Perhaps the greatest paradox of our times is the illusion of distance. We can now see and hear what is happening on the other side of the planet in mere seconds. But even though this has dispelled the myth of a small world, the screens we all carry around in pockets and purses give us the veneer of separation.
Gaza is the best example of this. The two year long genocide has been the first livestreamed one in history. We have witnessed both the horror and suffering of the Palestinians every single day, but also the depravity and sadism of the perpetrators. In addition to this, there is the staggering normalization and mendacity from Western media and political leaders.
What Gaza has showed us is that our leaders, almost all of them, are capable of committing or justifying the most unimaginable crimes. And if they are capable of that, they can also turn that toward us.
This is demonstrable in the actions and threats of the Trump regime in the United States. Like the Biden administration, it has supported, funded and defended Israel as it commits an obvious genocide. And now, the fascist regime is turning its sights unto its domestic population.
The recent meeting of generals and other military brass by Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth and Donald Trump, was a loyalty test. The goal was to get the military to align with the fascist policies of the regime. Whether or not it was successful is debatable. The duo, who looked more like used car salesmen than statesmen, managed to insult almost half of them with racist comments and body shaming. Certainly, many of the commanders looked visibly disgusted or, at the very least, disturbed by the spectacle.
But the regime is seeking to quell the rising tide of unrest rising within the US. With an economy that is strangling more and more people, a distaste for the repression of civil liberties, and increasing disgust of ICE thuggery, Trump and his cultish team see their only option as being the unmerciful hammer of state violence or in its threat. And it has several progressive or liberal cities in mind for carrying out its plans. In deed, Trump’s next war will be on the so-called “enemy from within.”
To many white Americans, the idea that they could suffer a similar fate as the Palestinians is absurd. They have been inured by the racist illusion of privilege for so long that they cannot fathom their own government trapping them and relentlessly attacking them until they either die or submit. But this toxic mythology may lead to complacency in the face of an increasingly belligerent fascist regime.
Even today, there are political operatives and media figures openly talking about locking up people with autism or who are transgender, gunning down unarmed protestors in the street, or euthanizing the unhoused. This type of language is insidious. It has the effect of normalizing future atrocities by making such ideas mainstream or socially acceptable. And when they are repeated over and over again, they numb our response.
To be sure, the prospect for becoming Gaza is likely many years down the line for most white Americans. But any cursory glance at American history should dispel the erroneous notion that “it can’t happen here.” In fact, the US has used far worse tactics of destruction on the Global South for well over a century. We know what it is capable of. And domestically, the US has ruthlessly crushed people of colour many times over. One glaring example was the bombing of a city block by police in Philadelphia in 1985.
As the Trump regime ramps up its attacks on dissent, labeling anyone who disagrees with its policies as terrorists, it would be unwise to underestimate how far it will go to hold on to power. Fascist regimes never give up power willingly. The idea of voting them out is ahistorical and dangerous. They are either brought down by coups, military actions or civil war, or they lumber on for decades, rotting a society until the last fascist in power dies.
Since the beginning, Trump and his minions have told us what they want to do. They may couch it in jokes that are in bad taste or in outright proclamations. But fascists aren’t very good at nuance or in hiding their true intentions. The regime seizes on any opportunity it can to advance its objectives. The death of a racist podcaster. A mass shooting. Its own ‘Reichstag fire’ is whatever incident it can weaponize.
The last two years have shown us how far Western leaders can go. It may seem like half a world away, but we live in a very different world now. That perceived distance from us is an illusion. And one of the most difficult things to come to grips with is that our leaders either do not care or worse, they have a taste for doing things we once thought unthinkable. Thus, it would be supremely unwise to ignore the glaring fact that we can all suffer a similar fate by a political and media class that see most of us as either expendable, a useful scapegoat, or as an impediment their mission. In essence, we are all Gaza now.
Kenn Orfanos, October 2025
