Opinion | The Old World Is Breaking Down. A New One Is Breaking Through.

Donald Trump is returning, artificial intelligence is maturing, the planet is warming, and the global fertility rate is collapsing.To look at any of these stories in isolation is to miss what they collectively represent: the unsteady, unpredictable emergence of a different world.Much that we took for granted over the last 50 years — from the climate to birthrates to political institutions — is breaking down; movements and technologies that seek to upend the next 50 years are breaking through.Let’s begin with American politics.

Trump is eight days from taking the oath of office for the second time, and America’s institutional storm walls are not, in 2025, what they were in 2017.The Republican Party is meek, and Trump knows it.He would not have dared to send Senate Republicans names like Robert F.

Kennedy Jr., Tulsi Gabbard, Kash Patel and Pete Hegseth for cabinet posts in his first term.Even beyond the party, he faces no mass resistance this time, nothing like the Women’s March that overwhelmed Washington in 2017.

Democrats are dispirited and exhausted.Trump is now flanked by an alliance of oligarchs led by Elon Musk.The billionaire owners of The Washington Post and The Los Angeles Times killed presidential endorsements of Kamala Harris, ABC News (owned by Disney) gave Trump’s “future presidential foundation and museum” $15 million to settle a defamation lawsuit Trump brought, Mark Zuckerberg is refocusing Meta platforms around “free expression” and his company against D.E.I., and Amazon reportedly paid $40 million for Melania Trump’s documentary about herself.

Tim Cook, Sundar Pichai and a slew of other chief executives have recently traveled to Mar-a-Lago to dine with Trump.This differs from 2017, when Trump was treated as an aberration to be endured or a malignancy to reject.

The billionaires see that the rules have changed.They are signaling their willingness to abide by them.

“EVERYBODY WANTS TO BE MY FRIEND!!!” Trump wrote on Tru...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: The New York Times

Recent Articles