Monday, March 17, 2025

Dangerous Confrontations

We are inevitably headed, whether it’s in this case or another, to a confrontation between a president who has rejected the rule of law and a judge sworn to enforce it. We are in an exceedingly dangerous moment for democracy.

- Joyce Vance

This week's featured post is "Rights, Privileges, and Mahmoud Khalil"

This week everybody was talking about the shutdown that didn't happen

Congress passed a continuing resolution keeping the government open for the rest of this fiscal year, i.e. until September 30. I have to own up to some disappointment here. Three weeks ago I wrote this:

The real test happens when the government runs out of money on March 14. It’s easy to be for or against things until somebody puts price tags on them and adds them all up. In order to get the bill he wants, Trump will need support from almost all of the Republicans in the House. If Democrats stay united and only two Republicans vote against a spending deal, it fails.

If that happens, that’s when congressional Democrats begin to have negotiating leverage.

But Speaker Mike Johnson wrote his continuing resolution without any input from Democrats, and he passed it through the House because he lost only one Republican vote. Heather Cox Richardson summarizes what's in it:

The new measure is not a so-called clean CR that simply extends previous funding. Instead, the Republican majority passed it without input from Democrats and with a number of poison pills added. The measure increases defense spending by about $6 billion from the previous year, cuts about $13 billion from nondefense spending, and cuts $20 billion in funding for the Internal Revenue Service. It forces Washington, D.C., to cut $1 billion from its budget, protects President Donald Trump’s ability to raise or lower tariffs as he wishes, and gives him considerable leeway in deciding where money goes.

When that CR went to the Senate, Democrats could have blocked it if they had hung together. (It takes 60 votes to kill a filibuster, and Republicans only have 53 senators.) For a while it looked like that would happen, with many people speculating about whether 7 Democrats would break ranks.

Then Democratic Senate Leader Chuck Schumer flipped to support the CR. This move is very unpopular inside the Democratic base, and was denounced by Democrats from AOC to Nancy Pelosi.

Schumer wrote an op-ed to explain. I'm going to try to express his view more convincingly than he did, not because I agree with it, but because I'm trying to evaluate it.

Ordinarily, a government shutdown is like a labor strike against a company: It hurts both sides, and the conflict is over who can endure the most pain before giving in. In a typical shutdown, both Republicans and Democrats understand that the American people don't like it. So they maneuver to blame each other while looking for some acceptable compromise that will end it.

But what if Trump likes ruling over a shut down government? What if he'd be content to let the shutdown run until the end of the fiscal year in September? During a shutdown, only "essential" services are provided: the military stays on duty, Social Security checks still get mailed, and so on. But isn't the whole point of all the DOGE firings and cutbacks to eliminate anything not "essential"?

If that's the case, then Trump doesn't feel pain and doesn't come under more and more pressure to make a deal as the shutdown continues. Eventually the Democrats have to capitulate and get nothing, so why not capitulate and get nothing now?

I admit that I have trouble evaluating whether or not that's how a shutdown would play out. Maybe it would. But even if I grant Schumer that point, I'm not impressed with his leadership, because he apparently didn't see this situation coming and had no plan to deal with it when it arrived.

OK, I admit I also didn't think Speaker Johnson would keep his ducks in a row and get a CR passed without Democrats. But it was always at least a possibility. Somebody on the Democratic side should have gamed out how to respond. There should have been a plan and a message: "We can't fight Trump this way, so we're going to fight him that way." There should have been talking points, and major Democrats should have united in pushing those points.

Instead, Schumer was talking about defeating the CR right up until the moment he turned around. Democrats are presenting no plan for resisting Trump going forward, and they're bickering among themselves about what they just did. They look weak and Trump looks masterful. Good going, Chuck!

The one saving grace in all this is that a shutdown itself is not in the headlines. Instead we can focus on the ever-weakening Trump economy, the assault on constitutional rights, and the crashing stock market. If only there were an opposition party with a plan to turn everything around.

and Mahmoud Khalil

His deportation case, and what it means for freedom of speech in general, is the subject of the featured post.

A related issue is the Trump administration's attack on Columbia University, where Khalil was a student. The Harvard Crimson writes "First They Came for Columbia", charging that "The administration has weaponized the fight against antisemitism as a means to another end: punishing and weakening universities." It says that no university is in a better position to lead a fight against this than Harvard, which so far is doing nothing.

and the rule of law

With the failure of Congress to check Trump in any way, the full burden falls on the courts. From the beginning, two questions have loomed over all the cases challenging Trump's illegal actions:

  • Will the Supreme Court invent new law to justify whatever Trump does?
  • What happens if the Trump administration doesn't obey court orders?

We're getting closer and closer to finding out. This week, hundreds of non-citizens were deported under the aegis of the Alien Enemies Act of 1798. This is one of the notorious Alien and Sedition Acts you may remember from US History class. Heather Cox Richardson summarizes the history:

That law, which applies during wartime or when a foreign government threatens an “invasion” or “predatory incursion,” permits the president to authorize the arrest, imprisonment, or deportation of people older than 14 who come from a foreign enemy country. President James Madison used the law to arrest British nationals during the War of 1812, President Woodrow Wilson invoked it against Germans during World War I, and President Franklin Delano Roosevelt used it against Japanese, Italian, and German noncitizens.

During the 2024 presidential campaign, Trump said he would use the Alien Enemies Act to deport gang members, and in an executive order signed Friday night but released yesterday morning after news of it leaked, Trump claimed that thousands of members of the Tren de Aragua gang have “unlawfully infiltrated the United States and are conducting irregular warfare and undertaking hostile actions against the United States.” In connection with the Venezuelan government, he said, the gang has made incursions into the U.S. with the goal of “destabilizing democratic nations in the Americas, including the United States.”

This is pretty fanciful stuff. Maybe Tren de Aragua is operating in the US, though Trump has a long history of exaggerating immigrant gangs, so I'd be amazed if we're really talking about "thousands" of members. But the idea that they aren't just trying to make money the way all gangs do, but are instead "conducting irregular warfare" while conspiring with the Venezuelan government to "destabilize ... the United States" -- that seems like a fever dream to me. Is there any evidence to back that up?

So this was the justification for deporting 200 supposed gang members to El Salvador. El Salvador is getting paid $20K per man/year to imprison them (prior to any graft), so you can imagine the conditions they'll be held in.

The ACLU filed suit pointing out that the administration had presented no evidence these actually were gang members, or that Venezuela was using them to wage war against us, so a federal judge issued a temporary restraining order against invoking the AEA in this way. And then things got interesting.

Ryan Goodman of Just Security put together the timeline of what came next. At 5:00 last night, Judge Boasberg asked whether deportations would happen in the next 24–48 hours. The government’s attorney said he didn’t know; the ACLU attorney said the government was moving rapidly. Before 5:22, Boasberg ordered a break so the government attorney could obtain official information before the hearing resumed at 6:00.

At 5:45, Goodman reports, another flight took off.

Before 6:52, Judge Boasberg agreed with the ACLU that the terms of the Alien Enemies Act apply only to “enemy nations,” and blocked deportations under it. Nnamdi Egwuonwu and Gary Grumbach of NBC News reported that the judge ordered the administration to return the planes in flight to the United States. “Any plane containing these folks that is going to take off, or is in the air, needs to be returned to the United States,” the judge said. “Those people need to be returned to the United States.”

The plane did not turn around. Law Dork looks into the details. It appears that the administration's position is that the judge's order did not apply once the plane had left American airspace.

Of course that’s absurd — as many others also noted Sunday — because the U.S. government was still in control of the planes, and the Justice Department lawyer before Boasberg on Saturday evening had literally argued, albeit unsuccessfully, that there was no irreparable harm here — a factor in deciding whether to grant a TRO — because the challenge could continue even if individuals had been deported.

One thing you can see across multiple court cases: Trump administration lawyers are not operating in good faith. They say whatever will allow illegal policies to continue. And if they have to say the opposite tomorrow, they don't care.


Jay Kuo summarizes the week's other legal news, which was pretty good.

A federal judge ordered the administration to rehire tens of thousands of the probationary workers it fired. Basically, the administration took advantage of a loophole allowing probationary workers to be fired for poor performance, and pretended that all probationary workers had performed poorly. The judge called this scheme "a sham".

A member of the National Labor Relations Board returned to work after a court found her firing illegal.

Perkins Coie, a private law firm targeted by a Trump executive order, won a temporary restraining order against enforcement of the executive order.

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Paul Krugman looks at the purely economic cost of Trump trashing America's image. He starts with Canada cancelling its order for F-35 fighter jets, which makes sense because "sophisticated military equipment requires a lot of technical support, so you don’t want to buy it from a country you don’t trust." Several European countries are also reconsidering buying new American weapon systems.

I had not appreciated how big US military exports are: $318.7 billion in 2024. That's 15% of total exports and twice as big as agricultural exports. And then there's tourism ($100 billion) and education ($50 billion). As the US becomes more suspicious of foreigners and less welcoming (not to mention Trump trashing our universities), those numbers should go down.

One way to think about this is to say that Trump is doing to America what Elon Musk is doing to Tesla, destroying a valuable brand through erratic behavior and repulsive ideology. ... Trump’s belief that America holds all the cards, that the rest of the world needs access to our markets but we don’t need them, is all wrong. We are rapidly losing the world’s trust, and part of the cost will be financial.


Krugman recognizes that as an academic economist, he's not particularly good at predicting short-term business cycles. So he interviews somebody who does that for a living. The upshot is that numbers look decent right now, but it wouldn't take much to change them. Both hiring and firing have been soft recently, so it wouldn't take much in the way of layoffs to spike the unemployment rate.


You know those measurements of CO2 in the atmosphere and how it increases every year? Those come from the Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii. Well, maybe not for long. The NOAA office in Hilo that oversees the observatory is being closed.

Remember when Trump wanted to limit Covid tests so that the number of reported cases would go down? Same thing here. If we stop measuring CO2 it won't be a problem any more.


Elon Musk has claimed that no one has died from his cutoff of foreign aid funds. Nicholas Kristoff provides some names and pictures of the victims Musk is denying.


Robert Morris, a Texas megachurch founder with connections to Donald Trump, was indicted in Oklahoma Wednesday for molesting a girl in the 1980s, when he was living with her family. I mention this not out of animus towards either Morris or the branch of Christianity he represents, but to make a point.

Certain cases become the center of movements; laws are named after them. For example, Lakin Riley was a nursing student murdered by an immigrant who had entered the US illegally. That led to the Lakin Riley Act, which requires the government to deport immigrants accused of certain crimes, even if they aren't convicted.

Whether a case takes on that kind of symbolic value depends on the popularity of the people in question. Undocumented immigrants are unpopular, so crimes they commit are candidates for becoming the center of campaigns, depending not at all on whether the perpetrators are typical of some larger trend.

Drag performers are also unpopular, and various laws restricting them have been pitched based on the threat they pose to children, despite the fact that there seems to be no such threat. But imagine what would happen if a single drag performer raped a single child. That child would become famous, and very likely would end up with a law named after him or her.

Christian ministers, on the other hand, are popular. So of course there will be no Cindy Clemishire Act, (named for Morris' victim) that puts restrictions on Christian ministers or abridges their rights in some way. It doesn't matter how many ministers molest children. None of those cases will become the kind of cause célèbre that Lakin Riley's murder was.


Trevor Noah's "What Now?" podcast is consistently good. I recommend his interview with Robert Putnam of "Bowling Alone" fame.

and let's close with something outrageously classical

A four-woman quartet turns Vivaldi and Mozart into a confrontational stage performance.

Monday, March 10, 2025

Crossed Lines

When you see important societal actors — be it university presidents, media outlets, C.E.O.s, mayors, governors — changing their behavior in order to avoid the wrath of the government, that’s a sign that we’ve crossed the line into some form of authoritarianism

- Steven Levitsky

This week's featured post is "Those Mysterious Tariffs".

This week everybody was talking about Ukraine

Pundits struggled to make sense of the Oval Office meeting between Trump and Zelenskyy on February 28, but nobody nailed it better than Jon Stewart: Trump and the Republicans just like Putin better. Stewart made an extended metaphor about a pro wrestling scene in which apparent good-guy John Cena sneak attacks a fellow good-guy wrestler.

Creating tension with Ukraine in the Oval Office meeting “was a ‘heel turn’ designed to create the alliance Trump always wanted in the first place,” Stewart explained, referring to the pro-wrestling narrative device in which a fan-favorite character changes to become a storyline’s villain.

Another way to understand the meeting is to take "Trump is Putin's puppet" literally. Trump told Zelenskyy exactly what Putin would have told him had he been there: Surrender or World War III starts.

I have to wonder whether Trump can speak while Putin drinks a glass of water.

After the meeting, Trump withdrew all military aid from Ukraine, including intelligence. Time reports:

The Ukrainians have lost the ability to detect the approach of Russian bombers and other warplanes as they take off inside Russia. As a result, Ukraine has less time to warn civilians and military personnel about the risk of an approaching airstrike or missile.

The result: "hundreds of dead Ukrainians".

Since the end of World War II, the United States has stood for collective security based on alliances with other democratic nations and resistance to aggression by dictators. We haven't always applied those principles consistently, but we never explicitly rejected them. Now we do. If dictators want to take over their neighbors, that's their business.


BTW: Trump's cocksure assertion that Zelenskyy "doesn't have the cards" because Ukraine is losing on the battlefield is another example of Putin's puppetry. The battlefield is not going well for either side. Both countries are facing exhaustion, and while Russian forces are advancing slowly, at this pace it will take many years to conquer Ukraine.

and tariffs

Trump whipsawed the markets these last two weeks with a series of announcements about tariffs being imposed or postponed. That's the topic of the featured post. But in that post I didn't get around to making the obvious prediction: Capital spending is going to collapse, and is probably already collapsing, because companies and investors can't trust their projections of where the economy is headed. Ditto for households, who can't predict whether the government spending cuts are going to affect their jobs. (Maybe you can build that new bedroom onto your house, or maybe you're going to need a cushion in case you'll be unemployed.) So money is going to sit on the sidelines, and that is going to start a recession.

and the budget

Thursday, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office confirmed what should have been obvious to everyone: The budget outline that the House passed recently is going to make substantial cuts to Medicaid.

House Republicans last week narrowly passed a budget instructing the energy and commerce committee, which is responsible for federal healthcare, to cut spending under its jurisdiction by $880bn ... The independent in-house agency confirmed that it would be impossible to reduce spending by $880bn without cuts to Medicare, Medicaid or the Children’s Health Insurance Program (Chip). That’s because after excluding Medicare, Medicaid and Chip, the committee oversees only $381bn in spending – much less than the $880bn target – the CBO said.

There's a pretty clear game-plan of deceit here.

  • Start by claiming to protect safety-net programs Americans -- especially Americans in the poorer, more rural Republican districts -- depend on.
  • Announce plans to cut those general areas, but deny that the cuts will affect those programs, even if the math doesn't work without such cuts.
  • Cut those programs, but claim that only "waste and fraud" will be affected.
  • Refuse to pay for your kid's healthcare and/or kick your mother out of her nursing home.

We're already hearing rhetoric about how deep cuts in federal spending are "necessary", because the $36-trillion-and-rising federal debt is unsustainable. But no matter how dire a picture Republicans paint of our fiscal situation, taxing rich people is never an option.


House Republicans are committed to not negotiating with Democrats about either the FY 2026 budget or the continuing resolution to fund the rest of FY 2025, which is needed to prevent a government shutdown on Friday. Democrats want a commitment that whatever funding they pass is meaningful, and won't just get frozen by Musk or Trump. Republicans want to give Trump maximum flexibility, even if it means surrendering Congress' power of the purse.

In order to do that, they'll need to hold all their members together, which they've never managed before. But maybe this time they can.

and Trump's speech to Congress

which I didn't watch (though I did quickly scan a transcript). I don't see the point, since nothing Trump says can be believed. The Guardian fact checks the speech's biggest whoppers. Since Trump has been corrected on these fake facts before, they are clearly intentional lies.

The biggest one was his claim that Elon Musk has uncovered "massive fraud". So far, Musk has said the word "fraud" a lot, but he hasn't provided any evidence of it. Quite likely, Musk has not uncovered any fraud.

Trump's speech lasted a record-setting 100 minutes, reminiscent of the hours-long speeches dictators like Cuba's Fidel Castro used to give.

Like me, James Fallows more or less ignored the speech's content, focusing instead on its symptomology. He noticed four things:

  • Trump's rhetorical range is shrinking. He used some form of his "like nothing ever seen before" cliche 20 times during the speech. By contrast, he said it only once in his first inaugural address, and it rarely appeared in his first-term State of the Union addresses. Similarly, "incredible" has become his dominant positive adjective, appearing six times.
  • More alarmingly, Fallows notes that all types of Trump speeches -- MAGA rallies, presidential addresses, press conferences, televised Oval Office talks -- have collapsed into one form. The broader press commented on how rally-like this speech was, but missed the larger point that all Trump speeches are basically the same now.
  • Recent presidential addresses to Congress have included heckling from the opposing party (going back to Joe Wilson's "You lie" directed at Obama in 2009). But this was the first time a president has abused members of Congress: Trump called Elizabeth Warren "Pocahontas" from the podium.
  • Presidents almost always spin or shade the truth in these speeches, and occasionally have even lied outright. But Trump's lying has reached a completely different level. Lying is no longer an attempt to fool people, because some of Trump's lies are so transparent -- Social Security is paying benefits to people it thinks are 200 years old -- that no one will believe them. Instead, lying has become an expression of power. "To me, Trump’s body-language—his bearing, mood, and presentation—suggested that the grossness of the lies was the point of the exercise. Preening in the knowledge that he could get away with it, and that he could make his minions applaud."

Newly elected Democratic Senator Elissa Slotkin needed only 10 minutes to respond.

We just went through another fraught election season. Americans made it clear that prices are too high and that government needs to be more responsive to their needs. America wants change. But there is a responsible way to make change, and a reckless way. And, we can make that change without forgetting who we are as a country, and as a democracy.

She talked about the economy:

President Trump is trying to deliver an unprecedented giveaway to his billionaire friends. He's on the hunt to find trillions of dollars to pass along to the wealthiest in America. And to do that, he's going to make you pay in every part of your life. Grocery and home prices are going up, not down — and he hasn't laid out a credible plan to deal with either. His tariffs on allies like Canada will raise prices on energy, lumber, cars — and start a trade war that will hurt manufacturing and farmers. Your premiums and prescriptions will cost more because the math on his proposals doesn't work without going after your health care. Meanwhile, for those keeping score, the national debt is going up, not down. And if he's not careful, he could walk us right into a recession.

And national security:

[T]hat scene in the Oval Office wasn't just a bad episode of reality TV. It summed up Trump's whole approach to the world. He believes in cozying up to dictators like Vladimir Putin and kicking our friends, like Canada, in the teeth. He sees American leadership as merely a series of real estate transactions. ...

[O]ur democracy, our very system of government, has been the aspiration of the world. And right now, it's at risk. It's at risk when a president decides he can pick and choose what rules he wants to follow, when he ignores court orders or the Constitution itself, or when elected leaders stand idly by and just let it happen. But it's also at risk when the President pits Americans against each other, when he demonizes those who are different, and tells certain people they shouldn't be included. Because America is not just a patch of land between two oceans. We are more than that. Generations have fought and died to secure the fundamental rights that define us. Those rights and the fight for them make us who we are.

and Tesla

For years, Elon Musk's public image worked to Tesla's benefit. He was Tony Stark. He was to our world what Hank Rearden was to Atlas Shrugged. And Tesla had a technology lead over rival electric-car companies. So Teslas weren't just good cars, they were cool. Driving a Tesla was a virtue signal; it told the world you were serious about climate change.

Then he bought Twitter and made the online world safe for Nazis. He spent $290 million to elect Donald Trump. He addressed a rally for the AfD, calling that neo-Nazi party "the best hope for the future of Germany."

His Trump contributions bought him the extra-constitutional power to cut government programs, fire civil-service workers, and shut down agencies created by Congress. (The Atlas Shrugged character he most resembles now is Wesley Mouch, head of the Bureau of Economic Planning and National Resources.) Has medical research ground to a halt in Musk's America? Are children starving in Africa while food rots in US ports? What a shame.

Suddenly, people who had been willing to pay a virtue premium for a Tesla are instead looking for a vice discount. It isn't just that competitors have caught up to Tesla (which they have). In many people's minds, a Tesla would have to be a lot better than the next best EV to make up for the stigma of driving a "Swasticar".

And in case you hadn't noticed that stigma, anti-Musk demonstrators are showing up at Tesla showrooms to remind you. Saturday, Tesla Takedowns erupted all over the US, with 350 protesters in Manhattan alone.

In Europe as well, Tesla's problems are growing: In Germany, sales were down 60% in January and 76% in February.


Maybe you were horrified by Musk's statement (in a Joe Rogan interview) about empathy.

The fundamental weakness of Western civilization is empathy, the empathy exploit,” Musk said. “There it’s they’re exploiting a bug in Western civilization, which is the empathy response.

Well, you should know that seeing empathy as an exploitable weakness isn't just a psychological quirk Musk has because he's on the spectrum. It's become a thing on the Right. A conservative Christian author has a book out called Toxic Empathy: How progressives exploit Christian compassion.

We are told that empathy is the highest virtue—the key to being a good person. Is that true? Or has “empathy,” like so many other words of our day—“tolerance,” “justice,” “acceptance”—been hijacked by bad actors who exploit compassion for their own political ends?

Yep. If you find yourself feeling sorry for bombed-out communities in Gaza, hungry children in Africa, or working-class families losing their health insurance in the US, it's a trap. Jesus wouldn't want you to fall for it. "Love your neighbor" now means something else entirely.

David French comments:

That’s one reason you’ll often see a shocking amount of derision online when anyone starts talking about the human toll of Trump’s decisions. His MAGA evangelicals are broadcasting that you cannot reach them with anything that looks like an appeal to the heart. ... It’s also just bizarre to argue that describing the consequences of a policy is somehow emotionally manipulative when avoiding those consequences was the purpose of the program that’s being frozen or cut.

So, yes, you say that children might die without a certain program when the very purpose of the program is to prevent children from dying. That’s not manipulation. It’s confronting individuals with facts. It’s making them understand exactly what they are choosing to do.

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Paul Krugman looks at Trump's "Strategic Cryptocurrency Reserve" plan and concludes that it's a gigantic pump-and-dump scheme. Even if you believe it's somehow on the up-and-up, this observation should trouble you:

What would the U.S. government do with this reserve? Make payoffs to gangsters? Buy favors from rogue governments like North Korea? I guess it could, in a pinch, sell the stuff to raise money if people have lost trust in the U.S. government’s solvency, but surely it would be a better strategy to stay solvent — among other things by not borrowing to buy assets that will probably crash in value if and when America tries try to sell them.


HHS has notified the State of Maine that its policy allowing transgender athletes to compete in school sports violates Title IX

by denying female student athletes in the State of Maine an equal opportunity to participate in, and obtain the benefits of participation, "in any interscholastic, intercollegiate, club or intramural athletics" offered by the state by allowing male athletes to compete against female athletes in current and future athletic events.

The Maine Attorney General’s Office was notified on Feb. 21 that the DHHS Office for Civil Rights started a compliance review of the Maine DOE, including the University of Maine System. A spokesperson for the Maine Attorney General's Office said federal investigators did not interview anyone in their office.

Whenever we talk about trans issues, especially trans athletes, it's important to realize just how few cases, and how little impact on cis-women's rights, we're talking about. HHS' letter identifies two cases:

In the 2023 Maine Integrated Youth Health Survey, 4.5% of high school students reported a transgender identity. (That seems high to me, but what do I know?) If we picked some random group comprising 4.5% of students, that group would also probably contain a few successful athletes. So I don't see evidence that Maine's policy is distorting girls' sports in any meaningful way.

A BlueSky poster brings the numbers home:

As of today, there are more kids infected with measles than there are trans athletes playing in college sports in the U.S.

In general, I disapprove of the Right's tendency to make policy by anecdote. (Another example is to base immigration policy on anecdotes about misbehaving immigrants. Hitler's Nazis used to publicize every "Jewish crime" they could find, for similar reasons.) Anecdotal policy lends itself to prejudice, because only the anecdotes that fit the ruling bias are allowed to count. For example, there are countless stories of boys and girls being abused by Christian ministers. Should Christian churches be shut down to prevent this? Of course not, because Christians are much more popular than transfolk.

The upshot of HHS' letter is a referral to the Department of Justice for enforcement.


Various free-trade agreements have established an Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) process "to protect foreign businesses from state corruption and theft", but these days it's being used by companies whose investments are affected by a nation's environmental laws. Right now, Greenland is being sued by a mining company because it shut down uranium mining in 2021. The company says it had invested $100 million in the site, but it is suing for $11.5 billion, based on what their mine would be worth had it been successfully developed.

That case motivated The Guardian to look at other ISDS suits, and the "chilling effect" they have on governments' attempts to limit fossil fuels. In short, every time a country tries to protect its environment, it may have to pay a ransom to the parties who feel entitled to exploit that resource.


The Netanyahu government's war against the independence of the judiciary branch has resumed.

and let's close with a great relief

A Chilean kayaker was scooped up by the mouth of a humpback whale, and then spit back out. He was unharmed.

Humpback whales aren't actually looking for large prey like humans. They typically suck in large quantities of seawater and filter it for krill and other small morsels. But that's probably hard to remember when you find yourself in one's mouth.

Monday, February 24, 2025

Winged Victory

NO SIFT NEXT WEEK. THE NEXT NEW ARTICLES WILL APPEAR ON MARCH 10.

Whoever is winning at the moment will always seem to be invincible.

- George Orwell
"Second Thoughts on James Burnham" (1946)

In order to understand the title of this post and its relationship to the quote, you need to know why ancient Greek statues of Nike, the goddess of victory, had wings: During a battle, birdlike Victory might flit back and forth from one side to the other before landing.

This week's featured post is "How Things Stand", my evaluation of the current state of Trump's attempt to overturn American democracy.

This week everybody was talking about Musk's chaotic attack on the federal workforce

Elon may have reached the limit of his power this weekend, as other players within the Trump administration began to resist his usurpations of their domains. Saturday, Musk tweeted on X that all federal workers would soon receive an email "requesting to understand what they got done last week. Failure to respond will be taken as a resignation."

That was followed by an all-government-employee email from hr@opm.gov, an account Musk created specifically to broadcast to the whole federal workforce.

[Subject Line] What did you do last week?

Please reply to this email with approx. 5 bullets of what you accomplished last week and cc your manager.

Please do not send any classified information, links, or attachments.

Deadline is this Monday at 11:59pmEST.

A number of Trump-administration cabinet secretaries did not take this well. Picture it: You're supposed to be in charge of a department, but somebody from outside your chain-of-command contacts your employees asking for progress reports and threatening their jobs. Presumably he thinks that he (and not you) is going to evaluate their performance. And what if you had something more urgent for your people to be doing on Monday?

So several people who are not Trump-administration dissidents (in any way) pushed back.

Newly confirmed FBI Director Kash Patel told his staff in a separate email later on Saturday that they should "pause any responses". "FBI personnel may have received an email from OPM requesting information," Patel wrote in a message obtained by CBS News."The FBI, through the Office of the Director, is in charge of all of our review processes, and will conduct reviews in accordance with the FBI procedures."

The state department sent a similar message, saying leadership would respond on behalf of the agency. "No employee is obligated to report their activities outside of their Department chain of command," an email from Tibor Nagy, acting undersecretary [of State] for management, said.

The Pentagon told its staff: "When and if required, the Department will coordinate responses to the email you have received from OPM."


From Wired today:

Federal employees at the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) were greeted this morning by television sets at the agency’s Washington, DC headquarters playing what appears to be an AI-generated video of President Donald Trump kissing the feet of Elon Musk, accompanied by the words: “LONG LIVE THE REAL KING.”

A person at HUD headquarters on Monday morning shared a video with WIRED showing the scene playing out on a loop on a TV screen inside the Robert C. Weaver Federal Building. The source, who was granted anonymity over fears of repercussions, says that workers at the building had to manually turn off each TV in order to stop the video playing.


Just for a moment, and for the sake of argument, Paul Krugman takes seriously the notion that government should run like a business. And then he looks at the list of alleged costs DOGE claims to have saved the taxpayers. It doesn't add up to anywhere near the "$55 billion" Elon claims, but that's not the worst of it. At one point it mistakes an $8 million contract for an $8 billion contract.

Now, imagine that a publicly held company were to release a statement about its earnings that was riddled with major errors — with all the errors going in the same direction, making the company’s earnings look better than they are. What would you conclude? The answer, surely, would be to suspect that the company’s business is going very badly, but that top executives are trying desperately to hide the bad news while they sell off their own shares and possibly loot the company through sweetheart deals and so on.

and Ukraine

In case you didn't think it could get any worse, just this morning the US voted with Russia and against our NATO allies against a UN resolution marking the three-year anniversary of the Ukraine War by condemning Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Back in 2016, Hillary Clinton said Trump would be Putin's puppet. And so he is.


Tuesday night, Trump firmly came down on Vladimir Putin's side in the Ukraine War. He made a number of false claims that echo Russian propaganda, including implying that Ukraine started the war

“I’m very disappointed, I hear that they’re upset about not having a seat [at the talks],” Trump told reporters at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida when asked about the Ukrainian reaction. The US president said a “half baked” negotiator could have secured a settlement years ago “without the loss of much land”.

“Today I heard, ‘oh, well, we weren’t invited.’ Well, you’ve been there for three years ... You should have never started it. You could have made a deal,” he said.

and that Zelenskyy (but not Putin) is a dictator. The Kyiv Independent explains the electoral situation: Zelenskyy was elected to a five-year term as president in 2019 with 73% of the vote. After the Russian invasion in 2022, martial law was declared. The elections previously scheduled for 2024 were not held due to the government's inability to establish safe voting conditions in the whole country. (The UK's Prime Minister Keir Starmer has pointed out that Britain also suspended elections during World War II.)

Trump's claim that Zelenskyy has a 4% approval rating was a typical Trump statistic: based on nothing. Kyiv International Institute of Sociology estimates Zelenskyy's approval rating at 57%, far higher than Trump's.

The Trump administration has been negotiating with Russia about the Ukraine War, but without Ukraine or Europe at the table. Statements by various people in the administration -- J. D. Vance, Pete Hegseth -- imply that Trump has already given in to many of Putin's demands: Russia gains Ukrainian territory, the US commits no peacekeeping troops to Ukraine, Ukraine does not join NATO, etc. Meanwhile, Trump has been demanding Ukraine sign over half its mineral wealth to the US in exchange for past support, with no future American guarantees or responsibilities.

Trump's embrace of a foreign dictator and previous enemy of the United States has not been sitting well with many congressional Republicans, who have pushed back against Trump's false claims without directly criticizing Trump.

“Putin started this war. Putin committed war crimes. Putin is the dictator who murdered his opponents. The EU nations have contributed more to Ukraine. Zelensky polls over 50%,” Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.), a GOP Ukraine supporter, posted on social media, tackling several arguments made by Trump over the past day without naming the president. “Ukraine wants to be part of the West, Putin hates the West. I don’t accept George Orwell’s doublethink.”

and the military firings

Friday, Trump fired two members of the Joint Chiefs -- the Black guy and the woman. The JCS will return to being a White men's club, as God intended. He also fired the top lawyers of all three military services. (These are the people who are supposed to tell military leadership: "You can't do that, it's illegal.")

JCS Chair and four-star General C.Q. Brown (a.k.a. the Black guy) is going to be replaced by a three-star general Trump is bringing out of retirement. Heather Cox Richardson writes:

In place of Brown, Trump has said he will nominate Air Force Lieutenant General John Dan Caine, who goes by the nickname “Razin”—as in “Razin Caine”—to be the next chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. ... Caine has held none of the assignments that are required for elevation to this position. His military biography says he was a career F-16 pilot who served on active duty and in the National Guard. Before he retired, he was the associate director for military affairs at the CIA. The law prohibits the elevation of someone at his level to chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff unless the president waives the law because “such action is necessary in the national interest.”

But of course it is Brown who is denigrated as a "DEI hire", not the White man replacing him whose only qualification is his absolute loyalty to Trump.

and the tax/budget negotiations

The Senate has passed a budget plan different from the one the House hopes to vote on tomorrow. A budget outline has no direct effect -- no money is appropriated -- but it's necessary to pass one before the reconciliation procedure can become available to circumvent Senate filibusters.

The fact that Republicans haven't formed a common plan yet -- and that the Senate went ahead and voted on its version even though Trump prefers the House plan -- indicates that this might be a difficult negotiation.

Republicans got no Democratic votes for their plan, but Rand Paul crossed over to vote against it.

The Republican margin in the House is so narrow that if just two Republicans cross over and Democrats stay united, no bill can pass.


I know basically nothing about the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, which claims to be non-partisan and has a board of directors full of academic types. So hold the following analysis lightly.

ITEP looked at the Trump proposals as we know them so far, including his stated (but not yet fully implemented) proposals about tariffs. ITEP models tariffs as taxes eventually paid by consumers, which is what most economists expect to happen.

If you do that, you get these conclusions about how Trump's proposals will affect taxpayers at various income levels.

but I want to back up and take a larger view

The featured post takes a broad look at how the autocracy vs. democracy struggle is going.

and you also might be interested in ...

LawDork points out that even cases that look like wins for the Trump administration are actually worth fighting, because the administration is forced to put its position on the record, and may even make commitments to the judge about how it will interpret certain parts of the policy in question. Even if a lawsuit fails, it shows the administration that someone is watching what they do.


Germany's governing party, the Social Democrats, suffered a crushing defeat Sunday in Germany's parliamentary elections, winning only 16% of the vote. Its allies, the Green Party, added 12%.

The leading party was the conservative Christian Democrats with 29%, so the next chancellor will likely be the CDU's Friedrich Merz. This is not a big deal in itself, since the CDU isn't all that conservative by American standards. Long-time chancellor Angela Merkel was a Christian Democrat, and the party hasn't changed all that much in the meantime.

The big news, though was the performance of the neo-Nazi Alliance for Germany (AfD), which got 21%, about double its performance in the previous elections in 2021. AfD was endorsed by American fascists J. D. Vance and Elon Musk.

Trump hailed the election’s outcome. “Much like the USA, the people of Germany got tired of the no-common-sense agenda, especially on energy and immigration,” he wrote in a post on Truth Social. “This is a great day for Germany.”

In addition to local German issues, the new government will play a central role in charting a course forward for Europe in the face of a rising Russian threat and an unreliable ally in America.

Merz struck a blunt tone, saying Trump had made it “clear that [his] government is fairly indifferent to Europe’s fate” and that Germany would have to wait to see “whether we will still be able to speak about Nato in its current form” when the alliance meets for its next summit in June.

“For me, the absolute priority will be to strengthen Europe as quickly as possible so that, step by step, we can really achieve independence from the USA” in defense matters.

and let's close with something that belongs in your vocabulary

Megan Herbert is a cartoonist with a Substack blog. In a recent piece, a wife calls her husband over to the window because he urgently needs to see something whose nature isn't revealed until the last panel: It's a beauty emergency.

Monday, February 17, 2025

Unwelcome Advice

I can even understand how a Chief Executive whose background is in business and politics might see the contemplated dismissal-with-leverage as a good, if distasteful, deal. But any assistant U.S. attorney would know that our laws and traditions do not allow using the prosecutorial power to influence other citizens, much less elected officials, in this way. If no lawyer within earshot of the President is willing to give him that advice, then I expect you will eventually find someone who is enough of a fool, or enough of a coward, to file your motion. But it was never going to be me.

- SDNY Assistant US Attorney Hagan Scotten
writing to resign after a DoJ order
to dismiss charges against NY Mayor Eric Adams

This week's featured post is "Can Ethical People Work in the Trump Administration?"

This week everybody was talking about the DoJ resignations

The resignation of seven federal prosecutors is covered in the featured post.

and Elon Musk's growing power

The Guardian summed up the state of things on Sunday:

Musk and his allies in the “department of government efficiency” (Doge), the unofficial committee acting as the operations arm of his cost-cutting efforts, have targeted a range of major government departments. They have moved to close the United States Agency for International Development, slashed the Department of Education and taken over the General Services Administration that controls federal IT structures. Doge staffers have also gained access to the treasury department, as well as set their sights on the Department of Defense, energy department, Environmental Protection Agency and at least a dozen others.

It's worth pointing out that Musk's authority is entirely delegated from President Trump, and the Constitution does not give Trump the power to do many of these things without Congress. But Congress has played no role in any of DOGE's actions. It never established DOGE as a government department, and Musk's appointment has never been confirmed by the Senate. Agencies like USAID and the Department of Education were set up and funded by Congress, so the President (and hence Musk) has no legal authority to close them or block the money Congress has appropriated to fund them.

The Guardian goes on to point out how Musk is benefiting personally from much of what he does.

As companies seek to benefit from Doge’s reshaping of the government, Musk also has extensive contracts worth billions of dollars through his own companies like SpaceX that are potentially set to expand under the new administration. ... Musk’s influence in the White House also puts in peril the numerous federal investigations against his companies for a range of alleged wrongdoings that includes violating federal labor and securities laws. Trump has already dissolved one watchdog agency investigating Tesla. Government accountability groups have warned that Musk’s myriad of potential ethical conflicts and a lack of transparency around his actions in government carry the risk that he will use his power for political corruption.

“You don’t need to be any kind of ethics expert to to appreciate the massive problem there is with a billionaire who helped fund the president’s campaign and has government contracts of his own being given the power to root around in agency systems that impact how and when government contractors are paid,” said Donald Sherman, executive director of the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (Crew), a watchdog organization.

To justify himself, Trump has quoted the Emperor Napoleon: “He who saves his Country does not violate any Law.” ("Saving the country" is in the eye of the beholder. So had he succeeded, would-be assassin Thomas Matthew Crooks might have used the same justification.)


The slipshod nature of DOGE's actions was underlined this week when it came out that DOGE had fired more than 300 employees of the Nuclear National Security Administration, the people who watch over our nuclear weapons stockpile.

Some of the fired employees included NNSA staff who are on the ground at facilities where nuclear weapons are built. These staff oversee the contractors who build nuclear weapons, and they inspect these weapons. It also included employees at NNSA headquarters who write requirements and guidelines for contractors who build nuclear weapons. A source told CNN they believe these individuals were fired because “no one has taken anytime to understand what we do and the importance of our work to the nation’s national security.”

When people who do understand what NNSA does got involved, the government tried to rescind the firings. However, the fired employees had lost access to their work email accounts, so no one immediately knew how to contact them.

Keep this in mind when you hear pronouncements about "waste" from Musk or other DOGE people: Everything looks like waste when you don't understand it.


Another blow to the "genius" image of Musk and his minions came when it turned out that the Doge.gov web site had security problems.


Did you hear about the $50 million in condoms USAID sent to Hamas? Or the 150-year-olds collecting Social Security? Or that USAID is a criminal organization, in league with money-laundering Lutheran charities?

Complete bullshit, to use a technical term coined by philosopher Harry Frankfurt. Nothing Musk says should be believed until he provides evidence.

and the law

Proclamations of Napoleon have no legal weight in the United States, so many of Musk's actions are being challenged in court. So far the Trump administration is losing most of those cases.

However, last year Trump also lost on his presidential-immunity argument all the way up the line until the partisan Republican Supreme Court got the case. Lower courts are obliged to follow previous precedents (though occasionally a judge goes rogue). But the Supreme Court is free to make up law as it sees fit, as it did in the immunity case.

Same thing here. A simple reading of the Constitution (in the birthright citizenship cases) or the law (in the freezing-federal-funding cases) forces a judge to rule against Trump. But the basic argument Trump is making across the board is that any law limiting his power is unconstitutional. (For example: The Impoundment Control Act of 1974 says that a president has to spend money as Congress has appropriated it. Previous Supreme Courts have upheld the Act's constitutionality, and those precedents tie the hands of lower-court judges.)

That is an absurd argument ungrounded in the history of American law. But so was sweeping presidential immunity. During the Biden administration, the Court's six conservative justices frequently limited the executive branch's ability to act without authorization by Congress. But Biden was a Democrat, and in the Roberts Era the law changes depending on which party has power.

But will it change this far? We may be about to find out. Here's the background: The US Office of the Special Counsel is an independent agency established by Congress.

OSC's primary mission is to safeguard the merit system by protecting federal employees and applicants from prohibited personnel practices (PPPs), especially reprisal for whistleblowing.

LawDork elaborates:

The limits state that the Special Counsel is nominated by the president, subject to Senate confirmation, for a five-year term and can only be removed by the president “for inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office.”

This set-up makes perfect sense, because OSC can't do its job if the same authority that wants to go after whistleblowers, i.e., the President, can also fire the Special Counsel if he gets in the way. However, Trump did fire Special Counsel Hampton Dellinger without cause. Dellinger went to court, and was granted a temporary restraining order preventing Trump from firing him. An appeals court refused the administration's appeal 2-1, but the dissenting judge (a Trump appointee) objected that "Congress cannot constitutionally restrict the President’s power to remove the Special Counsel."

Yesterday, the administration took its appeal to the Supreme Court, hoping that its Trump-cannot-be-bound (even though Biden could) argument prevails there. If it does, I suspect that few of the current lower-court rulings against Trump will stand.

and Ukraine

Tomorrow, a US delegation headed by Secretary of State Marco Rubio will meet with Russian counterparts to discuss ending the war in Ukraine. Notice who will not be there: a Ukrainian delegation or anyone representing our European allies.

Prior to these talks, the Trump administration already seems to have conceded much of what Russia wants. At a NATO meeting in Brussels last week, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Ukraine will not restore its pre-invasion borders, and he distanced the US from any guarantees for Ukraine's future. He called Ukraine's desire for NATO membership "unrealistic".

In sweeping remarks to NATO allies eager to hear how much support Washington intends to provide to the Ukrainian government, Hegseth indicated that Trump is determined to get Europe to assume most of the financial and military responsibilities for Ukraine’s defense, including a possible peacekeeping force that would not include U.S. troops.

Worse, any European troops deployed to Ukraine would not be covered by the NATO mutual-defense agreement. If Putin would decide to attack them, they would be on their own.

Afterwards, Hegseth was asked a fairly obvious question:

You have focused on what Ukraine is giving up. What concessions will Putin be asked to make?

The true answer here would be "none", but instead Hegseth went off on a tangent about how Putin responds to "strength", so he invaded Crimea during the Obama administration and attacked the rest of Ukraine during the Biden administration, but did not launch any new invasions during Trump's first term.

On the one hand it's interesting that Hegseth didn't answer the question asked. But it's also worth trying to figure out what question he answered instead. I postulate this one: "Should we be worried that Trump is in Putin's pocket?"

BTW, I think his answer to that question is misleading as well. During the first Trump administration, Putin knew that time was on his side, because Trump was dismantling NATO from within. After Biden started putting NATO back together, Putin attacked because he saw his window for action shrinking.

Plus, it is absurd to characterize an American president willing to concede virtually everything Putin wants before negotiations even begin as "strong".

and Gaza

I don't take seriously the part of Trump's plan for Gaza where the US claims ownership of the land and turns it into a Mediterranean resort. I think he announced that just to troll us.

However, the part of the plan where Israel ethnically cleanses Gaza, while the US pressures Arab nations to take in Gazan refugees -- that seems completely serious. Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates will meet in Riyadh Thursday to formulate an alternative, which they will hope to take to the larger Arab League meeting in Cairo next week.

I want to make two points about this. First, unlike the West Bank, Israel does not have any historical claim on Gaza. Even in Biblical times, Gaza was a Philistine city.

Second, I want to address the comparison being made to the population transfers that happened in 1946-48 when the former British Raj was partitioned into India and Pakistan. This argument has been put forward by WSJ columnist Sadanand Dhume, and echoes a claim often made by opponents of a Palestinian state: There are already nearly two dozen Arab countries, so why does there need to be another one?

Dhume glosses over what a disaster the partition of India was.

By 1948, as the great migration drew to a close, more than fifteen million people had been uprooted, and between one and two million were dead.

Also, proponents of the Palestinians-are-just-Arabs vision are projecting a Jewish notion of identity onto Arabs. Arabs have never had a unified ethnic identity. While it's true that many Palestinians did not identify as Palestinians until comparatively recently, prior to that they identified primarily with their local communities, not with some larger Arab nation. Palestinian identity comes up from below, not down from above.

Dhume paints the international refusal to support an ethnic cleansing in Gaza as "the world's double standard towards Israel". Actually, it is a single-standard reaction to the horror of the post-World-War-II population transfers.


I have not yet read Peter Beinart's new book "Being Jewish After the Destruction of Gaza". However, this interview with The New Yorker is worth a look.

and you also might be interested in ...

Politics is all fun and games until you have to write a budget. House Republicans took their first step in that direction by passing a budget resolution out of committee and sending it to the full house. It cuts rich people's taxes, lines up cuts in Medicaid and food stamps, and allows $3.3 trillion more debt to accumulate in the next ten years. It's already in trouble as Republican congresspeople reckon with the number of Medicaid recipients in their districts.


The WaPo:

[D]espite the rapid infusion of resources, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is struggling to arrest higher numbers of immigrants and falling far short of the administration’s goals.

Simple reason: The invasion of criminals that Trump talked so much about during his campaign was never real. He talked a lot about unleashing local law enforcement to deport the criminal migrants because "they already know who they are". And maybe that was true for a handful of people, but there were never "millions" of migrant criminals to deport.


The WaPo's Catherine Rampell:

What Trump has done for US farmers so far:
-frozen their foreign aid program (and left their food to rot)
-encouraged EU to ban their products
-frozen legally-owed reimbursements for their energy efficiency upgrades etc.
-threatened to deport half their workforce
-suppressed research on bird flu


Paul Krugman explains why everything Trump is proposing -- tariffs, deporting low-wage workers ... -- will make inflation worse. But he warns against buying inflation-protected Treasury bonds (TIPS), because they'll only protect you against "future inflation that the U.S. government admits is happening". Once Trump appointees start reporting the numbers Trump wants to hear, officially recognized inflation will plummet, no matter what is happening to your groceries.


The Daily Show explains how to Un-DEI your office.


Illinois Governor J. B. Pritzker has made a series of announcements: (1) Lake Michigan has been renamed Lake Illinois, (2) Illinois is annexing Green Bay for security purposes, and (3) stay tuned for an announcement regarding the Mississippi River next week.

and let's close with something musical

Back in 2020, the pandemic forced choirs to figure out how to synchronize without being in the same room. The Unitarian Universalist General Assembly went virtual that year, and this choral performance was created for it. I find "Let the wave wash over me" to be a particularly comforting thought these days.