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Vladimir Putin

Does Donald Trump Know What a Dictator Looks Like?

He calls Volodymyr Zelenskyy a “dictator,” but not Vladimir Putin.

Matt Welch | 8.7.2025 7:30 AM

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An image of, from left to right, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Donald Trump, and Vladimir Putin, the latter two are wearing suits. | Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Kotenko Yevhen | Ukrinform | CNP | AdMedia | ABACA | APAImages | Polaris | Newscom | Midjourney
(Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Kotenko Yevhen | Ukrinform | CNP | AdMedia | ABACA | APAImages | Polaris | Newscom | Midjourney)

President Donald Trump sure picked a curious venue to start calling Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy a "dictator."

It was February 19, halfway through a remarkable two-week run in which America reversed its approach to both the Russia-Ukraine war and possibly the entire 76-year-old Washington-led trans-Atlantic military alliance. Trump was speaking in Miami Beach's Faena Hotel and Forum at a bland-sounding "Priority Summit" hosted by the innocuously named Future Investment Initiative Institute, which in turn is owned by the nondescript Public Investment Fund (PIF). But to the global financial elite, that latter entity is far from obscure. At an estimated $941 billion, the PIF is the sixth-largest sovereign wealth fund on the planet, owned by one of the world's most authoritarian dictatorships, Saudi Arabia.

The institute's international confabs have not been without controversy. In October 2018, after the Saudi dissident and Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi was strangled to death and then sawed into bits at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, reportedly at the behest of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, then-Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, with Trump's blessing, joined a host of American and international CEOs and VIPs in withdrawing from the institute's flagship annual investment conference in Riyadh, sometimes known as "Davos in the Desert." Wall Street had largely gotten over its spasm of conscience by 2021, however, and Trump—like so many POTUSes before him, especially in the Bush family—maintains a warm relationship with the House of Saud. So by February 2025, no one was making much hay about an American president hailing Saudi Arabia as "a special place with special leaders," answering a question about his three ideal dinner guests by naming two Saudi officials in the room (plus the also-present and notoriously corrupt Italian-Swiss head of the international soccer federation FIFA, Gianni Infantino), and singling out for gratitudinal praise the aforementioned Salman.

Zelenskyy didn't get off so easily.

"Think of it," Trump mused about 53 minutes into his speech. "A modestly successful comedian, President Zelenskyy, talked the United States of America into spending $350 billion to go into a war that basically couldn't be won, that never had to start, and never would have started if I was president." There are a variety of disputable claims in that windup, but as a wise man once said, forget it, he's rolling.

"He refuses to have elections. He's low in the real Ukrainian polls," Trump continued. "Every city is being demolished. They look like a demolition site, every single one of them. And the only thing he was really good at was playing Joe Biden like a fiddle. [He] has done a terrible job. His country is shattered, and millions and millions of people have unnecessarily died." The president accused Zelenskyy of obstructing peace ("Maybe he wants to keep the gravy train going?"), warned that he "better move fast or he's not going to have a country left," and summed up the Ukrainian as "a dictator without elections."

It was that last claim, rather than the actually electionless dictatorship hosting Trump's speech, that generated headlines around the world, including in subsequent days when the president was asked twice point blank whether he would also characterize the aggressor in the war, Russian President Vladimir Putin, as a "dictator." On February 21, Trump demurred, saying "I think that President Putin and President Zelenskyy are going to have to get together because you know what? We want to stop killing millions of people." On February 24, sitting in the White House next to the visiting French president, Trump responded: "I don't use those words lightly."

A more accurate characterization might be that the second Trump administration does not lightly use condemnatory words to describe condemnation-worthy governments and leaders that it is busy trying to persuade on a prioritized issue. Saudi Arabia is the object of a pined-for peace deal with Israel, is intertwined with Washington's attempts to contain belligerent Houthis and nuke-seeking Iranians, and has interjected itself as an interlocutor in U.S.-Russia talks over Ukraine, so there are no strong words for the Saudis. Ukraine, like Canada and Denmark, is seen less as a friendly power that needs sweet-talking and more as an insufficiently grateful and possibly duplicitous beneficiary of U.S. protection busily impeding near-term American ambitions. Hence: insults.

After the startlingly contentious White House meeting on February 28 between Trump, Vice President J.D. Vance, and Zelenskyy (while a glum Secretary of State Marco Rubio looked on), analysts parsed the all-too-public footage to determine who escalated first. What most missed was that the temperature was initially raised not by a politician, but rather by a Polish journalist, who got Trump hot by asking a loaded if pertinent question about America's seemingly shifting values: "Poland was under Russian control for decades after the Second World War. When I was a kid, I looked at the United States not only as a most powerful country, richest country in the world, the country that has great music, great movies, great muscle cars, but also as a force for good. And now I'm talking with my friends in Poland, and they are worried that you align yourself too much with Putin. What's your message for them?"

The president's immediate words were revealing.

"Well, if I didn't align myself with both of them, you'd never have a deal," Trump snapped. "You want me to say really terrible things about Putin, and then say, 'Hi, Vladimir, how are we doing on the deal?' It doesn't work that way. I'm not aligned with anybody. I'm aligned with the United States of America, and for the good of the world. I'm aligned with the world, and I want to get this thing over with. You see, the hatred he's got [gesturing at Zelenskyy] for Putin, that's very tough for me to make a deal with that kind of hate. He's got tremendous hatred."

The historian Will Durant once observed that, "To say nothing, especially when speaking, is half the art of diplomacy." But Donald Trump did not become the most consequential American politician through subtlety and discretion. At the same time, the president is more focused than most of his detractors acknowledge on pulling peace deals out of seemingly intractable conflicts, à la the 2020 Abraham Accords between Israel and four Muslim-majority states. ("It's my hope," he said in Miami Beach, "that my greatest legacy will be as a peacemaker and a unifier. That would be a great legacy.") There is an inherent, spark-generating tension between Trump's freestyle insult comedy and his ambitions to reorient the global order along new nationalist lines. Some bad hombres are going to get spared.

Thorny questions about foreign policy expediency and hypocrisy are as old as diplomatic time, bedeviling political thinkers in America since the Founding. "Inconsistencies are a familiar part of politics in most societies," future U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Jeane Kirkpatrick wrote in her massively influential 1979 Commentary essay, "Dictatorships and Double Standards." "Usually, however, governments behave hypocritically when their principles conflict with the national interest."

The American public's principles have long tilted toward liberal democracies (especially English-speaking ones) and those playing defense against larger and more authoritarian neighbors. Gallup's latest U.S. polling shows Ukraine receiving a still-robust 63 percent favorable rating vs. Russia's woeful 17 percent. Trump is attempting simultaneously to disengage from America's international commitments, reassert hemispheric dominance to the point of acquiring territory, wage a global trade war, and bring an end to at least two armed conflicts. It's an inconsistent if audacious agenda, toward which the president is unevenly deploying one of his most potent weapons: his tongue.

Putin Is Bad, Actually

So what exactly constitutes a dictatorship? Though definitions differ and variations proliferate (military, absolute monarchy, one-party, personalist), the rough nomenclatural consensus is that dictatorships hold and exercise power over a given country with few if any limitations imposed by law or society or competing institutions. You may have won an election to gain or consolidate that power, but no foreseeable election can now remove you.

There are four widely cited comparative democracy/dictatorship indices that as of press time have been updated recently—the Economist Intelligence Unit's Democracy Index, Freedom House's Freedom in the World, the V-Dem Institute's Democracy Report, and the Fraser Institute/Cato Institute Human Freedom Index. (The Economist Intelligence Unit is a division of The Economist, Freedom House is an 84-year-old nonprofit funded largely by the U.S. State Department, V-Dem is a newer project run by the University of Gothenburg, and the Fraser Institute is a 51-year-old conservative think tank in Canada.)

With differing methodologies, the four arrive at broadly the same conclusions about the states under discussion. Ukraine is a bit less free than the average country, Russia is a good deal worse, and Saudi Arabia is scraping the cellar. (Also, the United States is backsliding, and northern Europe is the regional capital of freedom.)

The numbers: Ukraine is ranked 92nd out of 167 countries by the Economist Intelligence Unit, which designates it a "hybrid regime" (between "flawed democracies" and "authoritarian regimes"); it is ranked 115th out of 193 countries by Freedom House (which says it is "partly free"); according to V-Dem, it is 110th out of 179; and the Human Freedom Index ranks it 122nd out of 165. Russia, respectively, is 150th ("authoritarian"), 172nd ("not free"), 159th, and 139th; Saudi Arabia is 148th ("authoritarian"), 176th ("not free"), 169th, and 155th.

The Economist Intelligence Unit's hybrid regimes, like Freedom House's partly frees, tend to be transitional, usually though not always on the road from authoritarian to democratic, with some leftover bureaucratic rot and bad habits mixed with authentic stabs at liberal improvements. "The current administration has enacted a number of positive reforms as part of a drive to strengthen democratic institutions," Freedom House concludes about Ukraine, "but the country still struggles with corruption in the government, the judiciary, and other sectors." The Fraser Institute, on the other hand, lists Ukraine as one of the top 10 backsliders from 2007–2022, alongside such other freedom-constricting countries as Hong Kong, Turkey, and Hungary. 

So Zelenskyy might not qualify as a "dictator," but is he, per Trump, "without elections"? Currently, yes: He was elected initially in 2019, but after the March 2022 Russian invasion he declared martial law, which under the country's constitution postpones parliamentary and presidential elections until six months after the order is lifted. Such wartime changes, including onerous military conscription, forcible media consolidation, and crackdowns on Russian-language expression, have materially degraded liberty in an already poor and corrupt country.

Yet even in the face of an extinction-level threat from its nuclear-armed neighbor, Ukraine permits significantly more freedom of expression and political opposition than Russia does. Zelenskyy, for example, in the wake of Trump's criticism, offered to step down in exchange for peace and security guarantees, a gesture that no matter the level of sincerity or plausibility would be inconceivable coming from Putin.

The 72-year-old Russian president, who has steadily tightened his grip on power over his quarter-century of rule, last held sham elections in March 2024, winning 87 percent of the vote. Putin has outlawed and imprisoned and likely ordered the murder of political opponents, including on foreign soil, while arresting tens of thousands for opposing the war. He has shut down hundreds of media properties, seized control of virtually all broadcast media, cut off citizen access to websites critical of the Kremlin, and jailed scores of journalists, including Americans.

"Russia has never experienced a democratic transfer of power between rival groups," notes Freedom House. "With subservient courts and security forces, a controlled media environment, and a legislature consisting of a ruling party and pliable opposition factions, the Kremlin manipulates elections and suppresses genuine opposition….Pervasive, hyperpatriotic propaganda and political repression have had a cumulative impact on open and free private discussion, which is exacerbated by state control over online and offline expression."

Nevertheless, some foreign policy thinkers maintain, such domestic crackdowns should be diplomatically de-prioritized by Washington. Yes, there are monsters in this world, Jeane Kirkpatrick and "realists" such as John Mearsheimer would argue (in their distinct ways), but what matters in the realm of U.S. foreign policy is how the brutes act toward other sovereign nations, and in relation to America's national interests.

It's the playing-with-others test where the case against Moscow's destabilizing malevolence starts stacking up. Russia in the early 1990s—before NATO expansion was even a germ of an idea—used deadly force against the former Soviet republics of Georgia, Moldova, and Tajikistan. In 2008, Putin invaded and won control over the Georgian regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, then seized Ukraine's Crimea peninsula in 2014; he intervened in Syria's civil war in 2015, the Central African Republic's civil war in 2018, Mali's civil war in 2021, and Burkina Faso's civil war in 2024. (The last three conflicts are ongoing, if underpublicized.) Russia exerts controlling influence over dictatorial Belarus and war-scarred Armenia; has been rebuked by the European Union for meddling in the elections of Georgia, Moldova, and Romania; has persistently launched cyberattacks on the independent Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania; and has attempted with varying degrees of success to leverage oil and oligarchical corruption to purchase influence in the former satellite states of Hungary, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic.

So it shocked many European ears on February 14 when Vance declared, at the Munich Security Conference, that the "threat that I worry the most about vis-à-vis Europe is not Russia" but rather the Western European suppression of free speech and political opposition. "When I look at Europe today, it's sometimes not so clear what happened to some of the Cold War's winners," Vance said. "Europe faces many challenges, but the crisis this continent faces right now, the crisis I believe we all face together, is one of our own making. If you're running in fear of your own voters, there is nothing America can do for you. Nor, for that matter, is there anything that you can do for the American people who elected me and elected President Trump."

Vance was correct if arguably impolitic in criticizing Europe's grisly trajectory on free expression and political competition, and he was on even stronger footing taking the opportunity of a security conference to remind ostensibly sovereign countries that they need to do much more in providing for their own defense. But elevating those threats above those from the country that launched a full-scale invasion onto European soil and scattered millions of refugees into the European Union, while in the same speech downplaying Russia's continental skullduggery as "a few hundred thousand dollars of digital advertising," is factually and morally grotesque.

If bending diplomatic language beyond the point of observable truth is the cost of prioritizing the U.S. national interest over some high-falutin' moralism, then the question becomes: What is the assumed national interest in minimizing malefactions from one of the globe's worst actors?

All Tomorrow's Nazis

In Jeane Kirkpatrick's view, double standards with dictators made strategic sense when they were aligned with some overarching American goal, which back in her heyday was winning the Cold War. South Africa's notorious apartheid regime was therefore grudgingly tolerated, not just because of which side it took in the superpower conflict, but because opposition to Pretoria's authoritarian racism was led by a group with ties to revolutionary communism.

For post–Cold War thinkers like Mearsheimer, however, it is the very language used by American critics of faraway baddies that first needs to be interrogated. Realists, who have been generally more right than wrong in opposing U.S. military adventures over the past 35 years, delight in puncturing the reality-stretching propaganda deployed in the service of interventionism. Particularly comparisons to Adolf Hitler.

"There's a direct parallel between what Hitler did to Poland and what Saddam Hussein has done to Kuwait," President George H.W. Bush declared in October 1990, four months before a U.S.-led coalition forcibly dislodged Iraq from its smaller neighbor. "What if," President Bill Clinton thought-ballooned in March 1999, hours before NATO warplanes began bombing forces in Kosovo loyal to Serbian President Slobodan Milošević, "someone had listened to Winston Churchill and stood up to Adolf Hitler earlier?" In his final March 2003 speech before Operation Iraqi Freedom, President George W. Bush warned that, "In the 20th century, some chose to appease murderous dictators, whose threats were allowed to grow into genocide and global war."

That last reference was to the infamous 1938 Munich Agreement, in which Britain, France, and Italy ceded to a bellicose Nazi Germany the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia—a country that had a theoretical military alliance with France yet no representatives at the talks. "Munich," former Senate Armed Services Committee staffer Jeffrey Record noted in a 1998 Air War College paper, "was invoked in the late 1940s on behalf of establishing the containment of Soviet power and influence as the organizing principle of American foreign policy. It was subsequently invoked on behalf of the Truman administration's decision to fight in Korea; on behalf of containment's militarization and extension to Asia and the Middle East; and on behalf of the Johnson administration's decision to intervene in the Vietnam War." In the 21st century, the analogy would be deployed not just to support America's hot wars but to call for yet more interventions in Syria, Iran, and even North Korea.

As many of us have spent years arguing, the metaphor is spectacularly inapt. The only Hitler comp with even a fraction of the führer's peak power was the postwar Soviet Union—and even there, had the "lessons of Munich" been applied the way uber-hawks demanded after the Warsaw Pact invasions of Hungary in 1956 and Czechoslovakia in 1968, the world could have been a much more dangerous place. Also, labeling every less-than-satisfactory diplomatic negotiation as "appeasement" is a recipe for forever war.

The very word "realism" suggests a battle-weary, Humphrey Bogart–like disdain of either apocalyptic threat-inflation or airy-fairy idealism, in favor of a sober assessment of the fallen, interest-driven world as it actually exists. But as realism supplanted the discredited doctrines of neoconservatism and humanitarian interventionism, a funny thing happened: Instead of dropping overheated hyperbole, including Nazi analogies, many war-shy politicians and pundits have simply applied it to the opposing side of any given international conflict. And instead of realistic assessments of modern Russia, they have given Putin credit he abjectly does not deserve.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R–Ga.) accused Zelenskyy in March 2023 of having a "Nazi army." Then-Fox News host Tucker Carlson in February 2023, after having previously declared his rooting preference for Russia over Ukraine, criticized Zelenskyy as "an instrument of total destruction," and then four months later on his Twitter show called him "sweaty and rat-like, a comedian turned oligarch, a persecutor of Christians." (After that, Carlson infamously decamped to Moscow to proclaim the Russian capital's superiority to American cities and to lob softball questions at Putin.) The Libertarian Party of New Hampshire tweeted out images of Zelenskyy wearing a Hitler mustache.

Tellingly, some of the leading realists themselves have adopted a default that the United States, being by far the biggest player in the global sandbox, is therefore the main character in virtually every negative international story. In spheres where regional powers such as Russia seek to dominate, any U.S. defensive alliance or military aid or even strongly expressed support for smaller neighbors is seen as a reckless potential ramp-up to superpower conflict. "We forced Putin to launch a preventive war to stop Ukraine from becoming a member of NATO" is how Mearsheimer put it in a March 2025 New Yorker interview.

Such a view treats sphere-of-influence bullying as a postulate so obvious that it's hardly worth criticizing. (Indeed, Mearsheimer in that same interview declared himself "someone who believes in the Monroe Doctrine and does not want a great power in the Western Hemisphere.") But is that indeed the reality?

Not so fast, says the Columbia University historian Adam Tooze. In a perceptive March 2022 critique of Mearsheimer in The New Statesman, Tooze, a left-wing academic who has considerable respect for the realist school, argues that such resignation actually misses a more intriguing (and peaceful) reality. "Over the last century at least," Tooze wrote, war "has a poor track record for delivering results. Other than wars of national liberation, one is hard pressed to name a single war of aggression since 1914 that has yielded clearly positive results for the first mover. A realism that fails to [recognize] that fact and the consequences that have been drawn from it by most policymakers does not deserve the name."

But it could also be that Tooze is, so to speak, fighting the last war, or at least looking backward at an American-led world of strong alliances, ever-lowering tariffs, and comparative prosperity. For better and for worse, Trump is changing that world.

The Evolution of Little Marco

In January 2017, there was a Republican senator alarmed by the incoming Trump administration's potential softness on Russia. At the confirmation hearings for soon-to-be Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Marco Rubio lit into the former Exxon executive, accusing him of lacking "moral clarity."

"I asked you about whether Vladimir Putin was a war criminal, something that you declined to label him as," the Florida senator said. "I asked about Saudi Arabia being a human rights violator, which you also declined to label them….You said you didn't want to label them because it would somehow hurt our chances to influence them or our relationship with [Putin]. But here's the reality: If confirmed by the Senate and you run the Department of State, you're going to have to label countries and individuals all the time."

Conclusion: "When [those struggling for freedom] see the United States is not prepared to stand up and [say], 'Yes, Vladimir Putin is a war criminal, Saudi Arabia violates human rights,' it demoralizes these people all over the world."

What a difference eight years makes. Or even eight months—as recently as May 2024, the interventionist senator was tweeting that "Tyrant Vladimir Putin, who once again stole an election, uses his 'inauguration ceremony' as propaganda. Another example of an authoritarian dictator masquerading as a democratically elected leader."

And now? When asked on CNN in February how to reconcile his past fire-breathing toward Putin with the Trump administration's reticence to criticize, the secretary of state said, "My job working for the president is to deliver peace, to end this conflict and end this war….How are you going to get Vladimir Putin and the Russian Federation to a table to discuss even the opportunity, whether even to explore whether there's an opportunity for peace? You're not going to do it by calling them names."

Critics were quick to ridicule Little Marco for bending the knee to Trump. While there may be some truth to that dig, it misses what looks like a more momentous shift.

On January 30, 10 days after being sworn in, the secretary of state gave a wide-ranging interview to podcaster Megyn Kelly, in which the 2025 Rubio sketched out a foreign policy vision that would have been unrecognizable to the fresh-faced Cuban-American politician who first entered the Senate 14 years ago.

"The way the world has always worked is that the Chinese will do what's in the best interests of China, the Russians will do what's in the best interest of Russia, the Chileans are going to do what's in the best interest of Chile, and the United States needs to do what's in the best interest of the United States," Rubio said. "Where our interests align, that's where you have partnerships and alliances. Where our differences are not aligned, that is where the job of diplomacy is to prevent conflict while still furthering our national interests and understanding they're going to further theirs. And that's been lost."

He continued: "I think that was lost at the end of the Cold War, because we were the only power in the world, and so we assumed this responsibility of sort of becoming the global government in many cases, trying to solve every problem….It's not normal for the world to simply have a unipolar power. That was…an anomaly. It was a product of the end of the Cold War. But eventually you were going to reach back to a point where you had a multipolar world, multi-great powers in different parts of the planet. We face that now with China, and to some extent Russia."

Trump is accelerating toward a multipolar and less connected world, which for him requires hastening the European takeover of its own security, muting criticism of regional imperialism abroad, and engaging in some neighborhood bullying of his own, whether in Panama, Greenland, or across the 51st parallel. "In recent years, far too many American presidents have been afflicted with the notion that it's our job to look into the souls of foreign leaders and use U.S. policy to dispense justice for their sins. They loved using our very powerful military," Trump said May 13, in a major foreign policy address in Riyadh, at which he again lavished praise on Crown Prince bin Salman. "I believe it is God's job to sit in judgment; my job, to defend America and to promote the fundamental interest of stability, prosperity, and peace."

The flowery, often hyperbolic, yet usually aspirational rhetoric that Americans and the rest of the world have long been accustomed to is being replaced by a rougher-edged, erratic transactionalism, where ideals are for suckers and Saudi royals will be treated better than elected Canadians.

American presidents used to be able to call the Kremlin an evil empire while simultaneously negotiating with its leaders to reduce nuclear arsenals and free hundreds of thousands of captive people. Now we are afraid to use the d-word for fear of scotching fruitless ceasefire negotiations, while signaling in an ever-louder voice that our participation in mutual defense treaties will soon be worth the same as a 1938 alliance with France. Realists and other anti-interventionists will soon find out whether their long-heralded return of great-power rivalries will bring a more lasting peace. Using evasive language seems like a weird way to get there.

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NEXT: How Protectionist Wine and Liquor Laws Violate the Constitution

Matt Welch is an editor at large at Reason.

Vladimir PutinVolodymyr ZelenskyyDictatorshipDonald TrumpMarco RubioForeign PolicyWorldRussiaUkraine
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  1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 days ago

    Mean tweets.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Chumby   2 days ago

      None of those tweets pushed for a red wedding against his philosophical opponents.

      Log in to Reply
      1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 days ago

        Yes, one indication of a dictator is murdering journalists of the opposing political party.

        Like Welch.

        https://x.com/mattwelch/status/1102654202545913857?s=12

        Log in to Reply
        1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 days ago

          Matt should keep in mind what happened to the Red Wedding perpetrators later on.

          When people ask you what happened here, tell them the North remembers. Tell them winter came for House Frey.

          Keep that in mind, Welchie.

          Log in to Reply
          1. Chumby   1 day ago

            Dire Akitas remember.

            Log in to Reply
        2. But SkyNet is a Private Company   2 days ago

          What was wrong with Conservative writers in early 2019?
          Oh , was it because they were pushing back against The Narrative and the totally legit Mueller Report outlining surefire Russian Collusion?

          Log in to Reply
  2. Chumby   2 days ago

    Yes. He was the recipient of Otto Penn the First’s reign of lawfare terror.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Sam Bankman-Fried   2 days ago

      Yep, with the Durham prosecutions!! Lololol!!

      Log in to Reply
      1. Chumby   2 days ago

        Do you feel your original account was a victim of lawfare when it got banned?

        Log in to Reply
  3. VinniUSMC   2 days ago

    Maybe Trump will invite you to his next wedding. Theme: red.

    Welch is a nasty piece of shit. Why is he still employed here?

    Log in to Reply
    1. 5.56   2 days ago

      Little marine boi out of mommys aquarium, revealing that the weird civilian labor market is vewy confusing to him.

      Log in to Reply
      1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 days ago

        What’s confusing is someone that advocated for murdering a bunch of journalists working for a publication that should be advocating the NAP.

        But leftists always find a justification for violence, so I understand your position.

        Log in to Reply
        1. But SkyNet is a Private Company   2 days ago

          Welch was a willing participant in the Deep State frame-up hoax involving Russia and Ukraine. Benefitting those who actually profited from it at our expense.

          Log in to Reply
          1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   1 day ago

            Many at Reason were. That’s why they’re not covering all the information Tulsi is releasing.

            Log in to Reply
      2. VinniUSMC   2 days ago

        Thanks micropenis. Tell your mom I said hi.

        Log in to Reply
    2. damikesc   2 days ago

      Hey.

      He's also tedious and boring.

      Log in to Reply
      1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 days ago

        And he’s on the verge of making the retarded squirrel readable.

        Log in to Reply
  4. Chinny Chin Chin   2 days ago

    "It's my hope," Trump said in Miami Beach, "that my greatest legacy will be as a... unifier."

    “I pledge to be a president who seeks not to divide but to unify.” - Joe Biden, 11/7/20

    Morons both

    Log in to Reply
    1. Chumby   2 days ago

      But in America, we resolve our differences at the battle box. Now, that’s how we do it, at the battle box...

      - also “sharp as a tack” Joe The Sniffer Biden

      Log in to Reply
    2. Social Justice is neither   2 days ago

      I'll stack just the Abraham accords up against everything Sleepy Joe did and you'd still come up empty on the Democrat side because you've got deficits from the mainstream far left.

      Log in to Reply
      1. MollyGodiva   2 days ago

        The Abraham Accords had very little impact because the parties were not in conflict. All it did was lowered some diplomatic barriers. It I was not nothing, but also not much.

        Biden united Western Europe on the side of Ukraine and prevented a bloodthirsty and victorious Russian army from camping on the border of NATO.

        Log in to Reply
        1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 days ago

          If only you weren’t totally retarded, Molly. Western Europe was not fully united regarding Ukraine. The Abraham Accords brought together countries that have been in a cold war situation since 1948.

          Log in to Reply
          1. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   1 day ago

            Tony only knows what MSNBC tells him.

            Log in to Reply
    3. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   1 day ago

      Chinny Chin Chin - 8/7/25
      Dumber than a bag of rocks.

      Log in to Reply
  5. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   2 days ago

    Hey Welch what's it like to wake up every day knowing that if you were to commit suicide the would would be a better place?

    Log in to Reply
    1. SQRLSY   2 days ago

      The world would be a MUCH better place if evil people like YOU would just STOP being servants, serpents, and slurp-pants (pants-slurpers) of the Evil One!

      Cuntsorevaturds making friends, gathering votes, and influencing people by... PEDDLING KOOL-AID AND SUICIDE!!! How's it workin' for ya, servant, serpent, and slurp-pants (pants-slurper) of the Evil One?

      EvilBahnFuhrer, drinking EvilBahnFuhrer Kool-Aid in a spiraling vortex of darkness, cannot or will not see the Light… It’s a VERY sad song! Kinda like this…

      He’s a real Kool-Aid Man,
      Sitting in his Kool-Aid Land,
      Playing with his Kool-Aid Gland,
      His Hero is Jimmy Jones,
      https://www.britannica.com/biography/Jim-Jones
      Loves death and the dying moans,
      Then he likes to munch their bones!
      He’s truly, completely a necrophiliac,
      His brain, squirming toad-like, is REALY, really whack!
      Has no thoughts that help the people,
      He wants to turn them all to sheeple!
      On the sheeple, his Master would feast,
      Master? A disaster! Just the nastiest Beast!
      Kool-Aid man, please listen,
      You don’t know, what you’re missin’,
      Kool-Aid man, better thoughts are at hand,
      The Beast, to LEAVE, you must COMMAND!

      A helpful book is to be found here: M. Scott Peck, Glimpses of the Devil
      https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1439167265/reasonmagazinea-20/

      Hey EvilBahnFuhrer …
      If EVERYONE who makes you look bad, by being smarter and better-looking than you, killed themselves, per your wishes, then there would be NO ONE left!
      Who would feed you? Who’s tits would you suck at, to make a living? WHO would change your perpetually-smelly DIAPERS?!!?
      You’d better come up with a better plan, Stan!

      Log in to Reply
      1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 days ago

        Yawn. Come up with better copypasta next time, Squirrel Boy.

        Log in to Reply
        1. SQRLSY   2 days ago

          If'n Ye PervFected servants, serpents, and slurp-pants of the Evil One will cum up with BETTER shit than pushing SUICIDE, then I'll cum up with nicer things to say!

          Log in to Reply
          1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 days ago

            Yawn. F-, bushy-tailed retard.

            Log in to Reply
            1. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   1 day ago

              Did it copy paste it’s ‘tim the enchanter’ bullshit?

              Log in to Reply
              1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   1 day ago

                Not yet.

                Log in to Reply
  6. Incunabulum   2 days ago

    If Trump is a dictator, would that also not mean Zele sky is one?

    Log in to Reply
    1. Incunabulum   2 days ago

      And does he need to call Putin one? You already call him that. Everyone does. Does Trump need to remind you that water is wet too?

      Log in to Reply
      1. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   2 days ago

        What!? Spoiler alert!

        Log in to Reply
      2. Chumby   2 days ago

        Trump won an election.

        Putin won another election in 2024.

        The puppet dictator Zely suspended elections in Ukraine.

        Romania also suspended elections. Not sure they could pull off the 11th deluge of votes supporting the current thing as what recently happened in Moldova and in 2020 in the US.

        Log in to Reply
        1. SQRLSY   2 days ago

          "Putin won another election in 2024."

          After poisoning and otherwise murdering all opponents! Which is twat Trump will do if He can get away with shit!

          Log in to Reply
          1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 days ago

            Is that any different than committing a coup d’etat with fraudulent ballots in 2020?

            Log in to Reply
            1. MollyGodiva   2 days ago

              Yes. Putin actually did what he was accused of.

              Log in to Reply
              1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 days ago

                Oh, and now you’re realizing Trump hasn’t done what he’s been accused of. That would be your Democrat allies.

                Log in to Reply
                1. MollyGodiva   1 day ago

                  Trump has done everything he has been accused of (except maybe the worst of the Epstine stuff) and very few of the facts are even in contention. We know exactly what Trump did.

                  Log in to Reply
                  1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   1 day ago

                    Where and how? And please demonstrate with actual examples.

                    Log in to Reply
                    1. MollyGodiva   1 day ago

                      Uncontested facts: Trump pressured state legislators to disregard the votes and declare him the winner, he pressured Pence to illegally throw out EC votes, prior to J6 his WH was in contact with those who stormed the Capital, in 2016 his campaign was in contact with the Russians and they knew the Russians were helping them, he did illegally steal classified documents, improperly stored them, and refused to give them back, he is taking bribes to give out pardons, he engaged in insider trading in regards to tariff announcements. All of those are uncontested facts.

                    2. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   1 day ago

                      "Trump pressured state legislators to disregard the votes and declare him the winner,"
                      Lie.

                      "he pressured Pence to illegally throw out EC votes,"
                      Lie.

                      "prior to J6 his WH was in contact with those who stormed the Capital,"
                      Irrelevant.

                      "in 2016 his campaign was in contact with the Russians and they knew the Russians were helping them,"
                      Lie.

                      "he did illegally steal classified documents, improperly stored them, and refused to give them back,"
                      Lies.

                      "he is taking bribes to give out pardons, he engaged in insider trading in regards to tariff announcements."
                      Propaganda.

                      "All of those are uncontested facts."
                      All of those are lies, irrelevant or speculation, lying pile of steaming lefty shit.

                    3. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   1 day ago

                      I asked for actual links, Dr. Retard, not your conjecture.

                    4. Hickamore   1 day ago

                      You don't refute palpable facts by calling them "lies" with no evidence to the contrary.
                      "Trump pressured state legislators to disregard the votes and declare him the winner," "Lie."
                      REMEMBER RUSTY BOWERS, SPEAKER OF THE ARIZONA HOUSE? THE PRO-TRUMP REPUBLICAN WHO RESISTED INTENSE PRESSURE FROM TRUMP AND GIULIANI, AND PAID THE POLITICAL PRICE FOR HIS PRINCIPLED RESISTENCE?

                      "he pressured Pence to illegally throw out EC votes," "Lie." PENCE AND WH STAFF ALL CONFIRMED THIS AT THE TIME AND EVER AFTER. PENCE, AUGUST 2: “President Trump demanded that I use my authority as vice president presiding over the count of the Electoral College to essentially overturn the election by returning or literally rejecting votes. I had no authority to do that.”

                      "prior to J6 his WH was in contact with those who stormed the Capital," "Irrelevant." IRRELEVANT TO WHAT? IT PROVES TRUMP'S ORCHESTRATION OF THE J6 CAPITOL INVASION.

                      "in 2016 his campaign was in contact with the Russians and they knew the Russians were helping them," "Lie." THE SENATE INTELLIGENCE COMMITTEE FOUND THE TRUMP CAMPAIGN CHAIRMAN PAUL MANAFORT WAS IN DIRECT CONTACT WITH RUSSIAN INTELLIGENCE, AND EXPECTED TO BENEFIT FROM RUSSIAN INTERFERENCE. MANAFORT WENT TO PRISON AND AIDE GATES PLED GUILTY.
                      "he did illegally steal classified documents, improperly stored them, and refused to give them back," "Lies." A GRAND JURY INDICTED TRUMP OF 40 FELONY COUNTS AND THE CASE WAS AN ABSOLUTE LAYDOWN FOR JACK SMITH BUT FOR TRUMP'S DOJ DISMISSING THE PROSECUTION AND GIFTING HIM THE STOLEN DOCUMENTS.

                      "he is taking bribes to give out pardons, he engaged in insider trading in regards to tariff announcements."
                      Propaganda. THESE TRANSACTIONS ARE OPEN AND BRAZEN. HE DOESN'T EVEN TRY TO PRETEND OTHERWISE.

                      "All of those are uncontested facts."
                      "All of those are lies, irrelevant or speculation." WELL, THEY ARE UNCONTESTED BY ANYTHING CITED BY YOU OR ANY AUTHORITY CITED BY YOU!

                  2. But SkyNet is a Private Company   1 day ago

                    Parody. Has to be.

                    Log in to Reply
              2. Chumby   2 days ago

                What did Putin do?

                Log in to Reply
                1. SQRLSY   1 day ago

                  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_and_funeral_of_Alexei_Navalny

                  Killed his political opponent, is twat he did!

                  "Hang Mike Pence", Our Dear Orange DicKtator said! Putin was a bit worse; he actually DID shit!

                  Log in to Reply
                  1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   1 day ago

                    Who did Donald Trump kill? We know plenty of Hillary Clinton friends and associates have met untimely ends, usually with a double tap suicide.

                    Log in to Reply
                    1. SQRLSY   1 day ago

                      Donald Trump merely THREATENS political violence is some pretty damned faint praise!

                      (He also is KILLING free trade worldwide, ass well ass many-many $billions in 401 K retirement funds!)

                    2. Chumby   1 day ago

                      The grey box hurling feces against his locked from the outside room again?

      3. MollyGodiva   2 days ago

        The problem, in your analogy, is that we don’t think Trump knows water is wet.

        Log in to Reply
        1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 days ago

          Molly, please tell us when you went fully retarded. Were you born that way, or did you work at it your whole life? Either way, you’ve been successful at being a total retard.

          Log in to Reply
        2. Chumby   2 days ago

          We = ???

          Log in to Reply
          1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 days ago

            The voices within Molly’s echo chamber of a skull.

            Log in to Reply
          2. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   1 day ago

            MG has a turd in his/her pocket.

            Log in to Reply
      4. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   1 day ago

        Oh really? Are you a hydrologist?

        Log in to Reply
  7. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   2 days ago

    The last election in Russia took place in 2004, when was the last election in Ukrainian?

    Biden increesed the eu reliance on Russian oil, trump is kneecapping russias energy market.Who is more effictive?
    Welchie boy get your head out of your ass. Learn what's going on. Or go down a bottle of arsnic.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   2 days ago

      2024

      Log in to Reply
    2. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   1 day ago

      I advocate for the latter option.

      Log in to Reply
  8. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 days ago

    'Does Donald Trump Know What a Dictator Looks Like?'

    I dunno. Did FDR?

    Or Sean Penn?

    Log in to Reply
    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 days ago

      Or his cousin Otto?

      Log in to Reply
    2. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   2 days ago

      Fdr the Rollin' dictator

      Log in to Reply
  9. JohnZ   2 days ago

    Ukraine doesn't have elections. Washington simply stages a coup and they choose the next leader, democratically elected, of course.
    As of today, there are no opposition parties in Ukraine. The orthodox Church has been outlawed , old men and mentally retarded males are conscripted into Zelensky's suicide squads. Soon fourteen year olds will be sent to the front.
    Zelensky's plan to send retards to the front sounds a lot like McNamara's Folley. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_J2VwFDV4-g
    The orthodox Church in Russia has experienced a rebirth. while Putin is not a nice person, they all are not, including kweer Stammer or Macron, at least he's kept Russia considerably safer by stringent border and immigration controls which the west has abandoned.

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  10. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 days ago

    I looked at the United States not only as a most powerful country, richest country in the world, the country that has great music, great movies, great muscle cars, but also as a force for good....What's your message for them?

    Now, its your turn Poland and the rest of Europe. There is nothing inherently special about America that keeps you all from achieving at least a portion of our greatness. What a wonderful world it would be to have not only America but the rest of the free world be shining beacons of liberty carrying sword and shield to protect the freedoms we so cherish.

    Log in to Reply
    1. 5.56   2 days ago

      Start with healthcare, workers' and renters' rights.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Idaho-Bob   2 days ago

        Communists aren't people.

        Log in to Reply
      2. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 days ago

        Freebies are freedom!

        Log in to Reply
        1. 5.56   2 days ago

          Freedom from instability and volatility isn't a concept to americans. Additionally, a connection between privacy and freedom is unheard of around these parts.

          Where 4 weeks of vacation per year is considered an amazing perk reserved for the experienced. Haha, you fucking corporate slaves.

          Log in to Reply
          1. Idaho-Bob   2 days ago

            Freedom from instability and volatility...

            Doesn't exist. You commies have killed more people by starvation than corporate greed ever did.

            Log in to Reply
            1. 5.56   2 days ago

              Doesn't exist in perfection, but can be approximated much better than what the United corporations of america currently does.

              Keep sucking corporate dick while the rest of the civlized world facepalms at the things you have to worry about, in a country this rich.

              Log in to Reply
              1. Idaho-Bob   2 days ago

                Doesn't exist at all. But please, enlighten me.

                Log in to Reply
              2. VinniUSMC   2 days ago

                Poor micropenis. Little Gen Z, Luigi-lover. Too bad you're 600 pounds overweight and can't get out of your mom's basement. Were you castrated at birth, or did your dad wait until you started puberty to rip your balls off?

                Log in to Reply
              3. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   1 day ago

                Nope. You’re a worthless retarded Neo Marxist faggot that comes here to flail and gibber. You can’t back up a single thing you say, and you make threats you can’t possibly credibly back.

                If you and your fellow travelers ever try to seize power, you will die rapidly. So please try.

                Log in to Reply
          2. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 days ago

            That’s because it’s a retarded concept.

            Scarcity isn’t a concept to retarded leftists.

            Log in to Reply
            1. 5.56   2 days ago

              Scarcity of diamond studded swimming pools for your 10 figure overlords. Fucking corporate slaves.

              Log in to Reply
              1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 days ago

                Scrooge McDuck is a fictional character retard.

                And how could I be a slave to myself?

                Log in to Reply
              2. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 days ago

                Ohh! The return of 2.0! Fuck off and die, shitstain.

                Log in to Reply
          3. Neutral not Neutered   1 day ago

            Freedom from being an idiot is something you will never obtain

            Log in to Reply
          4. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   1 day ago

            2.0 - Freedom from logic and knowledge. Fucking asswipe.

            Log in to Reply
      3. Chumby   2 days ago

        The commentariat would likely support a GoFundMe to help you become a Canadian citizen and indulge in their MAID service.

        Log in to Reply
        1. Neutral not Neutered   1 day ago

          Only those of sound mind can request MAID.

          Log in to Reply
    2. Chumby   2 days ago

      The nation with $37T in debt and more than that in unfunded liabilities. Boomers saddled the country with generations of malaise so they could live out their unsustainable lifestyle.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 day ago

        The nation that secured the free world from the evil grasps of the ignorant servile Russian peoples who committed some of the worst atrocities of the 20th century.

        Log in to Reply
        1. Chumby   1 day ago

          You’re not getting to spray your rainbow cult propaganda on the crosswalks in Russia. Sorry.

          The west has repeatedly marched east in efforts to conquer Russia. Napoleon and his confederation of the Rhine allies in the early 19th century. They received a cold welcome and left. Later that century France and England teamed up to land grab in Crimea. The effete Brits are still known for their Charge of the Bud Light Brigade at Balaclava. Turn the page to the early next century where Germany declared war on Russia when she stood up for her fellow Eastern Orthodox cousins after they were being bullied by Vienna. After the overthrow of the Tsar, western nations dipped their foot in the water and sent some expeditionary forces there as part of the North Russia expedition. A couple decades later, once again the west invaded the region. That time it was headed by an Austrian painter. Tens of millions died. And now we have NAFO military bases ringing that nation in an effort to promote western globohomo hegemony (otherwise known as try to steal Russia’s natural resources). It is expensive engaging in color revolutions and subsidizing the puppets that come after. And this is halfway around the world. But that is the Biden doctrine so it must be good. And regarding western freedom, people are being imprisoned for complaining about rapefugee groomer gangs.

          Anyhow, you are free to head there yourself:
          https://www.joinuarmy.org/en/

          Log in to Reply
          1. Sometimes a Great Notion   14 hours ago

            After the overthrow of the Tsar

            Wilson should have sent the marines to kill those commie fucks, instead of just protecting those who attempted to flee the evil bastards. Would've saved the rest of the world a lot of grief from the misery spread by the Ruskies.

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  11. Idaho-Bob   2 days ago

    I wonder how these articles would go if the authors were even a little bit objective? They've drawn their conclusion, then wrote around it.

    Using phrases like "is factually and morally grotesque" written by a guy who suggested murdering conservatives.

    Geez.

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  12. Fred12345   2 days ago

    Matt, I think you may be writing for the wrong magazine? Libertarians believe that you have a right to remain silent. Maybe Trump does not say Putin is a dictator because it's plainly obvious? If your goal is to criticize Trump, there is plenty to criticize if you focus on what says without making things up about what he does not say.

    Log in to Reply
    1. A Thinking Mind   2 days ago

      I find it suspicious that Trump hasn’t condemned sexually abusing puppies. He’s been in the public spotlight for a long time and never said anything about it. I wonder what he’s hiding.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Juliana Frink   2 days ago

        Thanks to Fred and ATM for the best responses to Welch's deceptive editorializing. Does anybody NOT see through this grade school level propaganda?

        Log in to Reply
        1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   1 day ago

          Yep. See just below. And then Liz about a week and a half ago assured us of an 'outpouring' of Trump/Epstein "connections".

          Log in to Reply
    2. MollyGodiva   2 days ago

      The thing is that we strongly suspect that Trump does not see Putin as a dictator.

      Log in to Reply
      1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 days ago

        Seriously, Molly, did you work at being a retard, or were you just born that way?

        Log in to Reply
        1. Juliana Frink   2 days ago

          OMG! Right on cue. The Batshit signal must have just gone up, because along comes GollyMulva to facilitate the shift from mere dishonesty to total psy-op. Fantastic.

          Log in to Reply
      2. But SkyNet is a Private Company   2 days ago

        Is there a retarded mouse in your pocket?

        Log in to Reply
      3. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 days ago

        "...we..."

        MG has a turd in his/her pocket.

        Log in to Reply
      4. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   1 day ago

        You strongly suspect a lot of stupid unfounded things. You always have. Because you’re a stupid, retarded Marxist.

        Have you noticed that your kind ruin everything you touch?

        Log in to Reply
  13. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 days ago

    Zelinsky is forcefully conscripting his people to be slaughtered in a war he cannot win, has banned churches, suspended elections, and supported actual Nazis terrorizing a minority portion of his populace. He’s a dictator.

    Putin is also a dictator, but he has the largest nuclear arsenal in the world, and Trump is trying to de-escalate a military conflict with him.

    That could have been the extent of this article, but Orange Man Bad. Fuck off Welch, you scum.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Fu Manchu   1 day ago

      > Zelinsky is forcefully conscripting his people
      The Ukrainian Parliament passed the law on conscription. And Ukraine is at war - what do you expect it to do? Ukrainians overwhelmingly want Ukraine not to surrender to Putin. In order to realize the will of the people, people need to be conscripted. Just as the US has done in major wars.

      > to be slaughtered in a war he cannot win,
      Ukraine has held off the Russian invasion for 3.5 years. Russia is almost out of heavy weaponry and is barely advancing while taking huge losses. And Russia's economy is in serious trouble.

      > has banned churches,
      The Russian Orthodox Church was banned for directly acting to undermine Ukraine during a war for its existence.

      > suspended elections
      Presidential elections are suspended as per the Constitution because Parliament voted to declare martial law. It's not Zelinsky's choice.

      > and supported actual Nazis terrorizing a minority portion of his populace.
      He has never supported actual Nazis.

      > He’s a dictator.
      Then why, one week after he signed a law passed by Parliament to remove independence of anti-corruption agencies, did he sign a law repealing the previous law? Why has he not gone after those who would likely run against him in the next election, like Zaluzhnyi?

      This is your brain on propaganda.

      Log in to Reply
      1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   1 day ago

        So, uh, Shrike, what exactly happened to your original SPB account? I understand it got banned.

        Log in to Reply
      2. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   1 day ago

        Oh, the US did it. That makes it ok. And all the men being forced into it obviously don’t agree slaver.

        “Ukraine has held off the Russian invasion for 3.5 years. Russia is almost out of heavy weaponry and is barely advancing while taking huge losses. And Russia's economy is in serious trouble.”

        Barely advancing from where? Oh, that’s right, from the territory they’ve already conquered that Zelinsky thinks he’s getting back, that he’s not. I’ve been hearing the rest of these talking points since shortly after the war started.

        Those guys with the swastikas are who, exactly?

        Propaganda indeed.

        Log in to Reply
    2. Kemuel   1 day ago

      Anyone who doesn't see a guy who dresses like Fidel Castro and bans and/or imprisons or exiles his opposition as a dictator doesn't have eyes. Zelenskyy is a puppet dictator. Fact.

      Log in to Reply
  14. sarcasmic   2 days ago

    "Does Donald Trump Know What a Dictator Looks Like?"

    Does a prostitute know what a penis looks like?

    Log in to Reply
    1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 days ago

      Do you know what being sober looks like?

      Log in to Reply
    2. Idaho-Bob   2 days ago

      You need this:
      1-888-568-1112

      Log in to Reply
      1. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   1 day ago

        He needs the other one, where they affirm his worthlessness and encourage him to nut up and commit suicide.

        Log in to Reply
    3. Chumby   2 days ago

      Ask your mom.

      Log in to Reply
  15. charliehall   2 days ago

    Trump has always seen Putin ad a model.

    Log in to Reply
    1. sarcasmic   2 days ago

      Dictators get things done and Trump admires that. That's why he tries to do everything with executive orders and despises the court system.

      Log in to Reply
      1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 days ago

        And just how is Trump a dictator, retards?

        Log in to Reply
    2. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 days ago

      charliehall has always been a slimy pile of lying lefty shit.

      Log in to Reply
    3. TrickyVic (old school)   2 days ago

      Were you in NYC in 1990s?

      Rudy "America's Mayor" Guiliani is Trump's model. Trump watched Rudy turn NYC from a 1500 murders a year to under 500. Trump watched Rudy clean up Times Square and the presence of homelessness. Rudy took a "tough love" approach, and it paid off.
      Trump is hoping it works on a federal level.

      Rudy, also had no love for your rights either.

      I see a lot of similarities between what Rudy did and what Trump is doing.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 days ago

        Yeah, TDS will do that.

        Log in to Reply
  16. Rick James   2 days ago

    Well, one has elections, the other doesn't, so there's that.

    Log in to Reply
    1. sarcasmic   2 days ago

      Neither accept the outcome of an election if they lose, so there's that.

      Log in to Reply
      1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 days ago

        You do realize Trump actually left office, right?

        Log in to Reply
        1. MollyGodiva   2 days ago

          Not willingly, thus he gets no credit for leaving.

          Log in to Reply
          1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 days ago

            He walked out of the White House under his own power, not under guard, nor at gunpoint. Thus, it was willingly. Now do Joe Biden’s candidacy in 2024.

            Log in to Reply
            1. MollyGodiva   1 day ago

              Joe Biden made it very clear that the USSS would have carried Trump’s fat ass if he was there on minute past noon.

              Log in to Reply
              1. sarcasmic   1 day ago

                Trump is building his own personal police force to make sure that doesn't happen again.

                Log in to Reply
                1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   1 day ago

                  Another Maddow bookmark.

                  Log in to Reply
                2. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   1 day ago

                  How, Sarc? Please cite how he’s doing so with links and examples.

                  Log in to Reply
              2. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   1 day ago

                What Joe Biden said or did not say is irrelevant, Dr. Retard. The fact remains that Trump walked out under his own power prior to the appointed time.

                Log in to Reply
          2. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 days ago

            "Not willingly, thus he gets no credit for leaving."

            MG is certainly a lying plie of slimy lefty shit, but is also competing with turd and charliehall for the most lies per post.
            Asswipe, he walked out of the WH on his own; stuff your TDS up your ass so your head has some company.

            Log in to Reply
          3. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   1 day ago

            Leftists like to change the meaning of words to fit their lies.

            Log in to Reply
  17. mad.casual   2 days ago

    OK, Matt, they're both dictators. Now, who was in charge of the country, the personnel, the leadership, the planning and information that went into blowing up NS1 and 2?

    Oh, that's right, you're the Red Wedding, Bush-era-style Neoconservative Chickenhawk shitstain who thinks that if the Saudis give $2B to anybody six degrees of Jared Kushner, there can be no peace. You don't actually care if either one is a dictator as long as people profit off of conflict instead of peace.

    Even dictators command a degree of respect not owed to spineless, gutless, loudmouthed, low-IQ asshats.

    Log in to Reply
    1. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   1 day ago

      Welch only cares about Koch bucks and cocktail parties.

      Log in to Reply
  18. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 days ago

    Does the steaming pile of TDS-addled shit Matt Welsh know what a sentient human being looks like?
    Fuck off and die, asswipe.

    Log in to Reply
  19. Gaear Grimsrud   2 days ago

    Is Putin a dictator? Sure. Is Zelenski also a dictator? Absolutely. But Welch wants to convince us that Z is a somehow lesser dictator. The difference of course is that the US is not giving Putin hundreds of millions to feed into his graft machine and drag old men off the street to die in a war he cannot win.

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    1. mad.casual   2 days ago

      The difference of course is that the US is not giving Putin hundreds of millions to feed into his graft machine and drag old men off the street to die in a war he cannot win.

      Billions, sir. Hundreds of billions. And with the "not foreseen but not unintended" goal being the joining of NATO to perpetuate the graft ad eternum.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Neutral not Neutered   1 day ago

        I do not see myself, and I am usually wrong, a path to peace and security for Ukraine to exist in the future without it becoming part of NATO. After Putin, who's the next in line that only desires reunification of the USSR?

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    2. JohnZ   1 day ago

      There are others nearly as bad: Keir Starmer, Macron, Justin Trudeau, just to name a few. The leadership of those countries have gone full tyrant, jailing anyone who dares speak out.
      The individual rights of anyone in western Europe have essentially been erased.
      You have no rights
      You have owners.

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  20. Mother's Lament   2 days ago

    "Does Donald Trump Know What a Dictator Looks Like?

    Does Matt Welch Know What a Dictator Looks Like?

    He sat on his hands and never typed a word when the Biden junta ran kangaroo courts, censored millions on the internet and tried to disenfranchise and then imprison it's political opponents.

    He's brave and independent like that.

    Log in to Reply
    1. But SkyNet is a Private Company   2 days ago

      Reluctantly and Strategically

      Log in to Reply
  21. MollyGodiva   2 days ago

    Trump is a complete moron. His grasp of even basic concepts is mediocre at best.

    Log in to Reply
    1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 days ago

      He’s still smarter than you, sweetie.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 days ago

        Didn’t you ever notice those tall buildings with “Molly” written on top?

        Log in to Reply
    2. But SkyNet is a Private Company   2 days ago

      And yet he runs circles around your team! What does that say about you and yours?

      Log in to Reply
  22. Dillinger   2 days ago

    you let me know when I can goto church and/or vote in Ukraine which is weak and I will let you know when I believe you have achieved professional political author.

    Log in to Reply
  23. Michael Ejercito   1 day ago

    Public health officials sure acted like dictators.

    Log in to Reply
    1. JohnZ   1 day ago

      Indeed. Especially the leftist types who crave power and control.
      The past four years are indicative of what could have happened, only worse, if Harris/Walz gained the White House.
      When they tell you, "it's for your own good" beware.

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  24. Minadin   1 day ago

    I don't like Putin much, but at least he pretends to have elections.

    Zelenskyy is more likeable and his cause is more just, but that doesn't mean he isn't acting like a dictator.

    Log in to Reply
    1. JohnZ   1 day ago

      There is nothing just about his cause. Zelensky is a corrupt coke headed little tyrant.
      There was nothing just about slaughtering more than 12,000 ethnic Russians in Donbass.
      There was nothing just when the Kenyan from Chicago helped foment that bloody revolution. F*** him.

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  25. Neutral not Neutered   1 day ago

    Sorry I wasted my time reading this word salad of TDS hate. Should have known it would only lead to "Trump is worse than everyone" because he never denounced evil oil or coal which will eventually cause the oceans to boil according to anonymous sources in non dictator led western democracies.

    Log in to Reply
  26. Michael Ejercito   1 day ago

    Here was a commenter who actually defended dictatorships.

    https://reason.com/volokh/2022/01/13/supreme-court-rules-against-osha-large-employer-vaccine-mandate-but-upholds-mandate-for-health-care-workers/?comments=true#comment-9304763

    What the OSHA decision sets up is some moment in the future—how soon no one can tell—when the executive will tell the court to pound sand, and in defiance go ahead and exercise powers to protect public health. When that happens, there will be almost no one who will side with the Court, because the emergency will be such that they will discredit this decision utterly, and show that it was folly. It was not wise for the Court to put itself in that position.

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  27. JohnZ   1 day ago

    This war is just another sad dismal example of Washington's disastrous foreign interventionist policies that benefit no one but the MIC. For the past 130 years America has been involved in one foreign adventure after another, bringing misery and death along with it and the worst of it all besides the human tragedy, are the mouth pieces in the main stream media who are
    told to lie and distort the truth in order to cover up for those responsible. Effectively they are echo chambers for the CIA and those of whom we dare not utter their name.
    Ron Paul is right. America's foreign interventionist policies are bringing disaster back to the nation.

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  28. Azathoth!!   1 day ago

    Saudi Arabia is a kingdom, not a dictatorship. There's a difference.

    Putin was elected and, as much as it may pain the US, the Russian people appear to like him.

    Zelenskyy suspended elections and is holding office by decree.

    Log in to Reply
    1. mad.casual   1 day ago

      Moreover, unless Reason is jumping back on the "Police the World (of even benevolent dictatorships)!" Saudi Arabia spends, invests, and trades and Russia doesn't receive aid or arms.

      Ukraine, Chechnya, Khazakstan, Moldova... if Poland or the Czech Republic cares, let them do something about it. As far as the US is concerned, it's Nunya.

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    2. Hickamore   1 day ago

      What's the difference between a kingdom and a dictatorship from the subject's point of view? Either way, No free speech. No due process. No institutional checks on arbitrary edicts. No countervailing centers of power, public or private. Et cetera.

      Log in to Reply
      1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   1 day ago

        Depends on the kingdom. Are we discussing a Commonwealth Realm, which are typically constitutional monarchies, or are we discussing an absolute monarchy like L'Ancien Regime?

        Log in to Reply
        1. Hickamore   15 hours ago

          Absolute, not decorative. You know this very well. Saudi
          Arabia and the Emirates, in the present instance.

          Log in to Reply
  29. Brandybuck   1 day ago

    "Think of it," Zelenskyy mused. "A modestly successful reality TV star, Donald Trump, talked the United States of America into electing him president, and imposing the draconian tariffs on itself, while confusing dictators with democratically elected allies, firing BLS chief for telling the truth, and trying to replace a Fed chairmen with his own puppets for not inflating fast enough."

    FIFY. YW.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   1 day ago

      Brandybuck: 'I'm a lying pile of TDS-addled shit'

      Fixed it for you, shitstain.

      Log in to Reply
  30. Hickamore   1 day ago

    Incomprehensible that some here believe, or pretend to believe, that the 2020 Pres election was "stolen." Those alleging electoral irregularities have a legal remedy: go to court and prove the existence of some error or mischief, but for which the electoral outcome would have differed. Trump brought 62 separate challenges in 9 states plus D.C. AND LOST THEM ALL. End of subject, case closed, STFU. Wikipedia: Nearly all the suits were dismissed or dropped for lack of evidence or lack of standing,[3][4]: 4, 10–14 [5][6][7] including 30 lawsuits that were dismissed by the judge after a hearing on the merits.[8] Among the judges who dismissed the lawsuits were some appointed by Trump himself.[9] Judges, lawyers, and other professional observers described the suits as "frivolous"[10] and "without merit".[11][12] In one instance, the Trump campaign and other groups seeking his reelection collectively lost multiple cases in six states on a single day.[13] Only one ruling was initially in Trump's favor: the timing within which first-time Pennsylvania voters must provide proper identification if they wanted to "cure" their ballots. This ruling affected very few votes,[14] and it was later overturned by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.[15]

    Log in to Reply
    1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   1 day ago

      Where'd you copy and paste from? Provide the link.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Hickamore   15 hours ago

        Wikipedia entry on the subject, AS I SAID. Look it up. It's free, and before spouting here, you might want to inform yourself there. Just in case, as it appears, you didn't notice when all of this was happening in real time and reported by all news sources on a daily basis until time came for the states to deliver their electoral votes to Congress.

        Log in to Reply
    2. spec24   1 day ago

      Fucktard, there's lots of ways to steal an election. Lying to the public is one of them. Moron.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Hickamore   15 hours ago

        Who is/was lying to the public about the 2020 electoral results and/or the Trump lawsuits, their lack of merit, and their outcomes? Who? Legal proceedings are official public records and you have free access to all 62 of them, state and federal. The actual court records are the unimpeachable primary sources. Not that a 6th grade dropout like yourself would know such things.

        Log in to Reply
  31. spec24   1 day ago

    Oh, my God. Shut the fuck up. Slow day at Reason? Holy shit.

    Log in to Reply
  32. AT   21 hours ago

    This is Matt's Frankfurt School education at work.

    At no point does he consider that they're both dictators.

    Because he only sees thing through the Oppressor/Oppressed framework. And, like the good little Useful Idiot he is, he knows he has to side with the latter. And since most of the Twitter and Bluesky folks have put a little yellow and blue flag next to their handle...

    As a result, we get this ChatGPT rambling article of nonsense and idiocy which, at the end of the day, is just pandering the the Reason narrative of "I hate Trump."

    Log in to Reply
  33. Roberta   4 hours ago

    Russia is Russia, and they act like Russia. However, for most of US history, Russia's been friendly to the USA.

    Log in to Reply

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