
Based National Security? Trump Lays Out a Plan
Based Camp | Simone & Malcolm Collins
Mercenary diplomacy and deal-making logic
Simone links the strategy to Trump's deal-focused approach: help partners who reciprocate and stop subsidizing others.
Dive into a thought-provoking discussion on the dramatic shift in U.S. national security strategy. Simone and Malcolm Collins break down the recent changes in American foreign policy, exploring how the U.S. is moving away from its traditional role as âworld policeâ and adopting a more pragmatic, self-interested approach.
In this episode, youâll learn:
What the new U.S. national security strategy means for Americaâs relationships with Europe, Russia, China, and other global players
Why the U.S. is prioritizing sovereignty, border security, and domestic interests over global intervention
How these changes impact alliances, migration, trade, and the future of international cooperation
The philosophical and cultural shifts driving this new era in American geopolitics
Whether youâre interested in politics, international relations, or just want to understand the forces shaping our world, this conversation offers clear insights and lively debate.
Simone outlined this episode, so links and basic points are below and youâll find the episode transcript at the end. :)
Based Camp - A Shift in US National Security
The Gist
The days of Team America: World Police are over; weâve gone from âAmerica, F Yeahâ to âAmerica: Donât look at me ask Qatar.â
In November, the Trump Administration released a new national security strategy that is⌠pretty based
* It reframes the EU from partner to âproblemâ
* It insists countries need to handle their own problems
* It makes redditors mad: When prompted to explain the new strategy release, they said things like:
* âthe eu is in Putinâs way. The US is currently in the habit of agreeing with Putin on everything, word for word. Also, the leader of the US is making a lot of noise to distract from being the name mentioned the most on those âtrump files from epsteinâs pedophile islandâ that everyone that isnât on the list wants released. This is a good distraction.â
* âThe EU didnât allow Trumpâs shady real estate businesses. So there are no Trump Towers here. He is now making deals with Hungary and other right wing led countries to finally get a foot on EU soil. But as for business opportunities, he is rather friends with russians and arabs who flatter him as much as they can.â
* Quotes from the document:
* âOur elites badly miscalculated Americaâs willingness to shoulder forever global burdens to which the Ameri\can people saw no connection to the national interestâ
* âThe days of the United States propping up the entire world order like Atlas are overâ
* âWe will assert and enforce a âTrump Corollaryâ to the Monroe Doctrineâ
* â[Europeâs] economic decline is eclipsed by the real and more stark prospect of civilizational erasureâ
* âWe want Europe to remain European, to regain its civilizational self-confidence, and to abandon its failed focus on regulatory suffocation.â
* â[Americaâs goal is] cultivating resistance to Europeâs current trajectory within European nationsâ
THE US IS SHIFTING FROM HELICOPTOR PARENTING TO F AROUND AND FIND OUT PARENTING!! YES!!!!
But in all seriousness, we as citizensâand weâd argue that all peopleâshould probably be aware of what this shift in strategy entails, so letâs get into it
What is Changing About US Strategy?
In what way does this strategy represent a shift from the United Statesâ national security strategy up to this point?
* Replaces global ârulesâbased orderâ and democracyâpromotion language with a much narrower definition of U.S. interests focused on sovereignty, borders, and domestic strength rather than universal values.
* Elevates the Western Hemisphere to top priority, making migration, drugs/cartels, and Chinaâs regional footprint the central threats, instead of putting greatâpower competition with China/Russia and the IndoâPacific or Europe at the core.
* Treats mass migration itself as a primary national security threat and justifies using military force, including crossâborder strikes on cartels, as a routine tool of hemispheric enforcementâfar beyond prior strategiesâ lawâenforcement and humanitarian framing.
* Downshifts the Middle East from central theater to secondary concern, framing it mostly in terms of energy markets and transactional deals, in contrast to decades of âwar on terrorâ and regimeâchange or stabilization ambitions.
* Reorients alliances and Europe policy around burdenâsharing, trade balances, and âWestern identity,â openly criticizing European migration and regulatory policies instead of emphasizing cohesive liberal institutions and shared democratic values.
* Places economic nationalism at the heart of security, prioritizing tariffs, reâshoring, and industrial policy over support for multilateral trade regimes that earlier strategies still treated as broadly beneficial for U.S. power.
* Deâemphasizes international law and the ârulesâbased international order,â signaling more transactional, caseâbyâcase cooperation and fewer selfâimposed constraints on U.S. action than in Obamaâera and Bidenâera documents.
What is Shifting About the United Statesâ Relationship with the EU?
* Signals a much more adversarial and instrumental approach to the EU than previous U.S. documents.
* Shows less deference to EU institutions
* Puts more direct pressure on EU internal politics
* Sets stricter conditions on U.S. security guarantees.â
How it changes cooperation with the EU
* Frames the EU less as a core partner and more as a problem case, depicting it as economically stagnant and facing âcivilizationalâ decline because of migration and regulation.â
* Calls for âcultivating resistanceâ to the EUâs current trajectory by encouraging and working with Eurosceptic or âpatrioticâ parties and governments inside member states, rather than primarily channeling relations through Brussels.â
* GREAT way to handle dealings with feckless and broken bureaucracies
* Links U.S. security commitments more tightly to European burdenâsharing, expecting Europe to assume âprimary responsibilityâ for its own conventional defense while the U.S. acts mainly as a nuclear backstop and focuses elsewhere.â
Makes support more transactional: emphasizes trade concessions, action against Chinaâs economic practices, and higher defense spending as conditions for close partnership, instead of assuming automatic solidarity based on shared liberal values.â
Signals reduced enthusiasm for NATO expansion and more skepticism about longâterm alignment with European states whose demographics and policies diverge from Washingtonâs preferences, challenging the previous consensus on openâended enlargement and cohesion.â
Are New Allies Surfaced?
It clearly elevates some alliances and deâprioritizes others, with a new emphasis on partners in the Western Hemisphere and selected âlikeâmindedâ but not necessarily liberal governments elsewhere.â
Western Hemisphere partners
* The document defines a strategy of âEnlist and Expandâ in the Western Hemisphere, prioritizing âregional championsâ that will help the U.S. block migration, fight cartels, and secure supply chains.â
* It signals that such hemispheric partners could receive more U.S. troops, security assistance, and economic integration than many traditional allies outside the region.â
Alliances of âilliberalsâ
* Analysts note that the strategy implicitly favors governments aligned with U.S. nationalist and conservative prioritiesâeven if they are not liberal democraciesâover some traditional Western European elites.â
* This hints at deeper politicalâvalues alignment with certain Central/Eastern European, Latin American, Middle Eastern, and Asian leaders who share its stance on migration, culture, and sovereignty.â
Traditional allies and Asia
* The document still names NATO and IndoâPacific allies (Japan, South Korea, Australia) as important, but conditions close cooperation on higher defense spending and tougher economic policies toward China.â
* It also gestures toward a de facto greatâpower tier with the U.S., China, and Russia as the key shapers of order, implying that many other states will be treated more as swing partners or subâregional allies than as full strategic peers.â
Does This Change Our Stance vis a vis Conflicts?
Taiwan
What the strategy actually says
* It elevates âdeterring a conflict over Taiwan, ideally by preserving military overmatchâ to a stated priority, and calls for the ability to deny aggression anywhere in the First Island Chain, including Taiwan.â
* It reaffirms the âlongstanding declaratory policyâ of not supporting unilateral changes to the status quo in the Taiwan Strait, rather than introducing a new formal commitment to defend Taiwan.â
Expected U.S. moves before any invasion
* Accelerate military buildup and posture with Japan and other allies (more forces, longârange fires, maritime and air assets) to make a successful invasion or blockade militarily unattractive for Beijing.â
* Expand arms sales, training, and coordination with Taiwan to strengthen a âdenialâ strategy (asymmetric defenses, resilience, and joint planning) while pressing allies to spend more and do more around the First Island Chain.â
If China actually invaded
* The logic of the strategy points toward trying to deny a successful takeover through combined U.S. and allied military actionâespecially air and naval operations in and around the Straitârather than accepting a fait accompli.â
* At the same time, the documentâs emphasis on avoiding greatâpower war and on allies âstepping upâ suggests Washington would seek to share risk and burden heavily with Japan and others, and might calibrate its own direct use of force to manage escalation, rather than treating intervention as automatic or unlimited.
Israel and Palestine
Role of the Middle East overall
* States that the Middle East is no longer a primary strategic focus, arguing that energy and âforever warsâ no longer justify regionâwide prioritization.â
* Nonetheless lists âensuring that Israel remains secureâ and protecting energy flows and shipping lanes as continuing U.S. interests, so involvement remains but with narrower aims.â
Likely approach to IsraelâPalestine
* Reaffirms strong support for Israel, citing its security as a U.S. interest and highlighting the ceasefire and hostageârelease deals as signature achievements to be consolidated, not undone.â
* Treats the IsraeliâPalestinian conflict as âcomplicatedâ but no longer central; expects regional partners (Egypt, Gulf states, etc.) to carry more of the burden of stabilization and reconstruction rather than a large new U.S. peaceâprocess push.â
Expectations on policy moves
* Likely to keep backing Israel militarily and diplomatically (including against Iran and groups like Hamas and Hezbollah), while resisting international pressure for rapid recognition of Palestinian statehood or moves seen as constraining Israeli freedom of action.â
* More likely to sponsor incremental, highly conditioned arrangements in Gaza and the West Bank that lock in Israeli security requirements than to invest in a farâreaching finalâstatus agreement or robust U.S. nationâbuilding role.â
Russia and Ukraine
What the strategy actually says about the war
* Describes âan expeditious cessation of hostilities in Ukraineâ and restoration of âstrategic stabilityâ with Russia as a core U.S. interest, with far milder language on Russia than previous strategies.â
* Criticizes European leaders for âunrealistic expectationsâ about the war and portrays public opinion in Europe as wanting peace more than continued largeâscale support for Kyiv.â
Likely U.S. posture going forward
* Expect sustained pressure for a ceasefire or political settlement, even if it freezes lines close to current ones, rather than strong U.S. support for Ukraineâs stated goal of fully reversing Russian gains.â
* U.S. military and financial aid is likely to become more conditional and limited in duration, with Washington signaling that Europe must assume primary responsibility for any longâterm support.â
Relationship with Russia and Europe
* The strategy hints at a readiness to normalize relations with Moscow once a ceasefire is in place, aligning with Russian statements welcoming the softer tone and the focus on âstrategic stability.ââ
* It simultaneously downplays NATO expansion and admonishes European governments, implying that Washingtonâs priority is to cap the conflict, limit costs, and avoid deeper confrontation with Russia, not to lead a long war effort on Ukraineâs behalf.
Darfur and Other Atrocities in Africa
The strategy points to a much narrower, interestâdriven approach, so largeâscale U.S. intervention to stop genocide in Darfur or elsewhere in Africa is unlikely unless it clearly intersects with U.S. security, economic, or domestic political priorities. Expect selective, transactional engagement rather than a broad âresponsibility to protectâ posture.â
How Africa is framed
* Africa is repositioned as a region for limited, commercially focused engagement, with reduced appetite for major security or nationâbuilding missions compared with previous decades.â
* The document emphasizes that other regions and domestic priorities come first, implying that most African crises, including mass atrocities, will be handled primarily by regional actors with modest U.S. support.â
Likely tools the U.S. would use
* More reliance on sanctions, pressure at the UN, and shortâterm ceasefire diplomacy (as seen in U.S. efforts around Sudanâs recent ceasefire proposals) rather than deploying substantial U.S. forces or funding large protection operations.â
* Continued, but possibly reduced, funding for atrocityâprevention and accountability mechanisms, given ongoing legal obligations (Elie Wiesel Act, Genocide Convention) but also documented plans to cut some accountability programs.â
Selective and politicized responses
* Humanârights and genocide language is likely to be applied selectively, with more vocal and coercive U.S. action where abuses fit domestic narratives (for example, cases framed around protecting Christians or specific minority constituencies) and quieter responses where they do not.â
* Overall, the NSSâs deâemphasis on universal values and multilateral humanitarian norms signals that preventing or halting mass killings in places like Darfur will not, by itself, trigger major U.S. commitments unless tied to migration, terrorism, greatâpower competition, or salient domestic politics.â
Conclusions
* This is what I would expect from any reasonable countryâs national security strategy
* Itâs funny that while leftists decry this now, they previously decried the concept of the USA as world police
* The USâs obligations are, first and foremost, to its people and Iâm all for our investing more within our borders, especially in light of demographic collapse
Episode Transcript
Simone Collins: Hello Malcolm. Iâm excited to be speaking with you today because we have reached a new era in American geopolitical strategy. The days of Team America, world police are over. Weâre gone from America. F Yeah, we, weâve gone from that basically to America. Donât look at me. I donât know. No, I,
Malcolm Collins: I really like this.
The Trump administration basically released a plan for how weâre gonna act in terms of national security going forwards. Mm-hmm. And they said that essentially Europe has been taken over by hostile actors. Let me,
Simone Collins: can you let me, â
Malcolm Collins: cause you know, okay.
Simone Collins: Right. In November, the Trump administration released a new national security strategy that is pretty based.
It, it, it basically reframes the EU from a partner to a problem like quite clearly, which is amazing. And it insists that countries basically need to handle their own problems. In other words, like the big shift, if you just wanna sum it up. Is that America [00:01:00] has gone from being helicopter parent to being the F around and find out parent, which is exactly our style of parenting.
Yeah. And like even per our style of parenting, we donât just do it because weâre lazy and selfish than we are, we do it because it produces better outcomes. Like, it, it, it produces children who are not feckless and helpless. It, it produces people who can solve their own problems. So, you know, a lot of people right now, theyâre admittedly pretty mad about this and weâre like.
You know what, this is good for you, sweetie. Like, you need to, you need to learn how to solve your own problems. And I love it. I love it. And, and you know that itâs good because Redditers be mad. And when, when prompted to explain the new strategy, like hereâs some quotes from youâre just representative Redditer the EU is in Ginâs way.
The US is currently in the habit of agreeing with Putin on everything word for word. Also the leader of the US because they canât even refer to him by name. Heâs like [00:02:00] bor to them. No, 100% though is making a lot of noise to distract from being the name mentioned. And most of those Trump files from Epsteinâs Pedophile Island, that everyone isnât on the list once released.
This is a good distraction. Another person wrote. The EU doesnât allow Trumpâs shady real estate business. So there are no Trump towers here. Heâs now making deals with Hungary and other right wing led countries to finally get a foot in EU soil. But as for business opportunities, heâs rather friends with Russians and Arabs who flutter him as much as they can.
And another redditer took some choice quotes from this new strategy document that was released by the White House in November. That really goes to show. Kind of just one, how much this would make leftists mad. But like all these quotes, I read them and Iâm like, yeah. So, one quote, our elites, this is, this is from the document itself.
Our elites badly miscalculated, Americaâs willingness to shoulder forever, global burdens, to which American people saw [00:03:00] no connection to the national interest also. Yeah. Theyâre like,
Malcolm Collins: I hate that. How
Simone Collins: dare. Theyâre like, how very dare? And Iâm like, yeah, very dare you. Absolutely. So yeah, I, I mean I do love this âcause itâs, they see this as damning and Iâm like, no, this is fantastic.
Another, the days of the United States propping up the entire world order like Atlas are over. Yes. Thank you.
Speaker: This is all wrong. How dare you? You have stolen my dreams People are suffering.
Simone Collins: right. Another, we will assert and enforce a Trump corollary to the Monroe Doctrine. And Iâm like, yeah, absolutely. This is why he was voted into office.
People like, you know Monroe, he did. Okay. Can we start something a little fresh? Another Europeâs economic decline is eclipsed by the real man, more stark prospect of civilizational. Erasure. Yes. Actually. Mm-hmm. And another, we want Europe to remain European to regain its [00:04:00] civilizational self-confidence.
And to abandon, its failed focus on regulatory suffocation. Oh. Like, I cannot tell you like the scene for me is that scene where that woman basically as an orgasm in a restaurant at this point. Like, Iâm just like, ah, like this is just such a No, I,
Malcolm Collins: I love that. Theyâre gonna be like, what? They want Europe to state European that well, but also like the,
Simone Collins: when I was in college in, in, in, at, at Cambridge and we, we did a visit to the eu. I was, at first I was like, oh, the eu like, prestigious gotta be, itâs gotta be cool, right? And I came away so angry. Like just, it was just bureaucracy, bureaucracy, bureaucracy. I was horrified. I was like, this need, this thing needs to be burned down. It is, it is.
It is literally like the, it is holding a pillow over the face of Europe going sh and I donât like it. Okay. Final quote from Reddit. In, in Brackets America goal is Americaâs goal. Is and bracket cultivating resistance to Europeâs current [00:05:00] trajectory within European nations. Absolutely. Europe is not going in a good direction.
An analogy that youâve used with journalists is like. Basically thereâs, thereâs an anchor thatâs, thatâs like slowly falling off a ship. And everyone is like changed to the anchor. And Americaâs like removing their, their ankle from the chain because the anchorâs quickly, like now more quickly sliding to the ocean.
And everyoneâs like, why are you moving yourself from the chain? And youâre like, dude, itâs going into the ocean. Like, Iâm not tying myself to this. But Iâm, Iâm, Iâm really excited about this. And also in, in more seriousness though, I, I think this is all perfectly serious and Iâm not joking about any of it.
We as citizens, but I think pretty much anyone in, in the world, because weâre all affected by American foreign policy, should probably be aware of what the shift in strategy actually entails. And so I wanted to do a little look into it. So letâs, letâs, letâs go over it, you know, we wonât go too deep, but weâll, weâll get the important stuff.
Okay. And Iâd love to just hear your reactions to this. So, does that sound good? Yeah. Like I, Iâll tell you whatâs going on and you tell me what it means. âcause thatâs kind [00:06:00] of how our relationship works. Yeah. You do the thinking. I do the stating so I donât, I donât,
Malcolm Collins: itâs just âcause Iâm a man.
Simone Collins: Yeah. I mean, yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Brains and bronze. I, I, I do, I do the work. I, I, I, I clean. So, first what, what I wanted to look at with this document is. What is actually changing about strategy with the us? Like whatâs gonna be different now? Because thatâs all that really matters, right? I mean, as far as Iâm concerned. So the, the really big thing is again, this takes away the America world police imperative that has been slowly been fading away anyway.
It replaces a global rules-based order and democracy, promotion language, which of course you saw with like things like USA, which weâve already dismantled. With a much narrower definition of US interests focused on sovereignty, borders, and domestic strength rather than universal values, which absolutely Iâm for.
Also, weirdly, I feel like, you know, the whole joke with, with team America World Police, the movie. [00:07:00] Was like that. Conservatives were all about this, you know, like go blow up. Like, you know, like, you know, fix things. Yeah. And like, make so, so progressives in the past were like, oh, you know, how dare we go in and impose our values on these other cultures?
And now weâre like, you know what, weâre just gonna like kids who our own business. Interesting way
Malcolm Collins: it shifted, but the reason it shifted
Simone Collins: Yeah. Is
Malcolm Collins: because, and weâve mentioned this many times.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: In the nineties, the dominant culture in the United States was mm-hmm. Judeo-Christian culture. Mm. Today itâs the urban monoculture.
Mm. So of course now that theyâre the dominant culture, they want to use the apparatus of the state to push their culture into other countries. Yeah. In the same way that the Judeo-Christian culture in the United States did. Back in the nineties. Yeah.
Simone Collins: Itâs just so funny because at first they were like, how dare you intervene?
And then theyâre like, how dare you not intervene? How dare you not intervene? What are you doing? Yeah, we asked for this. Yeah. So this this, thereâs also a shift in really elevating the western hemisphere to the top priority. And itâs [00:08:00] making migration and drugs and cartels and Chinaâs regional footprint the central focus instead of putting great.
Power competition with China and Russia and the Indo-Pacific or Europe at the core, which is what we had before. It treats mass migration itself as a primary national security threat and justifies using military force, including cross border strikes on cartels as a routine tool for hemispheric enforcement far beyond.
The earlier strategies of law enforcement and humanitarian framing, and I think this is really prescient of the Trump administration in general. It itâs a Bob
Malcolm Collins: strategy.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Itâs our BOB strategy. They just adopted our parenting philosophy. What can we say? Describe.
Malcolm Collins: Some parenting strategies. When a child is misbehaving, you like have to hold them down until they stop doing what Theyâre good.
Thatâs like invading and, and maintaining a space. Yeah. In other parenting strategies. You like sit down and you talk with them. Yeah. Thatâs like the UN strategy, like [00:09:00] weâre gonna send you all, put the Weâll and Trump
Simone Collins: Jim just turns soleimani into salsa bop.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, just, but just bam,
Simone Collins: boom. Yeah. Those
Malcolm Collins: big, beautiful turrets you have.
Yeah. Itâd be ashamed of mail. Exactly,
Simone Collins: man. Like thatâs, and I think it, it, one, itâs more lightweight, itâs more effective. And that is gonna be the future of foreign policy. And I think this is, itâs really helpful to see this in the strategy document because what weâre seeing now is a sort of literary, formalization of something weâve already seen in practice. And I really, one, I also love that, I mean, you know, we are like 100% against deontology actions speak louder than words for us. And also like results speak louder than like, you know, the, the performativeness of anything. And what weâre seeing here is that.
The administration has already spoken with its actions. Now itâs just sort of presenting the philosophy behind it. But we donât have to be like, well, weâll see if they actually follow through because this is what theyâve been doing already. So I also really like that about this. Another thing thatâs shifting is weâre reorient, reorienting our alliances and, our European policy, [00:10:00] especially around burden sharing and trade balances and Western identity, while we also openly critique European migration and regulatory policies instead of emphasizing cohesive liberal institutions and shared democratic values. Like weâre not like, oh, weâre working with the EU on promoting democracy.
When weâre like, Europe, what are you doing? Like, why are you erasing yourself like youâre falling apart? And weâre also kind of like. I think thereâs this in the document, you see this over and over, this like general acknowledgement that Europe has lost the plot and, and basically shot itself more and more like not, it hasnât even shot itself in the foot.
Itâs like shot an essential artery in its leg and itâs bleeding out and like well it was nice to know you to
Malcolm Collins: do with
Simone Collins: it. Yeah. You
Malcolm Collins: know?
Simone Collins: Yeah. It was like Europe. Iâm sorry, like youâre over now. Our life. I think maybe a better metaphor is like we, we understand now that like Europe is, is, is like terminally ill or like irreparably addicted to fentanyl and like thereâs just no way around it.
And weâre like, Iâm sorry, I have to [00:11:00] disassociate from you. Like, thereâs you, you are not listening. You are incapable of listening. At this point, I have tried to help you multiple times. Itâs over now. Like you need to help yourself. Well, I
Malcolm Collins: do like that they talk about promoting, you know, European values in Europe where they can basically like Yeah.
Where we can put a foot on the lever to try to prevent the civilizational collapse of Europe like we will.
Simone Collins: But yeah. Actually, so Iâm, Iâll jump ahead. To, to, âcause the other key thing is sort of what does this mean for our relationship with Europe? And my favorite thing about, or I, I, I think maybe the most clever thing that surprised me about this document insofar as it relates to our, our relationship with Europe is it basically, itâs like, it says weâre, weâre not, the United States is not going to closely work with the EU anymore, but it is going to essentially work with, how do they word it? It calls for cultivating resistance to the eus current trajectory by encouraging and working with euros, euroskeptic, or patriotic parties and governments inside member [00:12:00] states, rather than primarily channeling relations through Brussels. In other words, itâs going to go to like the dissident nationalist parties.
Well, like, like
Malcolm Collins: V Vance did when
Simone Collins: he met with the A Germany. Exactly. And here it is. Formalizing that as a policy, but I, I think itâs really brilliant, and this never wouldâve occurred to me as a formal geopolitical national defense strategy like, because Iâm like, well, okay, like Europe is being written off.
But no, the United States isnât actually writing off Europe. The United States is choosing to invest in the facets of Europe that may have a shot that are not terminal. I like that. I think thatâs really cool. Now, of course, people on the left are like, oh, like theyâre just, theyâre gonna invest in white nationalist parties and like all these things, right?
But like, what theyâre really trying to do is, is like these people are attempting to create a sustainable version of Europe that isnât going to be completely financially drained, that may be solvent, that may have a shot at the future. And we will try to build [00:13:00] alliances with them. And the rest, like, Iâm sorry, but theyâre gone.
And I love that. I think that thatâs really, really cool. And of course theyâre also like, youâre up, you gotta pay for your own stuff now. You know, weâre, weâre not gonna, weâre not gonna bankroll you anymore. There thereâs less deference to EU institutions in general. Like they, they acknowledge that you guys are just bureaucratic.
It, itâs, itâs like just breaks in. Theyâre robots. They donât feel anything.
Speaker 2: . Theyâre just robots. Morty. Itâs okay to shoot them. Theyâre robots. Feel like you shut up. Glenâs bleeding to death. Someone called his wife and she, theyâre not robots, Rick. Itâs a figure of speech.
Morty. Theyâre bureaucrats. I donât respect them. Just keep shooting.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: And itâs much more strict with US security guarantees. Like, I, sorry, weâre not gonna like come in and solve your problems. Like you need to solve your own problems. And, and I think thatâs really cool.
I mean, it still frames, I donât
Malcolm Collins: think itâs, itâs quite cool to see formalized âcause so much of Yeah. You know, Trump. Doctrine. You know, heâll say it and his fans may get it, but then, you know, [00:14:00] he takes the White House and his team took the White House, like the first administration of his. Mm-hmm. And they werenât putting stuff together like this because they didnât get it yet.
No, they were
Simone Collins: like, well, they were so busy, basically dealing with an openly antagonistic deep state that was actively undermining every move that, like, what could they do
Malcolm Collins: really? Yeah, I, well, I mean, I, I, I loved what happened with the deep state that there, we went through the saga where they were like, the deep state doesnât exist.
Itâs a paranoid conspiracy. And then we find out that Biden is like, basically incapable of thinking. And weâre like, shouldnât we like be doing something about the fact that we donât know whoâs running the government right now? And the left was basically like, oh no, itâs a bunch of unelected really competent officials.
Iâm like thatâs the thing we were worried about. Trust me,
Simone Collins: bro. Yeah. It was just not great. Thatâs the deep state
Malcolm Collins: we were talking about. What do you mean? Yeah, like they, theyâre, they went from the deep state isnât real to actually the [00:15:00] governmentâs in good hands because the deep stateâs been running it all along.
Simone Collins: Yeah. But speaking of the deep state, what I love about this too, and I just feel like I feel so heard is that Europe is very distinctly framed in this document as. Undergoing civilizational decline because of migration and regulation. Like theyâre being explicit about it. Ooh, theyâre like Europe, like you boned, like demographic collapse.
Like just economically and, and, and specifically like the, the EU driven regulatory moras, you are imposing on your own people because, you know, weâve done episodes on how like, well, I, Europe is opting out. Of relevance because of their privacy rules, because of their AI rules, because of all these things that they really are, are economically and technologically.
Let alone civilizationally, you know, well opt out had the future,
Malcolm Collins: talked to me recently, which I thought was really big, is, you know, we have a whole episode on like ease erasing itself from history because itâs erasing itself from AI training data, right? Mm-hmm. Yeah. You know, and you canât easily and if ai, well, and
Simone Collins: I love, I [00:16:00] love though that the US.
Like government, or at least a Trump administration is openly recognizing that in politic, well, they had the pro
Malcolm Collins: AI thing that everyone was freaking out about recently. Yeah. Their one AI rule, you know, for, for, for every state, every region, I wish everyone freaks out about because theyâre like in that executive order.
You canât do that in that executive order, which. I mean, you canât, but large companies will find a way to use that. âcause they donât care, you know, what you as a state have to say if theyâre operating in every state, right? Yeah. Which makes a lot of sense. But outside of the, the Trump executive order on ai the, the other big problem which you told me about the EU and AI is EU has been trying so hard to make themselves green for a long time.
That theyâve been cutting down the amount of power that theyâre producing. And thereâs basically nowhere in the EU where it is cost effective to run giant data syn anymore.
Simone Collins: Hmm. Yeah, it is itâs a thing. So also there so clearly, right? Like weâre, weâre stepping away from the eu, right? Like weâre, weâre, weâre, weâre awkwardly like sidestepping, you know, at the party, like away from what used to be our good friend, [00:17:00] which is great.
Iâm just loving it. But itâs also kind of, then the question is, and we need to ask this and look at this, who then are our new. And in this document, thereâs a very clear elevation of some alliances and, and deprioritization of others, not just Europe. The, the new emphasis really is on partners in the Western Hemisphere.
And like-minded, but not necessarily liberal governments elsewhere. And this is where a lot of very progressive policy outlets are freaking out because it used to be like, well, if theyâre urban mono cultured and if theyâre quote unquote democratic, then theyâre gonna be our ally. Yeah. Whereas the, the focus here is more on.
I would say alignment of, of interest in sovereignty, in, in like mutual interest and like, even if youâre a totalitarian government, as long as our ends, like our desired end state and our res, our mutual respect for sovereignty is there, like weâre, weâre happy to work together. So the document defines a [00:18:00] strategy of what they call enlist and expand in the western hemisphere, which prioritize.
Prioritizes regional champions, it will help the US block migration, fight cartels and secure supply chains. And itâs signaling that such hemispheric partners could receive more US troops or security assistance and that economic integration than many traditional allies outside the region. And so itâs kind of like, I mean, I think in a very practical way, like weâll help you if you help us, like itâs much more.
Mercenary, which I, well, I donât think in
Malcolm Collins: a, in a being able to take this perspective actually gives us a lot more flexibility, diplomatically percent, and I feel like itâs a lot
Simone Collins: more transparent as well.
Malcolm Collins: Right. So for example, like if you can, which Trump was able to do, which is what the way he was able to end the war in Gaza was to get Erdogan on his side, right?
Mm-hmm. Like, Turkey. And you know, the fact that heâs able to go to Erdogan and be like, Hey, buddy, like, I understand that, like, not exactly a [00:19:00] democracy, not exactly, you know, friends with the Europe and the way that things are done. But like maybe, and, and if he, he had been. Progressive. He wouldnât have been able to make that deal.
He wouldnât have been able to go to him and be like, Hey, like letâs talk the three. Like, letâs figure something out. Right? Yeah. But under this new system, heâs able to be like, look, you are broadly conservative, right? Iâm broadly conservative, right? Like. We have a lot that we hate about those people in the EU together, donât we?
Simone Collins: Well, and I wanna be clear that the document still names NATO and, and a bunch of also are in the Pacific Allies like Japan and South Korea and Australia as important. But more like the really important theme here is that it. Conditioning the close cooperation on higher defense spending and tougher economic policies toward China.
And it, it also gestures toward a defacto great power tier with the us, China, and Russia as the key shapers. The key shapers of order. Mm-hmm. Implying that many other states will be treated more as like swing partners or sub-regional allies [00:20:00] rather than like specific partners.
Malcolm Collins: I think, you know, Russiaâs not really relevant economically on the global scale.
Geopolitically like,
Simone Collins: yeah, but hereâs like, hereâs how it, it actually stands with Russia. âcause this, all that like matters. Like, you know, so where do we sort of stand with Russia and Ukraine? And itâs, itâs no longer like. Well, hereâs how things would be fair. Like hereâs weâre, you know, itâs, itâs not the parent whoâs like, well, to be fully fair, like, you need to give Jimmy back this, and you need to apologize to him.
Itâs more just like, shut up and stop fighting. Itâs just like, stop. Like, just stop. I donât care anymore. I donât wanna hear it. Just shut up. Or I will like, you know, Bobâs
Malcolm Collins: all around. I
Simone Collins: donât care who started it. Yeah. And itâs not like, oh well, like, so, so this, this document kind of implies like, honestly, if you guys just shut up.
Just stop. I donât care if the borders are right where theyâre right now, just stop. Like, itâs not like, well you have to give back this land and weâre gonna broker this. Itâs, no, it is just [00:21:00] stop. And I think that thatâs honestly a much more pragmatic approach. And so when it comes like to it. What the document is clear is it, it, itâs basically like we want this to stop it, quote, an expeditious cesa cessation of hostilities in Ukraine.
And, and it wants a restoration of quote, strategic stability with Russia. And it, itâs honestly like, it, it is. I will, in all fairness, itâs, it is not very antagonistic toward Russia, but I also kind of get it because. And I, I, it is more antagonistic towards the EU than Russia in many ways. But I think thatâs because it inherently recognizes the long-term damage that the EU has done to Europe.
Like Putin may be, he may have boned the Russian people by like shredding the male population. And, and preventing like, you know, accelerating demographic collapse in Russia. But he was one person like the eu, like [00:22:00] these people, like this is like a giant, huge organization that is systematically and permanently neutering the eu.
And this is like many countries I feel like thatâs, thatâs a little more insidious. And, and itâs like the US seems a little more angry about that. Thereâs kind of a similar situation with Taiwan as well. That. The, the document elevates, quote, deterring a conflict over Taiwan, ideally by preserving military overmatch end quote.
Mm-hmm. So itâs really just trying to say like, weâre trying to make it clear in war games and like in from a strategic calculation to China, that it is not worth it to China to invade Taiwan. But itâs also clear from the document that if in the end China were to invade Taiwan, the emphasis would be on getting other allies in the region to lead.
And kind of how, like we, we did with Ukraine. Like maybe weâll provide some weapons like we, and youâll have to buy them from the US and weâll all be benefiting from it, like with Israel, but. Weâre not gonna like, weâre not gonna do [00:23:00] anything ourselves per se. Like itâs very much the BOP strategy. Or like we may go in and vaporize someone, but weâre not gonna like get super involved, like what we did with Iran.
I think what we did with Iran is very indicative of what we can expect in general with US foreign policy in the future. Until, of course, the Democrats come and take over and decide that theyâre gonna do something. But I think at that point weâre, weâre so financially screwed as a country that. We wonât be to afford to return to the Old Team America World police format.
So I think honestly, this is here to stay. And I think weâre gonna get used to it because in the end, this policy is what I would expect from any country in their national security policy, like this whole world police. Like weâre gonna go and take care of the worldâs strategy or, or policy that United States has had since World War ii, which we only really adopted, like.
For a variety of complex reasons after like the middle of World War ii, right? Like in the beginning weâre like hands off any [00:24:00] normal country, their imperative is to focus on stuff within their borders to take care of their own citizens. I mean, thatâs the whole conflict with, you know, internally with Israel that I think is driven so much unnecessary antisemitism is that people are like, wait a second.
Like why are we sending aid. To like, Israel, what, what about me here? Like, stop. This is, yeah. Like
Malcolm Collins: what is this? Yeah, yeah,
Simone Collins: yeah. And I mean, like, so also, you know, when you look at thereâs, thereâs not a lot of direct mention, for example, of our policy in Africa. Like, well, but what about whatâs happening in DAR four right now?
Like, you know, thereâs, thereâs genocides taking place, right? Like, terrible things are happening in the world and they are terrible. But in the end. Itâs our responsibility is to solve problems for our own citizens. Like thatâs who pays our bills. Theyâre the ones Yeah. That we need to take care of. Iâm, Iâm, Iâm, and I see this
Malcolm Collins: being electorally a really smart position to be taking.
Yeah. 100%. Yeah. I think itâs, itâs, it is what the average American wants. Mm-hmm. I think itâs what people voted [00:25:00] for. Yeah. Yeah.
Simone Collins: Certainly. If like Kamala Harris had won. Maybe I would see that thereâd be more of a mandate for our interventionism in things like the genocide taking place in Darfur, which of course wouldnât be happening anyway because know the genocides in Palestine didnât, you know, Malcolm didnât, you know.
Yeah. You
Malcolm Collins: know, this genocide doesnât matter âcause itâs happening to black people apparently.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Screw them. But yeah, I just. I think this is absolutely fantastic. I, I think this is extremely favorable, oh, by the way. Yes. The US still does. Speaking of Palestine see, Israelâs a key ally, but very, itâs very toned down.
This is a very muted thing. Weâre like, okay, sure. Like there is strategic ally in the region. But it, it very, the document explicitly is like weâre over the forever wars. We are no longer, this is no longer a region that we prioritize. There the document does refer to quote, ensuring that Israel [00:26:00] remains secure and it wants to protect energy flows and shipping lanes and continuing US interests that, that are relevant in the area.
But it definitely is like, this is. This is not our priority. Our priority is our border security. And you know, as demographic collapse plays out, like Peter Zhan in his book, the End of the World is just, the beginning was really all about this. Like this was e exactly what you would expect as countries start to price in demographic collapse and recognize.
The declining relevance of many countries and regions both politically, but from a defense and population standpoint as well. So I think this is important for everyone to just sort of internalize is like, hereâs what we can expect from the US and hereâs what we canât expect. And I think this is also really gonna influence how warfare is gonna play out in the future.
Bob strategy is going to pervade. Yes. Mm-hmm.
Malcolm Collins: I love it. We need to get on the militarization of bopping. When countries get outta [00:27:00] line and theyâre not listening, they get smacked on the nose. It was a, well, I mean, I think we really did That was like Iran recently, right? Like that was very much a bop strategy.
100%. Yeah. Right? Mm-hmm. It was, okay, will will bomb a bunch of infrastructure for like two days and then stop. And then, well, it was even like, you know.
Simone Collins: Israel loosened, loosened the lid. They were like, ah, ah, and like we came up and we were like, smash. And then, you know, opened it for you. But someone else has to work with us too.
And I think thatâs, itâs such a great example because Israel did the vast majority of the legwork and Israel benefited from the vast majority of the legwork. Now, we absolutely did benefit from from the contribution that we made, but again, like the big emphasis here, which is emphasized again and again, is like.
Okay, Europe, sure weâll work with you, but youâre gonna have to pay for like the value that you need. Like you, when you benefit primarily from this, you need to pay primarily for it. Weâre not gonna bankroll you anymore. Someone once said also like the best way to [00:28:00] understand Trump and his decisions, which I should, I probably do this is read Art of the Deal.
He said that after reading Art of the Deal, like you can really understand like the vast majority of Trumpâs policy decisions. And, and I do think that it really shows up when heâs like, we got a bad deal. Like, itâs like, why are we paying for this? Why are they paying for this? Like, this is not, I think maybe we should be looking at that, but I I do appreciate that.
I mean, what I, I
Malcolm Collins: thought I was, it was ghostwritten mostly right. Yeah, but itâs like the spirit of his strategy basically based on interviews with him or something. Yeah, it, yeah.
Simone Collins: So he didnât write it obviously, but like he, it, it still, it was very much his thing. And it, yeah, it, it. 100%. It is, it is a, a description of his strategy with regard to business dealings and whatnot.
No, itâs, you know, you didnât write it though. Let, letâs not dilute ourselves. But when I say mercenary, I donât say it in a derogatory fashion, but of course, you know, the, the, the [00:29:00] progressives on Reddit who decry this the, the, the liberals who are writing about this and freaking out. You know, theyâre saying things like mercenary and theyâre saying things like, oh, weâre no longer the world police.
And they, they mean it in a really bad way. I progression sad. Now weâre no longer the world police, but also the, there itâs, I think itâs very, itâs like a deeply, itâs a deep ideological divide. There is helicopter parenting. Mm-hmm. And thereâs e around and find out parenting. Right. And we, we are in that quadrant of.
F run and find out, and I, yeah, I think on a, from a geopolitical standpoint, Iâm in favor as well, so I love you very much, Malcolm. Love. Love. And what am I making you for dinner tonight? Much.
Malcolm Collins: Weâre, weâre doing the curry that you started to, I donât know why you started to fill it out, but you sort of thought, because itâs
Simone Collins: getting to the point where that, that like, you can only keep curry frozen for so long.
Like, okay, well letâs do it. Mango, Curry. Iâm making sourdough tonight, so maybe you just want that with sourdough to like dip in it or something. No, it
Malcolm Collins: will not taste good with sourdough. Itâs a, itâs a like a milk beer. Curry rice. So it needs to be with rice. Okay, no problem. And so, [00:30:00] weâll cook it.
You may wanna add a bit of like coconut oil or something to it. Donât coconut early. So how weâre handling what I
Simone Collins: can do, how about I saute some peppers
Malcolm Collins: or no? I do not think that thatâs going to go well with Mango. Okay. Then Iâm just,
Simone Collins: yeah, Iâll, Iâll Iâll just suber it in a pan to warm it up
Malcolm Collins: and weâll go from there.
Simone Collins: Sound good?
Malcolm Collins: Yep, that works for me.
Simone Collins: Oh, and would you like me to try to make cuddle corn? I mean, the kids will eat it now, but you could tell me if you like it and then I can make a batch dedicated just to you.
Malcolm Collins: Oh yeah, letâs try kettle corn. See kettle. See how thatâs done? You are such a thoughtful, I I could just
Simone Collins: like, you know, we can put it in a container and you can take it to your room.
Like, Iâm not suggesting you eat it for dinner, but like Iâm gonna be down there anyway, shall I? Yeah. Okay. I love you so much Malcolm.
Malcolm Collins: You and I love America. Amazing.
Simone Collins: God bless you, and God bless America,
Malcolm Collins: boy. Oh my gosh. Have a good one. Bye.
Speaker 3: Bow Titan, are you fighting like [00:31:00] a power Ranger? Which power Ranger are you? Iâm a Titan. Do you slay bad monsters?
Speaker 4: Toasty. Are you a power ranger? Yeah.
Are you the power ranger? What are you working on? Octavian? Um, that is not a good game. That is not what you said you were playing.
Speaker 6: No more computer. No.
Take one.
Dino Nuggets so you can become a Dino Ranger.
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