Attention Deficit and Defiance Division of Labor: There’s Stuff Happening Where You’re Not Looking
Last week, I wrote a post about the five ways Trump is sabotaging America. Those included:
- The original Project 2025 plan, an Orbanist plot to turn the US into an elected authoritarian government
- DOGE [sic], which is often mistaken for Project 2025, but which is far more reckless and destructive and as such has created far more backlash than Project 2025 might otherwise have
- Trump’s useful idiots, like the HHS Secretary who is barely responding to a Measles outbreak
- The personalization of DOJ, protecting not only Trump, but also his favored criminals
- Trump’s capitulation to Russia
As I’ve been puzzling through the, in my opinion, catastrophic distraction of Democratic in-fighting over how to respond to the SOTU, I came to realize one source of the general frustration. A lot of people still don’t understand there’s a natural division of labor in who should fight fascists how, one which is similar to those five areas of sabotage. As a result, there’s a demand that the national Democratic Party (appear to) take the lead on everything, a demand that invites those complaining to outsource their own agency completely, as if they simply hire people to do their politics for them every two or four years.
The demand that Hakeem Jeffries take the lead on issues that really aren’t central to his job breeds passivity and frustration and distracts from stuff being done by others better positioned to do so.
The national Dems are not the best suited for some of this, partly because civil society has more freedom and standing to sue, partly because within the Democratic party, local parties (and future candidates) should take the lead, and partly because polarization is going to be a big barrier to effective mobilization elsewhere. If a Black or Jewish Democrat from New York pushes an issue, those we need to mobilize will be far less likely to respond because their very identities have become defined in opposition to urban America (and all the euphemisms that entails). Moreover, the Democratic Party’s job is to shepherd legislation and win elections, and the fight against fascism is both broader than and more urgent than elections 20 months away.
I want to use this post to lay out what I mean by that, and also as a way to catalog some of what has been done, but also some areas where more needs to be done by precisely the kind of people who spent a week screaming at Democrats.
DOGE [sic]
I make a distinction here between combatting DOGE and other policy considerations. That’s true because — as has been true from the very start, civil society and Democratic Attorneys General and people who’ve been fired are better situated to fight DOGE in the courts, because they can get standing. On the legal front, there has been mixed success, with Special Counsel Hampton Dellinger giving up his termination challenge (but not before helping to save thousands of jobs and creating a precedent that reinforced other legal decisions) after an adverse ruling in the DC Circuit, but with others — most importantly two lawsuits representing USAID providers — surviving the first review from SCOTUS.
Tracking these lawsuits is as overwhelming for people as tracking the actual legal investigations into Trump was, with the result (I suspect) that people don’t see them. The good, the bad, and the promising — it’s all a blur. Plus, legal challenges are slow.
But we’re learning more and more from these lawsuits already, which is having a snowball effect, just a bit of which appears in this post (on this page, I’m tracking lawsuit declarations I find particularly interesting).
The most interesting developments this week may be several different lawsuits challenging DOGE on an Appointments Clause theory, basically that Elon is exercising the kind of authority that would require Senate confirmation.
Because DOGE has been so disorganized, DOJ’s lawyers are being fed garbage to, in turn, feed courts in good faith. And then, over and over, Trump ends up saying things that debunk what the lawyers have been fed to say. Judges are beginning to get fed up, and are granting plaintiffs more discovery. Anna Bower has been tracking this Calvinball relentlessly.
The other civil society success — perhaps the biggest ones so far — are the calls, town halls, and protests that outside groups like Indivisible and Tesla Takedown have organized. These have significantly increased the discomfort of Republicans. While, thus far, that has led only to some pathetic meetings where they ask Elon to stop fucking everything up, the recent focus on the VA and Social Security may raise their discomfort further.
One thing that could be better organized, locally, would be to magnify the stories of those affected by DOGE cuts. As I said last week, rather than turning government workers into villains, DOGE had made the importance of government visible. And the people being arbitrarily and cruelly fired are the daughters and sons of communities that have a distorted understanding of government. This story-telling, done by word of mouth and local press, likely is better served if it has no overt tie to the Democratic party, because otherwise polarization may undercut the lessons of the firings. But it is the kind of thing that can be done in letters to the editor in local newspapers.
Journalists continue to track DOGE’s bullshit claims of savings (I’m attempting to track such debunkings here). Where we need to get better — and this is something people should do on calls to their members of Congress — is to emphasize the way Republicans have ceded the Federal government to Elon’s DOGE boys even though their claims of savings are fraudulent (to say nothing of the kind of past associations, such as ties to sketchy Russian NGOs, that would disqualify them in any half-serious background check). Think about ways to mock Republicans for being so stupid they keep falling for Elon’s bullshit claims, even as he confesses he keeps misplacing Ebola prevention and similar things.
Entitlements and Funding Government
DC Democrats have to do several things in the days — and it is just days — ahead. First, they have to optimize the outcome of a continuing resolution, either by withholding votes and making Republicans own a shutdown or by joining in a continuing resolution that limits Trump’s ability to ignore Congress’ appropriations (or better yet, adds weight to the legal challenges) going forward.
Republicans are attempting to get a year-long continuing resolution on their own. If they do, it’ll be a first, but could well be the source of contention going forward.
The other thing Democrats need to do is either save Medicaid (and Social Security) or make Republicans own any cuts too, as well as the tax cuts for people like Elon Musk. This provides the opportunity to sow dissension within the Republican party. Charles Gaba has calculations of how many people rely on Medicaid, by district, which can be useful when calling Members.
House Republicans only managed to pass a budget through a gimmick: by ordering House Energy and Commerce to come up with $880 billion in cuts, but without mentioning what those cuts will obviously be: Medicaid. But the Congressional Budget Office this week called that out, holding that the only way they can fulfill the terms of that budget is with the cuts they’ve tried to hide.
The math is impossible. And because it is impossible, Republicans will have a very hard time not taking each other out (or creating useful defections). Meanwhile, they’ll be doing that while justifying tax cuts for the richest man in the world.
Thus far, Trump’s threats have kept Republicans unified. But that may well break down in days ahead (and if it doesn’t, Democrats have to be prepared to make Republicans own the consequences).
DOJ
From the start, I’ve thought two things might lead the corrupt incompetence at DOJ to blow up on itself (on top of the aforementioned good faith lawyers being stuck telling fictions to courts). First, unless key lawyers were willing to tell really outrageous lies in court, reality would debunk many of the conspiracy theories that have been fueling right wing fever dreams for years. And second, their own conflicts would begin to blow up in their faces.
This week, Kash Patel had to quietly debunk a conspiracy theory that George Papadopoulos has been spinning for years, that a female Special Agent who was part of an effort to learn of his ties to Russia was a (sexual) honey pot.
Kash, now the boss of the Agent, had to defend her for simply doing her job.
More spectacularly, Pam Bondi bolloxed an effort to politicize the Jeffrey Epstein files, in part because she stupidly thought the White House wouldn’t worry about such releases, in part because she (unknowingly, apparently) released stuff that was already public, and in part because she created dissension among the propagandist ranks.
When more than a dozen MAGA-aligned activists and social media influencers gathered at the White House last week, they had no idea they were about to be handed binders titled “Epstein Files: Phase 1”– and neither did senior White House officials who organized the event, according to multiple sources familiar with the event.
Attorney General Pam Bondi and her team did not inform White House officials in advance that she planned to distribute the binders, which contained almost no new information regarding convicted sex offender and financier Jeffrey Epstein — and now the move has ruffled feathers among those closest to President Donald Trump, including his senior White House staff, sources tell ABC News.
The move faced widespread criticism, not only from Democrats but also from some of the president’s most loyal supporters.
White House staff moved quickly to try and contain the fallout, privately reaching out to influencers who were critical of Bondi and the move online, according to sources.
Update, March 9: More on the way MAGAts are turning on Bondi.
There are a hundred ways reality — as documented in files to which Kash and Bondi now have unfettered access — conflicts with the conspiracy beliefs of these people. Unless they get better at managing expectations of the mob, we should expect similar embarrassing concessions in days ahead, concessions that piss off the most committed MAGAts and make them distrust their own.
More interesting are developments in the corruption of Emil Bove and Ed Martin.
Three entities asked for scrutiny of Bove for the way he coerced lawyers to dismiss the Eric Adams case when serving as Acting Deputy Attorney General (now that Todd Blanche has been confirmed on a party line vote, Bove becomes PADAG, basically the guy running DOJ day to day). A group of ethics experts have asked Judge Dale Ho to consider Bove’s actions as he decides how to resolve that case. Jamie Raskin and Jasmine Crockett wrote Pam Bondi with a series of questions, including whether Bove destroyed evidence (the notes of a January 31 meeting). And Senate Judiciary Dems asked the NY Bar to conduct a misconduct inquiry into Bove. (At least one NGO already filed a bar complaint.)
Then, later in the week, Senate Judiciary Dems filed a bar complaint against Acting DC US Attorney Ed Martin for representing January 6 defendants at the same time as approving the dismissal of their cases. That, too, follows a previous bar complaint (filed in Missouri) for Martin’s conflicts. But (in addition to some of Martin’s other wildly partisan actions) it adds a bit: that Martin allegedly had private conversations with pro se January 6 defendant William Pope, who is still trying to get files he’s sure must exist; this is another conspiracy theory that may blow up in wildly interesting ways, now that Martin has access to all these files.
What I noticed the Court in ECF No. 391 was a completely true and factual statement regarding U.S. Attorney Ed Martin’s telling me that the files I now have are no longer considered sensitive for me to possess. However, since a dubious representative of the government, AUSA Jennifer Leigh Blackwell, is now claiming the opposite of what I truthfully reported to the Court in ECF No. 391 (while she is signing under Mr. Martin’s name), this is essentially a government attack on my integrity. Because AUSA Blackwell has attacked me and because the entirety of her filing (ECF No. 392) is so at odds with President Trump’s directive and the current policy of Department of Justice, I suspect she filed her own rogue and unhinged ranting rather than consulting the official position of the government and her boss, Ed Martin.
This is the kind of complaint that could be written on a near-daily basis about Martin. He recently wrote Georgetown Law imagining he could dictate what a private Catholic university teaches, which elicited a superb response. It’s the kind of thing that lefty pundits should be focused on instead of screaming at each other. It is far more urgent to make Ed Martin’s shenanigans an anvil around Pam Bondi’s DOJ than it is to fight about the stupidest way to distract from Trump imploding.
Plus, that’s not the only trouble Martin has caused.
In the early days of Trump’s attack on DEI, Trump’s flunkies adopted two claims from Elon: That the Biden Administration had misstepped when it appropriated $20 billion in funds to green lenders. And that New York City had spent $80 million on luxury hotels to house migrants.
I’ve already written about the former case: how Bove and Martin forced Denise Cheung out at DC USAO because she found a Project Veritas video insufficient evidence to obtain criminal process clawing back funds. Martin kept trying, in the kind of judge shopping that can really piss off judges. Meanwhile, Mark Zaid, who represents the guy in the PV video, says that his client had nothing to do with the disbursements that EPA has attempted to clawed back. Lee Zeldin is trying to get EPA’s Acting Inspector General to find him an excuse for all this now, which seems rather late given that funds have already been frozen. (Senate Dems also sent Zeldin a letter debunking his claims last month.)
Meanwhile, even as Judge Jennifer Rearden this week denied New York City’s bid to get the $80 million back while the two sides fight about it [docket], one of the people Kristi Noem fired and accused of acting unlawfully, Mary Comans, has sued.
That same day Defendant DHS publicly issued a press release falsely stating that Ms. Comans had been fired “for circumventing leadership to unilaterally make egregious payments for luxury NYC hotels for migrants.” The release also noted that “[u]nder President Trump and Secretary Noem’s leadership, DHS will not sit idly and allow deep state activists to undermine the will and safety of the American people.” Because of the issuance of the press release and other steps undertaken by the Defendants, Ms. Comans’ actions were widely, publicly and falsely condemned as “illegal” and “criminal” by rightwing influencers, to include Elon Musk, on various social media platforms and news outlets, such as shown below:
In a declaration Comans submitted on February 26 in the Does 1-26 suit, Mary Comans debunked much of what DHS has publicly claimed about the clawback, which means Comans’ lawsuit is likely to surface these issues. I had noticed this myself, but in between her healthy obsession about the lies the Administration tells about Elon’s role on DOGE, Anna Bower wrote it up here. Comans is also represented by Mark Zaid; you can support his work helping fired government workers tell the truth about what happened here.
Yesterday, Marisa Kabas reported that the top lawyer at FEMA was forced out, possibly because he refused to sign a declaration retconning this clawback.
Joshua Stanton had served as Acting Chief Counsel at the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) for less than one week when he was placed on administrative leave Wednesday and reportedly escorted out of the building. Why?
According to people at FEMA privy to the details of Stanton’s dismissal—which was first reported by me via Bluesky Wednesday afternoon—Stanton was asked sometime this week to write a memo stating that the mid-February seizure of $80 million from the city of New York meant for migrant shelters had legal justification; this was despite the fact that it almost certainly did not. The money that was taken back was lawfully obligated by FEMA pursuant to congressionally allocated funds. Stanton reportedly refused to write such a memo, The Handbasket has learned, and then he was put on leave. It’s not clear at this point if the refusal to write the memo is the reason he was placed on leave.
In other words, between the public ousters and and the problematic legal claims, Trump’s flunkies may soon find themselves unable to defend past false claims they made in ways that could blow up in spectacular fashion (as I’ve suggested, the same is true for Pete Marocco, who just got enjoined in an awesome new lawsuit, but I’ll come back to that).
Corruption
There’s one area that has always been difficult to grab a hold of: Trump’s corruption. There has always been so much that it’s hard to focus on any one bit. That’s been even more true now that Pam Bondi has made it clear she’ll never prosecute Trump for bribery. And it has been matched by Elon.
I’m going to catalog just some of the coverage from recent weeks.
First, Wired reported that in addition to all the known kickbacks Trump got before he became President (from tech executives and media outlets), he continues to engage in pay-to-play with a price tag of $5 million for a face-to-face meeting.
Business leaders can secure a one-on-one meeting with the president at Mar-a-Lago for $5 million, according to sources with direct knowledge of the meetings. At a so-called candlelight dinner held as recently as this past Saturday, prospective Mar-a-Lago guests were asked to spend $1 million to reserve a seat, according to an invitation obtained by WIRED.
[snip]
It’s unclear where the money is going and what it will be used for, but one source with direct knowledge of the dinners said “it’s all going to the library,” as in the presidential library that will ostensibly be built once Trump leaves office. MAGA Inc spent over $450 million to elect Trump in 2024, though Trump is not legally permitted to run for a third presidential term in 2028.
Also this week, Public Citizen started tracking what it calls “corporate clemency” — all the corporations whose legal troubles have been dismissed in bulk or specifically.
Now, just over one month into Trump’s second term, it’s clear that the permissive approach to corporate crime and misconduct is returning with a vengeance.
Whole categories of enforcement have come to a screeching halt, including:
- All Consumer Financial Protection Bureau cases, seven of which the Trump administration has already moved to dismiss,
- Justice Department cases brought by the Civil Rights and Environment and Natural Resource divisions, Investigations and cases under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, and
- Equal Employment Opportunity Commission cases defending transgender and gender non-conforming workers from workplace abuse and discrimination, six of which the administration has already moved to dismiss, and
- An increasing number of Securities and Exchange Commission cases against cryptocurrency corporations, two of which have been paused and four of which the administration has moved to dismiss.
Meanwhile Forbes’ Zach Everson has been pulling at some strings on a Nasdaq-listed firm with suspect trading just before Don Jr and Eric Trump were named as advisors. He first laid out the trading pattern.
Between Feb. 12 and Dec. 29, 2024, trading in Dominari Holdings—a Nasdaq-listed firm that specializes in wealth management, investment banking, sales and trading, asset management and capital investment—averaged 11,500 shares a day, never exceeding 71,000 shares, with a price range of $1.10 to $3.20.
On Dec. 30, trading shot up to 358,000 shares, kicking off a surge that saw daily volume average 1.2 million shares a day through Feb. 10, 2025—when it skyrocketed to 23.7 million shares—as the stock price climbed from $0.83 to $6.50.
On Feb. 11, an hour before markets opened, Dominari Holdings announced that Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump had joined its advisory board and acquired an undisclosed amount of shares in the company, sending the stock to a 52-week high of $11.33.
The price peaked at $13.58 two days later but has since fallen, closing at $6.74 on Tuesday.
Then Everson showed how little evidence there is that the board existed before Trump’s sons joined it.
[B]etween June 10, 2021, when the company was named AIkido Pharma, and Feb. 12, 2025, the day after the Trumps’ involvement was announced, Dominari Holdings did not submit a filing to the SEC on that mentioned an advisory board or board of advisors, except for references in the chief operating officer’s bio stating he had been a member for three months in 2022.
An online search failed to provide evidence of the advisory board’s prior existence: it is not mentioned on any website—including Dominari Holdings’ own—prior to Feb. 11, in a search on Google.
Dominari Holdings also did not file its advisory board agreement with the SEC until Feb. 12, a day after announcing the Trumps’ membership.
This feels not dissimilar to some of the shenanigans relating to the funding of Truth Social (while several of his associates were criminally prosecuted, one is attempting to get an SEC action against him thrown out) or Trump’s Meme Coin, below.
Then, even as Trump has rolled out a crypto strategic reserve (one that many crypto experts hate and one that failed to rally the market), there have been several developments that show how he intends to permit corruption (his own, and others’) via cryptocurrency.
As I keep noting, the SEC, for example, has paused its suit against World Liberty Financial investor Justin Sun, anticipating a settlement. As Judd Legum describes, this follows the Chinese-linked businessman’s multi-million “investment” in Trump’s crypto currency.
In March 2023, the SEC charged Sun and three of his companies, accusing him of marketing unregistered securities and “fraudulently manipulating the secondary market” for a crypto token. The SEC accused Sun of wash trading, which involves buying and selling a token quickly to fraudulently manufacture artificial interest.
[snip]
Sun’s purchase put millions in Trump’s pocket. WLF was entitled to “$30 million of initial net protocol revenue” in a reserve “to cover operating expenses, indemnities, and obligations.” After the reserve was met, a company owned by Trump would receive “75% of the net protocol revenues.” Sun’s purchase covered the entire reserve. As of December 1, this amounted to $18 million for Trump — 75% of the revenues of all other tokens sold at the time. Sun also joined WLF as an advisor. While the purchase benefited Trump, WLF tokens are essentially worthless for Sun, as they are non-transferable and locked indefinitely.
Nevertheless, Sun has since invested another $45 million in WLF, bringing his total investment to $75 million. This means Sun’s purchases have sent more than $50 million to Trump, Bloomberg reported. Sun has also continued to shower Trump with praise. On January 22, Sun posted on X, “if I have made any money in cryptocurrency, all credit goes to President Trump.”
And, as Chris Murphy laid out, he used his Doge Coin to bilk his rubes, again.
Both of these are ways for foreigners to launder cash to Trump. Now that the bribery is happening in plain sight, we need to hammer home the implicatioms of that: If you can’t explain why Trump betrayed America and all her alliances, you cannot rule out old-fashioned bribery, not least given the impossibly lucrative deals Russia first dangled to get Trump’s interest.
And then there’s Musk, who happens to be included in Kirill Dmitriev’s current dangles before Trump.
Dmitriev has called for the Trump administration and Russia to start “building a better future for humanity,” and to “focus on investment, economic growth, AI breakthroughs,” and long-term joint scientific projects like “Mars exploration,” even posting a highly produced computer graphic, on Elon Musk’s X social media platform, showing an imagined joint US-Russia-Saudi mission to Mars, on board what appears to be a Space X rocket.
With Musk, it’s a two-edged sword. There are the legal investigations that stand to be dismissed, as two of the items on Public Citizen’s tracker have been.
And Elon Musk, the CEO of Neuralink, SpaceX, Tesla, X (formerly Twitter), and xAI, which started the Trump administration collectively facing 17 federal investigations.
- Neuralink faces a USDA investigation into alleged misconduct related to the treatment of test monkeys and an SEC investigation alleging unspecified misconduct.
- SpaceX has been in the process of negotiating a resolution with the EPA over repeated pollution discharges in Texas, an FAA lawsuit alleging multiple safety violations involving rocket launches in Florida, and an NLRB complaint alleging the company illegally fired workers who criticized Musk. The Trump administration dismissed a DOJ civil rights lawsuit against SpaceX alleging discrimination against asylees and refugees in hiring.
- Tesla faces a criminal fraud investigation by the DOJ over exaggerated claims about the “full self-driving” capability of vehicles’ “Autopilot” mode, a related SEC investigation into whether exaggerated claims about “full self-driving” vehicles misled investors, a joint investigation by the DOJ and SEC into Tesla’s plans to construct a private residence for Musk, an EEOC investigation into alleged racial discrimination and workplace retaliation at a Tesla factory in California, four NHTSA investigations into vehicle problems, and seven open NLRB cases alleging unfair labor practices and covering up to 140,474 employees. An OSHA investigation into a worker’s death at a Tesla factory in Texas was closed in January, though no announcement as to whether a citation was issued has been disclosed.
- X (formerly Twitter) faces an SEC lawsuit against Musk alleging misconduct related to the CEO’s $44 billion takeover of the company and an NLRB case alleging unfair labor practices.
- xAI faces an EPA investigation into air pollution concerns related to its “Colossus” supercomputer in Memphis, Tennessee. [my emphasis]
Musk’s conflicts are something that NYT has also tracked well.
Congressman Greg Casar has been pushing to get details of the death of the Tesla worker, Victor Joe Gomez Sr., released, with a fair amount of coverage in the Texas press.
But even as Casar is having to fight for details that should be readily available, and even as Musk’s private businesses continue to experience spectacular failures, even as Elon cuts off Ukraine, Trump’s government is sneaking deals to Starlink on the side, both in the form of FAA funds and rural broadband.
The degree to which Trump is selling out government, a story fundamental to the story of DOGE, is being covered, though (with the exception of Musk’s conflicts) often by less mainstream outlets: Wired and Forbes and Bloomberg and Judd Legum and American Prospect (NPR got the exclusive on the Public Citizen report).
This is undoubtedly an area where Gerald Connolly needs to pick up the slack from where Jamie Raskin left off with his move to House Judiciary. Or perhaps Casar, newly elected Progressive Caucus Chair and a Member of DOGE on Oversight, can take the lead.
But this is an area where a story in plain sight needs to be tied back to the destruction of government by the same corrupt people.
Trump is destroying government. But he is getting paid handsomely at the same time. At one level or another, Trump is destroying America because he is getting paid to do so. The better we can convey that, the greater likelihood that some of the rubes who got ripped off on the Doge Coin will come to understand they’ve been betrayed.
Russia
Any pushback on Trump’s capitulation to Russia has been distracted by everything else, starting with Trump’s equivocating trade war with our closest trading partners.
Though ironically, the line from Elissa Slotkin, hailing Ronald Reagan, to which many objected was a longer play on Trump’s attempt to compare himself with Reagan, a comment on Trump’s capitulation.
President Trump loves to promise “peace through strength.” That’s actually a line he stole from Ronald Reagan. But let me tell you, after the spectacle that just took place in the Oval Office last week, Reagan must be rolling over in his grave. We all want an end to the war in Ukraine, but Reagan understood that true strength required America to combine our military and economic might with moral clarity.
And that scene in the Oval Office wasn’t just a bad episode of reality TV. It summed up Trump’s whole approach to the world. He believes in cozying up to dictators like Vladimir Putin and kicking our friends, like Canada, in the teeth. He sees American leadership as merely a series of real estate transactions.
As a Cold War kid, I’m thankful it was Reagan and not Trump in office in the 1980s. Trump would have lost us the Cold War.
But while Americans are distracted by Trump’s erratic trade wargaming and the Democrats’ own infighting, the rest of the world is stepping up, most famously in this speech from center-right French politician Claude Malhuret.
There is dissension in Europe: While Giorgia Meloni is joining other European countries, she refuses to be led by France.
I’ve heard of non-public discussions among American national security types and members of Congress. And even Lindsey Graham, who shamelessly betrayed Volodymyr Zelenskyy after the ambush in the Oval Office, is pushing for Trump to demand something from Russia, too.
Thus far, the response to Trump’s capitulation to Russia has been muted. But it is also a topic that unites strange bedfellows, which showed up in the town halls last week.
Trump and his Russian handlers believed this would be easy. Thus far, it doesn’t look it’ll work out that way.
Attention
This post links almost 100 links (thanks, in part, to the linking ethics of Public Citizen and Everson). That’s a testament to the flood of information out there, much of it promising, about efforts to fight back against fascism. That flood is a response to Trump’s own flood. The two together have the means to overwhelm.
I won’t defend everything Jeffries said (or was portrayed as saying, by outlets whose bread and butter lies in stoking dissension among Democrats) this week. But much of what he said and did appear to be guided by a view on attention that is, in my opinion, quite right: Trump always camouflages what he does, including some fundamental weaknesses, with a flood the zone strategy.
Congressman Jeffries said Trump’s many actions to date, including mass firings of federal workers, freezing federal funds approved by Congress, and steps to eliminate critical agencies, are part of a larger strategy to “flood the zone” and distract from actions that Jeffries and other Democrats consistently say will devastate millions of Americans.
“[It’s] designed to create the appearance of inevitability [and] the notion that Donald Trump is unstoppable–he ain’t unstoppable,” said Jeffries, who noted, “Not a single bill connected to Trump’s Project 2025 agenda has passed the House because it’s unified Democratic opposition.” He continued, “But we’re supposed to believe it’s all inevitable…He’s invincible…Show me the evidence.”
This is a war for attention. Trump’s success at that war is the primary reason he won the election — and he was helped then, as now, by the fact that the primary counter-flood Democrats cared to mount was to attack each other.
Similarly, no matter what you think about Slotkin’s response (which was in any case not beset by weaknesses of presentation virtually all of these are) she also said something important. Rather than doom scroll on Bluesky, pick an issue, and start building from the bottom up.
Three, organize. Pick just one issue you’re passionate about — and engage. And doom scrolling doesn’t count. Join a group that cares about your issue, and act. And if you can’t find one, start one.
Some of the most important movements in our history have come from the bottom up.
You don’t have to, nor should you, wait for DC to lead the movement you want. Pick a corner of it and take action.
Leadership
I end with this: We’re seeing that happen around the country, as evidenced by three stories from recent days.
There’s the testimony of Meirav Solomon’s in yesterday’s sanctuary city hearing. Solomon challenged the notion that you shut down antisemitism by policing campuses. Indeed, she focused instead on Trump’s cuts to Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights. She pointed to the antisemitism of, “the President’s close advisors [who] raise their arms in fascist salutes.”
We must be honest about the most urgent threat to the Jewish community. It is not student protestors but the bloody legacy of Pittsburgh and Poway, Charlottesville and the Capitol Riot.
There’s how a community responded when the school board of a predominantly white community north of Pittsburgh voted against a young adult book about the Tulsa riots, Angel of Greenwood. The community came together to bring its author, Randi Pink, to town to speak to both students and the community more generally.
After the school board voted against adding Pink’s book to the Pine-Richland School District’s ninth-grade curriculum, the community decided it was time to act.
Macmillan, the publisher of “Angel of Greenwood,” sent Pine-Richland students 100 copies of the book to distribute to the community. Pink also traveled from her small town outside of Birmingham, Alabama, to come to Richland to meet with the community that had so fiercely supported her work.
“The supporters in the community were relentless in making sure I got there. Some people put in $5, $10, even $600. I waived my fee, but the community said, ‘Absolutely not. We’re going to pay you.’ I’m a single mother, so I had to bring my babies with me,” she said. “They said, ‘we’re going to pay for all your way.’
“They galvanized around me. I support them very much for that.”
[snip]
Students and parents raised nearly $6,000 for Pink to come to Pennsylvania, where the author held two talks — one for students of the school district to ask questions and the other was open to all community members.
[snip]
“If more of us are brave enough to step into communities and say, ‘You know what? Let’s just talk. I think we will get a whole lot further like that in all aspects of society.”
There’s Zooey Zephyr, the Montana legislator whose speech in support of drag shows turned the tide against anti-trans votes, as told by Erin Reed.
Something remarkable happened in Montana today. As has become routine, anti-trans bills were up for debate—the state has spent more than half of its legislative days this session pushing such bills through committees and the House floor, with Republicans largely voting in lockstep. But something changed.
A week ago, transgender Representative Zooey Zephyr delivered a powerful speech against a bill that would create a separate indecent exposure law for transgender people. Since then, momentum on the House floor slowed. Today, two of the most extreme bills targeting the transgender community came up for a vote. Transgender Representatives Zooey Zephyr and SJ Howell gave impassioned speeches—this time, they broke through. In a stunning turn, 29 Republicans defected, killing both bills. One Republican even took the floor to deliver a scathing rebuke of the bill’s sponsor.
You reclaim America not in DC, but in talks on campuses, in Montana, and Pittsburgh.
That is happening. You just need to know where to look.
Thank you many times for your post. I heard your podcast with Harry Litman / Talking Feds. Appreciate your work so much
God bless Zooey Zepher, and the GOP reps who crossed the aisle. That video has two great speeches.
I have some pretty strong personal connections with Montana, both family and friends who live there, or once lived there. I have been sorely disappointed by the anti-trans legislative push, but this is gratifying.
Montana has been backsliding over the past several years, but still hasn’t reached the retrograde level in Wyoming. Going to Harriet Hageman town hall next week; should be bat-guano crazy.
I have heard she is doing some town halls and have been encouraged to attend. At least if I do go, I know there will be at least two sane people in the room.
What’s left of the FAA may go after SpaceX for not providing adequate warning of its launch (and failure). A lot of flights had to be rerouted to avoid the area, and this is part of the FAA’s job. It may have been southeast of Florida, but it affected flights all the way to Philly.
This is an excellent list of observations and action items.
I will suggest one other. Trump owns the economy now. That message must be broadcast and narrowcast everywhere. The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow forecast tool is predicting negative 2.4 percent GDP this quarter. That’s astonishing. It is also unsurprising.
Folks need to be reminded over and over that the economic disaster that is unfolding is because of Trump, the feckless Republicans in Congress, and Musk.
As Marcy suggests above, Trump probably understands it better than anyone: when markets crash now, it’s his fault, end of story. A lot of what he’s doing, like backing down on the neighbor-tariffs, is guided by that inescapable popular understanding. And to that end, his currying favor with Putin isn’t a one-sided, puppet/puppeteer relationship: Trump’s betting on very cheap RU oil to drive down petro pricing (and thus countering Trumpflation) going forward.
Great compendium, Marcy. Thank you once again.
Regarding Slotkin’s reply to Trump: a better borrowed-figure-of-speech for her to skewer him on, but certainly along with Reagan’s “peace through strength,” she could also have honed in on Bush/Cheney’s “Shock and Awe,” which was the call-sign for a ware crime — committed against a made-up-enemy — and synonymous with Hitler’s “Blitzkrieg.” Nice, tight reference, dude!
One thing I’m doing is donating to the various lawyer-orgs that are in the thick of the legal fight with Trump et al right now. Democracy Forward, Public Citizen, CREW and ProPublica for reporting, to name a few. There are many others, and I’m also sending money to the special upcoming House races.
Cancelling my subscriptions to those media outlets that have chosen to appease our power-mad king has freed up a few bucks for me to do something similar, Bruce. It’s money much better spent.
It’s a “do the math” situation, lol.
First, my point was that everyone needs to be reminded/warned etc. that the economy is a sled going down a dung mountain because of Trump.
Second, I don’t know what Trump knows. Every competent economist warned that these tariffs would be inflationary and likely trigger a trade war. Rather than abandon this course of action he has “suspended” them, sowing even more chaos in the marketplace. And he persists in asserting that the tariff monies will fund a US sovereign wealth fund. Doesn’t that sound like a recipe for unimaginable corruption?
Third, West Texas Intermediate is trading at $67 per barrel. If it falls to say $62 a barrel that would bring new drilling in the Permian basis to a halt. So, I don’t think he should want to flood the market with Russian oil. Folks in Texas would be mighty unhappy with that.
If Bush II was in Trump’s circle of advisors, you’d probably expect Trump to take that kind of thing into account. But his circle of advisors consists of raving theocrats, implacable autocrats, and grand-theft plutocrats –seasoned with all flavors of personality disorders. There is no “book” on this weels-already-came-off spree, no table of contents, even.
A critical aspect of what is being done is the speed at which it is being done so that to the consequences are not felt by the victims, quite often the magats themselves, until it is too late.
THANK YOU, Marcy, for this extremely important and detailed article.
I have a comment re Social Security. We all pay into Social Security (and Medicare) consistently throughout our employment years (40 years +/- in length). It’s OUR money that is held and safely invested by the federal government, until we reach a certain age or become a retiree. It’s not Trump’s money, it’s not Elon’s money, nor any of their business “friend’s.” I think this needs to be stated, simply and loudly. They are misbranding Social Security and their attempts should be called out. My two cents.
DOGE (sic) is breaking a lot of things and when DOGE (sic) ends, which it will, many of those broken bits will have to be reassembled. Some of that recuperation effort will be piecemeal and may be ineffective. All of it will be expensive, an unnecessary expenditure to our nation caused by a rogue president and his unelected, besotted, benefactor.
US taxpayers have paid into our government agencies over their lifetimes; we’ve paid for the on-boarding and professional development, security clearances and sometimes the housing and travel of government employees. When DOGE ends, we’ll have to pay for it all over again.
And if you want Medicare Part B, you pay after you retire, also – it comes off the top of your Social Security check.
These are insurance programs, not giveaways! (Damned right, they’re “entitlements: we fund them from our pay, and we’re entitled to the benefits we’ve paid for.)
3/4 of Medicare part B funding comes from the “general fund” without passing through any lock boxes. Over 100 billion in insurance payments and over 300 billion from the general fund in 2025. It has been in the cross hairs of the tax cuts for the rich groups for decades. Guessing it will be part of the flood the zone with pain and destruction and then see what sticks strategy.
The money you pay in SS taxes is NOT invested for you. Musk is sort of correct when he says it’s immediately paid back out (although he’s lying when he equates it with a Ponzi scheme). When SS was first created, the politics required a way to get money to the large number of retired workers who had not built up any savings or investments.
Your taxes go into a Trust fund (OASI and DI) but that’s meant to be more like a buffer than an investment fund. Wikipedia says: “payments to beneficiaries […] are generally financed by payroll taxes on workers in Social Security covered employment, trust fund reserves, and income taxation of some Social Security benefits”.
The trust funds earned 68.6 billion in interest the last fiscal year. Termagent you are a victim of fake information placed on wikipedia and of the crappy google AI. Maybe the GRU investment in terrabytes of crap to feed LLMs is paying off.
From page 71 of the SSA annual report. “additional financing sources consist of interest revenue from OASI and DI trust fund investments”
It’s put into special Treasury bills, which is AN INVESTMENT because they collect interest. This is not a secret – it’s public information which you’ll never get from GOP outlets, because it says they’re lying to you.
I would add Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) to this list. If you’re on SSDI, you’re receiving insurance payments–from a program that you’ve already paid into–because you got disabled. It’s not a “handout” from the government.
Marcy,
Stunning work. I thank your tireless, imaginative courage, blazing action, pony steps, each of us might take, ensuring democracy responds to Trump’s authoritarian onslaught to the rule of law.
Thank you,
Peace,
We are in this together.
Great work pulling this all together in one place. Thank you ! Just FYI, the link to Georgetown’s response to Martin seems to be pointing to the wrong site.
Thanks. I think I’ve fixed it. Still looking for good links to the two letters, which are epic.
So much great information — it is really helpful to see this all in one place.
FYI, the link about Georgetown Law under the text “elicited a superb response” actually leads to the William Pope filing.
I think I’ve fixed it.
https://apnews.com/article/trump-dei-georgetown-ed-martin-9bff842ed5ca3e4600de52ca6967fe9d
The mummified remains of James Carville, originally found by Howard Carter among the canopik jars in Tutankhamun’s tomb, continues to recite his novel catechism that the most “radical thing” Democrats could do is “nothing at all.” Let Trump be Trump, he’ll undo himself. Whatever strategies Dems adopted, that should not be among them.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/mar/07/democrats-trump-socialism
Privilege, much, James? – or just shortsightedness?
Why is anyone asking him for political advice? He’s from the 90s, FFS.
CNN, of course! They love that Carville claims to be a Dem, but talks like a Repub. It’s also why they love Axelrod so much.
I gratefully add my vote of thanks for this detailed data dump. I will offer my humble opinion that the people who are angry, frightened, and confused want to see that level of emotion reflected back to them by the Democratic leadership, an ackowledgement that no, they’re not crazy, it really is that bad. I don’t know how to square the circle of appeasing the base while courting people unaware and uninterested in what is happening, which is what Jeffries and Schumer seem to be doing.
Especially grateful after reading the latest Dr. Timothy Snyder article about what the MAGA and 2025 backers are up to in the ‘big picture’ view. I think it is titled: THE LOGIC OF DESTRUCTION – AND HOW TO RESIST IT.
It can be found – I don’t think I am allowed to link – but it is a scary read.
All the FP moves Trump and his henchfelons are pulling right now (e.g., naming Greenland, Panama and Canada as targets for takeover, and aligning with Puting and Kim) deserves a tagline for the to-be-written history books. How about “Masturbatory Destiny?”
Allegedly Israel is beyond livid that we broke decades long policy and not only opened negotiations with Hamas directly but also may have declined to mention that to Israel ahead of the first talks. TFG has managed to specifically alienate almost every historical ally we’ve had across a wide continuum except maybe Japan. This is the greatest Russian ROI in the history of their country.
“TFG has managed to specifically alienate almost every historical ally we’ve had across a wide continuum except maybe Japan. This is the greatest Russian ROI in the history of their country.”
____________________________________________
To summarize Trump’s current thinking (…it could change in a few hours given Trump’s history)
• Trump trusts Putin – Putin wants peace and an end to the war.
• Putin is doing what anyone in his place would do: bombing harder and taking advantage of the fact that the U.S. has restricted Ukraine’s access to intelligence and halted military aid.
• Dealing with Ukraine is much harder. Besides, “they have no cards to play.”
• Security guarantees? Before Trump even thinks about that, he wants to end the war first.
• In general, “Ukraine needs to step up and do its job.”
I wonder how much that “investment” cost Russia?
A blow job from a woman who looks like Melania would probably suffice for a down payment.
BTW, wrt that Epstein rolodex dump, did Trump let them leave his name on it?
@ BRUCE F COLE March 7, 2025 at 3:31 pm
The rolodex happens to only go to “S” for some reason. Pam is certain she dumped “everything” she had.
/s
That sort of undercuts how serious the situation is. The US may think that calling Canada “the 51st state” is a joke, but the Canadians are deadly serious about it, and are genuinely worried about something like an economic blockade that would potentially crash their economy and obligate them to join the US. The rest of the world sees it largely the same way that Canada does.
The Danes are ramping up their military to send more protection to Greenland, and NATO nations are watching that situation closely, because an attack on Greenland would probably lead to an invocation of Article 5. When France talks about its nuclear capability, I don’t think it’s talking just to Putin. I think it’s also a shot across the bow at the US, too.
I haven’t been paying as close attention to the Panama Canal situation, but I suspect they believe him (and they should) when he says he’ll use force if necessary to get what he wants.
The Democrats don’t have a designated spokesperson that is capable of immediately countering the BIG LIE. An example was the paddles that the Democratic reps held up during his Congressional bloviating. Those signs said “FALSE”, when they should have said “LIE” and “HE’s LYING”. They are simply unwilling to call his lies out fully. I want Democrats to call a liar a liar, and to stop pussyfooting around. “My friends across the aisle”, and “my Republican colleagues” has got to stop. They R’s are not “friends”, and there is nothing “collegiate” about the way they operate. Those days are as dead as a parrot.
I think you missed a key point of this post: That’s not the venue where one CAN call out the Big Lie. And many of the people screaming on social media ARE in the venue where it needs to happen.
The pink suits are one thing. Standing up and yelling, holding a *hammer* – if it’s wrong for them to do that, it’s also wrong for us.
You’re simply wrong, quickbrownfox. First, Texas Rep. Al Green did exactly what you were asking for–and got “escorted out.”
Second, where have you been all the times Chris Murphy and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have been screaming at the top of their (rhetorical) lungs about these things? If you haven’t heard them, you haven’t been paying attention.
EW is of course correct about the limitations that congress folk in a minority face. But some are actively defying those limitations, and they can use our support.
Thank you Marcy for hilighting the diverse and strong legitimate and serious actions pushing back on the corrupt, flawed, weak, and illeagle shitcon47 administration and its partners, party and enablers.
I want as strong a future possible for this country as my kids each spread their wings and grow each day. And my friends and family do too, for all of US, even if they can’t see the situation on the ground as it unfolds or devolves or is coming up.
You blaze an amazing trail as a vital vivisectionist, daunting deductive diagnostician and inductive legend. Thank you for your efforts and labors to truthfully and accurately broadcast information and strategy and vibe with clarity.
Happy friday to all who live to build a better future for our entire world!*!*!
Dr. EW, Thank you for the technical, mental, but most of all moral effort you put into pulling this post together. I just spent a couple hours poring over Charles Gaba’s state-by-state, district-by-district Medicaid/CHIP data. I was not looking for explosive epiphanies, but the overall impression created by this data picture is revelatory.
Not in a good way. At first I thought Democratic districts outpaced Republican ones in using these programs. That turned out to depend on which state I was looking at, and possibly (as in Lauren Boebert and Thomas Massie’s districts) an ideological trend–or an illusion on my part. (In several highly gerrymandered red states, the only districts represented by Democrats are clustered in poor urban areas, too.)
My main depressing takeaway: America’s legacy of meanness predates Trump. He is capitalizing (politically and financially) on a legacy of victim-blaming that has relegated those born poor into a life of systematic exclusion from “advantages” like nutrition and health care. The proof in Gaba’s data lies in the column labeled ACA extension, a column that remains blank in Texas, Alabama, South Carolina, and several other states rich in politicians currently singing the praises of Trump’s approach.
In these states the average use of Medicaid/CHIP is roughly half what it is where I live. Because folks don’t need it there? NO. Because rich people need tax breaks more.
Much of the resistance to Medicaid expansion was couched in a false narrative of savings – “we’re bankrupting our grandchildren” – or, my fav, the virtuous do not take money from a “corrupt” administration (dudes! It’s taxpayer dollars, not Obama dollars! Also, it’s actual money – always take that! as opposed to non-money boutique crypto). From inside two state safety net hospital systems in states that dragged out the process but eventually signed up, this did indeed look like a pre-Trump expression of meanness, and the desperate measures taken by minority rule.
What was the point in turning down $ for much needed health care, especially when majorities in some states were clamoring for the funds – to the point of voting through referendums in direct defiance of state legislatures and some governors? This was an early indication of how a far right minority ignores what actual majorities of citizens clearly want, in order to enact repressive hurtful policies that keep some, even most, people down. Or even simpler: state level official ignores what citizens want just to take a political stand that might help in a future national campaign, no thought to other consequences. Think also: sensible gun regulation; reproductive care (guess which recent administrations had higher vs lower rates of abortions…)
Ciel babe, you expressed my point more clearly than I did. I would add that for state pols in Texas, Tennessee, Alabama and others, refusing the expansion was a way of demonstrating that “government” does not work–because they MADE it not work. Which is the entire project right now, the vision that unites DOGE and Project 2025.
exactly!
I’m so proud of Meirav Solomon for bringing attention to Trump’s cuts to the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR.) She is exactly right to focus on this. The services it provides are essential in supporting investigation, mediation, and workable solutions to difficult situations.
That is exactly the federal office I contacted in the late 1990’s when my local city administration refused to comply with established policies and laws regarding harassment of customers and staff. An investigator came down and took statements from willing witnesses about the behavior of city administrators and members of a white supremacist militia group.
The resolution took many months, but the policy forbidding us to check their rifle bag, or report concerns, was rescinded. And training was subsequently mandated for the entire 300+ staff. And, as I recently mentioned, I believe the existence of those witness statements may have played a part in why the city settled with me by reversing my demotion, and giving me back pay even though I lost my civil case in federal court.
It’s one thing for them to incapacitate OCR, which is already happening. But it’s also very easy to imagine with a few key hires and a few absurd but technically legal interpretations of their mission that the OCR suddenly goes on unicorn hunts for “reverse discrimination” cases, dog whistle politics language if ever there was any. Which means suddenly those investigators who were invaluable to you become a scourge to others in your situation, an impact that will tarnish that department long after TFG is gone (again).
It’s amazing how many people of various political stripes can recite the “First they came for the…” speech and not understand that we’re watching a variant in real time.
The current crop do not seem to care about “technically legal.” They do not seem to care about “legal” at all.
Exceptional workmanship. Thank you. Sincerely.
One small bit of contention. For all practical purposes, there are no local newspapers.
[Welcome to emptywheel. Please choose and use a unique username with a minimum of 8 letters. We have adopted this minimum standard to support community security. Because your username is too short and common it will be temporarily changed to match the date/time of your first known comment until you have a new compliant username. /~Rayne]
Despite not being able to run for a 3rd term, Trump’s fundraising has continued robustly, via his Joint Fundraising Committee.
In one of his latest, revealing accusations — that heads of state of other countries and allies are illegitimate — Donald unwittingly points the finger directly to his own election, especially the anomalies that have been noted in the seven swing states he “won.”
if he is alive by then, there will be an attempt to steal a third term.
As this blog has pointed out Trump didn’t win the 2016 election. He cheated (see Bill Barr, Robert Mueller, etc.).
He has admitted publicly that Elon cheated for him in 2024. He didn’t win there either.
It’s going to come out. If you haven’t checked in with Election Truth Alliance, here’s their latest video:
https://youtu.be/M2TufO9QAGA
When you are King, you don’t have to ‘run’.
I’ve heard he’s wanting to get the Declaration, framed, on his office wall. (It’s in a special case at NARA, along with the Constitution. Protective cases, low lighting, all the things that respectable institutions do to protect very fragile and very valuable objects.)
Atlantic via Daily Kos: https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2025/3/7/2308602/-Now-Trump-wants-to-steal-the-Declaration-of-Independence
I believe the “close advisors who raise their arms in fascist salutes” refers to Bannon and Musk.
One of features of politics that I puzzle over and fascinates me is the alignment with antisemitism and Zionism.
While the quote cites the antisemitism of the advisors, they both have ties to Israel.
Bannon has long been tied to an alt right website founded by Israeli intelligence and has spoken at Zionist conferences.
Off the top of my head, Musk has had private meetings with Netanyahu. Most prominently in my memory is the meeting right before October 7, which I suspect included a request to just let the algorithms amplify violence.
And I believe the origins of Soros as a Jewish boogeyman originated via advisors close to Netanyahu who working in the Hungarian elections nearly 20 years ago.
For MAGA, “antisemitism” is a convenient horse to ride when it comes to targeting university presidents, and faculty and students. Of course, as you point out, ZScore, it’s pure smarm: they will throw anyone overboard including Jews when the thrill of clicking their boot heels together overcomes them in the moment.
Thank you. I think this is an excellent detailed overview and one that gives me hope. One area I think deserves more attention is the impact of the USAID cuts. Not your fault, it’s not your wheelhouse, but the victims of those cuts have no standing anywhere in the United States I can see and it’s genocide.
Anyhow, thank you for this hopeful overview.
Here’s another good speech by a parliamentarian of a former ally:
https://www.youtube.com/live/ahUMBGaoVLs?si=mP0HQkdvmX-02gsV
Not a great orator, but powerful nonetheless.
Here’s another Chris Murphy video. A talk he gave on the Senate floor covering a whole collection of Trump corruption: Six Weeks In…
Thank you for another terrific post, all the detail, and all of the encouragement. And the little things: “DOGE [sic]” – the [sic] makes me happy every time.
Like the shout out re: Nope it’s not inevitable.
Thinking about how and why we all go along with stuff despite our inner voice saying Nooooo is a helpful exercise, particularly in these times.
https://hiddenbrain.org/podcast/marching-to-your-own-drummer/
This post helped pick up my spirits and give me hope. More work is being done to combat Trump’s authoritarianism than I’d realized, and in more ways than I’d known. The detail and breadth of information is incredible and, as many of your past posts have done, remind me just how indefatigably hard-working you are, Marcy. Thank you for all the time, effort, and care you put into your journalism. Cheers from the not-51st state, Canada.
“The fundamental weakness of Western Civilization is empathy.” Musk
https://www.cnn.com/2025/03/05/politics/elon-musk-rogan-interview-empathy-doge/index.html
“it’s all going to the library,”
Seems as though there may be a bit left over after they display the complete collection of Ritchie Rich comics and a gold-plated Lee Greenwood Bible.
Great post. The members of the circular firing squad need to spin on their heels and fire outward- there are plenty of targets.
Slotkin’s point about picking an issue and joining a group that cares about it is important. I don’t know yet whether the Indivisible groups springing up around here will bear fruit, but that’s a place to start. That and volunteering in my community.. It will still be here when the dust settles. I’m not going anywhere, not giving up and not expecting any hero to bail us out.
Those groups will bear fruit if we join them, or support them in some meaningful way. That’s been my experience, anyway, starting in high school campaigning for Abner Mikva in Illinois.
Dems need to respond to Trump as illegitimate. Like the brother in law beating your sister. It needs to be obvious and uncomfortable. And coordinated.
He is as corrupt and compromised as facts continue to show, he should be given no respect. It’s not theory. It’s ok to shout.
As a therapist, it’s been constant crises mode. Real lives. With no future prospect of change coming. The house is on fire and no one is coming. My sister got beat up but we will just play along? Act nice?
Deep wounds. Hurt badly. Lost jobs. Lost organizations. Running for their lives. (Undocumented terror) And the hurt is growing.
Dems look powerless and inept. Completely impotent. I get this article refutes that but this is not what it looks like or feels like.
No one spoke to the people who lost their jobs. No one spoke to the families of mothers dying from bad healthcare. No one spoke to the stress of doge walking into the building.
Dems should have one by one disrupted the speech and walked out after Al Green! Disrupting Trump a show of power.
We are way past decorum. MTG looked crazy but it looks sane when Americans are so deeply hurting. Trust me. They are hurting so badly they need validation now!!!
No one acknowledged the real stress and fear. No one spoke to the true suffering. They colluded.
Black eye at Christmas? Let’s just eat dinner and talk about the weather.
Dems appear aloof. Privileged, uncaring and impotent. The pain I am witnessing is over whelming.
Whether Trump moving forward with his plan is inevitable does not matter if you just lost your career of 25 years. It doesn’t matter. It’s not that comforting. How do I feed my family now?
So many truly harmed by what doge is doing.
Resistance is necessary. As every authority on coups such as this will say. So what if one by one democrats got kicked out of trumps SOTU. It would have communicated to the American people “we see you”.
Validating the true suffering will lead to action. Civil disobedience. A coordinated community response that says if you hit my sister again there will be hell to pay. A response that disrupts.
Validation for the utter destruction. It’s obvious the senate and congress are still getting their pay checks. It’s maddening and invalidating. Feels as gas lighty as Trump. Wear pink. Carry a sign.
Make sure you call your senator!! Make sure you write letters!! Let me stop and do that…right now while my house is on fire. Disconnect. There should have been hotlines to call for all those who lost jobs.
The American people are no longer in doubt. They are in pain!!!
Stop obeying. It’s ok to yell. It’s ok to be loud. There’s a fire in the house. There’s a woman dying in the stairwell!! Act like it.
“Dems look powerless and inept. Completely impotent. I get this article refutes that but this is not what it looks like or feels like.”
Where are you getting your news? Do you receive emails from your own representatives and senators, or others? Do you follow them on social media?
We’ve written thousands of posts here about the ways in which mainstream corporate media have failed to serve the interests of democracy including the now-trope evergreen “Dems in Disarray.” We’ve written about the ways in which social media has been used to undermine the left.
And yet we repeatedly get complaints that Dems are doing nothing when in fact few are actually looking to see what they did, continuing to expect the wholly-compromised mainstream corporate media to serve them what they are looking for as if on a platter.
We are in deep shit right now because too many people are comfortable with complaining about someone else not serving them democracy instead of doing the necessary work to obtain the democracy they demand. And if you have time and energy to scold, it’s not well spent here on us.
p.s. 483 words with excessive spacing to express your displeasure here is over the top. Tighten up your writing.
It doesn’t help much when this is the kind of stuff you see at Kos:
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2025/3/8/2308409/-Cartoon-Tsk-tsk
(And diaries saying the same kind of thing!)
Yup. Wholly unhelpful attacking the Democrats and not the guy with the chainsaw.
Meanwhile, we miss cues like this one:
We can go harder — but we need to focus our aim and knock off the circular firing squad.
Good point. I know you are right. And trust me, I am doing all I can do. The pain in my sessions is overwhelming. I thought covid was hard but not compared to the pain from my clients now. So much psychological pain. Overwhelming. It’s a me problem. Need to go see my therapist. It’s taking a toll on me to witness it. I was not scolding this site. The people here get it. It’s just so invalidating. My sessions are full of me encouraging them to get involved. But they are so traumatized and frozen. I am on a panel. And donating and donating lots of sessions. Sorry for the rant.
My apologies. I know you all are right.
I use the 5 calls app. And encourage it to my clients. Participate on a dem voter panel and wrote to every one of the dems who censured Al Green. Literally have bought and given away Timothy Snyder book to several clients.
Currently treating people in the political trenches. Giving discounts to clients as needed.
We are all abuse survivors now. And we will respond to fear with a variation of the 4 F’s of trauma. (Fight, flight, freeze and fawn.)
I am the one who feels impotent. It doesn’t feel like enough. I know this is the intention of the abuse. Good reminder.
Sorry for the rant. I appreciate this site and it’s nice to hear about all the work being done.
I did not mean to post 2. I started the other one earlier. Came back and thought I had posted. Didn’t see it, so I started a new one. Thinking I forgot to hit send.
Obviously my emotions are calming down as I go but posting 2 was unintentional.
You sound so human(e).
I loved the 4 fs esp. “fawn”.
Thank you!
We ARE all abuse survivors now. You said it beautifully, as you typically do. I think this applies even more to those (like me) who experienced trauma early on. In my case it was extremely severe and in very early childhood; I have been in therapy for decades building a self from those ruins.
I hate the jargon, but it is simply true: Trump triggers me, always has. His voice, the way he looks when he talks, force me into a struggle to hang on to my sense of wholeness. I avoid him when I can, but my work makes it impossible to do it totally.
That “meeting” with Zelenskyy felt to me like watching a gang rape. The bullies urged each other on, punching down like the cowards they are, and then claiming victory (“great television”!) when it was only their victim who walked away with his human dignity intact.
My own tailspin afterwards likely matches what you see in your clients. My therapist tells me she is hearing much the same thing. The bullies are trying to beat all of us into submission. We must not let them win.
PeaceRme, I got to a point this past week, after the Oval Office beatdown of Zelenskyy, where my own rage imploded and I found myself paralyzed with depression. What I’m trying to say: I believe I feel the pain you’re expressing.
But as I’ve been exhorting xyxyxyxy and others, I do not believe trashing Democrats generally helps us. Have you called Al Green to offer support for his gesture of resistance last week? Have you called Jim Himes, or any of the other nine Dem Reps who voted with Mike Johnson to censure him, to express displeasure? If not, then you can’t exactly accuse anyone else of inaction.
I know my frustration starts with my own feelings of helplessness. THAT IS WHAT TRUMP WANTS. He wants us blaming each other and our allies for what are his atrocities, abetted by his enablers. He his choking us with shit and he wants us to give up…on each other, most of all.
Don’t fall for it. Your insight into family violence and the ripples it casts is unmatched here. You have a rare weapon to bring to this fight. Don’t turn it on your friends.
as a practical matter, what about the 5 calls app? is this type of communication effective? friends say politicians pay less attention to robocalls than to individual contacts.
[MODS: PLEASE DELETE IF THIS IS CONSIDERED INAPPROPRIATE.]
I’d also suggest reading Timothy Snyder’s “On Tyranny”, which lays out 20 things you can do to fight totalitarianism. In addition to the links above, Snyder’s book is informative and will help put you in the right mindset for things that you can do.
Thanks Dr. Wheeler for you relentless work and detailed survey.
In Cleveland Ohio there is a lot of energy. Public meetings have attracted crowds beyond the number planned for. As an artist I’m involved in nascent collaboration aimed to develop spontaneous expressive capacities to support resistance.
One action that has not broken through is the plan to mobilize protests in Washington on March 14. This news needs to break through! (web search: protest Washington March 14)
No. Don’t do that here. If you’re going to personally promote a protest, be responsible and identify the organizers, their contact information, details about where and when before sharing. Research the organizers and their funding as well.
Folks need to start thinking more deeply instead of reflexively dumping here. What are typical reactions of an authoritarian state to protests? This site shouldn’t be treated like an organizing vehicle because the blowback will interfere with the work being done here. Furthermore, folks need to remember the 2016 protests which were co-opted by Russia; protect yourself and others by doing the appropriate homework in advance, and not dumping half-assed promotions here.
As I’ve said before, if after researching an event you plan to attend, take appropriate safety and security measures:
• Attending a protest: https://ssd.eff.org/module/attending-protest
• How to Use Signal: https://ssd.eff.org/module/how-to-use-signal
• Security starter pack: https://ssd.eff.org/playlist/want-security-starter-pack/
• Know your rights: https://www.aclu.org/know-your-rights/protesters-rights
• Give a trusted friend/family member information about where you will be and when you should be expected to return. Be sure to check in with them after the event.
We are no longer living in a system which respects human rights; it will demand compliance with the law on our part and more, while refusing to comply with laws on its part. Protect yourselves and others while protesting, first by taking appropriate privacy and security measures.
And wear a damned N95 mask. There’s still a COVID pandemic, influenza is rampant, and H5N1 is next as well as measles. Don’t become a statistic, don’t be part of a mass spreader event.
Go it.
Thanks for sketching out measures for security and safety.
It must be nice to think that everyone can take a day off from work to protest.