To Stop The Coup, We Must Be Clear About The Truth: Two Plus Two Equals Four

from the here's-what-we-must-do dept

In George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, the ultimate act of rebellion comes when Winston Smith insists that two plus two equals four, defying a system that demands he accept whatever reality the Party declares. The Party doesn’t just want him to say two plus two equals five—they want him to believe it. This demand that citizens deny obvious truth isn’t just about controlling specific facts; it’s about breaking their capacity to think clearly about reality itself.

Today, Americans face our own version of this test. A coup is underway in plain sight, yet acknowledging this basic truth has become its own act of resistance. In just the past few days, we’ve watched Elon Musk gain control of Treasury payment systems while security officials who followed classification protocols were removed. Career civil servants are being systematically purged for having complied with previous legal requirements. Congressionally established agencies are being illegally shuttered. The president openly declares he won’t enforce laws he dislikes.

Just as the Party in 1984 demands Winston deny the evidence of his own eyes, we’re being asked to accept increasingly absurd explanations for what we’re witnessing. We’re told this is about “government efficiency” when it’s clearly about seizing control of state power. We’re asked to believe that dismantling civil service protections somehow serves democratic interests. We’re expected to accept that private citizens can gain unauthorized access to classified systems in the name of “reform.”

The parallel to Orwell’s warning becomes even clearer when we examine how this denial works. It’s not just about specific lies—it’s about creating a system where truth itself becomes impossible to maintain. When every violation of constitutional governance is treated as a separate incident, when each breach of democratic norms is analyzed in isolation, we lose the ability to see the pattern that makes the reality clear: This is a coordinated effort to dismantle constitutional democracy itself.

Consider how this reality distortion operates in real-time: When Elon Musk illegally shuts down USAID, defenders of this action claim the agency serves “at the pleasure of the president.” This argument asks us to ignore the basic reality that USAID was established by congressional statute—specifically, the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 signed into law by President Kennedy. This isn’t a matter of interpretation or political perspective—it’s as clear as the fact that two plus two equals four. Congress passed a law creating an independent agency. That law remains in force. The president cannot legally shut it down through executive whim any more than he could unilaterally abolish the Environmental Protection Agency or the Department of Education.

Yet just as the Party in 1984 demands Winston deny the evidence of his own eyes, we’re being asked to accept an argument that fundamentally contradicts statutory reality. This isn’t just wrong as a matter of law—it represents an attack on the very concept of law itself. If we accept that the president can unilaterally shut down congressionally established agencies, then congressional power to establish agencies becomes meaningless. If executive authority can override clear statutory mandates, then our entire system of checks and balances collapses.

This is precisely how democratic breakdown occurs—not just through the violation of laws, but through the corruption of the very language and concepts we use to understand law. When we accept arguments that two plus two equals five—that presidents can simply ignore congressional statutes at will—we’re not just making a legal error. We’re participating in the dismantling of constitutional order itself.

This same distortion of reality appears in how the administration justifies removing civil servants. Career officials who followed legally required protocols—whether attending mandatory training or protecting classified information—are being purged under the pretense of “efficiency” and “reform.” Just as with USAID, we’re being asked to believe that following the law is somehow grounds for punishment. This isn’t just a violation of civil service protections established by the Pendleton Act and strengthened after Watergate—it’s an attempt to make us doubt whether laws mean anything at all.

The pattern becomes even more stark when we examine how DOGE gained access to Treasury payment systems. The fundamental reality is simple: Private citizens cannot legally access sensitive government financial systems without proper authority and clearance. This is as basic as two plus two equals four. Yet we’re asked to accept that somehow these basic security protocols don’t apply when the private citizens in question are powerful enough. The argument isn’t just that they can break the rules—it’s that the rules themselves don’t exist if enough power is brought to bear against them.

Consider how this reality distortion compounds itself: When security officials at USAID tried to protect classified information—doing exactly what the law requires them to do—they were removed from their positions. The message isn’t subtle: Following the law is now treated as an act of resistance. Just as Winston Smith’s insistence on mathematical truth became rebellion in 1984, today simply maintaining that laws mean what they say has become a revolutionary act.

This manipulation extends even to how we discuss resistance itself. When critics point out these clear violations of law, they’re accused of being partisan or alarmist. The very act of naming reality—of insisting that two plus two equals four—is treated as somehow radical or extreme. This isn’t just about specific violations of law anymore; it’s about breaking our collective ability to recognize and respond to the dismantling of constitutional governance.

The denial of reality becomes even more dangerous when we look at international affairs. Consider Trump’s imposition of tariffs on Canada under the pretense of addressing fentanyl trafficking—a justification that bears no relationship to reality, as minimal fentanyl comes from Canada. Yet we’re asked to accept this obvious fiction as legitimate grounds for emergency powers. Just as we’re expected to believe USAID can be shut down by executive whim, we’re now supposed to accept that clearly false emergency declarations can override international trade laws.

This distortion of reality has particularly infected Congress’s understanding of its own power. The constitutional framework is clear: Congress makes laws, controls spending, and oversees executive agencies. This is as fundamental as two plus two equals four. Yet as Trump openly declares he won’t enforce laws he dislikes, as Musk gains unauthorized control of government systems, as congressionally established agencies are illegally shuttered, Congress responds with hearings and strongly worded letters. It’s as if they’ve been convinced that their constitutional powers are merely suggestions rather than fundamental law.

The pattern becomes even more disturbing when we examine how this reality distortion affects our alliances. When Trump threatens Panama over the canal, when he imposes illegal tariffs on Canada and Mexico, he’s not just violating international agreements—he’s asking us to accept that America’s word means nothing. Just as domestic law becomes whatever those in power say it is, we’re now supposed to believe that international commitments can be discarded based on whatever pretense sounds convenient in the moment.

This systematic assault on reality serves a clear purpose: When people can no longer trust their own understanding of law and truth, resistance becomes nearly impossible. If we accept that USAID can be shut down despite clear statutory authority, that civil servants can be purged for following the law, that private citizens can seize control of government systems—we’ve already surrendered the conceptual framework that makes constitutional governance possible.

The most insidious effect of reality distortion is how it paralyzes democratic response. When people can’t trust their own understanding of what’s happening, they become hesitant to act. Consider how this works in practice: Even as we watch the systematic dismantling of constitutional governance—with private citizens seizing control of government systems and career officials being purged—many Americans remain trapped in a framework of “wait and see” or “let’s not overreact.”

This hesitation isn’t accidental. Just as the Party in 1984 understood that controlling reality meant controlling response, those dismantling our democracy understand that making people doubt their own perceptions creates paralysis. When every clear violation of law is met with sophisticated arguments about why it might actually be legal, when every breach of constitutional order is wrapped in claims about “efficiency” and “reform,” people become uncertain about when and how to resist.

The pattern becomes particularly dangerous when we examine how it affects institutional response. Professional civil servants, seeing colleagues removed for following the law, learn to doubt their own understanding of legal requirements. Members of Congress, watching clear statutory authority being ignored, begin to question whether their constitutional powers mean anything at all. Even the courts, faced with open defiance of their orders, start to hedge and qualify their responses.

This is why insisting on clear reality—maintaining that two plus two equals four—becomes so crucial. The first step in effective resistance is breaking free from the fog of deliberately induced confusion. When we clearly state that USAID cannot legally be shut down by executive order, that civil servants cannot be purged for following the law, that private citizens cannot seize control of government systems, we’re not just making legal arguments—we’re reclaiming the conceptual clarity necessary for democratic defense.

Let me explain how recognizing reality leads to effective democratic resistance:

Once we’ve cleared away the fog of manufactured confusion, the path forward becomes clearer. Historical examples show that effective resistance to democratic breakdown requires three key elements: clarity about what’s happening, courage to name it, and coordinated action to stop it.

First, we must maintain absolute clarity about basic reality. When we see security officials removed for protecting classified information at USAID, we must call it what it is—punishment for following the law. When we watch Musk gain control of Treasury systems without authorization, we must name it clearly—illegal seizure of government functions. When Trump declares he won’t enforce laws he dislikes, we must identify it precisely—violation of his constitutional duty to faithfully execute the laws.

But clarity alone isn’t enough. The next step requires courage—specifically, the courage to sound the alarm without hedging or qualification. This is where many Americans, particularly those with institutional power and influence, are failing. They worry about appearing partisan or alarmist. They fear being dismissed as overreacting. But just as Winston Smith’s insistence that two plus two equals four required courage in the face of institutional pressure, defending constitutional democracy requires the courage to name truth even when doing so carries social or professional costs.

This brings us to the crucial final step: coordinated action. History shows that the most effective response to democratic breakdown comes through mass mobilization focused on specific institutional targets. When Congress appears unwilling to defend its constitutional authority, citizens must make their representatives more afraid of voter anger than they are of Trump or Musk’s retaliation. This isn’t about violence or disorder—it’s about citizens exercising their fundamental constitutional right to demand their representatives fulfill their oaths of office.

The mechanism for this exists within our constitutional framework. The Founders understood that ultimate power in a republic rests with the people themselves. When institutional safeguards begin to fail, when normal processes prove inadequate, citizens have not just the right but the duty to defend constitutional governance through direct action. This means sustained protest, focused pressure on representatives, and unrelenting demand for congressional action while the possibility for legal remedy still exists.

The most relevant historical lessons come from successful defenses of democracy, particularly moments when citizen mobilization prevented autocratic capture of democratic institutions. Consider the Philippine People Power Revolution of 1986, where sustained peaceful protests successfully defended democratic institutions against Ferdinand Marcos’s attempt to override election results. Or look at South Korea’s Candlelight Revolution of 2016-2017, where peaceful mass demonstrations successfully defended democratic institutions against corruption and abuse of power.

These examples teach us crucial lessons about effective resistance:

First, successful democratic defense requires sustained pressure rather than sporadic response. When the Solidarity movement in Poland successfully defended democratic institutions, it wasn’t through single dramatic protests but through consistent, focused pressure that made clear the cost of continuing anti-democratic actions. This connects directly to our current moment—making Congress feel consistent pressure from constituents rather than just responding to individual crises.

Second, successful resistance focuses on specific institutional targets rather than general complaints. When South Koreans defended their democracy, they concentrated pressure on specific parliamentary representatives, making clear that their political futures depended on defending democratic institutions. In our context, this means focusing pressure on Congress—particularly Republicans who might be convinced that their political survival requires defending constitutional governance.

Third, successful democratic defense requires clear, simple demands that connect directly to constitutional principles. This is why maintaining that “two plus two equals four” matters so much. When we demand that Congress defend USAID’s statutory authority, when we insist that civil service protections be maintained, when we call for protection of classified systems from unauthorized access—we’re making specific, achievable demands rooted in clear law.

Most importantly, these examples show that democratic defense succeeds when it maintains both urgency and discipline. The temptation during constitutional crisis is either to downplay the danger (leading to inadequate response) or to panic (leading to disorganized action). Successful resistance requires the discipline to maintain peaceful, focused pressure while recognizing the genuine emergency we face.

The first crucial step is understanding that successful resistance has to operate at multiple levels simultaneously. At the most basic level, we need sustained protests focused specifically on congressional offices. This isn’t about general demonstrations against Trump or Musk—it’s about citizens making clear to their representatives that defending constitutional governance is a precondition for their continued political careers.

Consider how this would work in practice: When USAID officials are removed for following classification protocols, the response shouldn’t just be criticism of Trump or Musk. Instead, citizens should organize continuous presence at their representatives’ offices, demanding specific congressional action to defend the agency’s statutory authority. The message must be clear: Representatives who fail to defend constitutional governance will face relentless peaceful pressure from constituents.

The second level involves creating focused pressure on specific institutional chokepoints. Just as the Solidarity movement in Poland identified key points where pressure could be most effective, we need to target our efforts where they can have maximum impact. In our current crisis, this means focusing particularly on Republican representatives in competitive districts. These representatives need to understand that their political survival depends on choosing constitutional governance over partisan loyalty.

But perhaps most importantly, successful resistance requires maintaining clarity about what we’re defending. This isn’t about partisan politics or policy preferences—it’s about preserving the constitutional framework that makes democratic governance possible. When we demand Congress defend USAID’s statutory authority, we’re not arguing about foreign aid policy—we’re insisting on respect for basic law. When we oppose unauthorized access to Treasury systems, we’re not making a partisan argument—we’re defending fundamental security protocols.

This connects back to our core theme about maintaining reality: Every successful democratic defense movement has succeeded by insisting on basic truths despite enormous pressure to accept convenient fictions. Just as Winston Smith’s insistence that two plus two equals four represented resistance to totalitarian control of reality, our insistence on constitutional truth—that laws mean what they say, that Congress has real authority, that civil service protections matter—represents resistance to autocratic capture of our democracy.

First, organizing sustained presence requires organizing concerned citizens in each congressional district. These aren’t general protest movements—they’re specifically focused on demanding congressional action to defend constitutional governance. Just as the Candlelight protesters in South Korea maintained consistent pressure through rotating shifts of citizens, these groups would ensure continuous peaceful presence at congressional offices and district events.

The demands must be specific and tied directly to constitutional duties. For example, when confronting representatives about USAID’s illegal shutdown, the message should be: “You took an oath to defend the Constitution. USAID exists by congressional statute. Will you act to defend Congress’s constitutional authority, or are you surrendering your power to executive overreach?” This isn’t about policy—it’s about basic constitutional authority.

The pressure must also be strategic. Representatives need to understand that inaction carries real political cost. This means organizing visible presence not just at their offices, but at every public appearance. When they attend local events, they should face constituents calmly but persistently asking why they’re allowing private citizens to seize control of Treasury systems, why they’re permitting illegal shutdown of congressionally established agencies, why they’re accepting the purge of civil servants who followed the law.

Most crucially, this pressure must maintain both intensity and discipline. The temptation during constitutional crisis is to either escalate to counterproductive confrontation or to fall into ineffective symbolic protest. Success requires threading this needle—maintaining peaceful but relentless pressure that makes representatives feel the cost of failing to defend constitutional governance.

The most powerful messages in defense of democracy combine moral clarity with concrete specificity. When crafting messages about the current crisis, we need three key elements: clear reality, specific violation, and constitutional principle. Let me show how this works in practice:

Instead of saying “Trump and Musk are threatening democracy,” we say: “Security officials at USAID were removed for following classification laws that protect American national security. This isn’t about politics – it’s about whether laws passed by Congress mean anything at all.”

The power of these focused, reality-based messages lies in their ability to cut through the fog of manufactured confusion. When we insist on basic truths—that laws mean what they say, that Congress has real authority, that civil service protections matter—we’re not just making legal arguments. We’re engaging in the fundamental act of democratic resistance: refusing to accept the distortion of reality that enables autocratic power.

This brings us back to Winston Smith and his insistence that two plus two equals four. In Orwell’s dystopia, that simple act of maintaining reality became revolutionary. Today, we face our own version of this test. When we refuse to accept that presidents can unilaterally shut down congressionally established agencies, when we insist that following classification laws isn’t grounds for punishment, when we maintain that private citizens can’t legally seize control of government systems—we’re engaging in the same essential act of resistance.

The stakes couldn’t be higher. What we’re witnessing isn’t just a series of policy disagreements or political maneuvers—it’s a coordinated assault on the very foundations of constitutional democracy. Every time we accept a distorted explanation for clear violations of law, every moment we hesitate to name reality for fear of seeming alarmist, we participate in the erosion of our own democratic safeguards.

But history shows us that even in the face of sophisticated autocratic tactics, democratic resistance is possible. It requires clarity about what we’re facing, courage to name it without hedging, and coordinated action focused on specific institutional targets. Most of all, it demands that we maintain our collective grip on reality—that we refuse, no matter how much pressure is applied, to accept that two plus two equals anything other than four.

The path forward is clear, if challenging. We must organize sustained, peaceful pressure on our representatives, making them more afraid of constituent anger than of partisan retaliation. We must frame our demands in clear, constitutionally grounded terms that cut through attempts at reality distortion. And we must maintain both the urgency this crisis demands and the discipline required for effective action.

The future of American democracy hangs in the balance. But if we act now—with clarity, courage, and coordinated purpose—we can still defend the constitutional order that has, at its best, made self-governance possible. The time for complacency or strategic patience has long passed. Our task now, as citizens of a republic under threat, is to stand firmly for reality itself. Two plus two equals four.

Mike Brock is a former tech exec who was on the leadership team at Block. Originally published at his Notes From the Circus as a follow up to the post we ran yesterday. Republished here with permission.

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Comments on “To Stop The Coup, We Must Be Clear About The Truth: Two Plus Two Equals Four”

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131 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Never believe that anti-Semites are completely unaware of the absurdity of their replies. They know that their remarks are frivolous, open to challenge. But they are amusing themselves, for it is their adversary who is obliged to use words responsibly, since he believes in words. The anti-Semites have the right to play. They even like to play with discourse for, by giving ridiculous reasons, they discredit the seriousness of their interlocutors. They delight in acting in bad faith, since they seek not to persuade by sound argument but to intimidate and disconcert. If you press them too closely, they will abruptly fall silent, loftily indicating by some phrase that the time for argument is past.

Jean-Paul Sartre got to see the initial rise of fascism and Nazism. His observation holds true for reactionaries of all stripes.

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Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

it’s an attempt to make us doubt whether laws mean anything at all

A lot of people⁠—especially in right-wing circles⁠—tend to forget that the process of civilization is the process of everyone forgetting that they can grab a rock and bash someone’s skull in for little to no reason at all. Modern society as a whole rests on that careful, delicate process. Those who want to break society will not enjoy what happens if people begin to remember.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

A lot of them think they’ll be running their own right-wing death squads.

They’ll learn quickly, if they succeed, that governments cracked down on the KKK because of folks shooting back as much as anything.

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Thad (profile) says:

Re:

Mike’s spoken before about Musk’s tendency to tear out Chesterton’s Fence without giving any consideration as to the reason somebody put it there.

Now he’s doing that with society itself.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Musk loves the old Silicon Valley philosophy of “move fast and break things”. What he never stops to think about is how that philosophy leaves little-to-no room for caring about what gets broken, who gets affected by that, and how to fix what gets broken.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

Because he’s wealthy enough that he knows from past experience that he won’t be the one dealing with the fallout when his philosophy leaves a devastated mess behind, he can just move on to something else and let the peons deal with the mess.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Which is why you advocate to make sure those rocks are kept away from anyone except the fascists because only they can be trusted with them?

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That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Few things are more dangerous than someone with nothing to lose

One person who was so disgusted by the horrors of the medical insurance industry sent the rich and powerful running in terror; sure looting the country might make them richer and more powerful but they’re going to be creating a lot of people who are furious thanks to their ruined lives, have nothing left to lose, and who have been taught by example that the law is entirely optional and utterly undeserving of respect.

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Matthew M Bennett says:

Losing an election is not coup

You’re just engaging in election denialism, at this point. You lost, lost badly, and you wish it didn’t but it did. Too bad.

But me, this is literally what I voted for. And you don’t get take that away from me by screaming about laws you don’t understand. This is democracy in action, and buckle up, cuz there’s going to be a whole lot more.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

this is literally what I voted for

As the consequences land on your head, this statement is just going to get funnier and funnier.

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Matthew M Bennett says:

Re: Re:

I just find your desperate claim that I’m going to somehow going to become unhappy with the results really funny.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Objectively speaking, your life will get worse. If you’re able to find joy in other people suffering more, then that still tells a ridiculous story about you.

There’s no way for this to play out in which you’re not a bad joke. The only question is whether you’ll ever achieve the level of consciousness to understand the punch line.

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Matthew M Bennett says:

Re: Re: Re:2

Objectively speaking, your life will get worse.

Keep telling yourself that.

Meanwhile, Trump won the second time because things went pretty well the first term and went pretty awful during Biden’s term. It was a direct comparison and people liked the Trump years much better.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3

Meanwhile, Trump won the second time because things went pretty well the first term and went pretty awful during Biden’s term. It was a direct comparison and people liked the Trump years much better.

[citation needed]

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3

Stop lying. Things were utter shit during Trump’s first term and Biden spent 4 years on cleanup. You can believe whatever the fuck you want, and that’s clearly your intention. But you don’t get to rewrite reality we all fucking lived through for the sake of your shallow and brainless narrative.

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Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

this is literally what I voted for

So, to be clear, you voted for…

  • the president using the threat of tariffs and an economy-wrecking trade war to extract concessions from ally countries (that were basically already policy to begin with)
  • an unelected/unappointed private citizen illegally obtaining sensitive (and possibly classified) data at the behest of the president regardless of the reason why
  • turning Guantanamo Bay into a concentration camp for 30,000 people who may not even be subject to U.S. law (and the protections therein) once they’re in that camp
  • the potential eradiction of the Department of Education
  • the DOJ being used as an arm of the executive branch to target career civil servants only on the basis of a grudge held by the president
  • an anti-vaxxer potentially becoming the head of the Health & Human Services Department
  • federal employees declaring (or at least showing) loyalty to the president instead of the Constitution

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MrWilson (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

your wild strawman mischaracterization of what is happening.

This is literally what the administration is broadcasting and bragging about. So do you support the administration or are you saying they’re lying?

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Matthew M Bennett says:

Re: Re: Re:2

This is literally what the administration is broadcasting and bragging about

Lol, not “literally”. For instance, a prison for criminals is not a “concentration camp”.

But I absolutely support everything Trump has done so far, with the exception of delaying killing off Tiktok.

Weren’t you going back into hiding? Could you? You’re dumber than Stephen and that’s saying something.

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Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3

a prison for criminals is not a “concentration camp”.

I’m sure the Nazis who jailed Jews for the crime of “existing while Jewish” would agree with you.

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Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:5

No. No, they are not. Last I checked, Elon was the one palling around with white supremacists and Neo-Nazis and far-right German politicians, and he’s BFFs with the president, who is also beloved by white supremacists and Neo-Nazis (especially since he pardoned a bunch of them a couple of weeks ago).

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Mamba (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:7

They absolutely did not. Many threw a piss fit and either didn’t vote, voted third party, or in a shocking act of self owned stupid: votes for Trump.

JMT (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3

For instance, a prison for criminals is not a “concentration camp”.

From Wikipedia:
A concentration camp is a prison or other facility used for the internment of political prisoners or politically targeted demographics, such as members of national or minority ethnic groups, on the grounds of state security, or for exploitation or punishment.

Hitting a lot of targets there…

This is what you want so what’s the matter? You bothered by the historical comparisons?

But I absolutely support everything Trump has done so far…

We know Matty. We know you.

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MrWilson (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3

For instance, a prison for criminals is not a “concentration camp”.

A prison for people overstaying a visa which isn’t a crime or requesting asylum which isn’t a crime. And when the people targeted are of a particular ethnicity, yeah, it’s a concentration camp.

Weren’t you going back into hiding? Could you? You’re dumber than Stephen and that’s saying something.

You seem to have me confused with someone else. I’ve never said I was going into hiding. I knew you didn’t read the articles. Apparently you don’t read commenter names either.

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Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

I don’t see how anything I’ve said is a strawman.

  • The concessions Trump received from Canada and Mexico were either an renewal of existing policy under the Biden administration (Mexico sending troops to the border) or a policy worked out near the end of the Biden administration (Canada’s $1.3bn investment).
  • Elon Musk is a private citizen who was not elected to office by the public and not appointed to any office by Congress; his entering USAID and gathering its sensitive data, regardless of whether it was approved by Donald Trump, is an arguably illegal act.
  • The Trump administration intends to convert a naval base in Guantanamo Bay into a holding center for migrants detained at the southern border, with plans to house up to 30,000 people; attorneys in the government are still trying to figure out if U.S. immigration laws would apply to those detainees.
  • The Trump administration is currently drafting an executive order directing the Secretary of Education to diminish the Department of Education through executive action; Trump also plans to ask Congress to abolish the DOE altogether.
  • The FBI turned over to the Department of Justice a list of over 5,000 employees who worked investigations related to the January 6th insurrection; the fear from many employees is that the DOJ will use that information to retaliate against those employees in some way, likely at the behest of Donald Trump.
  • Robert F. Kennedy Jr., whose anti-vaxx views are well documented going back several years, is on the cusp of being named the Secretary of Health & Human Services; the Senate vote to confirm his nomination will likely take place next week.
  • Donald Trump prizes loyalty (to him) above all else; that civil servants (appointed, elected, or otherwise) would declare⁠—or at least show⁠—more loyalty to him than to the Constitution, even if they only want to keep their jobs, is not some off-the-wall conspiracy fantasy.

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Matthew M Bennett says:

Re: Re: Re:2

Buddy, I’m not buying your strawmans. You do this every time and it gets dumb af.

“So, you support literally Hitler, don’t you MMB?”
“how is that a strawman?”

No, I’m not arguing about your made up nonsense, fuuuuck off.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3

I’m not buying your strawmans

With the exception of the last item on my list, everything I’ve said is a fact backed up by news reporting from credible sources and the recorded words and deeds of the Trump administration itself. Go ahead and prove I’m lying about any assertion of fact⁠—I double…no, I triple dog dare you!

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Matthew M Bennett says:

Re: Re: Re:6

Prove WHAT?!? That you say ridiculous, over the top insane sh!t that I really shouldn’t be obliged to take seriously?

I believe I have already.

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Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:7

Prove WHAT?!?

You claim that I lied about what I said the Trump administration is doing. I made claims of fact that are backed up by both independent reporting from credible sources and the recorded words and deeds of the Trump administration. If you want to claim I lied about any of that and have any credibility when doing so, you need to prove I lied. To duck out of offering such proof makes you a coward and destroys any semblance of credibility you think you have. Why should anyone believe anything you claim about me or anyone else when you don’t have the testicular fortitude to back your claims up with actual factual information from credible sources? I mean, if you’re not gonna do that, you’re only ever outing yourself as a little bitch.

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Matthew M Bennett says:

Re: Re: Re:8

You claim that I lied

Excuse me, I said “wild strawman mischaracterization”. It’s a lot LIKE a lie, but incredibly more exhausting to argue about.

So let me repeat: fuuuuuuck offfff reeeeetaaaaarrrd

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:9

Excuse me, I said “wild strawman mischaracterization”.

A difference without much of a distinction, really. And that besides: Even if my initial list was a “mischaracterization”, I followed that up by going down every item on that list in terms that (last item aside) are all backed up by solid reporting from credible outlets and the Trump administration itself. Even if you disagree with how I characterized those actions, the fact is that (last item on the list aside) every one of those actions is a verifiable fact. You want to challenge my credibility, but you have nothing with which to do that. All you can do is use ableist slurs, imply I’m a liar, and run away like Koby does when he’s asked questions he doesn’t want to answer. You lack any form of credibility⁠—and what’s worse is that you keep coming back to this site despite hating everyone on it and begging for people to rhetorically own you so badly that it may well violate the U.S. Constitution’s prohibition on slavery. You wanna be a little bitch? Go ahead, keep up the act. But remember: No one here is forcing you to keep getting dunked on here but you, and no one here is keeping you from leaving this site but you. If you’re really going to keep asking for a rhetorical punch to the face, you’re going to keep getting it until you finally convince yourself to do the one thing that will help you save whatever semblance of dignity and self-respect you have left.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Phoenix84 (profile) says:

Re:

You elected to give a billionaire foreign national unlimited access to the personal information (Name, address, SSN, bank info) of millions of Americans? Not just federal employees, regular citizens.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

Matthew M Bennett says:

Re: Re:

You understand tens of thousands of government employees have access to that information, too? Why are you especially concerned about Musk and not those other people? You didn’t vote for any of them, either.

It’s just the stupidest framing.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

Why are you especially concerned about Musk and not those other people?

Those other people are government employees who would face steep sanctions (including jail time) if they were to use that information to commit crimes.

Elon Musk is an unelected/unappointed private citizen who could probably commit any crime with that information and kiss Donald Trump’s ass in exchange for a pardon that would keep Musk from ever being prosecuted.

On the whole, I trust the civil servants who know they’d be effectively sent to Hell for leaking even one SSN on purpose more than I trust the guy who could face no consequences for leaking thousands upon thousands of SSNs.

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Matthew M Bennett says:

Re: Re: Re:2

Anyone can get a pardon. Biden pardoned nearly his whole family and half of government for 14 years after taking 20 million in bribes.

It’s just the stupidest framing.

Again, basically your argument is “Musk is Skeletor” and so I’m supposed to be extra concerned about him and lol, no, he isn’t actually and your victimhood fantasies are dumb.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
MrWilson (profile) says:

Re:

this is literally what I voted for.

As you have already been told, we are a constitutional representative democracy. There are some things we do not get to vote on. Presidents aren’t autocratic dictators. They can’t just do anything they want, even within their own branch of government. That’s not how any of this works. No amount of your uninformed gleeful denialism of what’s actually happening changes the illegality of the actions being taken.

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Matthew M Bennett says:

Re: Re:

As you have already been told, you are literally wrong about everything.

YES, the executive can make changes to the executive branch, actually.

MrWilson (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

This bullshit makes your claims about Mike supposedly not understanding the Constitution even more absurd. You’re pretending the Constitution gives the president Ron Swanson’s permit that says “I can do what I want.”

Your thorough citation-filled argument is quite convincing!

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

David says:

Re:

But me, this is literally what I voted for.

Well, you need to vote harder. Because dispensing with the constitutional operating conditions of the branches of government requires a supermajority. Even then, the mechanisms for changing the Constitution are not mere finger-snapping.

Drawnder says:

Re: What you voted for

You voted for a billionaire to stick his mouth into the tap that is our tax money and slurp away? Do all your aspirations involve getting exploited or just this one?

JMT (profile) says:

Re:

Losing an election is not coup

Nobody said it was, literally nobody. Did you even read the article?

You’re just engaging in election denialism, at this point.

Again, this has nothing to do with the election. You seem to be confused about the discussion.

You lost, lost badly…

By a difference of less than 1% of voters. This shitshow you’re so gleeful about is nowhere near as popular as you think, which makes a backlash almost inevitable. If you think this is just going to become the new normal that people will keep voting for you’re deluding yourself.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re:

By a difference of less than 1% of voters.

And more to the point: While Donald Trump won a majority of the popular vote, he still didn’t win a majority of voters. Hell, at best, he got about a quarter of the entire U.S. population to vote for him, and he still couldn’t pull off getting 50% of that electorate.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Jesus fuck, shut up, Matty. You won nothing. You’re going to receive nothing. You’ve gained nothing from any of this. This isn’t your win. You’re as fucked as anyone, you’re just WAY too stupid to understand it.

MrWilson (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Matt puts on a jersey and thinks he’s going to get MVP this year while he watches the game on TV. “We won! We’re champions!” He’s not on the team.

“It’s a big club and you ain’t in it.”

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Matthew M Bennett says:

This is a lie

This argument asks us to ignore the basic reality that USAID was established by congressional statute—specifically, the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 signed into law by President Kennedy

That’s a complete lie. The act authorized funds, to be spent by the state department. The office of USAID itself was created by executive order and can ABSOLUTELY be dismantled by executive order. (later statues mention USAID, but do not create nor authorize it specifically).

I’m not going through it line by line but your entire article is made up nonsense.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

If you read more than the headline, you’ll see that nobody said losing an election was a coup. But that would involve you shutting the fuck up for a few minutes, so it’s not going to happen.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

The office of USAID itself was created by executive order

That executive order begins with “By virtue of the authority vested in me by the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (75 Stat. 424)”, you fucking shmuck.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
JMT (profile) says:

Re:

That’s a complete lie. The act authorized funds, to be spent by the state department. The office of USAID itself was created by executive order and can ABSOLUTELY be dismantled by executive order.

From Wikipedia:
Congress passed the Foreign Assistance Act on September 4, 1961, which reorganized U.S. foreign assistance programs and mandated the creation of an agency to administer economic aid. USAID was subsequently established by the executive order of President John F. Kennedy…

We all know you love to breathlessly argue over semantics, but calling it a lie is just stupid.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Wong again.. it was original via EO, but eventually codified by congress during I think Bill Clinton’s presidency.

That law included mechanisms to fold it into the state department but not outright dismantle it.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Elections have consequences.

This is literally what I voted for.

Never ever let Matty forget these statements.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

Matthew M Bennett says:

Re:

Why would I?

It’s just really funny that you idiots think this is going to turn around. You’ve called Trump Hitler for 8 years now. No one believed you. I’m sure you’ll Vance Hitler in 4 years, too, and no one will buy it then, either.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re:

It’s just really funny that you idiots think this is going to turn around.

We’re, what, two weeks into his second term? Give him a year and I promise that things will get worse⁠—even for you.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

Matthew M Bennett says:

Re: Re: Re:

WE ALREADY HAD 4 YEARS OF TRUMP, you m0r0n.

My main complaint is that he didn’t get enough done. He’s getting it done now.

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Matthew M Bennett says:

Re: Re: Re:3

Didn’t get enough inflation done in his first term to blame it on someone else?

You….you understand inflation was quite low under Trump and exploded under Biden, right? Please tell me you understand that.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4

I understand that Trump firing up the money printer is where the inflation came from, Biden spent years trying to keep it down, and conservatives said “it’s not being fixed fast enough, let’s bring inflation back.”

And this is what I’m talking about. You’re going to be completely blindsided when reality asserts itself in ways you can’t ignore. And I’m going to take a few minutes away from watching out for mine to laugh as you try to explain why it’s actually a good thing.

Connedsumer (profile) says:

It's still not a coup

I didn’t vote for this. I have never voted for Trump once. But this is not a coup. I like Masnik’s take better: Constitutional crisis. It’s pushing it, but that makes more sense.

But losing a presidential election and seeing the executive branch change is not a coup. And that’s why that 2+2 = 4 reminder is so ironic. Calling it a coup is denying reality.

Thad (profile) says:

Re:

losing a presidential election and seeing the executive branch change

You’re one of those guys who says the people who attacked the Capitol on January 6 were just a peaceful tour group, ain’tcha.

Anonymous Coward says:

Two Plus Two Equals Four

Not necessarily.

If you have two buckets of sand, and another two buckets of sand… the moment you pour them together you get one big pile of sand.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

TWO BUCKETS of sand plus TWO BUCKETS of sand all poured into one pile is…

FOUR BUCKETS OF SAND IN A PILE.

Objective reality is real, and surprisingly quantifiable

Mamba (profile) says:

Re: Re:

So Matt apparently crawled out from unde this rock, crushed some Adderall and snorted it, and is now posting some of the most ignorant statements of the law while simultaneously claiming everyone else is stupid. It would be embarrassing if it wasn’t so predictable.

But, just to keep score, in the last 24 hours he has claimed:
1. The title of “Government Official” is laid out in the constitution. Which, if you have any understanding of then constitution you know that’s not true, and if your not a moron you’d verify it first with the good old ctrl-f. But not Matt, he’s gonna just lie.

Just to clarify, it’s by no means anything more than a term of art to describe someone representing the government.
2. He believes, bizarrely, that if a contractor does something on behalf of the government that it’s somehow different than the government doing something itself…and is therefore immune to constitutional challenges. This has the same logic and intelligence as the poop hole loophole, and stands up to just as much scrutiny.
3. He claims that that President can declassify anything. This is not true, as the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 directs the DOe to manage that in compliance with the NRC. Same with providing clearance.
4. That somehow the guy with the title “employee” isn’t an employee.
5. That a company which has lost 80% of it’s value is doing ‘well’.

It’s astounding .

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Connedsumer (profile) says:

Ok, back to bed, Mr. Brock

This post needed a TLDR at the top. Too many words just to whine about Trump winning. It’s not a coup when you lose and the executive branch makes changes…to the executive branch.

I didn’t vote for Trump. But this plea for hanging tight to reality because there was a coup is the height of fantasy. I understand if you are in denial. But the time to admit 2+2 = 4 was before Nov. 6. Campaigning with a 2+2 =4 attitude would have helped a great, great deal.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
David says:

Re:

It’s not a coup when you lose and the executive branch makes changes…to the executive branch.

The executive branch does not have the authority to change its setup, funding, operation, purpose, or the laws determining the constraints they operate within.

If they decide they aren’t bound by the Constitution and the laws and Congressional oversight any more, that is, pretty much by definition, a coup.

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Matthew M Bennett says:

Re: Re:

The executive branch does not have the authority to change its setup, funding, operation, purpose, or the laws determining the constraints they operate within.

It actually does, nearly all of that, except for the funding.

And the executive branch is a co-equal branch of government, congress is actually limited in how it can try to put “constraints” on the executive. That’s why Trump could kick out Inspectors General without a months notice — the law requiring a months notice was not constitutional.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

That’s why Trump could kick out Inspectors General without a months notice — the law requiring a months notice was not constitutional.

That is quite a claim. Surely you have a Supreme Court ruling you can cite to that effect, given that you regularly attack the head writer of this site for supposedly not having a law degree.

Because as someone with an actual law degree, the idea that the law on Inspectors General being unconstitutional is one of the dumbest fucking things I’ve ever heard and suggests you are only capable of lies and motivated reasoning, rather than principled arguments.

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Matthew M Bennett says:

Re: Re: Re:2

That is quite a claim

It’s not even controversial:

https://www.nationalreview.com/2025/02/fight-over-fired-inspectors-general-is-fight-over-foundations-of-the-administrative-state/

Because as someone with an actual law degree, the idea that the law on Inspectors General being unconstitutional

Assuming you’re not lying, I feel real bad for your clients, cuz you can’t even read. “The notice”

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

No, it fucking doesn’t. Perhaps the executive branch has unilateral power to do whatever in your delusional little world, but our hedge in real life, this is yet another thing you know nothing about, so you’ve traded facts for confident lies.

Thane Garamon says:

LMFAO at the Nazi Trolls

The American Education system has failed miserably and to see all these Nazi Trolls here makes me laugh. Everyone of you should be carrying a plant around to replace the oxygen you are wasting. On the bright side, history has a great lesson about what happens to Nazis.

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Matthew M Bennett says:

Re: Re: Re:3

Liberals are way more hateful than I am. YOU are more hateful than I am. I’m just up to some minor (OK major) gloating.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4

gloating

Why are you so angry about Trump winning, then? Because you seem more emotionally unhinged than you were before Trump won, and that’s saying something. Like, you didn’t even use the R-word all that much before Trump won, but now you’re using it every day, and that seems as clear a sign as any that Trump winning the election fucked up your emotional regulation.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4

No. Your hate is just more smarmy. It’s been the conservative game for a long time: be a a genocidal shit without saying any swear words.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:5

A better question would be why haven’t any liberals done this?

Fascists are running wild and the liberal response is to write some press releases about how “concerned” they are.

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Anonymous Coward says:

The Phule

I fucking hate this “2+2=4” meme because it’s anti-science.

I can’t tell you how many times I, a physicist, have added 2.3 rounded to 2 to 2.3 rounded to 2 to get 4.6 which is then rounded to 5.

I’ve also added 1.7 rounded to 2 to 1.7 rounded to 2 to get 3.4 rounded to 3.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re:

Tell you what, you stick to physics(though I’m rather doubting your credentials there at the moment) and leave the basics of math to grade-schoolers who seem to be far more able to handle it.

Anonymous Coward says:

Speaking of advice: I strongly encourage anyone who does not use a strong encryption communication method (preferably privacy respecting. Preferable e2e encryption) so start doing so now, and encourage friends and family to do so.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
That One Guy (profile) says:

A bluff only works so long as it's not called, a coup only works so long as it's not opposed

Even as we watch the systematic dismantling of constitutional governance—with private citizens seizing control of government systems and career officials being purged—many Americans remain trapped in a framework of “wait and see” or “let’s not overreact.

The words you’re looking for are ‘denial’ and/or ‘cowardice’, as people either refuse to acknowledge what’s happening because to do so would require admitting that things have gone horribly wrong and bedrock pillars of society are under attack and that simply can’t be it, or refuse to speak up under the grossly naive belief that if they just keep their head down the leopards will leave them alone.

Anonymous Coward says:

If you knew even the basics about mathematics, you’d know that adding tenths to 2 means it’s not just 2 anymore, it’s a completely different number.

You were home-schooled by parents who made it a personal goal to avoid setting foot in school weren’t you?

Maura says:

“In George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, the ultimate act of rebellion comes when Winston Smith insists that two plus two equals four, defying a system that demands he accept whatever reality the Party declares.“

But Mike! By the end “he loved Big Brother.”

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Anonymous Coward says:

I suspect the sitё оwner and his collaborators have, at some point, been funded – either directly or indirectly – by USAID.

Notice how he hasn’t denied benefitting from USAID largesse?

Ken_L says:

Unfortunately it’s not only necessary to put persistent pressure on vulnerable Republicans. It’s also going to be necessary to do it to “centrist” Democrats like Joe Kyrsten Fetterman and Jared “It doesn’t matter if Trump wins” Golden.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

Absolutely. Every centrist Democrat who wants to work with the fascists out of some misguided loyalty to the principles of “bipartisanship” and “compromise” can and should get primaried. They keep trying to meet the unjust man in the middle and the unjust man keeps stepping backwards⁠—and shifting the Overton Window with him.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re:

One of the things that disgusts me most about the democrat party is their frequent painfully willful naivety in giving the benefit of the doubt to people who have demonstrated beyond a doubt that they don’t deserve it.

(With apologies to rabid dogs…)

It’s like watching someone try to pet a rabid dog that’s already ripped off several of their fingers, assuring the horrified watchers that it’s their fault and if they’re just nicer to the dog they’re sure it’ll work out fine the next attempt.

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S Peter Davis (profile) says:

Above all these people cannot be allowed to dismantle education. The blanket gaslighting is nothing short of a social engineering project, rewiring the minds of the populace until eventually the only source of truth and reality is the Leader

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D says:

The Truth

Mike, I think you got it wrong in a number of ways.

You see, its too late to do anything at this juncture. The things happening today were inevitable.

‘The Party’, is not Republicans, or Democrats. Its the cohort of people who are beholden to central bankers. They run the show and have for quite some time.

Historically, Activism requires the people in a position of authority to be responsive. In the past politicians and leaders have been responsive for fear of violence. This is no longer the case. Activists do damage, and they get hunted down later, surveilled illegally, harassed. This is an objective sign that society has broken down.

The courts power as a checks and balances has long become degraded. The most recent issues began with the Boomers promoting Judicial Activism. This effectively broke the rule of law as the courts became populated more increasingly corrupt people.

The rule of law’s primary purpose is non-violent conflict resolution. When it fails, and there are a number of dependent parts, then it becomes a rule by law; just like any dictator and society breaks down, and falls back to violent natural law. We see this objectively in the courts being unable to catch and hold criminals at large tech firms like Meta. The natural objective observation is the increase of what has become known as the brass verdict.

You are right that there is a reality warping going on, and it started with the corruption of our education system back in 1907, which steadily grew from influences like the NEA towards collectivistic behavior.

In 1950s perception was effectively broken with the research coming out of Mao’s China, documented by Robert Lifton and Joost Meerloo.

Today people have been induced to be stuck in trauma loops, where structured torture occurs without most people being aware of it. The first thing to go in such cases is rational thought.

Wokeism is running strong because its Maoism. So in some respects its quite good that Trump is running DEI out of government, because those that support it are Maoists.

We are a short cry away from going to war with China/Russia. They’ve made all the moves historically publicly that any nation historically who does so and also goes to war does (every time).

We didn’t have a chance once the judicial branch lost its power to the Supreme Court… It took quite a few generations of brainwashing and making systems brittle but the insider threat got it done.

The only thing left now is the fall. It will have us all because the vast majority of people have succumbed to the imposed mental coercion and psychological stress (torture) that modern day life has brought us.

Most people are unaware that embedded in our daily lives are torture systems everywhere. You interact with a CSR department designed as a doom loop, you’ve interacted with these, and they force you into trauma loops. Given enough exposure, everyone breaks.

The only thing we can do now is get out of the way of what is coming, and let the deluded and naive people who didn’t want to do anything reap the whirlwind of their own consequences.

The economy for the most part has already collapsed to non-market socialism, it just doesn’t know it yet.

It will take several years before the effects are seen. Debt issuance without reserve is money printing, and the off-ledger balances in private hands will become public as the banks get stuck in liquidity traps. This occurs every 7-10 years.

Economic calculation isn’t happening, which brings us to the Socialist calculation problem, and how it fails in 6 different ways that cannot be solved. (Mises)

Large consolidated business sectors are cooperating, and economic calculation requires adversarial decision-making, a stable store of value with price discovery (without distortion).

Meat producers entering contract to buy back bad meat at expiration, forcing markets to just throw the meat away instead of doing loss lieder sales to the public is one type of distortion. Anywhere artificial constraints warp the market towards collapse; chaotically.

The businesses cooperate, even when they don’t know it because the market is concentrated, and the central bankers hold the leverage over all of them through intermediaries.

Business without a money printer can’t compete at the same loss function as those with one. Its been a long running sieve of merger, acquisition, bailout, bankruptcy.

Eventually it will hit the agriculture sector, and With the collapse of food production from the natural failures that are inbound, sometime in the next 20 years or so if I have to guess, we’ll only be able to support 4 billion people globally. Malthus had it right, and a reversion is coming. All those cans that were kicked down the road for a generation are lining up all at the same time, and money printing can’t fix it now.

Cascade failures are impossible to stop after a point of no return is hit. The vast majority of people were slothful, most particularly the baby boomer generation were slothful, and they burned the bridges as they went making systems brittle over time.

Complacency is sloth, and the current generation is left holding the flaming bag of poo.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Kathleen Kern says:

One quibble

Watch the passive voice. Instead of “Security officials at USAID were removed for following classification laws that protect American national security,” write, “The Trump administration (or Musk’s DOGE or whoever it was) removed security officials for following classification laws that protect national security.” Leaving out who caused something happen lets offenders and war criminals off the hook.

Anonymous Coward says:

The Party doesn’t just want him to say two plus two equals five—they want him to believe it

Can we tell what gender someone with no costume on is by looking or do we believe what we are told?

Believe our eyes or our ears?

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