Saturday, December 13, 2025

A deep dive into the time of Trumpian magical realism

 

 A deep dive into the time of Trumpian magical realism

Nikki Barrowclough
December 12, 2025
If you remember, 2015 was a year of horror too. Beheadings, suicide bombings, deadly attacks in central Paris and other cities, the burning to death of a Jordanian pilot in a cage. In Sydney, accountant Curtis Cheng was shot dead outside the NSW Police headquarters by a teenage Islamic State wannabe.
At the end of that awful year, I wrote an opinion piece for this masthead about the imagination of writers in an age of terror, questioning whether novelists were now in a quandary about scenarios they’d dreamt up.

 The French prime minister at the time of the Paris attacks, Manuel Valls, remarked: “The macabre imagination of the masterminds is limitless.” Fourteen years earlier, Ian McEwan, the English novelist, had said the opposite following the 9/11 attacks in the United States. He wrote in The Guardian that “a failure of the imagination” was among the hijackers’ crimes. They wouldn’t have been able to proceed if they’d imagined themselves into the thoughts and feelings of the passengers, he argued.

In contrast, America’s 9/11 Commission Report, made public in 2004, concluded that the most important failure leading to the attacks on the Twin Towers and the Pentagon “was one of imagination”. The national security adviser at the time, Condoleezza Rice, said that no one could have imagined planes being used as missiles.
As a child, I was constantly told I had a vivid imagination. Perhaps this rankled more than I realised. The result is an ongoing fascination with how often a lack of imagination is lamented on the international stage.
In September, this masthead’s Peter Hartcher wrote that The Hague Centre for Strategic Studies had found that European policymakers failed to foresee Vladimir Putin’s full invasion of Ukraine. The invasion “was just beyond imagination”, said one Dutch official.
A different kind of destructive force preoccupied American journalist Brian Stelter, CNN’s chief media analyst, after the rancorous TV debate between Donald Trump and his rival for the presidency, Joe Biden, in September 2020.
“So many of the failures in the Trump age have been failures of imagination,” Stelter wrote. “Many, many people didn’t imagine that he could win and didn’t imagine that he would debase the office in all the ways he has … I failed to imagine that he would stoop to ‘enemy of the people’ rhetoric to wound the nation’s news media.”
Trump had only just got started. Even George Orwell might have blinked at the idea of conspiracy theorists and pro-Trump propagandists routing the Pentagon press corps. But they have. Pete Hegseth’s new policy restricting reporting provoked a walkout by the real journalists at the Pentagon, headquarters of the Department of Defence (sorry, the Department of War).
The irony is that, just this week, Trump trashed “decaying” Europe and its “weak” leaders in an interview with Politico, one of the news organisations evicted from the Pentagon. It was an “extremely unfriendly’ publication”, Trump told his interviewer, Politico’s White House bureau chief, Dasha Burns, thankfully without addressing her as “Piggy”, as he had Bloomberg reporter Catherine Lucey.
His assault on Europe followed the release of his National Security Strategy, which declared that Europe was facing “civilisational erasure” due to immigration, although even this has been trumped by the mind-boggling news that people visiting the US (yes, Australians too) must now provide five years of their phone numbers, 10 years of their email addresses, IP addresses, metadata from electronically submitted photos, biometrics and information about family members. Didn’t Edward Snowden leave any of that data behind?
Donald Rumsfeld would have said the future for “the fake news media” across the US was one of those “unknown unknowns”. And Trump’s threats against writers, as PEN America points out, are aimed at intimidating journalists and their publishers. (In September, a federal judge threw out his $US15 billion lawsuit against The New York Times, four reporters and Penguin Random House, publisher of the book Lucky Loser: How Donald Trump Squandered His Father’s Fortune and Created the Illusion of Success. In October, Trump refiled the lawsuit.)
Things aren’t at the stage – yet – when novelists in the US are grabbed off the streets by masked men. Six years ago, bestselling author Richard North Patterson suggested that Trump had rendered fiction redundant. Perhaps POTUS regards mere fiction writers as harmless.
There’s still the genre of fiction that has served those living in dictatorships well – namely, magical realism, a writer’s martial art – though perhaps novelists feel defeated by reality because it’s non-fiction writers who, in these Trumpian times, relish the fantastical.
This headline, “The imperial audacity of Trump’s magical thinking”, appeared on the London School of Economics and Political Science blog in 2019. Last year, in Foreign Affairs magazine, Peter D. Feaver, professor of political science and public policy at Duke University, wrote that Trump portrayed himself and his team as hard-nosed realists, “but what they offered was less realism than magical realism: a set of fanciful boasts and shallow nostrums”.
“What will fiction be like in the Trump era?” wondered writer Miranda France, back in 2017, in Prospectmagazine. Paying tribute to the Latin American novelists who created the genre, she wrote that railing against tyrannical leaders was the spur to invent new literary forms.
However, if Trump discovers that, unlike academics, novelists’ imaginations are regarded as hallowed ground, he might ask his on-again, off-again friend, the assassin Putin, for advice.
Trump’s first wife, Ivana, claimed her ex-husband kept a copy of Hitler’s collected speeches, My New Order, in his bedside cabinet. No mention of books by the late Mario Vargas Llosa, who grew up under a military dictatorship, and once stood for president in his native Peru. He also won the Nobel Prize for literature in 2010. Not the Peace Prize, Mr President, but hey. In Vargas Llosa’s book of essays, Making Waves, there’s a line that reads: “For almost every writer, memory is the starting point of fantasy, the springboard that launches the imagination on its unpredictable flight towards fiction.”
Today, with humanity imploding, and memories of the world before Trump starting to look surreal, instead of the other way around, and as we learn not to rule out anything any more – Nigel Farage’s Britain? Marine Le Pen’s France? Pauline Hanson’s Australia? Neo-Nazis in our state and territory parliaments? – those unpredictable flights towards fiction may end, as imaginations dry up and writers fall from the skies.
Nikki Barrowclough is a Sydney-based journalist and former staff writer on Good Weekend magazine.


Friday, December 12, 2025

"I'm Big Joe. 58. Long-haul trucker.

 "I'm Big Joe. 58. Long-haul trucker.

Been driving 18-wheelers for 34 years. Sleep in my cab. Eat at truck stops. Talk on CB radio to stay awake.


Lonely job. But someone's gotta move America's stuff. Two years ago, I'm driving through Nebraska. 2 a.m. See a car pulled over. Hazards on. Woman standing outside. Looking scared. I pulled over. She backed away when she saw me. I'm 6'4", 280 pounds, covered in tattoos. I get it. "Ma'am, I'm not stopping to hurt you. I'm stopping to help. What's wrong?" Her car died. Phone dead. She'd been there three hours. Nobody stopped. "Where you headed?" "Hospital. Omaha. My daughter's in emergency surgery. I have to get there." No hesitation. "Get in. I'll take you." "In your truck?" "Safest vehicle on this highway." She hesitated. Then got in. Drove her 60 miles out of my way. Got her there in time. She hugged me hard. "Nobody stops anymore," she cried. "Thank you for seeing me." Got back on the road. Couldn't stop thinking about it. Got on the CB. Told other truckers. "We see everything out here. We should do something." Started a code. "Code Angel" we call it. When truckers see someone broken down, stranded, in trouble, we stop. We help. Word spread. Truckers across the country joined. Last year, we helped 1,200 people. Dead batteries. Out of gas. Medical emergencies. Domestic violence victims escaping. Runaways needing safe transport to shelters. We've got a network now. Truckers, CB radio, truck stops. Someone needs help? We mobilize. Saved six lives last year. People broken down in dangerous spots. Diabetics in crisis. A kidnapping victim we spotted and reported. But here's my favorite story. Last month, I'm at a truck stop. Young kid approaches me. Maybe 19. Scared. "Are you Big Joe?" "Yeah." "You know how to ride in a truck?" His eyes filled. "You'd help me?" "That's what we do." I didn't go to San Francisco. But I got him to a trucker who was. She took him the rest of the way. He made it. Safe. Now there's 4,000 truckers in Code Angel. We've got an app. Dispatchers. Resources. News called us "Guardian Angels of the Highway." But we're just truckers. Doing what's right. That woman in Nebraska? Her daughter survived surgery. She sends me Christmas cards every year. The kid I helped? He's in college now. Studying social work. Says he wants to help invisible people like truckers helped him. I'm Big Joe. I drive a truck. Sleep in parking lots. Smell like diesel. But I learned something. The loneliest roads are where people need help most. And the scariest-looking people are sometimes the ones who stop. So tomorrow, if you break down, if you're stranded, if you're running from something bad, Look for the trucks. We're watching. We're listening. We might look rough. But we'll get you home. Because the highway doesn't have to be lonely. Not when 4,000 truckers refuse to drive past people in trouble." . Let this story reach more hearts.... . Ai image is for demonstration purpose only. . By Grace Jenkins

Whitwell’s annual record of 52 things he’s learned

 A list of 25 Things to Say to Your Children, including “You can do hard things. I’ve seen you do them before and you can do them again.”; “I’m proud of you.”; and “It’s so brave to feel your feelings.”


Photographing the Microscopic: Winners of Nikon Small World 2025. “Overall Winner: A rice weevil perched on a grain of rice.”


One of my favorite end-of-year lists is Tom Whitwell’s annual record of 52 things he’s learned in the past year. Some favorites of mine from the 2025 installment:

4. You can unlock the wheels on a shopping cart by playing sounds on your phone. [Joseph Gabay]

5. In the UK, water companies and offshore rigs communicate by bouncing radio waves off trails created by millions of small meteorites as they burn up in the atmosphere. [Meteor Communications Ltd]

14. Nearly 0.7% of US exports, by value, are human blood or blood products. [dynomight]

16. The Ceremonial Bugle is a small plastic device that slides into a real bugle and allows a non-musician to perform at a funeral. It has a discreet switch to select ‘Taps’, ‘Last Post’ or one of ten other calls. [Simon Britton via Nicolas Collins]

27. Researchers at MIT have developed a fibre computer that is stretchable and machine washable with 6 hours of battery life, weighing about as much as a sheet of A4 paper. [Nikhil Gupta & co]

49. Marchetti’s Constant is the idea that throughout human history, from cave dwellers to ancient Greeks to 21st century Londoners, people tend to commute for about an hour a day — 30 minutes out, 30 minutes home. So faster travel leads to longer distances, not less time. [Cesare Marchetti, plus a 2025 update]

The new Annie Jacobsen book on biological warfare

 The new Annie Jacobsen book on biological warfare


Why this PwC and big bank agitator is running for the Senate

Law academic Andy Schmulow has had enough. Big companies are too powerful and corrupting democracy, he argues. And he wants to ask them the hard questions


Timothy Snyder: “What comes next? For the Nazis, the deportation and the pogrom of autumn 1938 were steps towards creating a centralised national police agency. In the US, something similar is unfolding with ICE.”


Every second cigarette in Australia is now illegal


Barry O'Farrell expected to return as Wests Tigers chairman 10 days after shock sacking


Former Australian Taxation Office staffer walks free after defrauding taxpayers in GST scam

A former Australian Taxation Office worker from Brisbane who defrauded taxpayers of $105,000 in a GST scam, and spent it on her lavish lifestyle has avoided jail.
Eva Ellen Dierens was in the District Court in Brisbane on Wednesday where the court heard she created a fictitious house-cleaning business, then facilitated the lodging $105,000 worth of fake GST refund claims.
The 28-year-old from Woolloongabba spent the money on tattoos, teeth straightening, an overseas holiday and a car loan, the court heard. 
Her ex-boyfriend, named in court as Zachariah Ahmed, was never charged over Dierens crime, Ms Tanzer-Wilde told the court.

Maybe a General Strike Isn’t So Impossible NowLabor Notes


The National: speaking truth to power


‘Looks like massive fraud’: Trump’s many pardons spark fury The release of drug traffickers and fraudsters is puzzling allies and sending shockwaves through legal circles.


Who Runs Congress’s Agencies?

First Branch Forecast: “While legislative branch agencies belong to Congress, not all are entirely free of executive branch entanglements. 

The question of how Congress chooses, oversees, and removes legislative branch agency heads is integral to the independence of the legislative branch, especially with recent White House efforts to take over or place personnel inside the Library of Congress, the Government Accountability Office, the Government Publishing Office, and the Office of Congressional Workplace Rights. 

Legislative branch agencies are responsible for providing confidential legal and policy advice to Congress, conducting its oversight of the Executive branch, providing Congress with access to records, independently evaluating the state of our economy, administering the legislative branch workplace including addressing complaints concerning member misbehavior, and much more. 

There are very good reasons why their activities should be fully independent and separate from White House control. A few years back we surveyedhow appointments work for officers like the Architect of the Capitol, Librarian of Congress, the Director of the Government Publishing Office, the Comptroller General of the United States, and there was no consistency. How inconsistent? Let’s provide some examples…”

Thursday, December 11, 2025

Creative Christmas Lunch

… Memories and the feeling of the rhythm of the season 


Modern social science finds that the 13th-century theologian’s recipe for “imperfect happiness” turns out to be perfect.









“The tragedy of modern man is not that he knows less and less about the meaning of his own life, but that it bothers him less and less.”

~ Vaclav Havel


Enjoy this footage, which shows a Tesla bot removing an invisible headset and then falling over. In other words, it's being remote-controlled by a human operator, who forgot to shut it down before removing their headset. People of a certain age may recall the scene from Robocop 2 when OCP executives review replacement models. 

The trailer for It’s Never Over, Jeff Buckley, a documentary film about the late singer/songwriter.

The concept of human rights in ancient Persia - Iran - is primarily associated with Cyrus the Great circa 600 - 530 BCE and the Cyrus Cylinder
, which many scholars consider the world's first charter of human rights. 
After conquering Babylon in 539 BCE, Cyrus issued a decree that established several groundbreaking principles of governance and human treatment, which were inscribed on a baked-clay cylinder in Akkadian cuneiform script. The rights and policies outlined included: 
  • Abolition of slavery: Cyrus prevented unpaid, forced labor and prohibited the exchange of people as slaves within his ruling domains.
  • Freedom of religion: He declared that all people had the right to choose their own religion and live in all regions, a significant departure from the practices of many other ancient empires that imposed the conqueror's gods and customs on the subjugated people.
  • Repatriation of exiled peoples: Cyrus allowed enslaved and exiled populations, including the Jewish people who had been held captive in Babylon, to return to their homelands and rebuild their temples.
  • Protection against oppression: He pledged to ensure that no one would oppress others and that if it occurred, he would restore the rights of the oppressed and penalize the oppressor.
  • Equality and tolerance: His policies promoted racial equality and a general attitude of tolerance and respect for the diverse cultures, customs, and languages of the peoples within his vast empire. 
A replica of the Cyrus Cylinder was presented to the United Nations in 1971 and is now displayed in New York, where its provisions are often paralleled with the first four Articles of the modern Universal Declaration of Human Rights. While some historians consider the application of the term "human rights" to an ancient artifact anachronistic, the Cylinder undeniably represents a uniquely progressive and humane approach to governance for its era. 

From Babylon, the idea of human rights spread quickly to India, Greece and eventually Rome and Bohemia. There the concept of “natural law” arose, in observation of the fact that people tended to follow certain unwritten laws in the course of life, and Roman law was based on rational ideas derived from the nature of things.

Documents asserting individual rights, such as the Magna Carta (1215), the Petition of Right (1628), the US Constitution (1787), the French Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (1789), and the US Bill of Rights (1791) are the written precursors to many of today’s human rights documents.


The Authoritarian Tech Network: The Kingmakers


a show focused on history, politics, philosophy, and world affairs, aiming to uncover untold stories, challenge narratives, and provide deeper understanding, often through in-depth lectures and Q&A sessions covering diverse topics from ancient civilizations and Islamic Golden Age to modern conflicts and cultural issues. Hosted by historian and political scientist Dr. Roy Casagranda, it offers both structured content and "Office Hours" with direct audience engagement. 
  • Mission: To "unerase the erased peoples of the world" by sharing marginalized histories and truths.
  • Content: Explores complex events, ideologies, and cultures, seeking truth and challenging misinformation.
  • Formats: Features lectures (often from his Museum of the Future talks) and interactive sessions like "Office Hours".
  • Topics: Spans global conflicts (Palestine, Ukraine), historical eras (Abbasid Revolution, Islamic Golden Age), philosophy, and current events.
  • Accessibility: Available on platforms like Apple Podcasts and YouTube, with audio versions of video lectures. 
  • Apple Podcasts: Dr. Roy Casagranda Podcast

No one cooks an omelette without cracking an egg. No one starts a blog on political economy thinking they will keep everyone happy.


A Line in a Tom Stoppard Play Inspired a New Breast Cancer Treatment

In a letter to the Times of London, Dr. Michael Baum tells how a line in Arcadia by Tom Stoppard sparked an idea which resulted in adjuvant systemic chemotherapy, a therapy Baum helped pioneer which greatly increased the survivability of breast cancer.

Sir, In 1993 my wife and I went to see the first production of Arcadia by Tom Stoppard (obituary, Dec 1), and in the interval I experienced a Damascene conversion. As a clinical scientist I was trying to understand the enigma of the behaviour of breast cancer, the assumption being that it grew in a linear trajectory spitting off metastases on its way. In the first act of Arcadia, Thomasina asks her tutor, Septimus: “If there is an equation for a curve like a bell, there must be an equation for one like a bluebell, and if a bluebell, why not a rose?” With that Stoppard explains chaos theory, which better explains the behaviour of breast cancer. At the point of diagnosis, the cancer must have already scattered cancer cells into the circulation that nest latent in distant organs. The consequence of that hypothesis was the birth of “adjuvant systemic chemotherapy”, and rapidly we saw a striking fall of the curve that illustrated patients’ survival.

Stoppard never learnt how many lives he saved by writing Arcadia.

Michael Baum
Professor emeritus of surgery; visiting professor of medical humanities, UCL

Certainly drives home the value of a robust and diverse culture of humanities in contradiction to the current backlash. (via @harrywallop.co.


How MacKenzie Scott is giving away her billions. “Once you begin to see Scott as [Toni] Morrison’s mentee — rather than as a certain Amazon founder’s ex-wife — you can’t unsee it. She gives more like an artist would.”


Annual List by Tom Whitwell – 52 things I learned in 2025

 things I learned in 2025 –  – [a small selection from the list]

  • In 2023, Nigeria had a million more births than the whole of Europe – Our World in Data, via Charles Onyango-Obbo]
  • Childhood peanut allergies are falling dramatically, perhaps because advice to avoid peanuts was reversed. [Simar Bajaj]
  • The serial killer epidemic in 1970–80s US may have been caused by lead fumes from cars and factories, and solved by environmental regulations. [Caroline Fraser via James Lasdun]
  • Global suicide rates have declined by 29% since 2000, due to measures like pesticide bans, more responsible media reporting of suicide, mental health education in schools and improved healthcare responses. [Dévora Kestel & co, via Angus Herveyagain]

 

DOGE Isn’t Dead. Here’s What Its Operatives Are Doing Now

Follow up to DOGE ‘doesn’t exist’ – with eight months left on its charter, via Wired, see DOGE Isn’t Dead. Here’s What Its Operatives Are Doing Now [no paywall] -“…On Instagram, Yat Choi described his work as ongoing, announcing that he was returning to the underground Pennsylvania mine where federal retirement claims are processed.

 “Like Jigga [Jay-Z] I showed them the blueprint back in April, now going back in the Mine to lead the pilots next week,” wrote Choi, who previously worked as an engineer at AirBnb and has referred to Canada as home in other Instagram posts. Choi did not respond to a request for comment. 

It’s not just Choi. Many of the original young and inexperienced DOGE technologists whose identities were first reported by WIRED appear to still be enmeshed in federal agencies. Edward “Big Balls” CoristineGavin KligerMarko ElezAkash Bobba, and Ethan Shaotran all still claim to be affiliated with DOGE or the US government. So do other tech workers from Silicon Valley and Musk companies like xAI and SpaceX. Coristine, Kliger, Elez, Bobba, and Shaotran did not respond to requests for comment. 

The DOGE ethos—characterized by cutting contracts and government workersconsolidating data across agencies, and importing private sector practices—remains fully in force. While several media reports have suggested that DOGE has all but fizzled out, DOGE affiliates are scattered across the federal government working as developers, designers, and even leading agencies in powerful roles. “That’s absolutely false,” one USDA source says of reporting that DOGE has disbanded. “They are in fact burrowed into the agencies like ticks.”

DOGE has “just transformed,” an IRS employee tells WIRED. While DOGE is no longer moving across the government in a move-fast-and-break-things blitz, DOGE affiliates appear to be digging in for the long haul—and Silicon Valley–shaped fingerprints remain all over the way agencies continue to be run. Over the last few weeks, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has rolled out coding tests to its hundreds of technical staff, quizzing them over their “technical proficiency.” The decision to roll out these tests came from Sam Corcos, a DOGE operative and chief information officer of the Treasury, according to a source familiar with the situation. Corcos is seeking to overhaul the IRS’s 8,500-person IT department, the source says. This is part of a larger ongoing “modernization” process at the US Treasury. The tests, administered through a tool called HackerRank, have been used by private-sector tech companies like Airbnb, LinkedIn, and PayPal to quiz a potential hire’s technical skill. One source at X, the social media company owned by Musk, tells WIRED that X uses “HackerRank’s tool to do coding screen-sharing for tech screens and remote interviews,” but confirmed that existing employees are not assessed with the tool. “They want to see IRS as like a tech company, that’s the feeling I get,” says an IRS employee who spoke to WIRED on the condition of anonymity, as they were not authorized to speak to the press. While coding tests are expected for candidates applying for technical roles, testing existing agency employees is highly unusual, four IRS sources tell WIRED. Early in DOGE’s tenure, staffers at the Technology Transformation Services (TTS) were forced to defend their projects on video calls with DOGE members. Government employees were also asked to send weekly emails detailing their work and achievements, which were later reviewed by artificial intelligence. (These emails and project reviews closely resemble the playbook Musk used when he took over X, formerly Twitter, in 2022.)…”