Another “fuck you” has been delivered to federal courts by the Trump administration. This time, the extended middle finger is embodied by (extremely recently now-former) US Attorney Bill Essayli.
Essayli has made headlines here before, mainly for yelling ineffectively at prosecutors who were unable to convert bullshit cases against anti-ICE protesters into federal indictments. Essayli is angry, the papers said. Trump, however, seems to like him. In fact, he seems to like him so much he didn’t even bother to get Essayli legally appointed.
Bill Essayli, Trump’s pick in April to temporarily lead the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California, should have departed the post by July 31 under a 120-day limit imposed by federal law, U.S. District Judge J. Michael Seabright concluded.
An unusual maneuver by Attorney General Pam Bondi to extend Essayli’s tenure into 2026 violated federal appointment laws, the Hawaii-based George W. Bush appointee ruled.
“Simply stated: Essayli unlawfully assumed the role of Acting United States Attorney for the Central District of California,” Seabright concluded. “Essayli may not perform the functions and duties of the United States Attorney … He is disqualified from serving in that role.”
OK, there’s a reason rules like this are in place. And Bill Essayli, along with Pam Bondi and the rest of the Trump administration, are demonstrating why rules like these are in place. These rules normally — NORMALLY — discourage purges and the installation of loyalists. This is especially important in entities like the Department of Justice which, like all federal agencies, is supposed to serve the public, rather than the vengeful whims of an aspiring autocrat.
When these get ignored, Bill Essayli happens. You get a Trump puppet engaging in vengeful prosecutions of Trump’s personal enemies, along with tons of bullshit prosecutions of people engaged in their First Amendment protected right to complain about the government.
Now, we’d normally expect someone to step down for the time being and cede power to another, more legally qualified person until everything gets back in line, legally speaking. But, of course, that isn’t the case here. Essayli has gone far beyond the expected “you can’t fire me, I refuse to be fired” response common to Trump administration officials. Instead, he’s telling the court that telling him he had no legally derived prosecution power has only made him a more powerful prosecutor.
“We’re actually quite relieved,” Essayli said in an interview. “The judge has made it clear that regardless of my title I’m cleared to keep running the office, I’m very happy with the outcome.”
Yeah, that’s not actually what the court said. And it still has the power to appoint someone to take Essayli’s place until someone actually confirmed by the Senate ascends to his office. But since this hasn’t happened yet, Essayli assumes it won’t happen for… the next three years, I guess.
And that’s part and parcel of this administration’s incessant shitbirdery. Whenever someone tells them they can’t do something, they just pretend no one has said anything. And if they can be bothered to pay attention to the words used by federal judges in rulings against them, they head to The Nazi Bar to rant about liberal activist judges and insist no law is capable of constraining the leader of the Law and Order party.
If there’s any justice in the world (and there’s hardly any of that), Essayli, Bondi, and everyone else associated with this stillbirth of an administration will become terminally unemployable. But for now, we’re just going to have to suffer through a bunch of people who refuse to cede power, no matter what any other branch of the government says.
Fox News has a problem: when you build your entire editorial model around feeding your audience’s biases, you stop asking whether the stories feeding those biases are actually true. Case in point: last week, they published—and then quietly rewrote—a story about SNAP recipients threatening to “ransack stores,” based entirely on AI-generated videos that never happened.
Rather than running a correction or retraction, they simply rewrote the article at the same URL, with the same timestamp, transforming a story about “SNAP beneficiaries threatening to ransack stores” into a story about “AI-generated videos going viral” even though the article doesn’t make any sense. The deception is in the architecture: casual readers following the original link would have no idea the entire premise had been fabricated.
The timing of this matters. With the still ongoing battle over the Trump administration breaking the law to deny SNAP benefits to deserving recipients, the loyal state media folks at Fox News needed some sort of blatantly bullshit, racist story to make it sound like SNAP recipients were ungrateful.
After all, Trump-loyal media has been gleefully platforming Republicans lying about who gets SNAP benefits and what they do with it for a while. And Fox News needs to keep up.
And Fox News knows better than most that the easiest way to fan the flames of a culture war is to engage in a form of “nut picking.” Going searching, often on social media, for an isolated random person saying something crazy, and then presenting them as if they’re mainstream or common, entirely to make biased bigots feel that the people they hate really are as bad as they want to believe.
But the AI element adds something new here. Why go hunting through X or TikTok to find some rando wack job to show off as “Exhibit A” when someone can just make an AI-generated video faking someone even crazier than anyone actually online?
On Friday, “production assistant” Alba Cuebas-Fantauzzi at Fox News Digital, who seems to specialize in publishing culture war nonsense, took things to another level, publishing an article claiming that “SNAP beneficiaries threaten to ransack stores over government shutdown.”
Except, as would be obvious to anyone who did even the most basic reporting, the video was entirely AI generated. The women did not exist. Their complaints did not exist. It was digital fiction presented as fact.
Fox News fell for it completely. And when called out, rather than acknowledge the error with a proper correction, they simply rewrote the article at the same URL, keeping the same timestamp, but now pretending it was a story that AI videos of fake SNAP beneficiaries had “gone viral.”
Why did they go viral, Fox News?
The fucking gall.
The new version transforms the story into one about how AI-generated videos “have gone viral”—as if that was what they’d been reporting on all along. They insert phrases like “which appears to be generated by AI” into the text and massively shorten the piece, cutting out the quotes from “conservative commentators” who had also fallen for the fakes. But they keep the original timestamp, creating the impression that this is what they’d published from the start.
I mean, here’s the original opening:
And then the revised one with the inserted “apparently generated by AIs” added in:
The edited version is incoherent. The text still refers to “the same woman” making complaints—but there is no woman. She never existed. The entire premise evaporated, but they kept enough of the original scaffolding that sentences now reference people who don’t exist and events that never happened.
Fox News eventually added this “editor’s note” to the bottom:
Editor’s note: This article previously reported on some videos that appear to have been generated by AI without noting that. This has been corrected.
This “editor’s note” fundamentally misrepresents what happened. The article didn’t fail to “note” that videos were AI-generated. The article existed because Fox News believed the videos were real. The entire story was predicated on the false premise that actual SNAP recipients were making actual threats. When that premise collapsed, so did any justification for the story existing at all.
But here’s what makes this worse than a simple mistake: even if these had been real people, this would still be garbage journalism. Taking random social media posts and framing them as representative of an entire group — in this case, SNAP recipients — is a tactic that’s been used to demonize marginalized communities for years. Find the most outrageous-sounding person you can, amplify their voice, and present them as typical of everyone who shares their identity or circumstances. It’s nut-picking dressed up as trend reporting, and news organizations know better.
Fox News absolutely knows better. But when your business model depends on feeding your audience a steady diet of confirmation bias—particularly when the administration you’ve backed is facing criticism for illegally cutting benefits—the incentive structure points away from verification and toward amplification of anything that fits the narrative.
The real story here is that Fox News’ entire editorial model is designed to be fooled by exactly this kind of content. When you build a system optimized for finding stories that confirm your audience’s biases about marginalized groups, you create an infrastructure perfectly suited to amplify fabricated rage bait.
And when you get caught? Just memory-hole it with a stealth edit and move on to the next outrage. No real correction, no accountability, just a quiet rewrite that most readers will never notice.
It’s the institutional rot made visible: a news organization so committed to feeding confirmation bias that it can’t distinguish between real outrage and AI-generated fiction—and when the fiction is exposed, would rather gaslight its readers than admit the error, or to learn anything from it.
The Learn to Code with React Bundle has 9 courses to help you learn more about React, Redux, and JavaScript. Used by the likes of Instagram, Facebook, Netflix, and Imgur, React is an efficient and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces. Meanwhile, Redux is a predictable state container that helps you manage the data your pages display. Together, these two tools play a key part in building professional, well-functioning apps; and you’ll explore mastering them both in this training. It’s on sale for $25.
Note: The Techdirt Deals Store is powered and curated by StackCommerce. A portion of all sales from Techdirt Deals helps support Techdirt. The products featured do not reflect endorsements by our editorial team.
CBP commander Gregory Bovino has been given a temporary free pass by the Seventh Circuit Appeals Court to continue violating a court order he’s been violating since the lower court first issued it. So, that’s how things continue to go in terms of checks and balances here in the United States. You know, poorly.
Not that we should have expected anything else, now that it’s clear that if things go far enough, the Supreme Court will step in to give Trump whatever he wants and give the country absolutely zero explanation for its actions.
Gregory Bovino is one of those “old school” guys, which means he’s presumably a hot-headed racist who thinks law enforcement should behave more like vigilantes than public servants. That’s why he decided to engage in his own wide-scale anti-migrant effort before Trump was even sworn back into office — an action that had not been cleared by the still-in-office Biden administration.
Trump liked this preemptive bigotry so much he’s given Bovino a leading role in the federal government’s invasion of Chicago. Things are going the way you’d expect, with powerful bigots punching down to inflict misery on anyone who doesn’t look white/MAGA enough to be allowed to remain in the United States.
Bovino, at least, leads from the front. And that’s getting him in trouble. A federal court recently handed down an order restricting the use of crowd control munitions by CBP, ICE, etc. after lots of credible reports surfaced showing federal officers engaging in unprovoked acts of violence, often in direct violation of their own training and use-of-force guidelines.
And it was Bovino who first demonstrated he’s aligned fully with the Trump administration — at least in terms of believing courts don’t actually have any authority over him. He not only stated he only served one person (Donald Trump), but insulted the judge who had issued the order right after he was caught on tape personally violating the court order.
That act of deliberate defiance understandably irritated Judge Sara Ellis. She issued an order demanding Bovino show up in court each day to give her a rundown on use-of-force incidents. It was a reasonable request, given the circumstances. But we’re dealing with an unreasonable person who has the good fortune to be working for an equally unreasonable administration.
As soon as this order was issued, the DOJ and DHS immediately asked for it to be reversed. It hasn’t gotten that yet, but it has obtained a stay from the Seventh Circuit Appeals Court, which means Bovino won’t have to show up in court until there’s a final ruling on this order.
The unsigned opinion from the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals granted the request from lawyers from the Trump administration to block U.S. District Court Judge Sara Ellis’ order that Bovino appear in her courtroom every weekday at 6 p.m. to recap the events of the day and inform her of any use of force.
Ellis’ order “infringes on the separation of powers,” the appeals court ruled.
Ellis’ order “puts the court in the position of an inquisitor rather than that of a neutral adjudicator,” according to the ruling.
It also sets up the court “as a supervisor of Chief Bovino’s activities, intruding into personnel management decisions of the executive branch.”
That this “opinion” is unsigned really signifies nothing. It isn’t actually an opinion. It’s just a stay, which means the Seventh doesn’t actually have to explain its actions in any detail.
A partial list of what Bovino does not have to tell a federal judge happened today:*An agent pushed a City Council member in Albany Park*Agents deployed pepper spray in Albany Park & Evanston*Agents were involved in a car crash in Evanston*An agent pointed a gun at a woman in Evanston
A partial list of what Bovino does not have to tell a federal judge happened today:
*An agent pushed a City Council member in Albany Park *Agents deployed pepper spray in Albany Park & Evanston *Agents were involved in a car crash in Evanston *An agent pointed a gun at a woman in Evanston
There it is. The gloves will stay off, assuming Bovino even considered figuratively putting them on. The legality will remain “unsettled,” which in this legal climate just tends to mean the nation’s higher courts haven’t figured out exactly how they’re going to let this administration keep getting away with it. And Bovino will remain the lawless asshole he’s always been, to the detriment of Chicago and the nation beyond.
The Trump administration is promising to block billions in already-awarded infrastructure bill broadband grants to any states that enforce net neutrality or try to impose any sort of meaningful oversight on the country’s unpopular, predatory broadband monopolies.
That was the promise of Commerce Department official Arielle Roth, a former Ted Cruz staffer now in charge of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA). Roth made the comments about the Broadband, Equity, Access, and Deployment grants (BEAD) at a recent speech at the Hudson Institute, a far right wing think tank:
“Specifically, any state receiving BEAD funds must exempt BEAD providers throughout their state footprint from broadband-specific economic regulations, such as price regulation and net neutrality.”
The infrastructure bill set aside $42.5 billion in BEAD broadband grants to be doled out and managed by individual states. It took several years to get this money rolling out, in part, because state and federal governments had to remap the entirety of broadband access in the United States in a bid to avoid repeating past subsidy scandals and make sure the money was spent semi-wisely.
This introduced all manner of new delays to the program, ironically after Republicans (with Ezra Klein’s help) spent much of last election season whiningvery loudly about the fact this BEAD program was taking too long to deliver broadband.
Again, this money had already been awarded after years of expensive planning. States have already been forced to spend even more money to revamp plans to make Trump officials happy. Yet the Trump administration keeps fiddling with the rules and weakening core definitions (for stuff like “broadband” and “unserved,”) ensuring that fewer and fewer locations qualify for assistance and states are left constantly on their heels trying to please our mad king and his army of weird zealots.
Now, the Trump administration is also trying to leverage the funding to bully states away from engaging in even basic oversight of companies like Comcast, AT&T, Charter, or Verizon.
If you recall, the Trump administration destroyed net neutrality (some modest rules trying to keep telecom monopolies from abusing their market power to harm competitors and consumers). And they’re destroying whatever was left of FCC oversight of telecom monopolies. With federal oversight gutted, now they’re taking aim at the handful of states that have tried to fill the consumer protection void.
The original Trump net neutrality repeal also tried to ban states from imposing net neutrality rules. But even our broken-ass courts repeatedly found that to be patently illegal (the federal government can’t abdicate its responsibility on consumer protection, then tell states what to do). You know, the very sort of “state rights” Republicans and Libertarian “free market” think tankers used to pretend to support.
But while a handful of states do have net neutrality rules, nobody has bothered to enforce them. In part because states — already facing a cavalcade of legal battles in the Trump era — aren’t keen to pick yet another major fight with big corporations they might lose. And they’re even less likely to do so now, with billions in potential infrastructure funding on the line.
But the key point I’ve always made is that this goes well beyond net neutrality. ISPs don’t want to just kill “net neutrality,” they want zero oversight whatsoever. So they can rip off U.S. consumers with impunity and face absolutely zero meaningful federal or state repercussion. And it’s a fight the telecom lobby is most certainly winning. Trump 2.0 is delivering the killing blow.
The United States is, it cannot be overstated, literally too corrupt to do the absolute bare minimum on corporate oversight, consumer protection, antitrust reform, or health market protection. This fact gets buried by a lot of bluster and bullshit about how fabulously innovative we are.
And because there’s so much other terrible shit going on, and because the press and public generally find infrastructure boring, this sort of rank corruption and regulatory capture is allowed to fly under the radar. But the long term impact, like most Trump policies, will be decidedly ugly.
Nintendo and the Pokémon Company’s lawsuit in Japan against PocketPair, makers of the hit game Palworld, is still ongoing. As we’ve reported previously, this isn’t the copyright or trademark lawsuit that everyone expected when Palworld was first released. Instead, probably knowing that they couldn’t get around the idea/expression dichotomy in copyright, at least, Nintendo filed a patent suit instead. The patents referenced covered several different gameplay mechanics for which there is plenty of prior art in video gaming, such as capturing creatures in a thrown object and transitioning from riding creatures or items in an open world setting. As this was all going on, PocketPair began both patching out some of those gameplay mechanics from Palworld, while also trying to invalidate the patents powering the lawsuit. And, most recently, PocketPair pointed to even more examples of prior art in other games and game mods for the very mechanics Nintendo had managed to patent.
But one key aspect in all of this is that several of the patents featured in this lawsuit are still in the application stage. And now one of those patents, which notably sits in between two other mechanic patents of Nintendo’s, has been rejected as unoriginal.
Nintendo’s ongoing legal campaign against Palworld developer Pocketpair has hit another roadblock. A key patent in Nintendo’s “monster capture” family, one that sits right between two patents, currently being asserted in the Tokyo District Court, has been rejected by the Japan Patent Office (JPO).
The decision cites a lack of inventive step, pointing directly to older games such as ARK, Monster Hunter 4, Craftopia, Kantai Collection, and Pokémon GO itself as examples of prior art.
I cannot read Japanese script, but here is a visual representation of how interrelated these patents are. The one in the red box was the applied for patent that was rejected. The two on either side of the equation are the already granted patents that are being wielded in court against PocketPair.
The newly rejected 2024-031879 application descends from Nintendo’s 2023 filing (JP7505852), which has already been granted and is one of the patents cited in Nintendo’s lawsuit against Pocketpair. Meanwhile, patent 2024-123560 (JP7545191) branches off, another granted patent also being used in court.
That means this isn’t some irrelevant side filing; it’s literally sandwiched between two patents central to the litigation. If the JPO finds that one member of the patent family lacks originality, it raises questions about the others.
As GamesFray notes, this “sibling-parent” structure makes the 2024-031879 rejection potentially significant. The same reasoning (lack of inventive step, obviousness based on prior art) could easily apply to the related patents Nintendo is wielding in court.
As far as the lawsuit is concerned, this could be a big freaking deal. As Windows Central notes, the same logic the JPO used to reject this specific patent can easily be applied to the two granted patents central to the suit. Combine all of that with the prior art used to reject this patent and you have a solid defense in court against patent infringement and, I would say likely, the invalidation of Nintendo’s existing patents.
In this case, the rejection undermines Nintendo’s claim that its patents protect truly original gameplay ideas. When Japan’s own patent authority says otherwise, that argument loses credibility fast.
The ruling also puts pressure on Nintendo’s third patent-in-suit, which, according to previous reports, has already been modified mid-litigation. A sign that Nintendo is getting desperate.
We’ll see if Nintendo attempts to amend these patents or appeal JPO’s decision. I imagine it will, given how desperate it has behaved at pretty much every turn in this lawsuit.
But my larger question for Nintendo is a simple one: is this really worth it? Palworld still exists and I haven’t seen any evidence that the Pokémon franchise is suddenly suffering a loss of revenue or worth. So other than the digging in of heels and refusing to back down, what are we accomplishing here?
Why do some people endorse claims that can easily be disproved? It’s one thing to believe false information, but another to actively stick with something that’s obviously wrong.
We aresocial psychologists who study political psychology and how people reason about reality. During the pandemic, we surveyed 5,535 people across eight countries to investigate why people believed COVID-19 misinformation, like false claims that 5G networks cause the virus.
The strongest predictor of whether someone believed in COVID-19-related misinformation and risks related to the vaccine was whether they viewed COVID-19 prevention efforts in terms of symbolic strength and weakness. In other words, this group focused on whether an action would make them appear to fend off or “give in” to untoward influence.
This factor outweighed how people felt about COVID-19 in general, their thinking style and even their political beliefs.
Our survey measured it on a scale of how much people agreed with sentences including “Following coronavirus prevention guidelines means you have backed down” and “Continuous coronavirus coverage in the media is a sign we are losing.” Our interpretation is that people who responded positively to these statements would feel they “win” by endorsing misinformation – doing so can show “the enemy” that it will not gain any ground over people’s views.
When meaning is symbolic, not factual
Rather than consider issues in light of actual facts, we suggest people with this mindset prioritize being independent from outside influence. It means you can justify espousing pretty much anything – the easier a statement is to disprove, the more of a power move it is to say it, as it symbolizes how far you’re willing to go.
When people think symbolically this way, the literal issue – here, fighting COVID-19 – is secondary to a psychological war over people’s minds. In the minds of those who think they’re engaged in them, psychological wars are waged over opinions and attitudes, and are won via control of belief and messaging. The U.S. government at various times has used the concept of psychological war to try to limit the influence of foreign powers, pushing people to think that literal battles are less important than psychological independence.
By that same token, vaccination, masking or other COVID-19 prevention efforts could be seen as a symbolic risk that could “weaken” one psychologically even if they provide literal physical benefits. If this seems like an extreme stance, it is – the majority of participants in our studies did not hold this mindset. But those who did were especially likely to also believe in misinformation.
In an additional study we ran that focused on attitudes around cryptocurrency, we measured whether people saw crypto investment in terms of signaling independence from traditional finance. These participants, who, like those in our COVID-19 study, prioritized a symbolic show of strength, were more likely to believe in other kinds of misinformation and conspiracies, too, such as that the government is concealing evidence of alien contact.
In all of our studies, this mindset was also strongly associated with authoritarian attitudes, including beliefs that some groups should dominate others and support for autocratic government. These links help explain why strongman leaders often use misinformation symbolically to impress and control a population.
Why people endorse misinformation
Our findings highlight the limits of countering misinformation directly, because for some people, literal truth is not the point.
For example, President Donald Trump incorrectly claimed in August 2025 that crime in Washington D.C. was at an all-time high, generating countlessfact-checks of his premise and think pieces about his dissociation from reality.
But we believe that to someone with a symbolic mindset, debunkers merely demonstrate that they’re the ones reacting, and are therefore weak. The correct information is easily available, but is irrelevant to someone who prioritizes a symbolic show of strength. What matters is signaling one isn’t listening and won’t be swayed.
In fact, for symbolic thinkers, nearly any statement should be justifiable. The more outlandish or easily disproved something is, the more powerful one might seem when standing by it. Being an edgelord – a contrarian online provocateur – or outright lying can, in their own odd way, appear “authentic.”
Some people may also view their favorite dissembler’s claims as provocative trolling, but, given the link between this mindset and authoritarianism, they want those far-fetched claims acted on anyway. The deployment of National Guard troops to Washington, for example, can be the desired end goal, even if the offered justification is a transparent farce.
Is this really 5-D chess?
It is possible that symbolic, but not exactly true, beliefs have some downstream benefit, such as serving as negotiation tactics, loyalty tests, or a fake-it-till-you-make-it long game that somehow, eventually, becomes a reality. Political theorist Murray Edelman, known for his work on political symbolism, noted that politicians often prefer scoring symbolic points over delivering results – it’s easier. Leaders can offer symbolism when they have little tangible to provide.
We know there’s a concerted effort to punish anyone who dares to show anything but complete, unqualified reverence for Charlie Kirk’s corpse. The man who made millions by denigrating anyone who wasn’t as white, straight, and “Christian” as he was is apparently above reproach now that he’s been murdered.
That would be stupid enough on its own. But government officials — ranging from local level officials to the Trump administration itself — have piled on, turning Charlie Kirk into a martyr and using their power to silence his critics.
Tennessee resident Larry Bushart Jr. personally found out how far certain Charlie Kirk fans are willing to go to punish people who aren’t fans of Charlie Kirk. Here’s how that went for him once the local sheriff got involved.
Bushart’s case raised a firestorm of controversy after he was arrested, jailed, and slapped with a $2 million bail for a social media post. His supposed crime: making a threat of mass violence against a school in a neighboring county. In reality, all he had done was repost a meme. On Saturday, September 20, he had visited a community page, “What’s Happening in Perry County, TN,” and trolled a thread about an upcoming vigil honoring Charlie Kirk.
Bushart’s crime? Directly quoting Donald Trump on this Facebook page.
One of his posts was a photo of President Donald Trump, along with the quote “We have to get over it,” drawing from his response to a school shooting in Perry, Iowa, in 2024.
That’s all it took for the local sheriff to get busy abusing his power. After all, Bushart had insulted one of his personal heroes.
The post caught the attention of Perry County Sheriff Nick Weems, who had publicly mourned Kirk and shared information about the vigil.
Weems abused a terrible Tennessee law that was written to curb school shootings but has more often been used to punish people for engaging in what should be protected speech. Law enforcement officers love to play ignorant when they’re confronted about apparently illegal arrests or searches. But Weems definitely knew this law could be used to toss a person he disagreed with in jail.
Claiming the post had resulted in “mass hysteria” in the area due to its reference to Perry High School (the one in Iowa, although there’s nothing in the meme specifying its geographic location), Sheriff Weems justified the arrest and the month Bushart spent in jail by, well, lying.
In his interview with NewsChannel 5, Sheriff Weems insisted all of this could have been avoided if Bushart had just deleted the meme that some people in Perry County found objectionable.
“Whenever we sent Lexington Police Department out to speak to him and he refused to do that, I mean, what kind of person does that?” Weems asked. “What kind of person just says he don’t care?”
He also referenced the public reaction to Bushart’s post, which the sheriff claims resulted in people thinking the post was about a shooting in the area. Those who actually viewed the post and the page have pointed out that no one commented on the meme with anything that resembled concern Bushart might be referencing the local high school.
Lexington police told The Intercept that Weems had lied when he told local news outlets that the forces had “coordinated” to offer Bushart a chance to delete the post prior to his arrest. Confronted with the bodycam footage, Weems denied lying, claiming that his investigator’s report must have been inaccurate, NewsChannel 5 reported.
Weems later admitted to NewsChannel 5 that “investigators knew that the meme was not about Perry County High School” and sought Bushart’s arrest anyway, supposedly hoping to quell “the fears of people in the community who misinterpreted it.” That’s as close as Weems comes to seemingly admitting that his intention was to censor the post.
You know you’ve fucked up when even those on the same side of the “thin blue line” are willing to call you a liar in public. Sheriff Weems, however, appears to have learned nothing from this experience. Every subsequent comment is just more doubling down on an already-disproved narrative.
And public records obtained from other sources make it clear the Sheriff’s claims of “mass hysteria” were just as free of facts — something made up to justify an apparently personal vendetta against a local man (and former police officer) who offended the sheriff himself with his social media posts.
Although the Perry County Schools District did not respond to messages from The Intercept, attorneys with the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression filed a series of open records requests with the school district asking for any communications to or from staff pertaining to the case — including terms like “shooting,” “threat,” and “meme.” In response, the director of schools wrote that there were no records related to Bushart’s case. “The Perry County Sheriff’s Department handled this situation,” he wrote.
It’s one thing when one of your neighbors thinks you’re kind of a prick. It’s quite another when that person happens to be the local sheriff. This bogus arrest — coupled with a ridiculous $2 million bail — cost Bushart 40 days of his life. That meant he not only missed the birth of his grandchild, but also lost his post-retirement job.
All that’s guaranteed now is that Sheriff Weems is getting sued. No doubt he’ll claim the state law can be read expansively enough to cover his actions and all the lies he told to defend them. And with a nation full of Charlie Kirk acolytes looking to take their anger out on anyone who doesn’t treat him like a minor deity, there will be more of this in the future.
60 Minutes is under new management and things are getting stupid faster than you might expect. Last night’s episode featured President Trump, which is currently being described as “nuts.” There are all sorts of crazy moments to call out, but let’s start with the recursively meta nonsense.
60 Minutes edited out a segment where Donald Trump tells them to edit out a segment in which he brags about getting CBS to pay him because of them editing out part of an answer by Kamala Harris, and he notes that CBS clearly did the wrong thing in editing Harris in the same fucking sentence he tells them to edit out what he’s saying.
It is so fucking stupid.
As you’ll no doubt recall, last year, Trump sued CBS over the show. Right before last year’s election, 60 Minutes had interviewed Kamala Harris. As every such news show does, it had edited the interview down to make it fit into the TV time slot. MAGA culture warriors, desperate for anything to culture war about, started screaming that 60 Minutes had edited Harris to sound more coherent. This was nonsense.
What had happened was that in one question, Harris had given a long answer. CBS broadcast part of the answer on 60 Minutes. But it had broadcast a different part of that answer during the CBS Sunday morning show, Face the Nation. This… happens all the time. The full answer was too long. They edited it down to a shorter bit. The two different broadcasts chose different parts. That’s basic, fundamental, editorial discretion.
Given how often Trump is edited to make him sound more coherent, he should appreciate this. But Trump will never, ever care about how much leeway he is given and will always seek to gain whatever advantage he can. So he sued, claiming it was “election interference,” which it wasn’t. And even if it was (it wasn’t) he still won the election.
But Trump’s censor in chief Brendan Carr made it clear that the only way he’d approve Paramount’s (owner of CBS) sale to Skydance was if they first bribed Trump by agreeing to settle this frivolous case. So they paid a $16 million bribe just to get the case settled, while agreeing to install a Trump lackey as an internal censor at the network.
Trump’s full interview was 73 minutes long, but 60 Minutes only aired 28 minutes of it. They then did release the longer interview online along with a transcript, which caused people to look at what was edited. And that included this segment:
TRUMP: And actually 60 Minutes paid me a lotta money. And you don’t have to put this on, because I don’t wanna embarrass you, and I’m sure you’re not– you have a great– I think you have a great, new leader, frankly, who’s the young woman that’s leading your whole enterprise is a great– from what I know.
I don’t know her, but I hear she’s a great person. But 60 Minutes was forced to pay me– a lot of money because they took her answer out that was so bad, it was election-changing, two nights before the election. And they put a new answer in. And they paid me a lot of money for that. You can’t have fake news. You’ve gotta have legit news. And I think that it’s happening. I see–
NORAH O’DONNELL: Mr. President–
TRUMP: –I see good things happening in the news. I really do. And I think one of the best things to happen is this show and new ownership, CBS and new ownership. I think it’s the greatest thing that’s happened in a long time to a free and open and good press.
Again, I feel the need to repeat this because it is so incredibly stupid. Literally in the same sentence where he says CBS had to pay him “a lotta money” because it edited a 60 Minutes interview, he tells them to edit the interview not to air that section. Then he claims “you can’t have fake news.” Even though what he’s claiming is literally fake news. They didn’t pay him because they changed the answer. They paid him to get their merger done. Everyone knows it.
And, yes, I’m sure some people will try to defend this, but come on. There’s no defense. The President views everything in simple terms: “if it helps me, it’s good, if it doesn’t, it should be illegal.” It’s a narcissistic simpleton’s understanding of the world. And he’s in charge. It’s fucking crazy.
Speaking of fucking crazy, there were so many other crazy bits in the interview, but let’s just call out two. After all, the request to edit the section of the interview, while hypocritical, is nothing compared to the blatant corruption he admits to, or his desire to unleash the American war machine on American people.
Let’s start with this: just last week, MAGA loyalist Rep. James Comer released what may be the least self-aware report ever, screaming about how White House aides covered up Joe Biden’s mental and physical decline and because of that he didn’t know who he was pardoning, meaning those pardons should be null and void.
This comes the same week that people are raising serious questions about White House aides covering up the true nature of Trump’s physical and mental decline. And, now he’s admitting he has no idea who he’s pardoning—the very thing the Comer report claims means the pardons are void.
Two weeks ago, Trump (or whoever within the White House) pardoned CZ, the founder of Binance, who had pleaded guilty to money laundering. Though, when asked about it that day, Trump appeared to have no idea who CZ was, even though he had also (just coincidentally) given billions to the Trump family’s cryptocurrency business.
And even though he’d flubbed that question when he was asked about it right after the pardon was announced, when 60 Minutes asked him about it, he doubled down—seemingly proud of his ignorance. Which is bold, considering his administration’s entire argument against Biden’s pardons rests on the claim that Biden didn’t know who he was pardoning:
O'DONNELL: Why did you pardon Changpeng Zhao?TRUMP: Are you ready? I don't know who he isO'DONNELL: His crypto exchange Binance helped facilitate a $2b purchase of World Liberty Financial's stablecoin. And they you pardoned him.TRUMP: Here's the thing — I know nothing about it
From the full (unedited) transcript, which is way worse than that short clip above:
NORAH O’DONNELL: This is a question about pardons. The Trump family is now perhaps more associated with cryptocurrency than real estate. You and your son– your sons, Don Jr. and Eric, have formed World Liberty Financial with the Witkoff family.
PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Right.
NORAH O’DONNELL: Helping to make your family millions of dollars. It’s in that context that I do wanna ask you about crypto’s richest man, a billionaire known as C.Z. He pled guilty in 2023 to violating anti-money laundering laws.
PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Right.
NORAH O’DONNELL: Looked at this, the government at the time said that C.Z. had caused “significant harm to U.S. national security”, essentially by allowing terrorist groups like Hamas to move millions of dollars around. Why did you pardon him?
PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Okay, are you ready?I don’t know who he is.
Trump’s own administration is claiming Biden’s pardons are invalid because he didn’t know who he was pardoning. And Trump just proudly announced, on camera, that he has no idea who CZ is.
Then he admits that his sons basically told him to do this for their crypto business:
My sons are involved in crypto much more than I– me. I– I know very little about it, other than one thing. It’s a huge industry. And if we’re not gonna be the head of it, China, Japan, or someplace else is. So I am behind it 100%. This man was, in my opinion, from what I was told, this is, you know, a four-month sentence.
But this man was treated really badly by the Biden administration. And he was given a jail term. He’s highly respected. He’s a very successful guy. They sent him to jail and they really set him up. That’s my opinion. I was told about it.
By who? Who told you about it? A good reporter would have stepped in and asked that question, but this is the new Bari Weiss 60 Minutes where you won’t see follow-ups like that. Or if you did, they’d be edited out.
He continues:
I was told that he was a victim, just like I was and just like many other people, of a vicious, horrible group of people in the Biden administration.
Again, “who told you this?” is the next question any reporter should be asking. O’Donnell did not. Though she at least did point out that he pleaded guilty to allowing terrorist groups to engage in money laundering, which seems notable for a guy who keeps talking about fighting crime.
NORAH O’DONNELL: The government had accused him of “significant harm to U.S. national security”–
PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: That’s the Biden government.
NORAH O’DONNELL: Okay. Allowing U.S. terrorist groups to, you know, essentially move millions of dollars around. He pled guilty to anti-money laundering laws. That was in 2023. Then in 2025 his crypto exchange, Binance, helped facilitate a $2 billion purchase of World Liberty Financial’s stablecoin. And then you pardoned C.Z. How do you address the appearance of pay for play?
PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Well, here’s the thing,I know nothing about it because I’m too busydoing the other–
Um. Isn’t that exactly why your administration is claiming Biden’s pardons don’t count?
NORAH O’DONNELL: But he got a pardon–
PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: I can only tell you that–
NORAH O’DONNELL: He got a pardon–
PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Norah, I can only tell you this.My sons are into it. I’m glad they are, because it’s probably a great industry, crypto. I think it’s good. You know, they’re running a business, they’re not in government. And they’re good– my one son is a number one bestseller now.
So here Trump admits (1) he doesn’t know who CZ is, then (2) admits that basically his sons are the ones into cryptocurrency and “not in government,” and effectively admits that (3) he pardoned CZ on the advice of his sons, who directly profit from the pardon through their cryptocurrency business, while claiming ignorance of the entire arrangement.
This isn’t just yet another example of the most corrupt pay-for-play administration in the history of the United States but one that literally does everything it falsely accuses past administrations of doing, but way worse. Just as they’re claiming that Biden’s pardons weren’t valid, Trump is effectively admitting he has no idea who he’s pardoning, but he’s doing it to help his corrupt sons.
And I won’t even get into the frenzy MAGA continues to go through about Hunter Biden supposedly enriching himself by using his father’s name. Remember all those stories claiming payoffs to the “Biden family”? Funny how those folks are all silent about the Trump family (1) actually doing what they falsely accused Biden of doing and (2) doing it way, way, way worse.
Speaking of crime, another part of the interview involves the President falsely claiming that immigration enforcement is targeting criminals (leaving aside that he keeps pardoning criminals).
When O’Donnell asks about CBP’s tactics in Chicago—tear-gassing residential neighborhoods, smashing car windows—Trump’s response is to call for more violence:
O'DONNELL: Americans have been watching videos of ICE tackling a young mother, tear gas being used in a Chicago residential neighborhood, and the smashing of car windows. Have some of these raids gone too far?TRUMP: No. I think they haven't gone far enough.
NORAH O’DONNELL: More recently, Americans have been watching videos of ICE tackling a young mother, tear gas being used in a Chicago residential neighborhood, and the smashing of car windows. Have some of these raids gone too far?
PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: No. I think they haven’t gone far enough because we’ve been held back by the– by the judges, by the liberal judges that were put in by Biden and by Obama. We’ve been held–
NORAH O’DONNELL: You’re okay with those tactics?
PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Yeah, because you have to get the people out. You know, you have to look at the people. Many of them are murderers. Many of them are people that were thrown outta their countries because they were, you know, criminals. Many of them are people from jails and prisons. Many of them are people from frankly mental institutions. I feel badly about that, but they’re released from insane asylums. You know why? Because they’re killers.
Note the question: she’s asking him about ICE (actually CBP) tear gassing residential neighborhoods and smashing car windows. And he says “they haven’t gone far enough.” He literally thinks he should be able to have the military attack Americans.
And he’s completely full of shit about targeting “criminals and murderers.” The vast, vast majority of them are not. Over 90% of those being grabbed have never been convicted of a violent crime. We already know that Trump’s advisor Stephen Miller has told immigration officials to just grab anyone they can and to ignore any efforts to target actual criminals (because Miller knows there just aren’t that many in reality—it was all a myth they fed Fox News to get Trump elected).
But Trump is so disconnected from reality he doesn’t know that.
And speaking of disconnected from reality: he still thinks migrants “seeking asylum” means they’re literally from mental institutions. He’s been making this claim for years. No one has corrected him. No reporter has asked him to clarify. The President of the United States genuinely appears to believe that foreign governments are emptying psych wards and shipping patients to America because they’re “seeking asylum.”
So let’s recap: in a single interview, the President (1) suggests CBS edit out his complaints about CBS editing while simultaneously claiming CBS’s past editing was corrupt enough to sue over, (2) admits he pardoned someone he’s never met on the advice of unnamed people who are most likely his sons who profit directly from that pardon—the exact scenario his own party claims invalidates Biden’s pardons, and (3) endorses escalating violence against American citizens in residential neighborhoods while lying about who’s being targeted and seemingly unable to comprehend who the violence is actually being used against.
We have a President so catastrophically disconnected from reality that he’ll pardon anyone his sons tell him to, endorse any level of violence his advisors suggest, and contradict himself in the same sentence without noticing. The people around him—his kids, his advisors, his handlers—do the things they’ve spent years accusing others of doing (except way worse), and Trump happily goes along with it because he either doesn’t understand or doesn’t care. They get away with it, and they do it again, more brazenly.
The media that’s supposed to be holding him accountable has instead hired a Trump-approved censor to monitor their coverage and installed an inexperienced right-wing propagandist to run their newsroom. So when Trump sits down for an interview and admits on camera that he’s doing exactly what he’s claiming others should be jailed for… they don’t follow up or ask any tough questions.
Transform your future in cybersecurity with 7 courses on next‑level packet control, secure architecture, and cloud‑ready defenses inside the 2025 Complete Firewall Admin Bundle. Courses cover IT fundamentals, topics to help you prepare for the CompTIA Server+ and CCNA exams, and more. It’s on sale for $25.
Note: The Techdirt Deals Store is powered and curated by StackCommerce. A portion of all sales from Techdirt Deals helps support Techdirt. The products featured do not reflect endorsements by our editorial team.