Thursday, May 8, 2025

Something to Know - 8 May

Trump continues being Trump, and it gets tiresome.   However, his buddy Musk is running wild in a venue that most people do not understand.   His capture of the data banks in the government, coupled with his grand delusion of settling Mars is sucking the lifeblood out of whatever is left to support just the daily lives of we common folk.    


Heather Cox Richardson from Letters from an American heathercoxrichardson@substack.com 
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May 7, 2025, 11:06 PM (9 hours ago)
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Alarm appears to be rising about how the "Department of Government Efficiency" (DOGE) is consolidating data about Americans. Hannah Natanson, Joseph Menn, Lisa Rein, and Rachel Siegel wrote in the Washington Post today that DOGE is "racing to build a single centralized database with vast troves of personal information about millions of U.S. citizens and residents." In the past, that information has been carefully siloed, and there are strict laws about accessing it. But under billionaire Elon Musk, who appears to direct DOGE although the White House has said he does not, operatives who may not have appropriate security clearances are removing protections and linking data.

There are currently at least eleven lawsuits underway claiming that DOGE has violated the 1974 Privacy Act regulating who can access information about American citizens stored by the federal government.

Musk and President Donald Trump, as well as other administration officials, claim that such consolidation of data is important to combat "waste, fraud, and abuse," although so far they have not been able to confirm any such savings and their cuts are stripping ordinary Americans of programs they depend on. White House spokesperson Harrison Fields told the Washington Post reporters that DOGE's processes are protected by "some of the brightest cybersecurity minds in the nation" and that "every action taken is fully compliant with the law."

Cybersecurity experts outside the administration disagree that a master database is secure or safe, as DOGE is bypassing normal safeguards, including neglecting to record who has accessed or changed database information. The Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation at Harvard's Kennedy School explains that data can be altered or manipulated to redirect funds, for example, and that there is substantial risk that data can be hacked or leaked. It can be used to commit fraud or retaliate against individuals.

The Ash Center also explains that U.S. government data is an extraordinarily valuable treasure trove for anyone trying to train artificial intelligence systems. Most of the data currently available is from the internet and is thus messy and unreliable. Government databases are "comprehensive, verified records about the most critical areas of Americans' lives." Access to that data gives a company "significant advantages" in training systems and setting business strategies. Americans have not given consent for their data to be used in this way, and it leaves them open to "loss of services, harassment, discrimination, or manipulation by the government, private entities, or foreign powers."

Josh Marshall of Talking Points Memo suggests Musk's faith in his AI company is at least part of what's behind the administration's devastating cuts to biomedical research. Those who believe in a future centered around AI believe that it will be far more effective than human research scientists, so cutting actual research is efficient. At the same time, Marshall suggests, tech oligarchs find the years-long timelines of actual research and the demands of scientists on peer reviews and careful study frustrating, as they want to put their ideas into practice quickly.

If the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is an example of what it looks like when a tech oligarch tries to run a government agency, it's a cautionary tale. Under Trump the FAA has become entangled with Musk's SpaceX space technology company and its subsidiary Starlink satellite company, and it appears that the American people are being used to make Musk's dream come true.

Musk believes that humans must colonize Mars in order to become a multiplanetary species as insurance against the end of life on Earth. On Monday he explained to Jesse Watters of the Fox News Channel that eventually the Earth will be incinerated by an expanding sun, so humans must move to other planets to survive. In 2016, Musk predicted that humans would start landing on Mars in 2025, but in the Watters interview he revised his prediction to possibly 2029 but more likely 2031.

Critics note that while it is true the sun is expanding, the change is not expected to affect the Earth for another 5 billion years. As a frame of reference, humans evolved from their predecessors about 300,000 years ago.

But getting to Mars requires lots of leeway to experiment, and Musk turned against the head of the FAA under President Joe Biden, Mike Whitaker, after Whitaker called for Musk's SpaceX company to be fined $633,009 over safety and environmental violations. Musk complained that the FAA's environmental and safety requirements were "unreasonable and exasperating" and that they "undercut American industry's ability to innovate." Musk continued: "The fundamental problem is that humanity will forever be confined to Earth unless there is radical reform at the FAA!"

Musk endorsed an employee's complaint on social media that Whitaker required SpaceX "to consult on minor paperwork updates relating to previously approved non-safety issues that have already been determined to have zero environmental impact," reposting it with the comment: "He needs to resign." Musk spent almost $300 million to get Trump elected, and Whitaker resigned the day Trump took office.

That same day, the administration froze the hiring of all federal employees, including air traffic controllers, although the U.S. Department of Transportation warned in June 2023 that 77% of air traffic control facilities critical to daily operations of the airline industry were short staffed. The next day, January 21, Trump fired Transportation Security Administration (TSA) chief David Pekoske, and administration officials removed all the members of the Aviation Security Advisory Committee, which Congress created after the 1988 PanAm 103 bombing over Lockerbie, Scotland. The Trump administration vacated the positions with an eye to "eliminating the misuse of resources."

Today Lori Aratani of the Washington Post reported that in February, shortly after the deadly collision of an American Airlines jet and a U.S. Army helicopter in the airspace over Washington, D.C., administration officials also stopped the work of an outside panel of experts examining the country's air traffic control system.

After President Trump blamed the crash on diversity, equity, and inclusion hiring practices, career officials quit in disgust, according to Isaac Stanley-Becker of The Atlantic. As they left, an engineer from Musk's SpaceX satellite company arrived. He had instructions from Musk to insert equipment from Starlink, a subsidiary of SpaceX, into the FAA's communications network. On the social media platform X, Musk warned that the existing communications system for the FAA "is breaking down very rapidly" and was "putting air traveler safety at risk." In fact, the government had awarded a 15-year, $2.4 billion contract to Verizon in 2023 to make the necessary upgrades.

Starlink ties into Musk's plans for Mars. In November 2024, SpaceX pitched NASA on creating Marslink, a version of Starlink that would link to Mars, and Starlink's current terms of service specify that disputes over service on or around the planet Earth or the Moon will be governed by the laws of Texas but that "[f]or Services provided on Mars, or in transit to Mars via Starship or other spacecraft, the parties recognize Mars as a free planet and that no Earth-based government has authority or sovereignty over Martian activities. Accordingly, Disputes will be settled through self-governing principles, established in good faith, at the time of Martian settlement."

In early March, debris from the explosion of one of Musk's SpaceX starships disrupted 240 flights. On April 28, air traffic controllers lost both radio and radar contact with the pilots who were flying planes into Newark, New Jersey, Liberty International Airport, for about 90 seconds. In the aftermath of the incident, aircraft traffic in and out of Newark was halted, and four experienced controllers and one trainee took medical leave for trauma.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, a former Fox Business host, suggested the Biden administration was to blame for the decaying system. His predecessor as transportation secretary, Pete Buttigieg, dismissed the accusation as "just politics," noting that he had launched the modernization of the systems and reversed decades of declining numbers of air traffic controllers.

On Monday the White House fired Alvin Brown, the Black vice chair of the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), the agency that investigates civilian aviation accidents. Former FAA and NTSB investigator Jeff Guzzetti told Christopher Wiggins of The Advocate: "This is the first time in modern history that the White House has removed a board member."

Musk has the power of the United States government behind him. In December, Trump nominated Musk associate and billionaire Jared Isaacman to become the next head of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The Senate has not yet confirmed Isaacman, but the Republican-dominated Senate Commerce Committee advanced his nomination last week. The president's proposed budget, released Friday, calls for cutting about 25% of NASA's funding—about $6 billion—and giving $1 billion of the money remaining to initiatives focused on Mars.

Yesterday the FAA granted permission for SpaceX to increase the number of rocket launches it attempts from Boca Chica, Texas, from 5 to 25 per year after concluding that additional launches would have "no significant impact" on the environment near the launchpad. The first test of a SpaceX rocket launch there in 2023 caused the launchpad to explode, and the spaceship itself blew up, sending chunks of concrete into the nesting and migration site of an endangered species and starting a 3.5-acre fire. In their hurry to rebuild, SpaceX officials ignored permitting processes. According to Texas and the Environmental Protection Agency, the company then violated environmental regulations by releasing pollutants into bodies of water.

Musk is trying to make Starlink dominate the Earth's communications, a dominance that would give him enormous power, as he suggested last month when he noted that Ukraine's "entire front line would collapse if I turned it off." In April, Trump delayed the rural broadband program in what appeared to be an attempt to shift the program toward Starlink, and today Tom Perkins of The Guardian reported that the administration is going to end federal research into space pollution, which is building up alarmingly in the stratosphere owing in part to Musk's satellites.

Today Jeff Stein and Hannah Natanson of the Washington Post reported that the administration has been telling nations that want to talk about trade that it will consider "licensing Starlink" as a demonstration of "goodwill and intent to welcome U.S. businesses." India, among other nations, has rushed through approvals of the satellite company. Just 1% of India's consumer broadband market could produce almost $1 billion a year, the authors report.

In a statement, the State Department told Stein and Natanson: "Starlink is an American-made product that has been game-changing in helping remote areas around the world gain internet connectivity. Any patriotic American should want to see an American company's success on the global stage, especially over compromised Chinese competitors."

The attempt to gain control over artificial intelligence and human communication networks regardless of the cost to ordinary Americans might have a larger theme. As technology forecaster Paul Saffo points out, tech oligarchs led by technology guru Curtis Yarvin have called for a new world order that rejects the nation states around which humans have organized their societies for almost 400 years. They call instead for "network states" organized around technology that permits individuals to group around a leader in cyberspace without reference to real-world boundaries, a position Starlink's terms of service appear to reflect.

Mastering artificial intelligence while dominating global communications would go a long way toward breaking down existing nations and setting up the conditions for a brave new world, dominated by tech oligarchs.


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****
Juan Matute
The Harold Wilke House 
Claremont, California

Who is Asset Kraznov?
(we know where he is)


Tuesday, May 6, 2025

Something to Know - 6 May

Trump has decided that he going to continue to defy the protections afforded by our Constitution in so many ways.   He detests the print and TV programming that tell the truth, and he leans on media corporate heads to get what he wants.   Take the CBS program "60 Minutes" and a former producer who quit to protest Trump's pressure on the CBS corporation to tailor its programming to suit the authoritarian bozo.   Bill Owens is that producer, and someone has written an account on how it all went down.

Author: Bruce Lindner on FB


If you missed last night's 60 Minutes segment on the Trump administration's war on truth, here's the link. But I think a little back story is called for, for those who haven't been following the story.


It was just a few weeks ago that 60 Minutes producer Bill Owens resigned from the program. The reason he quit, was because CBS's parent company, Paramount Global, is in the process of an $8 billion merger with Skydance Media, but in order to consummate that deal, they need the approval of the FCC, currently under the aegis of the Trump administration.


So the president of CBS News, Wendy McMahon, doesn't want to rock the boat. So her office (according to Owens) put pressure on him to go easy on any exposés on the Trump administration, lest it sink Paramount's Skydance deal.


Pretty simple: We have to cave, just like all those high-profile legal firms did, in order to conduct business as usual. Profits first, integrity can suck it.


Except that was a bridge too far for Bill Owens, so he resigned. And on the following week's 60 Minutes broadcast, Scott Pelley told the back story to the world, citing "interference from above" and ending his announcement with; "None of us are happy about it."


That took guts.


Fast forward to today. Paramount Global's pressure campaign has utterly failed, at least for now. Say what you want about 60 Minutes, but they're clearly not playing upper management's game. This follow-up story was a thumb in Wendy McMahon's eye. Or possibly a collective middle finger from the entire 60 Minutes team.


We're on the knife's edge of losing our Democracy folks, and if the Fourth Estate crumbles, that'll be the death of TRUTH. If Trump ever gives an illegal order to the military (such as invading a fellow NATO country's sovereign territory) and the Joint Chiefs carry it out without question, in my opinion, that's when we can close the book. That would be end game for the U. S. of A.


I've seen several posts from friends over the past few weeks about boycotting 60 Minutes or CBS over this story. I would implore you to reconsider, especially after last night's story. They are CLEARLY not giving in to McMahon's (and Trump's) pressure. They deserve our respect for how they've stood up to power.


It's a hell of a thing to accuse your bosses of corruption (ask me how I know). In the case of 60 Minutes, Wendy McMahon and Paramount Global have ALL the power. They can make or break someone's career with the stroke of a pen. All the writers, producers, investigators and journalists have, is their integrity and a desire to report the unvarnished truth. At the moment, the latter group just scored a goal. But that doesn't mean the people "upstairs" won't retaliate in some fashion.


In my own case, when I went to war with my employer back in the '80s over their corruption, it consumed six years of my life. And I can admit it now, I suffered from several years of PTSD as a result—at a time when my toddler daughter needed a full-time dad the most. So taking on corruption is a BFD. But the consequences of NOT calling it out wherever it lurks is untenable. And on the international stage, potentially catastrophic.


So in the end, 60 Minutes **HAS** to win this war for truth, political pressure notwithstanding. Failure isn't an option. If they fail, America fails. That's not hyperbole.


What's the worst that can happen if one man who insists on getting his way by intimidating the media isn't put in check? Ask the people of early 20th century Germany how that worked out for them.


--
****
Juan Matute
The Harold Wilke House 
Claremont, California

Who is Asset Kraznov?
(we know where he is)


Monday, May 5, 2025

Something to Know - 5 May

And the beat goes on.   More failure to support and defend the Constitution and doubling down with Defiance:


Heather Cox Richardson from Letters from an American heathercoxrichardson@substack.com 
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May 4, 2025, 9:18 PM (13 hours ago)
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In an interview aired today on NBC News's Meet the Press, reporter Kristen Welker asked President Donald J. Trump if he agreed that every person in the United States is entitled to due process.

"I don't know. I'm not, I'm not a lawyer. I don't know," Trump answered.

The U.S. Constitution guarantees that "no person shall…be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law." Judges across the political spectrum agree that the amendment does not limit due process to citizens. In his decision in the 1993 case Reno v. Flores, conservative icon Justice Antonin Scalia wrote: "it is well established that the Fifth Amendment entitles aliens to due process of law in deportation proceedings."

In his oath of office, Trump vowed to "preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States."

When Welker pointed out that the Constitution guarantees due process, Trump suggested he could ignore it because honoring due process was too slow. "I don't know," he said. "It seems—it might say that, but if you're talking about that, then we'd have to have a million or 2 million or 3 million trials," he said. "We have thousands of people that are—some murderers and some drug dealers and some of the worst people on Earth."

"I was elected to get them the hell out of here, and the courts are holding me from doing it," he added.

Welker tried again. "[D]on't you need to uphold the Constitution of the United States?"

Trump replied: "I don't know. I have to respond by saying, again, I have brilliant lawyers that work for me, and they are going to obviously follow what the Supreme Court said."

Conservative judge J. Michael Luttig explained to MSNBC's Ari Velshi that far-right scholars have argued that the president does not have to follow the Supreme Court if he doesn't agree with its decisons: he can interpret the Constitution for himself. Luttig called this "constitutional denialism." He added that "[t]he American people deserve to know if the President does not intend to uphold the Constitution of the United States or if he intends to uphold it only when he agrees with the Supreme Court."

Mark Berman and Jeremy Roebuck of the Washington Post reported today that federal judges are becoming increasingly impatient with the incompetence of the Department of Justice lawyers who are defending more than 200 cases against the administration in court. Judges have accused DOJ lawyers of providing inadequate answers and flimsy evidence, defying court orders, and even behaving like toddlers.

Trump has said the justice system is a "rigged system" run by "radical left lunatics," but former federal judge John E. Jones III, whom President George W. Bush appointed to the bench, agreed that DOJ lawyers have "lost a fair measure of their credibility."

Authoritarian governments are based on the idea that some people are better than others. This translates into the idea that some people have special insight based only upon their superiority. They don't have to listen to experts, who just muddle the clear picture the leader can see. When reality intrudes on that vision, the problem is not the ideology of the leader, it is obstruction by political opponents.

As Trump told Ashley Parker and Michael Scherer of The Atlantic about his presidencies: "The first time, I had two things to do—run the country and survive; I had all these crooked guys," he said. "And the second time, I run the country and the world."

Trump himself illustrated this ideology again in the interview with Kristen Welker when he explained his trade war. "Look," he said. "We were losing hundreds of billions of dollars with China. Now we're essentially not doing business with China. Therefore, we're saving hundreds of billions of dollars. Very simple."

It is not, in fact, that simple.

This impulse to downplay expertise and concentrate power in a strongman shows in Trump's tapping of Secretary of State Marco Rubio as acting national security advisor, as well as acting head of the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) and acting administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). Clearly, Trump doesn't think he needs experts in at least three of those four senior posts. Perhaps it also shows there are few experts still willing to work in a Trump White House.

The results of this disdain for expertise shows these days most immediately in the policies of Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. As measles continues to spread across the U.S., a spokesperson for Health and Human Services said Friday that Kennedy will turn the country's health agencies away from promoting vaccination, which is 97% effective in preventing the disease, and toward exploring new treatments for it, including vitamins.

"It's not that there's been a lack of studies," Dr. Michael Osterholm, an epidemiologist at the University of Minnesota, told Teddy Rosenbluth of the New York Times. Decades of research have not discovered dramatic treatments, while vaccinations have proven safe and effective at preventing the life-threatening disease.

Rosenbluth noted that "[p]ublic health experts are baffled by Mr. Kennedy's decision to hunt for new treatments, rather than endorse shots that have decades of safety and efficacy data." This stance seems to contradict Kennedy's longstanding focus on preventing disease.

Kennedy has also falsely claimed that the measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine (MMR) contains "aborted fetus debris," that parents should "do their own research," and that he will institute testing for new vaccines with placebo-controlled trials, a practice medical experts warn could be unethical as subjects believe they are protected from disease when they are not.

Infectious disease expert Paul Offit told Jessica Glenza of The Guardian: "It's his goal to even further lessen trust in vaccines and make it onerous enough for manufacturers that they will abandon it."

At the end of March, Kennedy also vowed to study possible links between vaccines and autism, although repeated scholarly studies have shown no link. Kennedy has tapped David Geier, who does not have a medical degree and was disciplined in Maryland for practicing medicine without a license, to perform the study.

On Thursday, former New York Times global health reporter Donald G. McNeil Jr. noted that both Geier and Kennedy have made significant money thanks to their anti-vax stands as they monetize alleged treatments and sue pharmaceutical companies.

In Ars Technica on April 30, microbiologist and senior health reporter Beth Mole explored another angle to understand Kennedy's policies. She noted that Kennedy, who is neither a doctor nor a public health expert, does not believe in the foundational principle of modern medicine: germ theory.

In a 2021 book, Kennedy argued the idea that microscopic viruses, bacteria, parasites, and fungi cause disease serves the pharmaceutical industry and the healthcare industry that grew around it by "emphasiz[ing] targeting particular germs with specific drugs rather than fortifying the immune system through healthy living, clean water, and good nutrition." He accused those supporting this system, including Anthony Fauci, the former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases who was a proponent of the Covid vaccine, of misleading the American public.

While Kennedy appears to believe germs exist, he also claims to believe in the older theory of disease called "miasma theory," although as Mole points out, he misunderstands that theory—the idea that diseases are caused by poisonous vapors—and really appears to believe in another old idea: "terrain theory." Terrain theory maintains that diseases are signs that the internal "terrain" of the body is out of whack.

This would explain Kennedy's assertion—refuted by doctors—that the children who died of measles were malnourished. As medical blogger Kristen Panthagani, MD/PhD, explains: Kennedy's way of thinking is "the belief that infections don't pose a risk to healthy people who have optimized their immune system."

While underlying medical conditions certainly affect people's health, Mole notes that "the evidence against terrain theory is obvious and all around us." But if you think germs are less important than overall health, things like the pasteurization of milk to kill E. coli, salmonella, and Listeria bacteria—which Kennedy opposes—are unnecessary.

In 1876, German microbiologist Robert Koch discovered that the cause of anthrax was a bacterium. Germ theory challenged established practices In the U.S., where doctors in the 1860s during the Civil War believed the best demonstration of their skill was their bloody aprons and instruments, instruments they kept in a velvet-lined case.

In 1881 the doctor overseeing President James Garfield's recovery from a gunshot wound repeatedly probed the president's wound with dirty instruments and his fingers, prompting assassin Charles Guiteau to plead not guilty of the murder by claiming, "The doctors killed Garfield, I just shot him."

But just four years later, germ theory was so widely accepted that the U.S. Army required medical officers to inspect their posts every month and report the results to the administration, and by 1886, disease rates were dropping. By 1889, the U.S. Army had written manuals for sanitary field hospitals, and the need to combat germs was so commonplace medical officers rarely mentioned it.

And now, in 2025, the top health official in the United States, a man without degrees in either medicine or public health, appears to be rejecting germ theory and reshaping the nation's medical system around his own dedication to a theory that was outdated well over a century ago.


--
****
Juan Matute
The Harold Wilke House 
Claremont, California

Who is Asset Kraznov?
(we know where he is)


Saturday, May 3, 2025

Something to Know - 3 May

It gets tiresome every day to find out what MAGA mania is up to.  If there are any holdouts who don't get it, here is another day of the harm he is up to by attacking the judicial system.  Federal judges who support the Constitution and the rule of law are nefariously attacked.   The Wacko-in Chief has really gone nuts now.

Heather Cox Richardson from Letters from an American heathercoxrichardson@substack.com 
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12:22 AM (8 hours ago)
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Yesterday I identified incorrectly the messaging app newly fired national security advisor Michael Waltz was using at a Cabinet meeting on Wednesday as the unsecure Signal app. Joseph Cox of 404 Media identified the app as "an obscure and unofficial version of Signal" from "a company called TeleMessage which makes clones of popular messaging apps but adds an archiving capability to each of them." As Josh Marshall of Talking Points Memo notes, this third-party app introduces even more insecurity into those White House communications.

Today I spent time organizing the many tabs I had opened over the past six weeks. When they were grouped by topics, what emerged was the story of an administration that decided from the start to portray President Donald Trump as a king, creating an alternative social media ecosystem designed, as Drew Harwell and Sarah Ellison of the Washington Post noted in early March, "to sell the country on [Trump's] expansionist approach to presidential power."

The team set out not just to confront critics, but to drown them out with a constant barrage of sound bites, interviews with loyalists, memes slamming Democrats, and attack lines. "We're here. We're in your face," said Kaelan Dorr, a deputy assistant to the president who runs the digital team. "It's irreverent. It's unapologetic." Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung said their goal was "FULL SPECTRUM DOMINANCE."

They are engaged in a marketing campaign to establish Trump's false version of reality as truth. The White House has also brought into the press pool right-wing influencers, who are asking questions that tee up opportunities for White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt to push administration talking points, which the influencers then amplify on social media.

Trump's aspirations to authoritarianism are showing today in the announcement that there will be a military parade on Trump's 79th birthday, June 14, which coincides with the 250th anniversary of the Second Continental Congress's establishment of the Continental Army in 1775. About 6,600 soldiers, 150 vehicles, and 50 helicopters will proceed from near the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, to the National Mall at a cost of tens of millions of dollars.

Trump's attempt to empower loyalists showed today in the news that the Trump administration has reached a settlement in principle with the family of Ashli Babbitt, the Trump loyalist who was shot by Capitol Police officer Michael Byrd as she tried to breach the House Speaker's Lobby on January 6, 2021. The right-wing Judicial Watch organization had filed a $30 million civil suit on behalf of Babbitt's estate. A 2021 internal review determined that Byrd saved lives.

The administration's hunkering down in right-wing ideology showed as well in Secretary of State Marco Rubio's public attack on U.S. ally Germany for declaring the German right-wing political party Alternative for Germany (AfD) as an extremist party that goes against Germany's "free democratic order." That designation is the result of a three-year investigation. It allows the government more leeway in monitoring the AfD.

Both Vice President J.D. Vance and billionaire White House advisor Elon Musk supported the AfD and backed it in a recent election. Rubio took AfD's side today, writing on social media that that new designation was "tyranny in disguise." He attacked the current government and urged Germany to "reverse course."

The German Foreign Office responded publicly. "This is democracy. The decision is the result of a thorough & independent investigation to protect our Constitution & the rule of law. It is independent courts that will have the final say. We have learnt from our history that rightwing extremism needs to be stopped."

It says something about the Trump administration that the German government is lecturing the U.S. government about the dangers of right-wing extremism.

Molly Beck of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported that Trump's "border czar" Tom Homan spoke to reporters yesterday, threatening Wisconsin governor Tony Evers with arrest after the governor issued a memo to state workers directing them to check with a lawyer before turning over documents or other items to officials from Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Evers said Republicans were mischaracterizing his memo, which did not direct anyone to break the law.

"We now have a federal government that will threaten or arrest an elected official, or even everyday American citizens who have broken no laws, committed no crimes and done nothing wrong," Evers said. "And as disgusted as I am about the continued actions of the Trump administration, I'm not afraid."

Yesterday, at an event for judges, jurists, and lawyers, Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson spoke out against the attacks on judges currently plaguing the country. Judge Esther Salas, whose son Daniel was murdered by a man who came to their house looking for her, has been calling out the recent tactic of sending pizzas to the homes of judges or their children, making the point that right-wing opponents know where they live. Furthering their attempt at intimidation, the perpetrators have been using the name of Judge Salas's son.

Judge Jackson began her remarks yesterday by saying she wanted to address "the elephant in the room": the attacks on our legal system. Such attacks are not just on individuals, she said, but undermine the system itself. "Attacks on judicial independence is how countries that are not free, not fair, and not rule of law oriented, operate," she said, and she told her colleagues: "I urge you to keep going, keep doing what is right for our country, and I do believe that history will vindicate your service." According to Laura N. Pérez Sánchez of the New York Times, the audience gave her a standing ovation.

At least some of the administration's intimidation is an attempt to cow opponents. It does not appear to be working.

Yesterday, about 1,500 lawyers and their allies packed the plaza outside Manhattan's federal courthouse to defend the rule of law. According to Santul Nerkar of the New York Times, they held up pocket Constitutions, reaffirmed their oath to support and defend the Constitution, and chanted: "The rule of law protects us all. Without it we will surely fall."

Speaking in front of the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., constitutional law scholar and U.S. representative Jamie Raskin (D-MD) said, "The whole country needs a constitutional refresher." He recited the Preamble of the Constitution: "We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America."

On March 6, Trump issued an executive order attacking the law firm Perkins Coie, which has represented high-profile Democratic individuals and causes, by barring the federal government from hiring the firm, suspending the security clearances of individuals working for it, barring its lawyers from entering federal office buildings, and preparing to end government contracts with any of its clients.

Rather than back down, as several other firms did, Perkins Coie sued the next day. Today, Judge Beryl Howell permanently barred any enforcement of Trump's executive order, saying it "violates the Constitution and is thus null and void." In her opinion, Howell noted that "disposing of lawyers is a step in the direction of a totalitarian form of government." Trump's executive order violated the First Amendment's guarantee of the right to free speech, the Fifth Amendment's guarantee of due process, and the Sixth Amendment's guarantee of right to counsel.

She pointed out that the fair and impartial administration of justice has been part of the U.S. since John Adams "made the singularly unpopular decision to represent eight British soldiers charged with murder for their roles in the Boston Massacre." "I had no hesitation," Adams wrote in his diary, because "the Bar ought…to be independent and impartial at all Times And in every Circumstance."

Today, Riley Board and Dylan Tusinski of the Portland Press Herald reported that the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the state of Maine reached a settlement in the state's lawsuit against the Trump administration after it froze funding to Maine education. The administration claimed the state violates the law because it allows transgender girls to compete on girls' sports teams. Governor Janet Mills said she was following state and federal law and that Trump could not change the law by fiat. Maine attorney general Aaron Frey said the state had no choice but to sue in order to force the USDA to follow the law. The settlement restores the funding and establishes that the administration will go through the legally required process to pursue its policy.

When Trump tried to bully Governor Mills over the issue at a White House meeting in February, she told him, "See you in court." Today she commented: "It's good to feel a victory like this. I stood in the White House and when confronted by the president of the United States, I told him I'd see him in court. Well, we did see him in court, and we won."

Attorney General Pam Bondi has launched a different lawsuit against the Maine Department of Education that would pull funding primarily from poorer students and students with disabilities. "That's a separate complaint they filed a few weeks ago, it's only a one-page complaint that cites no authority, no case, no law," Mills said. "We'll see them in court on that one as well."

Finally, tonight, Trump's apparent determination to dominate the news and to project an image of leadership is overlapping with his increasingly erratic behavior. After suggesting on Tuesday that he'd like to be Pope, tonight the president of the United States posted on his social media site an AI-generated image of himself wearing papal robes and a miter.


--
****
Juan Matute
The Harold Wilke House 
Claremont, California

Who is Asset Kraznov?
(we know where he is)