History Will Not Treat Those Sleepwalking Through This Crisis Well
from the it's-time-to-wake-up dept
There’s a peculiar form of blindness that comes from prolonged safety. Like a frog in slowly heating water, people who have known only stability become incapable of recognizing existential threats until they’re already overwhelmed by them. This isn’t just normal human shortsightedness—it’s a specific kind of cognitive failure bred by generations of relative peace and prosperity.
Consider how many educated, thoughtful people respond when you warn them about the marriage of artificial intelligence with autocratic power. They acknowledge the concern intellectually, maybe even express worry about it, but then return to their daily routines as if nothing fundamental has changed. They treat an unprecedented threat to human freedom as if it were just another policy challenge to be debated at leisure.
We see this comfortable blindness in how our society responds to clear warning signs. When Trump openly declares “He who saves his Country does not violate any Law,” when Musk gains control of Treasury systems while simultaneously developing AI, when Vance explicitly advocates ignoring court orders—these aren’t subtle hints about their intentions. They’re telling us exactly what they plan to do. Yet much of society continues to treat these as normal political developments rather than existential threats to constitutional governance.
Most Americans living today grew up in what they thought was the natural order of things: American power meant global stability, NATO meant European security, and the dollar meant international trust. But what we’re witnessing now is the systematic dismantling of this entire architecture of peace—not through external defeat, but through internal surrender.
Consider the sheer audacity of Trump’s demands to Ukraine: conditions harsher than those imposed on defeated Nazi Germany, turning a democratic ally into an economic colony while simultaneously signaling to Russia that NATO’s mutual defense guarantees are meaningless. This isn’t just a policy shift—it’s the deliberate destruction of the international system that has prevented great power war for three generations.
For Americans who have never known anything but the stability of the post-war order, this should be terrifying. The world their parents and grandparents built—the alliances, institutions, and agreements that kept nuclear powers from direct conflict—is being dismantled with stunning speed. When Trump threatens Canada, alienates European allies, and treats Ukraine like conquered territory, he’s not just making diplomatic mistakes. He’s systematically destroying the frameworks that have prevented World War III.
Yet most Americans continue their daily routines as if nothing fundamental has changed. They treat the collapse of global security architecture as just another news story, perhaps concerning but not immediately relevant to their lives. This is the comfortable blindness that precedes catastrophe—the inability to recognize existential danger until it’s too late to prevent it.
The most dangerous form of comfortable blindness comes from those who should know better—the institutional actors who continue to treat existential threats as routine challenges that can be managed through normal processes. Consider what’s happening with the U.S. Marshals Service, the crucial enforcement arm of our federal courts. The administration is actively working to politicize this institution, transforming it from a guardian of judicial independence into a tool of political intimidation.
Yet responsible people, including many in the legal community, continue to assure us that “the guardrails are holding” because courts still issue restraining orders. They point to these orders as evidence of institutional resilience while ignoring a fundamental reality: court orders mean nothing without enforcement. When the very agency responsible for enforcing judicial decisions becomes subject to political loyalty tests, when marshals are directed to “visit” judges’ chambers to pressure them about January 6th cases, we’re watching the systematic dismantling of judicial independence itself.
This comfortable blindness extends beyond the courts. Congress sits passively while the administration openly declares its intent to ignore laws it dislikes. Media outlets report on the politicization of law enforcement as if it were just another policy dispute rather than the destruction of basic constitutional constraints. Even those who recognize the danger often treat it as something that can be addressed through normal institutional processes—as if the dismantling of those very processes wasn’t the whole point.
What makes this moment particularly dangerous is how the appearance of institutional function masks their actual collapse. Courts still issue orders. Congress still holds hearings. The media still reports. But these actions increasingly serve as mere theater—institutional muscle memory continuing after the actual capacity for enforcement has been surgically removed. Like a patient who doesn’t realize they’re bleeding internally, our democracy maintains the appearance of health while its vital systems are failing.
Stop. Look at what is happening. Not through the lens of partisan politics or institutional process, but through the basic reality in front of your eyes:
The administration openly declares it won’t follow laws it dislikes. Two plus two equals four.
The enforcement arm of our federal courts is being transformed into a tool of political intimidation. Two plus two equals four.
Private citizens have gained control of highly sensitive government systems while simultaneously developing AI to replace human judgment. Two plus two equals four.
The President explicitly advocates ignoring court orders. Two plus two equals four.
These aren’t complex policy disputes or normal political developments. They are observable facts that point to a single, undeniable reality: we are watching the systematic dismantling of constitutional democracy and its replacement with something fundamentally different—a form of technological autocracy that could permanently eliminate human freedom.
This isn’t alarmism. It’s basic arithmetic. When you eliminate civil service protections, gain control of government systems, develop AI to replace human judgment, and declare your intent to ignore courts—you’re not reforming democracy. You’re eliminating it.
The time for comfortable denial has passed. Either we confront this reality now, while democratic resistance is still possible, or we surrender human autonomy to systems of control so sophisticated they could eliminate not just freedom but the very idea that freedom was possible.
Look at the facts. Add them up. Two plus two equals four.
Because, my friends, the hour is late.
And if you still cannot see it—if you cling to your illusions of normalcy, if you insist that the courts will save you, that the system will hold, that it cannot happen here—then you are not merely blind.
You are complicit.
The blood is on your hands.
And when the last remnants of freedom are crushed beneath the boot of machine-optimized despotism—history will know your name—it will not forgive you. The digital records these days are… quite detailed.
Mike Brock is a former tech exec who was on the leadership team at Block. Originally published at his Notes From the Circus.
Filed Under: coup, donald trump, elon musk, jd vance


Comments on “History Will Not Treat Those Sleepwalking Through This Crisis Well”
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Mike Brock is a deranged, hysterical shitlib.
Re:
High praise indeed.
Re:
Coming from you, that must mean he’s spot on about absolutely everything.
Re: Re:
Techdirt commenters will call you many things but they will never call you a liar.
Re: Re: Re:
Which “you” are you referring to? Idiots in the comments section are called out as liars all the time.
Re: Re: Re: You’re a fucking liar
Why you so mad bro?
Re:
Still, a “shitlib” is better than a “shitrep”, aka a “Rep”.
Re:
You couldn’t be content just infecting the government with your idiocy, you had to spread it to this comments section as well? Name the specific false statements at the base of this article or piss off into the sun.
Re:
I have issues with Brock’s analysis here, but dismissing him as a “deranged, hysterical shitlib” is insane.
I don’t think the AI-controlled government he’s talking about is technically feasible, now or in the near future, regardless of what Musk or the gaggle of clueless people under him think. An AI capable of that level of control does not exist, and it’s certainly not going to be Grok or some other LLM.
That doesn’t mean Musk won’t try to replace human expertise with AI or automation, probably simply out of sheer stupidity. Whatever he does place won’t be a godlike dictator-aiding machine, but it will almost certainly be incredibly flawed and easily exploited. (“Infinite Money Glitch: Social Security Check Edition” is not going to end well.) It also doesn’t negate the fact that the current Trump administration is a threat to democracy in the US as we know it, and one that needs to be countered.
Stop trolling people as a performative “leftist” and grow the fuck up.
Re: Re:
I don’t know. Have you seen how Trump is performing now compared to the last time he was in power?
Re:
Oooo wow. You really owned us Libs with that one! Way to prove that you really are an anonymous coward. The least you could do is man up and use your name when you’re tossing around insults.
Re:
“Shitlib” is absolutely the most weaksauce insult. The effort put in is just pathetic. I don’t have a particularly high opinion of conservatives but I’d never bother calling one a “shitcon”, that would just be embarrassing.
Re: Re:
No, it wouldn’t. It would be a tautology.
Re:
You’re a complete moron who doesn’t know what why of those words mean.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Doomsday Cult
We’ve already heard the Obama “wrong side of history” speech, and the media proclamations of an “existential threat to democracy”. They were made prior to the 2016 election, and we’re still here. The predictions of the apocalypse were greatly exaggerated.
You gambled your credibility, then doubled down, then tripled down, and lost. Crying wolf, AGAIN, isn’t going to work.
Re:
You keep talking about what people have said as if the statements are propaganda meant to achieve inverse power (likely because that’s what Trump and company are prone to emit and you’re prone to parrot). They aren’t just gambits trying to win votes. They’re warnings and concerns and predictions. They’re still true even if some voters like you are brainwashed and ignorant of the implications.
Trump did fuck up the government a lot in his first term. Biden and the legislature also didn’t do enough during his term to fix many of the things Trump broke. And now Trump has returned and is breaking even more shit (including the Constitution).
You being in denial isn’t the same thing as bad things not happening. You’re not saying, “nothing bad is happening,” you’re really saying, “I don’t consider the bad stuff that’s happening to be bad.” That’s significantly different.
Re: Re:
When you remember that Trump, Musk, and a good chunk of MAGA ideologists (including members of Congress) are racist segregationists, that difference becomes even worse.
Re:
You know what’s funny? If it weren’t for Obama winning the presidency, you wouldn’t have Donald Trump as president. Trump began his entire political career because he couldn’t stand the idea of a Black man being elected to the highest office in the land—so much so that Trump was one of the leaders of the “birther” movement.
If you truly believe Trump is the (now self-proclaimed) king you always wanted, show some gratitude to Barack Obama. His election win paved the way for the racist backlash that gave you Donald Trump as president.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re:
“My president was so bad that your good president got elected and that’s bad, actually” is the most Stone comment to every Stone.
Sorry, fella, you can try again in 3.85 years.
Re: Re: Re:
Obama wasn’t a bad president per se. He was hamstrung for six of his eight years in office by the GOP, which wanted to do everything it could to foment that racist backlash against Obama—and largely succeeded at that goal. An Obama presidency with a full backing of Congress likely would’ve turned out better, but Republicans couldn’t (and didn’t) let a Black man actually succeed at being a president.
Obama being elected pissed off so many racists that Trump was able to capitalize on that hate and run a campaign full of base-motivating racism and xenophobia (among other forms of hatred) that won him two out of the past three elections. Had Obama not won the election in 2008, Trump likely would’ve never thought about running for president. So if the MAGA crowd likes what Trump is doing, they should show Obama some gratitude for pissing them off enough to make them vote into the Oval Office a hateful asshole who has now proclaimed himself a king. It’s only fair to give credit where credit is due.
Re: Re: Re:2
More like they didn’t want to let a Democrat succeed as President. That’s been a problem for a while with Republicans.
Re: Re: Re:2
I don’t think it was racism that made Trump run. I think it was that Obama publicly mocked him during the White House Correspondent’s Dinner, and Trump’s ego couldn’t handle that. He ran for president to show that he was better than Obama, and so he could destroy everything that Obama had created.
Re: Re: Re:
I know that reading comprehension is hard when you’re a complete dumbshit, but why don’t you go back and read what Stephen ACTUALLY said and respond to that instead.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re:
I hope you die homeless and diseased after you lose your job.
Go fucking die.
Re: Re: No really
That kind of hate is toxic. It will only hurt you in the end. You can be better.
Re:
They were right the, and they are right now. What is happening now is underpinned by what was started in 2016. The GOP used the opportunity to lock in the supreme court, advance the slide towards a theocracy, embrace totalitarians and fascists around the world, and undermine our technical capabilities in virtually every sector.
We lost a million more people to COVID due to shit as policies, anti-vaxer nonsense, and libertarian dipshittery.
We’re already seeing raw material and finished good prices increase dramatically, and much more of that is going to happen.
Re:
“You gambled your credibility, then doubled down, then tripled down, and lost. Crying wolf, AGAIN, isn’t going to work.”
You mad they stole your playbook?
Yes, but ...
You tell us what is happening. You tell us it needs to be stopped. Well and good: But you do not tell us what to do, besides abandon the internet (where the AI is trapped) and act as if the federal government no longer exists.
I already assume, that NATO will expel the US and become a purely European power, that the euro will become the world reserve currency, and that the US will become a lesser country, with all trade diverted away from us. Complaining about complacency is well and good, but we still do not know what to do.
Re:
We, people, have the Constitution, the freedom of speech, the right to vote, to gather, to manifest, but we need that some random blogger tells exactly what to do before using theses powers?
Re: Re:
We, people, have the Constitution, the freedom of speech, the right to vote, to gather, to manifest, but we need that some random blogger tells exactly what to do before using theses powers?
A list of random things that aren’t really actions doesn’t help much. What do I do with the Constitution? Roll it up and smack someone with it? How about freedom of speech? Should I yell at someone? What election, exactly, should I vote in to stop what’s happening right now? What on earth does “manifesting” mean?
It’s like the Dude from the Big Lebowski trying to advocate for action: “MANIFEST, DUDES!”
Re: Re: Re:
Speak up, protest, call your representatives. Run for office, if we still have free and fair elections by then.
Be supportive of those affected, so they don’t feel alone.
Civil servants are not the cause of the bureaucracy, they just implement what they’ve been told to do. Do you know how much it costs to buy a $200 transmitter? Well, you have to submit 3 quotes from 3 different US vendors, then get approval, then get someone to purchase it for you, wait for it to be delivered, inspected, and handed over to you for use.
Total cost: closer to $2000 when all done (all the man-hours required to get quotes, write out forms, etc).
There’s your waste. That’s not waste you can see when you inspect the treasury or look at receipts, only what you’ll see if you actually work in there.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:2
Speak up, protest, call your representatives. Run for office, if we still have free and fair elections by then.
Be supportive of those affected, so they don’t feel alone
There is literally not an effective thing in that list. Good things to do? Sure. Effective at stopping this? No.
The problem is that the MFing voters handed everything to the GOP. Yapping at fellow people on the left as if there was something they could do but weren’t is pathetic in the face of that reality.
Re: Re: Re:3
By “effective”, do you mean “instantaneous”? Because it feels like you want something done that will have an immediate effect, even if it doesn’t actually affect long-term change.
Re: Re: Re:4
No, I mean “effective” as in will actually have an effect.
Re: Re: Re:5
And yet, if someone were to tell you “go do [x]” and [x] neither produces instant results nor affects change in the short-term scheme of things, you’d probably snap at them for suggesting something “stupid” or “worthless”. Not all the work being done to help people is glamorous or revolutionary. Sometimes it’s a slog, even on the best days. Do you want a loud, flashy, televised “revolution” that burns out in one moment, or do you want to do the work that might take years to have a broader social effect but quietly changes lives in the process?
“If a man has any greatness in him, it comes to light, not in one flamboyant hour, but in the ledger of his daily work.” ― Beryl Markham, West with the Night
Re: Re: Re:6
I mean, yes, I’d absolutely evaluate the responses, but it’d still be better than “do your homework!”
Also, stop telling me my responses. I decided that.
Re: Re: Re:7
I’m telling you what I think your responses would be based on your posts and the vibes given off by them. Are you mad because I’m wrong, or are you mad because I’m right?
Re: Re: Re:8
What part of “don’t tell me my responses” did you not understand?
Re: Re: Re:9
A basic aspect of human communication is verifying what you think people mean and verifying for them what you think about what they’ve attempted to communicate.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:10
But is there a quiz?
Re: Re: Re:11
Check the syllabus.
Re: Re: Re:6
So many words just to say, “Just trust the process! Civility will prevail!”
Re: Re: Re:3
That is wrong. All of those things are very much part of an effective strategy. It has been reported, over and over again, how much widespread protests spur more people into action, and as the public outcry becomes louder and clearer it becomes harder and harder for people to get away with evil plans.
It’s not instantaneous, but it is very much a part of the effort.
Saying “nothing is effective” is giving in in advance and helping what you fear become true. Fuck that. Stand the fuck up and stop pouting.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:4
The Congressional switchboard has shut down because of the volume of calls opposing Trump. Kash Patel just got confirmed.
What part of “not effective” did you fail to understand?
Re: Re: Re:5
I understand fully that you seem to think that to be effective means it must have an immediate direct result, and that result must be the one you want.
This is, to put it mildly, fucking stupid.
These things are incremental and change over time. And FUCKING GIVING IN IN ADVANCE helps them, you fucking fool.
Stand the fuck up. Speak out. It does make a difference even if it doesn’t stop everything.
I mean, many of us are working hard to stop this, while having to waste fucking time on defeatist fuckups like you who want to just give up.
Suck it up and do something. It helps. Everything helps.
Re: Re:
If everybody who could vote actually did vote, then I doubt that Chump could have won the election. Everyone who was too tired, too busy, too distracted, or whatever reason they told themselves was enough for them to not vote in an essential election for Democracy are the ones to blame for this morass of insurrectionists taking over our government. If you don’t vote, then you have no right to citizenship at all.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:
Low propensity voters favored Trump heavily.
Also, thanks! I’ll notify the Election Judge in the Sky to take a look at things. That’ll definitely everything.
Also: moron.
Re: Re: Re:
This is one of those cases where I’m on the fence about compelling voting.
I appreciate the right to vote, like other rights, is also the right not to vote. However if everyone was forced to vote, those that were on the fence might have actually made a difference if they were forced to choose an option.
But, it also goes against the freedoms we aspire to have.
Re: Re: Re:2
This seems to be two different arguments, compelling voted and responsibility for the current outcome.
In general I’d be against compelled voting unless there was a ‘None of the Above’ option and the system was built from the ground up to handle that, though I’m unsure exactly how that would be done without effectively freezing the government until a new election was run.
As far as this particular instance though while I don’t think voting should be a requirement to maintain citizenship for any number of reasons I am all in favor of blaming those that decided that they just couldn’t be bothered to vote this time around and not just letting them pretend they had nothing to do with the current ongoing disaster.
Re: Re: Re:3
That’s exactly how the Brazilian voting system works: voting is a duty (even though the penalties are usually low), but there’s always both a “blank” option (which is usually considered as a “none of the above”. Since you vote by choosing the candidate or party number, there’s also the null vote option, is usually considered a protest vote, by choosing a number that doesn’t match anyone or anything. Blank and null votes are considered votes, so, if you cast them, your duty is fullfilled, but they’re ignored when checking whether a runoff should happen when appropriate.
Re: Re: Re:4
That’s not quite what I had in mind, in my rough idea the ‘None of the above’ option wouldn’t be a protest/tantrum vote it would itself be effectively a ‘candidate’ in that if it got the majority of votes none of the other candidates for that position would win and you’d toss the current candidates off the ballot and re-do the election with new ones that people actually might want to see in office.
Re: Re: Re:
Trump didn’t win the election because people didn’t vote. He won because misinformed voters either wanted Trump to win, refuse to vote Democrat even when it’s in their own best interest, or had some issue with the Democratic candidate.
Don’t blame the people who didn’t vote, blame the ones who voted for the wrong person.
Re: Re: Re:2 In a group of 100 51 is the tipping point, if however 50 of them sit it out...
No, I think I’ll blame both those that sat on their asses and refused to vote or cast tantrum/third party votes, and by that action made it easier for convicted felon Trump to get elected, and those that voted for him directly, as they both are equally responsible for getting him into office.
In a system where ‘majority vote takes all’ people refusing to vote are just throwing tantrums and lowering the number it takes to reach that point, making it easier for one side or the other to win.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:3
Yes, those who voted for this are blameless. We should never criticize them for their choice, it’s never been their fault.
Re: Re: Re:4
You might want to get your eyes and/or reading comprehension checked, and then re-read my comment.
Re: Re: Re:3
You’re assuming that those a larger portion of non-voters would not have voted for Trump and Kamala would have been elected instead.
However, people who are disengaged from voting are likely not informed enough about the candidates or issues to make an educated decision. Is that what you want?
I’d prefer those who don’t understand what’s at stake to just stay home on election day.
Re: Re: Re:4 There's honest ignorance, and then there's WILLFUL ignorance
Like they did this time with this as the result?
It’s not like people were quiet with the warnings of what would happen if the convicted felon won the election, or that his first term was decades back in history such that people might be forgiven for forgetting what a perpetual trainwreck it was on it’s good days, so no, I don’t think I’m inclined to give a pass to those that didn’t vote even if they did try the excuse of ‘Well I didn’t know enough to make an informed vote so I stayed home’.
Re: Re:
I vote. In California. Which always goes Democrat.
Beyond that, what? Speak? Gather? So what? That changes nothing.
What needs to happen is this: any voters who have Republican Congressional representatives need to replace them with Democrats. Once the Dems retake Congress, maybe they can get off their butts and push back against Cheetolini.
The problem is voters who vote Republican or not at all. That doesn’t describe me.
Re:
If we don’t abandon the internet they’ll torch the internet for us because queer people exist on it.
May be worth considering an alternate form of wireless communication to the internet at this point.
Re:
You have the whole entire-ass Internet at your fingertips. Go look for the information you want somewhere else if you don’t find it here; I promise that it’s somewhere on This God Damned Internet™ if you take the time to do the work.
Re: Re:
You have the whole entire-ass Internet at your fingertips. Go look for the information you want somewhere else if you don’t find it here; I promise that it’s somewhere on This God Damned Internet™ if you take the time to do the work.
Such a rousing call to action. “You must do something!!” “What?” “Look it up on the Internet!”
Re: Re: Re:
Why should I or anyone else here do your homework for you? If there’s a specific form of action you want to take, Google it. I promise you’ll find the info you’re looking for.
Want to contact your representatives in government? Go look up their info. Want to do some mutual aid work? Go look up people/organizations doing that work in your area. Want to learn how to resist authoritarians and refuse to obey in advance? You’ll find plenty of that kind of advice all over the damn Internet. Whatever you want to do, the resources to do it—and do it with other people, if need be—can be found with a couple of Google searches. If you need some random blogger to give you lists upon lists of specific and detailed instructions on what to do in times like these, maybe you’d be better off watching Netflix.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:2
BECAUSE YOU ARE CALLING PEOPLE TO ACTION AND HAVING SOME SUGGESTIONS OTHER THAN “Do your homework” WOULD BE GREAT.
Re: Re: Re:3
You seem awfully angry that I’m not suggesting, say, some form of violence as an action someone should take to fight the Trump administration. Is that what you want me to suggest? Because I won’t.
Re: Re: Re:4
I’m annoyed because you are issuing a call to action and then, you know, not actually suggesting actions.
Re: Re: Re:5
Think of something you want to do that will help people, then go look up the resources you need to perform that act. I can’t tell you what to do beyond that because (A) I’m not your dad or your boss, (B) I’m not a fucking fascist, and (C) I don’t know you or what you’re capable (or incapable) of doing. Your job is to figure what you can do and how well you can do it; if you can’t do that, you’ve got bigger problems.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:5
Also, I love the epic cluelessness of assigning homework, even metaphorically, in a call to action.
Will there be a quiz?
Re: Re: Re:6
You have that backwards; taking action without proper knowledge is being clueless.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:7
You didn’t answer my question…is there a quiz?
Re: Re: Re:8
Yup and you already failed it bro.
Re: Re: Re:5
Why would a rando on Techdirt know enough about your life to know what you’re capable of doing that would be productive?
Are you a bureaucrat with influence? Are you a transient person with a drug addiction? Are you a student with food insecurity but a lot of free time? Are you a retiree with time on their hands?
The productive actions you can take will be particular to your circumstance. If you want to go through an interview process to find out you’re capable of, I’m sure someone somewhere else can provide that service.
Complex issues will have complex solutions. If you want simple and easy, you’re not going to get far.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:6
The randos know enough to scold, that’s how.
Re: Re: Re:7
Again: Pot, kettle, black.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:8
Hey, Pot, how’s it going?
Re: Re: Re:9
Two things.
Re: Re: Re:7
That doesn’t make any sense. Telling you that you’re lazy because you want easy answers isn’t the same as knowing the specific details of your life enough to give you a total answer. You’re asking for the impossible and then chastising others for not being omniscient. And it would be creepy if we were. Your complaints make no sense.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:8
Oh good lord. So you can’t suggest action unless you know the intimate details of someone’s life? Are you normally this much of a p*******y?
Re: Re: Re:9
Normally I’d ignore otherwording, but in this case? The answer is “yes”. Nobody here knows what you’re capable of doing. You’re the only person in the world who knows all of your limitations—physical, emotional, financial, moral, and ethical (among others, I’m sure). If I were to suggest a specific course of action without that knowledge, that could lead you to snap at me for not knowing your limits with the omniscience of a supernatural deity, and then we’d be right back where we started but with you feeling even more resentful than you already are.
You know what you personally can and can’t do better than anyone else you’ve been bitching at today. You’re the one who has to decide what you’re going to do. No one else here can make that decision for you, and demanding we tell you what to do as if we can is weird as hell.
Re: Re: Re:8 Please don't feed the trolls.
RE: Total BS
No, s/he is not asking for advice.
S/He is actively preventing useful discussion by filling the site with turds, and everyone is – for some damn reason I cannot fathom – rolling around in those turds like they were daisies.
Waste space is all s/he’s offering.
If there was a set of actions that would undo the situation Americans have allowed to happen, there would be no need to ask. They would be posted everywhere.
The problem lies in the fact that the fascists – always the nation’s wealthiest citizens – use the laws of the land to steal the wealth of the nation they infest.
Once in place, the only way to get them out is to change the laws again.
You can only do that – like the Trumpists – by owning the bloody government.
Please don’t feed the trolls.
Re: Re: Re:5
YES. Also, not for nothing, but those of us with working class jobs still have to go to those jobs everyday so we can survive in the moment as much as many of us would like to “do something.” I will also point out that for a lot of us, the system was already broken and shit was already bad. My co- workers and I couldn’t afford rent long before Trump 2.0, and I just can’t blame them for not noticing or caring about something like USAID. There are ways to help people understand the stakes, but that won’t happen by writing articles like this. This is writing for people who are already bought in and who hang out on sites where legitimate philosophy blogs are published. Was it truly intended to persuade the average republican voter? Reaching people and getting them to give up on ideas they believe in is painstaking work most of the time, and telling average Joe working class people they’ll have blood on their hands ain’t the way to do it. Neither is talking down to people by telling them to “do the math.” Especially when some
people struggle to add things up in the first place.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:6
Everybody now explain to Maura, who may be working multiple jobs, how they should do their homework to figure out what to do. Go ahead.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:6
Also, Maura, thanks for the comment.
Re: Re: Re:
Such a lazy excuse. “I want to do something, but I expect random strangers on one particular site to have all the easy answers or else I’m giving up!”
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:2
The lazy excuse is calling people to act and then shrugging your shoulders when asked what they should do.
Re: Re: Re:3
With all due respect, the act of educating people on the problem is “acting”. People must understand what they’re opposing before they oppose it.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:4
Yes, I’m sure that the people reading Techdirt need a deep education on these things.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:5
And you weren’t educating, you were scolding. Is that normally an effective action?
Re: Re: Re:6
Pot, kettle, black.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:7
I didn’t claim to be educating, Pot.
Re: Re: Re:8
Nah you’re just an asshole bro.
Re: Re: Re:3
Ask for something more specific, then. “I wanna start a revolution” is too vague. “I want to help people in my area stay safe from ICE raids” is more specific—and as I said, you can always Google that sort of thing.
A call to action is a call for you to find some action that you can perform (and the resources you may need to perform it). Waiting for detailed and specific marching orders from complete strangers so you can resist tyranny or help people is weird as hell.
Re: Re: Re:
Being too dumb to properly use the internet is not an excuse for inaction but it is an example of the failings of the educational system.
Re: Re: Re:2
Not necessarily.
Sometimes the worst teachers do a better job of teaching than the worst students do of learning.
Teachers generally have to go through at least four years of education, have to get a license, continue professional development throughout their careers, and then have to have the personal skills to manage a classroom of randomly assigned children of unknown abilities and personalities.
Any man and woman can fuck, then nine months later create a child of unknown ability and personality, and for about 13 years outsource their offspring’s intellectual development to said teacher.
There’s a limit to what teachers and education are willing and able to do because they aren’t able to eradicate poverty or undo the effects of bad parenting or bad culture.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re:
And the consensus is simultaneously, “The entire country is on fire and no one is doing enough to stop it, and “The system will work just stop panicking and don’t do anything rash or the GOP will win.”
This is exactly the government you deserve too. Your only concern has only ever been how you can find the best source of smug moral superiority. So just shut up already and enjoy the ride.
Re: Re: Re:
The first bit is true. The second bit, not so much.
Democrats can take this time to show themselves as the leaders this country deserves by refusing to play nice with the GOP. That means obstructing everything Republicans do with the exact same tactics Republicans used when they were the minority party in Congress. It also means hammering Trump and the GOP with proper-ass messaging—not that weaksauce childish “Captain Chaos” bullshit, but in noting how everything Trump and his cronies are doing haven’t made things better for most Americans. (And in the case of hundreds-to-thousands of now-former federal workers, the Trump administration is arguably making things worse on purpose.) Everyone who is sitting back and going “well, we can wait until the midterms” is a coward who needs to either grow a spine or resign.
…says the anonymous coward who wants to feel morally superior to me.
My concerns about the Trump administration have nothing to do with my (lack of) moral superiority and everything to do with how Trump’s actions could destroy the economy and take the whole damn country with it. My concerns are about the lives being destroyed by the hatred of the GOP—the lives of immigrants (documented or not) who’ve lived here for years and become part of their communities, trans people who’ve been made into a scapegoat for problems they never caused, and federal workers who lost jobs because of Elon Musk.
Fuck you, make me. 🙃
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:2
…Which is why your response to someone’s question to what should be done about is, “You don’t already know so you can’t help. Just shut up then.”
And you wonder why you lost 2024.
So now suddenly you have an intimate knowledge of other people? Well since you magically gained that ability, why don’t you go back and tell Total what they should do to help solve the problems.
Which is why your “solutions” are to simultaneously cry that the world is ending, and call any call to action that hasn’t already proven ineffective to stop it wrong. AI could never simulate such an incredible idiot like you.
Enjoy whining impotently for the foreseeable future then. I’m sure you’ll win the next election for sure by insisting you should do something, but not really.
Re: Re: Re:3
Your deliberate misinterpretation of what I’ve been saying doesn’t and won’t change what I’ve been saying: Someone who wants to know what they can do to help other people these days should first explore their own limitations (physical, financial, etc.), then go look up resources for whatever course of action they want to take that they can do within those limits. If you want to, say, help trans people in your area and you have the time and energy for protests, community meetings, and other such actions, you can find plenty of resources online that’ll help you do exactly that.
I don’t think the world is ending. The American Experiment may be ending, and that would be a net harm to the world, but the world will keep spinning even if the U.S. ceases to exist as a nation.
The only call to action that I refuse to endorse is a call for violence. (And you’re not going to get that endorsement out of me any more than anyone else has over the past few months.) Other than that, all bets are off.
Re: Re: Re:3
I love that “you lost” bullshit. As if you won anything in this. You lost as much as anyone else. You’re just too stupid to realize it.
Re: Re: Re:3
He did, he told Total to go online to research the best solutions to his problems in meatspace. Just like my best solution to Trump is to contact my own political leaders and tell them to not rely on him (since I’m not American).
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re:
Mike Brock does not offer solutions because he is fundamentally incapable of offering them. Like most American journalists, his writing exists only for you to Engage With Content so you can feel miserable while arguing with similarly miserable people in the comments.
If Techdirt commenters actually believed the end of America was coming, they wouldn’t be commenting on Techdirt.
Re: Re:
You wrote that entire comment with a fully loaded diaper. Ironic that you’d spew shit while basting in it.
Re:
The dude wrote a piece titled “To Stop The Coup, We Must Be Clear About The Truth: Two Plus Two Equals Four“
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Wow, that sounds awful. You’re sending in dudes with guns to stop them right?
Re:
Fuck off herman
this all changed from WWI
Things changed as Corps and Gov. Pushes the common persons away. They did not tell anyone anything. realization of only 8 years of Peace in the USA since it inception.
There are wars in wars, covered over by other wars. But how does the Gov. pay for it? It has to be the corps. And gathering all you need and PAYING THEM BACK after.
200+ military installations around the world, over 1,000.000+ persons installed into those locations and More. materials at all those locations Must be maintained.
Where in all this history was the debate, and information of What we were doing? Arnt we responsible for OUR nation?
Along with that, Why arnt our representatives doing as we suggest? Welll,, they dont ask us do they?
For all the time our Gov. has been around, have we had any real access tot he contracts and Backroom paper work that has passed in the Congress? THAT DIDNT COST $1000’s per year to read about.
Re:
Hmm…
You were sleeping through the debate. It has been, and still is, going on all around you.
You’re here, reading pages like these. That’s a start. But perhaps you’ve been driving a forklift, or a keyboard, and not studying properly.
Yes, you are. You elect representatives, you inform your representatives. In some cases, you have buyer’s remorse when your representative turns out to have lied his ass off. But again, often they had a history in their office, and you ignored that history. “Surely he’ll be better this time!”
They don’t have to ask us. We tell them. We tell them every damn’ fool thing that comes into our heads. Much of it wrong. Much of it uninformed. Much of it sounding good when it comes out of your mouth but having hideous side effects you either never thought of or never cared about.
You tell a dog to sit, the person next to you says “come”, and you blame the dog for making a choice?
In this time of crisis, the one thing you must not do, is panic.
There are plenty-enough things going wrong already. Panicking is how you get mobs at congress. Panicking is how you get the “government” to start using live ammunition.
Panicking is how you spoil the plans that others have under way, that you don’t see being made, being put into effect, or don’t recognize as work against the current administration.
Panicking is how you overthrow the rule of law in order to prevent the overthrow of the rule of law.
Re:
Good advice.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re:
That is why these sensational “DOOOOOM!” articles every day are hurting way more than helping.
Everyone shut up and relax. The system will work. Anything to interrupt it will just help the GOP.
Re: Re:
… can’t tell if sarcasm, MAGAt or useful idiot.
Re: Re:
That’s… stupid.
Re: And
Its not a fair war when Money is Ammunition.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Hah!
“But what we’re witnessing now is the systematic dismantling of this entire architecture of peace” really? Architecture of peace? Really?! 😆😅😂🤣😭
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
There is no crisis...
… But democrats are working overtime to fabricate one.
Re:
And Republicans are working overtime to ensure it happens before anyone can stop them.
Re:
Son people here can see the stupid ass shit you are saying.
Re: If'
If; you are willing to open mouth, you should at least have some food in it.
POINT finger, but dont have proof or a Suggestion to Fix it?
SHAME.
We’re gonna need alternative means of communication to the general open internet/social media if we want to keep organizing things, in case the MAGA-congress kills off the whole thing in the name of mass-censorship before their term is over.
Re:
Flooding the zone with shit leads us into the same dystopian predicament as mass censorship.
We can worship at the altar of free speech all we want, but what happens when we have more speech than we know what to do with but can’t think our way out of problems, learn nothing from our mistakes, and preoccupy our minds with repetition of worn ideas rather than curiosity?
Re: Re:
Did you at all read my actual comment?
Re: Re: Re:
I was talking to the Anonymous Coward behind you.
History? We don't need no steenkin' history.
The head suggests that traces of history unfavorable to the new autocracy/oligarchy/idiocracy will be allowed to survive. Just look at the number of 404 error messages that now show up when one is looking for government data (gathered at taxpayer expense).
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
I’ve been starting to see my replies not appear, so I’ll just post this one under another nom and see.
For those folks advocating “homework”? You’d like my revolutionary education come from one of the tech giants (Google) with with a massively bad record on privacy? Shall I ask the KGB/CIA/NSA for advice on resistance as well?
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re:
Yeah, that’s what I thought.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re:
Yeah, Mike, so much about free speech.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:
So now we know who you are.
Re: Re: Re:
You have the right to speak your mind. You have no right to make anyone else host your speech. Free reach isn’t a thing, no matter how much you might wish it were.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:2
So now we know who you are, as well.
Re: Re: Re:3
If you’re implying that I’m someone who recognizes the difference between the right of free speech (“you can say practically whatever you want without government interference…”) and the imagined right of free reach (“…but nobody is obligated to either pay attention to or host your speech”), then you’re exactly right. Otherwise, whatever your implication might be, it doesn’t scare me one damn bit.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:4
Oh, sweet child, I didn’t say “First Amendment,” I said “free speech”. You — and Mike, apparently — seem unaware of the fact that free speech is not just defined by the Constitution. How entirely US centric of the both of you.
Re: Re: Re:5
I’m well aware of that. Now show me any definition of “free speech” that gives you the right to decide, over the wishes of this site’s owner, what (and whose) content this site will and won’t display. I’ll wait.
Re:
False dilemma. There are other search engines. There are other websites. There are other browsers. Pretending there’s only one source of information on the internet and all of the results from that one source will be bad is an absurd argument. Just more laziness. Hell, you can even search Google for “google alternatives” and find those other sources.
'The worst is the goal!' meets 'What's the worst that could happen?'
One portion of society is cheering on the destruction and suffering as they think it’ll only affect the Others they hate so much and haven’t realized just yet that to the ones ripping the county to shreds unless you’re obscenely rich and of the Right Sort(read: white male CIS hetero MAGAt) you are an Other.
Another portion is shrugging their shoulders and dismissing the ‘fearmongerers’ pointing out the threat, because hey, there’s checks and balances in place that will keep things from getting too far out of bounds, those are the rules and what sort of person would be so rude as to ignore the rules?
And then you’ve got the apparent minority, watching the other two cheer on or ignore the destruction respectively even as they can see the country burning to the ground around them and scramble to find a gorram water bucket to try to stop it or at least slow it down…
Re:
Obviously the “another portion” you mention is correct. Seeing as their solutions of calling on people not to panic lest they overreact somehow are the only opinions that aren’t censored.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
So it seems the only means of resistance according to our resident experts here is… Doing just what we’re doing now.
Then stop whining, obviously we’re winning.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Yep, that’s what I thought. Cowards.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
You suckers have literally almost FOUR MORE YEARS of this lol.
Re:
Wow, you used the word literally correctly.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re:
Between your kind’s laughing at your houses burning down in front of you and the concern trolls like Stephen pulling their best Two-Face impersonations by seamlessly going between sounding the alarm and then angrily berating anyone for listening to them, the Schadenfreude is going to be incredible.
The link there is to a Vanity Fair article behind a paywall.
What’s the exact quote of Vance regarding court orders?
Re:
https://letmegooglethat.com/?q=JD+Vance+quote+court+orders
Re: Re:
Search result: “There are no results for JD Vance quote court orders”
Care to try again?
Re: Re: Re:
That search criteria brings up 4 pages of results. Care to try again?
Re: Re: Re:2
Either you didn’t click on the link provided or you used a different search engine, meaning you didn’t click on the link provided. Nice of you to do AC’s work of proving you’re a liar for them, though.
Re: Re: Re:3
No, I literally just clicked it again and again I got four pages of results. Nice of you to not have a functioning internet connection or else not have a willingness to argue in good faith.
That link takes you here: https://google.gprivate.com/search.php?search?q=JD+Vance+quote+court+orders
Also, no one else is required to be the AC’s free tech support. If you don’t know how to search for the same criteria, then that’s a you problem.
Sleepwalking or wide-awake running away ...
This is beautiful writing. I like your “2+2=4” refrain. I’m not sure anything can be done. I’ve been a revolutionary since 1972, when I became draftable for Vietnam*, and obviously I haven’t moved the needle. 2 million readers on Quora. So what? This is starting to seem like 1934 Germany, when the ONLY smart move was to leave. It didn’t matter how brilliant, how charismatic, how politically skilled you were, there was no saving your beautiful Germany. It was toast. America is toast because after 4 generations of Cold War spending, our population is too ignorant to think clearly and to see the 2+2=4 realities that are beating them over the head.
The LAW of my sick country was that I had 2 choices: go to Vietnam and commit mass murder of peasants who were zero threat and 100% innocent, or go to prison (a weak little 18-year-old very bourgeois white boy) and live in terror every day.
Exactly what I have been saying!
I heard a statistic the other day, I think it was on Maddow, but might have been elsewhere. I cant’ quote it, and can’t be bothered to go find it, but it was basically that it took Hitler and the Nazi party about a month and a half (the quote was like 1 month, x days, x hours and 8 minutes) to dismantle Germany’s constitutional democracy. That’s the speed scale we’re working with here. Even if this current regime takes 2 or 3 times as long, “elect more Democrats” is NOT going to be the answer.
I have been brainstorming any way to avert this train wreck in progress, but I fear the first wheels have already jumped the tracks, and the cars will be in a mangles heap of scrap metal before anyone can do anything.
So who’s to blame, other than the orange moron in chief? More than anyone, I blame Mitch McConnell. There was ZERO reason not to hold a vote on the second impeachment, and yet he stood up there and was like “the courts will take care of it.” Merrick Garland bears some responsibility on that front. There should have been an army of prosecutors and investigators working on the Trump indictment on January 7th 2021, but they decided to stick with their standard procedure of catching the little fish first, in hopes of gathering more evidence against the big fish. That the courts allowed him to drag all his cases out for years was (and still is) a violation of the 6th amendment rights of the entire country. We (the people) were entitled to a speedy and public trial. I really, honestly feel like we will be living in a fascist country, where the poor (or non-wealthy) are made to struggle so much to survive that they don’t have time to rebel. The truly poor are already staring down the twin specters of starvation and disease with the proposed elimination of Medicaid and SNAP. And that’s not just the homeless or some unemployed ‘leeches,’ approximately 25% of every worker you see in a retail or fast food chain is on SNAP. Couple that with all the other bullshit that’s coming down from on high, and every American city willbe looking like the Detroit from Robocop before the 2028 election could happen, though I doubt “the king” will allow such an election to happen, unless he has it rigged like they do in other dictatorships. We’re fucked, the whole world is fucked, and as the article says, congress and the media are all just treating this as “just another day in politics.” The USA will only be a decent place to live if you make enough money to get into those ‘tax cut’ brackets above 400k per year. The rest of us making less will be squeezed for every dime just to survive, living paycheck to paycheck until an appliance, car, or medical problem upsets our delicately balanced finances and leave us homeless and/or DEAD.
Re: brilliant train analogy
Thank you for this, Duane. I have archived it forever.
You omit even a clue of what we should do re the blood on our hands...
Your article is so strong, and at the end you urge us to act, and yet you don’t provide a clue about how.
Even though I consider the AOC/Bernie tour too little too late, they might be the only game in town. They might be the only ones who can draw large enough crowds to make some kind of impact. The people in my town (pop. 160,000) who share my hardcore socialist politics and strong stance against the insane US provoked Ukraine proxy war, could be counted on a machinist’s left fingers. AOC and Bernie have mass appeal.
If it is a leader we need, they would have to be of the magnitude of a JFK or a MLK. Not some punk-ass like our Governor Newsom.