Barclay Mullins | Facebook - "People mocking the idea of the U.S. buying Greenland don’t know history.
1867 – Andrew Johnson: explored buying Greenland & Iceland (right after Alaska).
WWII – FDR: U.S. took over Greenland’s defense while Denmark was occupied.
1946 – Truman: offered $100M in gold to buy it.
Cold War – Eisenhower → Kennedy: nonstop negotiations for bases, radar, missiles.
Post–Cold War – Clinton/Bush/Obama: expanded Arctic security & missile defense.
2019 – Trump: said publicly what presidents discussed privately for 150+ years.
The U.S. didn’t “suddenly” want Greenland. It’s been defending it, negotiating it, and embedding there since the 1800s. Greenland = Arctic power, shipping lanes, missiles, minerals. Trump didn’t invent it. He said the quiet part out loud."
Josh Wolfe on X: "The Arctic Smokescreen " / X - "The most dangerous mistake about "Greenland is believing it is about Greenland. We are told this is a diplomatic spat, a real estate obsession, a chaotic throwback to 19th-century imperialism. The press treats it as spectacle. Commentators debate whether the administration is serious or simply trolling. Europeans express outrage at the affront to sovereignty. The whole affair is framed as noise: eccentric, embarrassing, ultimately inconsequential. This framing is comfortable. And almost surely wrong. The conventional reading of the Greenland saga is diplomatic incompetence in real time. The administration threatens force, gets rebuffed, escalates, gets rebuffed again, then retreats to the language of a purchase. Commentators shake their heads. Europeans express bewilderment. What looks like flailing is a classic Trump-style negotiation sequence. You open with an outrageous demand precisely so your real demand seems reasonable by comparison... The math is not absurd. The deal probably pays for itself within a generation. The minerals alone are worth multiples of the purchase price. Greenland's 57,000 residents become millionaires on paper. Denmark sheds a fiscal dependent and erases its debt. The United States secures the rare earth supply chain for the military of the 2030s. What is actually underway is a supply chain annexation dressed in the costume of territorial ambition. The target is not an island; it is two geological formations in Southern Greenland—Kvanefjeld and Tanbreez—that contain the heavy rare earth elements without which no advanced weapons system can be built... The average observer sees three separate news stories: a trade dispute with Europe, a strange fixation on Greenland, and some localized internet outages in the Baltic. These are not separate stories. They are three fronts of a single conflict.
The Resource Front: The administration is securing the mineral inputs for the military of the 2030s...
The Economic Front: The tariffs announced against Denmark, France, Germany, the UK, and four other European nations are not protectionist measures. They are precision-guided economic strikes against political dissenters. The £31 billion US-UK Tech Prosperity Deal—Microsoft's data centers, Google's R&D investment—has been suspended indefinitely. The message is unambiguous: alignment with American geopolitical objectives is the price of American capital.
The Kinetic Front: While diplomats argue over tariffs, Russian vessels drag anchors across Baltic telecommunications cables. The cargo ship Fitburg, seized by Finnish and Estonian authorities, is part of the "Shadow Fleet"—vessels with opaque ownership that operate below the threshold of open war. These are not accidents. They are shaping operations, mapping vulnerabilities, demonstrating the capacity to sever the digital infrastructure that binds the Western alliance together...
The European response to all of this has been to invoke international law, sovereignty, and the rules-based order. These invocations are emotionally satisfying. They are also strategically meaningless. International law functions only among actors who agree to be constrained by it. It assumes a mutual understanding of legitimacy, a shared framework of rules, and an enforcement mechanism capable of compelling compliance. None of these conditions hold. There is no global sovereign. There is no monopoly on force. Agreements endure only until interests diverge... European leaders can invoke norms. They cannot enforce them. And actors who openly reject the framework—whether by dragging anchors across undersea cables or by demanding territorial concessions under economic duress—gain advantage over those who internalize constraints the other side does not recognize."
Winston Marshall on X - "The Greenland issue has exposed two fundamental misconceptions widely held by Europeans elites
1. That the rules based world order ever existed. No. It was only ever a mirage, American might and money kept Europe afloat
2. It is America causing the “turbulence” and threatening world stability. No. America is in a Thucydides Trap. The threat to the world is China. U.S. are acting in response."
Meme - "DEMOCRATS: "Trump is Putin's puppet!"
ALSO DEMOCRATS: "How dare Trump defy Putin by wanting Greenland!""
Meme - EU: "GREENLAND Is For GREENLANDERS ONLY!"
Woman: "AND europe Is for Europeans only!'"
EU: "arRest HeR For HaTE SPeecH"
Exclusive | Greenlanders speak out against Danish rule: 'They stole our future’ - "Native Greenlander Amarok Petersen was 27 years old when she learned the gut-wrenching truth about why she couldn’t have children — and that Denmark was to blame. Suffering from severe uterine problems, a medical doctor discovered an IUD birth control device in her body that she didn’t know she had. Danish doctors had implanted it when she was just 13 as part of a population control program for thousands of native Greenlandic girls and women. “I will never have children,” Petersen told The Post, with tears of anger and sorrow welling in her eyes. “That choice was taken from me.” While the government of Denmark officially apologized last year for decades of forced sterilization of Indigenous women and girls, the horrific mistreatment has cast a long shadow on the island that has become the center of an international ownership fight. This week, the Danes hosted European troops for military exercises on Greenland, asserting they are protecting the island from outside powers — particularly the United States. But for many Inuit, Denmark itself has long been the real threat. “The Danes don’t see us as humans,” Petersen said at a local Inuit restaurant overlooking Nuuk’s famous fjords. “They think we’re too expensive, too small a population. But they take our land, our children, our lives and expect thanks.” Even in adulthood, medical decisions were made without Petersen’s consent. Plagued with problems after the IUD, she had repeated surgeries for unexplained pain. It wasn’t until years later that doctors informed her that her fallopian tubes had been removed in one of the operations in the early 2000s. Her family also suffered under Denmark’s so-called “Little Danes experiment,” in which Greenlandic children were forcibly sent to Denmark for adoption or institutional care — often permanently separated from their families, she said. The program, which ran from the 1950s through the 1970s, was part of Denmark’s broader effort to assimilate Greenlandic children, often without parental consent... “They think we are worth pennies,” she said. “They destroyed generations, and now they say, ‘Here — be quiet.’”... “People say ‘Greenland is for Greenlanders,’” Petersen said. “But that’s not reality. Denmark speaks for us. Denmark decides. They don’t let us speak.” That imbalance was visible recently in Washington, where the Danish foreign minister dominated nearly the entire press conference following talks with US officials on purchasing the island, while the Greenlandic foreign minister was largely sidelined... For many Greenlanders, US interest has been uncomfortable — but also clarifying. Not because they want annexation, but because it exposes how little autonomy Greenland actually has. “It was colonial,” Petersen said of Rasmussen’s assertions. “You could see it in his body language. He didn’t want her to speak. “If Denmark really believed Greenland belongs to Greenlanders,” Petersen said, “they would let us decide our own future.” That lack of control extends into everyday economic life. Karen Hammeken Jensen, a Nuussuaq resident who moved from South Greenland seeking better opportunities for her children, said basic living conditions remain poor... The imbalance is especially stark in fishing — Greenland’s most important industry. Elias Lunge, a fisherman who has worked the waters for 40 years, said Greenlanders do the labor while Denmark and large corporations capture the value... “They talk about our land,” she said. “They just never talk to us.”"
Invasion of Iceland - Wikipedia - "On 10 May 1940, during World War II, the United Kingdom landed Royal Navy and Royal Marines forces at Reykjavík and occupied Iceland without resistance. The operation, codenamed Operation Fork, was launched after Germany's rapid conquest of Denmark, to which Iceland was linked by a personal union, and amid British fears that Germany might establish bases on the strategically important island. Iceland had declared neutrality at the start of the war and rejected British requests for cooperation, but the UK proceeded with an unannounced landing to pre-empt any German move."
Damn fascism!
Meme - UK (Dr Strange): "The US are sending 14,000,605 troops to Greenland."
Iron Man: "How many are you sending ?"
UK (Dr Strange): "One."
ALX 🇺🇸 on X - "Greenland has a population of 56,000. America should send 100,000 “undocumented immigrants” to “culturally enrich” the island. They should then be given full rights as citizens. Finally, they can hold a referendum on leaving Denmark for America. There’s nothing wrong with this because replacing populations to change the voting demographics is a myth."
Trump is right: Greenland belongs in the United States - "It appears that some of the European reaction has been over-hasty: Marco Rubio, the secretary of state, is reported to have told members of Congress on Monday that Mr Trump’s goal was to purchase the island, not to invade it. But his interest in the territory is undeniable: “We need Greenland from the standpoint of national security”, Mr Trump told reporters at the weekend. And a dispassionate analysis of the question would conclude that the case for American possession is overwhelming. Greenland looms large in strategic thinking. Its remote Arctic location and small population belie its commanding position over Atlantic shipping routes, its vast mineral wealth, and, sadly, modern Denmark’s inability to defend it... In the Cold War, Greenland formed an essential part of the radar warning networks against Soviet missile attack, which was anticipated over shorter polar routes. Today, as China has preposterously declared itself a “near-Arctic state” and pursues an ambitious “polar silk road” across Russia’s underdeveloped Arctic ports, its inroads and investments could give it control absent American action... Can Denmark not defend Greenland on its own, or within Nato? Fat chance. Even the country’s recently augmented defence budget languishes at under $10bn (£7.4bn) per annum, compared to the $1trn (£744bn) US military budget Mr Trump has requested for 2026. The Danish armed forces have fewer personnel than New York City’s police department. Copenhagen’s investment in its island possession is impecunious, building on a long and unfortunate colonial legacy of neglect. When Trump returned to office in 2025, Denmark’s defensive force for Greenland consisted of one observation plane, four customs inspection vessels, and several dogsled teams. After Trump first mentioned acquiring Greenland, the Danes pledged an additional inspection vessel and more dogs. Left to Denmark, Greenland’s security is doubtful. With America in charge, it is assured... Perhaps the best solution, which I have previously advocated for, would be uniquely American – a Compact of Free Association, the diplomatic arrangement that governs US relations with the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, and Palau. Under its terms, those Pacific island nations retain independence and self-government while the US enjoys unlimited military access in exchange for free trade. Under a similar agreement, Greenland’s democracy and prosperity would be assured while US and global security concerns would be answered."
Jonatan Pallesen on X - "What Trump is addressing is the risk that if Greenland becomes independent (which many of our left-wing politicians want), then Greenland's politicians may make a deal with Russia or China. They have previously been in talks with China about building airports there. Their politicians make statements saying they want strengthened ties with China. An issue is that Greenland is a country that has way too small a population and economy for its global military importance. We can't have these Greenlandic politicians, who are similar to small-city mayors, have such enormous power over international security. And this is why Greenland cannot be independent. And why, if Greenland is on a path to independence, the USA should make moves to take over Greenland instead. I don't like Trump's talk about military action against Denmark obviously. But we Danes also have to realize our own failures in the matter. Our first failure was to put Greenland on a path for independence in 2009, with the Self-Government Act of 2009. This was naive and a mistake. As explained, Greenland cannot become independent. But many of our politicians are naive and woke. Our second failure was that of our Prime Minister who harshly rejected Trump when they first discussed Greenland in 2019. Instead, she should have been more open to dialogue. She flatly rejected him with "people are not bought and sold", and called his idea "absurd". But if there is a deal that Greenlanders are happy with, "selling" them is not the correct frame. It could be a mutually beneficial deal for all involved. Also especially when you yourself have made mistakes like the first failure, you should be more open to dialogue in general. And you should not publicly call the ideas of our most important ally "absurd". Our third failure is happening right now. What we should do is offer a price for Greenland. There are serious estimates putting the value in the range of $400 billion to $1 trillion. So an offer in that range. If we did this, then the USA could have their needs for military security fulfilled for a fair market price. This would make talk about the idea of a military conquest look (even more) unacceptable. And a sale could benefit all. It could bring wealth and opportunity to the people of Greenland, and greater military security to the U.S. and the world."
There’s method to Trump’s Greenland madness - "For decades, Denmark has quietly underwritten Greenland’s welfare, autonomy, security and gradual path towards greater self-government – while living with a basic truth: Greenlanders may have an affinity for Denmark, but they are also a distinct people with their own culture, shaped by distance, history and Arctic reality. Managing those contradictions has required a tactful Copenhagen balancing act. Then Trump arrived and dispensed with balance entirely, announcing – without nuance, without tact – that Greenland should be acquired... After the White House meeting with vice-president JD Vance and secretary of state Marco Rubio, a video of Danish foreign minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen and Greenland’s foreign minister Vivian Motzfeldt lighting up cigarettes outside the White House went viral... Surreal, yes. But it also captured the current situation: lots of Trumpian theatre, plenty of pressure, and (so far) no change in the fact that matters most. Greenland remains Greenland, and annexation-by-headline is still just that. Suddenly Greenland looks enviably placed – especially at the negotiating table. If Denmark and the United States start competing to stay in Greenlanders’ good graces, it is Greenlanders who hold the trump card: any major change in status would, in the end, be hard to imagine without a referendum. For decades, Greenland has been subsidised by Denmark and sheltered by Nato’s security umbrella. Now more money is likely to flow in – both from Copenhagen, keen to demonstrate commitment, and from Washington, eager to secure access and influence. Expect investment not only in runways and ports, but in minerals, research, hearts and minds. Few places on Earth sit at that sweet spot where cash, protection and strategic attention converge. And unlike most courted territories, Greenland can plausibly play suitors off against each other. Not bad for an island everyone once forgot. Even bribes can be useful if you are the one receiving them. Trump’s intervention, chaotic as it has been, has forced everyone to acknowledge, at record pace, what had long been politely ignored: Greenland matters. Not symbolically, but materially. This is no longer only a place at the edge of a map. There is also the small matter of soldiers. Not just American ones, but Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, Canadian and other Nato personnel now rotating through the Arctic. This matters because it exposes the most implausible element of Trump’s rhetoric: the idea that the US would ever forcibly “take” Greenland. It is difficult to imagine American troops attacking fellow Nato soldiers – some of whom would almost certainly be sharing mess halls, exercises, and perhaps even jokes about dog sleds. The whole scenario collapses under its own absurdity. Which raises an interesting question: did Trump ever seriously plan to take Greenland at all? Or was this, as so many Trump episodes are, a deliberate act of disruption, throwing something outrageous into the room to see whether it meets resistance? It is increasingly clear that Trump tends to learn where the boundary is by stepping over it first... Seen through that lens, the episode looks less like imperial ambition and more like Trumpian performance art: shake the snow globe, make allies run, force everyone to reassess priorities, flush out taboos – and put money on the table. Congress, in turn, has played its institutional role, pushing back just hard enough to reassert constitutional limits without fully defusing the spectacle."
Meme - GuilloTeen Vogue @leftistbeard: "They are rehabilitating one of history's worst monsters because he has decorum"
nicole @BadBunnyTwitch: "liberals hate bad manners more than war crimes"
John A. Daly @JohnDalyBooks: "I'm friendly with a number of people at The Bulwark, but I must say that this fixation on trashing George W. Bush (a fundamentally decent man who chose to retire from politics) for not fulfilling some fantasy of rising from the political ashes to take on Trump, is gross to me."
I'm old enough to remember when left wingers claimed George W Bush was a Nazi
Eric Levitz on X - "Since Trump took office, Americans' real wages and 401ks have risen, inflation has fallen, productivity has surged -- and voters' ratings of the economy have fallen off a cliff. Today, consumer sentiment is lower than it was during the Great Recession. What explains the public's economic discontent? In a good post on the broader "vibecession," @mtkonczal offered one explanation: The prices of essentials -- groceries, transportation, healthcare, and housing -- have risen faster than overall inflation. Maybe flat-screen TVs have been getting more affordable. But the things people truly *need* haven't. This has been true for much of the past four years. But since Trump's inauguration, wages have been rising faster than most essentials."
NYT Accidentally Admits There's A Judicial Coup Against Trump - "The admission comes in the piece’s opening paragraphs, in which Toobin discusses the American Constitution Society and its new president, Phil Brest. The ACS has often been described as the less successful and left-wing alternative to the conservative Federalist Society, which has become an influential force in getting originalists appointed to the Supreme Court and other federal judgeships. Toobin notes how Brest — who worked in the Biden White House’s counsel office — “helped the president nominate and win confirmation of 235 federal judges, which is more than Mr. Trump’s total in his first term.” In the very next sentence, however, the CNN legal analyst let it slip that these judicial appointments have become the left’s primary tool in grinding Trump and his voters’ agenda to a halt. “Those [Biden] judges — and others appointed by Democratic presidents — have proved that the most effective resistance to Mr. Trump has come not from Democratic politicians but rather from federal judges,” wrote Toobin, who subsequently listed off a series of overreaching orders issued by “these judges, many of them Biden appointees,” against the 47th president... In response to leftist-backed lawsuits, these judges have spent the past year issuing overreaching injunctions and temporary restraining orders blocking every aspect of the president’s agenda — with some even going as far as attempting to unilaterally halt enactment of policies passed by Congress... The Times and Toobin may think the latter’s article is shining a light on a new and exciting counter to the successful originalist movement. In reality, it’s just further affirmation of the left’s willingness to wreck America’s constitutional system in their quest for unfettered power."
Apple Lamps on X - "Never forget that Democrats abused their power to convict a former president on 34 felonies for how his lawyer recorded payments & invoices to/from his lawyer (same lawyer) while he was sitting president. The prosecution never claimed that Trump physically recorded the payments himself. Instead, he was convicted under the legal principle of "causing" a false entry to be made. The statute of limitations for the misdemeanor charge of falsifying business records (two years in New York) had long expired. The only way the DA could bring the charges in 2023 was by "stepping them up" to felonies, effectively bringing a dead, time-barred misdemeanor back to life The DA never actually had to formally charge Trump with the underlying campaign finance crime required to elevate the charges to felonies. The judge ruled that the jury did not even have to unanimously agree on which specific underlying crime Trump was trying to commit, just that they generally agree that he committed a crime. How can someone properly defend themselves against a crime they were never charged with? Democrats used an activist District Attorney and Judge to stretch and abuse the law to target a political figure, using a legal theory that had never been tested before. Democrats destroyed our justice system. They proved to everyone that they can jail you for any reason they want."
Glenn Greenwald on X - "I have a question.✋ How is it possible that Trump "dashed" Putin's hopes given that -- as the FBI, CIA, the Dem Party, the NeverTrump faction and US corporate media insisted -- Putin holds personal, sexual and financial blackmail over Trump that forces Trump to obey Putin?"
Feelings, Nothing More Than Feelings - "I’ve been thinking about the intractability of American politics and whether the rift can ever truly be healed. I began to wonder if I wasn’t seeing something because I was looking at it from the wrong perspective. For years, I assumed the division was primarily ideological—policy disputes about taxes, regulation, foreign policy, culture. That would at least be manageable, but the more I’ve watched the past decade unfold, the more I’ve come to suspect that what divides us is not policy at all—it is all about “feeling.” More specifically, it is feeling about Donald Trump. Strip away the daily outrage cycles and the social-media hysteria, and you see something striking: opposition to Trump has rarely been framed in terms of executive and legislative substance. It is not primarily about tariffs versus free trade, border enforcement levels, NATO funding formulas, or regulatory rollbacks. It is about loathing. It is aesthetic revulsion elevated to moral emergency. The man must be opposed, not because of policy detail, but because he exists and the hollow, performative screams of authoritarianism, dictator, Nazi, and racist, absent of actual proof, prove once politics becomes emotional absolutism, reconciliation becomes unlikely and nearly impossible... The Never Trump contingent—Democrats who for years masqueraded as Republicans—have fared no better. They appear like actors who missed their cue in a play that has already closed. Picking at the bones of a long-dead grift, they surface periodically to assure us that they still matter, that if only a Jeb Bush, a John Kasich, a Paul Ryan were in charge, normalcy would return. What they really want is a restoration of the polite managerial class—a GOPe technocracy that governs by consensus dinners and donor conference calls. Lovable losers. If such a figure were president, one assumes many of today’s fiercest critics would rediscover their appreciation for “norms.” Their outrage would subside into professional disagreement, and the temperature would drop not because policy changed, but because the “vibes” did. Which brings me to a different question: What if the paradigm has already shifted? What if America—quietly, imperfectly—has accepted that MAGA is not a passing tantrum but a realignment? What if a substantial portion of the country has decided that “America First” is not isolationism but self-respect? What if the country has already begun a turn toward something more assertive, more self-conscious about sovereignty, more comfortable with strength—yes, even more consciously masculine in tone?... The reactions to America winning gold medals at the recently completed MilanCortina Olympics, especially the patriotism of the hockey team winning the gold on the 46th anniversary of the Miracle on Ice, outed the America haters and illustrated that when your echo chamber becomes indistinguishable from parody, something has shifted. The economy, too, tells a story. Despite relentless messaging that any recovery is insufficient, fragile, or falsely attributed, the underlying indicators have stabilized. The narrative insists that nothing counts unless perfection is instantaneous. “Why hasn’t he fixed everything yet?” becomes the refrain even though five years of market and supply chain disruption takes time to heal. The same with illegal immigration. Emotional imagery dominates headlines and enforcement is framed as cruelty—but deportations continue. Border crossings decline. Policy, imperfect and incremental, proceeds beneath the noise. This suggests something uncomfortable for the opposition: governance is happening—and if governance continues while hysteria escalates, the hysteria begins to look performative. Voters may disagree with tone, style, or rhetoric—but they can see results. Over time, results dull outrage."