public” makes them an ideal candidate for an administration to focus on. Lots of headlines and manageable. Away from that, it seems like it will be a slog to get a lot of manufacturing done here. It will happen over time (we had immense success getting the COVID vaccines produced here – regardless of your view on the vaccines themselves).
My best guess is that the admin will focus on the pharmacies next, rather than the manufacturers , as that industry is concentrated, and well known to the public, so easier to get a lot of “bang for the buck” on the political front. While I think this is an incredibly important ProSec industry, I think it will not be front and center in 2026 for opportunities.
Chips, Data Centers, and AI.
These industries are doing incredibly well in their own right. Demand is there. In terms of ProSec™ the goal of the administration will be to bring more and more production home. There are a lot of opportunities in this space. The industry leaders should continue to do well and get government support. That support might come in many forms. Some of it may be through increased government use of the services. The government (in all facets, including state, local, defense, and healthcare) will spend in this sector.
Regulatory help is another avenue the government will pursue . Whether paving the way for data centers, the power generation required, or even allowing products to be exported, to earn money, and to fund domestic growth, there will be support from the administration.
INTC continues to stand out in this sector . While I would like rules in place to regulate state investments, those are not really in place (and would likely be pushed to the limit by this admin, even if they were in place). I find it difficult to see a world where the government doesn’t try to support the taxpayers’ investment in this company. For full disclosure, INTC was my biggest single stock holding in 2025 and will be again in 2026. It was up 86% in 2025. Can it repeat that? Who knows, but while I think any stock in this space has potential, with those focused on manufacturing in the U.S. getting the most government support, the direct investment leads me to suspect that extra support will be given here.
Much of this chart is “green” and even “yellow” as a lot remains in our control. Look for a “shift” in the industry as it moves to where the energy (electricity) and fresh water are located. Tasks that require low latency will remain in locations that can offer that speed, but applications that allow for more latency will move to where the electricity is.
The administration is likely going to take a closer look at quantum computing. I briefly pulled up WQTM (a quantum ETF) and some of their holdings jumped out at me – QBTS, IONQ, RGTI, and ARQQ to name a few. I have not spent much time on this, but some of these stocks seem to fit the “lottery ticket” theme in ProSec™ (companies with a small enough market cap, that a direct investment by the U.S. taxpayers could help the stock “pop,” similar to the investment in MP – though that stock is well off of its highs).
Electron Production.
There will be a focus on not only producing the electricity needed for AI, Data Centers, EVs, and industry, but also getting it to where it needs to go (transmission).
All forms of electricity generation will be used. Okay, maybe all forms other than wind, which this administration seems to really dislike.
Fusion. This is more the “future” and I haven’t poked around for tickers, but makes sense.
Fission. This is an area we have focused on a lot. The government is clearly promoting the growth of the nuclear power business. From allowing nuclear to be built on Army bases, to chatter about using Navy reactors more broadly, the government is working hard to jumpstart the nuclear industry. It has the longest lead time to build . There remains a “fear” factor associated with nuclear (I wonder what the world would look like had the nuclear industry hired the Bitcoin marketing team ). Despite those risks (too long and too much negative public opinion) I think the opportunities remain very good in this space.
URA is an ETF that focuses on Uranium. One way to bet on the rise of nuclear, here and abroad (Canada for example is ramping up efforts in this area), is through Uranium. The commodity itself, the miners, and the refiners could all do well if the nuclear industry really takes off. Worth looking through the holding of ETFs like this to assess what stocks might make sense.
Personally, I’m fascinated with the Small Nuclear Reactor space. It has been a roller coaster ride, and we need to see projects completed, in scale, but this fits our theme extremely well.
Coal and Natural Gas . While nuclear might become the backbone years from now, we are going to need rapid expansion of coal and natural gas burning facilities. Maybe not as clean as “we would like” but it is necessary (ProSec™ is trumping ESG – pun intended). Companies like GEV will continue to do well as will other companies that can step in and produce turbines and other equipment that these facilities will need. That industry compressed, as it was out of favor with “traditional” ESG, but will do well again as we try to harness all sources of electricity production.
One of the issues with coal and nat gas is getting it to where the electricity generation is. It is often one of the more difficult logistical issues that companies face when developing new facilities (less so when increasing size of existing facilities). It is right up there with regulatory approval, which remains an issue. So, maybe we will build the facilities where the resources are? We mentioned this earlier and will mention it again. When generating power for a city, you cannot really move the city. When generating power for something like a data center, maybe building the data center close to the power source is best?
Solar. From all the discussions I’ve had, it seems difficult to see the admin suddenly agreeing that wind is necessary. On solar, there is that real possibility. It seems impossible to believe that the electricity production industry isn’t telling the President and his team that solar needs to be part of his overall plan. Elon Musk literally tweets about the need for solar almost every day. While the solar plays may not have the upside of say nuclear, they should have less downside. Since they are “under-owned” as the government cuts back on subsidies, they could actually surprise to the upside. I like some of the more solar-focused companies.
Transmission and the Grid. We will need to make improvements to our transmission lines and the grid. Not just in terms of capacity but also “hardening” it – better cyber- threat security and possibly even better physical-threat security. Companies involved in transmission and the grid should do well.
Batteries. The use of batteries is only going to increase (especially if the admin reverses course on solar, where battery power is more of a necessity, due to the potential timing mismatches of power production versus use).
Utilities. Unregulated utilities probably have the edge here as more “traditional” utility users (individuals like you and me) are becoming concerned, perturbed, or even angry about the use of electricity by the AI/Data Center business.
Much of this sector is green and yellow as so much is in our control. Regulations might be the biggest hurdle to achieve the power needs, but I expect that hurdle will be lowered in an effort to ensure that the U.S. wins the AI and Data Center race.
Rare Earths and Critical Minerals. I need to connect with Michael Rodriguez, Academy’s Head of Sustainable Finance (where he has always focused on resiliency), to do a more thorough dive into this sector – plus this report is already getting long for you to read, and my fingers are starting to hurt from typing so much. We are trying to analyze the importance of the material, alongside potential commercial application/profitability. Some are crucial to the U.S. but not viable domestically. The reason this sector has some orange and red coloring has less to do with the “willingness” and more to do with the “ability.”
Commodities. Similar to the above section, but with a lower priority. First, we need to “fix” our rare earths and critical minerals problem, then we can focus on commodities more generally. Some will get done, but that won’t be the highest priority. Again, focus on refining and processing over extraction. Commodities have less green and more yellow and orange than rare earths – precisely because the will and urgency aren’t there.
Heavy Industry. Steel. Aluminum. Chemicals. Nice to have, but gets complicated quickly. Also, project lead time is typically at the long-end of the spectrum. This seems more like a Phase 2 ProSec™ idea rather than something that will create immediate opportunities.
Defense. I will defer to our GIG members to opine on this more fully, but there will be a lot of opportunities with small/private companies developing “cutting edge” technology. There will remain a place for the “platforms” (aircraft carriers, state of the art fighter planes, etc.), but there are indications that drones, space, and anything autonomous are going to be the big beneficiaries of a Department of War that is to some extent repositioning itself (if not reinventing itself).
Ship Building. We need to make more ships. The U.S. Navy (as per my latest understanding) has plans to grow its fleet, albeit by small numbers. But despite that “plan,” the size of the Navy has been decreasing as ships are being retired faster than the replacements are being built. That is just the “traditional” Navy. Surface and underwater drones are going to play a major role going forward in shore defense (and attack). The Jones Act prevents non-U.S. built and flagged ships from shipping goods and commodities between two U.S. ports (one reason the Northeast imports a lot of gasoline while the South exports a lot of gasoline). I’ve been told the President doesn’t like the cruise ships in and around Florida (where he regularly sees them) flying foreign flags (on non U.S.-made ships). This industry is poised for government support.
Despite that rousing endorsement of this industry, very little is in green or even yellow. This will be a HEAVY LIFT. The skills, the materials, and the facilities are not readily available. This is more complex than ramping up electricity or getting a mine up and running. There are a lot of problems, not just hurdles, and shortages of skill and expertise will make this one more difficult to achieve. That could slow the admin down, as there isn’t quite the “easy” win we can see in some other areas. Yet it is critical and the “photo op” of breaking a bottle of champagne across the bow of the first ship built in a new yard would be impressive (though I suspect it will be the next President who would get to do that, given the time it is likely to take).
There are ways to invest in this sector, some of which would include defense stocks. I will also toss out BC (which I own) as a potential fit – especially if I’m correct on surface drones and other small watercraft being part of the defense plan going forward.
Maybe Ship Building should have just been a subset of Defense? Probably, but it probably deserves its own special section (and I don’t feel like re-organizing everything).
The Big Industrial, Transportation, and Infrastructure Companies . If we are even remotely correct on the importance of ProSec™ the build out will allow many companies to prosper.
While it might take time to get many projects on line, the build out will create jobs and wealth immediately . From railways, to massive vehicles, to pipelines, to equipment makers of all types, the opportunities will be there. The jobs and wealth will start with those building the facilities, as much as with the final projects. Accelerated Depreciation works great with this concept.
The X, Y, and Z of America First
I’m losing steam quickly (and I assume you the reader are too). So, we won’t belabor the point.
X is what can be done domestically and “reasonably” efficiently.
X will be a different percentage for each and every resource . Maybe in the U.S. potash can grow from the 10% range to the 25% range? But how much beyond this? There are limitations on how much can be produced domestically. While bananas are not part of ProSec™ we learned from tariff policy that it was kind of pointless tariffing them since we couldn’t supply significant quantities ourselves. While the goal might be 100% - that is highly unlikely. X also kind of represents the green and yellow in the charts above.
X will vary by country . Yes, today’s T-Report has been very focused on the U.S., but each country is headed in this direction and how much of a given thing you can produce yourself will vary greatly.
Y is what likely needs to be done in conjunction with partners.
Some things are just not available domestically.
Some things, while available, may be prohibitively expensive.
Economies of scale exist for a reason.
America First is NOT the same as Only America
Australia is striking deals with the U.S.
As USMCA negotiations begin, there are many clear and easy paths to see the U.S. working with Canada and Mexico (independently or collectively) to achieve ProSec™ related goals.
America First is the X. America not alone, is the Y.
Z is whatever is expedient.
Some things will be purchased as they fit the need. For some things, that may need to be very small. The size of Z will depend on the importance of the item and the relationship with the country producing the item.
It also allows me to revert from zee to zed depending on the audience.
There still will be plenty of global trade , but for ProSec related items, that trading relationship will be anything but transactional. It will be part of an overall plan to achieve true sustainability and resiliency.
Sovereign Wealth Fund
D.C. has gone quiet on the potential for a sovereign wealth fund. Can the idea of selling gold at spot prices to create “income” that can be invested in American companies get traction again? I certainly think so. I’d rather have that than a Bitcoin reserve.
Bottom Line
ProSec or Production for Security will:
The one “sad” truth is to some extent all we need to do is look at how China has shaped their economy, and we have a pretty decent roadmap for what we need to do. It will vary by country, by company, and asset manager, but ProSec™ will be a dominant factor in 2026.
The exciting part is that it incorporates AI and Data Centers (because you cannot ignore those industries) and it also sets us up for a pivot or rotation into new sectors and companies and should spur a wave of not just M&A activity, but also a lot of private equity activity as well!
Tyler Durden
Mon, 01/05/2026 - 04:15 Close
Mon, 05 Jan 2026 08:30:00 +0000 Germany's Fiscal Illusion: Bond Markets Rebuke Merz's Debt Spiral
Germany's Fiscal Illusion: Bond Markets Rebuke Merz's Debt Spiral
Submitted by Thomas Kolbe
Germany was long seen as a bastion of fiscal stability in the Eurozone. But the erratic fiscal policy of the Merz governmen
Read more.....
Germany's Fiscal Illusion: Bond Markets Rebuke Merz's Debt Spiral
Submitted by Thomas Kolbe
Germany was long seen as a bastion of fiscal stability in the Eurozone. But the erratic fiscal policy of the Merz government is now creating tensions in the bond market. Risk premiums on traditional periphery sovereigns like Italy, Portugal and Spain relative to German Bunds are shrinking.
For months, something remarkable has been happening in European debt markets. Risk spreads on the key ten year sovereign bonds of countries such as Italy, Portugal and Spain versus the economic anchor Germany have been steadily falling. Spanish yields now sit only about 0.4 percentage points above German Bunds; Italian paper — from a country with around 125% debt to GDP — trades just about 0.7 points wider.
Capital is clearly shifting out of Germany into other European bond segments. Is the market pricing in catastrophic German fiscal policy?
Repricing German Policy
Germany’s debt strategy is unmistakably being reassessed by markets. With the so called special fund, Berlin has effectively thrust the country into a debt spiral virtually overnight. Over the next decade, more than €850?billion in new debt is to be issued — on top of a core budget already running a 2.5?–?3% deficit.
By decade’s end, Germany’s debt burden will likely hover near 85?–?90% of GDP — and nothing suggests an economic miracle will pull the nation out of this spiral. Miracles happen in fairy tales and children’s books — but even children’s book co author Robert Habeck didn’t achieve such an economic feat as Economics Minister.
Implicit obligations from pension and social systems aren’t even factored in — in Germany or elsewhere. What matters in the move in bond yields isn’t the absolute level, but the relative jump in German indebtedness, and markets are pricing exactly that. All this meets an economic reality with no meaningful extra value creation. German policy is pumping state credit — which will later surface as higher taxes and inflation — into an economic vacuum, just like centrally planned systems do.
Looking Ahead
Investors are watching German policy with hawkish scrutiny: the nuclear exit, sky high energy prices crushing industry, a migration policy that drains the welfare state like a vampire — all feed into German bund pricing. Bond markets are always a bet on the future — a judgment on national stability.
The consequence is clear: yields are rising. And they’ll keep rising. A mounting debt pile becomes ever more expensive — that’s how markets must respond.
These hard facts cannot be spun away by Kanzleramt spin doctors or orchestrated party media. German productivity has flatlined since 2018 — and is now declining. Industrial output has collapsed by about a fifth. Hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs have vanished while only the public sector expands, with the state’s share of the economy above 50%.
Germany is gearing toward a wartime economy that yields near zero benefits for real economic output. Alongside an already failed “eco economy,” this parasitic sector consumes resources, fosters make work, and feeds a nexus of extraction firms. It’s funded by ever rising levies that increasingly burden productive workers. Prosperity and economic substance are being systematically — purposefully — undermined by central planners in Berlin and Brussels.
This downward spiral is knowingly and ideologically accelerated by Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s government. The crisis is engineered as the solution — to bend the populace toward the climate socialist agenda and secure political power even as social stress rises. An ideological crash course — without doubt.
What seems lost on climate socialist planners like Merz is this: economic action and potential prosperity fundamentally depend on cheap, reliable energy. Germany’s current crisis — productivity collapse and industrial decay — speaks for itself. It happened without necessity and stands in economic history as a unique act of self inflicted vandalism.
That Merz and fellow climate socialists, using media plays, escalating censorship, and constant business bashing at events like employer forums, are trying to steer their political core through crisis shows only one thing: they fail to see this is a one way street. Climate socialism is the problem, not the solution — and markets along with German output are proving it.
Yet this mindset is typical for career politicians trapped in ideological echo chambers. We saw this with Economics Minister Robert Habeck — a party functionary mythologized by state affirming green media, utterly unversed in economics, and intellectually overwhelmed. He failed to understand how the crisis of subsidized sectors he inflated with bailouts came about.
Socialism is a recurring phenomenon in new guises. Climate socialism, like its predecessors, will fail through mass impoverishment. Harsh years lie ahead for Germany, and nothing seems able to prevent green vulgar socialism from metastasizing here. EU capitals have become adjunct outposts of Brussels’ cancerous core.
Some shifts are already visible. Italy , for example, has begun transferring gold reserves from its central bank to state vaults and is pursuing independent energy security via North African gas. At the bond market, this is rewarded: yields and risk premiums there are falling. Investors apparently see Italy as a “First Survivor” in a severe Euro crisis. Germany has no similar narrative.
Compounding this is Berlin’s almost unfathomable commitment to the Ukraine conflict without democratic mandate, accelerating fiscal decay. Merz plans to funnel around €11.5?billion from the 2026 federal budget directly into the Kiev black hole — a stance shared by Paris, London and Brussels — utterly detached from reality and dismissing even the possibility of a full U.S. pullback from the European theater.
This geopolitical folly echoes in bond markets. Germany’s leaders are playing Vabanque — without historical sense, responsibility, or foresight.
Those who hope that rising French and Belgian debt ratios (soon above 120% of GDP) can defuse hyper state growth via bond markets may be disappointed. Japan shows that even heavily domestically financed debt — at historically extreme ratios around 235% of GDP — can float for a while, though future obligations aren’t counted. Markets price in that the ECB will protect Eurozone debt by buying excess bonds — delaying collapse. But how exactly it intervenes now — since the “bazooka” of 2020 — is opaque and hidden. Risk premiums tell the tale.
That U.S. Treasuries trade at around a 1.3% premium over German bonds — and 60bp above Greek and Italian paper — is grotesque given Europe’s structural weaknesses. This stark mismatch between economic reality and bond pricing screams manipulation by Frankfurt central bankers.
Predicting when markets will finally downgrade a Eurozone pillar — likely France first — and bring the whole debt house of cards down is impossible. As Hemingway wrote in The Sun Also Rises :
“How did you go bankrupt?” “Two ways,” Mike said. “Gradually, then suddenly.”
* * *
About the author: Thomas Kolbe is a graduate economist. For over 25 years, he has worked as a journalist and media producer for clients from various industries and business associations. As a publicist, he focuses on economic processes and observes geopolitical events from the perspective of the capital markets. His publications follow a philosophy that focuses on the individual and their right to self-determination.
Tyler Durden
Mon, 01/05/2026 - 03:30 Close
Mon, 05 Jan 2026 07:45:00 +0000 Which US Foods Are Banned In Europe?
Which US Foods Are Banned In Europe?
From growth hormones in meat to controversial chemicals and artificial dyes, Europe's precautionary approach to food safety stands in strong contrast to America's more permissive stance
Read more.....
Which US Foods Are Banned In Europe?
From growth hormones in meat to controversial chemicals and artificial dyes, Europe's precautionary approach to food safety stands in strong contrast to America's more permissive stance .
This divide isn't just about science and risk management; it's become a flashpoint in the broader trade tensions between the U.S. and EU, where food standards often clash with economic interests.
As Statista's Tristan Gaudiat details below, for years, Europe has blocked imports of American foods containing substances like artificial growth hormones, brominated vegetable oil (BVO), titanium dioxide and potassium bromate, citing potential human health risks and animal welfare concerns.
The EU's stricter regulations on food safety, rooted in the "precautionary principle", prioritize consumer safety over industrial convenience - a philosophy that has repeatedly put Brussels at odds with Washington.
Yet, the tide may be (slowly) turning.
You will find more infographics at Statista
In 2024, the U.S. finally banned BVO, a synthetic emulsifier linked to neurological issues, after decades of use in soda and sports drinks.
And by 2027, Red Dye No. 3, a colorant long suspected of causing cancer, will also be phased out.
These moves mark rare moments of alignment with EU standards, even if several decades behind European legislators.
Critics argue that America's regulatory system, often influenced by powerful food and chemical lobbies, lags behind Europe's proactive bans.
Meanwhile, others point out that the EU's strict rules have become a trade barrier, with U.S. farmers and food producers pushing back against what they see as protectionism disguised as public health.
Tyler Durden
Mon, 01/05/2026 - 02:45 Close
Mon, 05 Jan 2026 07:00:00 +0000 'Demographic Time-Bomb' – 7 Million Syrians Could Arrive In Germany Within 50 Years Due To Family Reunification
'Demographic Time-Bomb' – 7 Million Syrians Could Arrive In Germany Within 50 Years Due To Family Reunification
'Demographic Time-Bomb' – 7 Million Syrians Could Arrive In Germany Within 50 Years Due To Family Reunification
Via Remix News,
Dutch migration researcher and social scientist Ruud Koopmans has described the current rapid naturalizations as a “demographic time bomb” that could lead to 7 million Syrians in Germany within 50 years. Koopmans says that family reunification is the main factor, and with many relatives of these newly naturalized migrants having the right to reunification, it could transform Germany.
Koopmans criticizes Germany’s rapid naturalization of migrants, which was initiated under the last far-left German government of Chancellor Olaf Scholz.
“One must consider whether refugees should be given access to German citizenship so quickly. If they are German nationals, there is no limit on family migration. Then any possibility of managing these migration flows is gone,“ he said in an interview with Cicero .
“This rapid naturalization can be considered a demographic time bomb in the long run,” he added.
He stated that the so-called “turbo naturalization“ after three years was removed by the current ruling government. The reality is that this option for receiving German citizenship after three years applied to very few people, sometimes numbering less than 10 people in certain German states.
However, standard naturalization is still possible after five years.
“I see a problem with naturalization. This limitation on family reunification only applies to those granted subsidiary protection as long as they don’t yet have German citizenship. While the federal government’s reform abolished accelerated naturalization after three years, standard naturalization after five years—even for people who came as refugees—remains,” he said.
Foreigners in Germany can receive citizenship after five years if they prove legal residence and an independent economic livelihood, have no criminal record, and have sufficient knowledge of German. However, there have also been widespread reports of cheating on the German-language tests.
Many of these new citizens are men, and they will want to bring their families to Germany.
“It is essential to consider the consequences this will have for the future. These (approx.) one million people are heavily overrepresented by men. They will largely seek their marriage partners in their country of origin. This is highly likely because marriage in these countries is typically within extended families. Marriage in these societies is also an economic transaction between families, and the ticket to Europe is an important means of exchange,” said Koopmans.
He then cited the rapid growth of previous immigrant populations, who used family reunification to grow their numbers by millions. Turks are a good case study, who are now over 6 million in number in Germany. They also remain extremely poorly integrated, and in fact, the recent gang war in Berlin, which has helped fuel a record number of shootings in the capital city this year, is due in large part to a feud between Turkish Mafia gangs.
“We only need to look at the past: How much has the population of guest workers from Turkey or Morocco grown over time through family reunification and reproduction? From 1973, the year recruitment was halted, to the present day, this group has increased sixfold or sevenfold. If we assume the same for the Syrians—and there is no reason not to—then in 50 years we will have seven million Syrians or citizens of Syrian origin in Germany. And I’m only talking about Syrians, but the same applies to people from Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, and so on,” the researcher added.
Koopmans then claims that after 10 years, people should be allowed to stay in Germany, but five years is too soon.
“If that’s still the case after 10 years, at some point you have to say: Okay, people have been here so long now that we have to offer them a lasting perspective,” says Koopmans. “But I think it’s wrong to do this after just five years.”
Koopmans makes a distinction between immigrants, however.
“These problems, both regarding integration into the labor market and high crime rates, affect very specific immigrant groups. They are a consequence of the fact that we don’t have truly controlled migration. It’s not the case that all immigrants are significantly overrepresented in crime statistics. Many migrants in Germany come from other EU member states. These are not significantly overrepresented in crime statistics. In terms of labor market participation, migrants from other member states are even better off,” he said.
However, given demographic trends, any number of naturalizations may present a serious demographic crisis for the German population moving forward due to the sheer number of people who arrived over the last few decades.
Notably, a majority of Germans now support an immigration moratorium, according to a new YouGov poll . The poll shows just how deeply Germans have turned against mass immigration in the past 10 years.
In addition, Syrians have an extremely high crime rate in relation to Germans, committing 135,000 crimes against Germans in the last nine years.
Read more here...
Tyler Durden
Mon, 01/05/2026 - 02:00 Close
Mon, 05 Jan 2026 04:20:00 +0000 Trump's New Energy Doctrine: Regime Change, Then Drill
Trump's New Energy Doctrine: Regime Change, Then Drill
Trump's New Energy Doctrine: Regime Change, Then Drill
Authored by Philip Wegmann via RealClearPolitics ,
President Donald Trump has embarked on his own regime-change mission. And this time the United States intends to keep the oil.
American Special Operations Forces captured Nicolás Maduro in a daring raid, nabbing the Venezuelan leader from his bed early Saturday morning before sending him north aboard the USS Iwo Jima to New York, where he will face criminal charges related to an alleged narco-terrorism conspiracy.
The leftist strongman had ruled the South American state for more than a decade.
Now Trump will take over. “We’re going to run the country until such time as we can do a safe, proper and judicious transition ,” he told reporters during a Mar-a-Lago press conference, deputizing Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of War Pete Hegseth to manage in the interim as “a team.”
Though long a critic of the foreign entanglements that defined the presidencies of his Republican predecessors, Trump insisted he could do regime change right. “We’ll run it properly. We’ll run it professionally,” he said. “We’ll have the greatest oil companies in the world going in .” He will not, however, clean house.
Trump claimed Delcy Rodríguez, a Maduro loyalist and the current Venezuelan vice president, was already willing to work with the United States to remake the country. He said it would be “very tough” for opposition leader María Corina Machado to assume power. Just hours after perhaps the most consequential decision of his tenure, the once ostensibly isolationist president was suddenly and remarkably open-ended in his commitment to rebuild a nation thousands of miles away from his own. Of a potential American occupation force, Trump said, “We are not afraid of boots on the ground.”
Even if the newly announced nation-building mission may be something of a flashback to the invasion and occupation of Iraq, Trump did not echo the language of the War on Terror. He spoke for nearly an hour. Not once did the president, or his assembled people, say the word “democracy.”
He ordered the removal of the foreign head of state to instead preserve American hegemony in the Western Hemisphere . Venezuela under Maduro had opened its arms to China, Cuba, Iran, and Russia by way of both trade and military cooperation. The White House alleged that this amounted to a violation of the Monroe Doctrine, a 19th-century precedent named for then-President James Monroe’s opposition to colonial meddling in the Americas by the Europeans. “They are now calling it the ‘Donroe Doctrine,’” the current president quipped before the press.
The turn of phrase was new. The strategy is not. The White House has shifted its focus to North and South America to establish what the new National Security Strategy released late last year described as “the Trump corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine. The stated goal: U.S. dominance in the region. The specific application as described by the president last month: Any nation harboring drug cartels is “subject to attack.” Even as the administration designated drug cartels as terror organizations, sanctioned Maduro and members of his own family, and sent the Gerald R. Ford Carrier Strike Group to blockade Caracas, the Venezuelan authoritarian doubted Trump.
The two leaders spoke as recently as last week in an attempt to avoid a conflict. The negotiations eventually broke down, according to Rubio, after Maduro failed to accept one of the “multiple opportunities to avoid” the kind of military intervention that led to his arrest. “We’ll talk and meet with anybody but don’t play games while this president is in office ,” the diplomat warned, “because it’s not going to turn out well.”
Democrats feel they woke up hoodwinked. Trump had sidestepped calls last year to go to Congress for war authority even as momentum tipped toward conflict. The subsequent operation to capture Maduro caught lawmakers by surprise. Many learned of the strike like the rest of the country – through news reports. While Rubio spent the morning calling different members of Congress, he defended the decision to keep Capitol Hill in the dark.
“This is not the kind of mission that you can do congressional notifications on ,” the diplomat said, insisting the decision to go was dependent on a number of factors. “It was a trigger-based mission.” The president offered another explanation. Congress, Trump said, “has a tendency to leak.”
Trump is not the first president to condemn Maduro as illegitimate. Former President Joe Biden briefly suspended oil sanctions on the now deposed leader in hopes that economic relief could entice him to hold free and fair elections. Those hopes were dashed when Maduro claimed victory, and a third consecutive six-year presidential term, in elections in 2024 that outside observers condemned as fraudulent.
But while there is broad agreement that Maduro is an authoritarian, there is no bipartisan support for overthrowing his government.
“Because the President and his Cabinet repeatedly denied any intention of conducting regime change in Venezuela when briefing Congress, we are left with no understanding of how the administration is preparing to mitigate risks to the U.S. and we have no information regarding a long-term strategy following today’s extraordinary escalation,” New Hampshire Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, ranking Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said in a statement on Saturday.
Trump justified the strike against Venezuela saying it was necessary to stop narcoterrorism and reclaim American oil assets seized by Maduro’s predecessor, Hugo Chavez. When pressed to explain how regime change fit with his America First mantra, the president replied, “We want to surround ourselves with good neighbors. ”
Most Republicans have accepted that explanation – but not all of them.
Outgoing Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, once a staunch Trump ally, asked a series of uncomfortable questions for the administration, including why the White House hadn’t launched military operations against Mexican drug cartels and why Trump had pardoned a former Honduran president found guilty of trafficking cocaine. “Americans disgust with our own government’s never ending military aggression and support of foreign wars is justified because we are forced to pay for it and both parties, Republicans and Democrats, always keep the Washington military machine funded and going ,” she wrote on social media. “This is what many in MAGA thought they voted to end. Boy, were we wrong.”
While Attorney General Pam Bondi characterized the operation as “an arrest with military support,” Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie wondered how that legal characterization applied to Trump’s promise to take over and run the country. That question will soon be litigated on Capitol Hill, though Democrats don’t have the numbers, nor Republicans the appetite, to check the White House.
Trump has offered different condemnations of Maduro at different times . He first condemned him as being complicit in the drug trade that brought “poison” to American shores, then reproached the authoritarian as a puppet of foreign adversaries, before finally flaying his regime for the nationalization of American oil producers in the region.
Perhaps a combination of those irritants has inspired Trump’s latest foreign policy evolution. Once averse to intervention, he now welcomes the opportunity to rebuild a regime immediately after he removed its leadership . He remains consistent on at least one count. After criticizing the Bush administration for not turning a profit in the War on Terror, Trump seems hell-bent on avoiding that same mistake.
He said that U.S. energy companies would rebuild the nation as they return to Venezuela and seeknew revenue streams. Any costs incurred would quickly be deferred by the new oil revenue, or what the president described as “the money coming out of the ground.”
Philip Wegmann is White House correspondent for RealClearPolitics.
Tyler Durden
Sun, 01/04/2026 - 23:20 Close
Mon, 05 Jan 2026 03:45:00 +0000 Footage Suggests 'Black Program' Stealth Drone May Have Supported Delta Force In Maduro Capture Operation
Footage Suggests 'Black Program' Stealth Drone May Have Supported Delta Force In Maduro Capture Operation
Our reporting on Saturday, spanning from early morning through late night, covered the Read more.....
Footage Suggests 'Black Program' Stealth Drone May Have Supported Delta Force In Maduro Capture Operation
Our reporting on Saturday, spanning from early morning through late night, covered the incremental developments as U.S. Delta Force operators successfully executed Operation Absolute Resolve. This operation led to the capture of Venezuelan socialist leader Nicolás Maduro, his immediate transport to the U.S., and the filing of federal charges in New York, including a highly visible "perp walk" designed to send a clear message to other left-wing-controlled countries in the Western Hemisphere that America is back.
In a late-night press briefing, Gen. Dan "Razin" Caine disclosed that the operation involved the deployment of more than 150 air assets, underscoring the air-dominant posture of the Delta Force-led mission.
"Last night, on the order of the President of the United States and in support of a request from the Department of Justice, as the President said, the United States military conducted an apprehension mission in Caracas, Venezuela, to bring to justice two indicted persons, Nicolás and Cecilia Maduro," Caine told reporters.
He continued:
"This operation, known as Operation Absolute Resolve, was discreet and precise, conducted during the darkest hours of January 2nd, and was the culmination of months of planning and rehearsal, an operation that, frankly, only the United States military could undertake.
In an unprecedented operation, we leveraged our unmatched intelligence capabilities and years of experience hunting terrorists. We could not have accomplished this mission without the extraordinary work of multiple intelligence agencies, including the CIA, NSA, and NGA.
We watched, we waited, we prepared, and remained patient and professional. This mission was meticulously planned, drawing lessons from decades of operations. It was an audacious effort that only the United States could execute. It required the highest level of precision and integration within our joint force.
Even the word 'integration' fails to capture the sheer complexity of this mission."
Caine then revealed a key operational detail:
Such a precise extraction involved more than 150 aircraft launching across the Western Hemisphere in close coordination, all converging at the right time and place to layer effects for a single purpose: inserting an interdiction force into downtown Caracas while maintaining tactical surprise.
Failure of any single component would have endangered the entire mission, and failure is never an option for America's joint force. Those in the air over Caracas last night were prepared to give their lives for those on the ground and aboard the helicopters."
Caine did not specify what the "150 aircraft" consisted of, but some open-source intelligence accounts on X shared footage that appears to show a stealth unmanned aerial vehicle used during the operation.
Clash Report posted footage that appears to show an RQ-170 Sentinel drone returning to a U.S. military base in Puerto Rico following the operation.
The stealth drone, a flying-wing platform with radar-absorbing skin designed to minimize detection, was likely tasked with covert surveillance to support the raid, the capture of Maduro, and any related kinetic operations.
There has been no confirmation from the Department of War that the RQ-170 was involved in yesterday's operations in Venezuela.
Tyler Durden
Sun, 01/04/2026 - 22:45 Close
Mon, 05 Jan 2026 03:10:00 +0000 Escobar: How Political Analysis Became A Target Of A.I. Fakes
Escobar: How Political Analysis Became A Target Of A.I. Fakes
Authored by Pepe Escobar,
A.I. is fast expanding as a plague all along the internet spectrum. That’s quite predictable, considering the
Read more.....
Escobar: How Political Analysis Became A Target Of A.I. Fakes
Authored by Pepe Escobar,
A.I. is fast expanding as a plague all along the internet spectrum. That’s quite predictable, considering the Big Tech model for A.I. is techno-feudalism, relying on profit and mind/social control, and not on sharing/expanding knowledge and creating better conditions for a well-informed citizenry.
A.I. in many aspects is the antithesis of civitas . Prior to the A.I. boom, several layers of the internet had already been distorted into a series of minefields across a large-than-life sewer. A.I. – as controlled by Big Tech – in many aspects had already revealed itself as a fraud. Now it’s a weapon.
There are several channels on YouTube manipulated by A.I., stealing the image and voice by some of us, independent political analysts. A not-extensive list includes as targets John Mearsheimer, Larry Johnson, Richard Wolff, Glenn Diesen, Yanis Varoufakis, economist Paulo Nogueira Batista and myself.
It’s not an accident that all of us are independent geopolitical and geoeconomic analysts, mostly know each other personally, and are guests in roughly the same podcasts.
In my own case, there are channels in English, Portuguese and even Spanish: I rarely do podcasts in Spanish, so even the voice is fake. In English, usually the voice is approximately cloned. In Portuguese it comes with an accent I don’t have. In several cases, audience numbers are huge. Essentially, these come from bots.
In all cases, as far as we, the targets are concerned, all these channels are fake. I repeat: all these channels are fake.
They may at least in some cases be set up by “fans” – certainly with an eye for profit via monetization.
Or the whole scam may be part of something way more sinister: a strategy bent of loss of credibility.
As in an operation by the usual suspects to sow confusion amongst the – large – audience of several independent thinkers.
It’s not an accident that quite a few viewers are already deeply puzzled. Cue to the most common question: “Is this really you, or A.I.?”
Many apparently have denounced these fake channels, but YouTube, so far, has done absolutely nothing about them. The algos keep suggesting these channels to large audiences.
The only realistic way to fight the scam is to file a complaint with YouTube. But that, in practice, is pretty useless. YouTube management seems to be more interested in occasionally erasing “inconvenient” channels displaying critical thinking and analysis.
Cracking the code of the scam
Quantum Bird, a physics and HPC (High Performance Computing) expert, formerly with the CERN in Geneva, has cracked the code of the scam:
“The proliferation of agents of deep learning digital neural networks capable of emulating writing, voice and video of human beings was inevitable , and their impact on scientific research, production of knowledge and art in general has a negative potential that has not been yet fully analyzed. ”
He adds:
“While writers and academics are detailing the springing up of texts attributed to them, and replicating to a certain extent their style and opinions, the latest fad is the blooming of whole channels on YouTube, and other notorious Big Tech platforms, that offer videos of popular content producers, communicating in their native language or other languages. In several cases, the quality of this synthesized material is sufficiently high not to allow immediate identification by an average viewer. In the context of the political analysis community, the impact is obvious: historic revisionism, erosion of reputations and distortion of news and analysis.”
And here Quantum Bird lays out the tech clincher:
“The synthetization of this type of content requires the availability of abundant samples and massive computational capacity, way beyond the reach of domestic users. While the popularity of the YouTube victims guarantees the first condition, the second one suggests the activity of large-scale state or corporate actors, since advanced deep learning models must be developed and trained by processing a huge quantity, in terms of “disk space”, of audio and video. The monetization of the content does not cover the costs of this operation. Ironically, it’s the availability and the excess exposure of voice and video online that allows this type of attack.”
Here we go. Welcome to A.I. turning the net into an infernal machine bent on erasing meaning, culture and History – and sowing deep intellectual confusion. Exactly like Techno-Feudalism wants it.
Tyler Durden
Sun, 01/04/2026 - 22:10 Close
Mon, 05 Jan 2026 02:35:00 +0000 "Cocaine Mills": Trump Puts Three More Latin American Countries On Notice
"Cocaine Mills": Trump Puts Three More Latin American Countries On Notice
President Trump soon after the overnight into early Saturday brief invasion of Venezuela and nabbing of President Nicolas Maduro - now in US custody on Americ
Read more.....
"Cocaine Mills": Trump Puts Three More Latin American Countries On Notice
President Trump soon after the overnight into early Saturday brief invasion of Venezuela and nabbing of President Nicolas Maduro - now in US custody on American soil - put more Latin American countries on notice, calling them essentially "cocaine mills" which ship 'poison' into the United States.
The not-so-veiled warnings and threats were issued to the governments of Mexico, Colombia, and Cuba - the latter which has been a Washington enemy stretching many decades back into the height of the Cold War.
AFP via Getty Images
In the comments, Trump again called Maduro as a "narco-terrorist" while fielding a question about the implications for neighboring countries, before linking the Venezuelan leader to his ally Colombian President Gustavo Petro.
"He has cocaine mills , he has factories where he makes cocaine and they're sending it into the United States " Trump said of the Colombian leader, adding, "he does have to watch his ass."
And on Cuba, the warning was more veiled, as he described his administration is "going to be something we’ll end up talking about" as Washington suppose wants to "help the people" of this "failing nation" akin to Venezuela.
"It’s very similar in the sense that we want to help the people in Cuba , but we also want to help the people who were forced out of Cuba and are living in this country," he continued, in reference to Trump's own significant support base among Cuban-Americans.
Among the more interesting and somewhat post-Venezuela regime change remarks by Trump were aimed just south of the border. Trump again put Left wing, or perhaps more accurately center-left Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo on notice.
Trump described that the drug cartels are basically running the country, and that "something’s going to have to be done with Mexico" and that the government is "frightened" of them.
"They’re running Mexico. I’ve asked her numerous times: ‘Would you like us to take out the cartels?’ ‘No, no, no, Mr. President, no, no, no, please.’ So we have to do something," he said in a phone interview with Fox.
Mexico had quickly condemned the US military action in Venezuela, as predictably the Colombian leader too. Petro has described Washington's actions as an "assault on the sovereignty" of Latin America - and many other BRCIS and other global south countries have said the same.
As for Cuba, the US has over decades been essentially 'looking for an excuse' in a 'give us a reason' kind of way while all along keeping brutal sanctions on Havana. Will Trump now have his 'reason' for getting more muscular on Cuba?
Tyler Durden
Sun, 01/04/2026 - 21:35 Close
Mon, 05 Jan 2026 02:00:00 +0000 Berenson: Just How Insane Did Democrats Become On Immigration?
Berenson: Just How Insane Did Democrats Become On Immigration?
Berenson: Just How Insane Did Democrats Become On Immigration?
Authored by Alex Berenson via Unreported Truths ,
Almost six years ago, Democrats published the world’s longest political suicide note — their 2020 election platform on immigration.
CREATING A 21ST CENTURY IMMIGRATION SYSTEM has now vanished from the Democratic Party Website. But the Internet is forever, and the archived document remains easily findable . It makes a fascinating read.
In almost 2,000 words, the platform does not mention “border security” once . It does use the word “illegal” — referring to “President Trump’s illegal, chaotic, and reckless changes” to immigration. “Undocumented” comes up once too, in a promise to offer citizenship to “millions of undocumented workers, caregivers, students, and children.”
Among the platform’s other high notes:
We will protect and expand the existing asylum system and other humanitarian protections… Democrats will end Trump Administration policies that deny protected entry to asylum seekers… we will end prosecution of asylum seekers at the border and policies that force them to apply from “safe third countries,” which are far from safe.
We will also eliminate unfair barriers to naturalization…
Democrats believe family unity should be a guiding principle for our immigration policy. We will prioritize family reunification for children still separated from their families…
[W]e will end workplace and community raids. We will protect sensitive locations like our schools, houses of worship, health care facilities, benefits offices, and DMVs [Note: this may be the first time anyone has ever called a DMV office a “sensitive” place] from immigration enforcement actions…
We believe detention should be a last resort, not the default. Democrats will prioritize investments in more effective and cost-efficient community-based alternatives…
—
(You want reckless? We’ll give you reckless!)
(SOURCE )
—
In other words: Come on in. The water’s fine.
The platform promises an interlocking series of guarantees and policy changes that would not merely reduce but as a practical matter end any restrictions against immigration, legal or otherwise.
Basically, the Democratic Party vowed that if it ran the federal government, it would open American borders to anyone and everyone in the world who could reach them.
The asylum promises were especially important.
As even the “American Immigration Council” — which despite its anodyne name is funded by immigration lawyers and relentlessly pushes open borders — has explained :
Since the second term of the Obama administration, however, U.S. asylum policy has become hopelessly entangled with border management. As part of global displacement challenges, many more people than ever before started coming to the United States to request asylum; at the same time, those people came from places beyond Mexico and had more complex needs than the working-age adults who had made up most migration in the past.
“More complex needs” is a polite way to say “people uninterested in working.”
The Democratic platform explicitly encouraged those arrivals. All they had to do was make an asylum claim, with or without credible evidence. How could border officials possibly check their stories? At that point they would be allowed in — and would not face any meaningful enforcement, ever.
—
Given these incentives, it is no surprise immigrant caravans started moving north only weeks after Election Day in 2020 — even before Joe Biden was officially sworn in.
And the flood continued, as migrants very quickly realized the Democrats had meant every word. They understood they would be greeted with open arms — and checkbooks. An increasingly professionalized industry of smugglers emerged to organize and transport them.
Supply creates its own demand, whatever the product.
In January 2023, the Biden Administration took the inevitable final step, a creating what it called a “Humanitarian Parole Program .” The plan allowed in another 360,000 migrants a year from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela without even requiring them to reach the southern border or have any legal basis for admission. If they could afford a plane ticket and find someone — anyone — in the United States to sponsor them, they could fly in.
The goal of the Bidenites was nakedly political. They hoped to make the border look better. But as a practical matter the program eliminated the last barrier to entry — that would-be migrants physically arrive at the border. Even the 2020 Democratic platform hadn’t (explicitly) gone that far.
—
(Sometimes the truth, like the devil, is in the details. Help me explain them.)
How the Democrats got to this point is its own story, and worth exploring. So is the question of what happens next.
But for now it is simply worth understanding that the collapse of any immigration restrictions was a feature, not a bug. Nearly 10 million people came to the United States under the Biden Administration — the largest surge either in raw numbers or as a percentage of the population at least since the Civil War.
The only surprise is that the total wasn’t even higher.
Tyler Durden
Sun, 01/04/2026 - 21:00 Close
Mon, 05 Jan 2026 00:50:00 +0000 Korybko: Regime-Tweaking, Not Regime-Change, Is What The US Just Achieved In Venezuela
Korybko: Regime-Tweaking, Not Regime-Change, Is What The US Just Achieved In Venezuela
Korybko: Regime-Tweaking, Not Regime-Change, Is What The US Just Achieved In Venezuela
Authored by Andrew Korybko via Substack,
This refers to keeping the targeted state’s power structure in place but after some (at times significant) changes that advance the meddling state’s interests.
Some critics of the US’ “special military operation” in Venezuela claim that it didn’t succeed despite President Nicolas Maduro’s capture since the “Chavismo deep state” that he presided over remains in place.
This refers to the explicitly ideological elements of his country’s permanent military, intelligence, and diplomatic bureaucracies but can be expanded to include governors and trade unions among other groups.
The point is that removing Maduro from the political equation didn’t result in regime change.
That’s true, but the premise that US wanted to achieve such a goal is debatable since Trump 2.0 is comprised of figures who’ve criticized previous regime change operations for destabilizing their regions and leading to unpredictable consequences that ultimately harmed US interests.
It’s therefore plausible that they never intended to forcibly carry out regime change in Venezuela due to concerns that a civil war might follow, which could engender a large-scale migrant crisis and destroy energy infrastructure.
Rather, the immediate goal can be described as regime tweaking, which refers to keeping the targeted state’s power structure in place but after some (at times significant) changes that advance the meddling state’s interests.
In the Venezuelan context, the US forcibly removed Maduro so that he’d be replaced by his Vice President Delcy Rodriguez , who Trump publicly expects to “do what we want” (likely at Marco Rubio’s direction ).
That’s arguably what he meant by “running the country ” till its transition is complete.
Such a transition might not result in regime change after Trump ruled out Nobel Peace Prize winner Maria Corina Machado leading Venezuela since “She doesn’t have the support or the respect”.
He also didn’t mention “democracy” once during his press conference in a sign that he’s uninterested in a radical regime change from the Chavismo model to a Western one (at least at this time). This hints that he’s open to Rodriguez or some other Chavista who he thinks the US can work with succeeding Maduro.
They’d have to enjoy the support of the powerful armed forces and militias in order to prevent a civil war, which ipso facto entails preserving at least some of their privileges, especially economic-financial ones.
That said, the armed forces barely put up any resistance on Saturday so it’s possible that Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez and Interior Minister Diosdado already clinched a deal with the US, only to talk tough in front of the cameras afterwards like Rodriguez has for domestic political reasons.
If an election is held within 30 days like Article 233 of the Constitution calls for , then the Defense and Interior Ministries would have to help secure it, thus reinforcing the importance of their chiefs supporting the US’ envisaged transition in Venezuela.
The US doesn’t care how Venezuela is governed or who (at least nominally) rules it, just that US influence is restored, which could take the form of its oil only being sold to US-approved buyers and foreign rivals like China no longer having a foothold there.
Of course, de-ideologizing the Venezuelan “deep state” so that more easily manipulatable pro-Western figures replace the Chavistas would entrench the US’ newfound influence, but this can only be done gradually since moving too fast could spark a civil war and thus risk ultimately harming US interests.
Some of the Chavismo model’s socio-economic programs and neighborhood organizations might also have to be preserved to prevent this.
It’ll therefore be interesting to monitor how the transition unfolds.
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ZeroHedge.
Tyler Durden
Sun, 01/04/2026 - 19:50 Close