Sunday, November 02, 2025

A long, sour decline for NYC

 

A Zohran Mamdani mayoralty

would mean a long, sour decline for NYC

Michael Goodwin, New York Post 

As a young reporter at The New York Times, I had the good fortune of working with an experienced political editor named Sheldon Binn. 

A wounded veteran of World War II, he explained the simple yardstick he used to judge politicians.

“The only thing I ask is that they don’t make things worse,” I recall him saying.

“That’s the best you can hope for.” 

As a wide-eyed idealist, I found his standard shockingly low and cynical.

But these days, Binn’s rule makes more sense to me than ever. 

Exhibit A is the New York mayoral race, where the Democrats’ nominee, Zohran Mamdani, is pushing a sweepingly radical agenda. 

If voters are foolish enough to elect him on Tuesday, his tenure wouldn’t just make things slightly worse.

His policies would inflict major damage in myriad ways, from declining public safety to out-of-control spending. 

Schools would be further dumbed down, and his pledge to hike taxes would drive away businesses, families, and jobs.

His antisemitic attacks on Israel make him unfit to lead the Jewish capital of America.

Mamdani also vows to close Rikers Island, with no place to put the 7,000 inmates. 

The result would be a rapid decline in the quality of life for the city’s remaining residents, workers and visitors. 

And not just for a short time.

Gotham’s history is chock full of lessons on how the actions of a mayor, good or bad, can have an outsized impact for years and even decades beyond his tenure. 

In addition to actual policies, a mayor helps shape the broader civic culture, including the role of nonprofits and private philanthropy. 

In Mamdani’s case, a long, sour decline is guaranteed because his promise of free this and free that, combined with an expansion of government control over private housing and some supermarkets, would require punishingly higher taxes. 

His agenda is a carbon copy of failed socialist governments around the world and throughout history.

Cuba and Venezuela are two clear and close examples: Huge portions of their populations have fled to other countries, and they didn’t run to nearby socialist outposts. 

They voted with their feet by aiming for New York and other cities in America.

If socialism is good and capitalism is evil, why is it that nobody, including Trump-hating celebrities, quits America to live in Cuba or Venezuela? 

That dynamic gets to the heart of why I am voting for former Gov. Andrew Cuomo and why it is essential that Mamdani and his snake oil never sets foot in City Hall. 

Cuomo is far from perfect, but under the Binn test, the fact that he would do less harm makes him the right choice.

The damage the untested 34-year-old Mamdani would do would not be easily corrected, even if he were booted after a single term. 

Failed experiment 

Four years is enough time to dig New York into a hole that it might not escape for years. 

History shows the pattern.

Consider the relevance of events 50 years ago this week, when a famous headline summed up Gotham’s fiscal nightmare.

“Ford to City, Drop Dead,” shouted the Daily News after President Ford vowed to veto any federal effort to bail out the city from its financial mess. 

For years, New York had lived well beyond its means.

So much so that banks took the drastic step of cutting off their lines of credit. 

The mountain of debts wasn’t built overnight.

The eight-year tenure of Republican Mayor John Lindsay that started in 1966 featured a nonstop spend-a-thon and a breakdown of law-and-order.

The number of murders exploded, with the total in his final year three times higher than in his first year. 

The city comptroller at the time, Democrat Abe Beame, never blew the whistle on the chaos, but the Dem machine still got him elected mayor in ’73. 

His move to City Hall sped up deficit spending, and it was fitting that the banks stopped the grift on his watch.

It is also understandable that Ford was reluctant to help unless the city started to clean up its own act. 

Beame lost his bid for re-election in part because the budget cuts needed to balance the books fell heavily on the NYPD.

The city became a filthy crime capital and the quality of life went to hell. 

Over a few years, nearly 1 million people fled, most to the suburbs or Florida. 

Ed Koch was the next mayor up, and his bold plans to reduce spending while also shoring up public safety were just what the doctor ordered. Koch’s popularity soared, and as Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan told me several years later, Koch’s great triumph was that he showed New Yorkers, Washington and the banks that finally, “somebody is in charge.”

Although the city had a new bounce in its step, the problems didn’t melt away and crime continued to grow as the outgunned NYPD couldn’t keep up. 

It wasn’t until 1990, when Koch’s beleaguered successor, David Dinkins, worked with Council Speaker Peter Vallone to develop a plan that called for hiring 10,000 more cops.

But with a slow roll-out, murders hit an all-time high, with about 2,000 a year recorded during Dinkins’ term. 

Golden Age of NYC 

It was only after Rudy Giuliani became mayor in 1994 that the police force was fully funded and smartly used.

Giuliani and his team, including top cop Bill Bratton, used the new officers in targeted enforcement campaigns under the revolutionary “broken windows” theory of policing. 

The results came fast and were dramatic.

Within four years, the number of murders fell by 60%, with huge declines in other crimes, too. 

The pattern continued through Giuliani’s second term and all through Mike Bloomberg’s subsequent three terms, as Bloomberg and his top cop, Ray Kelly, kept the same policies and extended and improved them. 

The result was a 20-year Golden Age of public safety and economic expansion that transformed New York into the safest big city in America and the world capital of capital. 

Jobs and population booms followed, with the city gaining even more people than it had lost. 

As I wrote at the time, an elderly friend who had spent his entire life in New York said he had never seen it shine as it did at the end of Bloomberg’s tenure. 

Unfortunately, he was followed by Bill de Blasio, the worst mayor since Beame.

Anti-cop to the core and a lazy, anti-business leftist, Mayor Putz left with crime on the rise and the quality of life in decline. 

It is telling — and scary — that Mamdani calls him his favorite mayor.

As if to underscore the idiocy, he pledges to shrink the NYPD. 

Reports that de Blasio is advising Mamdani and that there is overlap in their inner circles complete the horror scenario. 

Polls showing Mamdani leading the race recall a definition of insanity: “Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different outcome.” 

Don’t do it, New York. 


Sunday, October 26, 2025

NEW TRADE DEALS IN THE OFFING

 

NEW TRADE DEALS IN THE OFFING

John Hinderacker, Powerline 

President Trump is in Asia, and his trip appears to be producing results:

The United States announced finalized trade deals Sunday with two Southeast Asian nations — Cambodia and Malaysia — that contain provisions aimed against China, and further progress with two others in the region, Thailand and Vietnam.

This is a big deal: 

The two final deals and two framework agreements announced Sunday cover about 68 percent of approximately $475 billion in U.S. two-way trade with the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

It is another victory for the Trump administration:

Trump threatened high tariffs on the four countries, along with others around the world, to prod them into making policy reforms to open their markets to more U.S. goods and services. In exchange for those concessions, he reduced the tariffs he threatened to impose but still will be levying duties of either 19 percent or 20 percent on the four countries.

“These landmark deals demonstrate that America can maintain tariffs to shrink the goods trade deficit while opening new markets for American farmers, ranchers, workers, and manufacturers,” U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said in a statement.

It is hard to get straight reporting on tariff issues. Most of what you read is hysterically anti-Trump, and the President’s critics seem unable to distinguish between an initial negotiating position and a final agreement. Then, too, there are legal complications: Trump likely doesn’t have statutory authority for most of the tariffs that he has purported to levy. That issue is working its way through the federal courts, but my reading of the opinions so far is that the tariff opponents have the better legal case. However, if those tariffs lead to agreements like the ones just announced, the legal issue will be moot. The agreements will stand, even if Trump lacked the statutory authority for the tariffs he initially announced.

And that’s not all: in breaking news, the U.S. and China appear close to a trade deal:

A trade deal between the United States and China is drawing closer, officials from the world’s two largest economies said Sunday as they reached an initial consensus for President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping to aim to finalize during their high-stakes meeting.

China’s top trade negotiator, Li Chenggang, told reporters that the two sides had reached a “preliminary consensus,” while Trump’s treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, said there was “a very successful framework.”

The dust is far from settling on controversies over international trade. But I think that in the end, we will find that President Trump has largely succeeded in obtaining a more level playing field for American exports. World Bank economists agree with Trump that the international trade regime has disfavored the U.S.:

The World Bank effectively endorsed President Donald Trump’s complaint about the high tariffs that other nations impose on American products, calling for U.S. trading partners to sharply reduce their import taxes to more closely match the lower levies typically imposed by Washington.

The president says it is unfair that American companies face higher trade barriers in Europe, Japan and China than foreign businesses confront when they sell their products in the U.S. market. The World Bank’s top economists agreed, calling for an across-the-board reduction in tariffs.

In addition, Trump’s efforts will have led to substantially increased investment in American manufacturing.

Liberals have denounced Trump’s trade policies because they denounce everything Trump does, even though on trade, his policies are nearer to traditional Democratic dogma than Republican dogma. Many conservatives have also attacked Trump’s tariffs because we believe in free trade. Yet in the end, it may well be that Trump will be proved right: whether he had the legal authority or not–it is a close question–his standing up for America in the international trading system may ultimately be seen as a significant benefit to the American people.

Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Trump’s Crime Crackdown Is Paying Off

 

FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino:

‘Trump’s Crime Crackdown Is Paying Off’

AG Staff, American Greatness 

FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino is touting the the number of violent criminals arrested so far this year by the FBI, noting that the 28,000 arrests are nearly double the yearly average under Biden.

Bongino told Fox News that, over the past 3 or 4 years, the FBI would average 15,000 to 16,000 arrests of violent criminals but noted that this year’s arrests are nearly double, saying, “We’ve made 28,000 violent crime arrests in 2025, and the year’s not even over.”

Bongino explained that, “It shows that when you get a president, an attorney general, a deputy attorney general and an FBI leadership team that lets the FBI do FBI work, instead of getting into other nonsense like in the past. Look what happens. Your cities get cleaner.”

The FBI crackdown under the current administration has resulted in the arrest of over 28,000 violent criminals, the seizure of more than 6,000 illegal weapons and the capture of more than 1,700 child predators and 300 human traffickers since Trump’s inauguration on Jan. 20.

President Trump has been vocal in his support what he calls the “historic results” of federal law enforcement efforts to bring “law and order back to America”

The FBI’s Summer Heat operation, which took place June 24 through September 20, resulted in 8,629 arrests, 2,281 firearms seized, 557 children identified, 7,757 search operations and 2,081 criminal indictments.

Summer Heat is also credited with taking more than 421 kg of fentanyl off the streets and the seizure of 44,569 kg of cocaine.

The Trump administration has also celebrated more than 25,000 immigration-related detentions targeting violent gangs like MS-13 and Tren De Aragua.

Bongino also expressed admiration for Trump’s “zero tolerance” for crime, saying, “He drives around Washington, D.C., on these off the record movements. He sees homelessness, crime, he can’t stand it. He says, ‘What do we got to do to fix this?’ And we basically lay out a bunch of things, and his answer is very simple. [The] President’s like, ‘Go get ‘em, boys. Go get them.’ That was it. Like, you do what you have to do.”

Monday, October 20, 2025

WHO FUNDS ANTIFA?

WHO FUNDS ANTIFA?

JohnHinderaker,PowerlineBlog

Antifa is a fascist, terrorist organization that has conspired to commit countless crimes across the United States. Democrats assert, absurdly, that Antifa doesn’t really exist–it is just an idea! But ideas don’t organize riots, every night for three months or more. Ideas don’t compensate the people who participate in those riots, or bail them out of jail, or pay for their signs or their plane tickets. There is a great deal of money behind the American Left, and some of it is flowing to Antifa, the militant arm of the Democratic Party, much as the Ku Klux Klan was the militant arm of the Democratic Party during the latter decades of the 19th century.

The Trump administration should be putting a high priority on investigating the funding of domestic terrorism, including, above all, the funding of Antifa. Happily, it appears to be doing so:

FBI Director Kash Patel tells Just the News that the bureau is “on the verge” of unmasking the command structure and financing for anarchist groups like Antifa that have unleashed unrest around America and has also identified potential new criminal activity related to the abuse of federal law enforcement and intelligence.
***
Patel said one area where the FBI has made rapid progress is the tracking of financing and command structures of anarchist groups like Antifa that have fomented unrest in American cities, attacks on Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents rounding up illegal immigrants and antisemitic movements on college campuses.

He said there are indications that some support may come from overseas enemies and U.S. nonprofit groups that have tax exemptions from the IRS.

“Look, the thing I can tell you is that money doesn’t lie, and the thing we’re doing at the FBI is following the money,” Patel explained. “And thanks to President Trump, we now have Antifa designated, rightfully so, as a domestic terror organization. And we have had multiple investigations going on.”

Patel said those probes are “mapping out the money, and we are using social media and the influencers that the President had here just this last week, because they’re the ones on the ground, getting us ground level intelligence, because law enforcement isn’t able to enter these spaces, and these people are brave enough to do it.”

I don’t understand that. Doesn’t the FBI have subpoena power? Or maybe both legal process and infiltration are needed.

Patel’s comments came as a federal grand jury on Wednesday night indicted two people allegedly tied to Antifa on terrorism charges for an attack in July on an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility in Texas.

Many conservatives are eager to see criminal charges brought against Biden administration officials who betrayed their offices. I understand the impulse, but I am more interested in unraveling the financial networks whereby left-wing billionaires and NGOs, many of which receive taxpayer funding, finance criminal enterprises like Antifa. 

Tuesday, October 14, 2025

Trump Targets Antifa

 

Trump Targets Antifa, With Good Reason

Deroy Murdock, The Daily Signal

President Donald Trump correctly designated Antifa a domestic terrorist group.

“Individuals associated with and acting on behalf of Antifa further coordinate with other organizations and entities for the purpose of spreading, fomenting, and advancing political violence,” his Sept. 22 executive order declared. “This organized effort designed to achieve policy objectives by coercion and intimidation is domestic terrorism.”

“Not so fast!” the Trump-hating Left responds. They consider Antifa, at worst, Boy Scouts in a bad mood.

The Atlantic’s Tom Nichols dismissed Antifa-led chaos in Portland, Oregon, as the work of “costumed pranksters.” Elsewhere, an Atlantic headline giggled: “Portland’s ‘War Zone’ Is Like Burning Man for the Terminally Online.”

Never mind Antifa’s red, white, and black flag; Mark Bray’s “Antifa: The Anti-Fascist Handbook” (Melville House, 2017), and this extremist group’s recognition by the Anti-Defamation League, ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel swears: “There is no Antifa. This is an entirely imaginary organization. There is not an Antifa.”

“Antifa isn’t an organization!” MSNBC’s Stephanie Ruhle insisted Wednesday. That night, CNN’s Erin Burnett claimed that “Antifa-linked violence is rare and limited.”

Grabien’s Tom Elliott has artfully curated 10 on-camera lies from Antifa deniers who argue that this brutal outfit is less of a thing than Captain Crunch.

Rep. Maxine Dexter, D-Ore., denied the mayhem that Antifa currently perpetrates in Portland. “Many of my constituents have been engaged for quite a long time,” Dexter shrugged. “Most of them are middle-aged women who are just trying to bear witness.” 

“They’re not bearing witness. They’re bearing arms,” Fox News’ Jesse Watters observed Thursday evening. Citing a recent, locally shot video, he added: “This middle-aged woman’s packing a machete.”

An Oct. 8 White House fact sheet stripped the varnish that left-wing apologists have slathered all over Antifa:

• “It’s like a war zone. There are times I’ve had to have a gas mask on inside my own home,” says a resident near the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility under siege in south Portland.

• “I only come out during the day. You see all the black-covered Antifa people aren’t here. They come with the night,” says another Portland resident.

• Since early June, the terrorists have violently breached the facility by using a stop sign as a battering ram, hurled explosives and projectiles, burned American flags, viciously assaulted, attacked, and injured officers, doxed officers, berated neighbors, and even rolled out a guillotine.

• In May 2024, an “Antifa anarchist movement” took credit for burning more than a dozen Portland Police Bureau training vehicles.

• In May 2022, Antifa members deployed smoke grenades, paint-filled balloons, and fireworks to break up a campaign event for a Republican political candidate.

• In January 2021, more than 100 Antifa demonstrators attacked Portland police and vandalized property, with some armed with knives and long poles.

• In August 2020, a self-described Antifa militant shot and killed a Patriot Prayer supporter during a riot in Portland, then was later killed after he brandished a weapon while law enforcement attempted to apprehend him on murder charges.

• In 2020, Antifa terrorists led 100 days of carnage and violence in Portland—in which they rioted, looted, burned buildings, bludgeoned officers, deployed power tools and commercial-grade fireworks as weapons, and attempted to destroy a local courthouse.

“Rare and limited.” Really?

Also on Wednesday, Trump, well, presided at a White House conference on Antifa. Independent journalists detailed the potentially fatal dangers of covering these bloodthirsty criminals.

“I have been infiltrating Antifa cells in Seattle and Portland for the past decade,” said The Post-Millennial’s Katie Daviscourt. “Antifa uses extreme political violence to crush the civil rights of their political enemies.” She added: “Today, I’m sitting here with a black eye and a concussion after being violently hit in the face with a metal pole while reporting outside the ICE facility.”

“I was ambushed in a mob beating,” while scrutinizing Antifa in 2019, journalist Andy Ngo remembered. “I was bleeding out of my eyes and ears.” He continued: “I was rushed to the hospital in an ambulance and CT scan, and I had a subarachnoid hemorrhage, which is bleeding in the brain and nearly died.”

Antifa thugs typically wear black and don masks. They recall white-clad Klansmen with hooded faces.

Coincidence? Nope.

Just as the Ku Klux Klan was the postbellum Democratic Party’s ruthless enforcement arm, Antifa is today’s neo-Marxist Democratic Party’s militant wing.

No wonder the Left treats these domestic terrorists so gingerly.


Sunday, October 12, 2025

Drones: Potential US–China Warfare


Why Drones Are the Center of Potential US–China Warfare

The Epoch Times 

Scale and speed—not a perfect design—will decide drone warfare, pushing Washington to cut red tape and ship autonomous fleets by the thousands, analysts say.

On today’s battlefields, inexpensive flying robots are capable of locating, jamming, and eliminating targets faster than any human can react. China is determined to flood the skies with them.

In response, the United States is working on building its own swarms, refining smarter software, and tightening curbs on Chinese technology, while Ukraine’s front lines serve as a testing ground for evaluating effective and ineffective technologies.

The contest is not about a single “best drone,” an analyst told The Epoch Times. Instead, it’s a race between China’s ability to mobilize a huge civilian drone industry for war and America’s effort to turn clever prototypes into mass production, then bind them together with software and allied networks.

To prevail, the analyst said, Washington must move faster on approvals and testing, buy in large quantities, and adopt strategies proven effective on Ukraine’s battlefield on a larger scale, such as embracing open systems, facilitating quick upgrades, and shipping technology in the thousands.

Any future clash, especially over Taiwan, will be decided by scale, speed, and the lessons that endure from Ukraine, according to the analyst.

China’s Civil‑Military Fusion

China’s consumer drone machine is enormous.

China delivered more than 3.17 million civilian drones in 2023, with more than 2,300 companies and at least 1,000 models in mass production, the vice minister of industry and information technology told a press conference in April 2024.

That ecosystem—anchored by Chinese company DJI, the world’s largest drone maker—feeds a low-cost parts chain of motors, optics, radios, and flight controllers that can pivot to military use almost overnight.

This illustrates the civil-military fusion strategy of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP): a state-guided process that transforms consumer dominance into wartime readiness.

 Beijing is investing just as heavily in technology used to attack drones.

 In July, state-owned giant Norinco showcased a truck-mounted 50-kilowatt laser, the OW5-A50, billed as a swarm killer, during a widely publicized “border-control” drill that also paraded an array of uncrewed systems.

In September, a military parade pushed new drones alongside anti-drone lasers and microwave weapons. However, such equipment—such as the Hurricane-3000 microwave system—remains under field tests, according to an exclusive report by Army Recognition Group, a defense news website.

Civil feats could serve as evidence of military capabilities. In Yunnan, for example, in July, a coordinated fleet of heavy-lift drones hauled 180 metric tons of steel and concrete up a mountain to build power-line towers in days rather than weeks—a glimpse of the logistics muscle that could matter in wartime resupply.

At recent air shows, China has also touted a “drone mothership,” a large unmanned aircraft designed to launch and retrieve dozens of smaller drones.

However, due to the limited technical details available, observers say its practicality and battlefield value in real-world scenarios remain uncertain.

“The message is clear: Beijing wants scale on both offense and defense,” Stephen Xia, a former People’s Liberation Army engineer who now works as a military-equipment analyst, told The Epoch Times.

US Counters China

 Sensing the urgency, Washington is trying to decouple from Chinese parts while ramping up U.S. capacity.

In June, the Trump administration issued an executive order aimed at accelerating domestic drone manufacturing and reducing reliance on foreign suppliers.

The following month, the Commerce Department opened a national-security probe under Section 232 into imports of drones and related components—a move that may lead to tariffs or outright limits.

In September, U.S. authorities signaled new rules that could restrict or ban many Chinese drones and parts outright, building on earlier measures. A federal court also upheld the Pentagon’s authority to label DJI a Chinese military company, further tightening restrictions on the world’s biggest consumer drone brand.

The Pentagon’s Blue unmanned aerial system (UAS) program maintains a public, vetted roster of small drones and components that meet cybersecurity and supply-chain requirements—excluding those made in China—and guides Department of War buyers and other agencies toward trusted options.

“Policy only sets the stage—the real test is deploying hardware at scale,” said Mark Cao, a U.S.-based military-tech analyst, former materials engineer, and host of the Chinese-language military-news YouTube channel “Mark Space.”

The Department of War’s Replicator initiative, launched in August 2023, pledged to deliver “multiple thousands” of low-cost, expandable, autonomous systems by August 2025, pressing the military services to procure faster and in bulk.

The program prioritizes drone systems that can be produced quickly and at scale, bypassing traditional slow defense procurement methods.

Defense officials told DefenseScoop last month that hundreds have reached military units so far—still short of the original mark—but funding and momentum continue. The Epoch Times could not independently verify this claim.

The concept dovetails with Indo-Pacific Commander Admiral Samuel Paparo’s vow to turn the Taiwan Strait into an “unmanned hellscape” if the Chinese regime launches an attack, using swarms across air, sea, and land to slow the People’s Liberation Army and buy time for heavier forces. He made the remarks during an interview with The Washington Post on the sidelines of the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore in June 2024.

At the high end, the Air Force’s robotic wingmen are already in the air. General Atomics’ YFQ‑42A began flight tests in August, while Anduril’s YFQ‑44A is slated to fly in mid-October, the Air Force’s top civilian announced last month.

The glue that holds it all together is software. L3Harris’s AMORPHOUS aims to enable a single operator to task and retask thousands of mixed drones and unmanned boats through a single interface—the command-and-control backbone for large-scale swarming demands.

Russian Drones Rely on Chinese Parts

Crack open a wrecked Russian drone and the global supply chain comes into view.

“There is a good number of Chinese components and microprocessors in Russian drones, along with basically everything that is needed to assemble first-person view drones,” Samuel Bendett, an adviser at the Center for Naval Analyses’ Russia Studies Program who focuses on unmanned systems, told the Epoch Times.

“The transfer is direct and unobstructed.”

He noted that Russian builders order first-person view drone parts straight from Chinese factories and online marketplaces.

“The supply is cheap and plentiful,” Bendett said, claiming that it was so plentiful that it hurts Russia’s own attempts to make those parts domestically.

A Reuters investigation published in July tracked Chinese L550E engines—relabeled as “industrial refrigeration units”—to a sanctioned Russian maker of attack drones used in Ukraine. Kyiv has also blacklisted several Chinese suppliers after finding their parts in downed aircraft.

Beijing has tightened some dual-use exports since July 2024 to safeguard its national security interests—moves that have driven up prices and complicated shipments of components such as infrared cameras and inertial sensors.

Yet this display of leverage also underscored how dependent global buyers remain on Chinese supply, accelerating Washington’s push to reduce reliance through Section 232 measures, the Blue UAS program, and procurement bans, according to Cao.

Ukrainian Drones

“If China’s advantage lies in its mass and supply capabilities, Ukraine’s advantage is speed and adaptation,” Cao told The Epoch Times.

He noted that over the past year, Ukrainian units have transitioned from solo-drone strikes to artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted swarms that coordinate their own attacks under heavy jamming—still small in scale, but designed to expand in scope.

The Pentagon has allocated $50 million for 33,000 AI “strike kits” from Auterion, a Swiss-American defense and robotics software company, to equip the Ukrainian military. These kits transform low-cost drones into jam-resistant, target-tracking weapons, integrating battlefield upgrades into regular inventories.

Ukrainian sea drones such as the Magura V5 forced key Russian naval assets to pull back from Crimea, reshaping Black Sea operations since late 2023. U.S. naval planners are taking notes as they draft deterrence concepts for Taiwan.

Electronic warfare delivers the hardest lessons, according to Cao.

“Jamming can blind or hijack a drone; the counter is better autonomy and navigation that doesn’t rely on GPS,” he said, pointing to Russia’s fiber-optic-tethered first-person view drones, which sidestep conventional jammers.

Bendett said that when AI-driven drone swarms arrive in force, cyber defenses alone won’t be enough—armies will also need physical shields such as wire netting, cage armor, decoys, and old-fashioned kinetic weapons.

Both Russia and Ukraine are already developing lasers for that role, he noted.

The United States is also experimenting with directed-energy weapons.

At a live-fire trial in late August, U.S. electromagnetic-warfare company Epirus proved that a single pulse from its Leonidas high-power microwave system can disable a swarm of 61 drones, showcasing a potential low-cost shield.

Who’s Ahead and Why It Matters

In consumer and commercial drones, as well as the parts ecosystem that supports them, China leads by a considerable margin.

Civil-military fusion lets Beijing field “good-enough” platforms quickly and back them with a growing suite of counter-drone weapons, Cao said, noting that much of the PLA’s newest gear remains untested in combat.

 “The parade ground is not a battlefield,” he said.

The United States still sets the pace in high-end autonomy, battlefield-proven intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance; strike drones; and software that integrates mixed fleets. Its stumbling block is turning rapid-fire innovation into industrial-scale output—precisely what initiatives such as Replicator, the Collaborative Combat Aircraft program, and Blue UAS aim to fix, Cao explained.

The United States pioneered military drones starting from the Vietnam War, setting benchmarks with Predator and Reaper, while China’s early advances leaned heavily on copying, according to Cao.

“But today’s race isn’t about cloning airframes,” he said. “It’s about standardization, modularity, and speed—treating autonomy like software that can be pushed quickly and bought by the thousand once it works.”

What the US Can Learn From Ukraine

Cao identified three lessons that he says frequently reappear.

First, numbers matter more than perfection: Open-architecture designs, fast logistics, and continual software updates consistently outperform exquisite weapons that arrive too late.

Second, signals have become a battlefield; jammers cut control links, driving drones to rely on onboard autonomy, which, in turn, demands smarter counters. Those counters must be cheap—microwave pulses, lasers, decoys, even wire cages—so a soldier does not fire a million-dollar missile at a hundred-dollar quadcopter, he said.

Third, supply chains are a strategic element; as long as Chinese parts dominate, sanctions turn into a cat-and-mouse game, according to Cao. The more innovative approach is to out-produce and adapt quickly with allies—and it must be done fast.

China’s strength is mass mobilization. America’s answer must be software, allied production, and speed, Cao said. If Washington can convert today’s demos—AI strike kits, swarm control, robotic wingmen—into repeat orders and fielded units, it can offset China’s factory edge and raise the cost of any fight for Beijing. If not, he warned, the skies and seas around Taiwan may be dominated by those who ship faster, rather than those who design better.

🔗 RELATED

The Commerce Department added 19 Chinese entities that have supported or supplied drones to terrorist organizations to an entity list on Oct. 8. Among them are Goodview Global, found to be part of an illicit network supplying the sanctioned Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps with drone parts. The U.S. government in March offered rewards of up to $15 million for information that would disrupt the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps funding network, which supports the Hamas terrorist group, the Hezbollah terrorist group, and other proxies. The bounty notice named four Chinese nationals allegedly providing the terrorists with arms.

Chinese drone experts have traveled to Russia to work on military drones at a state-owned weapons manufacturer already under Western sanctions, Reuters reported. The Chinese experts visited IEMZ Kupol’s weapon facilities more than six times since mid-2024, Reuters reported on Thursday, citing two European security officials and company documents reviewed by the outlet.

War-torn Ukraine has much to offer its allies and partners in the expanding drone arms race, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a speech before the U.N. General Assembly on Sept. 24. Noting recent developments in unmanned weapons systems and artificial intelligence, Zelenskyy told the assembly, “We are now living through the most destructive arms race in human history.” The Ukrainian president touted his country’s successes in employing drones to slow the march of the numerically superior Russian military.


Thursday, October 09, 2025

Cutting Back the Administrative State

Cutting Back the Administrative State

Ronald Dodson, The American Mind

 A once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to downsize the bureaucracy.

The Trump Administration’s approach to the government shutdown is aimed above all at recovering the unitary executive as envisioned by the framers of the Constitution. Article II’s vesting clause, the epitome of “short and sweet,” empowers the president to control the executive branch, as Alexander Hamilton explained in Federalist 70. Though the administrative state steadily seized the chief executive’s power throughout the 20th century, President Trump seems determined to wrest it back by reasserting his authority over the executive agencies under his purview.

In preparing for the shutdown, each agency created contingency plans for operating during a lapse in appropriations. These are required by law and managed under guidance from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to ensure that essential government functions continue even when Congress fails to pass funding.

Each shutdown plan outlines an agency’s core mission, identifies which functions are critical, and lists how many employees will keep working and how many will be furloughed. It also explains how the agency will communicate with staff, why certain programs are allowed to continue, and how operations will restart once funding is restored.

The key law for our purposes is the Antideficiency Act, which makes it illegal for federal employees to obligate or spend money not appropriated by Congress, or to continue working when funding has lapsed—that is, unless the work is tied to constitutional powers or has an explicit exception. For example, the Department of War keeps nearly all uniformed personnel on duty, the Treasury Department continues key financial activities like IRS collections, and agencies such as the EPA, Department of Education, and HUD typically place most of their employees on furlough.

All of this raises an important question: If someone isn’t essential, why should they be employed at all? If an agency is performing duties that are out of step with President Trump’s agenda, shouldn’t he have the power to release those employees and close those departments? This is, after all, what any successful chief executive would do.

After Satya Nadella became the CEO of Microsoft in 2014, he saw that the phone hardware division was a non-essential drain on resources and talent and had a less-than-meaningful market share. Within a year, he shut down the entire division, writing off over $7.6 billion in the process and firing 18,000 employees. He refocused efforts on Microsoft’s core mission, which has proven quite successful. What was controversial at the time has since been seen as a decisive act that has been critical to the company’s success.

Elon Musk did a much more drastic version of this at Twitter/X. Steve Jobs famously eliminated dozens of Apple product lines in 1997. Andy Jassy streamlined Amazon.

Chief executives are the embodiment of an organization’s focus and mission. So it is with the President of the United States. Without the power to hire and fire at will, without the power to close unprofitable product lines, what is his role other than being a national figurehead?

And that is the rub—the modern liberal wants a figurehead who serves the managerial state instead of a managerial apparatus which serves the executive as the Founders wanted.

The late Sam Francis argued that modern liberal democracy produced the very managerial regime that enslaves the executive. The power the regime wields is unaccountable. No one votes on the staffing at HUD, for example. Therefore, this regime is self-perpetuating and naturally becomes monolithic in ideals. This structure becomes an antibiotic-resistant infection that is impossible to treat or to remove.

Francis further argued the Constitution’s grant of “the executive Power” to the president had been hollowed out by civil service protections, administrative law, and vast agencies that followed their own agendas. Instead of being constrained by lawyers and career officials, he contended that decisive leadership from the president could break up the procedural paralysis of the modern state.

Drawing on thinkers like James Burnham and Vilfredo Pareto, Francis maintained that only a strong, centralized executive could reassert discipline and restore national purpose, much like a CEO who can swiftly reorganize a failing company. For Francis, restoring full presidential command was a constitutional and moral necessity to ensure that the people’s elected leader, not an entrenched bureaucracy, actually governs.

Enter the reduction in force (RIF), a formal mechanism under federal personnel law that allows agencies under the supervision of the OMB and the Office of Personnel Management to permanently eliminate positions when funding or organizational needs change.

During the early stages of a shutdown, employees are temporarily furloughed but remain on the payroll. If the funding lapse continues and it becomes clear that some programs won’t reopen or that budgets will not return to previous levels, agencies may need to reorganize to preserve essential functions. At that stage, OMB can authorize a formal reduction in force, making those job cuts permanent.

A reduction in force follows a strict legal process in which agencies identify positions to eliminate, rank employees by service and performance, and give at least a 60-day notice before separation. Affected employees may receive severance pay, have priority for reemployment, and can appeal their dismissal to the Merit Systems Protection Board.

OMB’s main role during a prolonged shutdown is to coordinate staffing reductions across federal agencies, ensure compliance with fiscal and personnel laws, and prevent inconsistent or overlapping cuts. If the shutdown appears likely to continue, OMB can shift from temporary furlough management to planning permanent workforce reductions, turning short-term pauses into long-term structural downsizing.

Russ Vought, the head of OMB and a Claremont Institute Lincoln Fellow, understands that the shutdown is an opportunity to permanently scale back the federal Leviathan. This is beneficial from a mission standpoint, from a budgetary standpoint, and from a moral standpoint, which is why Vought should be supported politically and procedurally. It is immoral to ask the American people to employ nonessential people. It is immoral to ask the American people to support an unconstitutional system.

Donald Trump once promised, “I will shatter the Deep State (this administrative monster), and restore government that is controlled by the People” (emphasis added). He needs every bit of support, every bit of help, to achieve this important goal. The administration must have the will to follow through with the president’s stated intentions. It must show the intestinal fortitude to restore executive power as it was envisioned by the framers of the Constitution.

There are further tools to explore at a later time. Impoundment and Schedule F should be revisited. But now this is a time of opportunity. A time of decision. A chance to give the country a leaner heart and a clearer head.

This is a once-in-a-generation chance to restore constitutional government in the executive branch and remove entrenched powers that have only served to drag the country to the Left.

Ronald Dodson is CEO and Portfolio Manager of Dallas North Capital Partners, a private fund management firm.