Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Something to Know - 10 December

Christopher Armitage is not your average newsletter writer.   He ventures outside of the envelope of most opinion writers.  What makes him interesting is that he does not preach to the choir and present views that are fashionable to intelligent and progressive minds.   He challenges us.    to accept something that is way beyond our comfort zone.    As I read this column, I had to admit that he was probably speaking to folks like me, in that fighting Trumpism is more than just ranting about him.   I found it easy to pick anything about Trump, go wild with the English language and feel good about verbally stepping all over him.  Well, that really does not go very far except to make us feel that we have done our best to defeat him.   The truth is, day-by-day, the Republican Party machine is carving away at our democracy and Constitution from the federal level all the way down to state and local levels.   So, I guess we have to just suck it up and do the hard work to fight back.    However, I really do have fun fighting Trumpism with my keyboard.

Christopher Armitage from The Existentialist Republic cmarmitage@substack.com 
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Pictured, JD Vance (left) and American Oligarch Peter Thiel. Jeff Swensen/Getty Images; Marco Bello/Getty Images

Bottom Line Up Front for the Hardcore Activists (BLUF-HA): The GOP has spent 50 years building a machine to end democracy, funded by oligarchs who will outlive any single president. They want us to believe this ends with one man. It doesn't. We don't need false comfort right now, we need real clarity. That means acknowledging that as long as the seditious and openly criminal Republican Party exists, we are fighting the same machine that built him, protected him, and will replace him the moment he's gone. We have spent ten years personalizing a systemic crisis around a single figure. That personalization is itself a form of control. It lets us imagine that removing him solves the problem. It lets us fantasize about accountability and a soft landing. It lets us wait for rescue instead of doing the work.

Robert Reich recently argued that Trump's end is imminent. The MAGA base is falling apart, he wrote. Congressional Republicans are finding their backbones. The ground is finally shifting.

I respect Robert. He's been a consistent voice on the proper side of this fight for decades. So let's take his argument seriously. Let's look at the evidence he's citing and ask what it actually tells us.

The polling decline is real. Trump's approval has hit 36% in Gallup tracking, his second-term low.¹ A CNN poll found 61% of Americans say his policies have worsened economic conditions.² These numbers are bad.

But context matters. Trump's all-time low was 34%, right after January 6. His first-term average was 41%. He never once reached 50% approval in his entire first presidency.³ The mid-30s is not a collapse. It is his floor, and the floor is holding.

But context matters. The Republican Party's project is not to be popular or win elections. It is to make elections unnecessary for holding power. Gerrymandered maps, voter suppression, a captured judiciary, and the procedural stranglehold of the Senate filibuster all serve the same function: insulating Republican rule from democratic accountability. Trump's approval among the broader public matters only if that public can translate disapproval into political consequences. The party has spent decades building the infrastructure of preventing democratic functioning.

The November 2025 elections were a Democratic sweep. Spanberger won Virginia's governorship by 15 points.⁴ Sherrill carried New Jersey by 13.⁵ Mamdani became New York City's first Muslim mayor.⁶ Exit polls showed 55-69% disapproval of Trump across every major race.⁷ These results are significant.

But this is swing voters responding to chaos. This is the suburbs recoiling. This is not the MAGA base defecting. The coalition that carried Trump to victory in 2024 has not abandoned him. Voters at the margins have. That matters electorally. It does not mean the movement is collapsing.

Reich points to Republican fractures. Some are grumbling about the budget. Some reject the tariff dividend proposal. Some want to extend ACA subsidies. Hawks dislike the Putin courtship.

But grumbling is not governing. When it came time to vote on the Big Beautiful Bill, two Republicans out of 273 voted no. That is a 1% defection rate. The tariff dividend was never even brought to a vote. The ACA subsidy debate remains unresolved because leadership won't allow a floor vote. The fractures are nonexistent in practice. The grumbling itself is the performance, a way to maintain the fiction that Republicans aren't voting in lockstep while they vote in lockstep.

And then there is Marjorie Taylor Greene. After Romney. After Cheney. After Kinzinger. After the party systematically destroyed every Republican who broke ranks. After years of enforcing total loyalty, his most devoted defender finally walked away. One more name on a short list that keeps getting shorter as the party purges dissent.

She was his most loyal defender. She voted with him 98% of the time.⁹ She spent millions on his campaigns. She flew from her father's brain surgery to vote against his second impeachment.¹⁰ And when she broke with him over the Epstein files, he called her a traitor within days. She also announced her resignation timed to within a few days of her congressional pension beginning.¹¹

This is not a crack in the foundation. This is the foundation demonstrating how solid it is. The apparatus that destroyed Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger and Mitt Romney's political future did exactly what it was designed to do: enforce total loyalty and obliterate dissent.

So let's say Reich is right about all of it. Let's say the polling collapse accelerates. Let's say Republicans lose the House in 2026. Let's say Trump's health fails, his mind deteriorates further, or he simply dies. He is 79 years old. It could happen tomorrow.

Here is what does not change:

The 43 Republican senators who acquitted him after he incited an insurrection remain in office or have been replaced by others who would have done the same. The Supreme Court that ruled him above the law serves for life. The federal judiciary packed with Federalist Society judges will shape American law for decades. The 47% of Project 2025 already implemented does not reverse itself.¹² The 200,000 federal workers fired or forced out do not return to their jobs.¹³ The gutted agencies do not rebuild overnight. The dismantled regulations do not reassemble themselves.

The Varieties of Democracy Institute, the world's leading authority on measuring democratic health, identified the United States as undergoing the fastest episode of autocratization in modern American history.¹⁴ Director Staffan Lindberg stated in March that if the current trajectory continues, the United States will no longer qualify as a democracy when they assess 2025.¹⁵ That trajectory is not about one man. That trajectory is about captured institutions and a party apparatus committed to single-party rule.

We tried the institutional remedies. We impeached him twice. The Senate acquitted him twice. A jury convicted him of 34 felonies. No judge sentenced him. The Supreme Court granted him immunity. We voted him out in 2020. He came back and won by a wider margin.

Four years of Biden changed nothing structurally. The courts remained captured. The gerrymandered maps remained intact. He was able to make marginal progress that was obstructed at every turn, overturned by SCOTUS, or immediately undone by Trump. The filibuster remained in place, allowing Republicans to block voting rights legislation with unified opposition. We followed the rules. They ran out the clock. And at the end of it, we got a second Trump term that has done more damage in ten months than his entire first four years.

Trump did not build this. The Heritage Foundation wrote Project 2025. The Federalist Society built the judicial pipeline. The Republican National Committee enforces party discipline. The conservative media ecosystem manufactures consent. State legislatures draw maps that let them choose their voters. Dark money networks fund the whole operation.

Trump is their most effective instrument. He normalized what was previously unthinkable. He proved what was possible. He moved the ball further down the field than anyone before him. But he is still an instrument. When he is gone, everything he proved remains proven. Every precedent he set remains set. Every norm he shattered remains shattered.

The Republican Party has been building toward this for 50 years. The Powell Memo.¹⁶ The Heritage Foundation. The Federalist Society. Gingrich burning down congressional norms. The Southern Strategy. Gerrymandering. Voter suppression. McConnell holding a Supreme Court seat hostage for a year.¹⁷

Trump did not break the system. He is the product of a party that spent half a century crafting the tools to end American democracy.

As long as the Republican Party exists, our democracy remains under threat. That was true before Trump and will remain true after him. The party must be dismantled. Not defeated in one election. Not moderated. Dismantled and its leaders incarcerated for sedition and corruption.

So when the headlines tell you the ground is shifting, maybe something is happening. When pundits tell you the MAGA base is cracking, maybe the margins are eroding. When Trump eventually leaves the stage, it will feel like relief. We will want to exhale. We will want to believe the worst is over.

Do not exhale.

The day after Trump is gone, we have the exact same work to do. The same captured courts. The same gerrymandered maps. The same consolidated media. The same oligarch class. The same party apparatus that protected him through everything and will find another vehicle for their project before his body is cold.

And the next vehicle will be less repugnant. Someone who passes the same fascist laws and strips away the same freedoms but with less spectacle, someone who makes it all look more professional, and then people stop paying attention. Trump's repulsiveness keeps people in the streets. But the Republicans are the ones passing the policies anyway. They're the ones telling him what to support. A polished version pushing the exact same agenda without the daily outrages will be far more dangerous. The next one gets a grace period while the world celebrates, and the fascism continues while everyone exhales.

He covered a lot of ground for them. That doesn't all reverse with him gone. The project does not end with him, and if we act like it does, we hand Republicans a free pass for everything they built while we were staring at one man.

We have spent ten years personalizing a systemic crisis around a single figure. That personalization is itself a form of control. It lets us imagine that removing him solves something. It lets us fantasize about accountability that will never come through the institutions they have captured. It lets us wait for rescue instead of doing the work.

Stop waiting for Trump to die. The fight is the same either way.

So what actually works? Three things. First, states must investigate, prosecute, and criminally indict corrupt politicians at every level and refuse to hand those cases up to federal jurisdiction. If we don't hold these people accountable ourselves, no one will. This should be done through an interstate anti-corruption compact where states work together to rid our federal government of criminal actors. Second, states must build social safety nets at the state and multi-state level that actually improve residents' lives, because the federal government has been captured and isn't coming to help. Third, multi-state non-compliance with bullshit SCOTUS and federal decisions. That's it. That's what needs to happen. It takes political will, and it takes us demanding it from every state official we can reach.


For more information, I have a free book and two free booklets available right now: 'Conservatism: America's Personality Disorder,' 'Intro to Soft Secession,' and 'Tax Warfare.' All free. No paywall. The Existentialist Republic is also building an activist toolkit for the fight ahead, and gatekeeping it behind a subscription defeats the purpose. We are building a powerful movement, our strength as opposition grows and that's thanks to the folks who show up, make the calls, send the letters, and understand the assignment.

If you find this work valuable and want to help keep it free and moving forward, or if you just want to buy me a cup of coffee so I can keep researching and sharing, just click any of this text. If you can't, that's ok. Just use the resources and put them to use. That's the point!

If you want to check out physical items we sell to help us pay for the lawyers we will surely need at some point, just visit TheExistentialistRepublic.com or click anywhere on this text.


References

  1. Brenan, M. (2025, November 28). Trump's approval rating drops to 36%, new second-term low. Gallup. https://news.gallup.com/poll/699221/trump-approval-rating-drops-new-second-term-low.aspx

  2. CNN Politics. (2025, November 3). Democrats are more enthusiastic about the midterms as Trump's approval hits second-term low, CNN poll finds. CNN. https://www.cnn.com/2025/11/03/politics/cnn-poll-democrats-trump-midterms

  3. Jones, J. M. (2021, January 18). Last Trump job approval 34%; average is record-low 41%. Gallup. https://news.gallup.com/poll/328637/last-trump-job-approval-average-record-low.aspx

  4. NBC News. (2025, December 3). Virginia governor election 2025 results: Abigail Spanberger wins. https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2025-elections/virginia-governor-results

  5. NBC News. (2025, December 3). New Jersey governor election 2025 results: Mikie Sherrill wins. https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2025-elections/new-jersey-governor-results

  6. Romo, V. (2025, November 5). Zohran Mamdani wins NYC mayoral race. NPR. https://www.npr.org/2025/11/04/nx-s1-5597788/election-results-zohran-mamdani-new-york-city-mayor

  7. CNN Politics. (2025, November 4). CNN exit polls find voters in key races dissatisfied with Trump, concerned with economy. CNN. https://www.cnn.com/2025/11/04/politics/exit-polls-nyc-nj-virginia-california-elections

  8. Office of the Clerk, U.S. House of Representatives. (2025, July 3). Roll Call 190, Bill Number: H.R. 1 – One Big Beautiful Bill Act. https://clerk.house.gov/Votes/2025190

  9. CBS News. (2025, December). Former MAGA loyalist Marjorie Taylor Greene says Trump policies are not America First. CBS News 60 Minutes. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/marjorie-taylor-greene-trump-relationship-change-60-minutes/

  10. Greene, M. T. (2025, November 21). Full resignation statement. Newsweek. https://www.newsweek.com/marjorie-taylor-greene-resigns-statement-in-full-11092645

  11. Brady, D. (2025, November 22). Marjorie Taylor Greene's resignation timing secures her congressional pension by three days. National Taxpayers Union Foundation. https://www.ntu.org/foundation/detail/marjorie-taylor-greenes-resignation-timing-secures-her-congressional-pension-by-three-days

  12. Center for Progressive Reform. (2025, October 15). Tracking Project 2025 update: 47% of domestic policy to-do list commenced ahead of government shutdown. https://progressivereform.org/publications/tracking-project-2025-update-oct2025/

  13. Partnership for Public Service. (2025, August 26). Federal harms tracker: Cost to your government. https://ourpublicservice.org/federal-harms-tracker/cost-to-your-government/

  14. Nord, M., Altman, D., Angiolillo, F., Fernandes, T., Good God, A., & Lindberg, S. I. (2025). Democracy Report 2025: 25 years of autocratization – democracy trumped? University of Gothenburg: V-Dem Institute. https://www.v-dem.net/documents/60/V-dem-dr__2025_lowres.pdf

  15. U.S. News & World Report. (2025, March 25). Democracy expert raises alarm about U.S. trends under Trump. https://www.usnews.com/news/best-countries/articles/2025-03-25/democracy-expert-raises-alarm-about-u-s-trends-under-trump

  16. Powell, L. F., Jr. (1971, August 23). Attack on American free enterprise system [Memorandum to Eugene B. Sydnor Jr.]. Lewis F. Powell Jr. Papers, Washington and Lee University School of Law Scholarly Commons. https://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/powellmemo/1/

  17. Totenberg, N. (2018, June 29). What happened with Merrick Garland in 2016 and why it matters now. NPR. https://www.npr.org/2018/06/29/624467256/what-happened-with-merrick-garland-in-2016-and-why-it-matters-now




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Juan Matute
CCRC


Tuesday, December 9, 2025

Something to Know - 9 December

Can you imagine that the light from this far away image (200,000 light-years away) may have occurred long before Earth was a planet?   Think about it.   A lot of things have happened before the Hubble telescope arrived on the scene.   Earth was once thought to be flat.   We now have images from our moon that confirm we are more of an oval shape.   The wonders of Science will continue to be discovered by humanity, that is if we can stop from killing ourselves.


Sculpted by Stellar Winds

NGC 346 is a young star cluster about 200,000 light-years away. This image combines Hubble observations made at infrared, optical, and ultraviolet wavelengths, showing the hot blue stars carving out a space inside the surrounding nebula of gas and dust. (ESA / Hubble & NASA; A. Nota, P. Massey, E. Sabbi, C. Murray, M. Zamani)

I am stuck right now between two thoughts.   One is the image above that makes me feel so humble and small on a planet that probably is so small in a solar system, so insignificant of galaxie which is probably one in over 200 thousand, maybe an infinite number for all we know.   And then we have our own issues, here on Earth with the same problems civilizations have had for as long as we have recorded evidence.   The problems we have today have happened many times before, and the disputes were settled, and then the same damn problems came up again, just like before, and we have never learned from our mistakes.   And we keep on following the same game plan, century after century.   So, when we look up again, at light that actually started several billion trillion years ago, it really is hard to accept that mankind, for whatever it has done, or will do can have any affect on where the light shines a million years from now.  For all we know, the origin of the light we are seeing in the image above may have disappeared 100,000 light-years ago.   All I know is that Trump is a fading light, and we can turn him off.

Geddry's Newsletter a Publication of nGenium marygeddry@substack.com 

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You'll get access to public posts, breaking news, and essential updates, enough to stay informed and stay loud. No algorithms, no noise, just clarity, context, and community.

Geddry's Newsletter is a publication of nGenium, LLC


The Kennedys Would Like a Word: Trump's Gala of Decline

As babies die of whooping cough and China posts a trillion-dollar surplus, Trump lectures the nation on gold paint and tariff fantasies.

Dec 8
 
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Good morning! Pour yourself something strong, because the country is waking up today with a migraine that didn't come from the weather. While Donald Trump spent last night hosting his own discount-bin Kennedy Center Awards, complete with self-awarded prestige, gold-leaf delusions, and an audience stacked with MAGA superfans who clap the way North Korean functionaries clap when the cameras are running. In the background, the actual nation that he was supposed to govern kept falling apart, resembling a collapsing carnival ride while Trump shouted that everything was tremendous.

Let's begin with the economy, which Trump insists is "roaring" even as the job market is face-planting directly into the pavement. The numbers out this morning confirm what everyone in the real world already knows: layoffs are soaring at a rate we haven't seen since the Great Recession, possibly even eclipsing COVID once the revisions roll in. More than 1.1 million jobs are gone, gone as in disappeared, vanished, evaporated, and the trend-line points toward 2 million by year's end. Prices are climbing, wages are not, families are drowning, and the federal government under Trump is playing whack-a-mole with basic services. They've stripped affordable housing language out of the defense bill, slashed health benefits for service members, and are still out there bragging about rising Treasury yields like higher borrowing costs are some kind of medal of honor. You'd think a government this incompetent would at least not be proud of it.

As America bleeds, Trump, in between forgetting which year it is and explaining to the nation that "you can't fake real gold", is reportedly gearing up to announce a $12 billion bailout for farmers. He'll present this as heroic, an act of salvation, a benevolent ruler handing grain to the peasants from the palace balcony, but the truth is far simpler: the bailout is only necessary because Donald Trump's own tariff war kneecapped American agriculture. China didn't destroy U.S. farm exports. Trump did. China simply reacted like any rational nation under economic attack and bought from someone else. Farmers didn't need saving until Trump set the barn on fire. Now he's insisting they thank him for the hose.

Speaking of China, the world's largest exporter just quietly shattered a historic milestone: a $1.08 trillion trade surplus, the biggest ever recorded, and we haven't even hit the end of the year. And let's be perfectly clear: China didn't hit this milestone despite Trump's tariffs, but because of them. Trump's much-hyped trade war didn't weaken Beijing; it rerouted global commerce around the United States like a bypass around a toxic spill. Exports to the U.S. plummeted 29% in November, and yet China is exporting more than ever to Europe, to Southeast Asia, to every market Trump wasn't brave enough or coherent enough to pick a fight with. Europe is now choking on subsidized Chinese EVs and solar panels, and Macron is openly threatening U.S.-style tariffs, not because he admires Trump's genius, but because he's running out of choices in the economic landscape Trump helped warp.

Trump swore he'd make China "bend the knee." Instead, he delivered the U.S. economy to Beijing like a tribute payment, which brings me to something I'm writing about in more depth this week: the way Trump has steadily transformed the United States from a sovereign power into a vassal state. China's trillion-dollar surplus is not just a financial statistic; it's a flashing indicator on the geopolitical dashboard showing exactly how far American leverage has fallen under Trump's sabotaged trade policies. A nation that once shaped global markets is now being shaped by them, shoved to the margins while Trump claims victory from inside the wreckage. I'll have much more to say about this in the upcoming essay, but for now, understand this: the vassalization of America isn't theoretical anymore. It's measurable, in dollars, in lost markets, in lost credibility, and in the widening gap between the world's strategic center of gravity and the place where Trump insists everything is still "tremendous."

If the economic erosion weren't enough to raise your blood pressure, the public health news will do the job. Kentucky just lost a third infant to whooping cough, a disease so old it predates electricity, now back from the grave because the Trump–RFK Jr. Axis of Anti-Science gutted the CDC's advisory committee and stacked it with activists who treat childhood immunization the way Trump treats the Constitution: optional, inconvenient, and in the way. Newborn hepatitis B vaccines, which cut childhood infections by 99 percent, are no longer universally recommended. Surveillance systems for RSV, flu, and measles are being quietly dismantled. Public health experts are telling Americans, with straight faces and shaking voices, not to trust the CDC's own advisory panel.

And just like that, hospitals in New Jersey and New York are overflowing, flu cases are exploding, and infants across the country are dying from diseases that modern medicine solved decades ago. This is autocracy. As Dr. Haydée Brown, a physician and public-health expert who co-hosts the "ELLA" series exposing the real-time dismantling of America's health systems, explained, autocracy doesn't announce itself by telling you what to think; it begins by telling you what you're allowed to know. If you stop counting outbreaks, the outbreaks no longer make the evening news. If you stop measuring illness, illness ceases to be evidence. No data, no crisis. And without crisis, there's no accountability, which is the entire point.

You see it everywhere now: from the public health collapse, to the cooked economic narratives, to the "I ended eight wars with tariffs" fantasy, to the Supreme Court case where Trump argued he should be immune from prosecution for crimes committed in office. It's all the same operating system. Trump weakens the nation's institutions, then claims the weakness is proof they were corrupt. He sabotages the economy, then blames China. He destroys public health, then blames the experts. He undermines democracy, then declares it broken. This is how a country becomes a vassal state, not to another nation, but to the whims of one man.

While this democratic disassembly line hums along, Trump is on TV answering questions like "What makes a song great?" and explaining his deep thoughts on gold paint. His rambling Kennedy Center cosplay last night was pure decline, a fragile man squinting into the lights, insisting his memory is excellent, insisting the ratings will be huge, insisting he's running a government even as the government he runs dissolves around him like wet tissue.

Wars are escalating in Congo, in Thailand and Cambodia, in Ukraine, in Gaza. Trump claims he's the only one who can bring peace, even as leaked audio shows his "peace plan" was written in Moscow and hand-delivered to Zelensky like a ransom note. He boasts that "Russia is fine with it," which is precisely why the rest of the world should be horrified. And his official national security doctrine literally describes dismantling the EU and treating Canada as a subordinate appendage. Trump doesn't just want America to behave like a vassal state, he wants America to create them.

This is the backdrop against which he rants about fake gold and drags Kiss to a state function as if he's directing a roadshow version of his own ego. This is the administration that claims Europe isn't an ally, that praises Putin's "strength," that rejects refugees unless they fit Trump's racist obsession with "white South Africans," that skips the G20 in South Africa because Trump invented a genocide that doesn't exist. It would all be laughable if it weren't getting people killed.

This is the through-line this morning: a president who sees institutions not as tools of governance but as ornaments for his own self-mythology. A man whose policies burn down the countryside while he insists the glow on the horizon is just "beautiful energy." A ruling party that believes hiding evidence is the same as solving problems. A government that has replaced science with superstition, diplomacy with blackmail, and economic strategy with protection-racket rhetoric. A nation sliding, not tumbling, sliding toward something smaller and meaner than it used to be.

But the one thing they still fear is evidence. Evidence of corruption, evidence of failure, evidence of babies dying from diseases they let loose, evidence of Europe recoiling from America's chaos, evidence of China roaring past us while Trump insists everything is "incredible." Evidence is the antidote to autocracy. Which is why they are trying so hard to shut it down in the courts, in the data systems, in the media space, and on platforms like this one.

Truth is golden, so we stay loud, factual, and above all, annoying.






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Juan Matute
CCRC


Monday, December 8, 2025

Andy Borowitz

The Borowitz Report borowitzreport@substack.com 
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WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—Calling them "an imminent threat to the United States of America," on Monday Pete Hegseth ordered a strike on seven boat passengers he accused of being "notorious drug traffickers."

"I was watching late-night television and a program about these individuals came on," the Secretary of War said. "I immediately hopped on Signal and ordered the attack."

Hegseth said that, although the seven alleged narcoterrorists appear to be victims of a shipwreck, "That's never stopped us before."

"To the untrained eye, these persons might look like seven stranded castaways," Hegseth continued. "In point of fact, they are all on a list of dangerous drug traffickers—a list I made myself with ChatGPT."

"The passengers include a skipper, his first mate, and a so-called 'professor' who we believe runs a fentanyl lab," he said. "Also onboard is the kingpin of a major Venezuelan cartel, who goes only by the name 'El Millonario.'"

He urged the American people "not to be fooled" by the presence of three women on the vessel, including one wearing a full-length sequined gown and heavy makeup, noting, "I wear heavy makeup and there's no one more badass."


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Juan Matute
CCRC