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Home Diplomacy

Patriotism or Profit? Trump’s Flag-Waving Hides a Corporate Handshake

Staff Reporter by Staff Reporter
May 27, 2025
in Diplomacy
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Breaking the Silence: A Journalist’s Defiance in Trump’s America
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Picture this: Donald Trump, all smiles, clasping hands with Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg—three times since taking office, including a glitzy inauguration ball hosted by the tech mogul himself, as reported by Reuters. It’s a snapshot of power, draped in the American flag, sold as “America First.” But behind the patriotic pomp lies a grim truth: policies that prop up corporate giants like Meta while the rest of us—workers, small business owners, everyday folks—are left squinting through the red, white, and blue haze. In the spirit of truth-tellers like Glenn Greenwald and Arundhati Roy—those sharp-witted scribes who’d rather kick power in the shins than salute it—I’m diving into this charade, coffee-stained notebook in hand, to expose how Trump’s flag-waving serves the elite, not the people. With a sardonic grin and a knack for tripping over the truth, let’s pull back the veil on this so-called patriotism.


The Flag as a Shield: Corporate Favors in Disguise

Trump’s back, and the patriotic rhetoric is thicker than a July 4th parade. He’s selling his policies as a defense of American greatness, especially in the AI race against China. “We’ll lead the world in artificial intelligence,” he declares, pushing to loosen rules on tech monopolies to “keep the U.S. ahead,” per the Wall Street Journal. It’s a slick move—framing corporate consolidation as a patriotic necessity to outpace Beijing. But who benefits? Not the coder in a garage startup, not the user worried about data privacy—just the tech titans like Meta, who’ve got Trump’s ear.

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“Patriotism’s a great mask—it hides the hand picking your pocket,” as I scribbled once, probably while dodging a campaign ad blitz.

Zuckerberg’s three White House visits since Trump’s return aren’t just social calls. The Meta CEO, who even hosted a ball for Trump’s inauguration (CNN), is a poster child for access capitalism. The Federal Trade Commission’s 2020 lawsuit against Meta, detailed by CNBC, lays it bare: monopolies kill innovation, ignore user complaints, and exploit personal data. Yet Trump’s policies wave away these concerns, cloaking corporate favors in stars and stripes. The real cost? A tech landscape where small players can’t compete, and users are pawns in a data grab.


Tariffs with a Wink: Who Gets the VIP Pass?

Trump’s trade policies are a masterclass in patriotic sleight of hand. His 145% tariff on Chinese imports, trumpeted as an “America First” win, was supposed to shield U.S. businesses. But—surprise!—key products like smartphones, computers, and semiconductor chips got a free pass. Why? Trump himself let it slip: “I speak to Tim Cook. I helped Tim Cook, recently, and that whole business,” he said, per Bloomberg. When the president brags about cozy chats with Apple’s CEO while carving out exemptions, it’s not hard to see the game. Access buys influence, and influence buys breaks.

“When the elite get a free pass, the rest of us get the bill,” as I muttered once, probably while overpaying for a gadget.

These exemptions don’t save American jobs—they save corporate bottom lines. Consumers face higher prices for non-exempt goods, and small businesses without White House connections get no relief. The New York Times notes that such selective tariffs tilt the market toward big players who can afford to lobby. This isn’t “America First”—it’s “Cronies First,” and the average worker’s left scraping by.


Tapping the American Myth: Fear as a Weapon

Why does this flag-waving work? Because it hits America’s sweet spot: exceptionalism. We’re fed the story that the U.S. is the world’s shining star, destined to outshine all comers. When Trump invokes the China bogeyman—AI, trade, you name it—he’s not just talking policy; he’s stoking fear of losing that edge. The Financial Times points out that anxieties about China’s tech rise cut deep, letting politicians skip hard questions. Why explain a policy when you can shout, “We’re beating China!” and watch the crowd roar?

“Fear’s the best con—it sells you what you don’t need,” as I jotted in a dive bar, probably after one too many policy rants on TV.

This fear lets Trump paint corporate giants as patriots defending America’s tech crown, not profit-chasing behemoths. His populist charm—part showman, part neighborly uncle—makes it seem like he’s fighting for the little guy. But the numbers tell a different story: corporate profits climb while wages flatline, per Forbes. The brilliance? Convincing voters that billionaire handouts somehow put “America First.”


The Real Victims: People, Not Profits

Let’s talk about who’s not at the inauguration ball. Monopolies choke small tech firms, leaving innovators without a shot. Data exploitation—Meta’s specialty, per the FTC—turns users into products, their privacy sold cheap. Selective tariffs hit consumers and small businesses hardest, raising costs for those who can’t afford a White House lunch. I’ve seen it from Detroit’s shuttered factories to Delhi’s crowded markets: when the powerful win, the people lose.

“Truth doesn’t wave a flag—it walks the picket line,” as I overheard at a labor rally, probably dodging a cop’s glare.

Real patriotism isn’t about shielding billionaires with stars and stripes; it’s about building a system that works for all. Trump’s policies, wrapped in patriotic fervor, serve the connected few. The Zuckerberg handshakes, the Cook exemptions—they’re not flukes. They’re the system working as intended, funneling wealth upward while the rest of us scramble.


A Call to See Clearly

So, what’s the fix? Next time you hear “America First,” look for the fine print. Who’s getting the exemption? Who’s got the president’s ear? If it’s just the tech moguls and corporate CEOs, it’s not your fight. Demand policies that lift everyone—workers, small businesses, consumers—not just the elite. Call out this flag-draped cronyism for what it is: access capitalism, plain and simple. America deserves better than patriotic lip service that enriches the rich.

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