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Benjamin Fogel

@benjaminfogel.bsky.social

Head of Publishing at Alameda, Contributing Editor at Jacobin. South African

877 Followers  |  245 Following  |  15 Posts  |  Joined: 13.11.2024  |  1.7566

Latest posts by benjaminfogel.bsky.social on Bluesky

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We’re Now in the <cite>Sopranos</cite> Stage of Imperialism ### The attack on Venezuela marks the arrival of the Sopranos stage of imperialism: the transformation of US hegemony into naked extortion. As with the Mafia, loyalty may ultimately buy nothing, and deals can be broken at gunpoint. * * * The assault on Venezuela signals a shift from hegemony and consent to Sopranos imperialism: unapologetic gangster-style power. (Molly Riley / The White House via Getty Images) In the first episode of _The Sopranos_, Tony Soprano confesses to his new psychologist, Dr Jennifer Melfi, whom he visits after experiencing a panic attack, that “it’s good to be in something from the ground floor. I came too late for that, and I know. But lately, I’m getting the feeling that I came in at the end. The best is over.” While the fictional New Jersey mob boss is referring to the Mafia, it also serves as a metaphor for the anxieties of declining US imperial power in a world in which its hegemony is in marked decline. Donald Trump’s rise, fall, and return to power are, in large part, driven by this anxiety in its various forms — as is the racketeering style of his presidency in his second term — most obviously illustrated by the recent kidnapping of Venezuela’s president, Nicolás Maduro, and his wife, Cilia Flores. The episode was hardly unprecedented. Since 1989, the United States has kidnapped three sitting presidents, beginning with George H. W. “Pappy” Bush’s betrayal of his old partner in counterrevolutionary drug trafficking, Manuel Noriega, and continuing with George W. “Dubya” Bush’s abduction of Haiti’s democratically elected president Jean-Bertrand Aristide in 2004. Noriega was left to waste away in a US dungeon, while Aristide was eventually granted asylum in South Africa. We will see in the coming months if the pathetic justifications for taking out Maduro hold any weight in a US court, though there is little reason to expect an impartial process. What distinguishes Venezuela is that it is not a small state dependent on the United States like Panama or Haiti. It has been treated as one of the US’s official enemies, with a target on its back since Hugo Chávez came to power. It is also a large country with a population of twenty-eight million and a military that is, at least on paper, capable of inflicting some damage in the event of an invasion. The spectacle of the operation not only marked a clear end to any lingering idea of an international order premised on state-based sovereignty and international law; it also signaled, as I argued a few months ago, “a return to a conception of sovereignty premised on ‘the strong do what they will.’” Trump’s claim that the United States is effectively running Venezuela, consistent with his turn toward the crudest form of resource imperialism, offers further evidence of this. Given the fog of war, the frenzied hubris of MAGA agitprop, and the difficulty of assessing information coming out of Venezuela, any confident assessment of the future of Venezuelan politics or Chavismo is premature. # Mob Rule The attack on Venezuela, in this sense, marks the arrival of the _Sopranos_ stage of imperialism: the transformation of US hegemony into open extortion, as I argued in _Jacobin_ last October: > The crudeness of the justification for war with Venezuela reflects both the decline of US soft power, particularly after the destruction of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), and the Trump administration’s belief that it no longer needs to stage the same sorts of propaganda efforts required for past wars. Congress does what it is told, and the public no longer really needs to be won over; public opinion today can be manufactured post hoc through the algorithm. The fact that Trump has carried out a successful operation against Venezuela without consulting Congress, on what amount to the laziest and most mendacious premises in recent memory further establishes the point: > For the United States, sovereignty now means the right of the sovereign — Donald J. Trump — to exercise whatever forces, economic or military, he deems necessary in pursuit of what he dictates to be in the interest of the United States: from sanctioning Brazil for daring to prosecute a former president for attempting a coup to killing what are likely Venezuelan fishermen in order to appear to be combating drug trafficking. During a phone call tapped by the feds, Gambino underboss Aniello “Neil” Dellacroce exclaimed to future boss John Gotti, then a mere capo, and family soldier Angelo “Quack Quack” Ruggiero that “La Cosa Nostra means that the boss is your boss.” The takeaway is simple: you will do as you are told because this is how things work in the Mafia. Unlike the Gambino family, however, Trump doesn’t have a few hundred soldiers to call on. He commands the most powerful military machine in history, which he can deploy to extort the world. "Trump has carried out a successful operation against Venezuela without consulting Congress, on what amount to the laziest and most mendacious premises in recent memory." The writer John Ganz has made a useful comparison between Gotti’s populist appeal in the outer boroughs and Trump’s meteoric political ascent in his book _When the Clock Broke_. In Ganz’s view, “Trump has also long viewed the role of _capo di tutti capi_ as an aspiration.” # Protection as Extortion The attack on Venezuela shows that Trump, with Mar-a-Lago serving as his government’s Bada Bing, has established more or less the same principle in terms of US sovereignty. Only Trump can establish how the US state must act, and he doesn’t need to consult anyone. As he told the _New York Times_ in response to a question on whether there were any limits to his international power, “Yeah, there is one thing. My own morality. My own mind. It’s the only thing that can stop me.” What Trump and his cronies Stephen Miller and Marc Rubio will take from this is that they can and will get away with imperial extortion without facing congressional censure or any domestic political restrictions. That the European Union and NATO, with the notable exception of Spain, effectively supported the operation, along with what remains of the international community in the form of the Nobel Peace Prize committee, only reinforces this lesson. More acts of naked aggression in Latin America should therefore be expected, likely against Mexico, Colombia, Cuba, Nicaragua, and beyond. This risk is heightened as Trump’s domestic approval drops amid Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) occupation of cities, the regime and its supporters’ defense of a federal agency executing a US citizen, and sharp rises in the cost of living. "Trump’s affections and deals can always be reneged upon, sometimes at gunpoint." Given this trajectory, it is probably only a matter of time until the United States makes a move on Greenland — another expression of the _Sopranos_ stage of imperialism. The transformation of US empire from a hegemon able to provide legitimate protection to its allies after the devastation of World War II, at a tolerable price, into simply an extortion racket that maintains its position via military might amid economic decline was outlined by Giovanni Arrighi in the _New Left Review_ all the way back in 2005: “After a decade of deepening crisis, the Reagan Administration initiated the transformation of legitimate protection into a protection racket.” Weakness only encourages those with power to tighten the squeeze. Despite their supposed code of honor, both the fictional mobsters of _The Sopranos_ — from Tony killing Chrissy to Paulie “Walnuts” Gualtieri leaking secrets to New York — and their real-life counterparts proved more than willing to betray their allies for short-term gain, self-preservation, and sheer hubris at the first opportunity. After all, what can Denmark and Europe do about it? So far, Europe has only doubled down on accepting its role as a vassal to be extorted. Trump has been rather open about this, boasting to Fox News, “We have to do it again. We can do it again, too. Nobody can stop us.” # Miami Is the Capital of the Future The attack on Venezuela also served as the clearest signal yet of the return of the Monroe Doctrine — understood here as the sole right of the United States to shake down the Western Hemisphere. In doing so, it unified both Rubio’s frenzied anti-communist wing of MAGA and Miller’s white nationalist “America First” branch in a shared agenda. As Greg Grandin wrote in the _Financial Times_ _:_ > America First is often misunderstood as isolationist. But it’s never been that, for its most vocal advocates have celebrated the projection of US power within the Western Hemisphere. It’s better described as anti-universalist, as a tribalist nationalism that rejects the burden of global stewardship while clinging fiercely to regional supremacy. The Monroe Doctrine occupies a special place in this worldview since, in the form it has taken under Trump, it promises dominance without entanglement. Citing Monroe, Trump officials have carved out an area of the globe where the US need not persuade, integrate or universalise — only command, by fiat. Miller’s enthusiasm for the Monroe Doctrine in large part stems from the fact that > the war against narco-terrorists abroad will further serve — indeed, already serves — as justification for increased repression domestically, as ICE and the National Guard occupy and terrorize major cities while the Trump administration attempts to fabricate a left-wing terrorist threat to enable it to use the powers of the federal government against the Left. “Right now, Venezuela is not being treated as a foreign policy issue,” said Carrie Filipetti, who led Venezuela policy at the State Department under the first Trump administration. “It’s being treated as a homeland security issue, and rightfully so.” In this respect, the near future for Latin America appears bleak and uncertain. Miami — a city built by counterrevolutionary CIA-sponsored drug traffickers (including Rubio’s family) and now a haven for cryptoscammers, sports-betting influencers, OnlyFans models, streamers, and the other assorted detritus of MAGA’s base — has effectively become the new capital of US empire. Backed by the most reactionary sections of Latin America’s ruling class, South Florida now functions as a coordination hub for the hemisphere’s reactionary elite. As left-wing Colombian presidential candidate Iván Cepeda told _Jacobin_: > Miami and Florida have become a center of international politics, coordinating the efforts of the hemispheric far right. They have behind them powerful economic conglomerates, which resort to all kinds of methods. Unlike the politics carried out by the Left, dirty methods of doing politics are common on the far right. This strategic offensive on the continent — all that plays a role. There is also a strengthening of the Left in certain countries and social mobilizations in all of them. South Florida also figures in _The Sopranos_ as a destination for reinvention and escape. It’s the place where Junior Soprano went to pursue romance, where Little Carmine yearns for a career in the (legitimate) film business, and where Tony and Paulie go on the lam. For nearly a century, it has served as the Mafia’s fantasy of easy living away from the cold and grime of the East Coast and Chicago. Adjusting to the _Sopranos_ stage of imperialism means recognizing this shift in power and the brute fact that the only thing that gangsters respect is strength. As María Corina Machado, among others, can testify, Trump’s affections and deals can always be reneged upon, sometimes at gunpoint. * * *
17.01.2026 10:45 — 👍 1    🔁 1    💬 0    📌 0

Leia o ensaio completo “A Guerra contra a Venezuela e o Desaparecimento do Direito Internacional”, de Benjamin Fogel, publicado originalmente na Jacobin e parte do projeto After Order, do Alameda, que examina as transformações da soberania em nossos tempos catastróficos. / @benjaminfogel.bsky.social

31.10.2025 14:02 — 👍 2    🔁 1    💬 1    📌 0
Preview
A Lawless Trump Administration Runs Amok in the Caribbean As great powers abandon even the pretense of law, the undeclared war on Venezuela exposes a world ruled by extortion, collapse, and the redefinition of sovereignty.

Many thanks to @benjaminfogel.bsky.social for quoting Shifting Sovereignties in his interesting article on the Trump administration's recent actions in the Caribbean.
jacobin.com/2025/10/vene...

31.10.2025 10:02 — 👍 2    🔁 1    💬 0    📌 0

ICYMI- Emma welcomed David Hearst, editor-in-chief of Middle East Eye, to talk about the horrors unfolding in Gaza and the West Bank, and Jacobin’s Benjamin Fogel to discuss Trump's obsession with South Africa. @emmavigeland.bsky.social @middleeasteye-rss.bsky.social @benjaminfogel.bsky.social

22.05.2025 19:45 — 👍 76    🔁 18    💬 3    📌 1

Turns out that American democratic and liberal institutions just gave up or hid when there was an authoritarian capture of power, and capital seems mostly too afraid when a personalized shakedown system was implemented and global trade was destroyed. A hollow, rotten society

08.04.2025 11:08 — 👍 5    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0

The thing is about the contemporary right is that you can be a sincere Nazi or believe Rhodesia was the tradfash wakanda or whatever and be an open scammer at the same damn time.

26.03.2025 09:19 — 👍 2    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
The image shows an invitation for the panel to celebrate the launch of the dossier “Energy Transitions: Just and Beyond” from the Alameda Institute, on 29th March 2025, in Bristol UK. Participants are: Sabrina Fernandes, Hamza Hamouchene and Amir Lebodiou. The event will feature a debate and network discussion with different perspectives from authors and researchers on how the countries and social movements are addressing climate, energy, and geopolitical challenges worldwide.

The image shows an invitation for the panel to celebrate the launch of the dossier “Energy Transitions: Just and Beyond” from the Alameda Institute, on 29th March 2025, in Bristol UK. Participants are: Sabrina Fernandes, Hamza Hamouchene and Amir Lebodiou. The event will feature a debate and network discussion with different perspectives from authors and researchers on how the countries and social movements are addressing climate, energy, and geopolitical challenges worldwide.

Join us for the launch of Energy Transitions: Just and Beyond!
A powerful dossier on real pathways for a just energy future.

Expert panel featuring @sabrinafernandes.bsky.social @amirleb.bsky.social and Hamza Hamouchene.

🗓️ 29th March
📍 Bristol, UK

Sign up here: alameda.institute/event/

20.03.2025 09:26 — 👍 30    🔁 7    💬 1    📌 0

I wrote about Kony 2012, South African mercenaries, internet culture, empire and USAID

11.03.2025 09:40 — 👍 2    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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The Meaning of Kony 2012 The Kony 2012 campaign pioneered a new form of online activism — one that served empire more than the people it claimed to help.

Remember Kony and Invisible Children? I went down the memory (rabbit)hole back to 2012 jacobin.com/2025/03/kony...

10.03.2025 12:58 — 👍 1    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0

The other website now has a well funded and Elon supported infrastructure pushing Apartheid revisionism, particularly that it was not a crime against humanity and that the worst evils of that era came as a result of the ANC and the anti-apartheid struggle...

04.03.2025 10:14 — 👍 2    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0

Errol Musk being interviewed by DJ Vlad best represents the state of the culture.

13.02.2025 17:41 — 👍 1    🔁 1    💬 0    📌 0

Behind the lobbying campaign against South Africa and the right's support for Trump punishing the country, is a belief that fundamentally this government is illegitimate despite the participation of opposition parties in the coalition.

10.02.2025 09:22 — 👍 2    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0

Brazilian necropolitics: the stock market soars at the news Lula will need another surgery after a brain hemorrhage.

12.12.2024 01:03 — 👍 2    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0

Rio remains the world's most charming mafia state.

02.12.2024 23:15 — 👍 3    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0

Well at least he did one good thing

02.12.2024 00:45 — 👍 263    🔁 13    💬 15    📌 1

Testing this websites worth: Does anyone know who has done interesting work on the politics and political economy of sports betting?

27.11.2024 13:53 — 👍 2    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0

it’s about damn time

21.11.2024 13:09 — 👍 406    🔁 39    💬 4    📌 2

Is there a single Western institution that will not be forever tainted by what is happening gaza?

20.11.2024 21:00 — 👍 2    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0

How much worse will this year get? There doesn't seem to be anything holding back the genocide in Gaza, and likely annexation of the West Bank, and Biden's lameduck regime is trying to up the ante in Ukraine before Trump comes in. Then there is Sudan and all the other horrors

20.11.2024 15:24 — 👍 3    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0

Liberal Americans really want us all to feel as though we have collectively lost to Trump on this new platform.

20.11.2024 08:48 — 👍 1    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0

at this point I would like to remind Keir Starmer that us inhabitants of these rainy islands may not be as keen as he is to test the quality of British nuclear bunkers.

19.11.2024 14:44 — 👍 9    🔁 2    💬 1    📌 0

The great liberal tune out live and direct on this social media platform

15.11.2024 13:16 — 👍 1    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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Exit Right - Dissent Magazine Trump has remade Americans, and to defeat Trumpism requires nothing less than the left doing the same.

if you read one post election piece today, make it this cracking essay by @gabrielwinant.bsky.social www.dissentmagazine.org/online_artic...

15.11.2024 10:07 — 👍 12    🔁 7    💬 1    📌 1

Does this place have insane meltdowns as cheap entertainment yet?

15.11.2024 09:24 — 👍 3    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0

@benjaminfogel is following 20 prominent accounts