Skip to content

Digby's Hullabaloo Posts

Will The Courts Save Us?

Former federal judge Micahel Luttig writes I nthe NY Times today:

Mr. Trump seems supremely confident, though deludedly so, that he can win this war against the federal judiciary, just as he was deludedly confident that he could win the war he instigated against America’s democracy after the 2020 election.

The very thought of having to submit to his nemesis, the federal judiciary, must be anguishing for Mr. Trump, who only last month proclaimed, “He who saves his Country does not violate any Law.” But the judiciary will never surrender its constitutional role to interpret the Constitution, no matter how often Mr. Trump and his allies call for the impeachment of judges who have ruled against him. As Chief Justice John Marshall explained almost 225 years ago in the seminal case of Marbury v. Madison, “It is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.”

If Mr. Trump continues to attempt to usurp the authority of the courts, the battle will be joined, and it will be up to the Supreme Court, Congress and the American people to step forward and say: Enough. As the Declaration of Independence said, referring to King George III of Britain, “A prince, whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people.”

We like to think that the courts are apolitical but with the country polarized the way it is and the very partisan judges Trump put on the bench in his first term, it’s understandable that we see them through the prism of partisanship. And after some of the Supreme Court rulings these past few years it’s hard to have much faith that they’re going to defend us from the MAGA purge. They haven’t shown any respect for precedent and it’s clear that at least three of the members are obviously hardcore MAGA themselves.

But there is another way to look at this. The main excuse we get from many Republicans on background as to why they support even Trump’s most monstrous policies is that their MAGA constituents will throw them out of office. This has been recently expanded to included the threats Musk is making to primary anyone who looks at him sideways.

But federal judges don’t have to worry about that. They have lifetime appointments and Musk’s money is meaningless to them. Yes, they do worry about death threats and that’s a concern. But the vast majority of them are well-off and can afford security and many live pretty cloistered lives. They aren’t like politicians who have to be out in public all the time among the people. (I suspect that a lot of people use this as an excuse to do what they want to do anyway.)

And needless to say, despite the shrill cries of impeachment, they do not have the votes in the Senate to convict so there is really no fear of that. I suppose they think they will intimidate the judges into ruling for them because they will be embarrassed by the impeachment proceedings but on some level I think they know that the risk is huge that public will not approve of such a spectacle and it may even hurt their cause. They are not serious about this and the judges know it.

The point is that the incentives for judges are different than they are for politicians. They can do the right thing without having to worry as much about Trump’s tweets. So we are going to find out how many of them are actually true believers in Trump’s authoritarian cult and how many respect the rule of law and believe in American democracy.

Obviously, this is a separate question from whether or not Trump will defy them. We really have no idea what they will do in either case. But these cases are going to illuminate for us just how potent the MAGA threats really are. These judges have much less to fear than anyone else. Will they stand up or not?

War Footing

Polish Army 1939: Wiki Commons

I honestly never thought I would see this. Ever. But here we are. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, a mild mannered former Central Banker, called for snap election on April 28th. Here’s what he said:

“President Trump claims that Canada isn’t a real country. He wants to break us so America can own us — we will not let that happen. We’re over the shock of the betrayal, but we should not forget the lessons.”

“We [need] to act to fight the Americans,”

Over the past week, Carney has been working on new military and defensive deals with Australia, France, and the UK.

Is an actual war in the offing? Probably not. But it’s quite clear that the rest of the world, especially our allies, now consider America a threat. And they’re right, we are. We are led by a man with diminished capacity who prefers our traditional enemies and he’s empowered a group of tech-oligarchs with nefarious goals to do whatever they want. They have no choice but to band together.

Truth

When he approached everyone girded for a confrontation And then…

We should all do this.

The President Has A Very Busy Schedule

Totally corrupt price pumping from the President of the United States this weekend:

But he had other very important business to conduct as well:

I think it makes him look much better than he actually does. He’s less orange and mottled and his hair looks almost normal.

This is what he thinks he looks like:

That’s the portrait he had his charity illegally buy to hang at one of his properties:

He’s a very serious man working every day for the American people.

.



Li’l Donny Tyrant

He demands a full-throated apology and a promise that she will never challenge the federal government again before the case can be settled? It’s not exactly subtle, is it?

I suppose most people think this is just Trump being Trump again and it doesn’t mean anything. But he got Columbia University and Paul Weiss law firms to come crawling on their bellies just in the last few days. He means it.

The Guardian reports:

Inside the White House, advisers to Donald Trump reveled in their ability to bully Paul, Weiss – one of the largest law firms in the US – and see its chair criticize a former partner as he tried to appease the US president into rescinding an executive order that threatened the firm’s ability to function.[…]

The most extraordinary part of the deal, widely seen as humiliating for Paul, Weiss, was that Trump had not made any explicit requests of the firm, according to two people with direct knowledge of the matter. The commitments and most notably the sacrificing of Pomerantz were offered up proactively by Karp at a White House meeting this week, the people said.

The deal marked a significant new chapter in Trump’s campaign of retribution against several top law firms he sees as having supported efforts to prosecute him during his time out of office – and how he has used the far-reaching power of the presidency to bring them to heel.

It raises the prospect that Trump and his advisers, victorious over Paul, Weiss, will now feel emboldened to launch similar strikes against firms that tangle with the administration. After the executive order was withdrawn, some aides privately gloated that a precedent had been set.

I wonder when any powerful person or institution is going to fight back when he tries this? Maybe it’s up to the Governor of Maine.

And Then They Fell In Love

Tucker Carlson: What did you think of [Putin]?

Steve Witkoff:

I liked him. .. In the second visit that I had it got personal. President Putin had commissioned a beautiful portrait of President Trump from the leading Russian artist and actually gave it to me and asked me to take it home to President Trump, which I brought home and delivered to him.

It’s been reported in the paper but it was such a gracious moment and told me a story, Tucker, about how when the president was shot he went to his local church and met with his priest and prayed for the president not because he was the president of the United States … he could become the president of the United States, but because he had a friendship with him and he was praying for his friend.

Can you imagine sitting there and listening to these kid on conversations? I came home and delivered that message to our president and delivered the painting and he was clearly touched by it. This is the kind of connection that we’ve been able to re-establish.

This is the real Trump Degrangement Syndrome. They actually seem to believe this bullshit.

Trump crony Witkoff appears to have absolutely no qualifications or experience to be this shadow Secretary of State and clearly suffers from the same wide-eyed gullibility about Putin that Trump does. It’s embarrassing.

Vladimir Putin is a former KGB agent. He is ruthlessly focused on his goal to re-establish some version of the former Soviet Union and he correctly sees Donald Trump as a total moron he can manipulate into helping him do it. And Trump now has around him nothing but fools in his own image who are either too thick to understand what Putin’s doing or are cynical careerists who could not care less about this country or the world as long as they are in proximity to power.

For instance, the actual Secretary of State, Li’l Marco who very neatly fits into the second category:

Over the first two months of the second Trump administration, Rubio has in some ways taken a back seat on the world stage to Witkoff, whose portfolio has expanded beyond his official title of special envoy to the Middle East.

Witkoff has been a leading player in some of Trump’s highest profile foreign policy wins — the release of hostages in Israel, a since-broken ceasefire in Gaza, and the return of American Marc Fogel from Russia after Witkoff traveled to Moscow to finalize negotiations for his release.

He’s jetted around the Middle East and become a key mediator in talks to end the war in Ukraine. Witkoff went back to Moscow for a face-to-face with Russian president Vladimir Putin last week to try to advance the administration’s ceasefire proposal.

Witkoff is “flying all over the world playing secretary of state,” said a person familiar with the dynamic. “He has one thing that no one else has — he has Trump’s 100% confidence.”[…]

“I think he is frustrated,” a senator still in touch with Rubio told CNN.

Did Marco really think that Trump had forgiven him for implying that he has a small penis? Not in a million years.

Trump just threw him to the wolves again, saying the El Salvador deportation scheme was all Rubio’s and he just went along with it. (We know it was Stephen Miller’s baby.) I give Marco maybe another 3 months. He gave up his Senate seat for yet another humiliation that will put the final coda to his mediocre career.

The DOGE Bureaucracy

Elon Musk the visionary genius is tasked with making the government more efficient with a much leaner workforce full of brainy Trumpers who love America. How’s that going so far?

Catherine Rampell at the Washington Post:

Taxpayer dollars are being abused, too, as the “Department of Government Efficiency” makes the federal government almost comically inefficient.

  • At the IRS, employees spend Mondays queued up at shared computers to submit their DOGE-mandated “five things I did last week” emails. Meanwhile, taxpayer customer service calls go unanswered.
  • At the Bureau of Land Management, federal surveyors are no longer permitted to buy replacement equipment. So, when a shovel breaks at a field site, they can’t just drive to the nearest town or hardware store. Instead, work stops as employees track down one of the few managers nationwide authorized to file an official procurement form and order new parts.
  • At the Food and Drug Administration, leadership canceled the agency’s subscription to LexisNexis, an online reference tool that employees need to conduct regulatory research. Some workers might not have noticed this loss yet, however, because the agency’s incompetently planned return-to-office order this week left them too busy hunting for insufficient parking and toilet paper. (Multiple bathrooms have run out of bath tissue, employees report.)

I’ve spent the past few weeks interviewing frustrated civil servants, whose remarks typically rotate through panic, rage and black humor. Almost none are willing to speak on the record because of concerns about purges by the U.S. DOGE Service. But their themes are easy to corroborate: Routine tasks take longer to complete, grinding down worker productivity. DOGE is also bogging down employees with meaningless busywork, which sets them up to be punished for neglecting their actual duties.

That sounds very efficient.

How about this Orwellian busywork?

For example, many have been diverted away from their usual responsibilities in order to scrub forbidden words from agency documents, as part of Trump’s crusade against diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.

“All this talk of warfighter ethos, and our ‘priority’ is making sure there are no three-year-old tweets with the word ‘diversity’ in them,” said a Pentagon employee. “Crazy town.”

What counts as DEI wrongthink also changes almost daily, meaning employees must perform the same word-cleansing tasks repeatedly.

They are literally scrubbing “forbidden words” repeatedly. I think this describes it well:

“They’re like a kid in a nuclear power plant running around hitting buttons,” said Max Stier, president of the Partnership for Public Service (which actually focuses on government efficiency), when asked about DOGE’s measures. “They have no sense of the cascade of consequences they’re causing.”

Having been through some corporate takeovers where geniuses come in and immediately fire a bunch of people making those who are left absorb all the work in the midst of chaos, let’s just say the work suffered. The best transitions were those that featured someone coming in and interviewing everyone to find out exactly what they did and spending time evaluating the systems before making wholesale changes. Even then there were months of people being nervous and worried if they were going to have a job and a lot of good people leaving for greener pastures.

But for all that, even the worst ones I went through were nothing like this level of sheer destruction. This is akin to asset stripping by vulture capitalists who take over a company with the intention of selling its various parts and closing the company itself. But the government isn’t a business and even if they want to privatize everything it’s not possible. And mostly, what they want is to destroy “the deep state” which they have defined broadly as the entire federal bureaucracy without the slightest idea of what the ramifications of doing that will be to our society and economy.

I can’t imagine what it must be like to work in the federal government right now. Trauma doesn’t really describe it. I think emotional torture is more like it. But then that’s part of the plan. Project 2025 author and Director of OMB Russell Vought made it very clear with his “trauma” comment:

“We want the bureaucrats to be traumatically affected. When they wake up in the morning, we want them to not want to go to work because they are increasingly viewed as the villains. We want their funding to be shut down so that the EPA can’t do all of the rules against our energy industry because they have no bandwidth financially to do so. We want to put them in trauma.” 

I actually don’t think Vought is getting enough “credit” for the current dumpster fire. His plans are being implemented by Elon Musk not the other way around. Musk really is “IT Support” as his cutesy t-shirt says.

If you haven’t seen this undercover video of Vought before the election explaining what he planned to do, you should watch it. it’s not long and it’s really well done. His plan is being perfectly executed:

Disquiet On The “Do Not Obey In Advance” Front

Trump has given up our rights for Lent

Donald Trump has almost certainly never read Shakespeare’s Henry VI, Part 2. That doesn’t mean he hasn’t in his 78 years heard and taken inspiration from “The first thing we do, let’s kill all the lawyers” (The New York Times):

President Trump broadened his campaign of retaliation against lawyers he dislikes with a new memorandum that threatens to use government power to punish any law firms that, in his view, unfairly challenge his administration.

The memorandum directs the heads of the Justice and Homeland Security Departments to “seek sanctions against attorneys and law firms who engage in frivolous, unreasonable and vexatious litigation against the United States” or in matters that come before federal agencies.

Mr. Trump issued the order late Friday night, after a tumultuous week for the American legal community in which one of the country’s premier firms, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, struck a deal with the White House to spare the company from a punitive decree issued by Mr. Trump the previous week.

Trump cannot obey the law and will not uphold the Constitution, but nobody knows more than him about “frivolous, unreasonable and vexatious litigation.” He ran for president in 2024 to avoid spending the rest of his life in a jumpsuit matching his slathered-on complexion and to exact retribution against perceived enemies. He’s making good on both.

The biggest legal thorn in Trump’s side, attorney Marc Elias, had a pithy response last night to the “deal” Trump stuck with Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison.

May we all be as defiant when the brownshirts come for us. Elias went further:

Anna Bower, Senior Editor at Lawfare, posted a thread on Trump’s attacks on the legal profession:

So go out and hug a civil rights attorney, howboutit?

Trump has give up people’s rights for Lent

It’s Lent. It’s spring. The sun is shining, the sky is blue, and it’s “first they came for” season.

First it was non-citizens with criminal records rounded up for deportation. But the Trump DHS was ecumenical about that and is rounding up plenty of non-criminal non-citizens if they’d overstayed a visa by even a single day as Venezualans bearing benign tattoos. And non-citizens with expunged convictions. Then it was immigrants granted refugee status. And Canadians with visas not “properly processed” and German tourists for no clear reason. And green card holders and doctors with H1B visas. And now travel advisories for foreigners visiting the U.S. from Canada, England, Germany, Denmark, and Finland.

Trump 2.0 started with non-citizens. Now it’s moved on to lawyers. Don’t think that if this administration sees you as an enemy, it won’t in time come for you on whatever they can “Trump” up.

* * * * *

Have you fought the coup today?

National Day of Action, Saturday, April 5
Choose Democracy
Indivisible: A Guide to Democracy on the Brink
You Have Power
Chop Wood, Carry Water
Thirty lonely but beautiful actions

Bad New / Good News

2,085 protests in February

So. There’s a lot of spooky stuff going around. People are worried. Thousands of Americans with means “are applying to visa programs abroad” or hedging, purchasing new passports in other countries. (I know several who’ve gotten out.) Donald Trump’s deportations in defiance of federal courts has people unnerved. “We’ll Always Have Las Vegas” from Thursday is about incidents like Canadian Jasmine Mooney‘s unwelcome encounter with DHS harming the tourism industry. As things go with Americans, it’s one thing for DHS to throw brown-skinned “foreigners” in prison. It’s another when it happens to someone who might be nice, white you.

On Friday I posted this (below) on Threads (where I have no followers) to see if I could stir up some shit. Guess I did. It’s gotten 11.5K views.

 

 
View on Threads

 

Friends ask me how I am and my stock reply is now “Managing my stress.”

The Good News

Nineteen-sixties leftovers tend to like big, high-profile actions on the Mall that get lots of one-day press. Gather with your tribe, make a lot of noise, and go home feeling better about an issue you’ve accomplished little to change. When we don’t see those actions today, we think nothing of consequence is happening to push back against the madness of King Donald. But Digby sent along a post you need to see. Sometimes smaller and everywhere is a better 21st-century strategy.

From Waging Nonviolence:

Where is the resistance?” is a common refrain. Our research affirms that resistance is alive and well.

Many underestimate resistance to the current Republican administration because they view resistance through a narrow lens. The 2017 Women’s March in particular — immediate in its response, massive in its scope and size — may inform collective imaginations about what the beginning of a resistance movement should look like during Trump 2.0.

In fact, our research shows that street protests today are far more numerous and frequent than skeptics might suggest. Although it is true that the reconfigured Peoples’ March of 2025 — held on Jan. 18 — saw lower turnout than the 2017 Women’s March, that date also saw the most protests in a single day for over a year. And since Jan. 22, we’ve seen more than twice as many street protests than took place during the same period eight years ago.

In February 2025 alone, we have already tallied over 2,085 protests, which included major protests in support of federal workers, LGBTQ rights, immigrant rights, Palestinian self-determination, Ukraine, and demonstrations against Tesla and Trump’s agenda more generally. This is compared with 937 protests in the United States in February 2017, which included major protests against the so-called Muslim ban along with other pro-immigrant and pro-choice protests. Coordinated days of protest such as March Fourth for Democracy (March 4), Stand Up for Science (March 7), rallies in recognition of International Women’s Day (March 8), and protests demanding the release of Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil suggest little likelihood of these actions slowing down. These are all occurring in the background of a tidal wave of lawsuits challenging the Trump administration’s early moves.

This resistance movement is built upon but doesn’t look like past movements. “From mass refusals to boycotts to walkouts, regular Americans are bravely pushing back against the administration. Their actions are diverse and multiplying — and already having an impact,” reports Waging Nonviolence:

Major protests have been happening multiple times per week, organized under various banners, including 50501Tesla TakedownPeople’s MarchesNo Kings On Presidents DaySave Our ServicesStand Up For Science and National Parks Protests. These are turning out hundreds to thousands of people at dozens to hundreds of locations across the United States. (Check out the recently-launched Resist List, which is using social media to collect and share these stories, many of which aren’t making it into the mainstream news.)

And about those mass protests of past decades. You and I both know that King Donald is just itching to have “his generals” shoot protesters. He just needs actions large enough that he can invoke the Insurrection Act of 1807, declare martial law (he’ll call it marshal law), and send out troops (if they’d comply) to create the largest mass casualty shooting in American history.

A multitude of smaller Whack-a-mole protests by the thousands may frustrate Doanld’s wet dream and probably be safer for the resistance. Keep it up.

And get out wherever you are for the National Day of Action, Saturday, April 5.

* * * * *

Have you fought the coup today?

National Day of Action, Saturday, April 5
Choose Democracy
Indivisible: A Guide to Democracy on the Brink
You Have Power
Chop Wood, Carry Water
Thirty lonely but beautiful actions

And I feel fine: Aum-The Cult at the End of the World (***)

In my 2013 review of the documentary Let the Fire Burn I wrote:

Depending upon whom you might ask, MOVE was an “organization”, a “religious cult”, a “radical group”, or all of the above. The biggest question in my mind (and one the film doesn’t necessarily delve into) is whether it was another example of psychotic entelechy. So what is “psychotic entelechy”, exactly? Well, according to Stan A. Lindsay, the author of Psychotic Entelechy: The Dangers of Spiritual Gifts Theology, it would be

…the tendency of some individuals to be so desirous of fulfilling or bringing to perfection the implications of their terminologies that they engage in very hazardous or damaging actions.

In the context of Lindsay’s book, he is expanding on some of the ideas laid down by literary theorist Kenneth Burke and applying them to possibly explain the self-destructive traits shared by the charismatic leaders of modern-day cults like The People’s Temple, Order of the Solar Tradition, Heaven’s Gate, and The Branch Davidians. He ponders whether all the tragic deaths that resulted should be labeled as “suicides, murders, or accidents”.

While it arguably wasn’t as self-destructive, Japan’s “Aum” cult shared many similar traits, and was no less lethal. If you’re as ancient as me, you may recall the 1995 nerve gas attack on Tokyo’s subway system that resulted in 13 deaths and thousands of injuries. This shocking incident introduced the world to a bizarre spiritual sect hitherto unknown outside of Japan.

In an engrossing (albeit disturbing) new documentary called Aum: The Cult at the End of the World, co-directors Ben Braun and Chiaki Yanagimoto paint a “couldn’t make this shit up” portrait of  leader Shoko Asahara tantamount to a Bond villain’s origin story (replete with his rejection as a child, seething hatred of society, secret laboratories, evil plans, kidnappings, assassinations, and the inevitable stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction).

The story of Aum follows a trajectory that has become depressingly familiar. The sect was founded in 1983 by Chizuo Matsumoto (who changed his name to Shoko Asahara). Asahara’s original philosophy was centered on yoga, meditation, and self-enlightenment.

That didn’t last.

By the mid-80s, Asahara was getting extensive coverage in high-circulation Japanese occult magazines; this helped spur a sizeable youth following. A canny self-promoter, Ashara seized on this and over the next several years published a series of books and produced anime that portrayed him as having supernatural powers (including the ability to levitate). He even trekked to Tibet with the express purpose of arranging a photo-op with the Dalai Lama.

In the cult hierarchy, members who were scientists and chemists were at the top (which makes a sick kind of sense in hindsight). As the number of followers grew, so did Asahara’s increasingly draconian rules. As journalist Shoko Egawa points out, members were directed to forgo earthly possessions, money, the enjoyment of good food, etc., as such trifles were roadblocks to spiritual enlightenment. The Aum tenets praised not sleeping, not eating, even not changing clothes. The communal diet was “Aum food”, which one former member describes as “boiled vegetables with no flavor at all…rice and natto, day after day.”

Yum.

The turn to the dark side occurred circa 1989. In the film, journalist Andrew Marshall (who co-authored a book about the cult) observes “By 1989 the stock market had peaked and Japan was really entering this period of economic stagnation, and possibly cultural and political stagnation as well, and I think what was about to happen was a symptom of that.”

In 1989, a man began photographing suspicious activities by a “weird group” of people who “suddenly showed up” in his small village of Kammikushiki, which is nestled near the foot of Mt. Fuji. The newcomers were reticent to interact with the villagers, and hostile to any inquiries. They set up a compound containing some unusual equipment (including gas tanks and chemical barrels), and over time were regarded as “bad neighbors” due to non-stop construction noise and loud chanting emanating day and night. When Marshall was poking around, he discovered they also had a “massive Russian helicopter” parked on their premises.

The story gets weirder, and the bodies start piling up even before the Tokyo subway terror attack made international headlines. Equally troubling to learn is how the Japanese media characterized the sect as “silly” and colorful (perfect fodder for a kicker at the end of the newscast, but nothing worth a deeper investigative dive, despite many red flags over time),

As I was watching the film, I was looking at all the footage of this guy and just not seeing the appeal, although thousands of his devoted followers would surely beg to differ. One observer helpfully offers, “No matter what they asked him, he gave them an immediate answer.” (does that remind you of anybody?).

As Woody Allen says in Manhattan, after meeting his girlfriend’s highly-lauded ex-husband, the “little homunculus” portrayed by Wallace Shawn, “It’s amazing how subjective all that stuff is.” Maybe that’s what lies at the the crux of why I’m endlessly fascinated by cults. As I wrote in my 2012 review of Paul Thomas Anderson’s drama The Master:

What he has crafted is a thought-provoking and original examination of why human beings in general are so prone to kowtow to a burning bush, or be conned by an emperor with no clothes; a film that begs repeated viewings. Is it a spiritual need? Is it an emotional need? Or is it a lizard brain response, deep in our DNA?

As Inspector Clouseau once ruminated, “Well you know, there are leaders…and there are followers.”

The best hope for humankind is that, at some nebulous point in (whatever time is left of) our future, we will finally learn the lessons of history and stop repeating the same stupid, stupid mistakes.

(In theaters now; available on all rental platforms March 28th).

Previous posts with related themes:

Wild, Wild Country

Of mad kings, death cults, and Altman’s Secret Honor

Looking for something to watch? Search the archives at Den of Cinema

— Dennis Hartley