The roll-out of Trump 2.0’s “shock and awe” effort has been pretty rocky. This week’s attempt by Trump to “pause” billions in spending on Donald’s whim caused mass chaos across the land. There was enough backlash and a court order pausing the pause that the administration covered up its backtracking by announcing it had rescinded the memo announcing the pause but not the executive commands behind it. (Never admit mistakes.)
Yet already one sees critics taking solace in the apparent inability of the Project 2025 team to implement it’s 900-page vision for remaking America as a white-Christian-nationalist dictatorship. But they won’t stop. Ideologues like these are relentless and committed.
Wired reports that “the highest ranks of the Office of Personnel Management (OPM)—essentially the human resources function for the entire federal government—are now controlled by people with connections to Musk” and to tech industry movers like JD Vance mentor, billionaire Peter Thiel. Indeed, many have noticed that OPM’s “Fork in the Road” memo seems to be a cut-and-paste job from a RIF memo issued by Musk to Twitter employees after his takeover. This controversy came after the directive to quash all DEI efforts:
Last week, federal employees across the government received emails encouraging them to turn in colleagues who they believed to be working on diversity, equity, inclusion, and access initiatives (DEIA) to the OPM via the email address DEIAtruth@opm.gov.
“This reminded me,” says Kelman, “of the Soviet Stalinism of turning in your friends to the government.”
While the country was captivated by the “cruelty and loyalty” show Trump made of signing executive orders prepared by ideologues in his orbit, it begins to seem more obvious that the easily manipulated Trump is merely a Trojan horse for an oligarch class flirting with dictatorship.
The parallels between Trump 2.0 and another dictatorial regime have not gone unnoticed. In particular, one clip Rachel Maddow used in her fall profile of JD Vance began spinning out online last night. “We need a De-Ba’athification program….”
One recalls the hubris of the Bush ideologues who implemented the De-Ba’athification program in Iraq. And how well that worked out. One might find that abject failure encouraging except for the chaos Bush-Cheney unleashed from Syria to Afghanistan. Not to mention hundreds of thousands dead.
Maddow’s review of Vance’s history includes his taking a lot of his ideas not only from Peter Thiel, but from “self-described monarchist Curtis Yarvin.” Quoth Yarvin, “If Americans want to change their government, they are going top have to get over their dictator phobia.” (They don’t want to govern. They want to rule.)
Those looking forward to Trump’s passing of natural causes may need to rethink that. Because then we get Musk-Thiel-Yarvin in the guise of JD Vance. The broligarchs are trying to implement their agenda now under Trump the Ignorant and with the useful-idiot assistance of white-Christian-nationalists. They’ll all have more free reign — and I use the term purposefully — under Vance.
There appears to have been a disastrous collision between a regional jet, a CRJ made by Bombardier and flown by American Eagle Airlines, with more than 60 people aboard en route from Wichita, and a military helicopter, reportedly a Blackhawk flown as “VIP Transport” by the US Army. News footage from local TV stations captured the collision, for instance this from local NBC news.
The news is tragic and still unfolding. As in all aviation disasters, early reports can be misleading; I’ll follow up with more details tomorrow, as more become known.
The most recent mass-fatality crash had been almost 16 years ago. That was in February, 2009, when the crew of a Colgan regional jet, a feeder for United Airlines, apparently mis-managed an icing emergency, and crashed on approach to Buffalo, New York.
Since then, the relentlessly safety-minded collaborative culture of the US air travel system has made commercial airline travel in the United States the safest mode of travel ever invented. Not counting today, a total of two people had died in US airline accidents (over more than 12 billion passenger journeys) in the preceding 15+ years.
Now, tragically, that record is at its end.
On his second day in office, as part of his careless-or-intentional destruction of the institutions that have made the United States strong and safe, Donald Trump disbanded a group called the Aviation Security Advisory Committee.
As I had planned to write that day, this casually punitive gesture had the potential of undermining everything that had made US aviation safety the marvel of the world. It was collaborative; it combined public, private, military, civilian, academic, and other institutions to pool knowledge; it avoided blame; but it focused relentlessly on lessons learned. You can see a list of its members here.
I didn’t write about it that day, because life got in the way in various forms. But if I had I would have said: Destroying this institution probably won’t make a difference this week. Or this month. Or maybe even this year. But in the long run, some day, it will be part of an erosion of safety —part of the thoughtless destruction of the taken-for-granted institutions that have made modern as safe as it is.
That dismantling order, one week ago, wasn’t part of tonight’s tragedy—whose specific origins no one knows, as I write. But unless reversed, it will be part of tragedies in the future.
Nothing is perfect and accidents happen. But the dismantling of expertise that we are embarking on as a country is going to make them much more likely in many realms of everyday life. Elon Musk’s delusions of grandeur can’t keep American safe.
Serious talks about the suit, which had seen little activity since the fall of 2023, began after Meta Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg flew to Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Florida to dine with him in November, according to the people familiar with the discussions. The dinner was one of several efforts by Zuckerberg and Meta to soften the relationship with Trump and the incoming administration. Meta also donated $1 million to Trump’s inaugural fund. Last year, Trump warned that Zuckerberg could go to prison if he tried to rig the election against him.
Toward the end of the November dinner, Trump raised the matter of the lawsuit, the people said. The president signaled that the litigation had to be resolved before Zuckerberg could be “brought into the tent,” one of the people said.
Weeks later, in early January, Zuckerberg returned to Mar-a-Lago for a full day of mediation. Trump was present for part of the session, though he stepped out at one point to be sentenced—appearing virtually—for covering up hush money paid to a porn star, one of the people said. He also golfed, reappearing in golf clothes and talking about the round he had just played, the person said.
Trump has long been a prolific filer of lawsuits, with mixed results. In recent weeks, that has changed, as U.S. corporations have rushed to make inroads with the new administration. ABC News in December settled a defamation lawsuit Trump filed against the network and anchor George Stephanopoulos, agreeing to pay $15 million to Trump’s library. Paramount Global executives have also discussed settling a lawsuit Trump filed over a CBS News interview with former Vice President Kamala Harris.
Trump’s lawyers are working to capitalize on that momentum. In December, a lawyer for Trump filed a letter in an unrelated case—in which the president had sued publisher Simon & Schuster and author Bob Woodward over publishing recordings of their interviews without permission—urging the defendants to follow ABC’s lead. Attaching a copy of the ABC settlement, the lawyer wrote, “President Trump is hopeful that the Defendants in this case follow Mr. Stephanopoulos’ expression of contrition.”
Trump voters all believe that he is so rich that he can’t be bought. The opposite is true. He is a grasping con artist consuming bribes from a firehose. This appears to be his latest grift — suing companies with bogus claims as a way for them to put money directly into his pockets. Look for more of this. It’s a very easy way to pay tribute to the Dear Leader and they all seem very eager to do it.
(That is not what happened. Colombia said they didn’t like Trump landing military aircraft in their country and treating their citizens like shit. Trump agreed to allow Colombia to send their own airplanes to pick them up and treat them humanely.)
The total amount US sends to all underdeveloped countries is $60 million. We sent $30 million to Gaza for medicine. The idea that Hamas is using $30 million dollars worth of condoms is insane but it’s the kind of thing the wingnuts love (“dirty, dirty”) so it will join the rest of the lunatic fringe lies that Trump is spewing.
Like this one:
Total lie. This did not happen. Republicans in DC know this because they aren’t this stupid but they either think it’s clever and funny or they just don’t care that the president is apparently suffering from dementia.
I don’t know what the observances of these events were in the past but I can’t for the life of me see what the harm was in doing it. It just seems like benign celebrations of our pluralistic society, like St Patrick’s day parades or Mardi Gras. Why is this a problem? But I guess the white guys are upset so they have to stop doing it.
Many companies in the private sector are ending their DEI programs as well which I have to assume is being done just to make their MAGA customers happy. And I suppose they’re probably happy to abandon all their anti-discrimination policies as well.
Republican attorneys general from 19 states want Costco Wholesale to ditch its diversity, equity and inclusion efforts, making the call days after the retailer successfully defended its DEI policies as good for business to shareholders.
In a letter on Monday to Costco CEO Ron Vachris, the AGs accuse the retailer of “clinging to DEI policies that courts and businesses have rejected as illegal,” and called on it to account for the legal risks of its actions.
Led by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird, the Republican officials instructed Costco to let them know within 30 days whether it would get rid of its DEI policies or explain why not.
Costco did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The GOP letter came after Costco shareholders overwhelmingly rejected a proposal that the wholesale club operator evaluate any risks associated to its DEI practices. The shareholder behind the resolution, the National Center for Public Policy Research, argued that DEI “may sound benign,” but in fact is “weaponized language concealing a radical Marxist agenda.”
Costco’s board, however, urged against the conservative think tank’s motion ahead of its annual meeting.
“Among other things, a diverse group of employees helps bring originality and creativity to our merchandise offerings, promoting the ‘treasure hunt’ that our customers value,” the retailer stated. Costco’s “commitment to an enterprise rooted in respect and inclusion is appropriate and necessary. The report requested by this proposal would not provide meaningful additional information,” it added.
A day after Costco held its ground on its DEI policies, discount store chain Target joined Walmart and other corporations in scaling back on diversity initiatives under attack from conservative activists emboldened by high court decisions and President Trump, who recently banned DEI programs across the federal government.
I don’t know why they think this is their business but apparently the idea is that these programs are illegal because of the Supreme Court’s recent affirmative action decision. Or maybe it’s just because Dear Leader has proclaimed it. But it just isn’t true. (And it goes without saying that diversity has absolutely nothing to do with Marxism and it’s insanely depressing to see state Attorneys General argue that it is.)
There has been no decision on whether private business can allow their companies to celebrate racial or ethnic diversity. And considering that we’re allegedly still a free country I can’t believe that anyone would think it’s the government’s job to tell them they can’t do it. The mind reels.
I have concluded that Trump is so angry about the attempts to hold him accountable for his crimes that he just wants to hurt Americans. I also think that he’s showing some serious signs of dementia now. This stuff about the “valve” and sending Elon to space is weird even for him. It’s possible that he’s just owning the libs but I have a sense that it may be more than that. Choosing a conspiracy theorist like Bobby Jr. covers all those bases. He is an insult to all Americans. If the Republicans let him go through despite knowing what a monstrous freak he is, we’re truly in Mad King territory.
Oopsie. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt just tweeted this:
This is NOT a rescission of the federal funding freeze. It is simply a rescission of the OMB memo. Why? To end any confusion created by the court’s injunction. The President’s EO’s on federal funding remain in full force and effect, and will be rigorously implemented.
I assume this is them trying to be clever and moot the court injunction? Probably not a good idea to say this out loud.
Meanwhile here’s Potus and his Majordomo entertaining the MAGA faithful with fantasies:
Except… note the date
They think they’re in a movie.
They’re just lucky that the only people paying attention are MAGA cult members and a few die-hards like us.
There’s already proposed legislation to rename Dulles Airport. I assume highways, schools and post offices are already on the way. But we have to start thinking bigger. Cities? Mountains? The country itself? Let’s get serious about this.
Donald Trump has the highest approval rating of either of his presidencies right now and he’s still below or just at 50%, the lowest of any president at this point in their presidency except himself in 2017. That hasn’t stopped him and his lackeys from insisting that he has an unprecedented mandate to enact a radical agenda, based upon what they ludicrously call a landslide victory. In reality he won the popular vote by 1.5% and didn’t reach a majority and his electoral college victory was a tepid 312. Compared to real landslides such as Ronald Reagan’s in 1984 when he won 49 states by a popular vote margin of 18 points, it’s embarrassing that they even have the nerve to claim one but that’s just how they roll.
According to the latest Reuters/Ipsos poll “45% of Americans approve of Trump’s performance as president, down slightly from 47% in a Jan. 20-21 poll. The share who disapproved was slightly larger at 46%, an increase from 39% in the prior poll.” And regarding Trump’s early policy moves, the majority disapproves of almost all of them.
While it’s true that the one issue that gets majority support is “downsizing the federal government” it’s fair to assume that a majority do not believe that abruptly freezing the funding of important medical research, children’s health or veterans care without notice, which Trump and his Project 2025 acolytes have done in the past few days, is the way to do it.
You will note that after ending requirements that government employees report gifts and investments and renaming the Gulf Of Mexico, the most unpopular move that Trump has made is the pardons of the January 6th rioters. Only the most hardcore MAGA true believers support his actions and it tells you that Trump’s belief that America at large sees the violent actions of that day as justified is very wrong. (Even Trump’s biggest fan, S. Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham has said publicly that it was a mistake.)
Not that he seems the least bit concerned about that. Over the weekend Trump appeared at a rally in Las Vegas with Stewart Rhodes, the head of the Oath Keepers whose 18 year sentence for seditious conspiracy Trump commuted. According to a recording obtained by CBS News, he’s the guy who said “my only regret is they should have brought rifles, we should have brought rifles. We could have fixed it right then and there. I’d hang fu**ing Pelosi from the lamppost.” What a guy.
Trump said that all the prisoners were patriots who love their country. Meanwhile, one pardon recipient was killed by police in a shootout just days after being released, another is wanted on charges of solicitation of a minor and another is facing trial on state charges of pedophilia and possession of child pornography. It’s highly likely they will not be the last to find themselves back behind bars or worse before too long. Everyone in this country and around the world saw what those violent criminals did that day.
Trump is so driven to “prove” that everyone should believe him rather than their lying eyes that he has appointed one of the organizers of the “Stop The Steal” gathering on January 6th, a man named Ed Martin, to be the interim US Attorney for Washington DC. At a rally on January 5th, Martin spoke before the excited crowd and exhorted “die-hard true Americans” to work until their “last breath” to “stop the steal.” He was at the Capitol the next but says he didn’t think anything was “out of hand.” He tweeted this as the crowd had already breached the building and was engaging in a violent battle with police:
Martin has also been a big part of the Patriot Freedom Project, advocating for the J6 defendants and holding fundraisers for them. If there is someone with a greater conflict of interest to be involved in these cases I can’t imagine who it would be. But that isn’t stopping him. Martin has instigated one of those patented Trumpy “investigation of the investigations” to review what he calls the “great failures” of the prosecutors to use a charge that was later disallowed by the Supreme Court, despite the fact that all but one of the judges that heard the cases before it landed in the high court upheld it. He has also disbanded the DOJ’s Capitol Siege Section and was the one who moved to dismiss all the pending J6 cases.
The New York Times reports that over at Main Justice, Acting Attorney General James McHenry “fired more than a dozen prosecutors who worked on the two criminal investigations into Donald J. Trump for the special counsel Jack Smith, saying they could not be trusted to “faithfully implement” the president’s agenda.” Career prosecutors are supposed to follow the rule of law without fear or favor not “faithfully implement” anyone’s political agenda but apparently those rules have changed. Trump now sees the DOJ as his personal law firm which makes sense since he’s staffing it with all of his defense lawyers from his criminal, impeachment and civil trials.
And then we have Kash Patel who will be facing his confirmation hearings this week as he prepares to take over the FBI and do without question what former FBI Directors James Comey and Christopher Wray refused to do: act as Trump’s personal henchman.
I wrote about Patel a couple of months ago when I was still in shock that he could possibly be confirmed for such an important law enforcement position. He is, as I said then, apparently driven by the same persecution complex as Trump and has developed an equal thirst for revenge. Members of the Intelligence Community have begged the Senate not to confirm him as have former Republican national security officials. Revelations are coming out daily about his malfeasance in his former positions during Trump’s first term, always because he was operating as Trump’s propaganda minister regardless of the actual job he held.
USA Today reported this week that Patel was one of the members of Trump’s inner circle most responsible for “recasting” January 6th as a patriotic protest rather than the violent insurrection we all watched in horror as it unfolded. He spread lies about the FBI instigating the riot that day and pushed the bogus Ray Epps conspiracy theory. He even produced that depraved January 6th Prison Choir rendition of the Star Spangled Banner. It’s hard to think of anyone worse to be in the role of FBI Director.
All of this is happening in the shadow of Trump’s repeated flouting of the law, from his odious Executive Order banning Birthright Citizenship to the unauthorized firing of almost all of the Independent Inspector Generals to his refusal to fund programs for which the Congress has appropriated the money, which is their job. His brazen lawlessness is already beyond most people’s expectations or even imagination and he’s just getting started.
The American people are not in favor of any of it and they are almost certainly going to like it less and less as it all unfolds. Trump’s twisted psychological need to believe that he won in a landslide and is therefore vindicated in his lies about 2020 has given him a monumental case of hubris. He’ll do a lot of damage before he’s done but he will never have the popular approbation he craves, now or in the future.