arotrios

joined 2 years ago
[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 1 points 5 hours ago (1 children)

Any chance of Alexandrite being available for lemm.ee? Best lemmy interface imho.

 

WHAT HAPPENS WHEN a greedy geezer with the most powerful job in the world cements himself to a greedy grabber who is the richest man in the world? You get Donald Trump, Elon Musk, and a superpower emeritus about ready to be stripped for parts.

Few foresaw this in 2010, when the Supreme Court launched us onto a dark path. The court’s 5–4 Citizens United decision, allowing unlimited corporate, interest-group, and individual spending on elections, did trigger dire predictions from plenty of doomsayers. But even the most pessimistic among them fell short of imagining American reality today.

“We knew that it was going to be really, really destructive for our democracy,” says Tiffany Muller, president of the group End Citizens United, which is dedicated to electing Democrats committed to seeing the ruling overturned. “Fifteen years after that decision, we’re seeing the full culmination of living under a Citizens United world—where it’s not just elections that are for sale, but it’s that our entire government, and the apparatus of our government, is up for sale.”

It’s hard to believe, but once upon a time there was bipartisan common ground on gun safety, health care, voting rights, climate change, and even limits on campaign funding. The Senate in 2006 voted 98–0 to reauthorize the Voting Rights Act, and George W. Bush signed the law. He also added a voluntary prescription benefit to Medicare, with help from Democrats in both chambers.

Bipartisan Senate pairs introduced major climate bills in 2003 and 2007, but their prospects faded amid opposition from the fossil-fuel industry. In 2010, a few months after Citizens United, a cap-and-trade tax designed to reduce carbon emissions passed the House in a landmark vote, but it fell short in the Senate. Democrats had 59 seats and needed just one Republican vote to advance the bill—and they couldn’t get it.

The oil and gas sector now floods the election zone with over six times as much cash as it spent in the 2010 cycle. And it has amassed all the clout you’d expect as contributions have skyrocketed—from defeating a carbon tax–friendly House Republican in 2010 to helping to elect Trump last year.

When Citizens United turned ten, in 2020, the political money-tracker Open Secrets reported on what the ruling had wrought. Super PACs—the non-party committees created to legally raise cash in unlimited amounts to independently promote issues and candidates—spent $4.5 billion over the decade (up from $750 million over the previous twenty years).

The major players of the new era, it turned out, were not corporations. They were millionaires and billionaires. “The 10 most generous donors and their spouses injected $1.2 billion into federal elections over the last decade,” Open Secrets found.

Muller wrote then that a new Gilded Age was upon us, one in which wealthy donors—most of them old, white, and male—unleashed their money to manipulate politicians, reward them if they were compliant, and sink them if they were not. “The court’s naïve view of our electoral process set the stage for 10 years of billions of dollars corrupting our politics and dictating national policy on everything from the cost of prescription drugs to climate change to gun violence,” she said in a 2020 USA Today op-ed.

THE CORRUPTION OF FIVE YEARS AGO is almost trivial compared with the corruption of today. Gridlock and dysfunction are still with us, blocking many priorities supported by voters, but now “there is nothing that isn’t for sale,” Muller told me, and reeled off a few choice outrages: Trump’s personal investment in crypto and public steps that will enrich him, his family, and wealthy friends; an unprecedented thirteen billionaires in Trump’s cabinet, with all the potential that entails for conflicts of interest and insulation from the impact of their policies; and Musk’s “unfettered access” to the government and the private data of tens of millions, as he fires, freezes, and cancels his way through one agency after another, allegedly to slash costs.

At the same time, Musk himself is flush with government grants and contracts, and is aggressively pursuing more of them—from the Federal Aviation Administration (where he has insinuated his Starlink internet system into its operations although the FAA’s existing Verizon contract doesn’t expire until 2038) to the Commerce Department’s $42 billion rural broadband access program (which rewrote its rules last week to make Starlink eligible).

The root of this corruption debacle, of course and alas, is Musk spending nearly $300 million to get Trump elected in the first place. Now he’s trying to purchase a state supreme court seat in Wisconsin, and his fellow billionaires are pouring money into state legislative races in Arizona, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and Wisconsin. What’s next, local school boards?

By the time the Supreme Court ruled on Citizens United, it had lost the one justice who had campaigned for office and negotiated political deals: Sandra Day O’Connor, a former Arizona state senator and Republican majority leader, nominated by Ronald Reagan in 1981 as the first woman on the court.

It would be an understatement to say O’Connor’s decision to step down in January 2006 to care for her husband, who had Alzheimer’s, had enormous national consequences. One of them was Citizens United. A few days after that ruling, speaking at Georgetown University, O’Connor joked that “Gosh, I step away for a couple of years, and there’s no telling what’s going to happen.”

I wrote in 2010 that based on that remark and her 2003 opinion upholding campaign donation and spending limits in the McCain–Feingold law, she likely would have been part of a 5–4 majority against opening the cash floodgates. I’ve been thinking a lot lately about O’Connor’s decision and a couple of portentous what-ifs as we endure this disastrous, potentially deadly, anti-democracy Trump-Musk reign of error and terror.

Two of those what-ifs: What if Bush’s first choice to replace O’Connor, Harriet Miers, had not withdrawn amid critiques that she was not sufficiently experienced or conservative? What if Bush had not then nominated Samuel Alito?

AND THE DEEPEST WHAT-IF QUESTION OF ALL:

What if O’Connor had left the Court in 2016 instead of in 2006? Her biographer, Evan Thomas, told NPR’s Nina Totenberg in 2019 that she resigned because “he sacrificed for me, now it’s my turn”—a reference to her husband moving from Phoenix to Washington for her career. “It was tragic because within six months of her leaving the Court, he could barely recognize her,” Thomas said.

The rest of the interview went like this:

TOTENBERG: Did she regret it—leaving?

THOMAS: She said it’s the biggest mistake—dumbest thing I ever did.

TOTENBERG: Indeed, in the years afterwards, she made little secret of her view that the Court, with the addition of Justice Samuel Alito in her place, was systematically dismantling her legacy.

That legacy would have been much different, and maybe more permanent, had she stayed even a few years longer. Just as her political background made her unusual, so did her gender. As I wrote in 2010, “She was a law school graduate who had been offered secretarial jobs. She was a justice who, after listening to her new colleague Antonin Scalia rail against affirmative action, responded: ‘How do you think I got my job?’”

Short of a Supreme Court reversal of Citizens United, lawmakers have repeatedly introduced House and Senate bills proposing a constitutional amendment to overturn it. But that’s a long and arduous route that has yet to get traction. In the meantime, states have made progress on reforms such as disclosure of major donors and closing dark money loopholes, and there are ways for Congress to reduce the influence of money in politics.

The House passed such a bill—the For the People Act—five times, according to Muller, but Senate filibuster holdouts made it impossible to pass with a simple 51-vote majority. The next chance to enact a law like that would be January 2029, the next time there might be a Democratic House, Senate, and president.

Here’s Muller’s checklist of work to be done between now and then: call out corruption and harm, hold the perpetrators accountable, and make sure voters know who they are; win the House in 2026 to check Trump; win as many state races as possible next year for governor, secretary of state, and attorney general—the jobs crucial to running and protecting elections for president and Congress in 2028. Then it might be possible to ride a blue wave to a blue sweep.

It’s not unthinkable. By that point, Trump, Musk, and their billionaires-first, empathy-last philosophy will have inflicted untold pain. There’s a good chance voters will be anxious to leave them, and it, behind.

And yet, the demise of our democracy is not unthinkable, either. Will the 2028 election be free and fair? Will the voice of the people be heard?

The presence of Justice O’Connor on the Supreme Court for another five or ten years likely would have changed a chunk of the Court’s major 5–4 rulings, and the direction of the country. I once counted four cases with that potential in 2007 alone. Given the frightening territory we’re in, I now see Citizens United as the most ominous result of her absence—even, possibly, the most consequential hinge point of U.S. history in my lifetime. Because no one knows how this ends.

[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 9 points 10 hours ago

Welcome to the land of the free range lemmings and mastodons, weary traveler. You may proceed unto the Fediverse with Saint Luigi's blessing.

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Link above is to full youtube of the CSPAN coverage of the talk with the FIFA president. Trump lays out this banger at 2:25.

[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 9 points 2 days ago

Bold move, Huffman. Let's see how it plays out.

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[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 13 points 2 days ago

Pretty simple - same folks who bought Xitter and Trump are pulling their $ out until Reddit starts censoring shit they don't like. It's not a coincidence that "Luigi" became a banned word last week.

[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 19 points 2 days ago

The people who run the Democratic Party got there by being good at catering to the rich. Now, the party must fight the rich, or be crushed. Therefore, the party itself needs to radically remake its leadership. If it does not, it will not be able to become an effective opposition party, and all of us will suffer for it.

The DNC will not allow this to happen. They will fight as viciously as the GOP to hold on to their power, and will take the party down in order to maintain it. We've seen it before when they iced out Bernie (Hillary and Wasserman-Schultz, I'm looking at you).

This is a really well-written article, but I think the author is missing a key point here - the Democratic Party cannot change quickly enough to help us. It won't, and even if it wanted it too, economically in a world of Citizens United, it just can't. The grassroots infrastructure of the Obama years is gone, and they'll never compete against foreign billionaires using meme coins to dodge campaign finance laws.

They know they're beat, and without the grassroots, their only hope is to lay low until the economic collapse that Trump brings starts hurting their former donors enough to scare them back into the ranks of the Dem donors. Just like the GOP of the Biden years, they need us to suffer to maintain their power.

This is they're asking us to wait two years so that "maybe we can do something to stop Trump" while they vote in his nominees and censure those who speak out against him. They're willing to let Americans suffer to try to score political points with their oppressors.

Here's what really has to happen for the Dems to become relevant again:

Stop telling people what to do and who to vote for. Encourage resistance to Trump, don't shut it down - this is a street fight and nobody gives a shit about decorum.

Start listening to and organizing your constituents in resistance. Stop paying for ads and start paying for permanent local staff who actively work in the community throughout the election cycle, not just once every four years. Engage and assist unionization efforts and community improvement initiatives.

Stop playing coy about churches and how they're supposed to be non-political. They're not - work them the way the GOP does - Jesus has a lot more in common with Dems than Nazis.

And stop ceding territory - there are a number of areas where the GOP runs unopposed. What the hell kind of a national party are you if you can't field a candidate in every race?

People have to believe that you're working for them before they allow you to lead them. All they've seen thus far from the majority of Dems is that they're willing to surrender.

[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 5 points 2 days ago (3 children)

We've seen the American Greens completely co-opted by Russian interests over here. Jill Stein is an absolute disgrace. I'm certain the Russians are working overtime on the German Greens as well. This is actually a real concern of mine when thinking about a potential political party - how to keep it from getting co-opted by adverse actors (foreign or otherwise).

[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 5 points 2 days ago

Thanks for your detailed response - this is excellent advice. My purpose in providing the top down summary came when I realized how low the threshold could be to create action on the state level - my intention with the wall of text was to provide local thresholds for exactly this purpose. One of the problems we've seen with the Libertarian, Peace and Freedom, and Green Party is that they have only a brief local presence if at all, and they're extremely disorganized on a national level.

Regarding automation, I agree with you that this will become a political issue in the near future. I think the platform should definitely include worker protections, and possible even a UBI financed through a tax on AI productivity could be a winner if properly articulated.

One thing about your comment really caught my eye:

The alternative route is fine a huge personality and buuld a national party around them. However from European politics weve seen that basically means populist domineering politicians, and the parties are unstable - they build fragment and rebuild. Look at UKIP, Brexit Party and now Reform Partyin the UK, or the numerous parties Berlesconi led in Italy. It can work and be disruptive but I think such parties are very risky. Its a bit like taking a punt on another Trump like personality rather than fixing the actual problem with politics of unrepresentative parties.

This struck me as its the route both parties in the US have been taking, and because I think creating an internal democratic governance structure is the only way to keep a potential Progressive Party from going the way of the Dems as the organization grows. I've got some ideas on how to do this (party members can vote on policy between elections to inform elected reps, something not really done in the US), but they go beyond the scope of this initial discussion. However, ensuring that personality doesn't trump policy would need to be a cornerstone in any internal governance to prevent demagogues from hijacking the party.

[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 4 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (2 children)

Nothing constructive about this criticism, but I'll respond to your points.

First, the breakdown by state is to provide attainable targets for action at the state and local level. As you can see, the thresholds for getting on the ballot are low with a bit of community organizing. The reason people don't get involved at the local and state level is because they don't see a path for real national change through their action there.

This is my attempt to start charting that path. I agree with your overall point here, but tactical state and local targets need a national strategy to work together to create real change.

Secondly, I have worked with the Democratic party (since the 90s) and seen how progressive ideas get sidelined and lip-service at best, even in supposedly left wing states like California. The primary effect of the Democratic party as it exists in 2025 is to dilute revolutionary energy into the service of the corporate agenda where it can (Obamacare instead of universal health care, for instance), and render it impotent where it can't.

Real action that threatens corporate interests simply isn't possible within the democratic party apparatus, because there are plenty of special interests willing to sink progressive candidates in the primary (AIPAC, I'm looking at you). Citizens United hollowed out the Dems just as much as it did the GOP, and they're completely captured by their donor class. The fact we haven't had a real primary since Obama in 2008 has made it clear that there is no voice for the people when it comes to platform or policy.

In regards to:

There has to be a foundation in place, or it’s just a waste of time and effort. It takes decades to do this, not one election cycle.

The best time to grow a tree was 30 years ago. The second best time to grow a tree is now. I have no illusions that the process would be quick nor easy. But it is attainable. And since the other alternatives are either been proven ineffective or would involve potential violence, this seems to be the only legal path forward for Americans to regain control of our political system.

I mean, I'm open to alternatives, but just giving a list of reasons why it won't work isn't helpful, and does nothing but discourage people from getting involved.

[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 13 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (5 children)

Agreed. This is why I believe that Alaska is ripe territory for a Progressive Party - they already have ranked choice voting. This should be a key part of the party platform.

I'd also like to ask you, as a non-American, which parties in your country would you point to as being Progressive success stories? I'd like to look at their platforms, strategy and tactics.

 

Creating the Progressive Party in America

Progressives have been largely abandoned by Democratic leadership, and don't have any voice in the GOP. I, and many others, have lost faith in the Democratic Party leadership, and after forty years of watching them betray progressive ideals, believe it's time for a real Progressive Party in America.

As such, I'd like to ask the community, how would a Progressive Party work? What are your goals for its platform? And would you be willing to volunteer your time and energy to get it off the ground?

All responses are welcome, but I'm looking for constructive criticism, because I absolutely believe this is possible in our current political environment. Here's why:

According to my recent research, it would take approximately 1,110,000 registered voters across the 50 states to qualify as a major political party.

That's just .0595% of our 186,500,000 registered voters in 2024. For comparison, there are 14.3 million union members in the US, so if just 5% of them vote Progressive, we've got ourselves a party.

I've detailed the totals and requirements by state below, because these are attainable numbers on a state by state basis (also so you can search and find out what the reqs are for your state). Additionally, the 1,110,000 number above is only to qualify as a major political party - many of these states have much lower ballot requirements.

I know the detail below is a wall of text, and I may break lemmy, but this is posted not with the intent to overwhelm, but with the purpose to point that on a state by state basis, these numbers are more than possible - the bar for getting on the ballot is pretty low in many states.


Ballot and Registration Requirements:

Ballot access signature requirements for each state:

  • Alabama: 50,000 signatures
  • Alaska: 3,000 signatures (1,500 from each congressional district)
  • Arizona: 36,647 valid signatures
  • Arkansas: 10,000 signatures
  • California: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Colorado: 10,500 signatures (or 1% of votes cast in the most recent gubernatorial election)
  • Connecticut: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Delaware: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 10% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Florida: 76,834 valid signatures (or 1% of registered voters) from each congressional district
  • Georgia: 50,000 signatures
  • Hawaii: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 20% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Idaho: 18,692 signatures (or 5% of the votes cast in the most recent gubernatorial election)
  • Illinois: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Indiana: 50,000 signatures
  • Iowa: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Kansas: 38,947 valid signatures (or 5% of the votes cast in the most recent gubernatorial election)
  • Kentucky: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 20% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Louisiana: 54,689 signatures (or 1% of registered voters) from each congressional district
  • Maine: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Maryland: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 20% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Massachusetts: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 10% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Michigan: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Minnesota: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Mississippi: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 18% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Missouri: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 20% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Montana: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Nebraska: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 10% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Nevada: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • New Hampshire: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 10% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • New Jersey: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • New Mexico: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 10% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • New York: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • North Carolina: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 10% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • North Dakota: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Ohio: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Oklahoma: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 10% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Oregon: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Pennsylvania: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Rhode Island: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 10% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • South Carolina: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 10% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • South Dakota: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Tennessee: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Texas: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 10% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Utah: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Vermont: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 10% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Virginia: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 25% of the vote in a statewide election.
  • Washington: No ballot access requirement for political parties; however, to secure major party status, candidates must receive at least 10% of the vote in a statewide election.

Registration Requirements for new political party by state:

  • Alabama: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 50 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Alaska: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Division of Elections. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 50 registered voters who support the formation of the party, and a platform.

  • Arizona: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 3,000 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Arkansas: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 50 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • California: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 10,000 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least ten proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Colorado: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 2,000 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Connecticut: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 50 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Delaware: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 50 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Florida: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 125 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Georgia: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Hawaii: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 50 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Idaho: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 50 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Illinois: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Indiana: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Iowa: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Kansas: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Kentucky: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Louisiana: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Maine: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Maryland: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Massachusetts: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Michigan: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Minnesota: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Mississippi: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Missouri: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Montana: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • Nebraska: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • Nevada: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • New Hampshire: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state executive committee, and a platform.

  • New Jersey: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • New Mexico: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • New York: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • North Dakota: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • Ohio: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must contain the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • Oklahoma: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must include the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • Oregon: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must contain the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • Pennsylvania: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must contain the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • Rhode Island: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must contain the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • South Carolina: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must contain the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • South Dakota: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must contain the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • Tennessee: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must contain the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • Texas: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must contain the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • Utah: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must contain the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • Vermont: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must contain the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • Virginia: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must contain the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • Washington: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must contain the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • West Virginia: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must contain the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.

  • Wyoming: To form a new political party, one must file an application with the Secretary of State. The application must contain the proposed name of the party, the names and addresses of at least 130 registered voters who support the formation of the party, the names and addresses of at least five proposed members of the state committee, and a platform.


Total registered voters to achieve major party status in each state (approximate):

  • Alabama 10,000
  • Alaska 3,000
  • Arizona 5,000
  • Arkansas 3,000
  • California 67,000
  • Colorado 1,500
  • Connecticut 2,500
  • Delaware 1,500
  • Washington DC 3,000
  • Florida 78,000
  • Georgia 15,000
  • Hawaii 3,000
  • Idaho 2,000
  • Illinois 25,000
  • Indiana 30,000
  • Iowa 10,000
  • Kansas 5,000
  • Kentucky 10,000
  • Louisiana 5,000
  • Maine 2,000
  • Maryland 25,000
  • Massachusetts 10,000
  • Michigan 50,000
  • Minnesota 8,500
  • Mississippi 3,000
  • Missouri 10,000
  • Montana 2,000
  • Nebraska 2,500
  • Nevada 6,000
  • New Hampshire 3,000
  • New Jersey 30,000
  • New Mexico 2,000
  • New York 100,000
  • North Carolina 75,000
  • North Dakota 1,500
  • Ohio 75,000
  • Oklahoma 3,000
  • Oregon 5,000
  • Pennsylvania 25,000
  • Rhode Island 2,500
  • South Carolina 15,000
  • South Dakota 1,500
  • Tennessee 30,000
  • Texas 100,000
  • Utah 10,000
  • Vermont 2,500
  • Virginia 75,000
  • Washington 50,000
  • West Virginia 3,000
  • Wisconsin 100,000
  • Wyoming 2,500
[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 6 points 2 days ago

Start subscribing to communities across instances - it will drastically improve your feed quality and the overall Fediverse at the same time.

In the Fediverse, note that when you hit "All or New" you're only seeing the instances that people on your server have already subscribed to at a previous point in time. By subscribing to new communities on separate instances, you're opening a gateway for other users on the server to start discovering it as well.

 

We really should have two major parties committed to upholding the Constitution. But at the moment we seem to have none. Because not only have the Republicans been captured by the corrupt fascism of Trump but, instead of standing against the grotesque assault on our democracy Trump has been perpetrating non-stop since January 20, Democrats keep trying to join in.

The latest inexcusable abdications of their duty to uphold the Constitution involve conspiring with Trump to tear up what’s left of the First Amendment with the Take It Down Act. Trump and his supporters may pay lip service to how much they hate jawboning, but this bill is a celebration of it, using government pressure on intermediaries as a means of inflicting as much censorship on online speech as their shriveled autocratic hearts desire. They may wrap their craven agenda in the idea that this law would help the most vulnerable, but only the most gormless would be foolish enough to believe that its power would be so limited when the text itself makes clear how rife it is for abuse. Yet there are Democrats—like Senator Amy Klobuchar, who has never met a First Amendment-violating bill she didn’t like—who are for some reason lining up with Melania “I don’t care” Trump to make sure its abusers might soon have that power.

If we are to get through this constitutional crisis it will be only because of the citizen discourse that the Internet enables. While traditional mass media fails us, the Internet allows us to share ideas and information without it. Laws like the Take It Down Act attack our ability to speak online by forcing the platforms we need to do it to turn against our speech in order to protect themselves. As does the dumber than dumb proposal by outgoing-Senator Dick Durbin, who wants his final gift to America to be to destroy the one law that makes discourse on the Internet possible: Section 230.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/57598352

[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 44 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (2 children)

Yea, my blessed Fediverse brethren, hear ye!

Mark thy holy lemmings, gird thy loins with smelling salts and prepare for the unwashed tides. The memes will be terrible and swift, and no one will be safe from the waves of idiocy.

Tremble, for the 2nd Dawn of the Age of Incelius has arrived, and the Reddexodus Reddux is upon us!

[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 10 points 3 days ago

That was you?

Well then, in answer to your last question scrawled in the Kansas City Walmart bathroom, yes, you should definitely get that checked out by a medical professional.

 

cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/33958648

Share this.

 

On r/RedditSafety, Reddit admin "worstnerd" posts:

Warning users that upvote violent content

Today we are rolling out a new (sort of) enforcement action across the site. Historically, the only person actioned for posting violating content was the user who posted the content. The Reddit ecosystem relies on engaged users to downvote bad content and report potentially violative content. This not only minimizes the distribution of the bad content, but it also ensures that the bad content is more likely to be removed. On the other hand, upvoting bad or violating content interferes with this system. 

So, starting today, users who, within a certain timeframe, upvote several pieces of content banned for violating our policies will begin to receive a warning. We have done this in the past for quarantined communities and found that it did help to reduce exposure to bad content, so we are experimenting with this sitewide. This will begin with users who are upvoting violent content, but we may consider expanding this in the future. In addition, while this is currently “warn only,” we will consider adding additional actions down the road.

We know that the culture of a community is not just what gets posted, but what is engaged with. Voting comes with responsibility. This will have no impact on the vast majority of users as most already downvote or report abusive content. It is everyone’s collective responsibility to ensure that our ecosystem is healthy and that there is no tolerance for abuse on the site.

Some users see this as a reaction to the recent controversy surrounding Luigi Mangione and the fatal shooting of the UnitedHeathCare CEO. There are concerns that this new system (which mods are speculating to be AI-driven) has potential for abuse and censorship, especially given the current vagueness of what is considered a "violent" comment or post.

__________

Reactions on RedditSafety:

__________

On PublicFreakout, the sub's moderator shares the admin's message with the note:

"Mind how you are voting because Reddit is about to start spanking folks for votes"

At least some users are already receiving warnings:

The PublicFreakout moderator pledges to stand by their users, at least in the case of one frequently reposted video of a Nazi getting punched...

__________

In r / cincinnati :

__________

Several anti Elon Musk subreddits apparently connect this with the recent Reddit drama involving Musk that got WhitePeopleTwitter banned:

Elon gave reddit some attention, now they're changing policies so he doesn't put them on blast again.

Your new president turned his gaze on reddit, now they're changing policies to escape his wrath

__________

Full list of other subreddits that have shared the admin's post

 

Some Department of Government Efficiency staffers were blocked by staffers from entering an African aid office in the latest clash between federal agencies and the Elon Musk-led cost-cutting arm.

On Wednesday, DOGE workers and ​​Pete Marocco, director of the Office of Foreign Assistance at the State Department, arrived at the U.S. African Development Foundation headquarters in Washington, D.C., to get access and fire employees, according to the Washington Post. The roughly 50-person agency refused to let them inside

After about an hour of trying to enter the independent federal agency’s building, they left, the Post reported.

USADF is an independent agency established by Congress in 1980 to invest “in African grassroots organizations, entrepreneurs and small and medium-sized enterprises.” It currently operates in 21 African countries and has made investments in over 40.

Two “very young men” sporting backpacks at around 11.30 a.m. claimed to a security officer that they were staff at the foundation — yet they lacked key cards — and needed access to the building. The security officer then asked agency employees whether to allow the visitors inside; the employees refused, an official familiar with the matter told the outlet.

The description of the visitors aligned with the DOGE workers who had previously shown up to the building for an initial introduction, the Post reported. The aid workers were then aware that DOGE had plans to dismantle the agency. That’s when the security guard reported that the young men were threatening to call the U.S. Marshals; his boss told him to let the visitors upstairs. The pair reached foundation’s floor, but no workers let them in, as staff stayed at their desks while the men roamed the halls before leaving at around 12.30 p.m., the outlet reported.

Video footage, posted online by a ProPublica reporter, captured the backpack-strapped men and others wearing suits and ties standing near the elevators. It’s not immediately clear when Marocco and the others joined the two young men.

DOGE staffers were blocked from entering the U.S. African Development Foundation's office on Wednesday in the latest clash between federal agencies and the Elon Musk-led cost-cutting force DOGE staffers were blocked from entering the U.S. African Development Foundation's office on Wednesday in the latest clash between federal agencies and the Elon Musk-led cost-cutting force (USADF)

They threatened to come back Thursday — flanked by U.S. Marshals.

A day before the visit, agency President and CEO Ward Brehm signaled he was aware that Marocco had planned to visit the building in a letter to a DOGE official. Trump is considering tapping Marocco, who also currently serves as deputy administrator-designate at the U.S. Agency for International Development, to lead the foundation, The Hill reported.

In the letter, Brehm explained his instructions to his staff for when he was out of office: “In my absence, I have specifically instructed the staff of USADF to adhere to our rules and procedure of not allowing any meetings of this type without my presence.”

The president has the authority and responsibility to nominate foundation board members, but “by law, no person may be seated on the Board until the President has made such a nomination and that nomination be confirmed by the Senate,” Brehm continued.

He looks forward to meeting Marocco after he’s nominated and confirmed, he added. “Until these legal requirements are met, Mr. Marocco does not hold any position or office with USADF, and he may not speak or act on the Foundation’s behalf.”

The Independent has reached out to the foundation and the State Department for comment.

The standoff comes weeks after Trump issued a February 19 executive order calling for the elimination of a handful of foreign assistance agencies — including the Presidio Trust, the Inter-American Foundation and the United States Institute of Peace — “that the President has determined are unnecessary.”

Days later, Democrats wrote a letter to Trump on February 24 laying out that only Congress has the authority to dissolve the African aid foundaiton.

“Eliminating this agency – or reducing its activities in an effort that would effectively eliminate it – would undermine U.S. leadership in the region and create a vacuum that adversarial powers would exploit to expand their influence, and undermine congressional intent,” the letter reads. “If your administration believes changes to the mission or funding levels of USADF are necessary, such proposals must be submitted to Congress for legislative consideration, as required by law.”

1
submitted 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) by arotrios@lemmy.world to c/politicalmemes@lemmy.world
 
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/26427482

Tuesday night, Donald Trump stood before the nation and, with the full backing of billionaires like Elon Musk, laid the groundwork for the biggest heist in American history—the rapid, systematic destruction of Social Security, disguised as “reform.”

We saw the formal announcement of it during Trump’s non–State of the Union address, and the DOGE announcement earlier in the week that 7,000 employees at Social Security are to be immediately laid off—with as many as half of all Social Security employees (an additional 30,000 people)—soon to be on the chopping block.

Republicans and their morbidly rich donors have hated Social Security ever since it was first created in 1935. They’ve called it everything from communism to socialism to a Ponzi scheme, which Musk just called it this week (“the biggest Ponzi scheme of all time,” no less).

In fact, it has been the most successful anti-poverty program in the history of America, one now emulated by virtually every democracy in the world.

But the right-wing billionaires hate it for several reasons.

The first and most important reason is that it demonstrates that government can actually work for people and society. That then provides credibility for other government programs that billionaires hate even more, like regulating their pollution, breaking up their monopolies, making their social media platforms less toxic, and preventing them from ripping off average American consumers.

Thus, to get political support for gutting regulatory agencies that keep billionaires and their companies from robbing, deceiving, and poisoning us, they must first convince Americans that government is stupid, clumsy, and essentially evil.

Ronald Reagan began that process when he claimed that government was not the solution to our problems but was, in fact, the cause of our problems. It was a lie then and is a lie now, but the billionaire-owned media loved it and it’s been repeated hundreds of millions of times.

Billionaires also know that for Social Security to survive and prosper, morbidly rich people will eventually have to pay the same percentage of their income into it as bus drivers, carpenters, and people who work at McDonald’s.

Right now, people earning over $176,100 pay absolutely nothing into Social Security once that amount has been covered. To make Social Security solvent for the next 75 years, and even give a small raise to everybody on it, the simple fix is for the rich to just start paying Social Security income on all of their income, rather than only the first $176,100.

The entire solvency and health of Social Security could be cured permanently, in other words, if we simply did away with the “billionaire loophole” in the Social Security tax.

But the idea of having to pay a tax on all their income so that middle-class and low-income people can retire comfortably fills America’s billionaires with dread and disgust. So much so that not one single Republican publicly supports the idea.

How dare Americans have the temerity, they argue, to demand morbidly rich people help support the existence of an American middle class or help keep orphans and severely disabled people from being thrown out on the streets!

Which is why Musk and his teenage hackers are attacking the Social Security administration and its employees with such gusto.

By firing thousands of employees, their evil plan is to make interacting with Social Security such a difficult and painful process—involving months to make an appointment and hours or even days just to get someone on the telephone—that retired Americans will get angry with the government and begin to listen to Republicans and Wall Street bankers who tell us they should run the system.

(This won’t be limited to Social Security, by the way; as you’re reading these words, Trump and Musk are planning to slash 80,000 employees from the Veterans Administration, with a scheme to dump those who served in our military into our private, for-profit hospital and health insurance systems.)

The next step will be to roll out the Social Security version of Medicare Advantage, the privatized version of Medicare that George W. Bush created in 2003. That scam makes hundreds of billions of dollars in profits for giant insurance companies, who then kick some of that profit back to Republican politicians as campaign donations and luxury trips to international resorts.

Advantage programs are notorious for screwing people when they get sick and for ripping off our government to the tune of billions every year. But every effort at reforming Medicare or stopping the Medicare Advantage providers from denying us care and stealing from our government has been successfully blocked by bought-off Republicans in Congress.

Once Republicans have damaged the staffing of the Social Security Administration so badly that people are screaming about the difficult time they’re having signing up, solving problems or errors, or even getting their checks, right-wing media will begin to promote—with help from GOP politicians and the billionaire Murdoch family’s Fox “News”—people opting out of Social Security and going with a private option that resembles private 401(k)s.

Rumor has it they’ll call it “Social Security Advantage” and, like Medicare Advantage, which is administered for massive profits by the insurance giants, it will be run by giant, trillion-dollar banks out of New York.

While big insurance companies have probably made something close to a trillion dollars in profits out of our tax dollars from Medicare Advantage since George W. Bush rolled out the program, Social Security Advantage could make that profit level look like chump change for the big banks.

And, as an added bonus, billionaires and right-wing media will get to point out how hard it is to deal with the now-crippled Social Security Administration and argue that it’s time to relieve them too of the regulatory burdens of “big government”: gut or even kill off the regulatory agencies and make their yachts and private jets even more tax deductible than they already are.

This is why Trump repeated Musk’s lies about 200-year-old people getting Social Security checks and the system being riddled with fraud and waste. In fact, Social Security is one of the most secure and fraud-free programs in American history.

But Tuesday night was just the opening salvo. It took Bush almost three years to convince Congress to start the process of privatizing and ultimately destroying Medicare.

Having learned from that process, odds are Trump will try to privatize Social Security within the year.

And he may well get away with it, unless we can wake up enough people to this coming scam and put enough political pressure—particularly on Republicans—to prevent it from happening.

 

A newly discovered network botnet comprising an estimated 30,000 webcams and video recorders—with the largest concentration in the US—has been delivering what is likely to be the biggest denial-of-service attack ever seen, a security researcher inside Nokia said.

The botnet, tracked under the name Eleven11bot, first came to light in late February when researchers inside Nokia’s Deepfield Emergency Response Team observed large numbers of geographically dispersed IP addresses delivering “hyper-volumetric attacks.” Eleven11bot has been delivering large-scale attacks ever since.

Volumetric DDoSes shut down services by consuming all available bandwidth either inside the targeted network or its connection to the Internet. This approach works differently than exhaustion DDoSes, which over-exert the computing resources of a server. Hypervolumetric attacks are volumetric DDoses that deliver staggering amounts of data, typically measured in the terabits per second. Johnny-come-lately botnet sets a new record

At 30,000 devices, the Eleven11bot was already exceptionally large (although some botnets exceed well over 100,000 devices). Most of the IP addresses participating, Nokia researcher Jérôme Meyer told me, had never been seen engaging in DDoS attacks.

Besides a 30,000-node botnet seeming to appear overnight, another salient feature of Eleven11bot is the record-size volume of data it sends its targets. The largest one Nokia has seen from Eleven11bot so far occurred on February 27 and peaked at about 6.5 terabits per second. The previous record for a volumetric attack was reported in January at 5.6 Tbps.

"Eleven11bot has targeted diverse sectors, including communications service providers and gaming hosting infrastructure, leveraging a variety of attack vectors," Meyer wrote. While in some cases the attacks are based on the volume of data, others focus on flooding a connection with more data packets than a connection can handle, with numbers ranging from a "few hundred thousand to several hundred million packets per second." Service degradation caused in some attacks has lasted multiple days, with some remaining ongoing as of the time this post went live.

 

It is almost difficult to believe this is a real thing that happened with the President of the United States, but here’s what actually happened on Tuesday. In the morning, Donald Trump threatened to imprison protesters and defund any university that allows certain protests. Then, that same evening, he stood before Congress and declared — with apparently zero irony — that he had “stopped all government censorship and brought back free speech in America.”

You might think this whiplash-inducing contrast is just standard political hypocrisy. But it’s actually something much more terrifying: it’s part of a calculated strategy to redefine “free speech” as “speech I like” while using government power to punish speech I don’t like. The crazy part isn’t just that he’s doing it — it’s that he’s doing it so blatantly, while the very same backers who claimed they supported him for his views on “free speech” cheer this on.

Once again, we need to be explicit and direct here, because it’s all that matters. Donald Trump has not “stopped all government censorship,” because there really was no real government censorship. Instead, he has repeatedly engaged in and encouraged his administration to engage in one of the most aggressive and problematic campaigns of suppressing and chilling speech this country has ever seen.

Let’s go through this bit by bit.

Trump’s claim stems from his executive order on “restoring freedom of speech and ending federal censorship” — a solution to a problem that never existed. How do we know? Because Trump’s own Supreme Court appointee, Amy Coney Barrett, thoroughly demolished these claims of government censorship just last year.

While MAGA supporters had convinced themselves that the Biden administration was secretly ordering social media companies to censor conservative views, the Supreme Court took one look at the actual evidence and exposed it as pure fantasy.

Reading the ruling is like watching Justice Barrett swat down conspiracy theories like flies at a picnic. “No evidence” appears so frequently it could be the ruling’s catchphrase. No evidence of CDC-influenced censorship. No evidence of White House pressure. No evidence of FBI interference. No evidence that Facebook changed policies on government orders:

There is therefore no evidence to support the States’ allegation that Facebook restricted the state representative pursuant to the CDC-influenced policy….

But neither the timing nor the platforms line up (nor, in Dr. Kheriarty’s case, does the content), so the plaintiffs cannot show that these restrictions were traceable to the White House officials. In fact, there is no record evidence that White House officials ever communicated at all…

This evidence does not support the conclusion that Hoft’s past injuries are likely traceable to the FBI or CISA….

There is no evidence that the White House asked Facebook to censor every user who reposts a member of the disinformation dozen, nor did Facebook change its policies to do so.

There’s more, but you get the idea.

So Trump’s executive order “stopped” imaginary censorship while enabling very real suppression of speech. His FCC chief Brendan Carr now routinely threatens media organizations over their editorial choices.

But Trump’s real innovations in censorship are just getting started. His administration has launched a systematic campaign to eliminate discussions of diversity and inclusion, reaching far beyond government into private business. And last week, he announced plans to “create some NICE NEW LAW!!!” specifically designed to sue authors and publishers who dare to criticize him using anonymous sources.

If you can’t see that, it’s a Truth Social post saying:

As a President who is being given credit for having the Best Opening Month of any President in history, quite naturally, here come the Fake books and stories with the so-called “anonymous,” or “off the record,” quotes. At some point I am going to sue some of these dishonest authors and book publishers, or even media in general, to find out whether or not these “anonymous sources” even exist, which they largely do not. They are made up, defamatory fiction, and a big price should be paid for this blatant dishonesty. I’ll do it as a service to our Country. Who knows, maybe we will create some NICE NEW LAW!!!

Let’s be clear about what this means: Trump wants to create legal tools that would let him force journalists to reveal their sources or face ruinous lawsuits. This isn’t just about suppressing critical books — it’s about making sure no insider ever dares speak to the press about his actions again. The chilling effect would be immediate and devastating — precisely what Trump and those in his orbit want.

The MAGA faithful love to pretend that “anonymous sources” means “made up quotes.” But any journalist knows that fabricating sources is a career-ending offense — just ask Stephen Glass or Jayson Blair, whose names are now synonymous with journalistic fraud. The ability to protect legitimate anonymous sources isn’t just a nicety — it’s fundamental to investigative journalism and government accountability.

Trump knows this. His proposed law isn’t about preventing fake quotes — it’s about ensuring that anyone who might expose his actions faces not just legal harassment, but the very real threat of retaliation from his most rabid supporters. It’s a calculated attempt to ensure that the next Watergate-style revelation never sees daylight.

But Trump wasn’t done. Just hours before he claimed to Congress that he had “brought back free speech,” he had threatened to imprison and deport protestors while promising to strip federal funding from any university that allows protests:

If you can’t see that, it’s a post from Trump saying:

All Federal Funding will STOP for any College, School, or University that allows illegal protests. Agitators will be imprisoned/or permanently sent back to the country from which they came. American students will be permanently expelled or, depending on on the crime, arrested. NO MASKS! Thank you for your attention to this matter.

This threat manages to violate multiple constitutional principles at once. But the sheer levels of nonsense here require so much effort to peel back each layer of madness.

First, the Constitution gives Congress, not the President, control over federal spending. This isn’t obscure legal theory — it’s basic separation of powers that even high school civics students understand.

More fundamentally, this is a direct assault on core First Amendment rights of expression and assembly. When Trump says “illegal protests,” he means protests he doesn’t like — whether they’re pro-Palestine demonstrations or (more likely) the anti-Trump protests he knows are coming. The “illegal” framing is just cover for targeting specific viewpoints — exactly what the First Amendment prohibits.

Now here is where you might expect that all the people who were so concerned about “free speech on campus” to speak up. Remember all those self-proclaimed “free speech warriors” who spent the last few years writing endless think pieces about how a student protest against a conservative speaker represented The Death Of Campus Free Speech™?

Funny story: they seem absolutely delighted by actual government censorship of campus speech. Take Bari Weiss’s The Free Press, which has built an entire media empire on breathless warnings about campus censorship. Their take on Trump’s threat to literally imprison protesters? An “exclusive” gleefully reporting that the GSA is already implementing Trump’s threats, preparing to strip Columbia of $5 billion in funding unless it shuts down protests they deem “antisemitic.”

It’s almost like they never actually cared about free speech on campus at all. They just cared about which speech was being challenged.

The strategy by Trump here is bone-chillingly clear: threaten universities’ survival through financial blackmail while simultaneously threatening students with life-altering punishments for exercising their constitutional rights. It’s a two-pronged attack designed to make universities preemptively shut down protests and make students too afraid to speak out.

This is what actual government censorship looks like. Not imaginary pressure on social media companies that even Trump’s own Supreme Court appointee dismissed, but real threats of imprisonment, deportation, and financial ruin for engaging in constitutionally protected political speech.

So when Trump stood before Congress mere hours after issuing these threats and claimed he “stopped all government censorship and brought back free speech,” he wasn’t just lying — he was executing a deliberate strategy to destroy the very concept of truth itself. By boldly claiming the exact opposite of reality, he’s trying to make people give up on the idea that facts matter at all.

And that’s the real threat here. Not just the actual censorship (though that’s bad enough), but the attempt to make reality itself negotiable. Because once truth becomes whatever the person in power says it is, actual free speech becomes impossible.

The traditional ending here would be something like “we can’t let him get away with it.” But that’s not quite right. The point isn’t just to stop him — it’s to preserve our ability to recognize and speak truth at all. Even when — especially when — the most powerful people in the country are trying to convince us that up is down, black is white, and censorship is freedom.

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