Event JSON
{
"id": "7c554a6864cda6fff8b0420765d86129bb7e201d91396213c198a6f204aa726a",
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"tags": [
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"https://jacobin.com/2025/02/boris-kagarlitsky-trump-foreign-policy/"
],
[
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"Russian Political Prisoner Boris Kagarlitsky on Trump’s Uncertainty"
],
[
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"1738846800"
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"https://images.jacobinmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/06115248/GettyImages-2196996771-900x600.jpg"
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[
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"Kagarlitsky notes that Trump's presidency is unprecedented, with no clear vision for foreign policy. He criticizes the Left for not offering a coherent alternative and suggests that the uncertainty will affect international relations, leading to changes in the Middle East and elsewhere. The article concludes that the US is like a bull in a china shop, with its presence impossible to ignore."
]
],
"content": "nostr:nprofile1qyd8wumn8ghj7ctjw35kxmr9wvhxcctev4erxtnwv4mhxqpqcxwturs6tupm30z8m5rtdgtm7srx3yxq0cgyqvyc7vzwhrtehq8qntej22\nhttps://images.jacobinmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/06115248/GettyImages-2196996771-900x600.jpg\nA new US administration is always a global-level event. The world anticipated George W. Bush’s arrival at the White House with fears that came to be confirmed, while Barack Obama’s election brought hopes that didn’t pay off. But for perhaps the first time ever, the new boss of the Oval Office is seen with perplexity [\u0026hellip;]\nhttps://jacobin.com/2025/02/boris-kagarlitsky-trump-foreign-policy/",
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}