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Month: October 2025

It Matters To Me

I think it matters to a lot of people

This exchange confounds me. Why would a popular Democratic politician fail to understand the obvious synecdoche/metaphor of Trump demolishing a historic wing of the White House to raise a huge, gaudy tribute to his monarchical pretensions while the government is shuttered and there is massive distress across the country?

I know for a fact that regular people know about this and they care about it. Seven million of them came out to express that last weekend. And yet we get this robotic response from the likes of Gretchen Whitmer:

I just wonder, from your vantage point as a governor of a state, what are you making of that split screen?” Psaki asked.

“Well, as I have talked to people, I’m telling you right now, no one is worried about building a ballroom in Washington, D.C.,” Whitmer replied. “What they want is to make sure that they can feed their kids next week. And the longer the shutdown goes, the more precarious it gets for people.”

The governor said most Americans are “never going to step foot in a ballroom over the course of their lifetime.”

“But what they do every single day is try to feed their kids, make sure that they get a job to show up to, make sure that they don’t hit a pothole on their drive to work and they have to take money out of their rent or their child care to pay to fix their damn car,” she continued. “That’s why we got to stay focused on the issues that matter to people.”

People are worried about the destruction of the White House which symbolizes the destruction of our country, including the economy. Doesn’t she understand that??

Brian Beutler addresses this phenomenon in his newsletter today and it’s really great. He talks about the art of persuasion. (I urge you to read the whole thing.)

How often over the past, say, five years have you found yourself confused to see something small, local, fringe, minor in the scheme of thing become a dominant issue in political discourse?

How do people in Georgia come to care about whether San Franciscans honor Founding Fathers with school names and statues? Why do voters who’ve never met or interacted with a transgender person decide they’ve learned everything they need to know about a politician based on whether they respect (or how they talk about) other peoples’ gender identities? By what process do people who watch Fox News or hang out on Twitter or consumer wellness content transform from normies into zealots?

Strident views can arise seemingly out of nowhere the same way trends do. People of influence drop them intentionally into the cultural slipstream then fan and fan and fan them until they’re ubiquitous enough to make us incorporate them, one way or another, into our identities.

This is something Republicans in particular understand about opinion formation, and, thus, persuasion. Democrats by and large do not.

Everyone I’ve asked, from all walks of life, had a visceral reaction to this week’s images of physical wreckage at the White House. Nearly all of them understood intuitively that if Joe Biden or Barack Obama had spent bribe money to bulldoze the East Wing, their presidencies would have ended. They knew enough about politics, in other words, to intuit this difference between how Republicans and Democrats react to shocking developments.

I suspect most elected Democrats had the same visceral reaction you and I did to those images. But they largely suppressed their indignation. They did not treat it as an emergency (i.e. a political opportunity) and reverted instead to their own, socially-constructed, default opinion that Regular People™️ would not care.

It is self evident to them that their feelings about what’s happening in the world, their instincts about what constitutes important news, are unreliable barometers of public sentiment. The fact that they’re upset about something doesn’t imply the voters they need to persuade will care. To the contrary, as out of touch elites, it’s likely that our fixations are of no interest to Joe Sixpack. They can not imagine that Joe Sixpack has few fixed views and is mostly just glancing around for cues about what’s important and what to think about it. They don’t reason that if people in Georgia can be made to care about school names in San Francisco, those same voters can be made to care about the White House reduced to rubble.

This gets to a phenomenon that seems confusing to those of us who know that democratic policies are far more likely to address the economic woes of the average Joe while the Republicans make everything worse. I think a lot of people are simply confused that Democrats often sound like they think Americans are selfish, myopic people who care about nothing but money. I know it annoys me anyway. People are more complicated than that and can hold several ideas in their heads at the same time, especially if leaders offer them different ways of thinking about things.

As Beutler writes:

I’m not saying Democrats should ignore laboratory findings about what matters to voters, or what voters want to hear. I want these stickers affixed to everything Donald Trump has made more unaffordable. I want people who lose their health insurance because of Trump on the news and in 30 second ads. I want people to think of him as Mary Antoinette or a modern-day robber baron. I want it to become socially awkward, a sign of supplication, to make excuses for the economic havoc he’s wreaked. It should be a sign of loserdom and weakness to blame Trump’s failures on Joe Biden or mysterious saboteurs or even the business cycle.

But none of this has to come at the expense of pouncing when he makes a mistake that has nothing to do with wallets and bank accounts—when he fantasizes openly about dumping shit on citizens exercising first amendment rights, or orders his defense attorneys, who now run the Justice Department, to pay him a quarter-billion dollars in taxpayer money.

Or when he demolishes a priceless historical artifact to build a gilded monument to himself.

It’s foolish to be dismissive of people who care about what Trump is doing to the country and that’s how Whitmer sounds to my ears. She could have incorporated all those thoughts Beutler names together because they are all of a piece. His destruction of the economy, our democracy, our history, our place in the world — all of it.

Take advantage of those things that have great symbolic value and put the Republicans on the defensive. They know Trump’s acting like a spoiled prince, doing what he wants without any sense of the optics or the timing anymore. Democrats should pounce on all of it — and repeat the charges over and over again. Make it a matter of conventional wisdom that he is a demented old tyrant and those people who are disengaged or just on the sidelines not knowing what to think will drift in the Democrats’ direction.

A Serial Killer On The Loose

It makes your skin crawl:

The first body washed ashore on Trinidad’s northeastern coast soon after the United States carried out its first strike in September on a boat in the Caribbean. Villagers said the corpse had burn marks on its face and was missing limbs, as if it had been mangled by an explosion.

The tides deposited another corpse on a nearby beach days later, drawing a wake of vultures. Its face was similarly unrecognizable, and its right leg appeared to have been blown off.

The bodies have fueled a mystery that is gripping parts of Trinidad and Tobago, the Caribbean nation that is within sight of Venezuela’s coast: Who were they? Did a U.S. strike kill them? Will more bodies appear on Trinidad’s beaches?

Good God.

Trump said yesterday that he’s not going to try to get a declaration of war, he’s just going to kill bad people. And that’s what he’s doing.

He’s Fine. Everything Is Fine.

Perfectly normal. Nothing to see here.

Q: “You pardoned the founder of Binance…Did it have anything to do with his involvement in your family’s crypto business?”

Trump: “I do pardon a lot of people. I don’t know. He was recommended by a lot of people…A lot of people said he wasn’t guilty of anything.”

He says every day that Biden didn’t know who he was pardoning…

And he knows perfectly well that this man is responsible for boosting his fortune by billions of dollars.

Sure. That’s fine. No problem.

This did not happen. It is a total fantasy.

Q: “The same day you established this task force back on January 20th was the same day you pardoned the January 6th defendants.”

Trump: “I’m very proud of that.”

Q: “Just last weekend, one of them was charged with allegedly threatening to kill House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries…Do you worry that your actions back on day one undermine what this task force is trying to accomplish?”

Trump: “No.”

Perfect adult behavior. Every mother in America must see this great leader as a role model for her children.

That did not happen either.

Meanwhile:

The White House is now devoting at least 60 percent of its time shitposting on social media and now on official White House web sites. It gets worse and worse every day.

There have been many tyrants in this world. But I think we may be breaking ground by having the most ignorant and demented lunatic of them all, enabled and supported by a staff of bored, teenage bullies.

Can this really go on like this for years?

War And Rumors of War

Good god, y’all!

This brilliant compilation of Fox News clips came over the transom this week. I’d never heard of comedian Bill Jubran, but he had to work to assemble this.

“Do people really not see they are playing you?” Jubran asks.

No. No, they don’t. They are too busy being played by people who feed their prejudices for profit. Fox is by now a legacy player in the decay of our democratic republic. When its talking heads are not hyping wars on everything, they’re feeding viewers’ perception that the world, the news, and everyone unlike them is biased against them.

Fareed Zakaria considers the differences in how the cultural erosion of trust manifests on the left and on the right:

2023 study by Sung In Kim and Peter A. Hall confirms this pattern: When citizens perceive the system as unfair or biased, they shift preference from neutral process to direct, personalized rule. Leaders who present themselves as fighters rather than referees — who attack courts, media outlets and bureaucracies — gain credibility precisely because they reject the system’s pretense of fairness.

Trump’s rise also exposes a deeper divide between left and right populisms. Kim and Hall find that when people see unfairness as personal — my job, my income, my future are unfair — they turn to right-wing populists, whose rhetoric frames their pain as betrayal by elites and outsiders. When they see unfairness as social — society treats others unfairly — they gravitate to left populists, who promise redistribution.

My home, my family, my church, my school, my bank account & my guns, etc. That me-first perspective on the right rejects the social contract that is the very foundation of self-rule. “There is no such thing!” as society, Margaret Thatcher famously declared. You don’t need to tell Donald Trump twice. It’s every man for Donald Trump.

The left (and our nation’s founders) accepts that a peaceful society involves human cooperation. Although unfairness exists, ameliorating it where possible is a worthy goal, as is defense against the aggregation of power. The right sees that as a crime against survival of the fittest, Darwinism fundamentalists otherwise reject. Unless it’s convenient.

(h/t KY)

* * * * *

Is this a private fight, or can anyone join?

No King’s One Million Rising movement 
50501 
May Day Strong
Freedom Over Fascism Toolkit
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

When Trump’s Not 9/11-ing The White House

Bonwit Teller all over again

Leaked photos from the battle damage assessment. (I kid.)

In sort of pre-weekend wrap-up, Kevin Kruse on Thursday provided a summary — I was going to type “Bluesky summary” and reconsidered — of Donald Trump’s recent crimes against the republic:

Over the past week, the president said the DOJ should pay him a quarter billion dollars, bulldozed half the White House to build himself a gaudy ballroom, bragged about murdering civilians in international waters, pardoned some more criminals, directed federal prosecutors to indict his opponents …

… called several African American politicians “low IQ,” called all Democrats terrorists, insisted the 7 million Americans who protested his regime were all paid, showed a video of him flying a jet and dropping shit all over them, sent $40 billion to Argentina to prop up a fellow dipshit tyrant …

… threatened to invade every state in the US, renewed his conspiracy theories about the 2020 election and vowed his people would prevent it from happening “again,” bragged about illegally slashing programs Democrats like, said he would send disaster relief to a state because it voted for him …

… severed economic aid to Colombia in a tantrum, threatened to crack down on NYC, announced drug prices would be coming down “500 percent,” claimed Pete Buttigieg tried to fix the air traffic system with “glass wire,” and committed probably a dozen other crimes we’ve already forgotten about.

Also this week, North Carolina’s Republican-controlled state legislature on Wednesday passed yet another in along line of heavily gerrymandered congressional maps. (I attended the Democrats’ Tuesday rally against it.) Republicans redrew the map because, as one Republican admitted, Trump asked them to. A court ordered fair map resulted in a 7R-7D split in 2022. Republicans quickly redrew it to 10R-4D once the GOP gained control of the state Supreme Court. This one looks like 11R-3D.

Team autocrat is not done either. Former Trump adviser Steve “Two Shirts” Bannon gave an interview this week to The Economist . Bannon declared that there is a plan for running Trump for a third term in 2028:

Asked if the 22nd amendment could prove to be a hard barrier to remaining in the White House, Bannon expanded: “There’s many different alternatives. At the appropriate time we’ll lay out what the plan is, but there is a plan, and Trump will be the president in ‘28.”

Don’t rule out a military dictatorship.

Trump may have timed his unsanctioned demolition of the East Wing of the White House as a thumb-in-the-eye response to millions of opponents taking to America’s streets last Saturday. But that’s unclear. Nor is the origin of his obsession with building a ballroom over four times the size of the one at his tacky Mar-a-Lago resort. One friend suggested it stems from his visit in 1987 to the Catherine Palace in St. Petersburg, USSR.

Catherine Palace Dining Room. Photo 2009 by Dennis G. Jarvis via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 2.0).

As for his wanton destruction of the East Wing with no apparent attempt at preservation of historically significant accoutrements or consultation with preservationists, a friend from New York reminded me Thursday that that is Trump’s style.

The 1929 Bonwit Teller and Co. flagship store that once stood where Trump Tower stands in Manhattan was designed by the same architects who designed Grand Central Terminal. When it reopened in 1930 as Stewart Bonwit Teller, the owners worked with world-famous artists. “Starting in 1936, the Spanish surrealist artist Salvador Dalí regularly decorated the windows with spectacular installations.” But when the future president acquired the building, Artnet notes:

This part of the history of art and of New York City appears to have eluded Donald Trump. And that’s not all: the developer wasn’t even willing to save the artworks inside the building from destruction, breaking a promise to the renowned Metropolitan Museum of Art, which is nearby, because profit and time were dearer to him than culture.

[…]

Close to the top of the 11-story building there were two limestone relief panels of two nearly naked women brandishing large scarves, as if dancing, in which the Metropolitan Museum of Art had expressed a strong interest for its sculpture collection. The Metropolitan, one of the largest and most important museums in the world, had also wanted to add to its department of applied 20th century art the six-by-nine meter, geometric-patterned bronze latticework that hung over the entrance at Bonwit Teller. By all accounts, Trump had agreed to donate both, if his workers were able to remove them from the walls. 

Trump reneged the way he promised his new ballroom would not touch the existing East Wing. As my friend put it, his “goons” ripped down the panels in the middle of the night.

In truth, Trump’s biographer Harry Hurt III confirmed, Trump himself ensured that the workers were told to remove the bronze latticework over the entrance with blowtorches, separate the friezes from the walls with jackhammers and break them off with crowbars, and throw them down into the interior of the building where they shattered into a million pieces.

And on Trump’s “execrable taste,” Paul Krugman replies:

I’ve read uncountably many articles about Trump and his motivations, and I continue to think that one of the most insightful is a piece by Peter York, published early in Trump’s first term, titled “Trump’s Dictator Chic.” York is an authority on the design and décor choices of modern despots, from Saddam Hussein to Ferdinand Marcos to Nicolae Ceausescu. He noted that despite the vast differences in their cultural backgrounds, the palaces of despots all looked very similar: Gigantic rooms confected with massive amounts of gold, glass and marble, clearly in imitation of Versailles.

[…]

So the ballroom is a sign, not just of Trump’s personal vulgarity, but of the collapse of small-r republican norms. Trump is turning the people’s house into a palace fit for a despot partly because that’s his taste, but also to show everyone that he can. L’etat, c’est moi.

He can and he did. Only this time, it was property Trump did not own. You did.

(h/t FC, AP)

Update: FYI, the Presidential Emergency Operations Center (PEOC) bunker is underneath what was the East Wing.

* * * * *

Is this a private fight, or can anyone join?

No King’s One Million Rising movement 
50501 
May Day Strong
Freedom Over Fascism Toolkit
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

Presidential Palace News

I think we know what he’s going for…

It’s all he thinks about:

Leavitt: "At this moment in time, of course, the ballroom is really the president's main priority."

Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2025-10-23T17:56:56.195Z

I think we know that but it’s good to see the White House acknowledge it. Recall this on the day after Charlie Kirk died:

Q: My condolences on the loss of your friend Charlie Kirk. How are you holding up?

TRUMP: I think very good. And by the way, right there you see all the trucks. They just started construction of the new ballroom for the White House, which is something they’ve been trying to get for about 150 years. And it’s gonna be a beauty. It’ll be an absolutely magnificent structure.

It’s as close to a temple for God Trump as he can get:

Bibi Spanks JD

And he’s pouting about it in public

Axios reports that JD has a sad:

Vice President JD Vance said on Thursday before leaving Israel that he was “insulted” by the Knesset vote on annexing the occupied West Bank, which took place while he was visiting the country this week.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has control over the majority in the Knesset and could have stopped the vote by taking it off the agenda or ordering the members of his party to vote against it. He chose not to in order to avoid a confrontation with his ultranationalist coalition partners.

[…]

Speaking with reporters at the airport before departing Israel, Vance was asked about the vote, and he called it “weird.” He said he was confused by it and that he was told it was only “symbolic” and part of a “political stunt with no practical significance.”

“If it was a political stunt, it was a stupid one, and I take some insult to it,” Vance said.He stressed that the Trump administration’s policy is that “the West Bank is not going to be annexed by Israel.”

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Wednesday ahead of his trip to Israel that the Trump administration thinks annexation of the West Bank will be “potentially threatening to the peace deal” in Gaza.  “So, they’re a democracy, they’re going to have their votes, people are going to take these positions, but at this time, it’s something that especially we think it might be counterproductive. … We’re concerned about anything that threatens to destabilize what we’ve worked on,” he said.

Imagine that. The right wingers of the Knesset don’t do whatever Trump tells them to do? What kind of empire is this?

 The Netanyahu government considered annexing large portions of the West Bank in response to the recognition of a Palestinian state by several Western countries in September.

I know this will shock you, but Trump’s buddies in the Arab states aren’t on board with Israeli annexation of the West Bank or Gaza. It’s kind of a problem, wouldn’t you say?

  • The United Arab Emirates told the Trump administration that Israeli annexations would harm the Abraham Accords.
  • Trump held a meeting last month with leaders and senior officials from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, Egypt, Jordan, Turkey, Indonesia and Pakistan and asked them to support his plan for ending the war in Gaza.
  • The Arab leaders presented Trump with several conditions for supporting his plan, including a commitment that Israel won’t annex parts of the West Bank or Gaza.
  • Trump made it clear to the leaders that he’d block such a step. Three days later, he told reporters that he won’t allow Netanyahu to annex parts of the occupied West Bank.

He won’t? Well, ok then. I guess that means he’ll stop arms shipments and use his tariff threats and all that if Netanyahu and his extremists don’t go along. Sure, sure he will.

I will never get over the fact that the U.S. media gave Trump that ecstatic extravaganza in the middle east when it was obvious that whatever cease fire they had was very fragile and the “peace agreement” was little more than a rough outline that hadn’t actually been signed off on by all the parties that are necessary to make it work. But that’s how Trump gets over. He makes some grandiose announcement and everyone runs toward the big, beautiful sound in order to flatter him and make him happy for that day. It’s almost always total bullshit.

Don’t Worry Ranchers, Your Dear Leader Is Helping You

MSNBC interviewed a Trump voting rancher and showed him that tweet. He was surprised, saying he agreed with Trump on a lot of things but he disagrees that he could do anything to lower the price of beef because his costs are way up too — because of the tariffs. Unfortunately, I’m not sure it dawned on him that maybe, just maybe, the president is a fucking moron who doesn’t understand anything at all.

It appears that the administration does have a plan to help the ranchers, though. They’re going to force Americans to eat more beef. Which is only right.

Remember this?

Sarah Palin brought 200 cookies to a Pennsylvania Christian school Tuesday, a hostess gift that would not be notable if Palin had not declared the move a stunt to mock anti-childhood obesity campaigns in public schools.

Fresh on the heels of Rush Limbaugh’s pro-Twinkie tirade against Michelle Obama’s health initiative, Palin explained to the audience, “I wanted these kids to bring home the idea to their parents for discussion. Who should be deciding what I eat? Should it be government or should it be parents? It should be the parents.”

The crowd roared. Palin was reacting to an incorrect report that Pennsylvania was considering banning sweet treats at school parties. She followed up with this tweet: “2 PA school speech; I’ll intro kids 2 beauty of laissez-faire via serving them cookies amidst school cookie ban debate;Nanny state run amok!” (Is it odd to decry the “Nanny State” to the very people who actually have nannies?)

That was completely different, of course. Michelle Obama is a Black woman and a Democrat. Donald Trump is our King.

Historic Lows

Enten: “Trump is doing absolutely awful in the minds of the American people. We’re talking about new lows. CNBC, -13 net approval on the economy. It’s -19 among Quinnipiac … Trump is at his lowest point ever in either of his terms. He’s not just beating himself with record lows — this is the lowest for any president ever at this point in either a presidency or for a second term.”

He doesn’t know this because he’s living in a bubble and even if he did, he wouldn’t care. Either he’s a demented, old, lame duck who’s just deep into YOLO or he he doesn’t plan on leaving any time soon and figures he can do whatever he wants as long as he’s in power.

The Corruption Stares Us Right In The Face

And we’re just watching it happen

Read this and then just think about how they tortured Hillary Clinton for alleged corruption because her husband ran an international charity:

President Trump has pardoned Changpeng Zhao, the convicted founder of the crypto exchange Binance, according to people familiar with the matter, following months of efforts by Zhao to boost the Trump family’s own crypto company.

The president signed the pardon on Wednesday, the people said. Trump recently indicated to advisers that he was sympathetic to arguments of political persecution related to Zhao and others, one of the people said. 

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said that Trump had “exercised his constitutional authority by issuing a pardon for Mr. Zhao, who was prosecuted by the Biden Administration in their war on cryptocurrency.” She added: “The Biden Administration’s war on crypto is over.”

Binance didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

A pardon will likely pave the way for Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange, to return to the U.S. after the company pleaded guilty in 2023 to violating U.S. anti-money-laundering requirements and was barred from operating in the country.

The company has spent nearly a year pursuing a pardon for Zhao, who left prison in September 2024 after serving a four-month sentence for related charges. Earlier this year, the company hired lobbyist Ches McDowell to help pursue a pardon, the Journal previously reported.

Since Trump’s election, Binance has also been a key supporter of his family’s World Liberty Financial crypto venture, a business that has driven a huge leap in the president’s personal wealth.

[…]

The Justice Department imposed a record $4.3 billion fine and burdensome oversight on Binance, which the department said had become a colossal money-laundering hub through which sanctioned groups and criminal organizations laundered billions of dollars in illicit funds.

The pardon may also prematurely end the Justice Department’s three-year Binance monitorship, set up to ensure the company complies with U.S. financial crime laws. However, it likely won’t end a separate monitorship established by the Treasury Department without the additional approval of Trump or the Treasury secretary.

[…]

Binance first reached out to allies of Trump last year, offering to strike a business deal with the family as part of a plan to return the company to the U.S., the Journal reported earlier this year. Representatives of the Trump family have held talks to take a financial stake in the U.S. arm of Binance.

Binance has been one of the main drivers of the growth of World Liberty’s dollar-pegged cryptocurrency, called USD1. It delivered World Liberty’s first big break this spring when it accepted a $2 billion investment from an outside investor paid in USD1. Binance has also incentivized trading in USD1 across platforms it controls.

It was just an outright bribe. A massive one. And it’s just a-ok.

I dream of the day when the crypto market implodes and all these assholes get their due. Of course they’re working hard to make it too big to fail so we the taxpayers will have to bail them out. Uday and Qusay will probably end up winners in the end anyway.

I guess the scale of Trump’s corruption in this term is just so overwhelming that we aren’t even gong to talk much about it. Nobody knows what to do since there’s no oversight anywhere and certainly no law enforcement capability in the federal government to hold him accountable.

I don’t know if we even have the tools to set this right. But if we are able to remove these people from power massive reform is going to be required. I wish I was more confident that it will happen. But, first things first. Putting an end to this misbegotten reign is job one.