Trump’s legal theatrics, teamed with Musk’s free speech circus, have engineered a ludicrous blueprint for political domination. It’s a cocktail that serves as a rallying cry for every European opportunist desperate to milk American clout for their own gain, while democracy is left to pick up the pieces of their charade.
Such developments echo Italian philosopher Antonio Gramsci’s notion of “cultural hegemony,” where the dominant ideology isn’t imposed by force but woven into society’s fabric through influential institutions like the media and education.

Trump’s actions embody this theory: Since taking office, he has targeted media outlets, dismantled the Department of Education, arrogated self-appointed authority within elite cultural circles, killed diversity, equity and inclusion programs, ruthlessly curtailed abortion rights and imposed draconian restrictions on military eligibility.
Of course, this is only a small part of the underlying plan, now in full swing and epitomized by his “Liberation Day” tariff storm, to subjugate other nations. Despite Musk mingling at the Saturday shindig of Italy’s far-right League party to make a case against tariffs, his boss isn’t about to cave in — and rightly so. Those tariffs are a mic drop, a declaration that Trump is hell-bent on steamrolling cultural norms and silencing dissent, even if it hurls the world into another Great Depression.
Yet, all is not bleak.
As it stands, there are two emerging developments that indicate some resistance: The first is the growing skepticism among European nations, which suggests Trump’s theatrics are gradually losing their allure. Trade negotiations reveal that Europe is pursuing alternative partnerships to reduce its reliance on the U.S., implying that cooperation with the MAGA realm is not as tenable as some initially thought.