AN ENGLISH ALIEN THROWING UP IN NEW YORK
The political and social decline of the United States
goes hand in hand with a noticeable decline in the common sense of its leaders.
How
will this affect the United Kingdom?
By Sir Charlattam
Oh dear, the US is no longer even a shadow of what it once was. Getting
to J.F. Kennedy Airport is starting to feel like a real journey, as if it were
an obstacle course. My years of service have taught me to observe, intuit and
realise when a place and its atmosphere are hostile.
It is true that the controls and paranoia are not the
same as what I experienced in Berlin during the Cold War or at the checkpoints
of the British collaborators of the UVF in Belfast. But despite the distance
and time, the make-up and manners, the government informers, who I assume are
from the HSD and the FBI, are watching those who come and go, regardless of
whether they are English or from other friendly nations.
As the days passed, I was able to corroborate this. As
is now a ritual, I met up with my contacts in a typical Italian restaurant
where we can exchange views on how things are evolving on both sides of the
ocean. Obviously, I shared Starmer's bizarre policy and his cronies' commitment
to fabricating a casus belli against Russia, playing with peace and, in
that plan, their underhanded cooperation with the White House, but what I was
most interested in knowing was whether my perception was exaggerated or not.
It was Tommy, an old American colleague who used to
work as a liaison in Turkey, who painted me a picture of the increasingly
radicalised internal situation in the US and how it was being fuelled from
Washington DC. The murder of ultra-conservative activist Charlie Kirk has unleashed
a flood of suspicion involving important Zionist contacts in the US (such as
Bill Ackman) and paranoia which, added to the Epstein scandal that is coming to
the surface like shit, has triggered a witch hunt ordered by Donald Trump
himself, which has even reached members of the House of Representatives.
The Trump administration has militarised many cities
and is trying to do the same with the minds of citizens, and in that sense,
political and social violence is functional to that policy. It is so obvious
that there is no need for interpretation.
Trump has not only questioned one of the foundations
and values that made this country great, he has simply nullified freedom of
expression in any area that leads to critical thinking. Criticising or expressing
any suspicion about the federal administration or any of its decisions is now
reason enough for the government's dogs to come after you, says one of my
colleagues. The cancellation of Jimmy Kimmel's television programme is only the
most visible example of what is happening here.
Just as Trump was arriving in London to present his
conditions to Keir Starmer, mass protests against his visit reflected the
British people's reluctance to endure new US impositions that will undoubtedly
end up being paid for by those at the bottom. We all know, from Brixton in east
London to the Black Country to Greenwich in the south, that Trump's promises
end up costing others, and in this case, those others will be the British people.
Returning here, the economic, social and political
situation could not be more heated. At all times, federal agencies, especially
the HSD, are on the lookout for what they consider to be enemies of the
government, who, without warning and wherever they may be, are taken by storm
by militarised forces who shamelessly drag them away like a sack of potatoes to
take them away in one of their armoured vans.
The security apparatus that supports Trump's policies
and his MAGA movement labels its internal enemies, the most prominent being
leftists (ANTIFA), illegal foreigners, including Europeans who don't give a
damn about their bloody policies, and pro-Palestinian groups who, for doing
their academic and outreach work to raise awareness of the horrific situation,
are labelled - to the delight of Netanyahu and Co. - as conspirators. Of
course, this didn't start yesterday. Compulsory deportations, the transfer of
handcuffed people and the imprisonment of ‘suspected illegal immigrants’ in
places such as Guantanamo, which bring back terrible memories for America's
already blurred image, are not going to return to the country again.
This repressive policy, in the best style (but much
more elegant and sophisticated) of African dictatorships, covers the entire
spectrum of government. One of my colleagues, after agreeing with us,
illustrates how far the government intends to go by saying: ‘If there is anyone
who reflects in detail what Trump has in mind and wants to see it carried out,
it is Secretary Marco Rubio, whom the government may give the power to review
and cancel the passports of those they deem undesirable.’
If I said that this seemed like an African
dictatorship, I stand corrected and would rather describe it as typical of the
German STASI during the Erich Honecker era, which was so effective at gathering
intelligence that even in the early 1980s—when the CIA was still
experimenting—they managed to compile databases with the DNA of citizens
suspected of being dissidents or of suspicious behaviour after having touched
glasses, coins and containers in a public place.
But today it is not communist or Arab nationalist
agencies (now defunct) that practise these archaic methods of invading
citizens' privacy and freedom. Today, it is American and British agencies, with
the close involvement of Israeli agencies, that cross and snoop on activities
and dare to analyse what someone thinks and posts on their social networks,
determining whether they are an enemy to be targeted.






