Somewhere between the ghost of the American Century and the panic-sweat of a declining empire, the United States forgot how to breathe.
We were promised global supremacy through at least 2041. Hell, maybe 2141, if the algorithms stayed in line and the nukes kept to their silos. We had the flag, the swagger, and the GDP to back it up. But now? The scoreboard’s glitching, the crowd’s booing, and America—the big swinging sheriff of the “free world”—is curled up in the fetal position, sobbing into a golden age that no longer returns our calls.
We didn’t get conquered. We didn’t go broke. We just… slipped. Slowly. Tragically. Pathetically. Like a bloated Elvis sweating through a Vegas set in ’77, we kept performing the same old act, oblivious to the fact that the world had already left the building.
This is not a geopolitical transition. It’s a national nervous breakdown, complete with paranoia, hallucinations, rage, and wild gestures at imaginary enemies. We didn’t fall. We flailed. We’re still flailing.
You see it in the headlines. One day it’s tariffs on Chinese semiconductors. The next day it’s banning foreign students from Harvard—as if denying elite visas to PhDs in quantum physics is somehow patriotic. It’s not nationalism. It’s not strategy. It’s a tantrum. A toddler’s shriek in a global courtroom that no longer revolves around us.
We’re not playing chess with the world anymore. We’re eating the pieces and blaming China for the splinters.
Let’s talk about China. The big red specter. The dragon in the room. For decades we saw them as either a rice-paddy Cold War pawn or a discount factory for rubber dog toys and iPhone guts. They were useful. Distant. Slightly amusing.
We never saw them coming. Not because they were hiding—but because we were high on our own supply.
While we congratulated ourselves on being the land of innovation, China was actually innovating. Closing the tech gap. Building infrastructure while we debated whether bridges were “woke.” They poured trillions into AI, biotech, clean energy, space tech. And what did we do? We built more strip malls. We argued about gas stoves.
Now the dragon is awake. Not breathing fire. Just quietly outperforming, outbuilding, and outlasting us. And we hate it—not because they’re evil, but because they succeeded on their own terms.
Enter the psychosis.
We react to this shift not with reflection, not with adaptation, but with delirium. We slap tariffs on Chinese goods, watch the market tank, and walk it back two days later like it never happened. We ditch the Paris Climate Accord, tell the world to shove its emissions standards, then act surprised when Europe keeps moving forward without us.
We are that guy at the party. The one who used to be cool. Who now drinks too much, screams at the DJ, and yells “You’re nothing without me!” while everyone else nods politely and changes the subject.
The world is no longer unipolar. That ship has sailed. We are in the age of multipolarity—where no single nation dominates, where power is shared, messy, dynamic. That’s not failure. That’s balance. That’s evolution. But for America, it feels like exile.
Because we’ve forgotten how to be anything but number one.
That’s the heart of the madness. The insecurity. The agony. The existential dread of not being the sun around which all planets orbit.
And so we lash out. We ban apps. We blacklist scientists. We accuse everyone of espionage while leaking our own secrets into the algorithmic ether. We blame Mexico, we blame China, we blame TikTok, we blame immigrants, we blame climate activists, we blame the French. Anyone but ourselves.
What we refuse to admit is that power is not a birthright. It’s earned. Maintained. Re-earned. But we were too busy selling debt to each other and watching Netflix reboots to notice that our global edge had dulled.
This is why we see dysfunction parading as policy. Trade wars that evaporate. Alliances we walk away from. A president who thinks economic diplomacy is a WWE promo. Foreign policy by meme. Domestic policy by meltdown.
Even the supposed “solutions” are theater. America doesn’t want to fix anything—it wants to feel powerful again, by any means necessary. And if that means torching its own institutions, canceling intellectual exchange, or withdrawing from every global agreement like a petulant teenager flipping the board game—so be it.
And the rest of the world? They’re watching. Not in awe. In confusion. In concern. In quiet detachment.
Because nobody’s following America anymore. They’re building their own roads, making their own deals, striking their own balances. The dream of postwar American leadership has turned into an overlong Twitter thread about “taking our country back”—from whom? From reality?
Meanwhile, in East Asia, the trains run on time. The factories hum. The satellites launch. Even Africa, long treated like an afterthought by the West, is poised for a wave of development we’re too distracted to see. India’s growing at 6–7% annually. ASEAN is on fire. The world’s moving fast—and America’s still checking its rotary dial.
There’s a term for this kind of breakdown. In psychology, it’s called a narcissistic injury—when a once-powerful ego encounters a truth it cannot bear. The result? Rage. Denial. Withdrawal. Projection. Sound familiar?
We thought the world couldn’t function without us. Turns out, it can. Maybe even better.
And here’s the kicker: this global shift isn’t a tragedy. It’s not the apocalypse. It’s just the end of a chapter. Europe ruled for 250 years. Before that, Asia ran the show for millennia. What we’re seeing is not collapse. It’s return.
So what now?
We could adapt. We could collaborate. We could lean into innovation, humility, resilience. We could acknowledge the world as it is, not as it was. We could show up as partners, not kings.
But first, we’d have to detox from American exceptionalism. We’d have to give up the fantasy of control. We’d have to let go of the myth that everyone else is cheating when they’re simply playing better.
I’m not optimistic. Not yet. Because the delusion is still strong. And the Empire is still high on its own mythology.
But maybe, just maybe, if we can endure the shakes, the tremors, the ego death, and the long dark night of the American soul… something new might emerge on the other side.
Something less arrogant. Less afraid. Less obsessed with domination.
Until then, we remain the world’s richest lunatic—howling into the abyss, clutching an old map where we’re still the center, wondering why no one calls us back.
_ _ _ _ _
Until we meet again, let your conscience be your guide.
Great read, Bret. Spot on. Not only do we have a POTUS that is the very embodiment of the decline, but who's floored the accelerator .
You’re right, of course… and I can’t blame them for not returning our calls; it is a weird place to be these days! I keep hoping saner minds will prevail but so far?? Thanks for making me laugh…. 👍🏻you are a treasure! 💕