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Month: June 2025

ICE/CPB Atrocity O’ The Day

I obtained this from a community member minutes after arriving on scene following a raid at the Cypress Park Home Depot this morning. they detained day laborers.

Jacob Soboroff (@jacobsoboroff.bsky.social) 2025-06-30T19:13:36.265Z

You can’t help but wonder what these guys would do if they really were taking back Falluja instead of abducting unarmed men and women trying to make a meager living. This has all the hallmarks of a Call of Duty cos-play convention.

In today’s NY Times:

Some carry passports to travel to the corner store. Others do not venture out at all, too afraid of the consequences. Bus ridership has dropped. So has business at taco trucks and fruit stands.

Fear and anxiety have gripped Latinos in Los Angeles to an extraordinary degree, upending the lives of thousands of residents. Increased immigration raids and patrols by masked officers have stifled one of the largest and most established Latino communities in America, causing what residents and officials describe as a Covid-style shutdown of public events, street life and commerce.

It has affected not only undocumented immigrants and mixed-status families but also many U.S. citizens who have lived in California for decades and who say that they are fearful of being swept up in the raids. Interviews with more than two dozen Latino residents, elected officials and community leaders in the Los Angeles area revealed the cultural, financial and psychological toll the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown is having on a county where nearly half of the population traces their ancestry to Mexico and other parts of Latin America.

This is what we’re living with in Los Angeles these days. It’s what’s about to explode in cities and towns all over the country as soon as DHS gets all its money. I hope everyone is prepared.

The First Step

I think we know who will be under the microscope of this one:

The Trump administration has codified its efforts to strip some Americans of their US citizenship in a recently published justice department memo that directs attorneys to prioritize denaturalization for naturalized citizens who commit certain crimes.

The memo, published on 11 June, calls on attorneys in the department to institute civil proceedings to revoke a person’s United States citizenship if an individual either “illegally procured” naturalization or procured naturalization by “concealment of a material fact or by willful misrepresentation”.

Concealment of a material fact of by willful misrepresentation is doing a lot of work here.

I’ll just leave this here:

The boss of Tesla and SpaceX, who has in recent weeks supported Donald Trump’s campaign for a second presidency while promoting the Republican White House nominee’s opposition to “open borders” on his X social media site, has previously maintained that his transition from student to entrepreneur was a “legal grey area”.

But the Washington Post reported Saturday that the world’s wealthiest individual was almost certainly working in the US without correct authorization for a period in 1995 after he dropped out of Stanford University to work on his debut company, Zip2, which sold for about $300m four years later.

[…]

“If you do anything that helps to facilitate revenue creation, such as design code or try to make sales in furtherance of revenue creation, then you’re in trouble,” Leon Fresco, a former US justice department immigration litigator, told the outlet.

How about this one?

Last week, US First Lady Melania Trump’s immigration history once again came under fire during a heated congressional hearing. Democratic Representative Jasmine Crockett questioned how the former model qualified for a visa typically reserved for individuals with “extraordinary ability.” Crockett’s remarks come at a time when the president is railing against immigrants and directing ICE officials to enact raids across the country.

“The first lady, a model—and when I say model, I’m not talking Tyra Banks, Cindy Crawford, or Naomi Campbell-level—applied for and was given an EB-1 visa,” Crockett said incredulously.

“Let me tell you how you receive an Einstein visa,” she said, “you’re supposed to have some sort of significant achievement, like being awarded a Nobel Peace Prize or a Pulitzer, being an Olympic medallist, or having other sustained extraordinary abilities and success in sciences, arts, education, business, or athletics. Last time I checked, the first lady had none of those accolades under her belt. It doesn’t take an Einstein to see that the math ain’t mathin’ here.”

The math definitely ain’t mathin.’ But then Trump is handing out citizenship to anyone rich enough to buy one and South African white supremacists so I’d guess Elon and Melania are safe. People who came here from what Trump calls the “shithole countries” are the ones who need to be Einsteins. The good white people will be welcomed with open arms (as long as they’ve never said a word against Trump or his cult.)

Feel The Trumpy Magic

Now that Daddy has chased Thom Tillis out of the North Carolina senate race, guess who’s seriously considering running for his senate seat?

Yep. She’s got somethin’ speshu-ul…

Stuart Stevens has some words:

There Goes The Future

It’s very hard not to feel hopeless:

Senate Republicans have quietly inserted provisions in President Trump’s domestic policy bill that would not only end federal support for wind and solar energy but would impose an entirely new tax on future projects, a move that industry groups say could devastate the renewable power industry.

The tax provision, tucked inside the 940-page bill that the Senate made public just after midnight on Friday, stunned observers. “This is how you kill an industry,” said Bob Keefe, executive director of E2, a nonpartisan group of business leaders and investors. “And at a time when electricity prices and demand are soaring.”

The bill would rapidly phase out existing federal tax subsidies for wind and solar power by 2027. Doing so, many companies say, could derail hundreds of projects under development and could jeopardize billions of dollars in manufacturing facilities that had been planned around the country with the subsidies in mind.

Those tax credits were at the heart of the Inflation Reduction Act, which Democrats passed in 2022 in an attempt to nudge the country away from fossil fuels, the burning of which is driving climate change. President Trump, who has mocked climate science, has instead promoted fossil fuels and demanded that Republicans in Congress unwind the law.

It’s horrible. But they’ve gone that extra step to make it even worse:

But the latest version of the Senate bill would go much further. It would impose a steep penalty on all new wind and solar farms that come online after 2027 — even if they didn’t receive federal subsidies — unless they follow complicated and potentially unworkable requirements to disentangle their supply chains from China. Since China dominates global supply chains, that measure could affect a large number of companies.

The point is to cripple the industry, that’s obvious.

As I write this there is some talk of amending this largely because some senators have belatedly realized that a lot of their own constituents are working in this industry. The Inflation Reduction Act was designed to do that and maybe it will work. But I wouldn’t count on it. These people don’t really care about their voters. I’d guess that if the amendment passes it will just squeak by with one vote. The rest actively want to be on record licking Trump’s and the fossil fuel industry’s boots.

Life is much easier when you just do what daddy wants. Even if it hurts.

He’s Serious About This

We’ve already seen the grotesque “re-decorating” of the oval office and the razing of the rose garden to put in “patio” like the one he has a Mar-a-Lago. His portrait is hanging all over the White House now, even in the First Ladies gallery replacing HIllary Clinton’s:

According to the NY Times, his grandest dream (other than the Nobel Peace Prize) is to be carved into Mt. Rushmore. You may recall that he told then Gov. Kristi Noem that he dreamed of it and she had a model with his face on it made for him.

Anyway, this is under real consideration:

The thought of amending Mount Rushmore faded until Mr. Trump suggested himself. It’s a provocative idea. Historians recently ranked him as one of the worst presidents in American history, while the four on Mount Rushmore are all in the top five.

But plenty are taking Mr. Trump’s Mount Rushmore ambitions at 60-foot-face value. Theoretically, the president could direct his administration to carve his face there. Given his penchant for chipping away at norms, who’s to say that Mr. Trump wouldn’t figure out a way to chip away at Mount Rushmore?

“Fortunately, from my view, and not just for Trump but anybody else,” Mr. Wenk said, “they’re fighting against the reality of the rock.”

You see, the rock formation doesn’t really support another big sculpture. In fact, according to the story they had originally planned to do torsos of the original but couldn’t because the mountain isn’t all granite.

Still, I could see Trump insisting they blast out one of the other faces and put his in there. Maybe Teddy’s. Or Jefferson. I’m sure he doesn’t even know who he was.

It turns out that’s actually been contemplated:

In this era, imaginations are being stretched and no idea can be dismissed, including at Mount Rushmore. Could smaller versions of presidential heads be carved around the current ones? Maybe, though no one is proposing a 10-foot Trump head sitting on Washington’s lapel or anywhere else.

Could a pre-made carving be attached to Mount Rushmore? If portions of the rock are not strong enough to be carved, they are likely not strong enough to hold something. A cubic foot of granite weighs about 170 pounds. Another material, if it could be adhered, would age differently, beyond other issues.

What about changing one of the current faces into someone new? Not impossible, but those who want to see Mount Rushmore protected take solace in knowing that all four presidents on it remain popular and in good standing.

Isn’t the bigger question why in the world would anyone even suggest putting Donald Trump up there? It’s beyond absurd but that’s the world in which we live now. Let’s just say I would not be surprised.

“They’ll Get Over It”

Will we?

People think that Donald Trump is responsible for blowing up the democratic system of checks and balances but he was actually a late comer to that game. It was former senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., also known as the “gravedigger of democracy” who can take credit for that. From the moment he became leader in 2007, he set out the roadmap for the modern GOP to achieve its goals by throwing bipartisanship on the trash heap and setting it on fire. When he was in the position as minority leader he believed in one thing: obstruction. In the majority, he pushed the Republican agenda through by any means necessary, norms, rules, even laws be damned.

McConnell ended up having his differences with Trump over the years but this past week, as the senate grappled with a bloated omnibus bill under Trump’s arbitrary July 4th deadline, McConnell shared a bit of tactical wisdom he’d obtained over years with his colleagues. When asked about the danger of massive cuts to vital government programs to their re-election prospects, McConnell reassured them by saying, “they’ll get over it.”

In the long run they probably will. Americans have a short attention span. But to paraphrase John Maynard Keynes’ famous quip, in the long run Mitch McConnell will be dead. There is no reason to believe that he is right about it this time any more than he was when he vowed to make Obama a one termer. Nonetheless, with the exception of two (one of whom, Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, was compelled to retire because of it) all the senate Republicans agreed to hold hands and take the plunge together.

Just as they did in 2001, 2003 and 2017, they immediately betrayed their allegedly most cherished value, fiscal responsibility, in order to achieve their most priceless goal: tax cuts for the wealthy. And throwing caution to the wind, high on Trump’s supply, this time they’ve checked off as much of their long standing wish list as they could cram into a thousand pages. Their cuts to the safety net, health care in particular, don’t even come close to closing the deficits they are causing with their tax cuts and swollen Defense and Homeland Security budgets, but they don’t care. They figure “they’ll get over it” apparently meaning the people who will die as a result of their handiwork.

This isn’t a Trump thing. It’s a standard issue conservative movement thing. These ideas have been articles of faith for so long now that I don’t think the modern Republicans even know why they believe it.

It started out as an anti-communist, free market ideology but that’s obviously no longer operative on the American right. Today it’s pretty clear, as Atlantic writer Adam Serwer memorably wrote, “the cruelty is the point.” Whether they think that will build our character or simply make us bow to their will, they do it because it hurts. But we’ll get over it…

The person who can take the deepest bow today as we watch the Republicans cut taxes for the richest Americans while decimating huge portions of the safety and exploding the deficit is anti-tax activist Grover Norquist whose most infamous quote is, “I don’t want to abolish government. I simply want to reduce it to the size where I can drag it into the bathroom and drown it in the bathtub.”

In a profile for 60 Minutes back in 2007, journalist Steve Kroft said, “Norquist has been responsible, more than anyone else, for rewriting the dogma of the Republican Party” and the “One Big Beautiful Bill” that’s working its way through the congress right now shows that for all of the talk of MAGA populism, that dogma is still driving the Republican Party.

Trump is not a doctrinaire Republican in this way. Yes, he loves the ideas in his big bill like those killing all the climate change and green energy initiatives because he has a weird personal antipathy for the way they look. But it’s not about saving money or shrinking government. For instance, he’s happy to spend more money subsidizing coal:

Perhaps he’s just feeling nostalgic for his youth growing up in New York when the air was so polluted your eyes and lungs burned.

Sure he’s adopted the trite “waste, fraud and abuse” rhetoric that has become the mantra among Republicans trying to weasel out of responsibility for harming their own voters, but he knows that these cuts to Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act are a problem. On Fox news on Sunday he lied saying the bill cut the deficit by 1.7 trillion but then said this:

But we can grow our country so much more than that and we’re not gonna have to do… and you also have to get elected. When you do cutting, you have to be a little bit careful, because people don’t like necessarily cutting if they get used to something. And what I wanna do is do it through growth.

This was his line throughout the campaign. Yes, he said they’d cut the waste but he didn’t dwell on that. It was always that tariffs and “growth” were going to fuel the new gilded age and everybody could have everything.

In his TIME 100 day interview he even came out for raising taxes for the wealthy:

I certainly don’t mind having a tax increase, and the only reason I wouldn’t support it is because I saw Bush where they said, where he said “Read my lips” and he lost an election… I would be honored to pay more, but I don’t want to be in a position where we lose an election because I was generous, but me, as a rich person, would not mind paying and you know, we’re talking about very little. We’re talking about one point. It doesn’t make that much difference, and yet, I could just see somebody trying to bring that up as a subject, and, you know, say, “Oh, he raised taxes.” Well, I wouldn’t be, really, you know, in the true sense, I wouldn’t. I’d be raising them

He repeated that later, suggesting that his rich pals would be happy to kick in more as well, if only the Democrats wouldn’t hold it against them. It’s fatuous nonsense, of course, but it does show that Trump understands that tax cuts for the wealthy are not popular.

He loves his Big Beautiful Bill because he’s shown that he can rule the GOP with an iron fist to pass a massive piece of legislation on his orders within a short amount of time. He has some hobby horses in it that he loves but for the most part this isn’t really his bill at all. It’s a Republican fantasy bill of everything they ever dreamed of short of eliminating Social Security and medicare which they will just let go shrivel and die on their own once the government goes down the drain. But if Mitch McConnell is wrong and people don’t “get over it” this is his legacy as much as it is the Republican Party’s and on some level he knows it.

Salon

On Being Rats

And on being Frank

Via CalMatters’ Pedro Rios: Neighbors confront Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Special Response Team officers following an immigration raid at the Italian restaurant Buono Forchetta on May 30, 2025. Photo courtesy of Pedro Rios

A friend named Frank back in high school and college days had a reputation for being really blunt.

“Tom, you look like hell today. No offense,” he might say, grinning. We called it being Frank with you.

This morning’s Frank is Paul. Krugman. Bigots are back, he says bluntly.

MAGA likes that Donald Trump is blunt. Belligerent and bigoted, too. Trump grew up knowing his family’s wealth meant he could get away with doing or saying virtually anything and incur no consequences. He could shoot someone “in the middle of Fifth Avenue” and get away with it, he said himself. For the MAGA world, that feels like a superpower akin to being able to fly or bend steel. It’s a power they feel vicariously by touching the hem of his garment. For people who never evolved beyond race hatreds passed down from their parents, Trump freed them to express their darkest impulses without social opprobrium, at least within their own social circles.

Krugman writes:

Scott Bessent, the Treasury secretary, declared that New York is about to turn into “Caracas on the Hudson.”

And Sen. Tommy Tuberville of Alabama basically declared New York’s voters subhuman, saying:

These inner-city rats, they live off the federal government. And that’s one reason we’re $37 trillion in debt. And it’s time we find these rats and we send them back home, that are living off the American taxpayers that are working very hard every week to pay taxes.

These reactions are vile, and they’re also dishonest. Whatever these men may claim, it’s all about bigotry.

While Tuberville looks like “an ignorant fool” even within a caucus filled with them, “his willingness to use dehumanizing language about millions of people shows that raw racism is rapidly becoming mainstream in American politics.”

Krugman continues:

Remember, during the campaign both Trump and JD Vance amplified the slanders about Haitians eating pets.

And now that they’re in office, you can see the resurgence of raw racism all across Trump administration policies, large and small. You can see it, for example, in the cuts at the National Institutes of Health, which are so tilted against racial minorities that a federal judge — one appointed by Ronald Reagan! — declared

I’ve never seen a record where racial discrimination was so palpable. I’ve sat on this bench now for 40 years. I’ve never seen government racial discrimination like this.

You can see it in the renaming of military bases after Confederate generals — that is, traitors who fought for slavery.

You can even see it in a change in the military’s shaving policy that is clearly custom-designed to drive Black men — who account for around a quarter of the Army’s new recruits — out of the service.

So racism and bigotry are back, big time. Who’s safe? Nobody.

The U.S. Supreme Court just allowed Trump to violate the 14th Amendment’s guarantee of birthright citizenship until everyone stripped of theirs (it will be selective, naturally) litigates their cases in court. Legal resident status is meaningless now. Citizenship is meaningless now. I am a U.S. citizen by birth until Trump decides I am not and makes me defend it in court.

Should Trump’s bigly bill pass into law, it will massively increase funding for ICE brute squads to harrass Americans at random. Just because their focus now is on nonwhites is no consolation.

Krugman reflects:

I personally don’t have any illusions of safety. Yes, I’m a native-born white citizen. But my wife and her family are Black, and some of my friends and relatives are foreign-born U.S. citizens.

Furthermore, I’m Jewish, and anyone who knows their history realizes that whenever right-wing bigotry is on the ascendant, we’re always next in line. Are there really people out there naïve enough to believe MAGA’s claims to be against antisemitism, who can’t see the transparent cynicism and dishonesty?

He concludes, “Everyone who cares about keeping America America needs to take a stand against the resurgence of bigotry. Because the truth is that we’re all rats now.”

Let’s be Frank. Trump and his MAGA movement feel empowered to act like exterminators. If not stopped it could be just a matter of time.

MAGA is Kryptonite to freedom. Yet, America has strong democratic traditions, a friend reminds me, and individualist ones. That’s our superpower. The crowds surrounding swarming ICE thugs who arrive to disappear neighbors aren’t just saying no, but hell no. Silence gives the bigots license. Don’t be silent. We should be Frank about who they are and what they’re doing to this country.

* * * * *

Have you fought dictatorship today?

Good Trouble Lives On (July 17, in memory of John Lewis)
The Resistance Lab
Choose Democracy
Indivisible: A Guide to Democracy on the Brink
You Have Power
Chop Wood, Carry Water
Thirty lonely but beautiful actions
Attending a Protest Surveillance Self-Defense

Thom Tillis Is Out

Who’s in?

Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) on Saturday evening explains his vote not to advance Trump’s bigly budget bill.

N.C. Sen. Thom Tillis (R) announced on Sunday that he would not seek reelection in 2026. This decision comes after Tillis voted against advancing Donald Trump’s bigly budget bill to a Senate vote. Tillis believes the bill’s Medicaid cuts (that other Republicans deny are in the bill) would devastate his constituents.

The president messaged that Tillis had made “a BIG MISTAKE” and threatened a primary challenge. Tillis was already facing reelection headwinds and polls poorly against generic candidates.

Only Tillis and Rand Paul (R) of Kentucky voted against advancing the measure on Saturday. But unless two more Republicans defect after an expected fight to amend the measure, Republicans may yet pass it.

“What do I tell 663,000 people in two years, three years, when President Trump breaks his promise by pushing them off of medicaid because the funding’s not there anymore, guys?” Tillis said in a floor speech. He told Trump that the “amateurs” advising him turned his crusade against waste, fraud, and abuse into a mechanism for gutting Medicaid.

The Associated Press reports:

The CBO estimates the Senate bill would increase the deficit by nearly $3.3 trillion from 2025 to 2034, a nearly $1 trillion increase over the House-passed bill, which CBO has projected would add $2.4 to the debt over a decade.

The analysis also found that 11.8 million more Americans would become uninsured by 2034 if the bill became law, an increase over the scoring for the House-passed version of the bill, which predicts 10.9 million more people would be without health coverage.

The stark numbers are yet another obstacle for Republican leaders as they labor to pass Trump’s bill by his self-imposed July 4th deadline.

After Tillis’s decision to spend more time with his family, the Cook Political Report shifted the race ranking to Toss Up. North Carolina will again be political ground zero in 2026.

NC Newsline provides a rundown of rumored and announced candidates. To date, only former U.S. Rep. Wiley Nickel (D) and Don Brown (R), a former U.S. Navy JAG Officer and novelist, have announced runs for the seat. The remainder of Newsline’s list is a Who’s Who of D and R candidate speculation, most with little or no name recognition. The only real question is whether former Gov. Roy Cooper (D) will run. Democrats in the state have been holding their breath for that word for months now. Republicans too. Cooper would be Democrats’ most formidable candidate and turn a Toss Up race into a Lean Left one.

* * * * *

Have you fought dictatorship today?

Good Trouble Lives On (July 17, in memory of John Lewis)
The Resistance Lab
Choose Democracy
Indivisible: A Guide to Democracy on the Brink
You Have Power
Chop Wood, Carry Water
Thirty lonely but beautiful actions
Attending a Protest Surveillance Self-Defense

Today’s Atrocity Watch

He must be a member of Tren de Aragua:

The mother brought her two children to the immigration court on May 29 expecting to continue to make a case for asylum after fleeing Honduras because of threats of violence. But like many other immigrants across the country, they were surprised to see their case quickly dismissed as ICE agents waited for them to step out of the courthouse into the hallway.

“There were men waiting for them in civilian clothing. The [ICE agents] detained the family for many hours, and it was a terrifying time for the two children and their mother,” said Elora Mukherjee, director of the Immigrant Rights Clinic at Columbia Law School.

“They were crying in fear. One of the agents at one point lifted up his shirt, which displayed the gun that he was carrying,” Mukherjee said. “The 6-year-old boy was terrified to see the gun. He urinated on himself and wet all his clothing. No one offered him a change of clothing for many hours.”

The family was then transported to the Dilley Immigration Processing Center in Texas, where they have been detained for several weeks.

The 6-year-old boy has been diagnosed with leukemia and has missed a medical appointment to be treated for worsening symptoms, according to the lawsuit filed Tuesday in federal court in San Antonio by the Immigrant Rights Clinic and The Texas Civil Rights Project.

“The horrors that this family has suffered should never be felt by a child in need of medical care. Arresting immigrants as they step out of a courtroom is a heinous display of disregard for humanity. This family came to the United States seeking safety, but inhumane policies are preventing them from seeking necessary medical care for their child,” said Kate Gibson Kumar, a staff attorney for the Texas Civil Rights Project Beyond Borders program.

The family had been staying with a relative in Los Angeles for the previous seven months after crossing the border legally for a court appointment through the now-defunct CBP One App to seek asylum last October. They were granted parole status in the U.S. while they waited for their day in immigration court.

Expelling violent criminals is the priority according to Pam Bondi.

It’s just terrorism. That’s the point. With the passage of the Big Brutal Bill this week, they will be handing out hundred of millions more dollars to ICE to do their worst and they will be spending it without oversight or procedures. The grift will be immense but I think we can all assume that the new hires will be willing terrorists happy to terrify all of America to make them bow down.

Your safest bet today is to put a Trump sticker on your car and wear a MAGA hat in public.

How The Lying Works

Don’t ever think that we can’t know the truth. We can. It’s not that hard. If you are a sentient being with critical thinking skills and a working bullshit detector you can see it quite easily. Their lies are ridiculous. They are crude and stupid.

But there are way too many credulous people in this country who are brainwashed by right wing media and are apparently driven by insecurity and hatred for anything unfamiliar to them. They are the marks.

They can be beaten but we have to stay on this and keep telling the truth. It’s all we’ve got.