A recent poll from the Economist/YouGov Poll reveals that 30% of Americans believe that the U.S. should not be the dominant power in the western hemisphere. Looking at a group of 572 Democrats, 49% agreed that the U.S. should not be the dominant power. While out of 453 Republicans, only 8% of Republicans agree.
Instead, presumably, they want to see a world of shared power between the U.S., Russia and China, and that sentiment is starting to be seen among the dissident right as well.
Tucker Carlson said in an interview with The Economist that he believes the U.S. has reached the limit of its power.
Carlson: “We can no longer be the sole author of terms of commerce, of anything. We have to share power.
Reporter: “With China?”
Carlson: “Of course, because of their scale.”
Gary Bauer of American Values says these Democrats and their radicalized right comrades suffer from one of two delusions. They actually think three superpowers can get along, peacefully share the world's resources and work toward some fanciful utopia.
“This is a level of naivety that I would have expected maybe in America in the 1920s,” Bauer says.
Or they hate America and wish to see her laid low. Bauer says this woke self-hatred is strong in the Democrat party and, in fact, competing for its control.
“The driving force in the party is a globalist, secular, naive, in many ways believing that America was founded by evil men, that it must be transformed, that it's not worth defending,” Bauer says.
On his podcast, Ben Shaprio calls this sliver of the culture "America haters" and says it would be a disaster if they were to find their way to power.
“A world in which the United States acts as an unchallengeable global hegemon is better. It is better than a world of multipolarity,” Shapiro says.