The Art of the Steal, Seizing Power by Stealth. Palestine – From Two-State to Real Estate. Digital Dollar Own Goal. Plus more! #241

The Art of the Steal, Seizing Power by Stealth. Palestine – From Two-State to Real Estate. Digital Dollar Own Goal. Plus more! #241

Grüezi!

  • While DC pundits freak out about coups, the real takeover is happening in IT – turns out you don’t need storm troopers when you have system permissions.
  • As American power verbally implodes, the real action is moving to mineral rights and digital currencies – welcome to geopolitics’ quiet rebrand.
  • Meanwhile, a farewell interview from the Biden administration reminds us that intellectual inertia can be as damaging as open mic diplomacy…


1?? ?? The Trump-Musk Treasury Takeover Crisis ??

Another stress test for an over-stressed democracy…

A man gives a Hitler salute
Not a Nazi salute. Not a coup.

Much ink has been spilled by alarmed Americans worried their nation is being subverted from within.

Nobel laureate Paul Krugman referenced “a 21st century coup,” economics commentator Nathan Tankus called it was an administrative Reichstag Fire.

It’s bizarre watching people talking about something grave without actually appearing to act. As if somehow, later on, it will be possible to triumphantly remind people that – yes, you were right. When if you were right, you may find yourself having to explain exactly what you meant to one of Elon Musk’s DOGE-troopers.

So what has happened?

  1. Private citizens given unprecedented access to critical US government systems;
  2. Normal oversight and security protocols bypassed;
  3. Congressionally mandated spending potentially interrupted;
  4. Career civil servants ousted.

What we’re seeing isn’t the dramatic authoritarianism of the 1930s that haunts some liberal imaginations. It’s something more prosaic and effective: the transformation of public infrastructure into private networks of loyalty and patronage. This isn’t a coup so much as a leveraged buyout of the administrative state. The FT’s Joseph Cotterill compares it to Jacob Zuma’s “state capture” of South Africa.

The people writing worried op-eds are still thinking in terms of constitutional crises and dramatic confrontations. Meanwhile, the work of transforming government happens in memos and IT system read/write access.

The same newspapers running opinion pieces about constitutional crisis have front pages treating this as routine political transition.

It’s not that they’re wrong – it’s that our entire framework for understanding how power could be seized hasn’t caught up to how power actually works now.

Commentators are still searching for dramatic moments of confrontation, while the real action happens in system permissions and database access. The question isn’t just whether this is a power grab – it’s whether Americans even know how to recognise one anymore.


3?? Idea-less in Gaza

Two-state solution to real estate solution.

The Riviera of the Middle East...

Nothing captures the current state of American power quite like Trump’s Gaza takeover plan.

A real estate developer president, inspired by photos from a real estate developer diplomat, casually announcing plans to “take over” Gaza during a press conference. The fate of millions casually brushed over for a beach condo brochure.

The Defence Department doesn’t know the plan, the State Department can’t explain it, and Arab allies watch decades of careful diplomacy dissolve in real time.

Yet somehow the US is going to:

  • Convince multiple countries to take 2 million displaced Palestinians;
  • Clear a war zone of unexploded ordnance;
  • Attract private investment to a conflict zone;
  • Transform 140 square miles of rubble into a Mediterranean Dubai.

The administration insists American taxpayers won’t foot the bill, but Palestinians –?of course – will pay the price.


3?? The New Resource Wars Aren’t About Oil

Why critical minerals are reshaping global power.

A rock.
Not oil...

A fascinating shift is occurring in global politics, hidden in plain sight. While the world focuses on traditional security concerns in Ukraine, a new great game is emerging around rare earth elements and critical minerals.

Here’s what's really happening. Trump’s recent remarks about Ukrainian rare earths aren’t the usual unrehearsed rhetoric. They’re a window into how global power dynamics are fundamentally changing:

  1. Military aid is evolving into resource partnerships. The traditional donor-recipient model of military support is being replaced by something more complex. Ukraine’s “victory plan” explicitly includes resource-sharing agreements. This isn’t just about help – it’s about long-term strategic positioning.
  2. The real China competition isn’t about trade. While headlines focus on tariffs and trade deficits, the critical battlefield is rare earth elements. China controls 80% of global processing capacity. Every iPhone, Tesla, and F-35 depends on these materials. Ukraine’s deposits could change this equation dramatically.
  3. Future alliances will be built on minerals, not missiles. Countries with critical mineral deposits are becoming the new strategic prizes. This explains why Trump expressed interest in both Ukraine’s resources and Greenland’s deposits. The new geopolitical map is being re-drawn in rare earths, lithium, and cobalt.

?? The business implications?

  • Supply chain strategies need to account for this new resource nationalism;
  • Strategic partnerships may need to include mineral access considerations;
  • Investment opportunities are emerging in critical mineral development;
  • Risk assessments will need to consider resource-driven geopolitical shifts.

The deeper question? We might be witnessing the end of purely security-based international relations and the emergence of explicitly transactional diplomatic relationships that could reshape how global business operates.

#Geopolitics #CriticalMinerals #GlobalBusiness #FutureOfTrade #InternationalRelations #SupplyChain #Strategy


4?? The Biggest Own-Goal in US Financial History Just Happened

And almost nobody noticed.

Currency graphics
Yuan Currency To Rule Them All...

While everyone’s focused on Trump’s tariff talk, Treasury takeovers and Gaza gaffes, his ban on US digital currency development could prove far more consequential. Here’s why:

Digital currency isn’t just about tech – it’s about the future of global finance itself. And the US just chose to ignore the revolution:

  • China’s digital yuan is gaining real-world traction;
  • Gulf states piloting new digital payment platforms;
  • Global traders seeking faster, cheaper settlement options.

And America’s response? “No thanks, we’ll sit this one out.”

The irony is breathtaking. In the name of protecting American financial power, the administration is accelerating its erosion. Because here’s what happens next:

  • Countries adopt Chinese payment systems (because they’re available);
  • Network effects kick in;
  • US banks fall behind on crucial innovation.

This isn’t about grand strategy. It’s about basic market efficiency. When you make it faster and cheaper to trade in yuan, guess what traders choose?

Prediction? Five years from now, we’ll look back on this as the moment America voluntarily ceded its financial technology leadership – not because of China’s strength, but because of its own choices.

#GlobalFinance #DigitalTransformation #Geopolitics #Banking #Fintech #Leadership


5?? Over-Intellectualised Inertia

A critical look at Jake Sullivan’s out-the-door interview

Jake Sullivan talking
National Insecurity Advisor

The FT’s exit interview with former US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan is a bleak window into the moral failure of the Biden administration.

The confident headline – “The Core Engines of American Power are Humming” – quickly collapses when it comes to Gaza. Trump’s crassness is perhaps accidental. Sullivan’s well-calculated callousness has no such excuse.

Despite the “immense human suffering,” the engineer of American power claims helplessness on Gaza –?“I’m not sure how I could have justified” changing course.

Three points of failure:

  1. Abdication of Moral Agency Sullivan frames Gaza policy as something that happened to the Biden administration rather than choices it made. This subordination of moral decisions to “technical constraints” is a failure of leadership at the most fundamental level.
  2. Institutional Cover for Individual Choice While Sullivan points to limitations, he had the power to raise alarms, force debate, or –?as others did – resign in protest. The choice to remain was his personal decision, not a system failure.
  3. Retreat from Consequence Sullivan’s planned departure from Washington for a comfortable teaching job in New Hampshire seems less healthy work-life balance and more internal exile.

Sullivan’s exculpatory exit interview offers a warning about how institutional processes can become masks for moral abdication.

#Leadership #Ethics #MoralResponsibility #InstitutionalAccountability


6?? Be Careful What You Wish For…

A Lesson in Anti-Immigration Backfire from Bulgaria.

A small boy is comforted
No more little Bulgarians...

In 1989, nationalist hardliners in Bulgaria got exactly what they wanted. They successfully drove out nearly half a million ethnic Turks in their “Revival” campaign for ethnic “purity.” The result? A smack in the face from unintended consequences.

Fast forward to today: Bulgaria’s population has plummeted from 9 million to 6.8 million. Schools built for hundreds now echo with dozens. Villages that once bustled with life now struggle to keep a single bar open. The UN projects the population will halve from its peak by 2070.

The irony? That initial act of forced emigration normalised the idea of leaving, triggering waves of departures when borders opened. Young Bulgarians fled west, taking with them their future children and grandchildren. The same nationalist mindset that drove out “foreigners” now makes it tough to attract new immigrants who might help reverse the decline.

The lesson for anti-immigrant nationalists everywhere? Population “purity” comes at a steep price. While you’re busy “protecting” your nation from immigrants, you might just be orchestrating its collapse.

#Demographics #Immigration #PolicyFailures #EconomicDevelopment


7?? Ever Wondered When Data Visualisation First Changed the World?

Wonder no more…

In 1788, a Plymouth draughtsman created what might be history’s most influential infographic: the Brookes slave ship diagram – a hand-drawn revolution in how to use data to drive change.

The innovation? Expressing a moral outrage as simple technical drawings:

  • Precise measurements and scale;
  • Cross-sectional views;
  • Clear visual hierarchy.

The result? As one abolitionist noted: “an instantaneous impression of horror upon all who saw it.”

Key lesson for today’s data professionals: Sometimes the most powerful message isn’t an argument – it’s just showing the numbers and letting them speak.


Thanks for reading!

Best

Adrian

Two hussars charge.


Regina Kim

Entertainment Journalist, Cultural Commentator & Host | Forbes Contributor

2 周

Thank you for these great insights ?? I’ll just add that there are in fact many people who have been protesting against the Trump administration and DOGE in DC and across the country, and last I heard the Senate was receiving 1,600 calls per minute. People are also supporting organizations like Democracy Forward, which has been filing lawsuits against Trump and has successfully stymied some of his administration’s efforts. I think for whatever reason such actions haven’t been getting a lot of news coverage, so many of us in the US have been relying on social media platforms like Instagram and Threads to stay informed, which I find to be ironic bc they’re all owned by the very tech oligarchs that support the current administration ??

Fran?ois Bringer

Filmmaker/Photographer/Content Creator

2 周

Great. You are the only one to touch these issues full on. From the big picture to where it hurts. Thanks a lot.

回复
Petronella Halwiindi

Country Manager UNOPS

3 周

Thank you for sharing those insights.

回复
Stephen Khan

Executive Editor at The Conversation

3 周

Great stuff Adrian. Thanks

回复
Arinze Oduah FCIPS

Supply Chain Management Leader (ex-Royal Dutch Shell)

3 周

Powerful nuggets! Thanks Adrian!

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