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Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Amer­ica at 250, a crum­bling empire

 Shattered myths and soft power legacies, amidst a crum­bling empire.


Happy birth­day, USA!

Trump shines the light on him­self as the nation marks 250 years of inde­pend­ence.

YESTERDAY, Amer­ica turned 250 years old.

Yes­ter­day, Amer­ica was the world’s single greatest super­power – an apex pred­ator without equal.

Today, the rest of the world is scram­bling and jost­ling for power, amidst the ashes of the Amer­ican empire.

It’s easy to ima­gine any­one writ­ing the words above to be gloat­ing haught­ily, delight­ing in the demise of the Great Satan, full of hate for all things Amer­ican.

It is cer­tainly not the case for me.

In fact, in recent months, I’ve reflec­ted on how much of an Ameri­co­phile I am.

As that nation turns 250, it’s also import­ant to note the dif­fer­ence of the things we love about it, and the things we really don’t love about it at all.

I sup­pose the things we don’t love are, for the most part, not uniquely Amer­ican.

The evils of Amer­ican imper­i­al­ism are essen­tially the same evils of every empire that came before it.

The cor­rupt­ing nature of excess­ive greed in Amer­ica is essen­tially the same cor­rup­tion of excess­ive greed throughout his­tory.

What is unique is likely much more a func­tion of time and tech­no­logy than it is geo­graphy or cul­ture.

Amer­ica is a land of a great many con­tra­dic­tions.

It is the wealth­i­est coun­try in the world, yet wealth inequal­ity there some­times feels like it is at Third World levels.

It is the land of some of the world’s most advanced med­ical tech­no­logy and research, yet has some of the worst health­care in terms of afford­ab­il­ity and access among wealthy nations.

Since World War II, it has prob­ably been the largest donor of inter­na­tional aid to the Third World, and has prob­ably dropped more bombs on the Third World (or any­where) than any other coun­try.

Like all the major global empires before it – Brit­ish, Dutch, Span­ish, Por­tuguese, Mon­gol, Chinese, Roman – Amer­ican imper­ial influ­ence saw a phase of vast expan­sion, and is now star­ing down the bar­rel of steep decline.

Nowhere is this more obvi­ous than in the Middle East.

While no one can really keep track of what peace deal is or isn’t in effect from day to day any­more, the latest draft of a pre­deal deal seemed to offer Iran terms that were as shock­ingly good for it as they were shock­ingly bad for Amer­ica.

In essence, this sug­gests that the legendary, myth­ical Amer­ican war machine was brought to its knees by a nation that had been suf­foc­ated and choked by sanc­tions for nearly five dec­ades.

It is inter­est­ing too, to pon­der the source of that legendary myth of invin­cib­il­ity, as we watch it being shattered in real time.

I would argue that Amer­ican influ­ence has been as much about soft power as it has been about hard power.

My gen­er­a­tion, and I daresay the gen­er­a­tions above and below mine, grew up on a steady diet of Amer­ican movies, TV shows, music, fash­ion, and more.

How many movies have we watched where the Amer­ic­ans were the good guys, bat­tling evil Nazis or Sovi­ets.

It feels like one long, unbroken line between Top Gun ,and Top Gun2 – a movie which is a per­fect example of this myth and aura that has been built.

Even more light­hearted Amer­ican cul­ture has found its way into the hearts and minds of bil­lions world wide. (The only com­par­able coun­try in recent times that has achieved any­where near such dis­pro­por­tion­ate cul­tural influ­ence is South Korea.)

I remem­ber Ira­nian friends who would tell me that they learned Eng­lish watch­ing

Friends. I recently met a really lovely per­son whose mother named her Emma, after Rachel’s baby in that same TV show.

To con­tinue the list of con­tra­dic­tions, it is the land of Kim and Kanye, but also the land of Bob Dylan and Kurt Von­negut; the land of Talib Kweli, The Eagles, and one of my favour­ite authors, Lois Mcmas­ter Bujold.

An Amer­ican tweet I’ve never for­got­ten read something like:

The West Wing was our dream of what gov­ern­ment could be,

House of Cards is our night­mare of what it’s become.

Indeed, a lot of the heart and soul of what makes Amer­ica can be found in its lit­er­at­ure.

The Wire remains a clas­sic of all the little things that makes up the rot and insti­tu­tional poverty eat­ing into Amer­ican cit­ies.

But as seen in shows like

Andor, as long as there is oppres­sion, there is always res­ist­ance.

We see this in the latest vic­tor­ies in Demo­cratic primar­ies – not­ably three in con­gres­sional races in New York, where pro­gress­ive demo­cratic social­ists backed by New York City Mayor Zohran Mam­dani achieved thump­ing vic­tor­ies.

In a sim­ilar Col­or­ado primary, another pro­gress­ive, Melat Kiros, 29, beat estab­lish­ment, pro-israel Demo­crat Diana Degette, who had been in Con­gress longer than Kiros had been alive.

This is yet another sign of the global trend where polit­ical “extrem­ists” do bet­ter than “mod­er­ates” – espe­cially when those mod­er­ates are still very much under the thumb of Zion­ist lob­by­ists.

US Pres­id­ent Don­ald Trump is of course one of the best examples of this trend, which argu­ably star­ted as far back as the elec­tion of George W. Bush in 2000.

This trend argu­ably explains the defeats of not only Kamala Har­ris and Hil­lary Clin­ton, but the defeats of Mitt Rom­ney, John Mccain, and John Kerry as well.

Amer­ican for­eign influ­ence is dis­in­teg­rat­ing, with Iran being the latest debacle in the vein of Viet­nam and Afgh­anistan.

Per­haps more per­tin­ently, Amer­ica’s eco­nomy is strain­ing under the weight of ever increas­ing inequal­ity.

I see no reason to gloat, but whether we gloat or not, the end­ing of Amer­ican suprem­acy is all but guar­an­teed.

The motto of the state of Vir­ginia is Sic Sem­per Tyr­an­nis – thus always to tyr­ants. Sim­il­arly, all empires even­tu­ally fall.

The rest of the world needs to get smart about how we want to adapt to this new real­ity, and where we want to pos­i­tion ourselves in the unfold­ing new order.

And what will be next for Amer­ica?

When I watch shows like the recent Death by Light­ning ,and the older movie Lin­coln, which was set not far apart in time, I am reminded that there is a great amount of mater­ial and his­tory that Amer­ic­ans can draw from in their 250 year his­tory when it comes time to rebuild from their own ashes.

In time, that leg­acy of hon­our, prin­ciple, tenacity, dili­gence, and love of free­dom, will form the core of Amer­ican inde­pend­ence from the excesses of the pred­at­ory bil­lion­aire class, and the cor­rupt­ing influ­ence of unchecked power (and Zion­ism).

The Star Malaysia
BY NATHANIEL TAN Nath­aniel Tan wishes Amer­ic­ans a happy Inde­pend­ence Day, and every­one in Johor a safe and healthy cam­paign! He can be reached at nat@engage.my. The views expressed here are solely the writer’s own.




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