Saturday, October 4, 2025

Ballroom construction continues, Trump's shutdown be damned

Barricades are in place for construction work for the planned new White House ballroom Sunday, Sept. 21, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)
Barricades are in place due to construction work for the "garish, stupid" new White House ballroom on Sept. 21.
"Incredibly crucial work of building an ugly monument to Trump’s ego goes on" 
 

You can bet that as the government shutdown continues, President Donald Trump is laser-focused on maintaining mission-critical operations. And what does Trump consider mission-critical? Continuing construction on his big, garish, stupid new ballroom.

Americans were no doubt on tenterhooks, wishing and hoping that Trump would be able to keep building the 90,000-square-foot monstrosity that will dwarf the White House, make everything look as tacky as Mar-a-Lago, and, of course, be named after Trump. 

According to the White House, it’s totally fine that construction will continue despite the government shutdown because the funds aren’t tied to 2026 appropriations, but are instead from private donors.

Yeah, that doesn’t really make it any better. The fact that YouTube just bribed Trump with $22 million to help build the thing still doesn’t make it so essential that construction needs to continue during the shutdown.


Related | Trump's tacky ballroom will be way bigger than the actual White House


YouTube isn’t alone in currying favor with the president by giving him money. Other ballroom bribe enthusiasts—er, donors—reportedly include R.J. Reynolds, Palantir, and Lockheed Martin. In a real classy touch, Trump is weighing etching the names of donors onto the ballroom building. 

While the incredibly crucial work of building an ugly monument to Trump’s ego goes on, the actual work of government? Not so much.

The Office of Management and Budget took the opportunity to use the shutdown to kill $8 billion in energy funding, calling it “Green New Scam funding.” In what is surely just a coincidence, all of the canceled funding affects states with at least one Democratic senator who voted against the GOP’s continuing resolution, which led to the shutdown.

It’s so cool that government funding is now just something doled out based on the rage-fueled whims of people like Trump and OMB head Russell Vought. 

Also closed during the shutdown? Government oversight websites—at least 15 of them. The Office of Inspector General websites for multiple departments, including Agriculture, Education, Justice, Interior, and Veterans Affairs, are all dark.

Cartoon by Clay Bennett

OMB is withholding funds for the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency, which means there are no funds for the inspectors general. So, any access to watchdog reports and whistleblower hotlines is just … gone, replaced with a message that they’ve been shuttered “due to a lack of apportionment of funds.” 

Yeah, about that.

CIGIE isn’t funded by appropriations, so it isn’t affected by the shutdown, as it has a no-year revolving account. It’s such a ridiculously corrupt move by the administration that it spawned a letter from GOP Sens. Susan Collins and Chuck Grassley demanding answers about the move and asking the administration to promptly apportion funds to CIGIE. 

However, according to the administration, the watchdogs must be shut down not because of a lack of funds, but because they are corrupt. An OMB spokesperson said that “inspectors general are meant to be impartial watchdogs identifying waste and corruption on behalf of the American people. Unfortunately, they have become corrupt, partisan, and in some cases, have lied to the public.”

So in review: not corrupt and totally important to continue during a shutdown? Construction on Trump’s hideous ballroom, possible only because private companies are currying favor with the president by paying for the thing. Totally corrupt and unnecessary during a shutdown? Government watchdogs.

Critics, including California Gov. Gavin Newsom, are seeing right through this song and dance.

Thursday, October 2, 2025

What Liberals Get Wrong About Trump’s Executive Order on Antifa

 What Liberals Get Wrong About Trump’s Executive Order on Antifa

Liberals dismiss antifa as just an idea — instead of acting to defend the activists, researchers, and organizers facing persecution.

Matthew Whitley / The Intercept

10/2/2025 

 

 Last week, President Donald Trump signed an executive order claiming to designate antifa as a “domestic terror organization.” On Thursday, he issued a directive for his government to pursue antifa. 

Talk spread of another, imminent order on dismantling left-wing groups. It was the culmination of years of obsessing over antifa.

As someone publicly associated with anti-fascist organizing, the proclamations weren’t the greatest shock. The repression is to be expected.

The reaction to Trump’s nakedly illegal designation from progressives, liberal media, and left-leaning think tanks, however, has given me a sense of dread.

That’s because opponents of MAGA have embraced a dangerous narrative: The antifa designation is moot because there is, simply, nothing to designate. “Antifa,” in this telling, will simply be used as a catchall to repress anyone opposed to Trump when, in truth, it’s just an idea with no concrete grounding in the world.

Trump will indeed label just about all his opponents “antifa,” but the terms “antifa” and “anti-fascist” aren’t hollow references to mere ideas.

Contrary to Republicans’ portrayals, there is no overarching antifa organization or official network. The terms “antifa” and “anti-fascist,” though, do reflect an actually existing world of activists, researchers, thinkers, and organizers at real risk of persecution and dedicated to a specific politics.

If left-wing organizing is to be defended against Trump’s repression, denying their existence will only do further harm.

What Liberals Get Wrong

Anti-fascism was one of the most unifying and electrifying banners to organize under during Trump’s first administration. We may already be losing that framework, as Trump certainly hopes, to a deliberately nebulous sense of criminality associated with its language and symbols.

Instead of recognizing this, corporate media, mainstream commentators, and liberal voices have largely dismissed antifa

Consider how Luke Baumgartner, a research fellow in the program on extremism at George Washington University, responded while discussing antifa in a television interview on the heels of the latest designation.

Asked if there was anything real for Trump to target, Baumgartner said, “There is no hierarchical organizational structure. It is primarily a movement and an ideology. And there are no leaders. There are no assets. There are no bank accounts or revenue streams to go after either.”

The mainstream fact-checking site PolitiFact responded to the latest designation by citing past remarks from Michael German, a fellow from the Brennan Center for Justice’s liberty and national security program.

Comparing antifa’s designation to that of foreign terror groups, German said, “Antifa isn’t organized in that fashion in the first place, as it has no leaders, assets, or infrastructure, so banning material support to foreign anti-fascist groups would have little legitimate anti-terrorism effect here or abroad.”

This take — which is pervasive in mainstream and liberal circles — gets right that anti-fascist movements do not operate according to a centralized hierarchy. It is wrong, however, to dismiss the ways in which Antifa is grounded firmly in reality.

You can take it from me: I have organized and raised funds for the real-world structures that make up the anti-fascist movement.

Antifa in the Real World

Dismissing antifa runs the risk of leaving the people in the movement to the wolves.

A casual observer of mainstream, liberal, or Democratic Party talking points might be left with the impression that a “real,” organized, large, coordinated, and uncompromising anti-fascist movement may in fact be worthy of being treated as a terrorist organization.

At the very least, they might think that such a movement — which is precisely what we need right now — doesn’t need a robust defense. Why, after all, would you need to protect something that doesn’t exist?

The truth is that antifa and anti-fascist groups have been responsible for some of the most prescient and impactful organizing countering the far-right during the last decade.

Until the recent empowerment of an unleashed Trump administration and the support of wealthy business interests, the far right was languishing. Many notorious far-right groups and personalities were bankrupt, unemployable, facing prosecution, unable to attract audiences, plagued by infighting, harassed in public, under a constant microscope, and generally rendered weak and inert.

It was the work of dedicated and organized anti-fascists that made this possible. And that work was, I might hasten to add, perfectly legal.

Groups that have considered themselves antifa or anti-fascist run the gamut of organizational possibilities. They are formally and informally constituted, with and without membership, and range from publicly facing to completely anonymous. Their activities include the publication of research on the far right, producing cultural events, staging self-defense trainings, organizing de-platforming campaigns, and mounting counter-demonstrations.

As for assets, George Soros and liberal financiers certainly do not fund these activities. Activists themselves usually do. All groups need some money and assets to carry out the most basic work, even if the sums are paltry. I myself have fundraised for the basic infrastructure needed to do things like host meetings, run online platforms, call demonstrations, and produce educational materials.

A Better Approach

Instead of demeaning antifa by focusing on questions of organization or the technical feasibility of a domestic designation, liberals should rally around it — by putting the very values they espouse into action.

You don’t need to consider yourself antifa to believe in defending protected political speech or the right of free association.

If they want to foster a functional opposition, liberals must say what they already know, despite their discomfort, and fight for these constitutional guarantees — even for protected speech that advocates for self-defense and discusses the politics of violence.

Anti-fascists tend to be more concerned with questions of morality than questions of legality, but liberals concerned about the rule of law ought to take succor in past precedents.

Direct action-focused groups in American history that moved to protect their communities, like the Black Panthers or militant labor unions, have shown that it cannot be made illegal to advocate for or practice community self-defense, whether that means learning to use arms, conducting boycotts and demonstrations, or feeding and educating your constituencies.

Considering the current administration’s open assault on “hostile” communities and “blue” states and cities, and the inability of courts and lawmakers to restrain its weaponization of the legal system, military, and law enforcement, that direct action example is more important than ever.

In the absence of fascist adversaries that are as concerned with free speech, the rule of law, or polite disagreement as their opponents are, a politics of mutual aid and community self-defense remains our most powerful choice.

Anti-fascism and anti-fascists have demonstrated how we might walk this path toward a politics of empowerment, in which we take direct responsibility for our own communities.

If we are going to foster a thriving, powerful movement equal to this dangerous moment, we must not surrender “antifa” to Trump’s whims and the worst fantasies of our opponents. The health and safety of our friends, family, and society may depend on it.


Saturday, September 27, 2025

Trump’s UN Address Was a Tragedy of Shakespearian Proportion

Trump’s UN Address Was a Tragedy of Shakespearian Proportion  
President Donald Trump speaks during the 80th session of the U.N. General Assembly at the United Nations headquarters in New York City on Sept. 23, 2025. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty)
 
"To describe the speech as insane, while accurate, would distract from just how extraordinarily packed with lies it was. How profoundly ignorant it was. How much damage it did to the United States’ standing in the world." 
 

Instead of a traditional public address from a world leader, U.S. President Donald Trump tilted back his badly-dyed hair-sprayed coif and howled at the moon for the better part of an hour during his speech to the UN General Assembly on Tuesday morning.

Well, not the better part. Definitely not the better part.

To describe the speech as insane, while accurate, would distract from just how extraordinarily packed with lies it was. How profoundly ignorant it was. How much damage it did to the United States’ standing in the world—it clearly marked a low point in America’s relationship with the United Nations and the international order we helped create in the wake of World War II.

From a purely U.S. political perspective, emphasizing how haggard and low-energy our rapidly declining president was is key. He made a point to note that an apparent mechanical issue with a UN escalator was an insurmountable problem, for example—most of the rest of us who are in fairly reasonable shape might have noted a stalled escalator is actually just a stairway that we could have walked right up.


no image description available
Trump and first lady Melania Trump ride an escalator as they arrive to attend the 80th United Nations General Assembly at the U.N. headquarters in New York.

But it would nonetheless, be a mistake, to ignore just how crazed the speech was. It was apparent from Trump’s opening moments when he railed about the UN’s broken teleprompter to the point later when he brought it up again in his broader condemnation of the UN as also broken, highlighting what he saw as its uselessness in not coming to his assistance in solving the famous seven global conflicts that we all know he did not solve. It was apparent in the fact that he argued that he deserves the Nobel Peace prize while noting he also takes great pride in discussing the attack he authorized on Iran, and those he has ordered against boats he claims without evidence were trafficking in drugs on the high seas.

The speech contained the most extensive condemnation of green energy and what Trump considers the climate change hoax that we have ever heard from a public official since possibly the invention of the steam engine. Science be damned. Oligarchs love fossil fuels or what Trump noted that he demands White House staffers refer to as “beautiful, clean coal.” Windmills, windmills on the other hand, are the pinwheels of Satan. (Someday we will get to the bottom of Trump’s anemomenophobia. Clearly, he had a bad experience with something that blew him the wrong way as a child. Or more recently.)

He defended his irrational, lose-lose global trading system destroying tariffs which in and of itself will soon be listed in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders as an extreme symptom of economic psychosis. He downplayed civilian casualties in Ukraine and explained this war wouldn’t have happened if there had been good leadership in the country—in front of President Volodymyr Zelensky, no less.

He continued to argue that he could have solved the conflict were it not that Vladimir Putin had, inexplicably, let him down—so now it’s the Europeans who should take the lead in stopping the Russians, or else the US would have to take strong action…sometime…in the near future…or maybe never…who knows.

(It should be noted that, underscoring the degree to which Trump was making up foreign policy on the fly, later on Tuesday he posted on social media a statement seeming to reverse his prior positions: “I think Ukraine, with the support of the European Union, is in a position to fight and WIN all of Ukraine back in its original form,” it read. He also said NATO countries should shoot down Russian aircraft approaching their airspace. All of which sounds good. And if that is his new position, well done.)

One of his most detailed perorations was devoted to the perils of immigration. Trump told his audience that immigration was destroying their countries. “It’s time to end the failed experiment of open borders. You have to end it now,” he asserted. He exclaimed, in an epic soundbite that will be replayed around the world tonight in its embodiment of the entire speech, Trump’s narcissism, delusions of competence and contempt for his audience, that “I’m really good at this stuff. Your countries are going to hell.”

Name an area and Trump lied about it. Name a global issue and he laid out a US position that was at odds with reason and most of the world. (With the exception to his welcome if totally out-of-character call for an end to the development of biological weapons. He also appeared to call for ending work on new nuclear weapons but that riff is almost certain to be walked back soon given Trump’s regular calls for modernizing our nuclear arsenal.) He personally attacked the mayor of London, asserting erroneously that he wanted to impose sharia law in the English capital. He attacked the green movement in Europe even as one of its leaders was presiding over the meeting. He attacked Joe Biden.

Did I mention the aside about how once upon a time when Trump was, in his own words, “a very successful real estate developer in New York,” he offered to remodel the UN? He did not get the gig and, as a result, the UN now has terrazzo floors instead of the marble ones he would have installed. Yuge scandal!

He said, “I am a man more sinned against than sinning” likening the UN to a “great stage of fools.” He warned that people should fear his wrath saying, “And thou, all-shaking thunder, Smite flat the thick rotundity o’ the world!”

Oh, wait. That was King Lear. But face it, listening to Trump today, the one clear message was that Shakespeare got it exactly right when it comes to the lunacy of aging rulers. Of course, “King Lear” was fiction. But sadly, today’s performance by Trump out on the heath of the international community was not.

Instead, it was a low point for American diplomacy, a moment at which the world realized the nation that had been a cornerstone of its stability for eighty years has slipped its moorings. You could see the shock of those in the great plenary hall as they took it in. And we all had to worry when we saw them from time to time nervously applaud Trump remarks. Would any among them be strong enough to offset the reality of an America gone rogue, led by a man like Trump?

As Shakespeare also wrote in Lear, “Tis the times plague, when madmen lead the blind.”

A cartoon by Clay Jones.
“Hate on an escalator” by Clay Jones/Daily Kos 

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

SECESSION, ANYONE? How blue states are joining together to save themselves from America’s slide into idiocracy

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California Gov. Gavin Newsom
 
Colorado, Illinois only blue states not linking up with the others.  Where are you, Jared and J.B.? 

With the federal government not just abdicating its public health responsibilities but actively working to harm Americans, blue states are stepping in to safeguard their own.

California, Oregon, and Washington have banded together to preserve access to life-saving vaccines.

“California Governor Gavin Newsom, Oregon Governor Tina Kotek, and Washington Governor Bob Ferguson announced they will launch a new West Coast Health Alliance to ensure residents remain protected by science, not politics,” the states announced in a joint press release. “The alliance represents a unified regional response to the Trump Administration’s destruction of the U.S. CDC’s credibility and scientific integrity.”

And over on the other coast, blue states are doing the same thing. All of New England—excluding New Hampshire, New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania—met in Rhode Island to discuss coordinating vaccine recommendations.

Boston Mayor Michelle Wu, center, is joined by Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., left and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., right, as she speaks during a Massachusetts Congressional Delegation press conference regarding the impacts of the Trump administration's actions on communities across Massachusetts, Tuesday, March 4, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)
Boston Mayor Michelle Wu is joined by Sens. Ed Markey and Elizabeth Warren during a press conference about the impacts of the Trump administration.

The only two solid blue states missing, for the moment, are Colorado and Illinois.

I’ve always thought it made sense for a blue state compact to arise as a counterweight to the barriers erected in Washington, where even the unelected and unaccountable Supreme Court stands ready to stymie any hint of progress.

By itself, California is the world’s fourth largest economy, trailing only the United States, China, and Germany. So why couldn’t it—along with the rest of a blue state compact—have its own universal health care system, coordinated climate action, clean energy grids, stronger gun safety standards, joint infrastructure projects, worker protections, science-based education standards, and guaranteed abortion access?

The reason much of this could not be easily implemented, of course, is that the money needed is paid to the federal government. And red America does not survive without that revenue from blue states subsidizing their low-tax, low-effort, ignorance-embracing lifestyle. 

Who do you think will pick up the tab for Florida’s inevitable health care crisis as it ditches all vaccine mandates in schools? For all their braying about “heartland values,” they sure aren’t giving up that sweet, sweet blue-state cash.

But the work around vaccines and public health advocacy is a great first step. And if this sounds like groundwork toward a potential future secession, that’s not the worst thing. There is too much ingrained ignorance around the role of blue states in keeping this country running. 

There’s a fiction that cities and immigrants are leeches on federal coffers, when in fact they’re the very economic engines that power this country’s greatness.

Liberals never had a problem subsidizing rural America and less productive states, but that free ride needs to come to an end. In the words of Vice President JD Vance, “Have you said ‘thank you’ once?”

Quite the opposite. 

Conservatives demonize blue states and cities, and it’s time to end that. That’s why it’s been so refreshing seeing Newsom strongly defend blue America from that skewed conventional wisdom. 

“Nine out of the ten dependent states—welfare states—are Trump states. The donor states disproportionately are the blue states,” Newsom said on Shawn Ryan’s manosphere podcast. “Seventy-one percent of the country’s GDP comes from blue counties—these same cracked-up counties with all these crazy liberals.”

This has to be repeated over and over again until it finally seeps into the mind of the body politic. A blue state compact—coordinating science- and reality-based policy around critical public health and other issues—would be a start to countering the nation’s slide into idiocracy.

If you can't lick 'em, leave 'em.

Monday, September 22, 2025

'You are envy, you are hatred': Kirk memorial turns into unhinged rally

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PRAISE THE LARD, KING DONALD: "It was hard to tell whether this was a memorial for conservative activist Charlie Kirk or a MAGA rally."
 
"Speakers ignore Kirk’s long record of hateful, bigoted comments."

President Donald Trump used his speech at the memorial service for conservative activist Charlie Kirk on Sunday at 63,400-seat State Farm Stadium in Arizona, to continue obscuring Kirk’s long record of hateful and bigoted comments and views. Other speakers were also a part of the process of using what was billed as a memorial service instead as a political rally for the right.

“He was a missionary with a noble spirit and a great, great purpose. He did not hate his opponents, he wanted the best for them,” Trump said. “That’s where I disagreed with Charlie; I hate my opponent.”

Hate was central to Kirk’s career as a political organizer for the right and as a political pundit. From his platform, Kirk preached bigotry against multiple groups of Americans. He struck out against transgender people, in January referring to the “trans mafia” and the “purple haired jihadis” who he praised as “being run out in decent society.” Years before that he said a trans student in Wyoming should be bullied and imprisoned.

Kirk also called for former President Joe Biden to be executed and argued that Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, who is Black, did not “have the brain processing power to otherwise be taken really seriously” and “had to go steal a white person’s slot to go be taken somewhat seriously.”

Kirk’s widow, Erika Kirk, also brushed past her husband’s incendiary rhetoric in her speech, instead alleging that “the greatest cause in Charlie’s life was trying to revive the American family.”

By contrast, figures like New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have condemned Kirk’s killing while also speaking out against efforts to whitewash who he was.

On Friday, while speaking in opposition to a congressional resolution honoring Kirk, Ocasio-Cortez noted, “We can deeply disagree and come together as a country to denounce the horror of this killing, and it is not a license for the abuse of power and whitewashing of American history.”

The measure passed the House with the support of 95 Democrats, including Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries.

The right and the Republican Party have chosen to weaponize Kirk’s death and to use it as an excuse to go after the left in America. The killing is being used as a flimsy cover for attacks on free speech and the First Amendment, most notably the decision to use the FCC to pressure Disney/ABC to sideline host Jimmy Kimmel.

At the memorial, White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller, who has a history of supporting white supremacy, continued the crusade.

Miller falsely claimed that the political left supported Kirk’s killing, adding, “You have nothing. You are nothing. You are wickedness, you are jealousy, you are envy, you are hatred, you are nothing.”

The rally was billed as a memorial to a slain political figure, but ultimately it was a full-blown political rally, another moment in which the right decided to lie about who Kirk was while using the moment to push their censorious political agenda.

Donnie brags about his own hatred at memorial service...right after Kirk's wife forgives her husband's assassin. 

Friday, September 19, 2025

Boycott Disney. Reinstate Jimmy Kimmel.

Indivisible Team info@indivisible.org


 Cowardly companies putting self interest above stopping fascism must be confronted

The Trump regime’s campaign of authoritarian repression took a major step forward this week with the indefinite suspension of Jimmy Kimmel.

Like a third-rate mob boss, Trump’s Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chair issued a public threat to “take action” against stations airing Jimmy Kimmel for a joke that offended the regime. His actual words: “We can do this the easy way, or the hard way.”

Within hours, ABC/Disney execs (specifically, CEO Bob Iger) chose what they thought was the easy way. They silenced Kimmel because they believe caving to authoritarian censorship is best for their bottom line. It’s on us to prove them wrong and show there’s a price to sacrificing our First Amendment rights at the altar of corporate profit.

Let’s dig a little deeper into the greed, corruption, and cowardice at play here -- and then let’s get to work protecting our First Amendment rights. That means boycotts, protests, and demands of our representatives. More on that below.


The state of play

Trump and his cronies are rapidly working to consolidate power and use the full might of the federal government to squash peaceful dissent -- bending media companies, business leaders, universities, and so many other institutions to Trump’s will.

Silencing Kimmel is just one example of how our institutions are putting their own shortsighted self-interest first and choosing to give in to fascism instead of fighting back. Here’s a brief review of how we got here:

  • December 2024: ABC/Disney caves to a frivolous defamation lawsuit by Trump, paying $15 million to his presidential library rather than going to court to defend the freedom of the press.
  • July 17: CBS announces that it will cancel the late-night show of Trump critic Stephen Colbert. The move comes as CBS’ parent company, Paramount, awaits FCC approval of an $8 billion merger.
  • July 18: Trump takes to Truth Social to post that “Jimmy Kimmel is next.”
  • July 24: The FCC approves Paramount’s merger just one week after Colbert’s cancellation.
  • September 10: Charlie Kirk is murdered. Trump administration officials and other Republican leaders begin calling for a massive crackdown on the left.
  • September 15: In his show’s opening monologue, Kimmel notes that Trump and his allies are “desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them, and doing everything they can to score political points from it."
  • September 17 (morning): In an interview on a far-right podcast, FCC Chair Brendan Carr openly threatens to revoke the broadcast license of any stations airing Kimmel’s show.
  • September 17 (afternoon): Within hours of Carr’s threat, Nexstar Media Group -- a TV conglomerate that (like Paramount) wants FCC approval of a merger -- says its local ABC affiliates will not air Kimmel's show. Another TV conglomerate with FCC business pending, Sinclair Media Group, rapidly follows suit.
  • September 17 (evening): ABC/Disney announce that they are pulling Kimmel's show off the air entirely.

Appeasing a tyrant only leads to more tyranny. If ABC/Disney refuses to reverse their decision, the regime will only become more emboldened to target comedy, opinion, and even news they don’t like. None of us will be free to dissent. None of us will be able to speak our minds.


How we’ll fight back

We need to pressure ABC/Disney to reinstate Kimmel’s program, cease their political collusion with Trump and his FCC lapdogs, and commit to defending free speech.

That means fighting back with our voices and our wallets -- because no wannabe king can match the power we wield when millions of us take action together. Here are some things you can do right now:

❌ Cancel your Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+ subscriptions until Jimmy Kimmel Live! is reinstated. Then, use the customizable sample posts in our social toolkit (or create your own!) to let Disney and your network know with the hashtag #BoycottDisneyABC.
💬 Use this contact form to send a message to ABC/Disney that we won’t stand for cowardice and corruption. If you’re canceling Disney services, postponing a vacation to a Disney theme park, or taking some other action in response to their corporate cravenness, let them know.
🔥 Email your representative to demand an investigation into government censorship. Carr’s threats may violate the First Amendment and other federal law, but an attempt to subpoena Carr is being blocked. Let’s turn the heat up to demand that Carr, ABC/Disney execs, and their partners be hauled before Congress to testify under oath.
📣 Protest in person. We’ve already heard of dozens of locally led events popping up outside ABC/Disney offices and studios across the country. Get out to one if you can, and make a plan to join us on No Kings Day, as well.

We’re working with partners nationwide to plan additional actions that push ABC/Disney towards putting free speech over the whims of a wannabe king. We’ll share those as they develop, but for now, let’s use our voices, our dollars, and our people-power to show Disney that they’re standing on the wrong side of history.

In solidarity,
Indivisible Team

P.S. Boycotts like this one are most effective when we move swiftly and uniformly to take our business elsewhere. Please take a moment to cancel that subscription right now, and then forward this email to other folks, especially Disney+/Hulu subscribers, who may join our efforts.




Tuesday, September 16, 2025

MAGA’s Canonization of Kirk Is Truly Monstrous

Why MAGA’s Canonization of Charlie Kirk Is Truly Monstrous  
"If Kirk was a victim of a pernicious culture of violence in America, it must also be acknowledged that he was an author of that culture." (image: Daily Beast/Reuters)
 
"He mercilessly attacked those with whom he did not agree. He was an enemy of truth and of equity." 
 
David Rothkopf / The Daily Beast  
 

It is one thing to condemn, as we all should, the brutal murder of Charlie Kirk or, for those who cared about him, to mourn his death.

It is quite another to turn Kirk into a MAGA saint, or to use his death as a Reichstag fire-like justification for increasing Trump’s authoritarian chokehold on America.

I am sure that Kirk and his family are grateful for the outpourings of support from the president and vice president of the United States, the cabinet, members of Congress, the media, and the public.

But at this point, it appears that we as a country have lost our minds.

The president of the United States has ordered all flags in the United States to skip out on 9/11 observations—among the most solemn on the federal calendar—to be with Kirk’s family.

He then called Kirk “a martyr.”

As if Charlie Kirk were some kind of American hero.

But Kirk was no hero. The record is clear. If Kirk was a victim of a pernicious culture of violence in America, it must also be acknowledged that he was an author of that culture.

His primary accomplishment in life was to acceptable cost for that culture.

However, what is happening is far worse than simply devoting our national resources or devaluing our national reputation by elevating an unworthy individual.

In tributes from across the political spectrum, Kirk is being praised as a champion of “free speech.” He was not. He mercilessly attacked those with whom he did not agree. He was an enemy of truth and of equity. Kirk perverted the idea of our First Amendment rights to suggest they required universities to embrace lies, as though there were some obligation to present unfounded idiocy and malice simply because some special interest or political group supported them.

Much of his political identity was tied up in the dangerous promotion of white Christian nativism and its alliance with the most corrupt president in American history—a felon, a sex offender, a man who incited an insurrection against the United States government.

This president has already revoke visas or deny them to people who might have commented on Kirk or his death in ways they did not approve of.

What a fitting tribute to a fake First Amendment warrior.

The right in America has also sought to use similar criteria—posting or sharing views of Kirk they felt were critical of him, even when those views were entirely fact-based—to cancel media commentators and even social media posters.

How do we reconcile that with the assertions that Kirk “did politics right” or promoted free speech?

Easy.

These tributes are bulls--t. Furthermore, many of those on the far right who are elevating Kirk to a lofty pedestal that he does not deserve are doing so to help them justify precisely what they claim he stood for.

Trump, and Vance, and Hegseth, and Rubio, and Patel, and Loomer may be truly shocked and appalled by Kirk’s murder—as we all should be—but they also instantly saw it as an opportunity to accelerate their campaign to attack our democratic institutions and to demonize all those who do not agree with them.

Kirk’s supporters are the ones promoting memes depicting him as leading a battle against American cities. The war against their opponents, using the resources of the federal government to suppress dissent, gut democracy and solidify their rule on this country was their priority all along.

Now, the death of Charlie Kirk, and the elevation of Charlie Kirk, and the lies about who Charlie Kirk was are all being used as weapons in that war, as part of a new offensive against those who believe in the values and ideals on which this country was founded.

This is not merely about an outpouring of emotion and over-the-top responses to the grief of a horrible moment.

Nor are they the usual spin of partisans. They are something far more dangerous—the monstrous opportunism of those who have been planning for a moment like this all along, a moment that rather than making America great again, is seized in the hopes of making the America we once knew, an America for all of us, the America that guys like Charlie Kirk have long sought to undermine, cease to exist. Once and for all.


Ballroom construction continues, Trump's shutdown be damned

Barricades are in place due to construction work for the "garish, stupid" new White House ball...