Where We Go from Here

At the beginning of 2026, I did a post piggybacking on what had succeed against Trump last year, laying out ways to use Trump’s own conspiracism and grievance against him. That post linked an assessment of our success in five ways fighting fascism, and also explained why I think we need to fight Trump using his own tools against him.

This page repeats the same categories from that post, and fleshes out developments that accord with my original framework.

Treat Epstein as the base layer

Remember that Marc Caputo column — it was published on December 23 — stating that the Epstein releases could last a whole ‘nother week? On the day that would mark that week, December 30, Devlin Barrett published a story saying that, “The document review” of what is now believed to be 5.2 million documents “is expected to take until at least Jan. 20, according to a person familiar with the matter.” Even if they could finish it by January 20 (they won’t), that’ll just be the first go-around. DOJ has not done what they need to do to document the redactions, so there’ll be demands from Congress for them to do that (with obvious areas — including DOJ names and some deliberative documents specifically included in the law, where they’re in violation), they’ll need to repeat the entire process over again, Congress will begin to bring more legal pressure, and all the while survivors will be pointing out things they missed.

A week, Marc Caputo reported, as if that were credible!

This will go on for some time. This will go on for a very long time.

Still, while the Epstein scandal has been absolutely instrumental in loosing Trump’s grip on things, people are naive in thinking that will be enough. “My friends will get hurt,” Trump predicted, but what does it really mean for Trump’s power that Les Wexner has been implicated in the Epstein scandal as a co-conspirator? What is the use of creating right wing cognitive dissonance about Les Wexner, when Wexner is not the oligarch currently helping Trump destroy the country?

In my opinion, the Epstein scandal is a tool. It undercuts Trump’s ability to grab and redirect attention. It can create moments of cognitive dissonance, as it did for MTG. It is a way to turn Trump’s conspiracism and populism against him and may make other related narrative lines more salient. And if there’s a surprise disclosure — perhaps about Melania’s origin story — all the better. But as you keep the focus on Epstein, remember that there needs to be a direction beyond Epstein as well, a direction which incorporates the oligarchs who are still key players in Trump’s network of power.

Focus on the Broligarchs and AI

The Broligarchs who’ve been a key part of Trump’s power are one way to do that (and that’s before we’ve really gotten into Steve Bannon and Peter Thiel’s ties to Epstein).

Tesla Takedown was one of the most successful campaigns of 2025. At a time when Tesla faced cheaper competitors worldwide, the protests incurred a cost on Musk for his DOGE depredations.

Elon was installed in the White House in significant part by fellow South African “alien invader” David Sacks, who is even more conspiratorial and even more pro-Russian than Musk. Sacks was installed in the White House as a Special Government Employee (who, Elizabeth Warren suggests, has overstayed his welcome) to force a bunch of policy decisions that suck for America but ensure that Broligarchs won’t pay any consequences for their rash business deals. When one or both of crypto and AI crash (this is a really good story on how and why AI will burst), he’ll be there to ensure the government bails them out, as he did after playing a role in the failure of Silicon Valley Bank.

And even as Trump sheds support based on his mockery of affordability, even as MTG split with Trump over that and his support for crypto, Sacks is trying to brand Democrats as being more populist than even Zohran Mamdani is.

Fine. You want Democrats to be the party attending to the needs of working people? You’ve just made the GOP the party of “alien invader” billionaires who got tax cuts as millions lost their health care.

This happened even as AI has become a political liability. It has happened as local groups successfully stave off new data centers. It has happened as more instances of AI-inflamed suicide, murder, and pornincluding porn exploiting children — appear. And it happens before the aforementioned crash.

Sacks and the other Broligarchs are going to do something for which they’ll try to dodge accountability. Now is the time to make sure his name comes up as people look for culprits.

January 12, 2026: Trump seeks to quell data center rebellion (WaPo)

January 12, 2026: America’s Biggest Power Grid Operator Has an AI Problem—Too Many Data Centers (WaPo)

Emphasize Trump’s loser stench

Another thing that will lead people to defect is to realize that Trump is a loser. He has done things — like the takeover of the Kennedy Center — that makes it easy to demonstrate he’s a loser in tangible fashion. Better still, every time Trump attaches his name to something, it provides an opportunity to hijack that brand, as comedian Toby Morton auspiciously managed to do by anticipating Trump’s most venal instincts and buying the domain.

The same is true of his businesses. Trump and his entire family is getting rich off the presidency 2.0. But his businesses are built as cons, sometimes Ponzi schemes. The idea is to leverage the loyalty of MAGAts to get them to invest in something, run up its value, only to collapse, leaving the most vulnerable screwed. In the past, at least, the cult effect was such that even MAGAts bilked by Trump associates, as with Steve Bannon’s Build the Wall graft, were reluctant to turn on the fraudsters; that may change. But at the very least, the volatile nature of Trump’s frauds makes it easy to show that as a businessman, he’s a loser.

Visualize Trump’s corruption

While there has been good reporting on Trump’s corruption — see, for example, NYT’s nifty visualization from New Year’s Eve — there has not been a systematic effort to take on his corruption.

Nevertheless, possibly because of the Epstein scandal, a majority of the country does think Trump is corrupt.

That may actually not be in a bad place to be as we move into 2026. That’s because Democrats can make Republican inaction in the face of Trump’s corruption a campaign issue (and then, if it leads to a Democratic sweep in midterms, the electoral buy-in will be in place to do a lot of oversight and defunding of Trump’s corruption).

Trump’s pardons are similar. There’s actually a solid stream of reporting on how corrupt they are, without yet any political direction to it. Democrats running against Republican incumbents — especially in the Senate — should state as presumed that it is the job of Senators to respond to the kind of naked corruption Trump is engaged in.

Where activists can magnify the good reporting on both Trump’s corruption and his pardons is to focus on the victims. This is actually showing up in the reporting on both topics. WaPo focused on the victims of Trevor Milton who might have gotten restitution had Trump not pardoned him. LAT similarly focused on the victims fucked over by Trump’s pardon of David Gentile.

Rosenberg, a retired wholesale produce distributor living in Nevada, has supported Trump since he entered politics, but the president’s decision in November to commute the sentence of former private equity executive David Gentile has left him angry and confused.

“I just feel I’ve been betrayed,” Rosenberg, 68, said. “I don’t know why he would do this, unless there was some sort of gain somewhere, or some favor being called in. I am very disappointed. I kind of put him above this kind of thing.”

Trump’s decision to release Gentile from prison less than two weeks into his seven-year sentence has drawn scrutiny from securities attorneys and a U.S. senator — all of whom say the White House’s explanation for the act of clemency is not adding up. It’s also drawn the ire of his victims.

“I think it is disgusting,” said CarolAnn Tutera, 70, who invested more than $400,000 with Gentile’s company, GPB Capital. Gentile, she added, “basically pulled a Bernie Madoff and swindled people out of their money, and then he gets to go home to his wife and kids.”

This superb Bloomberg story on the extent to which the Juan Orlando Hernández pardon unraveled years of work starts with a murder arranged by the network.

Five minutes later, González was circling a roundabout when a gray van braked in front of him. At the same time, a green SUV crowded his rear bumper. A motorcycle carrying two men emerged on his left. A man on the back of the bike fired six shots through the driver-side window. González’s head slumped toward his shoulder, and he tilted forward, held upright by the seatbelt. He died instantly.

More than a dozen men streamed out of the two vehicles that had sandwiched his Nissan. They scrambled to collect the spent shell casings on the ground, then scattered other casings across the pavement—decoys to complicate ballistics tracing. They jumped back into their vehicles, circled the roundabout and took the same road Julián had just driven down.

When they approached the Slaughterhouse, the gates opened to let them in, then closed behind them.

Every one of these pardons has a victim — and that’s before you get into the people newly victimized by people who’ve been pardoned by Trump, which NYT covered in November and others are tracking as well.

A New Jersey fraudster who was pardoned by President Trump in 2021 was sentenced to 37 years in prison this month for running a $44 million Ponzi scheme, one of a growing number of people granted clemency by Mr. Trump only to be charged with new crimes.

The man, Eliyahu Weinstein, was pardoned by Mr. Trump in 2021 and was re-indicted by the U.S. attorney’s office in New Jersey three years later. He was accused of swindling investors who thought their money was being used to buy surgical masks, baby formula and first-aid kits bound for Ukraine, and a jury convicted him in April of several crimes, including conspiracy to commit securities and wire fraud.

[snip]
Some of those pardoned for their role in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol have quickly drawn new attention from law enforcement. The group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington said in June that at least 10 of the more than 1,500 who were pardoned had been rearrested and charged, and the number has only grown since then.

Earlier this month, a man who was pardoned after having participated in the Jan. 6 attack was charged with sex crimes against two children. Another man whose original sentence Mr. Trump commuted in 2021 was recently sentenced to 27 months in prison after convictions on physical and sexual assault, among other crimes.

These stories provide an important way to explain the costs of Trump’s corruption.

Brand Trump as the criminal he is

And while we’re talking about telling these stories: We must never ever cede the ground of crime to Stephen Miller’s attempt to brand immigrants as criminals.

Trump — a felon who freed hundreds of cop assailants on his first day on the job — has an entire infrastructure devoted to trying to spin brown people as criminal. Every time that infrastructure goes into action, including with the effort to brand Somalis in Minnesota as inherently fraudulent when Trump himself is a serial fraudster, we need to repeat, relentlessly, that Trump is a serial criminal who coddles other criminals.

This is something Gavin Newsom just started doing, with an entire website devoted to cataloging Trump’s crime and that of his pardon recipients.

Do not let a conversation about crime go by without focusing on how much of it Trump does.

Crime, in Trump’s era, is a rich white man’s thing. And while it will take a lot of work to adjust a lot of racist priors, until people start seeing Trump as a criminal it will be far too easy for them to make excuses for him.

Hold Stephen Miller accountable for his failures

I focused on Stephen Miller — and the import of making his failures clear — last week.

The import of shifting how we speak of Miller’s considerable power is clear. That’s true because he frankly has done huge damage, even to Trump’s goals, and well more so to average Americans. He’s someone that people, including Republicans, can scapegoat for Trump’s failures (and they’ll be right). And if we don’t make sure that happens, then he’ll scapegoat brown people.

Again, are Somali day care workers or billionaires systematically defrauding average people the problem? One easy to way to drown out Miller’s case that it’s the former is to make it clear how much he personally has harmed average Americans.

Visualize how Stephen Miller took money for cancer research and veterans care to pay for a goon army snatching grandmothers

On January 12, AOC explained this shift better than anyone has.

Relatedly, particularly as the huge injection of funding Republicans approved last year starts landing at DHS, it will become increasingly necessary to tie the goon squads in the streets to the loss of benefits elsewhere.

We need to make it clear that this is a direct trade. 50,000 ICE goons in, 300,000 other government employees out, including people who cure cancer, help learning disabled kids get through school, protect our National Parks, ensure your Social Security comes on time, and care for veterans.

Christopher Ingraham did a handy graphic to show the trade-off.

Stephen Miller’s dragnet is unpopular in the abstract and wildly unpopular in the lived sense, even — if meekly — among local Republican leaders.

But it still retains support of a big chunk of the population, probably because Trump officials routinely blame their own failures to address American problems on migrants, when as often as not, Trump’s response to immigration is the source of the problem.

America can’t have nice things, like cures for cancer and welcoming public schools, because Republicans in Congress took the money used to pay for those things and gave it to Stephen Miller to use to invade America’s neighborhoods.

Discredit Key Spokespeople

Right wingers like Jonah Goldberg and David French have expressed alarm by an old promo for a 60 Minutes piece (the piece itself was from October) that an influencer reposted yesterday, describing dozens of times when the government lied in court filings.

Judges have caught Trump’s DOJ in several major lies since then. In Chicago, Judge Sara Ellis wrote a 233-page opinion documenting the many lies DHS has told about their Chicago invasion.

And in December, judges in both Kilmar Abrego’s case caught the government obfuscating. In the criminal case, on December 30, Judge Waverly Crenshaw unsealed a December 3 opinion describing how Nashville’s US Attorney lied about how centrally involved Todd Blanche’s office was in demanding Abrego face trial.

The central question after Abrego established a prima facie case of vindictiveness is what information in the government’s control sheds light on its new decision to prosecute Abrego, after removing him from the United States without criminal charges. These documents show that McGuire did not act alone and to the extent McGuire had input on the decision to prosecute, he shared it with Singh and others. (Doc. No. 178-1). Specifically, the government’s documents may contradict its prior representations that the decision to prosecute was made locally and that there were no outside influences. For example, Singh contacted McGuire on April 27, 2025, to discuss Abrego’s case. (See Doc. No. 229 at Abrego-Garcia000001). On April 30, 2025, Singh asked McGuire what the potential charges against Abrego would be, whether the charging document would reference Abrego’s alleged MS-13 affiliation, and asked for a phone call before any charges were filed. (Id. at Abrego-Garcia000007–000008). In a separate email on April 30, 2025, Singh made clear that Abrego’s criminal prosecution was a “top priority” for the Deputy Attorney General’s office (Blanche). (Id. at Abrego-Garcia000037). He then told McGuire to “sketch out a draft complaint for the 1324 charge [making it unlawful to bring in and harbor certain aliens].” (Id.). On May 15th, McGuire emailed his staff that “DAG (Blanche) and PDAG would like Garcia charged sooner rather than later.” (Id. at Abrego-Garcia000060).

And as I’ve already noted, Judge Paula Xinis cataloged the many deliberately ignorant declarations DOJ filed about whether DHS had deportation plans for Abrego when she ruled that he must be released.

Respondents showcased Cantú’s ignorance about the content of his Declaration pertaining to Costa Rica. As the pointed questions of Respondents’ counsel made clear, Cantú’s lack of knowledge was planned and purposeful.

Counsel: So paragraph 4, final sentence [of the Cantú Declaration], do you see where it says the word—the words “certain understandings”?

Cantú: I found it. Yes, I do. I see it.

Counsel: What are the certain understandings referenced in the last sentence?

Cantú: I don’t know . . .

Counsel: What are the “contingencies” referenced in the last sentence?

Cantú: I do not know . . .

Counsel: What are the “interim developments” referenced in paragraph 5?

Cantú: I don’t know.

ECF No. 107 at 26:8–27:12 (counsel for Respondents, Jonathan Guynn (“Guynn”), questioning Cantú). See also id. at 53:8–9 (Guynn, at sidebar with Court, stating “I’ll just say I told you this was exactly what was going to happen,” regarding the witness’ ignorance on Costa Rica as a viable country of removal).

Ultimately, Respondents’ calculated effort to take Costa Rica “off the table” backfired. Within 24 hours, Costa Rica, through Minister Zamora Cordero, communicated to multiple news sources that its offer to grant Abrego Garcia residence and refugee status is, and always has been, firm, unwavering, and unconditional.

It’s a problem that, after huge scoldings like these, right wing critics of Trump don’t understand how much Trump’s people lie — not least because the Supreme Court still credits the most outlandish claims Trump makes, even after they’ve been thoroughly debunked by lower court judges.

Many of these lies are coming from the same people: Stephen Miller, Todd Blanche’s office, DHS spox Tricia McLaughlin, and Greg Bovino.

It is remarkable that so many of these people have been caught lying to courts (or publicly, about people before courts). But it needs to become common knowledge for everyone, so every time Tricia says something, they start from the assumption she’s lying, because she almost always is.

There comes a time when the credibility of systematic liars not named Trump collapse entirely such that every utterance they make discredits the claims they try to sell. Tricia McLaughlin, at least, is close those levels of propaganda, and Stephen Miller is not far behind.

Use Trump’s claimed opposition to antisemitism against him

Within days of his inauguration last year, Trump signed an EO — adding to one he signed in 2019 — claiming to oppose antisemitism. There has been some discussion about the bad faith of this EO and a DOJ lawyer implementing it, Michael Velchik, once wrote a paper from Hitler’s perspective. While it is explicitly targeted at universities (and has been a key tool to attempt to takeover universities), it nevertheless claimed to oppose antisemitism everywhere.

It shall be the policy of the United States to combat anti-Semitism vigorously, using all available and appropriate legal tools, to prosecute, remove, or otherwise hold to account the perpetrators of unlawful anti-Semitic harassment and violence.

This is the kind of statement of principle that can form the basis of political pressure — particularly as the MAGAt movement splinters around the overt antisemitism of people like Nick Fuentes and Candace Owen, and as political opportunists like Ted Cruz attempt to exploit that splinter.

We’re going to have to fight this battle in any case. As part of the revocation of everything Eric Adams did after he was indicted for bribery yesterday, Zohran Mamdani revoked an EO that gave Israel preferential treatment, which Israel is using to stoke division; yet Mamdani preserved the office Adams opened to combat antisemitism.

We need to call out the dripping antisemitism of Trump’s team, from top (at least JD Vance, who refuses to disavow Fuentes) to bottom.

There are two key Trump aides who should be targeted. Most notably, Paul Ingrassia, who had to withdraw his nomination to be Special Counsel after Politico exposed texts in which he confessed to a Nazi streak been installed at GSA instead. In addition, Kingsley Wilson became DOD spokesperson in spite of Neo-Nazi comments. NPR has done good work unpacking these ties.

Reclaim disinformation research

Republicans plan on exporting fascism via US tech platforms.

That’s not new. I’ve been talking about Elon’s plans to use Xitter as a machine for fascism for some time.

But since then, Trump’s minions worked it into the National Security Strategy.

And, in the wake of the EU’s sanctions against Elon Musk for — basically — lying about why I have a blue check, Marco Rubio stripped the visas of five people, including US Green Card holder Imran Ahmed, a long time adversary of Elon’s.

But there are several developments that suggest it is time to renew efforts to defend disinformation research, not least the White House’s absurd effort to attack real journalism, what is sure to be a snowballing failure on Bari Weiss’ part to make propaganda popular, and the meltdown the head of DOJ’s Civil Rights division, Harmeet Dhillon, had over the holidays about right wing “misinformation” targeting Pam Bondi.

The right wingers are doing what they themselves established is unlawful. And that presents both political and legal opportunities to demonize their propaganda.

Which in turn cycles back to the increasing problem of AI propaganda, including Grok’s flagrant willingness to nudify children in recent days.

Some people write short resolutions. I guess I write 4,000-word To Do lists. Join me in my efforts!

image_print
Share this entry
53 replies
  1. xyxyxyxy says:

    Since Tillerson is alive, maybe he can knock some sense into the current Exxon CEO about the way he speaks of Trump, the President of Venezuela.
    “Speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One on Sunday, the president said he is inclined to block Exxon Mobil from future projects in Venezuela…”We are going to have guarantees,” Trump said. “They had problems in the past because they didn’t have Trump as a president.”

  2. RitaRita says:

    I add one more: Comment on Trump’s cognitive and emotional functioning.

    I read the transcript of the NY Times interview. I was struck by Trump’s inability to answer the question asked, his lack of historical knowledge and the grandiosity connected to that lack, his continued attachment to grievances largely detached from reality, and his inability to express himself logically and clearly. In short, much of what he says and does, can be fairly described as childish.

    At one point, the reporter wanted to know his feelings about Rubio and Vance. He replied that he “…can’t be happier with either of them”.

    • Mooserites says:

      If I am not mistaken one of the last questions on the MOCA is “Count backwards from 100 by 7” Could Trump do that?

      • punaise says:

        99 bottles of fear on the wall
        99 bottles of fear
        Take one down, pass it around
        98 bottles of fear on the wall”

    • emptywheel says:

      While I do that (I joked that they’re labeling all the rooms of the White House so Trump doesn’t get lost), but in general that doesn’t target Trump w/grievance and conspiracism. The idea is you will never convince a MAGAt by making fun of Trump — that’ll just further polarize things and drive loyalty to Trump. But you can do so by driving the emotions that led them to embrace Trump.

      • RitaRita says:

        I don’t advocate making fun of Trump. Im not even talking about cognitive decline. I am appalled that such a childish, ignorant man is in charge of our fate. I’m not diagnosing Trump. I am describing his behavior.

        • Allagashed says:

          You don’t advocate making fun of trump? Why? For some of us it is the only thing we have. I live in the far north, up on the Canadian border. I write scathing letters to both Angus King and Susan Collins. Every now and again I’ll drive the almost two hours south to stand in a protest on the bridge in Presque Isle. If we don’t make a public display of our disdain for this Eee-vil MF’er, then we are left to stew in the juices of our rage; we need an outlet. Mocking this stupid bastard, publicly, brings a small measure of relief.

  3. xyxyxyxy says:

    Way-off OT: BNN reports “Gold heist arrest: A suspect in what investigators call Canada’s largest-ever gold heist has been arrested. Peel Regional Police arrested Arsalan Chaudhary, 43, after landing at the Toronto airport from Dubai Monday, and charged him for theft over $5,000, two counts of possession of property obtained by crime, and conspiracy to commit an indictable offense. On April 17, 2023, about 400 kilograms of pure gold was offloaded from a flight at Toronto Pearson International Airport after arriving from Zurich along with $2.5 million in cash. But the shipment disappeared after being transferred to another part of the airport, triggering a cross-border manhunt.”
    Why would this person return to the crime scene knowing…?

  4. Greg Hunter says:

    Thanks for the pardon reminder as it was timely for me. I had turned on my right wing radio show at 7:40 MST for Don Day weather at 7:45, and sure enough, Glenn was gleefully describing the prosecution of the Black Lives Matter organization. When open phones was announced I called in to tell Glenn’s listeners that Trump needed these prosecutions so he could sell pardons. He asked where I got these stories but I hung up on him this time. I am certain some (probably most) have not heard these stories, but I bet some did google ‘trump sells pardons’.

      • Greg Hunter says:

        We have a love/hate relationship that has formed over the years and he claims he doesn’t hang up on people unless they are rude, which has not proven to be true. I have gotten into discussions with him about “sources” for stories in the past and that road is a losing proposition, so I chose the less is more route today. Not always, as my call last Thursday I went on a great length correcting his assertion that the agitators on the left were paid. He always makes this assertion and I of course said that ICE were the tax payer funded agitators/brown shirts and that Trump was using Mein Kampf as a playbook. He, of course, said that Trump is deporting violent criminals.

        His show gets turned into a podcast and I go back and listen to hear the results of my calls….I am sometimes surprised at responses, but not often. I used to get discouraged about calling into the show as I would rather listen to WPR, but on the last day for the last producer he could convince to work for him, she told me that I was one of the only bright spots in her day and I did not call every day, week or month.

    • RipNoLonger says:

      Depends on what you mean by “losing”. If his goal is to drag the Kennedy name through the mud, then having the Kennedy Center failing is working very well.

      He’s doing the same for most government agencies and anything else he can get his dirty little hands on. And he’s mainly “succeeding”.

      • Memory hole says:

        Republican strategist Rick Wilson perfectly described it during Trump 1.
        Everything Trump Touches Dies.

      • gruntfuttock says:

        Dragging the Kennedys through the mud?

        Maybe Don really hates JFK Jr; in which case maybe he’s not totally lost it.

        Seriously (very much so) the need to hurt and belittle others is very Trump but I think Don put his name up on that wall in big letters above the original dedicatee because of his need to put himself above everything — it’s always about his ego. He wants monuments and memorials, even if he has to steal other people’s memorials.

        Stolen valour.

        Whether it’s fake TIME covers or getting a second-hand Nobel Peace Prize (actual value zero), he just needs to feel that somebody loves him. Or fears him. He doesn’t really care. It’s all about the attention.

        I’ll add that Lemmy from Motorhead once said, if his band moved in next door to you, your lawn would die. He was joking.

  5. Matt Foley says:

    The other day at the grocery store I struck up a conversation with a petite 88 year old woman. Within minutes the conversation turned to Trump. We talked for about a half hour and I made zero progress with her. She deflected all my criticisms of Trump with some version of:
    a) all politicians lie (e.g., “What about Bill Clinton?”)
    b) he’s trying really hard
    c) we don’t know what he knows
    d) it’s too complex for us to understand
    e) who are we to judge?I

    I remained calm and polite and I stuck to facts. Absolutely no effect.

      • Matt Foley says:

        She told me she is Catholic and considered becoming a nun, then worked at a prison (some kind of nurse) so I focused on his criminality. I thought it would be easy to appeal to her sense of justice and morality. I mentioned his felonies, his sex assault, his insurrectionist pardons. But as she had done with the prisoners, she seemed determined to see past any bad deeds and focus on the positive. She saw how bothered I was by Trump and she seemed more focused on trying to help ME be more understanding and forgiving.

      • misnomer bjet says:

        Early in the pandemic, in a long glum line in the cold rain outside RMV, after a little gallows humor shooting the shit to kill time with the folks nearby in line, the guy behind me let on he was a Trump fan.

        I could see he felt defensive & expected me to say something familiar that would confirm his bias & send him back in his shell.

        So I told him I’m from NY, if you grew up there you knew Trump was an ass. He did rotten things he should have gone to jail for back then, and if he had, a long time ago, instead of getting protected by his scumbag daddy’s money, he might have straightened out & had a better life. He belonged in jail, not trying to run our country.

        But, I said, I felt sorry for him, because he was just really damaged, badly, obviously, like when he was a kid, and that made him easy to manipulate, and he was just being used by people in his party taking advantage of his brokenness, people who mock him behind his back and never cared about him (or his fans who could relate); and that’s what really pissed me off.

        That got to him. He heard that.

    • grain of Sand says:

      Facts don’t move people.
      Flattery might. I’d work on D. No, it’s not too complex for you to understand. It’s a system and you and I and our ancestors have learned a lot about living in systems. Have you ever noticed how the rich get richer? Do you ever feel like you just can’t get ahead? How about the cost of those prescriptions and groceries? Shouldn’t we take care of children and old people?

      Don’t give up! I commend you.

    • RitaRita says:

      Know your audience. They accept that he’s a liar and a sexual predator. So don’t waste too much time on those topics. Try something new:
      A. Why is he always so divisive and negative?

      B. Why can’t he control his emotions?

      C. What does naming the Kennedy Center after him have to do with lowering prices?

      D Why can’t he stay on topic?

  6. Amicus12 says:

    Another possible placard to hang around Trump’s neck is that he’s a warmonger.

    Consistent with Trump’s intent to take Greenland “one way or the other,” Congressman Fine introduced today the Greenland annexation bill. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/greenland-randy-fine-bill-51st-state/

    And as regards this particular example, some reframing would likewise be helpful. Trump is threatening to invade Denmark. Who, you might ask, was the last national leader to invade Denmark? https://www.annefrank.org/en/timeline/61/germany-invades-denmark-and-norway/

  7. Mooserites says:

    As far as I know ‘hoes’ is plural for a gardening implement, the ‘hoe’. The word she wants is ‘hos’ the plural of ‘ho’.

  8. Thequickbrownfox says:

    There haven’t been repercussions for blatant lying and misdirection in courts because the judges realize that they don’t have any enforcement power. Their only recourse is a referral of the attorneys for discipline, and that isn’t effective when those referred are willing to give up their ability to practice law. Those attorneys that such referrals would be effective against have resigned, or been fired.
    The law is being proven to have always been dependent on those subject to it being willing to follow it.

    What we have is MAGANazi anarchy, whereby their goons will enforce what ‘they’ deem to be the law, against those that are deemed to be outside of the MAGANazi power structure.

  9. earlofhuntingdon says:

    “there needs to be a direction beyond Epstein as well, a direction which incorporates the oligarchs who are still key players in Trump’s network of power.”

    A useful reminder that Trump will go, sooner or later, but Trumpism and its patrons will remain. He’s one player on a team, whose members are constantly renewed, who play for a short while while at their peak. The team endures.

  10. gmokegmoke says:

    Former Treasurer of the DNC Andrew Tobias linked to Carole Cadwalladr today on the Broligarchs and the UK. She is to the point and brings up issues that may be useful to reverberate back to USAmerica:
    https://broligarchy.substack.com/p/peter-thiels-new-model-army

    “President Donald Trump’s pardons have eliminated over $1.3 billion in fines and restitution owed to victims and the public, according to analyses by Democratic staffers of the House Judiciary Committee and former Justice Department officials”

    An accurate accounting of the depradations of DOGE might also be useful. Some of it is leaking out, slowly, but we shouldn’t let that drop down the memory hole.

    • RipNoLonger says:

      Thanks for that link to Carole Cadwalladr’s piece. There seems to be an undercurrent in the US and UK (and probably elsewhere) that has the very wealthy oligarchs controlling the elections via the messaging (thanks, Murdochs, et.al.)

      LaFarge, Boris Johnson, Brexit.
      Trump, Trump, exit NATO.

      Breakup of western alliances (and civilization?) – benefit to whom? Those that can live outside of the western financial strictures. Ultra-rich and autocrats.

  11. Matt___B says:

    With apologies to Gill Scott-Heron…the revolution is now being televised…kind of.
    I stumbled onto a live feed of a protest in Minneapolis directly across the street from an ice staging
    area where ice vehicles are coming and going. Every time a vehicle comes out of the compound, the
    fairly belligerent crowd revs up and lines of ice agents standing at the gate advance, issue directives
    through bullhorns and sometimes throw tear gas to send the protestors backwards a bit. Don’t know
    how long this live feed lasts, but it’s live right now as I post this:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j_Dagt__ZJM

  12. ExRacerX says:

    Point out the obvious hypocrisies:

    (example from today) Shoot to kill ICE protestors in the USA vs. “Keep protesting—Help is coming!” to protestors in Iran.

    • P J Evans says:

      He thinks we’re his property.
      He wants to own Iran, so he doesn’t want his potential property damaged.

    • RipNoLonger says:

      Any time trump yells “Help is coming”, you better run the other direction.

      Whether you are an ally or a casino.

  13. IndieGuy says:

    “I just feel I’ve been betrayed,” Rosenberg, 68, said. “I don’t know why he would do this, unless there was some sort of gain somewhere, or some favor being called in. I am very disappointed. I kind of put him above this kind of thing.”

    Here’s your sign.

  14. Savage Librarian says:

    Fire ICE

    It only instigated ire
    when Exxon piped up to inquire
    about how investable the dire
    circumstances had to aspire.

    Like an unquenchable desire,
    Or a term that will expire,
    Oil, oil into the fire,
    SVR views Ratcliffe’s mire.

    Global networks, competing aims,
    Profit constructs, legal frames,
    Not to mention political claims,
    all add their fuel to the flames.

    A map of Cuba with brand names
    is not the only stunt that shames,
    With all the maniacal con games,
    Good is now who the US defames.

    And don’t forget we’ll pay a price
    if EDVA & SDFL sacrifice
    a hard drive for a storage device,
    Plundering justice, to be precise.

    How to shift and stir to entice
    and lift the heart to think twice
    when all we have is loaded dice:
    Maybe begin with fire ICE.

    • Ginevra diBenci says:

      Fantastic. As usual. I have a humble suggestion, for the sake of rhythm:

      “Maybe begin with: fire ICE.”

  15. Mike from Delaware says:

    I try to live in the moment, but I too have been thinking about “where we go from here”. Only the ‘here’ I’ve been contemplating is after Trump is gone. He will go – then what?
    What do we do about:
    The SCOTUS that’s easily stocked with ideologs?
    Our feckless congress.
    The corporate media that aids and abets.
    The Broligarchs and Corporations that have oversized influence in how we are governed.
    The prevalence of misinformation that will only be amplified by AI.
    The 70 million+ people who thought electing Trump was a great idea and the large number of those voters who are firmly entrenched in his cult.
    Accountability
    It can’t be business as usual after this, can it?

  16. Mooserites says:

    You want something to use against Trump? How’s about this; Trump is bragging about starting wars, and taking Greenland,(or buying for 700 billion dollars, as of this morning) and Venezuela, And god knows how many other places, not to mention the wars Trump is starting within the US.
    Where does he expect to get the manpower and equipment to do this? And who does he expect to pay for it? Is he going to re-start conscription?
    Trump is mad and dying and wants the US to die with him. I’m 72 and have never seen anything like this.

    • P J Evans says:

      Where’s he going to get that 700 billion dollars? The billionaires won’t give up any part of their money and wealth. He doesn’t have any money, or he wouldn’t need to grift.
      (Also I don’t think it’s enough money to buy Greenland – Denmark isn’t poor, even though it’s small.)

  17. Paul Canning says:

    Marcy, you are doing the work on how to fight fascism (your videos are fantastic) but there is one thing you’re missing: Your allies overseas. This is a problem across the entire American opposition to Trump. Here’s a current example, Greenland. Americans should be encouraging Europe to send troops to Nuuk. Charlie Sykes in the only one I’ve heard say this. I could cite plenty of others but the bottom line is there is no ask from America’s Trump opposition to the rest of the world. You are behaving as if you’re isolated when we’re right here. Your friends dont know what to do because American progressives have forgotten its friends. This is my perspective and am guessing that of others. Because you’re America you dont think you need help. The reason is the exceptionalism. This effects progressives as much as any other American. And we could obviously help. But Americans wont do it. The failure of America’s opposition to Trump to appeal for international solidarity is not nothing. And its not good for any attempt at a reset post 47. I honestly think American progressives at the moment are forgetting the basics. Because theyre American. In any other country an appeal internationally would be built in. Not for you guys. America’s opposition is not asking the rest of the world for help because its American. Because it would never think to ask for help.

    This is my sense of you. You forget us because you’re American. You never think we might be a help. Bottom line, you never think of us at all. Because American. This is a mistake. If you cant have an ask of your foreign allies, which you dont, this is not good for you.. To us, progressives and democrats are saying nothing. Because they dont think they have to and theyve zero idea about how to use foreign allies. Dont underestimate how the behaviour now of you guys towards us will effect you going forward. My guess is it certainly will.

    • Rayne says:

      Any ask for EU resources to protect Greenland comes at the expense of resources to Ukraine.

      This is the ENTIRE point — Trump is a useful idiot who has been prompted by unknown person(s) to harass Greenland in order to fragment NATO and at the expense of Ukraine’s defense.

      The EU should already know and understand this.

        • Paul Canning says:

          Zelensky cannot afford to do that. Ukraine cannot afford to snub Trump. So I dont think thats a helpful suggestion. Any more? What can ordinary Brits do apart fom boycott travel?

      • Paul Canning says:

        “Any ask for EU resources to protect Greenland comes at the expense of resources to Ukraine.”

        No it doesnt. Its a small group who’ve gone to act as a deterrant. They’re already there. Europe is as well ramping up for Ukraine. If Europe couldnt do both that would be damming but obviously we can.

  18. Zinsky123 says:

    I have been busy in my personal life this week (not to mention I literally have ICE vehicles in my neighborhood, since I live in a suburb of Minneapolis) but I just read this column – Outstanding! This should be the template for all criticism of Trump and his Administration. The fact he was Jeffrey Epstein’s biggest customer (in more ways than one) should be Talking Point One. He wasn’t just an acquaintance of Epstein. His blatant corruption and lifetime criminality, particularly his abuse of the pardon power, should be Talking Point Two. Thank you, thank you for this wonderful summary and fantastic links and graphics! Well done!

Comments are closed.