By Jonathan V. Last
Friday, April 04, 2025
1. Canada
Fittingly, it was the Canadian prime minister, Mark
Carney, who declared the official time of death.
The global economy is fundamentally
different today than it was yesterday. The system of global trade anchored on
the United States, that Canada has relied on since the end of the Second World
War—a system that, while not perfect, has helped to deliver prosperity for our
country for decades—is over.
Our old relationship of steadily
deepening integration with the United States is over.
The eighty-year period when the
United States embraced the mantle of global economic leadership—when it forged
alliances rooted in trust and mutual respect, and championed the free and open
exchange of good and services—is over.
While this is a tragedy, it is also
the new reality.
And just like that, the age of American empire, the great
Pax Americana, ended.
***
We cannot overstate what has just happened. It took just
71 days for Donald Trump to wreck the American economy, mortally wound NATO,
and destroy the American-led world order.
He did this with the enthusiastic support of the entire
Republican party and conservative movement.
He did it with the support of a plurality of American
voters.
He did not hide his intentions. He campaigned on them. He
made them the central thrust of his election. He told Americans that he would
betray our allies and give up our leadership position in the world.
There are only three possible explanations as to why
Americans voted for this man:
1. they
wanted what he promised;
2. they
didn’t believe what he promised; or
3. they
didn’t understand what he promised.
Pick whichever rationale you want, because it doesn’t
matter. Whatever the reason was, it exposed half of the electorate—the 77
million people who voted for Trump—as either fundamentally unserious, decadent,
or weak.
And no empire can survive the degeneration of its people.
***
2. No Going Back
Understand this: There is no going back.
If, tomorrow, Donald Trump revoked his entire regime of
tariffs, it would not matter. It might temporarily delay some economic pain,
but the rest of the world now understands that it must move forward without
America.
If, tomorrow, Donald Trump abandoned his quest to annex
Greenland and committed himself to the defense of Ukraine and the perpetuation
of NATO, it would not matter. The free world now understands that its long-term
security plans must be made with the understanding that America is a potential
adversary, not an ally.
This realization may be painful for Americans. But we
should know that the rest of the world understands us more clearly than we
understand ourselves.
Vladimir Putin bet his life that American voters would be
weak and decadent enough to return Donald Trump to the presidency. He was
right.
Europeans are moving ahead with their own security plans
because they realize, as a French minister
put it, “We cannot leave the security of Europe in the hands of voters in
Wisconsin every four years.” He was right.
The Canadian prime minister declared the age of American
leadership over. He was right.
Instead of arguing with this reality, or denying it, we
should face it.
It’s bad enough being a failing empire. Let’s not also be
a delusional failing empire. Let’s at least have some dignity about our
situation.
The world will move on without us.
Economically this means that international trade will
reorganize without the United States as the central hub. Relationships will be
forged without concern as to our preferences. The dollar may well be displaced
as the world’s reserve currency. American innovation will depart for other
shores as the best and brightest choose to make their lives in countries where the rule of
law is solid, secret police do not disappear people from the
streets, and the government does not discourage
research and make economic war on universities.
There’s a reason why countries like Belarus and El
Salvador aren’t tech hubs.
All of this will mean slower growth at home and declining
economic mobility. The pie will shrink and people will become more desperate to
hold on to their slices.
If you want a small preview, look at what
has happened to the British economy since Brexit.
The drag we experience will be much greater, because we
had much further to fall.
***
In the security space, Europe will organize apart from
us. The Europeans will create a separate nuclear umbrella and will likely
include Canada, Japan, and Australia in their alliance. The “free world” as we
have understood it for the entirety of our lifetimes will no longer include
America.
As a result, America will either drift, or find itself
becoming more closely allied with the world’s authoritarians. We may become
closer with Putin’s Russia or Xi’s China. We may find that we need them—Russia
as a counterweight to democratic Europe and China as a source of cheap
manufacturing to relieve some of the price pressure on American consumers.
The end of the American era doesn’t mean everything will
become chaos overnight. We aren’t going to wake up tomorrow to the sound of the
blaring war rig horn from Mad Max. We are still a rich country, with
momentum carrying us forward. But in ways that will soon be perceptible and
eventually be undeniable, things will get worse. And facts about America and
the world that we have taken for granted since the end of the Second World War
will no longer hold true.
***
3. Idiots
On the day that Trump’s tariffs collapsed America’s
position in the world, Secretary of State Marco Rubio went to Brussels to demand
that NATO allies increase defense spending to 5 percent of their budgets.
But here is how utterly stupid and unserious our
government is:
Europe is going to rearm. And they are going to do
so by building up their internal defense industries so that they do not have to
rely on America, which is in the process of threatening military action against
a NATO member.
And the American response to this has been to
cry foul.
U.S. officials have told European
allies they want them to keep buying American-made arms, amid recent moves by
the European Union to limit U.S. manufacturers’ participation in weapons
tenders, five sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.
The messages delivered by
Washington in recent weeks come as the EU takes steps to boost Europe's weapons
industry, while potentially limiting purchases of certain types of U.S. arms.
Our government thinks it can simultaneously:
·
demand that Europe re-arm;
·
threaten our European allies with territorial
annexation; and
·
demand that Europe buy American weapons.
We have a deeply stupid government—from our economically
illiterate president to our craven and foolish secretary of state, from the
freelancing billionaire dilettante who is gutting
American
soft
power to the vaccine-denying health secretary who is firing
as much talent as he can. From the senior economics advisor who thinks
comic books are good investments, to the senators who voted to confirm this
cabinet of hacks, to the representatives who stumble over themselves justifying
each new inane MAGA pronouncement.
But also, we have the government we deserve.
The American age is over. And it ended because the American people were no longer worthy of it.
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