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The American system versus British imperial globalism * WorldNetDaily * by Hanne Nabintu Herland

Read Hanne’s The Herland Report.

The battle for global influence is fundamentally a clash between the American traditional system focused on national sovereignty, and the globalist British imperial system that enriches the elites through control over international finance, open borders and media manipulation.

Veteran community organizer, Susan Kokinda of Promethean Action explains in a recent podcast with Patrick Bet David how the globalist imperial system has come about and how different it is from the classical American system that Alexander Hamilton outlined. These two world orders are now colliding in the most brazen way.

Donald Trump’s administration represents a historic effort to revive the American system based on national interests, traditional values, secure borders, citizens’ rights and local industrial power. The strategy is justice and peace, not endless wars.

Owned by the globalists, the media obscure these important systemic conflicts as it is not in the interest of the elites to keep the people informed, but rather actively to keep the public in the dark. The demonization of President Trump’s success in reindustrializing America reflects the globalists’ desire to halt the national-sovereignty approach. In my book, “Trump: The Battle for America” 2025 Edition, I point out that the corporate globalist elite that have benefited from the outsourcing of jobs and wealth to foreign nations follow the transnational business model that depends on borderless, weak nation states that are easily overrun by global corporations. In the process, the Western working class is abandoned and citizens’ rights eroded.

In the shadows, the British imperial system continued its influence post-colonialism, controlling international naval trade, the insurance market and banking, using its intelligence operations to actively destabilize rival sovereign nations, Kokinda points out. She says that fostering political radicalism has been a much-used British tool, such as creating the Muslim Brotherhood in the 1920s as a method to destabilize regions and prevent sovereign development. More recent examples are the fall of Iraq, Libya and Syria, all nations that threatened British control over the natural resources in the Middle East.

Americans have been used as the “useful idiot” in this game, with the U.S. military the enforcer of British interests the world over. The pinnacle was the globalist Biden administration. This is the system President Trump seeks to end. And he has many friends. In Iran, the British have been much more hated than Americans. In the Middle East, outside the media it is hard to find anyone who does not cheer for Trump.

While the media focus on Russia and China, Britain is the orchestrating a hidden hand. Everyone, including the United States, are to be kept as subordinates to the rule of the Western billionaire oligarchs. Kokinda also highlights the three assassination attempts on Donald Trump, linking them to efforts to suppress the American system.

In truth, both Russia and China defend national sovereignty and traditional values, while opposing Western globalist desire to dominate their countries. China wants the same as President Trump: International trade, not globalist imperialism. China focuses on national sovereignty, national interests and a government-led redistribution policy that benefits the well-being of its citizens. This reflects a vastly different nationalist attitude than what is found in the Western globalist, open border, free drugs, hedonist and nihilist society. China is much more of a natural ally to the Trump administration than an enemy.

The Gulf States’ move away from imperial influence also represents a shift, as seen in the Abraham Accords initiative. The unhinged demonization of Israel in the globalist-owned media also reflect the raging anger over the rising independence of the multicultural Israeli state together with its Muslim allies in the Middle East. What globalists hate the most is strong, sovereign nation states that are not easily controlled.

Kokinda explains that Trump’s foreign policy challenges globalist institutions by demanding sovereignty, fair trade and mutual benefits. His administration’s stance on Iran exemplifies physical economic leverage: The Strait of Hormuz oil blockade threatens Iran’s economic survival more than diplomacy or military action do.

The Western media war, the demonization of conservatives and manipulation of political movements also reflects the “divide and conquer” strategy. Former conservatives like Tucker Carlson, Nick Fuentes and Candace Owens – who married into the British elite with her father-in-law in the House of Lords – arguably serve the interests of British intelligence. “Divide and conquer” has been the British mantra for centuries. By sowing hatred against the MAGA movement, the hope is to reinstate globalist control and end the historic American system. After all, the U.S. used to be among the British colonies; the desire is to return it to subordination. Consequently, sovereign-nation developments threaten imperial globalism at its very core.

Watch Elizabeth Farah’s recent interview with Susan Kokinda.


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