Doomstead

Doomscroll Comments => Crazy times => Topic started by: K-Dog on Mar 18, 2026, 06:00 PM

Title: The madman
Post by: K-Dog on Mar 18, 2026, 06:00 PM

LINKEDIN.COM2025-09-17

Hispanic Heritage Month: Don Trump is Tilting at Windmills (Really)

The Don Quixote of today isn’t a deluded nobleman on horseback but Don Trump at a podium, railing against turbines as if they were plotting global conquest. The rhetoric is passionate, dramatic, and, let’s be honest, still downright funny. At times it sounds less like energy policy and more like Cervantes’ novel brought to life.


Yesterday Trumpo was talking about how stupid windmills are again.  So I found this article.
Title: The madman
Post by: K-Dog on Mar 18, 2026, 07:34 PM

THEGRAYZONE.COM2026-03-06

How Israel and the FBI manipulated assassination plots to goad Trump into Iran war

The FBI manufactured plots to convince Trump that Iran sought to kill him, while Israel and its administration allies exploited the president’s deepest fears to keep him on the war path.
Title: The madman
Post by: K-Dog on Mar 19, 2026, 09:20 PM

BREWMINATE.COM2018-07-01

The Donald Trump of Ancient Greece

His name? Alcibiades. Like Trump, this scion of wealth loved to win and manipulate the masses.



ACTIVISTHISTORY.COM2017-04-07

Trump as Alcibiades: Lessons in Demagoguery from Greek History

In 2017, America may again need to be mindful of both dangerous potential futures and telling ancient precedent. The surprising election of President Donald Trump brought historical precedent flowing back to the minds of many Americans.


ODT.CO.NZ2025-11-07

Trump and the ghost of Alcibiades

William J Dominik compares Donald Trump to the Athenian general Alcibiades and shows how both weakened democracy while pursuing power.



EIDOLON.PUB2016-02-22

Alcibiades’ Trump Card: The Political Masquerades of Masculinity

What Thucydides shows is that when masculinity is in crisis, the speaker who seems most masculine will prevail — even if his ideas are irrational.




CARNEGIECOUNCIL.ORG2026-03-14

The Sicilian Expedition and the Dilemma of Interventionism

During the Peloponnesian War, Athenian statesmen were divided over a proposed intervention into Sicily. Alcibiades and his camp were overly confident of Athens's prospects in this military expedition, arguing, "How could anybody ever defeat us? We're Athens!" However, the elder general and statesman Nicias foresaw problems with Athenian intervention. Nicias told Alcibiades that the best way to demonstrate Athenian power to the Sicilians was not to intervene at all. Ultimately, the Sicilian Expedition went forward, and Athenian expeditionary forces were obliterated in battle.


QuoteAthenian expeditionary forces were obliterated in battle.

A fragile democracy gave power to a man who viewed the state as a stage for his own personal psychodrama and was ruined.  Rinse and repeat.