America’s Whimpering Democracy Is Trump’s Past, as Well as Future
There was a bit of a kerfuffle yesterday in response to an Erik Wemple claim that the media has not shirked media coverage of the risk posed by Trump while focusing non-stop on Biden’s (but not Trump’s) age.
Wemple made a list — and given the prevalence of lefty columnists, not a particularly impressive one, once you look closely.
But it also betrays the degree to which journalists have the same blind spots I have noted in NYT’s series on the subject (which makes up 15 entries in Wemple’s list): they ignore or understate how much of this Trump did in his first term and continues to do it via his right wing allies in Congress.
Charlie Savage, Maggie Haberman, and Jonathan Swan keep teaming up to write the same story over and over: A second Trump term is going to be bad … really bad.
Just some of these stories, in reverse order from Tuesday’s latest installment, are:
- October 31: If Trump Wins, His Allies Want Lawyers Who Will Bless a More Radical Agenda
- July 17: Trump and Allies Forge Plans to Increase Presidential Power in 2025
- June 21: Few of Trump’s G.O.P. Rivals Defend Justice Dept. Independence
- June 15: The Radical Strategy Behind Trump’s Promise to ‘Go After’ Biden
There are several aspects to these stories: a bid to eliminate civil service protections, a personalization of power, and the elevation of people who proved willing to abuse power in his first term: Russel Vought (who helped obstruct the Ukraine investigation), Stephen Miller, and Johnny McEntee (who even before January 6 was making a willingness to invoke the Insurrection Act a litmus test for hiring at DOD), and Jeffrey Clark.
The series, thus far, skirts the language of authoritarianism and fascism.
[snip]
These stories admit that Trump did some of this in his first term. But they describe a process of retribution by the guy who got elected — with abundant assistance from Maggie Haberman — on a platform of “Lock her up!,” who breached the norm of judicial independence 24 days into office when he asked Jim Comey to “let this” Mike Flynn “thing go,” as something that took a while to “ramp up.”
[snip]
[T]hese pieces always vastly understate how much politicization Trump pulled off in his first term, and never describe how that politicization continues at the hands of people like Jim Jordan.
Such reporting will be most salient, I believe, if reports show voters the costs of such abuses of the judicial system have already had and are already having.
Even as the kerfuffle was unrolling, Rosa Brooks published a piece in The Bulwark describing the lessons from a series of five nonpartisan simulations on how American democracy might fare if Trump wins in November.
The simulations showed that the risk Trump poses isn’t necessarily the immediate totalitarianism or civil war liberals sometimes raise, but instead targeted persecution against those who speak up.
The exercises produced some “good news”: None of the simulations devolved into mass violence or civil conflict, and Team Trump found it difficult to fully execute its most ambitious plans. For instance, in one of our exercises, Trump’s efforts to detain millions of undocumented migrants floundered; the money and infrastructure for such a massive operation proved too challenging.
[snip]
High-profile nonprofit groups are undergoing IRS audits, forcing their senior staff to spend most of their time huddled with accountants and lawyers. More university presidents have resigned in the face of investigations, audits, and threats to yank federal funding over curricula and the actions of student protests. Meanwhile, a number of high-profile journalists are the targets of leak investigations. The owners of several major media outlets are under investigation for specious criminal tax code violations, and the FCC is considering revoking the broadcast licenses of a dozen television stations. Liz Cheney, Adam Schiff, and retired Gen. Mark Milley are under investigation for allegedly mishandling classified materials.
The nation’s streets are largely peaceful. But around the country, numerous civil servants, reporters, teachers, librarians, election officials, and other community leaders are being doxxed and threatened.
You can imagine how this unfolds. Most people will see the writing on the wall: Speak out, and life becomes unpleasant. Your address and children’s names will be posted on social media. You’ll get a nasty letter from the IRS. Perhaps your brother’s undocumented girlfriend will go to work one day and never come home, and you won’t know if she’s been detained or deported. Your pregnant niece might be stopped by police as she drives from Texas to New Mexico, and grilled about whether she’s heading to an abortion clinic. Maybe the FBI and Homeland Security will use undercover agents—or even government surveillance capabilities—to spy on organizations from school boards to church groups, in search of “illegals,” “Christian-hating communists,” the “woke,” and other “vermin.”
The chilling effect on our politics would be intense. Ordinary citizens would self-censor. Many federal, state, and local leaders, rightly worried about the effects on themselves and their families, will quietly step down from their roles.
Definitely read the piece. As you do, though, consider the ways that this, too, is a story of Trump’s past and present, not just his future.
Just yesterday, for example, FBI’s Deputy Direct Paul Abbate said that he “absolutely did not” sign off on the settlement of Peter Strzok and Lisa Page’s lawsuits and “would never sign off on something like that.”
The allegations in the Privacy Act part of the complaint — the only part included in the settlement — show that before the misconduct allegations against Peter Strzok had been resolved, someone shared his texts with the White House, which in turn got leaked to the press before Sarah Isgur released them en masse, with Rod Rosenstein’s approval.
59. Between late July and December 2017, someone from the Department of Justice alerted the White House to the existence of these texts and, at least, their general content. On information and belief, officials in the White House, in turn, began to contact members of the news media about the texts as a means to try to undermine the Special Counsel’s investigation.
60. No later than December 2, 2017, at least two news organizations printed stories including characterizations of the contents of some of Special Agent Strzok’s texts.
[snip]
62. On December 12, 2017, DOJ willfully and intentionally disclosed to numerous news outlets approximately 375 text messages to, from, and about Special Agent Strzok. In a press release, DOJ called this act a “public release” of the messages.
Years ago, I was told this was a clear violation of the Privacy Act. Having gone through discovery, DOJ appears to agree.
By saying he would never sign a settlement with someone targeted in violation of the law, Abbate was (wittingly or not) stating an unwillingness to make things right after the government violates the rights of a long-valued FBI employee. And Abbate has to know that there are plenty of right wing agents who never got disciplined for sending pro-Trump texts on their phones, including the agents who handled one of the informants targeting the Clinton Foundation.
Republicans threw a similar tizzy fit after DOJ settled Andrew McCabe’s lawsuit for a similar violation of his rights — in that case, of his due process rights. And in McCabe’s case, granting McCabe’s due process would likely have revealed that the allegations he willfully lied about his role in a story that exposed the investigation into the Clinton Foundation were unproven.
The time to stand up to the kind of individualized targeting that Trump has long used is now, was last year, was seven years ago, when the extended campaign to turn Strzok and Page into the face of the Deep State first began.
Waiting to learn the outcome of the election is a cop out.
The time to catalog the damage Trump has already done by the kind of treatment the Bulwark projects in the future is now. All the more so given that its anonymous participants, described to include “former senior officials from President Trump’s first administration, along with former senators and members of Congress,” surely include a number of people who’ve received this treatment. If the way to combat Trump involves solidarity to prevent this isolating doxxing, then such a group is precisely the kind of group that should set an example.
LOLGOP and I are working on a podcast episode that talks about all the people at the FBI that Trump targeted: in addition to Strzok and Page, McCabe and Jim Comey, every person mentioned in the Carter Page IG Report, a number of key witnesses in the Durham investigation, often leveraged to cultivate the testimony Durham needed to sustain his conspiracy theory. That retaliation did real damage to the FBI’s expertise on Russia.
But it has continued even since Trump left office. After first being investigated in the wake of the IG Report, a top Russian analyst, Brian Auten, remains a target because he tracked Russia efforts to influence the 2020 election. Laura Dehmlow — then a unit chief in FBI’s Foreign Influence Task Force and now the Deputy Director of the National Counterintelligence Center, was bullied because she didn’t come out and say that the FBI had obtained a laptop attributed to Hunter Biden from a computer repairman (which remains inconclusive regarding any Russian influence). Tim Thibault, who in 2016 was one of the people who predicated investigations of the Clinton Foundation, was targeted in part because he made the decision — at the request of FBI agents trying to preserve the integrity of the Hunter Biden investigation — to shut down Peter Schweizer as an informant. Elvis Chan, long one of the most important FBI agents in fighting Russian hacking, was misrepresented as part of the Twitter Files, and ever since, the House GOP has been demanding he sit for a deposition either represented by his personal lawyer or the FBI’s lawyer.
Other members of the “Deep State” that Trump or his flunkies have targeted include:
- The 51 former spooks who signed a letter stating that the release of the Hunter Biden laptop before the 2020 elections “has the earmarks of a Russian information operation”
- Witnesses at either of Trump’s impeachments
- January 6 Committee witnesses and members
- Capitol Hill Police who testified in January 6 trials
- Witnesses in the Durham investigation
- Former Trump officials who’ve spoken out against Trump (again, these likely include some participants in Bulwark’s simulations)
- Members of the Hunter Biden investigative team, including those who were engaged in the more aggressive targeting of him
- Every judge, prosecutor, and identified FBI agent who has investigated Trump (note: Aileen Cannon was also targeted)
- Judges who’ve overseen January 6 trials or those of Trump’s associates
- Those who didn’t support Jim Jordan as speaker
This has a noticeable effect. Not only does Abbate (along with Chris Wray) cow before Congress rather than explain that Trump’s Administration violated the law, which has repercussions, but it led the FBI to hesitate before going after Trump and his people both before January 6 and during the stolen documents case.
There are those outside of government, too.
A sustained campaign to shut down efforts, both within and outside social media companies, to limit mis- and disinformation has led many programs and experts to quit, largely after sustained doxing and disinformation campaigns.
Perhaps most alarmingly, Trump and his mob have targeted election administrators around the country, both prominent and not. Even if Kamala Harris wins more votes than Trump in November, there are known localities and states where there’s real question whether election denying voting officials will certify the vote. Patrick Byrne has even started issuing death threats against those prosecuting Tina Peters for tampering with election equipment back in 2020.
This is not just about loyalty. This is not just about cowing law enforcement. This is not just retribution — though that serves as cover.
Particularly taking account of the election workers targeted in service of Trump’s Big Lie, this must be understood as systematic: an attack on particular institutions and norms of liberal society: the rule of law, elections, and truth.
We don’t have the luxury of waiting until after November to start defanging the right wing’s stochastic terrorism. That’s true, because they’ll be using it to stoke fear leading up to the election. That’s true because Jim Jordan still has three months wielding a gavel to elicit lynching threats. But it’s also true because the guy managing the FBI is so afraid of Congress that he’s unwilling to say that people selectively targeted for such treatment by Donald Trump are entitled to due process.
Marcy wrote:
“We don’t have the luxury of waiting until after November to start defanging the right wing’s stochastic terrorism”.
Thank you.
Marcy,
I think you’ll find this interesting:
Guests:
Olatunde C. Johnson, Ruth Bader Ginsburg ’59 Professor of Law, Columbia Law School – She served on President Biden’s Presidential Commission on the Supreme Court
Philip Bump, national columnist, Washington Post – Bump is the author of “The Aftermath: The Last Days of the Baby Boom and the Future of Power in America”
Jennifer Ahearn, Senior counsel, Brennan Center – Ahearn previously served as Policy Director at Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), where she led a team focused on government ethics and accountability
Alex Padilla, U.S. Senator, Padilla sits on the Judiciary Committee
https://www.kqed.org/forum/2010101906513/can-biden-get-supreme-court-reforms-passed-before-end-of-term
(The lede is misleading. The conversation was not)
Trump would continue to use the Bureau Of Prisons to fire beanbags into the eye sockets of peaceful protesters for the sake of a limp photo op. The DOJ seems to agree with that, too.
Thank you for all you do. This brilliantly crystalizes so many disparate threads – I am continually amazed at how you can do that. I do not support your work enough – time to contribute again.
Your phrase “Isolating doxxing” struck a nerve. I used to wonder how TFG got so many powerful people to bend the knee. The answer that made the most sense is they feared for their lives and the lives of their families; not because some lone gunman might target them, but because of the vindictive determination and power of the president. You could never just move somewhere else and be safe.
It’s one thing to know at a gut level how dangerous TFG is but to see all these examples of his reach is truly frightening. It’s as if there are now myriad landmines planted throughout our government and institutions that need to be identified and defused.
Your research and that of the Bulwark (at least in this instance) are invaluable. Thank you!
I have tended to assume the blackmail option, because who doesn’t have a secret? And, if your target doesn’t, use false but credible charges that are impossible to disprove. Nice marriage you have there; pity if someone broke it.
That would however require a widespread collection of bad behavior dossiers; not impossible but probably not explaining every bent knee. Probably some combination of that and fear.
I made a similar comment in the other thread. I can’t cite any unequivocal evidence for the view that Trump holds kompromat on many, many individuals, but I can’t come up with any other satisfactory explanation.
He might have it on a few people, like Lindsey Graham. But Trump himself wouldn’t bother with that much work. His usual shtick is to just make shit up.
But “if it’s what you say it is, I love it,” right? Why wouldn’t “friendlies” feed him professionally gathered kompromat?
Someone might. But for Trump, it’s work he doesn’t need when he can lie with impunity.
To P-Villain:
Decades ago, someone who was in a position to know, told me that Susie Wiles did something similar to what you are describing. When Ron DeSantis really got bent out of shape about something he believed Susie did, it reminded me of what I had been told earlier. It convinced me to believe it could be true. I imagine Trump surrounds himself with grifters who have similar values.
When we see some novichok start to appear in in the post-mortems then we will know who is really running this terrorist organization. For now, for a little while, the velvet gloves are still on.
Good to know you’ll have a podcast episode on all the victims of Trump and Republicans’ stochastic violence. It’ll be great to pass around.
While I’m starting to really feel hopeful about Harris’ chances I still remain glumly pessimistic about the time between the election and certification of the vote. Rolling Stone published and article (paywalled or 1 free article a month) https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/election-deniers-17-states-1234826808/ that 17 states have election deniers overseeing elections and I believe the counted close to 100 of these folks. And who knows how many more are out there.
The GOP is no longer under a consent decree that arose from voter intimidation and it seems like that’s exactly what they’re planning for this year. And while the Supreme Court shot down Trump election lawsuits in 2020, who’s to say they will again next time.
Too many MAGAts are in enough places to create mob violence, chaos and stochastic terrorism along with an online army talking about a civil war for anyone to take a smooth election transition as likely.
I know Dems and Independents can work polls to counter a MAGAt presence, but how do we dig out the officials who are either condoning this violence or keeping quiet about it?
This is still playing out in GOP primaries:
Critic of Arizona’s elections operations unseats incumbent election official in GOP primary [AP]
” … State Rep. Justin Heap of Mesa seized on the first opportunity to unseat election officials who knocked down false claims about the 2020 and 2022 elections. He defeated both Stephen Richer, the incumbent, and information technology professor Donald Hiatt in the GOP primary for Maricopa County recorder. …
Richer took office in early 2021 after unseating a Democratic incumbent. He drew criticism in some conservative circles for calling out former President Donald Trump and others for falsehoods about the 2020 election, which Joe Biden won in Arizona by 10,457 votes. …
Richer later filed a defamation lawsuit against Lake, saying he faced “violent vitriol and other dire consequences” because of lies spread by Lake, including death threats and the loss of friendships….”
https://apnews.com/article/arizona-primary-congress-legislature-elections-maricopa-9b688f0a5d54d26acb13db386159192d
Fortunately, that was just a primary. The winner, who could be a Dem, won’t be chosen until November. Couldn’t find the relevant statute, but I doubt that the November winner will take office before January 2025.
In short, Richer is still in the saddle for the upcoming election.
“The simulations showed that the risk Trump poses isn’t necessarily the immediate totalitarianism or civil war liberals sometimes raise, but instead targeted persecution against those who speak up.”
When you’re the target, targeted prosecutions look totalitarian. The two conditions are not different, so much as the latter is a precursor to the former. It has enormous knock-on effects, expressed in such things as conformity and self-censorship. The more of that a totalitarian elicits through this kind of intimidation, the fewer resources are needed to forcefully compel and sustain it.
One of Stalin’s tricks, probably not original to him, was periodically to call an amnesty. The decrease in pressure was intended to let natural leaders rise above the crowd and begin to peep. Once enough had done so, names were taken. Those who had them soon disappeared. The nail that sticks up, gets beaten down.
One of Saddam Hussein’s tricks was to demand his supporters eliminate his opposition, thereby making his supporters, co-conspirators. Even Christopher Hitchens was surprised.
Or, the sperm whale that spouts first is the first to get harpooned.
Where I see WE Democrats are at this point. Democracy organizations are registering new and young voters in droves. I hope people who have the means are donating to these groups also.
What’s nagging in my mind is the lack of connecting the crook TFG with all of the crooks he’s been associated with for decades. I.e. Rudy Giuliani for example.
The “missing chapters” in Project 25: Rudy; Roger Stone; Clarence Thomas & ginned up; billions from the Middle East & a new Trump Tower in? What it is, a SELL OUT!
That someone could do a photo collage of, numbered, with their names & a number, titled underneath so people could (google) research, titled simply, Trump’s friends?
If just to keep associating Rudy with this insane asylum. INSANE ASYLUM!
That the danger of this insane man, having the power of clemency would be the end of Democracy.
This is real & WE are in an all out fight!
/choir-preaching
I think this community gets it, okay? What are you personally doing now to stop a fascist takeover. That’s rhetorical, don’t need an answer, just need you to spend less time dumping and more time doing something constructive because as Marcy says we don’t have the luxury of time.
I understood synergy’s message as: how do we get these themes into the heads of the aforementioned newly registered, presumptive low-information voters rapidly and in an easily consumable format. Forgive me if I’m over-interpreting.
You’re assuming newly registered voters don’t get it. What motivated them to register in the first place?
Stop underestimating them, start helping them. For the disadvantaged most at risk, the cost to obtain ID and register is huge. Focus on the barriers, help them get over them.
Picking up on Rayne’s comment re: voter IDs being a barrier, here’s an organization that helps people obtain voter IDs: https://www.voteriders.org/
I don’t see the need to be so combative, Rayne. Of course, getting through to new voters isn’t the only necessary step, and I never said it was to the exclusion of other registration or secure voting efforts.
It’s reasonable to assume the surge in new registrations is primarily driven by the new vibe, and hence presumably Harris-curious. If they were already connected with the issues, we wouldn’t expect them to wait until this week. Whatever the case, it is I think important to consolidate that demographic with issue messaging that can be easily transmitted by, say, TikTok — which is happening already, of course. If they already get it, so much the better.
Dear goddess, don’t start tone policing with me.
Where do white men get off thinking newly registered/soon-to-be registered persons don’t understand the issues they are dealing with every fucking day??
Have you caught a whiff at all of Trump’s performance with Black journalists today? Do you not realize that shit happens all the time to people of color and to women, to be disrespected to their faces and through legislation enacting policies which deny them their humanity?
Help them get out to vote. Stop wasting time lecturing me and them and get busy.
As for the rest of the community: if you think I’m cranky now you ain’t seen nothing yet. We are weeks and days from another fascist takeover. Act like it.
I would like to think that these notes from my years of reading on Nazis, Fascism, and tyranny can be of use:
https://hubeventsnotes.blogspot.com/2024/07/notes-on-nazis-fascism-and-tyranny.html
But some may believe this is only rhetoric.
PS: This event may be helpful:
Turning out the Climate Vote for 2024 through Deep Canvassing
Wednesday, August 7
7 – 8pm EDT
Online
RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/turning-out-the-climate-vote-for-2024-through-deep-canvassing-tickets-950201898457
I alerted the Environmental Voter Project (www.environmentalvoter.org) and Swing Left (swingleft.org) about this event to make sure that connections are made.
May not be the way others roll but that’s what I do.
Fantastic.Thank you!
There are newly registered voters, that suggestion is made. Where online are demographics of who these are? Assumptions are fine, data better.
The above is all true and relevant, important, critical even to what comes next.
But I have trouble listening to the guys, to be nice, who brought us 90% of the way (since 1979), and are now preaching the dangers of pseudo populist demagoguery.
But, as they told us, you don’t pick the army you go to war with, just the wars you fight.
Amirite?
DOJ IG Details How Close Trump Came To Invoking Insurrection Act in 2020 https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/doj-ig-details-how-close-trump-came-to-invoking-insurrection-act-in-2020 Josh Kovensky July 31, 2024 12:52 p.m.
TRUMP now being interviewed at Black Journalists Convention.
Starts by complaining about “rude” introduction.
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2024/07/31/us/harris-trump-election
Wow this is really contentious already!
Right there, in that little bit, you can see him trying to drive a wedge between Black Americans and Asian Americans. This is the same technique Russian influence ops have relied on with Gamergate and BLM and every social media op afterward — use the conflict between genders and races as leverage to fragment their power.
This is why NABJ24’s co-chair Karen Attiah stepped down before this event. She didn’t want to platform Trump and hadn’t agreed to it. There’s a story behind this — who organized Trump’s appearance if Attiah wasn’t involved?
ADDER: this is likely the driver behind the whining on the right that Harris used a “fake southern accent” when speaking in Atlanta — a white guy claimed this, and it’s reported by Fox News. *eye roll* IOW they’re trying to say to southern Black Americans Harris is not legitimate. They call it a “fake southern accent” when it’s simply code switching for a multiracial person speaking to an audience which is majority non-white. The actual fake is Team Trump.
TRUMP is being VERY confrontational with the black women journalists here.
Oh my. Can you imagine what a Trump – Harris debate will be like if it should come to pass??
Rayne, I could imagine Harris saying, “All you do is talk. You won’t shut up. Even with your mic muted. You don’t even listen to the questions, or don’t care. You don’t learn a thing when you pull that shit. So stop. Change your weird act, be human. Listen. And stop all the lying.”
Something like that. Apparently Trump kept talking loudly, mic off, during the session with Biden. And question content was irrelevant to whatever he wanted to shout.
Reply to Error Prone
August 1, 2024 at 11:11 am
Yup. She’d take it where Biden didn’t in 2020 when he said, “Would you shut up, man?”
Trump railing on immigration? It’s very intentional. https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2020/08/01/stephen-miller-david-horowitz-mentor-389933
The obvious retort is that Trump is already mentally older and less fit than Joe Biden. He was always less fit than Biden. We don’t have to wait until the end of his second term, or its start, to find that out.
How a mixed parentage individual “identifies” is shaded by how the press identifies coverage about the individual. How often has Tiger Woods been called the nation’s premier Asian-American golfer?
TRUMP’s last statement: “These people that are coming in are taking your jobs.”
Trump’s staff will have added their names to the list.
PLEASE NOTE:
All of the blockquoted sections above are NYT journalists live-blogging.
More from NYT live blog:
Here’s the VIDEO:
Donald Trump takes questions at NABJ conference | Full Conference
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jgod-nqFEEc
Nothing happens until the 1hr 16min mark.
The whole VIDEO is 1:53.
So the “interview” part is about 37 minutes [???? lol oy!]
Here’s Phil Lewis at 2:10 PM:
https://bsky.app/profile/phillewis.bsky.social/post/3kylw3cg2ak27
Jul 31, 2024 at 2:10 PM
So everyone on the stage knew he was lying about why the event did not start on time. I don’t know what protocols this kind of production might adhere to as a rule? It’s probably a waste to give him more attention by calling him out.
Kamala had better things to do. I imagine she is working on her lines of fire, so to speak. Might as well save it for later when the time is right.
Biden seems to have a great sense of timing, in case anyone wants to talk about what he’s set in motion lately.
He was whining about them starting late, when he was the cause of the delay.
They aren’t being nice to him, and they’re not asking softball questions like Fox does.
Aaron Rupar with a “supercut”:
https://bsky.app/profile/atrupar.bsky.social/post/3kym42b2wuo23
Jul 31, 2024 at 3:57 PM
Did the Trump campaign think they were making digital clips they could use to entertain the MAGA cult? Did they think this was practice for Trump as a warm up for what is called a debate? Or did the campaign want to see how badly Trump would perform?
Trump repeated the comforting nonsense that the VP nominee has no effect the campaign. 2008 is evidence that the line is not true, and history is full of VPs who became Presidents.
It will be obscure. Only political junkies will see it. But it might be evidence of the lack of tactical awareness in the Trump campaign, and the complete lack of self control in their candidate.
People will be losing jobs, not because of immigration, but because Trump’s Project 2025 and Trump’s Agenda 47 are going to reissue Schedule F. Yes, Schedule F is Trump’s plan to get rid of civil servants. Thousands of them. That’s Trump’s plan to make people lose their jobs. Trump’s plan.
He’ll have unemployment numbers the likes of which have never been seen.
You wouldn’t believe what people are telling me….(no, we never would!)
At the last branch where I worked before I retired there was a woman from India and a man from Jamaica. They both came to the US as young people, legally. There were also other staff members who were POC and white, of various ethnic backgrounds. I loved working at that branch. Everyone was so helpful, cooperative, and fun. It was like the America we all wish for now.
But as Marcy quotes in her post from the simulation, the following is Trump’s America:
“The nation’s streets are largely peaceful. But around the country, numerous civil servants, reporters, teachers, librarians, election officials, and other community leaders are being doxxed and threatened.
You can imagine how this unfolds. Most people will see the writing on the wall: Speak out, and life becomes unpleasant.”
I have to say it really disgusts me that the people who are being paid to ensure this kind of behavior doesn’t thwart democracy are more cowardly than ordinary citizens.
On a more upbeat note, from Adam Klasfeld:
“Giuliani and his creditors, including Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman, say they reached an agreement to resolve pending issues in their bankruptcy dispute.”
“The proposed order includes terms related to the sale of Giuliani’s NYC or Florida properties.”
https://x.com/KlasfeldReports/status/1818647497381744810
Thank you and congratulations to ladies who know how to be brave!
I don’t discount Trump adding himself to Putin’s journalist-kidnapping team cowing reporters into giving him softer coverage.
“LOLGOP and I are working on a podcast episode that talks about all the people at the FBI that Trump targeted….”
It seemed obvious to me from the beginning of Trmp’s term that he was systematically dismantling USAmerica’s counter-intelligence capacity in the FBI, CIA, NSA, and the military intelligence agencies. Looks like you are following those breadcrumbs. Thanks.
Brilliant post – again. Thank you. Donald Trump is an empty shell. He has no original thoughts and hasn’t since his adolescence. He is filled with these horrible thoughts and schemes by vile low-lifes like Stephen Miller, Steve Bannon and Peter Navarro. These men need to be called out, marginalized and prosecuted wherever possible, for their heinous crimes and hijacking of reality and abetting of lunatic Donald Trump.
I have double asterisks around the words I found most interesting in this part of Rosa Brook’s article …
Those consequences seem ABSOLUTELY the most likely – especially the part about stopping a pregnant niece driving from Texas to New Mexico. What made Brooks shade the likelihood of those consequences?
My twin 16-year-old granddaughters live in Lubbock, Texas, one of the counties that have **already** passed laws intended to prevent pregnant women from traveling out of state for reproductive healthcare. Abbott/Patrick/Paxton stopping pregnant women at the Texas border during a second Trump term? I’d stake my life on that one.