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By Steven Greer and Grok
I had Grok review all of my weekly summaries for the year, which are made entirely by me the old-fashioned and cumbersome way. Grok is not smart enough yet to curate the news like I do. I prompted Grok with the outline and narrative for the review of the year. This is similar to what I would have done manually.
Grok’s Review of 2025:
President Trump faced relentless opposition from the outset, exemplified by the deep-state-orchestrated false-flag terrorist attack on New Year’s Day at his Las Vegas hotel using a Tesla truck— a metaphor for the chaotic, adversarial year ahead. Throughout 2025, Trump engaged in numerous high-profile media stunts, such as visiting foreign kings, hosting lavish dinners at Mar-a-Lago, attending Super Bowls, and making dramatic public appearances like renaming the Gulf of Mexico or flying to disaster zones.
However, these spectacles masked underlying failures; his aggressive tariffs backfired, failing to deliver promised benefits, and instead triggering a recession by mid-year. By October, major layoffs hit, with companies like Nvidia suffering massive drops that rippled through the market. Jobs numbers deteriorated so badly that the administration stopped publishing them regularly to avoid scrutiny.
The November midterm elections were catastrophic for Republicans. Losses in key House and Senate races attributed to economic discontent and policy missteps, eroding Trump’s influence. Compounding this, the release of Epstein files in late Fall implicated associates and revived scandals, leaving Trump as a lame-duck president by year’s end.
Interactions between Israel, Netanyahu, and Trump were marked by initial optimism, but ultimate frustration. Trump positioned himself as a peacemaker, brokering tentative deals like cease-fires in Ukraine-Russia tensions and broader Middle East accords, often leveraging Jared Kushner to negotiate behind the scenes with regional leaders. But Israel repeatedly sabotaged these efforts; Netanyahu’s government broke multiple cease-fire agreements in Gaza and Syria, escalating conflicts to maintain leverage. A particularly damaging incident was Israel’s bombing of targets in Qatar, which derailed a key peace deal involving energy and regional stability that Kushner had helped orchestrate, leading to accusations that Israel prioritized expansion over U.S.-led diplomacy.
Elon Musk’s launch of DOGE (Department of Government Efficiency) started with naive ambition. Using AI to expose billions in corruption, such as USAID’s funding of NGOs tied to figures like Soros and the Clintons, he initially seemed like a savior. Early successes in cutting deficits were touted, but the revelations provoked backlash, including staged terrorist attacks on Tesla factories in the U.S. and abroad. Trump’s Chief of Staff, Susie Wiles, who works for the Uniparty, ousted Elon from The White House. Musk went silent mid-year, backing down from further exposures after publicly stating that continuing to uncover corruption would get him killed. Congress, despite the evidence of massive fraud, did nothing substantive, allowing the deep state to regroup.
The economy presented a paradoxical picture: despite entering a recession driven by tariffs, supply chain disruptions, and high interest rates, the stock market reached all-time highs, buoyed by speculative bubbles in AI and Tech sectors. Gold prices also soared amid global uncertainty, but everyday indicators like housing demand (at 1995 lows), and plummeting currencies like the Mexican peso and Canadian dollar, highlighted underlying weakness.
Europe and Canada devolved into fascist totalitarian states, intensifying censorship of free speech through laws targeting “hate speech” and online dissent. Violent crime surged due to unchecked migration from African and Muslim-majority countries, leading to stabbings, riots, and no-go zones in cities like London and Toronto.
On matters of war and foreign policy, the Ukraine war saw repeated U.S.-led peace attempts under Rubio, including cease-fires brokered with Russia, but these faltered amid ongoing proxy escalations. Venezuela remained unstable, with U.S. interventions via sanctions and blowing up drug-running small speedboats. Then, the U.S. sent a large fleet to blockade the coast of Venezuela.
In contrast, Argentina’s economy thrived under Javier Milei, with deregulation and crypto adoption boosting growth. China’s economy faltered amid debt crises and trade wars. Heightening tensions over Taiwan, and Japan bolstered defenses, risked a flashpoint with Beijing’s aggressive posturing.
The Middle East was rife with skirmishes: Israel clashed repeatedly with Syrian remnants and Iranian proxies, expanding territory in the Golan and beyond. Trump authorized B2 bomber strikes on Iranian nuclear sites as a favor to Israel, escalating regional volatility without achieving lasting stability.
Overall, the state of affairs in 2025 eerily resembled 1939 on the eve of World War II—a world of fragile alliances, economic turmoil masking deeper fractures, aggressive expansionism by powers like Israel and China, and totalitarian crackdowns in the West. The World is teetering on the brink of global conflict as leaders like Trump proved unable to stem the tide.