Maine Writer

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Tuesday, July 15, 2025

Donald Trump and MAGA extremists burdened their own voter base with the unfair stigma of being Medicaid beneficiaries

To the editor of the Los Angeles Times: What I find weird about Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins’ assertion that migrant laborers can simply be replaced by automation and Medicaid recipients is not just the underlying cruelty expressed toward both hardworking immigrant laborers and Medicaid recipients, nor is it the shocking ignorance (“Trump official suggests Medicaid recipients, automation can replace immigrant workers. California farmers disagree,” July 9).

What I find unusual is the apparent assumption by Donald Trump and his “brain trust” that “able-bodied adults on Medicaid” are all people outside of his very base. From a purely political perspective, it’s the only way I can make sense of Rollins’ proposal. I hate to be the bearer of bad news to Trump’s team, but according to current statistics, the largest group of Medicaid recipients in the U.S. are white non-Hispanics (estimated to be 39.6% of all recipients). A majority 55% of white voters cast ballots for Trump in the 2024 election. This means that of Medicaid recipients, who are registered voters, it’s not unreasonable to assume that a large portion are Trump voters. 😔😖😓

Trump and his administration’s seeming indifference to subjecting Medicaid recipients who may happen to be GOP voters to the type of contempt and cruelty they normally reserve for immigrants and people of color tells me that they (as is often the case) might not have considered the consequences of their proposals on their own voters. And in this case, it seems to me that this particular lack of judgment is like a rogue torpedo fired by the Trump administration that is headed right back at the GOP. It will be interesting to see how this affects the midterm elections.  (Maine Writer post script....assuming there are "mid term elections"....scary what Trump might do to call them off by creating some mythical situation.)


From Matthew Singerman, in Newbury Park, California

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Monday, July 14, 2025

Donald Trump cruelty is a disaster for hard working immigrant families: Big Ugly Bad Bill is punishment to innocent immigrants

Echo opinion published in the Boston Globe by Marcala Garcia



A ‘big, beautiful’ disaster for immigrant families
What this law enshrines is not reform but punishment — it’s criminalizing immigration to the fullest extent possible.

Donald
 Trump’s so-called Big Beautiful Bill, now law, promises sweeping changes to the country’s immigration system and safety net. But for millions of immigrant families, it spells a future of fear, hardship, and exclusion.

Touted as a win for border security and fiscal restraint, the law pours unprecedented resources into immigration enforcement and border security — to the tune of $170 billion — while stripping away critical health care and food assistance.

Legal experts and community advocates have warned that the law’s harsh provisions — massive detention expansions, steep new immigration fees, and deep cuts to social programs — will destabilize families, endanger children, and undermine the very communities that help drive the nation’s economy.

Among the law’s most alarming provisions: $45 billion to expand detention capacity to more than 100,000 beds — rivaling the entire federal prison system — and $31 billion to expand immigration enforcement and deportation activity, which could lead to the hiring of as many as 10,000 new ICE agents. The result? More raids, more arrests, more fear.

It doesn’t stop there. The bill imposes financial barriers and new fees on immigrant families. For instance, asylum applications, once free, will now cost $100 (after House Republicans originally proposed $1,000) and work permits, also once free, will now cost $550.

Appeals of immigration decisions now cost $900, up from $110. For many immigrants, these fees represent an “unaffordable price tag on due process,” Heidi Altman, vice president of policy at the National Immigration Law Center, told NPR.

Then there’s the new 1 percent tax levied on remittances sent abroad, which disproportionately affects low-income immigrants whose families back home rely on that financial support. The law also bars some legally present immigrants from accessing Medicaid and restricts food assistance (SNAP) eligibility for certain immigrants.

The Big Ugly Bill is incredibly irresponsible,” Héctor Sánchez Barba, president and CEO of Mi Familia Vota, a Latino advocacy organization, said in a statement.

The sweeping law, which also includes massive tax cuts for rich individuals, carries a hefty cost: It’s estimated that it will add more than $3.4 trillion to the national debt over 10 years. “Our children and grandchildren will have to pay for its massive debt, while obscene amounts of money will go to ICE policies that punish families and the essential workers our economy needs for their hard work and tax dollars,” Barba said.

What this law enshrines is not reform but punishment 😞😭— it’s criminalizing immigration to the fullest extent possible, monetizing some legal rights, and prioritizing cruelty over common sense. It is a legislative embodiment of Trumpism: performative and punitive.

For immigrant families, the “big, beautiful” promise has revealed its true face, and it surely is an ugly one.

This is an excerpt from ¡Mira!, a Globe Opinion newsletter from columnist Marcela García.

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Donald Trump is obviously in melt down mode about the disappearing Epstein Files.- "he doth protest too much" said Shakespeare

Finally A report about the hideous Epstein files in a coherent excellent analysis by Heather Cox Richardson!  Recommend for everyone to follow her superb commentaries on Substack. 

Attorney General 3-D printer Pam Bondi somehow made the Epstein files on her desk disappear

An extraordinary rift in MAGA world.
Letter from an American by Heather Cox Richardson

The conflict began last Monday when the Department of Justice (DOJ) released a memo saying that it had conducted a thorough review of all the evidence the department had collected about convicted sex abuser Jeffrey Epstein, who died in his prison cell in 2019 awaiting trial on additional sex-trafficking charges. The memo said that the department’s “systematic review revealed no incriminating ‘client list’” and that there was “no credible evidence found that Epstein blackmailed prominent individuals as part of his actions.” It said the DOJ and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), which operates within the DOJ, had determined “that no further disclosure would be appropriate or warranted.”
The memo also said FBI investigators had concluded that Epstein died by suicide, releasing footage from a camera from the unit in which Epstein was being held at the time of his death.

For years now, Trump and his loyalists have claimed Epstein was murdered to protect the rich and powerful men who were preying on children. This theory dovetailed with the QAnon conspiracy theory that Trump was combating a secret ring of cannibalistic child molesters who included Democratic politicians, government officials, film stars, and businessmen. MAGA influencers, including Kash Patel and Dan Bongino, pushed the Epstein theories, and MAGA followers believed them, hoping to bring down Democratic politicians like the Clintons.

Once in power, they vowed, they would release the client list and provide the truth about Epstein’s death. In February, Attorney General Pam Bondi told the Fox News Channel that the client list was “sitting on my desk right now.” Patel is now director of the FBI—in part because MAGA senators like Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) believed he would release more information on Epstein and child sex trafficking rings—and Bongino is the FBI’s deputy director. Senator Mike Lee (R-UT) called for Americans to vote for Trump in 2024, because “Americans deserve to know why Epstein didn’t kill himself.”

The announcement that the DOJ would not provide further information and that Epstein had died by suicide set off a firestorm among MAGA. Far-right influencer Jack Posobiec wrote: “We were all told more was coming. That answers were out there and would be provided.”

When a reporter asked about Epstein during a press opportunity at a cabinet meeting, Trump responded: “Are you still talking about Jeffrey Epstein? This guy’s been talked about for years. Are people still talking about this guy? This creep? That is unbelievable.”

Trump’s attempt to turn attention away from the story only drew attention to it. While MAGA focused on the idea that the people on an Epstein client list would be Democrats, in fact the person most closely associated with Epstein in popular culture was Trump himself. The two men were photographed and filmed together a number of times. In 2002, according to New York magazine, Trump said: “I’ve known Jeff for fifteen years. Terrific guy…. He’s a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side.”

On June 5, after a falling-out with Trump, billionaire Elon Musk posted on social media: “Time to drop the really big bomb: [Trump] is in the Epstein files. That is the real reason they have not been made public. Have a nice day, DJT!” He followed that post up with another saying: “Mark this post for the future. The truth will come out.” He later deleted the posts and said they had gone too far.

After Trump tried to downplay the story last week, it gained momentum. MAGA influencers began to call for Bondi to be fired, and Bongino began to talk of resigning from the FBI over Bondi’s memo and handling of the issue.

Then, at 5:21 Saturday evening, Eastern Daylight Time, Trump posted a long, incoherent screed on social media. In it, he defended Attorney General Pam Bondi—who is, of course, doing his bidding concerning the files—and tried to bring MAGA together again, warning that “selfish people” were trying to hurt his “PERFECT administration” by focusing on Epstein. In apparent contradiction to the story Bondi had told, he suggested the Epstein files existed, but then nonsensically said they were “written by Obama, Crooked Hillary, Comey, Brennan, and the Losers and Criminals of the Biden Administration, who conned the World with the Russia, Russia, Russia Hoax, 51 ‘Intelligence’ Agents, ‘THE LAPTOP FROM HELL,’ and more? They created the Epstein Files, just like they created the FAKE Hillary Clinton/Christopher Steele Dossier that they used on me, and now my so-called “friends” are playing right into their hands. Why didn’t these Radical Left Lunatics release the Epstein Files? If there was ANYTHING in there that could have hurt the MAGA Movement, why didn’t they use it? They haven’t even given up on the John F. Kennedy or Martin Luther King, Jr. Files,” he wrote.

“No matter how much success we have had, securing the Border, deporting Criminals, fixing the Economy, Energy Dominance, a Safer World where Iran will not have Nuclear Weapons, it’s never enough for some people. We are about to achieve more in 6 months than any other Administration has achieved in over 100 years, and we have so much more to do. We are saving our Country and, MAKING AMERICA GREAT AGAIN, which will continue to be our complete PRIORITY,” Trump wrote.

Pam Bondi and Kash Patel and the Epstein magic show

“The Left is imploding! Kash Patel, and the FBI, must be focused on investigating Voter Fraud, Political Corruption, ActBlue, The Rigged and Stolen Election of 2020, and arresting Thugs and Criminals, instead of spending month after month looking at nothing but the same old, Radical Left inspired Documents on Jeffrey Epstein. LET PAM BONDI DO HER JOB—SHE’S GREAT! The 2020 Election was Rigged and Stolen, and they tried to do the same thing in 2024—That’s what she is looking into as AG, and much more.

“One year ago our Country was DEAD, now it’s the ‘HOTTEST’ Country anywhere in the World. Let’s keep it that way, and not waste Time and Energy on Jeffrey Epstein, somebody that nobody cares about. Thank you for your attention to this matter!”

For the first time ever, Trump got ratioed on his own platform, meaning that there were more comments on his post than likes or shares, showing disapproval of his message. According to Jordan King of Newsweek, by 10:45 this morning (Eastern Time) it had more than 36,000 replies but only 11,000 reposts and 32,000 likes.

Trump sounds panicked, not only over the Epstein issue itself, but also because he cannot control the narrative his followers are embracing. After stoking the fire of his followers’ anger against what they seemed to see as powerful men getting away with crimes against children, he is now being burned by it. His reflex is to return to his greatest hits, accusing Democrats of writing the Epstein files and then, as he always, always, always does, snapping back to the Russia scandal and calling it a hoax.

Over the weekend, attendees at a conference held by the right-wing Turning Point USA booed the Trump administration’s handling of the Epstein case. MAGA influencers kept up the drumbeat; Matt Walsh called the administration’s about-face on releasing information “obvious bullsh*t.” Natalie Allison of the Washington Post reported that even the Fox News Channel warned this morning that “[t]here has to be some explanation” and that questions about the way the administration is handling the Epstein files were “very valid.”

Musk, who controls the X/ social media platform preferred by the right wing, is amplifying the story. After Trump’s Saturday post, Musk wrote to his 222 million followers: “Seriously. He said ‘Epstein’ half a dozen times while telling everyone to stop talking about Epstein. Just release the files as promised.”

Trump appears to be planning to regain control of the narrative by persecuting his political opponents.

But it is not clear that will silence MAGA voters who backed Trump in part because they thought he would lead the fight against an elite group of pedophiles controlling the country. As Trump’s policies on the economy, immigration, tax cuts, firing of government employees, and gutting of disaster relief have soured Americans on his administration, loyalists stayed behind him. Now he has turned against their chief cause, giving them an off-ramp from a presidency that seems increasingly off the rails.

Mike Flynn, who served as Trump’s first national security advisor until forced to resign for lying about his contact with Russian operatives, posted on social media: “[President Trump] please understand the EPSTEIN AFFAIR is not going away. If the administration doesn’t address the massive number of unanswered questions about Epstein, especially the ABUSE OF CHILDREN BY ELITES (it is very clear that abuse occurred), then moving forward on so many other monumental challenges our nation is facing becomes much harder.”

Flynn concluded: “We cannot allow pedophiles to get away. I don’t personally care who they are or what elite or powerful position they hold. They must be exposed and held accountable!!!”

Notes:
https://www.justice.gov/opa/media/1407001/dl?inline

Haley Chi-Sing, “Bondi says Epstein client list ‘sitting on my desk right now,’ and is reviewing JFK, MLK files,” Fox News, February 21, 2025.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-jeffrey-epstein-question-this-creep/

https://www.thedailybeast.com/fox-news-puts-bomb-thrower-dan-bongino-on-blast-for-epstein-files-meltdown/

Emma Colton, “DOJ brass vowed full transparency on Epstein before turning up empty-handed,” Fox News, July 13, 2025.
The Bulwark
Case Closed on Epstein? Not So Fast
A HOST OF NERVOUS INDIVIDUALS—including President Donald J. Trump—must have breathed a sigh of relief over the weekend when the Department of Justice announced that “no fu…
Read more
3 days ago · 389 likes · Philip Rotner

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/6/6/what-has-musk-accused-trump-of-in-relation-to-the-epstein-files

Donald J. Trump, Truth Social post, July 12, 2025, 5:21 p.m.

https://www.newsweek.com/donald-trump-jeffrey-epstein-truth-social-post-pam-bondi-2098351

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/7/7/epstein-no-client-list-died-suicide-justice-department-says

https://newsletters.democracydocket.com/trumps-epstein-problem
The Bulwark
The Case for Epstein Trutherism
1. The Lost City of E…
Read more
5 days ago · 707 likes · 544 comments · Jonathan V. Last

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/07/12/turning-point-usa-conference-concerns-trump/

https://nymag.com/nymetro/news/people/n_7912/

https://www.thedailybeast.com/elon-musk-breaks-silence-on-donald-trumps-epstein-file-demand/

https://www.cnn.com/2017/02/14/politics/michael-flynn-resigns-timeline

X:

elonmusk/status/1944239510604460045

GenFlynn/status/1944214943198286033

Bluesky:

did:plc:4lx6nur5wstwoc4wtgj56kyu/post/3lturenqtlc2c

marcelias.bsky.social/post/3ltscrpm4js24

thetnholler.bsky.social/post/3ltvbqkutuc26

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Sunday, July 13, 2025

Donald Trump showsbsigns of cognitive impairmen and dangerous mental incompetnce

Echo opinion letters published in the Grand Forks Herald

Donald Trump
and cognitive incompetence, an opinion letter:
Donld Trump is truly unfit to rule❗

He would come back to the same topic three or four times during the hour-long attempted conversation, repeating the same things. He changed his mind on things on a daily basis and often forgot what he had said.

During Trump's news conference, we sitnesses his incompetent clown car cabinet.

He did exactly the same and acted the same way. At several points he went back to his same old rally points, i.e. the press is corrupt; Russia, Russia, Russia; people who preceded him were idiots; other countries emptied out their insane asylums and sent them here; the planes that bombed were beautiful; Democrats hate America etc., etc., etc.

He is obsessed with illegal immigrants.

I fear he is going down the same path as my brother.

Is he fit to rule as our dictator issuing executive orders like the one that banned paper straws in favor of plastic ones?

From Lee Murdock in Grand Forks North Dakota

I fear he is going down the same path as my brother, who had
Alzheimer's.

Letter to the editor, My brother died of Alzheimer's two years ago. During the last stages, even though I knew it was a futile effort, I tried to call and visit with him. No matter how hard I tried to keep him on a topic he would wander off onto related and often unrelated topics.

He would come back to the same topic three or four times during the hour-long attempted conversation, repeating the same things. He changed his mind on things on a daily basis and often forgot what he had said.

I watched Donald Trump's news conference with his (clown car) cabinet. He did exactly the same and acted the same way. 

At several points he went back to his same old rally points, i.e. the press is corrupt; Russia, Russia, Russia; people who preceded him were idiots; other countries emptied out their insane asylums and sent them here; the planes that bombed were beautiful; Democrats hate America etc., etc., etc.

He is obsessed with demonizing innocent immigrants.

I fear he is going down the same path as my brother.

Is he fit to rule as our dictator issuing executive orders like the one
 that banned paper straws in favor of plastic ones?

From Lee Murdock in Grand Forks, North Dakota

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Saturday, July 12, 2025

Republicans and Speaker Mike Johnson use the Bible a like decoy to attract Christians but hypicrisy support for Tump harms the poor

Christian Backlash Taking Hold echo opinion published in the New York Times by Esau McCaulley

Shortly after the passage of Trump’s domestic policy bill, Speaker Mike Johnson posted a Bible verse on his social media from Paul’s second letter to the church in Corinth. It read, “All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation.” Johnson appeared to be referring to the House’s passage of the reconciliation bill. Adding his own commentary on the text, he wrote, “soli Deo Gloria,” which is Latin for “glory to God alone.”

Quote from Saint Paul: "Let love be genuine; hate what is evil, hold fast to what is good; love one another with brotherly affection; outdo one another in showing honor.": (Romans 12:9-10)

You almost have to appreciate the nerve it took to apply Saint Paul’s words to a law that is likely to lead to millions of Americans’ losing their health care. Consider that the apostle was referring to sharing the good news about Jesus Christ and the chance to be reconciled to God.

In a rare moment of Christian ecumenism, white evangelicals, mainline protestants, Roman Catholics and Black church leaders agree that there’s no glory to be found in this legislation. They have levied distinctively religious critiques of Mr. Trump’s signature piece of legislation. Their issues with the legislation vary, but they seemingly all note that the ravenous greed at the core of this law threatens to devour the poor.

I am glad to see this pushback, but none of these policies can be called a surprise. What many feared has become a reality: treating diversity as a threat, dehumanization of migrants and policies that favor the wealthy at the expense of the poor.

For too long this administration presented itself as the only defender of Christianity, while it engages in merely symbolic gestures, like posting Bible verses or publicizing worship services in the White House. Frederick Douglass described this type of performance: “Religion simply as a form of worship, an empty ceremony, and not a vital principle, requiring active benevolence, justice, love and good will towards man.” I fail to see how you can shout glory to God one minute and laugh about the harsh conditions of Alligator Alcatraz the next.

Mike Johnson’s use of the Bible is similar to a recent U.S. Customs and Border Protection recruitment video that was posted on the Department of Homeland Security’s social media. It quotes the biblical passage about God asking the prophet, “Whom shall I send,” and the prophet volunteers to go in the name of the Lord to do his work. This prophet goes on to call people to repentance for mistreating the oppressed and abandoning God. Co-opting a passage depicting a prophet shaken by a vision of the glory of God to recruit for U.S. Customs and Border Protection is an audacious affront to Christianity that defies adequate description.

The National Baptist Convention, a historically Black denomination representing millions of members, has often criticized this administration. Instead of manipulating the words of the Bible to support its argument against the bill, it cited Psalm 82:3, which reads, “Defend the weak and the fatherless; uphold the cause of the poor and needy.”

Johnson’s and U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s use of scripture and that of the National Baptist Convention go beyond simply hurling verses at one another. They offer contrasting visions of how the Bible forms the moral imagination of the faithful. 

In fact, the leaders of the National Baptist Convention looked for guidance among the mountain of scriptures that highlight God’s concern for the weakest among us.
Psalm 82 is actually a message to human rulers telling them that they would be judged for how they treated the poor. Mr. Johnson, by contrast, seems to be simply using biblical language to justify something that he had already done. This is religion as ornament, not the tree.



The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops has at times supported or opposed decisions by Trump and the Supreme Court that he helped shape. For example, it affirmed the court’s decision around parental rights but opposed the big domestic policy bill that just passed. It said, “the final version of the bill includes unconscionable cuts to health care and food assistance, tax cuts that increase inequality, immigration provisions that harm families and children, and cuts to programs that protect God’s creation.”

The Catholic conference opposes the damage this legislation does to the poorest Americans because Catholic teaching compels the faithful to uphold human dignity. It is hard to conceive of the law as promoting the sanctity of every life when it cuts key programs for the needy and expands tax cuts to the wealthy.

The Council for Christian Colleges & Universities critiqued the legislation’s tying of federal funding to degree programs based on salaries of graduates. It said, “The emphasis on earnings as a measure of value risks penalizing students who pursue lower-paying public service roles — many of whom do so out of a deep sense of faith and calling.”

The council argues that the bill assumes the primary reason one chooses a degree program is because it maximizes income. For the Christian, there are higher goods than money, including service and care for those in need. Paul makes this point in the very letter that Mr. Johnson quoted. The apostle said, “For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor.”


Following this example, the argument goes, Christians have rejected higher-paying jobs to serve in impoverished areas. Christians also often go into social work and the nonprofit sector. The idea that Christian colleges might be punished for encouraging their students to follow in the example of Christ while rewarding colleges that do not is deeply troubling.

The Black church opposition to Trump might not be much of a surprise given that he secured only 13 percent of the Black vote, albeit a substantial increase from 2016. But he received 59 percent of the Catholic vote and 82 percent of the white evangelical vote. If there is widespread religious disapproval of Trump’s signature legislation because of the impacts that it has on the poor and working classes, then this might signal long-term danger for two pillars of Trump’s coalition.

But more than that, these statements highlight the irreconcilable difference between Trumpian politics and Christianity. Trump uses money and power to keep people in line. If politicians, countries, businesses or even institutions of higher education go against his wishes, they will pay a financial penalty. Trump believes in making deals rooted in self-interest.

Christians have the resources to resist this tactic because we are taught to model our behavior on Christ, who looked to the interests of others, not himself. It is precisely that interest in others, namely, the millions of working-class Americans negatively affected by this legislation, that led so many Christian leaders to say no to it. For some, this is a part of a long history of resistance; for others, they are finally finding their voice. Whether new or old, I am happy to see it.

It is up to the rest of the faithful to follow suit.

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Friday, July 11, 2025

Christian churches in Canada and Europe are empty because politics became embroiled in religion. Americans will see the same happen here.

IRS takes a step toward giving Christian pastors a bully pulpit. 
An article and opinion letter published in the Boston Globe:

Pastors who endorse political candidates shouldn’t lose tax-exempt status, IRS (Internal Revenue Service) says in filing. The Christian media group and others filed suit against the IRS last August, stating that the amendment violates their First Amendment rights to the freedom of speech and free exercise of religion, among other legal protections.

Maine Writer comment:  This decision, if allowed to stand will continue to divide an already bulkanized nation. Canadians long ago gave up on organized religion, even though every community has either a church, basicilica or a Cathedral, they are largely empty.  Canadians go to church for weddings, baptisms and funerals.  In Europe, the churches are empty tourist attractions. There is a reason for this abandonment of formal religion....because....the government was controlling the pulpit through the clergy.  There is no freedom of speech when the pastors are told what to preach.  

The recent IRS decision to allow religious organizations to endorse political candidates without losing their tax-exempt status contradicts a change to the tax code passed in 1954 known as the Johnson Amendment (“IRS: Pastors who endorse candidates shouldn’t lose tax-exempt status,” Business, July 9). The amendment, named after Lyndon Johnson, then a senator, prohibits tax-exempt entities from participating in political campaigns.

This decision emerged as a consent agreement to settle a lawsuit by the National Religious Broadcasters Association and two Texas churches, which claimed the amendment infringed on their First Amendment rights. However, this policy shift disregards federal law, opens the door for misuse of tax-exempt status for partisan purposes, and creates another pathway for secret spending in our elections.

By interpreting political discussions during worship as private conversations, the IRS creates a loophole that will lead to organizations seeking tax breaks in exchange for political support and introduce hidden sources of money into elections. Any decision to invalidate the Johnson Amendment should be made through debate in Congress, not through back-channel agreements.


The IRS must adhere to the US tax code as established by Congress and ensure any modifications arise from transparent, democratic processes. We need less dark money in politics, not more.

From Cushing Anderson in Boston


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Donald Trump MAGA cult are hypocrites ignore his ugly vengeful behavior

Why do decent folk back Trump

Echo opinion letter published in he Addison County Independent
By Alec Lyall in Middlebury Vermont
Decent individuals with personal stories support an indecent, vulgar, vengeful, self-serving president. How that has happened is a challenge the pundits struggle to answer.

An inflated (egomaniacal) ego, motivated by personal gain, is not something to admire. Expecting an honest advocate from a deranged psychopath, the label applied by his psychologist niece, is wishful thinking at best. Aside from the loss of essential services and world stability, children will learn by example to disrespect the law, social norms, the public good and their parents.




Again, why would decent individuals support an autocrat with behavioral issues, and the inability to read or process information

From Alec Lyall in Midlebury


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Thursday, July 10, 2025

Donald Trump must be removed from office because he is beyond being scary as executive orders are driven by his obsession with fascism

A Show of Force by Fintan O’Toole*
Published in the New York Review of Books

Maine Writer prologue:  "Scary" has become normalized by Trumpian autocratic behavior. Thankfully, journalists like Fintan O'Toole is not letting Trump get away with fascist behavior without calling it what it is- "dangerous".  ⚠️
A man protesting against raids conducted by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement while National Guard troops stand outside the Metropolitan Detention Center, Los Angeles, June 8, 2025

What Trump was trying to demonstrate in Los Angeles is that he can project his armed power into every American community at any time.

Donald Trump’s desire to militarize American politics and politicize the American military is unfinished business. Militarizing American politics means defining all those who do not conform to his version of normality as mortal enemies to be confronted as though they were hostile foreign nations. Politicizing the military means dismantling its self-image as an institution that transcends partisan divisions, is broadly representative of the US population, and owes its primary loyalty not to the president but to the Constitution. These aims are intertwined, but the first cannot be consummated until the second has been accomplished. Trump failed to do this in his first term, but he is determined not to be thwarted again.

In late May 2020, as hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets of American cities to protest the killing of George Floyd by a police officer in Minneapolis, Trump held a meeting of his advisers in the Oval Office. According to Bob Woodward and Robert Costa in their book Peril (2021), Stephen Miller, the architect of Trump’s most extreme anti-immigrant policies, advised: “Mr. President, they are burning America down. Antifa, Black Lives Matter, they’re burning it down. You have an insurrection on your hands. Barbarians are at the gate.” The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Mark Milley, responded, “Shut the fuck up, Steve.”

Citing the daily Domestic Unrest National Overview produced for him by his staff, Milley told the commander-in-chief, “They used spray paint, Mr. President. That’s not insurrection.” He pointed to a portrait of Abraham Lincoln: “That guy up there, Lincoln, had an insurrection.” Milley insisted that the BLM protests were “not an issue for the United States military to deploy forces on the streets of America, Mr. President.” Along with other real soldiers, Milley was able to resist Trump’s demand that the 82nd Airborne Division be sent to Washington. But that was then. Now there is no one in the Oval Office to tell Miller to shut the fuck up or to explain to Trump what an insurrection is.

On June 6 federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents targeted what US district judge Charles Breyer cited as “several locations in downtown LA and its immediate surroundings” that were “known to have significant migrant populations and labor-intensive industries.” They arrested forty-four working people, including some day laborers gathered outside two Home Depot stores, and employees of an Ambiance Apparel warehouse in the Fashion District.

On June 7, by which time only around a dozen arrests had been made at protests against these roundups, Trump issued a memorandum to the secretary of defense, attorney general, and secretary of homeland security declaring that these demonstrations “constitute a form of rebellion against the authority of the Government of the United States.” He authorized his secretary of defense, Pete Hegseth, to take federal control of the California National Guard and to “employ any other members of the regular Armed Forces as necessary.” By June 9, around 1,700 National Guard soldiers and seven hundred US Marines had been deployed to Los Angeles, even though both the Los Angeles Police Department and the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department had made clear that they did not require additional resources to manage the protests or suppress the outbreaks of looting and vandalism that occurred on their margins. As Breyer emphasized in his ruling that Trump’s federalization of the National Guard was “dangerous” and illegal, “There can be no debate that most protesters demonstrated peacefully.”

Trump’s deployment of troops in Los Angeles thus had no military purpose. It can best be thought of as a counterdemonstration. For Trump, those who protest against him are “paid troublemakers, agitators, and insurrectionists.” He cannot imagine large-scale dissent as anything other than a professionally organized conspiracy. The US Army, by this logic, is his own professionally organized crowd. It must be seen on the streets to demonstrate his personal power. That military presence in turn redefines peaceful protesters as enemies of the United States. They cease to be citizens exercising constitutionally protected rights to free speech and assembly and become outlaws and aliens.

Moreover, Trump’s lawyers pleaded in court that protesters need not engage in rebellion to be rebels. Breyer noted in his ruling (which was overturned on appeal) that “in a short paragraph, Defendants suggest that even if there was no rebellion that would justify federalizing the National Guard, there was still a ‘danger of a rebellion.’” The intent could hardly be clearer. So long as Trump has political opponents, their dissent alone makes the danger of rebellion timeless and ubiquitous. What Trump was trying to demonstrate in Los Angeles is that he can project his armed power into every American community at any time. This is a form of wish fulfillment that has deep roots in his psyche.

Everything in Trumpworld happens twice—the first time as performance and the second as reality. In The Art of the Deal (1987), the best seller that formed his personal creation myth, Trump, who dodged the draft for the Vietnam War because of “bone spurs,” included three photographs of himself in military uniform. The attire is that of a dashing officer in some Ruritanian operetta rather than of a soldier in the US Army. In the first two pictures, taken in 1964, to mark his high school graduation from the New York Military Academy, he is the Student Prince. We see him gloriously arrayed in a tall parade hat with a feather plume and a chin strap, a waist-length jacket with rows of brass buttons crossed by a white shoulder belt and adorned with elaborate epaulets and decals, white gloves, and a ceremonial saber. He is a toy soldier in a make-believe army.


But in the third photo he is leading a detachment of armed and uniformed young men on the streets of an American city. Trump is at the head of his prep school’s contingent, marching up Fifth Avenue in New York’s Columbus Day Parade of 1963, a year in which there were already over 16,000 US troops in Vietnam. (Remarkably, his bone spurs do not seem to have inhibited his ability to march in step.) His own caption for the photo is bizarre: “This was my first real glimpse of prime Fifth Avenue property.” He seems at once to be occupying New York and eyeing opportunities in the conquered territory.

Yet Trump came to believe that this playacting made him a real soldier. Michael D’Antonio, in his biography Never Enough: Donald Trump and the Pursuit of Success (2015), reported that Trump
insisted that he had actually known military life.

In a separate conversation he said, “I always thought I was in the military.” He said that in prep school he received more military training than most actual soldiers did, and he had been required to live under the command of men…who had been real officers and soldiers. “I felt like I was in the military in a true sense.”
Francisco Franco (1892-1975)-Francoist dictatorship
Here we may perhaps discern the origins of Trump’s extraordinary ability to eliminate the difference between performance and reality. The archetypal twentieth-century dictators—Benito Mussolini, Adolf Hitler, Francisco Franco, Augusto Pinochet—had been or remained soldiers. Trump was a soldier “in a true sense,” by which he means presumably that a simulacrum of military masculinity is purer than the dirty reality of combat—war without tears.

Until, that is, the spectacle becomes the reality. Trump’s jokes become deadly serious, his provocative rhetoric becomes violent provocation—and his Ruritanian fantasy becomes America’s nightmare. This is what happened on January 6, 2021. Trump’s speech to his supporters before the invasion of the Capitol was that of a general firing his troops up for battle: “And we fight. We fight like hell. And if you don’t fight like hell, you’re not going to have a country anymore.” But Trump did not then actually lead his storm troopers anywhere, and according to his apologists, “fight like hell” was not supposed to be taken literally. Trump’s fascistic militarism retained its performative quality and remained suspended between the playacting war games of his youth and the actual violence he frequently threatens, as commander-in-chief of the world’s most potent army, to unleash. It is thus entirely apt that his big moves toward military dictatorship in recent weeks have been a compound of show business and terror.

Trump’s grand triumphal-march-cum-birthday-party in Washington on June 14 was as much a pageant as a parade: a thousand of the participating troops were dressed in costumes rented from the Motion Picture Costume Company, which describes itself as “a leading supplier of civilian, military, and police wardrobe to the motion picture industry.” The versions of history being played out by the troops depended on the availability of suitable outfits. According to USA Today, “The Army eliminated the War of 1812 and Spanish-American War from the parade after running into trouble with the costuming process.”

The Washington jamboree was thus a show of force in which the show was at least as salient as the force. But the phrase had a parallel and much darker meaning on the streets of Los Angeles. That was a very different kind of costume drama: the dressing up of peaceful protest and some vandalism as a war so that, in Trump’s words, his soldiers could “liberate Los Angeles from the Migrant Invasion.” This too was make-believe, and it too was a performance. 

As California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, put it, “The federal government is taking over the California National Guard and deploying 2,000 soldiers in Los Angeles—not because there is a shortage of law enforcement, but because they want a spectacle.” This spectacle, though, was not meant to entertain. It was a war movie with real guns.

Trump’s militarism remains at the meta stage, which is to say it is still primarily about language and form. The word game he is playing is one in which “rebellion” and “insurrection” are stripped of all their past meanings so that they can be forced into any garb he chooses. This is a further aspect of the drive toward absolute power. As Humpty Dumpty replies when Alice objects to his claim that a word means “just what I choose it to mean,” “The question is, which is to be master—that’s all.” Milley’s rebuke of May 2020—pointing out that Lincoln was the president who faced a real insurrection—was a challenge to Trump’s position as master of meanings. In the second term, there is no place for such insolence.

On June 10, just after he sent the troops into Los Angeles, Trump boasted of rehabilitating the official memory of leaders of that insurrection. Addressing what was in effect a political rally at Fort Bragg, he told uniformed soldiers not only that he had given the base back its original name (it once honored the Confederate general Braxton Bragg, then was renamed Fort Liberty, and under the new dispensation is named after the World War II paratrooper Roland Bragg) but that “we are also going to be restoring the names to Fort Pickett, Fort Hood, Fort Gordon, Fort Rucker, Fort Polk, Fort A.P. Hill, and Fort Robert E. Lee.” It is another word game: officially the military heroes being honored with the latest renamings just happen to have the same surnames as famous Confederate insurrectionists. The refurbished titles of these bases are thus elaborate puns. In this linguistic burlesque it is not only names that mean whatever Trump wants them to mean. It is also the actual history of rebellion against the United States. He has dropped it into a never-never land where it is both remembered as heroic and forgotten as unspeakable—much, of course, like January 6.

Meanwhile, restoring these Confederate designations obliterates the names that replaced them in 2023, the names of women and people of color: Charity Adams, Mary Edwards Walker, Richard Cavazos, William Henry Johnson. This too has purpose. For now at least, the primary goal of Trump’s deployment of troops on the streets of Los Angeles is not the violent suppression of dissent. It is the remaking of the army itself. Trump is instructing the troops on how they must think of themselves and of the nature of the country they are pledged to defend.

Hegseth writes in his best seller The War on Warriors (2024) that he “didn’t want this Army anymore.” This army is the one that actually exists: of its 1.3 million active-duty troops, 230,000 are women, and more than 350,000 are Black. Trump appointed Hegseth to make many of these soldiers invisible. The War on Warriors is subtitled Behind the Betrayal of the Men Who Keep Us Free. It offers “to recover a true vision of the value of strong men.” These are “red-blooded American men,” men who “respect other strong, skilled, dedicated men” and not “men who are pretending to be women, or vice versa.” It follows that women and Black men who have risen up the ranks of the army are the good soldier’s nemesis: “A black or female soldier who gets promoted, primarily because of the color of their skin or the genitalia between their legs—gets people killed.”

While Hegseth pays lip service to racial equality in the army (“There is no black and white in our ranks. We are all green”), elsewhere in his book he falsely implies that Joe Biden’s appointment of the air force general Charles Q. Brown Jr. to succeed Milley as chairman of the Joint Chiefs was a diversity hire: “Was it because of his skin color? Or his skill? We’ll never know, but always doubt.” This hardly qualifies as racist dog-whistling—the pitch is too low and too brazenly loud. Trump duly fired Brown, an unmistakable overture to the much larger project.

The Trumpian reimagining of the US Army has nothing to do with fighting foreign wars. It is all about reasserting the innately white and male nature of America. According to Hegseth, the military’s “key constituency is normal men”: “Normal dudes have always fought, and won, our wars.” His vision, as he explains it, is to restore not just the value of strong men but also “the importance of normality.” The military is to be reborn as its true self: the embodiment of a nation of red-blooded American men. 

What that means for abnormal Americans of impure blood, does not have to be spelled out.

In this regard, putting troops on the streets of Los Angeles is a training exercise for the army, a form of reorientation. Soldiers are being retrained or loyalty to the president rather than the Constitution. They are meanwhile becoming accustomed to confronting that deviant and anomalous America. In Trump's (staged for television) Fort Bragg speech, Trump invited the troops to see protesters in Los Angeles as invaders: “We will not allow an American city to be invaded and conquered by a foreign enemy, and that’s what they are.” But what was happening in LA was, he claimed, even worse than an armed incursion:

Not only are these service members defending the honest citizens of California, they’re also defending our republic itself, and they are heroes, they’re in there, they’re heroes. They’re fighting for us, they’re stopping an invasion just like you’d stop an invasion. The big difference is most of the time when you stop an invasion, they’re wearing a uniform. In many ways, it’s tougher when they’re not wearing a uniform because you don’t know exactly who they are.

If the army doesn’t know exactly who “they” are, it has to be told. Trump reminded the troops that their purpose is to spread fear: “For our adversaries, there is no greater fear than the United States Army.” Its job now is to spread that fear to an ununiformed and thus unknowable mass of internal enemies. Just as Trump transforms actual rebellion into the vague but omnipresent “danger of a rebellion,” he makes the invading army invisible, amorphous, and fluid. Traditional military doctrine demands a clear understanding of the nature of the threat and the shape of the opposing forces. Contrariwise, in the Trump doctrine the threat must be as nebulous as possible, and the opposing forces must be formless. Thus only the commander-in-chief can say at any given time what they are. The enemy the army must learn to face is one that he, and he alone, can conjure.

In this Trump is offering soldiers what fascist leaders have always offered their followers: a peculiar amalgam of the thrill of transgression and the submissive surrender to absolute obedience. New lieutenants and sergeants are (for now at least) issued a document called The Army: A Primer to Our Profession of Arms. Its prohibition on any appearance of partisanship is emphatic:

The Army as an institution must be nonpartisan and appear so too. Being nonpartisan means not favoring any specific political party or group. Nonpartisanship assures the public that our Army will always serve the Constitution and our people loyally and responsively. When representing the Army or wearing the uniform, you must behave in a nonpartisan way too.

At Fort Bragg, Trump incited the uniformed soldiers arrayed behind him to boo the press and laugh at his political opponents, thus disobeying those prohibitions, while a pop-up shop on the base sold MAGA-branded clothing and jewelry and faux credit cards labeled “WHITE PRIVILEGE CARD: TRUMPS EVERYTHING.” This organized insubordination had an obvious point: soldiers must transfer their obedience from the army and the Constitution to Trump himself.

The manual makes clear to soldiers that they should not obey illegal orders:

When you believe you are being given an illegal order, you should take further action—do your homework, seek counsel, and approach your leaders for clarification. If this fails or you know that what you are being asked to do is unlawful, then it becomes your duty to disobey and to follow the law, no matter how resolute your superiors’ stance.

In this light, it actually suits Trump’s purposes if his federalization of the National Guard is understood to be illegal. His deployment of troops in Los Angeles is intended to dissolve boundaries—between domestic disputes and foreign wars, between reality and performance, and above all between a law-bound democracy and arbitrary rule. Getting soldiers used to following illegal orders and to disregarding their “duty to disobey” is a big step toward autocracy.

As his dithering over whether to bomb Iran showed, Trump has a problem: fascism bends inexorably toward war, but much of his appeal lies in his promise to end America’s foreign conflicts. Part of the solution is to mount one-off spectaculars: B-2 stealth bombers dropping 30,000-pound bunker busters. The other part is to repatriate the idea of boots on the ground. Like iPhones and pharmaceuticals, that kind of war will no longer be made abroad. It will be manufactured all over America.

Fintan O’Toole is the Advising Editor at The New York Review and a columnist for The Irish Times. His book Shakespeare Is Hard, But So Is Life was reissued last year. (July 2025)

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Texas Republicans supported by Donald Trump own the terrible disasterous drownings caused by inadequate warning systems

Texas Hill Country floods: Texas lawmakers failed to pass a bill to improve local disaster warning systems this year.

Echo report published in the Texas Tribune:

A GOP state lawmaker who represents Kerr County says he likely would vote differently now on House Bill 13, which would have established a grant program for counties to build new emergency communication infrastructure.
Echo reporting by Terri Langford and Carlos Nogueras Ramos

For the last three days, state Representative Wes Virdell is out with first responders in Kerr County, as they search for victims and survivors from the devastating floods that swept through Central Texas early Friday morning on July 4th, 2025.

“All the focus right now is let’s save all the lives we can,” Virdell, who was still on the scene in Kerrville, told The Texas Tribune on Sunday.  (As of July 10, 2025, there are 120 confirmed deaths with about 170 people who are still missing.  No survivors have been found since the floods devastated the Guadalupe River on July 4, 2025.)

Virdell’s closeup view of the havoc wreaked on his district has made a lasting impression, he said, and left him reconsidering a vote he made just a few months ago against a bill that would have established a statewide plan to improve Texas’ disaster response, including better alert systems, along with a grant program for counties to buy new emergency communication equipment and build new infrastructure like radio towers.

“I can tell you in hindsight, watching what it takes to deal with a disaster like this, my vote would probably be different now,” said Virdell, a freshman GOP lawmaker from Brady.


The measure, House Bill 13, would have created a new government council to establish the emergency response plan and administer the grant program, both of which would have been aimed at facilitating better communication between first responders. The bill also called for the plan to include “the use of outdoor warning sirens,” like those used in tornado-prone Texas counties, and develop new “emergency alert systems.”

Authored by Rep. Ken King, R-Canadian (a city in Texas), the legislation was inspired by last year’s devastating wildfires in the Panhandle, where more than 1 million acres burned — including part of King’s property — and three people died. The bill failed in the Texas Senate, prompting newfound questions about whether lawmakers should have done more to help rural, cash-strapped counties stave off the deadly effects of future natural disasters.

As of Monday morning, at least 90 people had died in the floods. Of those, 75 were in Kerr County, many of them camping or attending a private summer camp along the Guadalupe River. (This number increases daily with about 170 people still missing.)

Virdell, a Hill Country native who lives about 100 miles away, made his way to Kerrville early Friday after seeing news that rains raised the Guadalupe more than two feet, swamping its banks in Hunt and other river communities that host thousands of holiday vacationers.


(Hmmmm❓ if an alarm system was in place, the sad news about the lack of alert would be less of an issue and Governor Greg Abbott would not have to use a ludicrous "football" analogy to deflect blame from his imcompetent administration.) New reported money for upgrades to flash flooding alerts was diverted to continue building an ugly border wall.  In fact, that stupid border wall will fall just like every other wall in history has fallen or deteriorated.  But, the over 119 lives lost by drowning in the Texas Kerr County flash floods will never be forgotten. Therefore, this is a stupid response, to stress that an alarm system may not have helped much in this instance because the floodwaters came so quickly. Between 2 and 7 a.m., the Guadalupe River in Kerrville rose from 1 to more than 34 feet in height, according to a flood gauge in the area. (HELLO Campers were asleep....like SLEEPING A siren would have awakened them.)

“I don't think there was enough evidence (ahhhh??? in "flash flood alley" to even suspect something like this was going to happen,” he said. ”I think even if you had a warning system there, this came in so fast and early in the morning it's very unlikely the warning system would have had much effect.”  (IOW preventable dseatsh by drownings and denialism)

Virdell said he doesn’t recall the specifics of the bill or why he opposed it, though he guessed ”it had to do with how much funding” was tied to the measure.

Even if it had passed, it would not have gone into effect until Sept. 1, after the Hill Country flooding.
The bill’s initial $500 million cost drew heavy criticism from fellow Republicans including state Rep. Tony Tinderholt, R-Arlington.

“This shouldn't be about anything other than the fact that it's a half a billion dollars,” Tinderholt, a hardline conservative and budget hawk, said during the April 1 House floor debate. “This is probably one of the most simple votes we should be able to take today. It's that this interoperability council is going to spend money to try and get these departments to be able to talk together.”

Steven Aranyi, a spokesperson for Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, noted that lawmakers — including the Texas Senate, which Patrick oversees — made several “unprecedented” investments in disaster response during this year’s legislative session, totaling $547 million. That included:$257 million for disaster response aircraft,
$135 million for regional operation facilities,
$90 million to provide ambulances to rural counties,
$65 million for emergency response drone technology.

The flaw with HB 13, Aranyi said, was that it proposed rolling out the local grant money over an estimated timeline of up to 10 years.

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Wednesday, July 09, 2025

Donald Trump MAGA Republicans have a responsibility to tell Texas flood victims families the truth about global warming worsening the world weather

Texas Floods Were Made Worse by Climate Denialism
Elected officials must be held accountable, now and in the future, for the lives lost in disasters brought on by increasingly extreme weather.

By Michael R. Bloomberg the founder and majority owner of Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News, and the founder of Bloomberg Philanthropies.

The tragic news about the drownings and destruction out of central Texas has been heartbreaking, but it’s also been maddening — because so many lives could have been saved if elected officials had done their jobs. They owe the families who lost loved ones — the death toll from the Fourth of July floods is now at more than 100 — more than thoughts and prayers. They owe them a sincere commitment to righting their deadly wrong, by tackling the problem they’ve turned their backs on for too long: climate change.

The scientific evidence is clear that the more frequent extreme weather we are experiencing is being driven by climate change — and that it’s only going to get worse. As the director of the Texas Center for Extreme Weather at Texas A&M University put it, the storms and flooding in central Texas are “exactly what the future is going to hold.” And yet so many elected officials are pretending otherwise.

The latest episode of horrific flooding isn’t just about a natural disaster in one state. It’s also about a political failure that’s been happening in states across the country, and most of all in Washington. The refusal to recognize that climate change carries a death penalty is sending innocent people, including far too many children, to early graves.

Nearly a year ago, Hurricane Helene caused devastating flooding in western North Carolina that killed more than 100 people. A few months later, wildfires in California killed 30 people and destroyed thousands of homes and businesses. This month, the death and destruction of climate change came to Texas. Where will be next? No place is safe.

Not every life can be spared from climate change, unfortunately, but many more could be saved if elected officials stopped pretending that they’re powerless to do anything about it. The fact is: Climate change is a manageable problem with practical solutions. Those solutions will not only save lives, but they will also improve our health, reduce our energy bills and create more jobs. The longer these officials pretend otherwise, the more the public will suffer, and the more people will die. And yet what are those in power in Washington doing? Worse than nothing: They are actively thwarting efforts to address climate change and help communities cope with its harms.

The Trump administration has erased the words “climate change” — and critical climate data and information — from government websites, as if the problem could be wished away. It is attempting to roll back the Environmental Protection Agency’s obligation to fight climate change. And it has put lives at risk by canceling grants to local communities to help them prepare for the effects of climate change — and by cutting essential positions at the National Weather Service that help communities prepare and respond to disasters, leaving the weather service’s offices in the areas around the flooding short-staffed.

Last week, the administration even proposed eliminating a research office that plays a critical role in forecasting extreme weather. 

And that’s not the end of it.

On the same day the Texas floods killed dozens of people, the president signed a budget bill that, in addition to piling on $3 trillion to the national debt, gutted the nation’s efforts to promote renewable energy sources. The new budget repeals tax credits for clean energy production, electric vehicles and clean manufacturing while also eliminating the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, which Congress created to help increase private-sector investment in clean energy. As a result, many fewer such projects will be built, killing jobs in communities across the country and driving up energy costs.

All of this will make it harder for the US to drive down the greenhouse-gas emissions that are helping to supercharge deadly storms, while increasing the human toll and financial costs of extreme weather — and making it harder for states and localities to recover from it.

Local and state governments do not have the resources to dig out from disasters on their own, which is why Texas Governor Greg Abbott has requested support and financial assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Yet the administration has been busy gutting the agency, which has lost some 20% of its full-time staff since the start of the year. Making matters worse, the administration has proposed getting rid of FEMA altogether, which would be a disaster in itself.




In short: The federal government is attempting to get out of the business of helping communities prepare for and respond to climate-fueled weather disasters just as they’re becoming more deadly and destructive. It won’t work. As the flooding in Texas painfully demonstrates, Washington cannot escape its duty to confront climate change. Trying to do so will only lead to higher body counts and heavier financial burdens on communities.

(Maybe Governor Abbott can claim a broken clock award...) To Abbott’s credit, he has stood up for the state’s clean energy industry and helped kill several bills that would have put an anti-free-market cap on clean energy production and subjected wind and solar power projects to additional red tape. We need more of our elected representatives to recognize that climate change should not be a partisan issue — and that it requires urgent cooperation from members of both parties, as well as both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue.

That’s not only the right thing to do. Increasingly, it will also become the essential thing to do for political self-survival — because as extreme weather events become more and more frequent, voters will increasingly hold elected officials accountable for taking action.

There is much more that our governments can be doing to protect us — and our children and theirs — from the worsening effects of climate change. But for that to happen, all of us need to make our voices heard, and our votes count(Maine Writer post script....assuming Americans will be allowed to hold free and fair elections!)

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