100 Days of Chaos, Cruelty, and Corruption: America Boards the Pequod

As we mark Cinco de Mayo this year, we also find ourselves confronting a grim milestone: 100 days into the Trump presidency. While the day is often a celebration of resistance and resilience—honoring the Mexican victory over French imperial forces at the Battle of Puebla—this year it feels eerily symbolic of a different kind of struggle: the battle for the soul and survival of American democracy.

Trump’s first 100 days have been a whirlwind of executive orders, policy reversals, and rhetoric that veers between incoherent and incendiary. These days have been defined by confusion—chaotic rollouts of travel bans, knee-jerk firings of key officials, and contradictory statements that leave allies and adversaries alike guessing. They have been marked by cruelty—a crackdown on immigrants and refugees, relentless attacks on the press, and policies designed to strip the most vulnerable of basic protections. And they have reeked of corruption—a White House staffed by billionaires and insiders whose conflicts of interest blur the line between public service and personal gain.


But perhaps most troubling is how we got here. Roughly one-third of eligible voters actively chose this path, while another large swath of the electorate—about one-third—surrendered without a fight by staying home. Their inaction was as consequential as the ballots cast. In a democracy, apathy can be as destructive as bad choices.


To understand where we are, Herman Melville’s Moby Dick offers a chilling metaphor. Picture the United States as the crew of the Pequod. We have boarded a ship led by a captain whose obsession and madness are plain to see. Some passengers—Trump’s most ardent supporters—believe Ahab’s quest is righteous and just. Others sense the danger but rationalize it, thinking they can ride out the storm or even benefit from it. And many, far too many, have simply closed their eyes, ignoring the obvious signs of disaster ahead.

Now, as the Pequod sails out of harbor, the die is cast. The ship is moving, and it’s no longer easy to disembark. The crew has tied its fate to a man driven by ego, grievance, and a thirst for domination—qualities that, like Ahab’s, can only lead to wreckage.

The question we face: will we, as a nation, find a way to avert the catastrophe looming on the horizon, or are we fated to watch helplessly as the ship goes down? Melville’s tale is a tragedy. But unlike the crew of the Pequod, we still have choices. We can resist, we can organize, and we can refuse to be complicit in the madness. The next 100 days—and the next four years—will test whether we have the will and wisdom to do so.
Truth Tellers
These are must watch videos. Americans need to listen. Democratic, Republican, or non-voter…I suggest pairing the ideas of this blog with the three videos below. Together, they provide you a chilling analysis of American foreign and economic policy from a geopolitical perspective, Jeffery Sachs, and an economic perspective, Richard Wolff. Both men are saying very similar things about America and the union of their decades of work, experience, and knowledge coming from geopolitical and economic perspectives help encode our current reality.
Combine these clear-eyed perspectives and you get a chilling understanding of why Americans are at each other’s throats in an all out culture war… we are being manipulated by a system built for the rich and run by the rich… and it is so easy for them when mainstream, bread and butter Americans are fighting each other over manufactured ideas that have nothing to do with the real and present danger of Now.
‘Europe needs an independent foreign policy’: Professor Jeffrey Sachs at European Parliament —
Jeffrey Sachs Destroys Donald Trump’s Trade Talk, Compares Him To A Cartoon Mouse | US News —
“Most People Have No Idea What’s Coming” | Richard Wolff’s Last WARNING —