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#democracy

277 posts193 participants35 posts today

#MontyPython “Well, I didn’t #vote for you.” – Peasant Woman to King Arthur. But... Every Day we read this - 'This is the crisis moment': Political scientist says Trump crossed a crucial red line (April 14) - No he crossed it on Jan 20 and every day thereafter #media #journalism #corruption #power #blackmail #access #democracy #government #maga #politics #freedom #censorship #deportation #immigration #education #climate #healthcare #measles #economy #finance #insidertrading #wallstreet #markets

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#State …will work with an admin-wide task force to collect info “involving anti-religious bias during the last presidential administration” & will collect examples of anti-Christian bias through anonymous employee report forms.

The cable was sent out to embassies around the world under Secy of State #MarcoRubio’s name. The instructions also were released in a department-wide notice.

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Sunday night’s post about #CBS is the latest example of #Trump encouraging his appointees to apply government pressure against his critics. In recent months, Carr has flaunted his MAGA credentials & launched #FCC investigations of several media outlets Trump has derided, including #ABC & #NBC. Carr was photographed last week wearing a gold pin with a silhouette of Trump’s head [wtf?].

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#Trump name-checked the man he promoted to chair the #FCC, Brendan Carr, whom he called “Highly Respected.” He said hopefully Carr “will impose the maximum fines & punishment, which is substantial, for their unlawful & illegal behavior.”

There is no evidence of illegal behavior by #CBS.

#Trump urges the #FCC to punish ‘#60Minutes’ over reports on #Greenland & #Ukraine

Trump has a “hope” for his Federal Communications Commission: that the agency will punish #CBS for airing “60 Minutes” reports he doesn’t like.

Apparently angered by Sunday night’s “60 Minutes” telecast, Trump wrote on Truth Social about his ongoing legal battle w/CBS & its parent company, Paramount Global.

#law #democracy #FreePress #FreeSpeech
cnn.com/2025/04/14/media/trump

CNN · Trump urges the FCC to punish ‘60 Minutes’ over reports on Greenland and UkraineBy Brian Stelter

"I do not believe for a second that terminating my grant does anything to combat antisemitism, & I believe it was an excuse for the Trump admin to target higher education & exert control and power.”— Daniella Fodera

fortune.com/well/2025/04/13/rf #press #health #democracy

Fortune · As RFK Jr. defends cuts to public health, experts warn of devastating effects that could haunt Americans for decadesBy Carolyn Barber
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@charlotteclymer John Lithgow --> 20 Lessons on Tyranny

Now, more than ever, we need the wisdom of our intellects, the patriotism of our citizens, and the passion and talents of those who still believe in the American experiment. I am deeply grateful to Timothy Snyder for his 20 Lessons On Tyranny and for talents of the brilliant John Lithgow for bringing them to life.

Watch --> youtube.com/watch?v=cXR5HLodsT8

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@gleick John Lithgow --> 20 Lessons on Tyranny

Now, more than ever, we need the wisdom of our intellects, the patriotism of our citizens, and the passion and talents of those who still believe in the American experiment. I am deeply grateful to Timothy Snyder for his 20 Lessons On Tyranny and for talents of the brilliant John Lithgow for bringing them to life.

Watch --> youtube.com/watch?v=cXR5HLodsT8

The Precarious Republic: Understanding the Fascist Threat to Modern Democracies

What if it doesn’t take years, or even months, for a democracy to collapse—but only a few short weeks? The idea that a stable republic could fall in ninety days may seem exaggerated, until you look at the historical record. Then it becomes a haunting possibility. Fascism doesn’t always arrive with fanfare or fire. Sometimes, it walks in through the front door, wearing a suit and a smile, welcomed by the very institutions it plans to dismantle.

History tells us as much. The Weimar Republic didn’t die in a coup—it eroded from within. Italy’s liberal government didn’t collapse overnight—it was coaxed into irrelevance by elites who thought they could manage Mussolini. Democracies, even mature ones, are not as durable as we like to think. They depend not only on constitutions and courts, but on norms, trust, and shared belief in the rule of law. When those things begin to fray—under economic crisis, cultural upheaval, or political fragmentation—fascist movements often see an opening.

And they don’t need to win by force. They can win elections. They can exploit legal ambiguities, weaponize fear, and slowly nudge the public into seeing the extraordinary as inevitable. The paradox of fascism is that it often rises through the very tools of democracy—until, one day, those tools are broken.

But how does that happen? And why do people, often ordinary and otherwise decent, go along?

Fascism is not just a political project. It’s a psychological and cultural phenomenon. It doesn’t start with ideology. It starts with emotion: fear, humiliation, alienation. In times of crisis, people look for answers—simple ones. They crave order, certainty, a sense of purpose. Fascist leaders understand this deeply. They don’t need to be right. They just need to be emotionally resonant. They offer scapegoats instead of solutions, enemies instead of arguments. They give people a story that makes sense of chaos, even if it’s a lie.

And they tell that story well. Propaganda is the fascist’s most refined weapon—not brute force, at least not at first. Fascist regimes excel at crafting reality itself: through slogans, through cinema, through orchestrated mass events, through education, through repetition. It’s not about convincing people through evidence. It’s about bypassing reason entirely and targeting the gut, the identity, the tribal loyalties. The goal is not just to control behavior. It’s to remake how people see the world.

This isn’t just a relic of the 1930s. Today, the tools are more sophisticated. Algorithms now do what radio and film once did. Social media personalizes outrage. Misinformation moves faster than fact-checking. But the playbook remains familiar: vilify the press, attack pluralism, elevate a charismatic leader as the only truth. In short, the conditions that gave us fascism in the past have not disappeared. In some ways, they’ve become more efficient.

And yet, fascism doesn’t triumph in a vacuum. It requires permission—sometimes active, sometimes passive. It needs institutions too weak or too paralyzed to resist. It needs elites who think they can harness the populist wave, only to be swallowed by it. Most tragically, it needs people who begin to rationalize the intolerable. “Just for now,” they say. “It’s better than chaos.” And by the time they realize the cost, it’s too late.

So, what can be done?

First, we must stop thinking of democracy as self-sustaining. It isn’t. It’s a living system that requires maintenance—legal, moral, cultural. Elections alone are not enough. We need strong, independent courts. We need checks and balances that actually check and balance. We need a press that can survive without being vilified or captured. We need to protect the machinery of democracy from those who would use it to destroy it.

Second, we need to build resilience against propaganda and disinformation. That means investing in education—not just civic mechanics, but critical thinking, media literacy, and historical awareness. It means defending independent journalism and demanding transparency from platforms that profit from division. And it means recognizing that fact-checking is not enough. We have to address the emotional and identity needs that lies fulfill.

Third, we have to renew democracy itself. People must feel it works. That it listens. That it delivers fairness and opportunity. A democracy that only functions for the privileged will not survive when the winds of authoritarianism blow. That means addressing inequality, rebuilding social trust, and making space for real participation—from town halls to citizens’ assemblies. Cynicism is not a defense against fascism. It’s a gateway.

Finally, we need to confront our own vulnerabilities. None of us is immune to the pull of tribalism or the appeal of certainty. In times of fear, we all look for something solid. But democracy is not supposed to offer certainty. It offers process. It offers compromise. It is frustrating and slow and imperfect. And that is precisely what makes it humane.

Fascism offers clarity—but it is the clarity of a clenched fist. Democracy offers doubt—but it is the doubt of an open hand. The challenge of our time is to choose the harder path, again and again, with eyes open and memory intact.

Because the fascist mind does not disappear. It adapts. It waits. And the only true defense against it is a republic that knows it is precarious—and fights every day to remain whole.

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@clintruin @emptywheel.bsky.social Since you asked, it is not yet curtains. Really really close, but not yet. It is true that the rule of #law is hanging on by a slender thread. It is true that #Congress is fully subverted. It is true that the institutions of federal government that provide essential services to us are being systematically erased. Very hard times are ahead.

But… I keep returning to the Preamble to the Declaration of Independence. #Patriots sacrificed, fought, died, and ultimately prevailed to achieve what it says. Please read the brief document (link below) because this is why I believe our situation not yet checkmate: the power of the people to consent or not.

“[…] when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute #Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.”

I have no idea how this will be done, or when, or how long it will take. Nevertheless, I place my ultimate #trust, my #hope, in the power, right and duty of people to choose.

gilderlehrman.org/sites/defaul

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Emboldened no doubt by the fascist repression and rhetoric deployed by the Trump regime, and a large number of right wing extremists in the US judiciary, state governments all over America are proposing or passing laws that criminalize even peaceful protest - with multi-decade prison terms laid out for dissidents and resisters:

theguardian.com/us-news/2025/a

US intensifies crackdown on peaceful protest under Trump

"Anti-protest bills that seek to expand criminal punishments for constitutionally protected peaceful protests – especially targeting those speaking out on the US-backed war in Gaza and the climate crisis – have spiked since Trump’s inauguration.

Forty-one new anti-protest bills across 22 states have been introduced since the start of the year – compared with a full-year total of 52 in 2024 and 26 in 2023, according to the International Center for Not-for-Profit Law (ICNL) tracker.

This year’s tally includes 32 bills across 16 states since Trump returned to the White House, with five federal bills targeting college students, anti-war protesters and climate activists with harsh prison sentences and hefty fines – a crackdown that experts warn threaten to erode first amendment rights to freedom of speech, assembly and petition."

I don't know about you, but I've been having arguments with liberals about what constitutes an effective protest since at least the Occupy Wall Street movement, and invariably their excuse for not actually disrupting anything or shutting shit down, is that effective resistance will give the authorities an excuse to crack down on otherwise peaceful protests. So what now folks? If you're gonna be called a domestic terrorist and do twenty years in prison for peacefully disrupting the oil and gas industry or opposing a US-backed genocide conducted by its client state Israel regardless, why remain peaceful? Given that Trump's Attorney General, Pam Bondi, is openly talking about twenty year prison terms for vandalizing a Tesla dealership, it seems pretty clear that the penalties are the same whether you march peacefully waving your little signs, or actually shut the fuck barrel down and hurt these folks where it counts - their wallets.

Furthermore, while it's obvious these anti-protest bills are designed to target anti-genocide protestors as part of the Trump regime's crackdown on anyone who doesn't support settler colonialist massacres by Israel in Gaza, don't sleep on the fact that these guys are also targeting climate crisis protestors who disrupt the fossil fuel and energy industries. As I've been telling you for years now, understanding climate crisis and what our leaders already know about it, is crucial to understanding the rise of fascism because these folks absolutely intend to lead us all off the ecological cliff and they know, sooner or later, the public at large isn't going to accept "we think you should all die so a handful of nazi billionaires can keep stacking filthy lucre." All over the Pig Empire, whether your government is overtly fascist, or covertly fascist under the guise of neoliberalism, our states are preparing to meet everyday people rising up against the capitalism that's killing us, with fascist repression - and we've already caught the companies that know they've got bodies on their hands, actively funding the lobbies behind these anti-democratic suppression laws, to protect their business interests.

As I've told you a number of times already, it only takes one side to declare war, and the rise of fascism in the so-called West must be understood as part of a much larger class war; a war nazi billionaire cultists and corporate power intend to win, once and for all. It doesn't matter how peaceful you are, the fact that you know the machine is killing your kids for five pennies a share and don't like it, is enough to make you the enemy of a capitalist order increasingly turning to overt fascism to lock in their way of life and future profits, no matter how many of their victims (all of us) don't like it. Whether you fight back, or not, the boot is coming.

The Guardian · US intensifies crackdown on peaceful protest under TrumpBy Nina Lakhani