Pulitzer Prize Historian: You Won't Notice Until It's Too Late
Donald Trump's net worth has tripled in just two years of office — from $2.3 billion to $6.5 billion — while his administration shapes policy decisions that directly benefit his business partners. Anne Applebaum, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian who spent decades studying the collapse of the Soviet Union, now finds herself writing about something she thought was relegated to history books: the methodical dismantling of democracy in real time. As the United States slips from «liberal democracy» to «electoral democracy» on global freedom indices and European allies secretly plan contingencies for a potential US invasion of Greenland, she warns that most citizens won't recognize the transformation until the system has already changed. The question isn't whether America could become a one-party state — it's whether citizens will notice the incremental shifts before it's too late.
Points clés
Trump's net worth nearly tripled from $2.3 billion to $6.5 billion in two years, with Saudi Arabia investing $2 billion in Jared Kushner's fund while Kushner negotiates Middle East policy — creating unprecedented conflicts of interest at the presidential level.
The US has been downgraded from «liberal democracy» to «electoral democracy» on global freedom indices, joining a pattern of democratic decline where autocrats use five core tactics: corruption, election manipulation, civil service politicization, information control, and paramilitary forces.
ICE has evolved into a national paramilitary force wearing combat uniforms and masks, operating above local law enforcement accountability — and the administration's immediate response to killing US citizens was to grant immunity rather than investigate.
America's closest NATO allies, including Denmark, have been forced to develop contingency plans for US military action after Trump threatened to invade Greenland, fundamentally fracturing seven decades of transatlantic security relationships.
Historical cycles of democratic decline are not inevitable — what happens next depends entirely on civic participation, voting in all elections including local ones, and citizens refusing to become nihilistic about the political system.
En bref
Democracy doesn't end with tanks in the streets — it ends when legitimately elected leaders systematically dismantle neutral institutions, capture the civil service, control information, enable high-level corruption, and create paramilitary forces accountable only to the executive. The United States is exhibiting all five warning signs simultaneously.
The Enrichment Problem
Presidential net worth tripled while policy decisions benefit business partners.
Five Tactics of Democratic Decline
Autocrats follow a predictable playbook when dismantling democracies from within.
High-Level Corruption Presidents running businesses while in office, making policy decisions that benefit their companies rather than citizens. Saudi Arabia's $2 billion investment in Kushner's fund while he negotiates Middle East policy exemplifies this.
Election Manipulation Gerrymandering districts to favor one party, implementing voter ID laws that disproportionately affect young people (24% lack documents), minorities (11% lack documents), and married women (69 million have mismatched names).
Civil Service Politicization Replacing merit-based bureaucrats with political loyalists. Trump attempted to pressure Fed Chairman Jerome Powell to resign and installed loyalists in the Department of Justice to prosecute enemies rather than pursue justice.
Information Control Not through direct censorship, but through media ownership manipulation. Administration pressures federal regulators to influence television stations and encourages sympathetic buyers to acquire media properties like TikTok, CBS, and CNN.
Paramilitary Forces ICE has evolved into a national force wearing combat uniforms and masks, operating above local law enforcement. When ICE killed two US citizens during Minnesota protests, the administration's response was immediate impunity rather than investigation.
The Greenland Crisis Nobody Talks About
America's NATO allies secretly planned to shoot down US planes.
When Trump publicly threatened to invade Greenland and private signals suggested genuine preparation, Denmark — one of America's closest allies since World War II — faced an unthinkable scenario. Danish officials began planning how to blow up Greenland's airports and whether they would shoot down American planes. They consulted with Germany about the implications if they fired on US soldiers. Every NATO ally went through the traumatic experience of imagining war with their security guarantor.
Then Trump gave a speech at Davos where he confused Greenland and Iceland several times, and the crisis seemed to pass. But no European ally has recovered. The moment crystallized a new reality: the United States is now viewed as an unstable power that cannot be relied upon. Since January, there has been an explosion of hedging behavior — Canada initiating security relationships with the EU, Brazil and India negotiating new trade agreements, Europeans discussing alternative nuclear umbrellas.
The breaking point wasn't theoretical concerns about democratic decline. It was the visceral experience of allied democracies preparing contingency plans for American military aggression. The 75-year transatlantic security architecture is fracturing in real time, and most Americans have no idea it's happening.
Why Autocracy Feels Stable Until It Isn't
Dictatorships offer the illusion of hierarchy and safety that appeals to human nature.
Why Autocracy Feels Stable Until It Isn't
There's a deep human need for stability, security, and hierarchy that autocracies falsely promise to satisfy. In democracies, you face constant change of leaders and demands for civic participation. Autocrats offer an appealing narrative: stability, safety, traditional values, hierarchy. When people with this instinct control information, security services, and monopolize violence, they become extraordinarily difficult to undo even if the majority wants something different. The question isn't whether some people prefer authoritarian systems — it's whether democratic citizens will recognize the trade-offs before they've already been made.
The Happiness Paradox
The world's happiest countries are democracies with strong equality and welfare.
Why Tech Oligarchs Bend the Knee
Status competition with peers matters more than money or principles.
“If I were that rich, what's the point of being rich unless you can't say what you think? I don't understand the value of it.”
The Journalist's Dilemma in Polarized Media
Business incentives now punish neutrality and reward tribal loyalty.
The economic model of modern media creates an impossible trap. If you build an audience that expects critical coverage of Trump and you write something positive about him, your article receives a fraction of the engagement and subscribers. But if you write negatively, you get ten times the reach. As a CEO, you face a stark choice: hire exponentially more staff to produce more output for the same rewards, or simply write what your base expects.
Geography compounds the problem. If you open offices in New York or Los Angeles, most available hires statistically come with certain political views. The fate of most media organizations may be inevitable political capture one way or the other — not through conspiracy, but through the fundamental incentive structures of attention economics.
Yet the job of journalism remains distinct and essential: going into the world to establish what's true, gathering information, and bringing it back accurately. For democracy to exist, for meaningful national conversation to exist, we need people devoted to figuring out what's real. As AI develops and we consume more information online, the risk grows that we lose touch with reality altogether — living in personalized algorithmic bubbles completely disconnected from what's actually happening on the ground in Ukraine, Iran, or our own communities.
Are We Living in Inevitable Cycles?
Human nature drives patterns, but agency determines outcomes and timelines.
Are We Living in Inevitable Cycles?
The dangerous seduction of historical determinism — whether it's the 250-year empire cycle or boom-bust patterns — is that it removes agency. When you believe decline is inevitable, you stop acting to prevent it. Human nature is a constant that offers warnings, but there's enormous accident in history. If Boris Yeltsin had chosen Boris Nemtsov instead of Vladimir Putin in 1999, we'd live in a completely different world. The cycles aren't predictable by scientists. What happens tomorrow depends entirely on choices citizens make today — the arguments we have, the degree of civic participation, the willingness to vote in all elections including local ones, and the refusal to become nihilistic about politics.
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