Tag Archives: late-capitalism

In Targeting Venezuela, the Trump Regime has Ripped the Mask Off American Imperialism

If there is one thing that the Trump regime has succeeded at, it is in ripping off the mask of American imperialism and smashing it into a million pieces on the ground. The era of lofty platitudes about the “rule of law” or “liberating” the people of (insert name of nation to be plundered) is over.

Trump’s racism allows no space for Venezuelans to have agency over their own lives. Indeed, as he talks about taking their oil, he demonizes those Venezuelans who seek a better life in the US. This is a regime that has murdered scores of civilians, many of them fishermen, in the Caribbean on the basis of a lie. Now it is using the term “terrorism” to justify any act of military violence. So, it is abundantly clear what this is all about to all but those still brainwashed by the cult of MAGA and American exceptionalism.

In this post and others, Trump is open about the American doctrine of ownership over all the resources in its “sphere of influence.” He uses the grammar of a mob boss, but none of it is a departure from official American foreign policy. There is no attempt to veil this. No flowery words about democracy or human rights. No bromides or vagaries to cloud intent. It is the naked theft of another sovereign country’s land and natural resources said in no uncertain terms.

Venezuela poses no threat to the United States. It does not produce fentanyl. It has not attacked the US or any of its strategic interests. Like Cuba, its crime is its rejection of US hegemony. Its sin is choosing a government which is at odds with the power and interests of the wealthy elite and American capital investment.

We cannot expect establishment Democrats to offer any meaningful opposition to the regime’s aggression. They have played handmaiden to American imperialism and more often champion its projects of expansion and aggression. And the corporate-owned US media will likely whitewash this as well.

This is an industry which has been complicit in every other war of conquest launched by every other administration throughout US history. Its role will be merely to sugarcoat the regime’s most belligerent talking points while stoking American nationalism. It relies on a public which has been conditioned to reject critical thinking. A public that is struggling to pay mounting debt, rent, food expenses, healthcare and costs of daily living under the worst predations of late capitalist exploitation.

The United States has been the primary engine of Israel’s genocide in Gaza. The colonial-settler ethnostate being its most important colonial asset. One which the US has invested billions of dollars in, year after year. But it is also one that gives it constant grief, especially in the last 2+ years. And with little payout. Venezuela offers a new opportunity for capital investment and enormous gain. And, without a doubt, the Trump regime is aggressively steering the entire hemisphere toward an all out war to obtain it for its wealthy shareholders.

Kenn Orfanos, December 2025

Late Capitalism, Beauty Standards and the War Against Aging

Perhaps you’ve noticed something. The faces of so many celebrities and influencers are beginning to look, well, not human. There has been a noticeable shift in aesthetics in Western society. One that supposedly defies the aging process, but that has ended up being unsettling and rather frightening.

Full disclosure, I have had micro-derm abrasion, botox and other procedures in the past and I love facials and other similar services. Without a doubt, I do care how I look. And there is absolutely nothing wrong with feeling good or enhancing your appearance. In fact, I have great respect for people who become aestheticians.

But this is about the beauty industry under late capitalism. It is an industry that preys upon the insecurities they foster. And their primary target is young girls and women. The saddest example I have seen of this were 15 and 16 year old girls buying “anti-aging” serums at Sephora.

In fact, the language that the beauty industry uses is telling in and of itself. “Age-defying” or “anti-wrinkle.” It is as if these things are medical conditions that must be treated before you die from them. Wars against time that must be fought by expensive procedures that literally alter the contours of your face.

And influencers peddle these ideas with astonishing speed and success. Watching them on the screens we carry around in our pockets, we are transfixed by both the spectacle and the soothing ASMR.

Hollywood also plays an enormous role, as an older female actor is constantly under scrutiny for her “youthfulness.” How many young women in the industry today have faces that appear less human because they fear being “aged out” of acting? Overly filled lips. Foreheads that do not move. Emaciated bodies. None of this is to shame or make fun of them. But to examine the pressure that people, especially young women, endure daily to conform to this specific aesthetic.

The significant medical risks involved in such procedures, from fillers to botox, should not be ignored either. I won’t go into detail about that here, since I would be out of my depth. But there is ample evidence of botched cases, infections and problematic health consequences one can find on a simple internet search.

The wellness movement under capitalism has adopted these tactics too, joining the beauty aesthetic to health and well being. If you are tired or your face is showing the signs of fatigue, it isn’t that soul-sucking, under-waged job you have to go to in order to live on this planet that is at fault. It is your face, literally. Essentially, it is shaming us for still being alive and showing the signs of that aliveness, while ignoring the real factors that cause a person stress.

There is also an underpinning of racialized aesthetics that should be addressed. Whiteness has always been elevated as the pinnacle of beauty in Western society. And it still resonates today. Actor and model Sydney Sweeney recently came under fire for her American Eagle jeans ad. The implication was that while she was selling the clothing product, she was also giving a racist dog whistle about her “superior” genes. And in a subsequent interview, she did not deny these accusations. The point being that there is a persistent standard of beauty in the West that glorifies white youthfulness while denigrating or disappearing those who do not conform to it.

The pursuit of youth and beauty is nothing new. We can see evidence of it throughout human history, and it has taken a wide variety of forms. But late capitalism has warped culture in a way never before seen. It cynically uses our deepest fears against us and promises us fulfillment through technology and spending lots of money. And that technology takes its toll on social interactions and cohesiveness in society.

How often have we looked at a face that does not seem real? That doesn’t emote in a way we can relate to? That doesn’t move? This kind of facial alteration severs the normal social dynamic we rely on for social cohesion, one that has evolved over millions of years.

Regardless of what the beauty industry says, aging is not something we must wage a war against. It is a fact of our existence. While there is absolutely nothing wrong with going to the spa, getting facials or even undergoing treatments or procedures that make us feel better, we should not feel pressured to do so or go into debt because of it. We should try to understand the forces at play that often make us feel unworthy or unattractive and the enormous amount of money being made from reinforcing those insecurities.

Aging isn’t always easy. But there are cultural attitudes that make it unnecessarily harder. In truth, we should be appreciated for how we look at any age. And we should not be mocked or rendered invisible if we do not conform to a largely unobtainable and incredibly exorbitant notion of beauty.

Even as we take care of our skin, we should not feel the need to hide its age by buying expensive concealers, deform it with risky fillers or numb it out of existence through paralytic drugs. Humans can be beautiful at any age, but most especially when they hold on to the very things that make them human to begin with.

Kenn Orfanos, November 2025

How Food Imperialism Hurts Us All

Ask yourself a few questions: why is it that the only foods in your local supermarket that make health claims are the ultra-processed ones? If your supermarket has a “health food section,” then what does that make the rest of the store? Why are those “health foods” so expensive? Why is even fast food becoming unaffordable? And why are more and more people in the West shoplifting food in supermarkets?

Capitalism commodified food in manner never before seen in human history. In fact, many of the disgraced American tobacco companies who peddled their carcinogenic products to the public through ubiquitous marketing campaigns, went to the Big Food industry and applied the same principles to peddling processed food products. Pushing food that is as addictive as any cigarette, and just as damaging. Companies pay lots of money for the marketing firms that mark chips or cereal boxes “heart healthy.” You won’t see a bunch of spinach, or bananas, or avocadoes, or lemons with such claims.

And America has exported its fast food model around the world. This form of imperialism has made human beings less healthy, more depressed and economically enslaved to an omnicidal system. Thousands of acres of rainforest and other vital ecosystems are razed to the ground each day around the world to make room for lucrative monocrops. Hundreds of thousands of tons of food is wasted every day. And the health of billions of people around the world is declining alongside the biosphere we all depend upon.

None of this is new. Colonialism brought cash crops to Africa, displacing traditional methods of food cultivation, land use and trade norms. It brought slash and burn methods to the lush rainforests of Southeast Asia. It also allowed white European settlers to wipe out the buffalo in North America, Russian imperialists to ruin ancient farming practices in Ukraine, and Israeli settlers to burn down thousand year old olive groves. To dominate the land is to dominate the people who live on it. To settle it and exploit it for every dime they could get. And, in many cases, to eradicate the Indigenous people who stood in their way.

Today, the nation of Nauru is a modern example of how food imperialism has almost destroyed an entire people. Denuded of its natural phosphates for the profit of Western multinational agri-corporations, the little South Pacific island of Nauru became temporarily wealthy. But it lost virtually all of that economic gain through corrupt leaders and the predatory practices of international capital investment firms.

With a fishing industry in tatters, farmland polluted and many old practices abandoned for convenience, Nauru became dependent upon cheap, processed, imported foods. Many foods considered inedible were exported there, from turkey tail to lamb flaps. The result: diabetes has skyrocketed as life expectancy has plummeted.

Blaming the people of Nauru or any other people for their collective health plight is like blaming a drowning person for being in a flood. They have been impacted by the dire effects of food imperialism in the exact same way every other working class person on the planet has been impacted. From highly toxic and addictive additives to aggressive marketing to the unavailability of affordable healthy options, they are victims of a system predicated on maximum profit for the few at the expense of the many. In other words, 99% of us human beings on earth.

Food imperialism impacts our local food markets as well. There is little to no choice what food is made available to us. And this is especially true for where we live. Poorer and more racialized communities are routinely neglected and now prices are exploding for everyone thanks to price gouging from the industry and financial speculators.

Even the highly processed, fast foods are becoming exorbitant. Indeed, the stress of buying modest groceries, even in traditionally “middle class” areas, has increased exponentially. Simply put, we are being priced out of living even a modestly decent life on this planet by wealthy and powerful companies and their lobbyists.

While it is incredibly easy to blame individuals for their food insecurity, obesity or health struggles, it is also incredibly lazy. To make these people the butt of a joke is very convenient. It is also punching down. Even shows like “My 600-Lb Life” end up shaming, otherizing and ostracizing people who are in deep crisis for ratings.

Employing judgmental superiority on those who are faced health issues or lack of access to affordable and good food, and weaponizing compassion in service to capitalist spectacle, has become a national pass time in the US. It has become a virtue in some circles. Just look at many of the recent posts or comments from various people about the Trump regime’s denial of assistance for SNAP benefits. Those individuals bought into the lie that lack of money for food is a personal failure, not a systemic one.

But no matter what lies capitalists and their sycophants tell, everyone deserves healthcare and food. And it is not enough to say that these things alone are human rights. Good, quality, affordable healthcare and food are universal human rights.

So, although it has been said many times before, the answer to what do you do the next time you see someone stealing food is: no you didn’t. Instead, fight against imperialism in all of its forms, and fight for the things we all deserve, not only to survive, but to live this life to the fullest.

Kenn Orfanos, November 2025

Trump’s Great Gatsby Redux is a Portent

To say we live in an age of absurdity would be an understatement. But absurdity often accompanies sadism. Case in point: Trump throwing a “Great Gatsby” themed gala on the eve of 40+ million Americans losing their access to food. This is “Let them eat cake” on steroids.

To be sure, Trump has likely never read a book through cover to cover, with the possible exception of Mein Kampf translated into English and his own “The Art of the Deal.” So, the irony of holding a Great Gatsby themed party while millions of his citizens struggle or languish in near intolerable conditions will always be lost on him.

Gatsby, the main character, was a conman who was obsessed with the aristocracy. His nouveau riche credentials didn’t get him the status he craved in their circles, but he threw lavish parties in a mansion he built to display his ostentatious wealth to anyone he could dazzle.

That Trump cannot see such glaring irony is staggering, but not surprising. While he is a narcissist, he is also a proud illiterate and affirmed ignoramus. His dearth of curiosity is legendary. He is only attracted to glitter, gold and gilded mirrors. And he delights in the praise of the vapid courtiers who surround him.

As the nation teeters on economic ruin, Trump has ensconced himself in the illusion of prestige. He lacks the capacity for insight and grows ever more delusional by the day. This does not make him any less dangerous. On the contrary, as he grows even more unhinged by the day he becomes more erratic and paranoid. This is the real reason for the golden ballroom and the renovated bunker that will be rebuilt below.

Narcissism is a poison to its bearer. It promises satisfaction, but only guarantees loneliness and longing. It creates hungry ghosts, never able to sate the empty void within. Trump has cultivated his own narcissism for a lifetime. But no one can avoid the humbling veil of mortality.

Gatsby’s ignominious fate was met while he was floating in his pool. Trump appears to be aimlessly floating for disaster as well. The only problem is that he is taking the entire nation with him.

Kenn Orfanos, November 2025