How Trump Ended Netanyahu’s Biggest Dream
Darwin, 19 June : Over the past 25 years, the United States has experienced several military setbacks in the Middle East, but the war with…
Darwin, September 27 — Let’s take a deep breath for a moment. And for that moment, let’s forget Donald Trump, Jimmy Kimmel, the United Nations, Charlie Kirk, Gaza, government shutdowns, and the many other crises facing us. Instead, let’s talk about a reality that corporate‑controlled media and corporate‑controlled political systems rarely discuss. We are witnessing the rise of two Americas — one for the billionaire class, and one for everyone else.
In the first America, the wealthy are shamelessly growing even richer; they’ve never had it so good. In the second America lives the majority — people who depend on monthly paychecks just to survive. They struggle to afford the most basic needs: food, health care, housing, and education
The simple truth is that never before in U.S. history have so few had so much wealth and power, while so many lived in economic desperation.
In the first America:
Together, these four alone control over $1.3 trillion in wealth. But they are just a part of it — the top 1 percent now holds more wealth than the bottom 93 percent.
This 1 percent lives in a completely different realm than ordinary Americans. They don’t ride overcrowded subways, they don’t get stuck in traffic. They move by private jets and helicopters. They live in mansions around the world, send their children to elite private schools, vacation on private islands, and some even spend millions to travel to space.
Then there’s the second America, where the vast majority of people reside. For these Americans, the system is not just broken — it is collapsing.
Everyone needs health care, yet over 85 million Americans are uninsured or underinsured — and that number will rise under Trump’s proposed “big, beautiful” healthcare plan.
Everyone needs housing — nearly 800,000 Americans are homeless. Over 20 million households spend more than half of their income on rent or mortgage.
Everyone needs a decent education — yet public schools are crumbling, teachers are underpaid and undervalued, and higher education is unaffordable for many.
Justice Louis Brandeis warned in 1933:
“We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of the few; but we cannot have both.”
That warning is even more relevant today.
America is at a crossroads. We must build a government and an economy that work for all, not just the wealthy. Otherwise, we will slide into an oligarchy, where billionaires control our government, economy, and future.
If we refuse to let Trump and his oligarch allies divide us, we can change the path we are on. The choice is clear: let us stand together for democracy and justice.
— Senator Bernie Sanders
(originally published in The Guardian)