Friday, February 27, 2026

Citizen v. Alien: The Loyalty Test Behind the Applause
By Tony Pentimalli
When Donald Trump told lawmakers to stand if they believed “the first duty of the American government is to protect American citizens, not illegal aliens,” he wasn’t explaining policy. He was setting a trap.
Stand up, and you look like you’re defending Americans. Stay seated, and you get painted as someone who cares more about “illegal aliens” than your own country. It forced a public choice with only one safe answer.
The sentence sounds simple. Of course a government protects its citizens. Nobody serious argues with that. But the way he framed it turns two words into weapons: citizen and illegal.
The federal government does not serve only passport holders. It serves green card holders who pay taxes and raise families. It serves students on visas. It serves refugees admitted legally. It serves people waiting for their asylum cases to move through court. It serves millions of American-born children whose parents are not citizens.
When the Constitution talks about due process and equal protection, it uses the word “persons,” not “citizens.” That was intentional. The government’s power comes with a duty to protect the people under its authority. If leaders narrow that duty to a smaller group, everyone else stands on weaker ground.
Some people watching that moment believe Democrats should have stood. They argue that protecting citizens should never be controversial. That reaction makes sense at first glance. But the problem wasn’t the word “protect.” It was the framing that said protection applies to one group and not another.
Standing would not have been a vote for public safety. It would have been an endorsement of a false choice - the idea that government protection is selective. Refusing to stand wasn’t about opposing citizens. It was about rejecting a setup that turns neighbors into competitors.
“Illegal” doesn’t describe a type of person. It describes a legal situation, and immigration law is complicated. Some people overstay visas, which is a civil violation. Some apply for asylum and are allowed to remain while their case is pending. Some lose status because of paperwork or delays.
Rolling all of those situations into “illegal alien” erases the differences. It makes it easier to stop seeing neighbors and start seeing a category.
The most important word in Trump’s sentence wasn’t “citizen” or “illegal.” It was “not.” Protect citizens not illegal aliens. That framing turns safety into a competition and teaches people to believe that if someone else is protected, they must be losing something.
Government doesn’t work that way. If a fire breaks out, firefighters don’t check immigration papers before they go in. If a crime happens, police protect whoever lives there. Public authority applies to the people within it because that’s how a country stays stable.
Undocumented immigrants pay billions every year in state and local taxes. Many pay into Social Security and Medicare even though they will never collect benefits. They pay sales taxes. They pay property taxes through rent. They work in farms, kitchens, construction sites, warehouses, and nursing homes. The economy relies on that labor whether politicians admit it or not.
Describing these families as if they only take and never contribute isn’t honest.
That moment in the chamber wasn’t about solving immigration. It was about drawing a line on live television and showing who stands on which side of it. Authoritarian leaders rely on public loyalty tests. They divide people into the approved and the suspect, and over time, citizens get used to the idea that protection depends on belonging to the right group.
When people get used to that idea, real damage follows. Families in mixed-status homes stop reporting crimes because they’re afraid of drawing attention. Workers don’t report wage theft or unsafe conditions because they think no one will protect them. Public health officials struggle to contain outbreaks because people are scared to seek help. Trust between neighbors weakens. Once government protection feels selective, cooperation breaks down. A country becomes less safe, not more.
In living rooms across the country, American citizen children sat next to noncitizen parents and heard the President suggest that one of them deserved protection more than the other. That conversation doesn’t end when the speech does. It shapes how a child understands “us” and how a parent understands “home.”
The line works because it makes a complicated problem feel simple. Immigration law is confusing. The courts are backed up. Wages are tight. Housing is expensive. It’s easier to point at a group of people than to confront deeper failures.
Once a country accepts the idea that some people inside its borders fall outside the government’s duty to protect, that idea doesn’t stay contained. If leaders can shrink that obligation once, they can shrink it again.
The Constitution ties government power to rules that apply to persons, not just favored groups. That guardrail only holds if people insist on it.
That standing moment was about getting the country comfortable with a smaller definition of who deserves protection.
If we get used to that, we may forever loose our country.
The applause was the warning.
*Tony Pentimalli is a political analyst and commentator fighting for democracy, economic justice, and social equity. Follow him for sharp analysis and hard-hitting critiques on Facebook and BlueSky
@tonywriteshere.bsky.social

 

 
In March 2025, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated the trust fund that pays for Medicare A would be solvent until 2052. On Monday, it updated its projections, saying the funds will run out in 2040. The CBO also expects the Social Security trust fund to run dry a year earlier than previously expected, by the end of 2031. As Nick Lichtenberg of Fortune wrote, policy changes by the Republicans under Trump, especially the tax cuts in the budget reconciliation bill the Republicans call the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” have “drastically shortened the financial life spans of both Medicare and Social Security, accelerating their paths toward insolvency.”
Between Trump’s statement that if the administration finds enough fraud it can balance the budget overnight, and the subsequent insistence that cuts to Medicaid are necessary because of that fraud, it sure looks like the administration is trying to distract attention from the CBO’s report that Trump’s tax cuts have cut the solvency of Social Security and Medicare by more than a decade. Instead, they are hoping to convince voters that immigrants are at fault.

 
key to success."
Why is your pathetic, saggy ass reading this then when you could be gifting your life blood to oligarchic vampires? Where did you come by the capitalism undermining delusion that the hours of your life (if not your earthly flesh) are yours own? You are just begging for your High Dollar betters to establish a panopticon mass surveillance state to keep your ass-scratching self's indolent nose to the capitalist imperium's grindstone, aren't you?
Expect ICE recruits, when not dogging dark-skinned interlopers, to knock on your door to put a jackboot to the neck of your goldbricking ways. It is obvious that your value system has become so twisted and butt-backwards that you believe you possess entitlement to what the ruling griftocracy is entitled to at their birth. The Invisible Hand Of The Free Market will become highly visible in order to pimp slap you slattern self.
Jesus Christ on a blockchain cross, despite your shirker yourself, your endless work will be done on earth as it is on Epstein Island.
As Pam Bondi admonished, stop whining, loser. Your mood will rise heavenward, like an insider-trading rigged Stock Market portfolio, when you accept the fact that the billionaire elect's god-granted destiny is to own your soul.
Now get back to work and show some gratitude to the billionaires who strive to relieve you of the burden of freedom.
Check out my Substack essays on the subject:
(Phil Rockstroh's Substack is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.)

Thursday, February 26, 2026

And another testimony of why Donald Trump wears a diaper due to his uncontrolled shitting himself all day every day because of a then 12-year-old Sascha Riley who after Trump repeatedly choked him unconscious and raped him, then wanted this kid to have anal sex with him, and Sascha Riley gave him the most memorable rockin' rocket banging the pervert ever experienced and left him disabled for life. Little Mr. Riley put a lubricated condom on the end of a tent stake, inserted it, stood and then kicked it with all his 12-year-old might straight into Mr. Trump's anus leaving him screaming, torn and shredded in which Mr. Trump had to leave by helicopter, screaming all the way to a hospital where a butt-hole specialist was waiting to repair as much as he could. But, alas and alack, the damage was beyond repair. However, in little Mr. Riley's defense, he pulled a "Cri De Coer" on the aging 50 something Trump in the form of passionate appeal, a complaint, or protest if you will by stabbing him in the ass with a tent pole. Gawd damn, what a world we live in thanks to nutsy billionaires.


 

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

From: Robert Reich
How California Can Neuter “Citizens United” and Improve Democracy for Us All. The Sunshine State has an opportunity to save American democracy from big corporate money.
Friends,
Good news.
You may remember that back in November I mentioned that Montana was considering a bill that would effectively negate the Supreme Court’s awful Citizens United decision, which held that corporations are people under the First Amendment and therefore entitled to spend unlimited amounts of corporate money in elections.
A similar bill has just been introduced in California.
Montana is a great and beautiful state. Some 1,145,000 people live there. But California! Almost 40 million people live in the Sunshine State. If California were an independent country, it would have the fourth-largest economy in the world (behind Germany and ahead of Japan).
So the possibility that California might pass this legislation is a very big deal.
As you know, corporate political spending was growing before Citizens United, but the decision opened the floodgates to the unlimited super PAC spending and undisclosed dark money we suffer from today.
Between 2008 and 2024, reported “independent” expenditures by outside groups exploded more than 28-fold — from $144 million to $4.21 billion. Unreported money also skyrocketed, with dark money groups spending millions influencing the 2024 election.
Most people assume that the only way to stop corporate and dark money in American politics is either to wait for the Supreme Court to undo Citizens United (we could wait a very long time) or amend the U.S. Constitution (which is extraordinarily difficult).
But there’s another way, and there’s a good chance it will work. It will be on the ballot next November in Montana. And there’s now a chance California could enact it!
As I’ve pointed out, individual states have the authority to limit corporate political activity and dark money spending, because states determine what powers corporations have.
In American law, corporations are creatures of state laws. For more than two centuries, the power to define their form, limits, and privilege has belonged only to the states.
Corporations have no powers at all until a state government grants them some. In the 1819 Supreme Court case Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward, Chief Justice John Marshall established that:
“A corporation is an artificial being, invisible, intangible, and existing only in contemplation of law. Being the mere creature of law, it possesses only those properties which the charter of its creation confers upon it, either expressly, or as incidental to its very existence….The objects for which a corporation is created are universally such as the government wishes to promote. They are deemed beneficial to the country; and this benefit constitutes the consideration, and, in most cases, the sole consideration of the grant.”
States don’t have to grant corporations the power to spend in politics. In fact, they can decide not to give corporations that power.
This isn’t about corporate rights, as the Supreme Court determined in Citizens United. It’s about corporate powers.
When a state exercises its authority to define corporations as entities without the power to spend in politics, it will no longer be relevant whether corporations have a right to spend in politics — because without the power to do so, the right to do so has no meaning. (Delaware’s corporation code already declines to grant private foundations the power to spend in elections.)
Importantly, a state that no longer grants its corporations the power to spend in elections also denies that power to corporations chartered in the other 49 states, if they wish to do business in that state.
And what corporation doesn’t want to do business in California?
All a state needs to do is enact a law with a provision something like this:
“Every corporation operating under the laws of this state has all the corporate powers it held previously, except that nothing in this statute grants or recognizes any power to engage in election activity or ballot-issue activity.”
Sound farfetched? Not at all.
The argument is laid out in a paper that the Center for American Progress published last fall. (Kudos to CAP and the paper’s author, Tom Moore, a senior fellow at CAP who previously served as counsel and chief of staff to a longtime member of the Federal Election Commission.)
Which is exactly what the new California bill does. Here it is: AB 1984. (I kind of like the name.) You can find the text and status of the bill here.
The heroes of the day are Assemblymember Chris Rogers and Senator Mike McGuire, who have stepped up to sponsor and co-author the measure, respectively.
I hope Gavin Newsom gets 100 percent behind this effort. If he has his eye on the White House in 2028, this would be a feather in his electoral cap. The Citizens United decision is enormously unpopular. Some 75 percent of Americans disapprove of it.
It’s time to make Citizens United history. California (and Montana) can lead the way.

 


 
BREAKING: Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk sends a shiver down Trump's spine by announcing "Investigation Team No. 5" — a powerful task force designed to investigate the Epstein scandal.
Since the MAGA Justice Department won't take action, the rest of the world is stepping up...
“We cannot allow that any of the cases involving abuse of Polish children by the network of pedophiles and the organizer of this satanic circle, Mr. Epstein, be treated lightly,” stated Tusk.
The announcement from Tusk, a conservative, comes as the Trump administration refuses to even acknowledge that Epstein was running a child trafficking network. At this point, it's an undeniable fact of the case, clearly laid out in the documents. But Trump — who is accused of sexual abuse and rape in the files — won't acknowledge that reality because doing so would increase the pressure for a full investigation. He's desperately hoping that this entire scandal will just evaporate into thin air. Poland is making sure that doesn't happen.
Tusk said that the possibility of Polish victims gives their government the authority to dig through the 3 million pages of documents, images, and videos released so far. He pointed specifically to a group of individuals from the Polish city of Krakow who informed Epstein that they had "women or girls" for him, a clear indication that Poland was a nexus for Epstein's network.
"There are more such leads,” said Tusk.
Investigation Team No. 5 will now proceed with preliminary inquiries into "an organized criminal group of an international nature." This is an incredibly welcome development and exactly the kind of police work that the United States federal government should be conducting. Every single person in the Epstein files should be questioned. Once authorities start pulling on these threads, more leads and evidence could come tumbling out.
The Polish task force is composed of three highly experienced prosecutors, denoting a high level of priority for the government. Once they conclude their preliminary probe, a decision will be made on opening a full-blown criminal investigation.
On top of that, the Polish Justice Ministry announced a separate task force led by Justice Minister Waldemar Zurek to review the Epstein files, synthesize the data, and present the relevant parts to the Polish public.
“It is our duty to provide a reliable and impartial explanation of all Polish aspects in the so-called Epstein affair,” said Zurek. "The Polish state must check whether crimes have taken place on the territory of the Republic of Poland and whether Polish citizens were involved in the case."
They will also request access to all of the classified materials currently being held by the American government.
This is exactly what people have been screaming in vain for the Trump administration to do. Finally, the world is taking a major step towards justice.

 Say goodbye to fertilizers.
Dr. Mariangela Hungria, a microbiologist from São Paulo, has been named the 2025 World Food Prize Laureate for transforming how crops get their nutrients. Instead of relying heavily on synthetic nitrogen fertilizer, her work harnesses soil bacteria to feed plants naturally.
Nitrogen is essential for plant growth, but manufacturing synthetic fertilizer is energy-intensive and expensive. Hungria focused on biological nitrogen fixation, a process where microbes convert nitrogen from the air into forms plants can use. She studied rhizobia, bacteria that live in nodules on legume roots, and showed that inoculating soybean seeds annually could raise yields by up to 8 percent compared to synthetic fertilizer alone.
Over four decades at the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation, known as Embrapa, she helped scale these treatments nationwide. Today, her microbial inoculants are used on more than 99 million acres (40 million hectares) of farmland in Brazil. The impact is enormous. Farmers save an estimated $25 billion per year in input costs, and the shift away from chemical fertilizers avoids more than 230 million metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions annually.
She also pioneered commercial strains of Azospirillum brasilense, bacteria that improve nitrogen uptake and stimulate plant growth. Combining these microbes has doubled yield gains in some soybeans and common beans. Her latest work restores degraded pastureland, increasing grass biomass by 22 percent to support cattle production.
When Hungria began her career, few believed microbes could compete with industrial fertilizers. Today, Brazil’s soybean production has grown from 15 million tons in 1979 to a projected 173 million tons in the upcoming harvest.
Her work shows that feeding the world does not have to mean exhausting it. Sometimes, the smallest organisms can drive the biggest revolutions.
Learn more:
"Dr Mariangela Hungria Named 2025 World Food Prize Laureate." FarmingFirst, 2025

America's "Lactating Testicle of Venom" speaks
 The State of the Union as Authoritarian Display
By Tony Pentimalli
Donald Trump did not deliver a State of the Union. He staged a demonstration of power.
For nearly two hours, the presidency was not describing the country’s condition but asserting control over its narrative. Applause functioned as allegiance. Silence marked deviation. The chamber was not operating as a coequal branch engaged in oversight; it was a live audience being sorted in real time.
He opened by declaring conquest rather than progress. America was in a “golden age,” “bigger, better, richer, and stronger than ever,” and the country had “seen nothing yet.” There was no acknowledgment of limits, no admission of tradeoffs, no recognition of complexity. The picture was total and unquestionable. Doubt was preemptively disqualified.
Then came the absolutes.
Inflation was plummeting. Illegal admissions were zero. Gas prices were below two dollars and thirty cents in most states. Investment commitments totaled eighteen trillion dollars. These claims are exaggerated, misleading, or unsupported. When success is framed as total, correction begins to sound like sabotage.
The structure repeated with discipline. Victory was declared complete. Internal enemies were identified. Critics were portrayed as corrupt. Resistance was exposed. Authority was elevated above constraint.
When Trump said members of Minnesota’s Somali community had “pillaged” billions and labeled them “Somali pirates,” he did not isolate alleged misconduct. A community was cast as suspect from the presidential podium. Allegation became identity.
The election rhetoric followed the same pattern. Cheating was described as widespread, and those who resist new restrictions were accused of wanting fraud. Opposition was framed as criminality. Loss was rendered illegitimate before ballots were cast because authority was presumed rightful.
The ceremony shed its final veneer of normalcy when he demanded lawmakers stand in affirmation of his framing of citizenship and immigration. When Democrats remained seated, he mocked them, ridiculed them, and attempted to shame them in full public view. It was not persuasion. It was humiliation deployed as governance.
That demand was tied to a declaration that the administration was choosing to “protect citizens over illegal aliens.” The phrasing constructed a moral hierarchy in which one group was inherently deserving and the other inherently suspect. Remaining seated was cast not as policy disagreement but as siding against Americans. Immigration was converted from legislation into loyalty test.
Authoritarian politics advances through normalization of dominance and moral sorting.
Where measurable progress exists, language still erased limits in favor of conquest. Crime reduction became eradication. A reported strike on Iranian nuclear sites, known as Operation Midnight Hammer, was described as obliteration. Military activity in Venezuela, which generated serious legal and constitutional debate, was recast as destiny fulfilled. When outcomes are framed as complete victories, accountability appears unnecessary.
World leaders should not dismiss this address as partisan theater. They should read it as a stress test of American institutional reliability. The speech fused national legitimacy to a single individual, recast oversight as hostility, and described alliances in transactional, coercive terms. Stability depends on the rule of law outlasting any one president. This address implied the opposite.
The foreign policy boasting reinforced that shift. The president celebrated forcing America’s “friends and allies” to pay five percent of GDP, as though alliances were tribute systems rather than strategic partnerships. Alliances built on coercion prompt hedging. In recent months, key allies have reduced exposure to U.S. Treasuries, expanded alternative trade frameworks, and accelerated conversations about economic autonomy. Treasuries function as confidence instruments. Diversification away from them is not symbolism; it is insulation.
The invocation of divine purpose removed the final restraint. When authority is framed as providential, it ceases to appear temporary and begins to feel ordained.
The address conditioned its audience to equate correction with hostility and constraint with betrayal. Courts become obstruction. Journalists become adversaries. Oversight becomes sabotage. Limits become aggression.
The speech tied national stability to the individual delivering it. Legitimacy flowed from applause rather than law.
If economic promises falter, blame will expand outward. If elections disappoint, legitimacy will be denied. If courts intervene, judicial review will be branded political warfare. The groundwork has been laid.
For those who watched, the pattern was unmistakable. The absolutism insulated. The scapegoating consolidated. The public shaming rehearsed.
For those who did not watch, understand this plainly: the address was not an assessment of the nation’s condition. It was a demonstration of how power will be exercised and how resistance will be treated.
Democratic failure becomes possible when truth is downgraded, when institutions are mocked into submission, and when loyalty to power replaces loyalty to principle.
When accountability thins, permanence begins to sound reasonable.
And when authoritarian behavior is displayed openly from the highest office and absorbed as normal political theater, the display itself becomes the warning.
*Tony Pentimalli is a political analyst and commentator fighting for democracy, economic justice, and social equity. Follow him for sharp analysis and hard-hitting critiques on Facebook and BlueSky
@tonywriteshere.bsky.social

 
Under Tennessee law, homicide can carry the death penalty. Now, Tennessee Republican lawmakers have introduced House Bill 570 / Senate Bill 738—legislation that declares life must be protected “from fertilization to natural death.”
By revising homicide statutes to include abortion under the same legal framework, this bill enables capital punishment for women who receive abortion care and for physicians who provide it. While the bill has not yet been formally filed, if it is filed and passed, its provisions would take effect July 1, 2026—that’s just a few months away. Here’s what you need to know about this bill, the five white Republican men behind it, and how you can do your part to help stop this bill from advancing.
Let’s Address This.
Who Is Behind This Bill?
Sponsored by Rep. Jody Barrett (R-Dickson) and backed by Reps. Bud Hulsey, Monty Fritts, and Ed Butler — with a Senate companion bill sponsored by Sen. Mark Pody — this proposal revises Tennessee’s assault and homicide statutes to apply the same legal standards to abortion as existing homicide laws. As you can see below, it is quite a diverse bunch sponsoring this barbaric piece of legislation.
Last year, I sounded the alarm about South Carolina introducing a bill redefining personhood to criminalize abortion as homicide. At the time, I warned that even if such bills failed, their repeated introduction would shift the Overton Window and embolden lawmakers in other states to follow suit.
This bill in Tennessee is an example of this possibility materializing into reality. Let’s be clear about what this means. The legal architecture they are constructing makes abortion legally indistinguishable from homicide. This is draconian. And, worse, this bill is being introduced in a state that already leads the nation in maternal mortality.
The Facts Tennessee Lawmakers Cannot Ignore
According to data from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), Tennessee ranks number one in the nation for maternal mortality between 2018 and 2022. During that five-year period, there were 166 pregnancy-related deaths in Tennessee, giving the state a maternal mortality rate of 41.1 deaths per 100,000 births — more than double the national average of 18.6.
Tennessee Republican lawmakers could have some humanity and meaningfully addressing this crisis—which might include expanding access to prenatal care, investing in rural hospitals, or funding maternal health programs. Instead, they are proposing legislation that will escalate criminal penalties against women experiencing pregnancy complications and those seeking reproductive care.
This is not about protecting life. It is about exerting control.
When a state with the highest maternal mortality rate in America proposes legislation that would treat abortion as homicide, it is not “pro-life.” It is reckless governance. When I wrote about South Carolina’s bill, thousands of you mobilized. Calls were made. Pressure was applied. The bill was stalled.
But I cautioned then that the introduction itself was strategic. The goal was not necessarily immediate passage. The goal was normalization. The goal was to move the conversation further toward criminalization so that what once seemed unthinkable would become merely “controversial.”
Now Tennessee is following that path.
This is how coordinated national strategies operate. Introduce extreme legislation in one state. Gauge reaction. Refine the language. Introduce similar bills elsewhere. Repeat until one advances far enough to reach federal courts.
If we treat each bill as an isolated anomaly, we will continue playing defense. If we recognize this as a coordinated effort, we can respond accordingly.
If you’re finding value in this analysis and insight, I invite you to join our community of 170,000+ activists and subscribe.
What You Can Do — Nationwide
This is not only a Tennessee issue. It is a national test case. If these bills advance in one state, others will follow.
You can act right now.
Contact the bill sponsors and make clear that criminalizing women and exposing them to capital punishment for seeking abortion care is unacceptable. Below I provide their publicly available contact numbers, address, emails, and a script to help guide your remarks.
Rep. Jody Barrett
425 Rep. John Lewis Way N.
Suite 596 Cordell Hull Bldg.
Nashville, TN 37243
Phone: (615) 741-3513
Fax: (615) 253-0244
Email: rep.jody.barrett@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Bud Hulsey
425 Rep. John Lewis Way N.
Suite 519 Cordell Hull Bldg.
Nashville, TN 37243
Phone: (615) 741-2886
Fax: (615) 253-0247
Email: rep.bud.hulsey@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Monty Fritts
425 Rep. John Lewis Way N.
Suite 430 Cordell Hull Bldg.
Nashville, TN 37243
Phone: (615) 741-7658
Fax: (615) 253-0163
Email: rep.monty.fritts@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Ed Butler
425 Rep. John Lewis Way N.
Suite 578 Cordell Hull Bldg.
Nashville, TN 37243
Phone: (615) 741-1260
Fax: (615) 253-0328
Email: rep.ed.butler@capitol.tn.gov
Sen. Mark Pody
425 Rep. John Lewis Way N.
Suite 754 Cordell Hull Bldg.
Nashville, TN 37243
Phone: (615) 741-2421
Fax: (615) 253-0205
Email: sen.mark.pody@capitol.tn.gov
You can use this simple script:
Subject: Vote NO on HB 570 / SB 738
My name is ________, and I am writing to urge you to reject House Bill 570 / Senate Bill 738.
Tennessee already has the highest maternal mortality rate in the nation. Criminalizing abortion as homicide will not protect women — it will endanger them.
Revising homicide statutes to apply to abortion creates a pathway to capital punishment for women and providers. That is extreme, reckless, and harmful.
I urge you to vote NO and instead focus on policies that actually reduce maternal deaths and improve access to health care.
Sincerely,
[Your Name]
Mobilization matters. Legislators track call volume. They track email spikes. They measure opposition. We have stopped similar bills before. We can do it again.
This Is Not Going Away
These efforts will continue unless we respond with equal persistence. They are coordinated, strategic, and designed to escalate. Silence enables that escalation.
I will continue to monitor these developments and elevate them in real time. State-level extremism often receives minimal national coverage until it is too late. As a human rights lawyer, I believe it is essential to track these patterns early, explain their implications clearly, and mobilize before damage becomes irreversible.
If you value that work, I ask you to support it.
Subscribe to Let’s Address This. Share this article. Help grow this platform so that we can continue exposing and organizing against these threats—especially at the state level, where many of the most consequential battles are unfolding quietly.
As these barbaric pieces of legislation spread, we must match and exceed that escalation with sustained, organized resistance. My gratitude to each of you who are in this fight for human rights. Let’s continue to support each other to elevate our impact.
___________________________________________________
Read the full article with links and receipts: https://www.qasimrashid.com/.../tennessee-gop-intro-bill...
Consider becoming a free or paid subscriber to Let's Address This. Join our community of 170,000+ activists: https://www.qasimrashid.com/subscribe


 

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

The Business Plot of 1933 was an alleged conspiracy in which a group of wealthy American industrialists and financiers sought to overthrow President Franklin D. Roosevelt, whose New Deal policies threatened their economic interests.
According to retired Marine Corps Major General Smedley Butler, the conspirators planned to recruit him to lead a massive veterans’ organization, modeled on European fascist movements, and use it to pressure or forcibly remove, Roosevelt from office. Butler testified under oath in 1934 before the McCormack–Dickstein Committee, revealing that the plotters intended to install him as a figurehead dictator while they controlled the government behind the scenes.
Although the committee found Butler’s testimony credible, no one was prosecuted, and major newspapers at the time downplayed or dismissed the story. Later investigations and historical analyses suggest the plotters underestimated Butler’s loyalty to democratic institutions; instead of joining them, he exposed the scheme.
The Business Plot remains one of the most striking examples of how economic elites, threatened by sweeping reforms during the Great Depression, considered extreme measures to preserve their power.

 


 
BREAKING: “MADE ME PHYSICALLY SICK!” A federal grand juror just broke her silence on what she heard while serving on a grand jury involved in Epstein trials, and every American needs to hear what she said.
A former federal grand juror who served for the last year and a half spoke out on a recent video, sharing from her car the raw toll of hearing cases involving depravity and child exploitation. Bound by secrecy rules not to discuss specifics, she made one powerful point clear: the horrors in the Epstein files are NOT fiction.
She said: “I think that there are a lot of you out there who look at some of the stuff in the Epstein file releases and you say there's no way this happened. This is not a real thing. This is a figment of someone's imagination, but I want to tell you that stuff does happen.”
The juror described leaving grand jury sessions deeply disturbed and nauseated by the evidence she heard. “On more than one occasion when I left the grand jury I was physically sick from the things that I had to hear while I was there. These memories of some of those things that will always be with me.”
She said she learned that evil exists: “There are people in the world that are this depraved. There are people in the world that hurt children. There are people in the world that are just wired so screwed up or had so much trauma. I don't know what causes these things, but for whatever reason they are capable. Maybe they're just soulless.
Her summation cut deep: “There’s nothing that I have read in the Epstein files that is that far-fetched to me.”
This is not speculation from a pundit on TV. It is testimony from a real person who sat through real evidence, real testimony, real pain. The Epstein files are not conspiracy theories or tabloid fantasy. They document crimes against children by powerful people who thought they were untouchable. When a grand juror says the depravity is believable and leaves her physically ill, it demands attention.
The administration’s selective releases, redactions, and delays only deepen the wound. Survivors and the public deserve full transparency, not half-measures and excuses. Evil thrives in darkness. Light is the only cure.
If this grand juror’s words shake you to the core, like and share to demand the full truth be released.

BREAKING: “YOU HAVE KILLED AMERICANS!” Rep. Rashida Tlaib and Rep. Ilhan Omar bravely confront Trump at the State of the Union over the murders of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by his masked goons!
When Trump inevitably unleashed his avalanche of racism and fearmongering over immigration at tonight’s State of the Union, he met some unexpected pushback from Rep. Rashida Tlaib, Rep. Ilhan Omar, and Rep. Norma Torres.
“You have killed Americans!” Omar says.
"We saw the videos too... you are killing Americans!" Tlaib yells.
“You should be ashamed of yourself!” yells Trump in response.
“YOU should be ashamed of yourself!” retorts Ilhan.
He SHOULD be ashamed of himself. His fascistic goon squads have MURDERED two American citizens and brutalized countless more in a rampage of wanton violence and terror in pursuit of a mass deportation regime to ethnically cleanse the United States and funnel billions of taxpayer dollars into the pockets of private prison corporations by way of for-profit concentration camps.
While some may tut-tut at their yelling at him during the speech, we’re long past the point where decorum matters. Decorum won’t save us from stolen elections, Palantir surveillance, or ICE bullets.
Only getting mad, fighting back, and winning in November will.
Spread his shame. He should never be able to appear in public again without hearing the names Renee Good and Alex Pretti, for their blood is on his hands.

 


 Oh, yeah!!! It came to light he is, or was, obsessed with the Epstein files, of which Donald J. Trump is the star. He's mentioned, so it's been told, over one million times. Guess that must have been hard to swallow, pardon the pun.


 
BREAKING: Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum is FIRING BACK after Elon Musk’s smear linking her to cartels — and now Mexico is ready to lawyer up.
Elon Musk just lobbed a social media grenade at the president of Mexico — and it may land him in court.
After Mexican forces captured and killed notorious Jalisco New Generation Cartel boss “El Mencho,” Musk took to X to respond to an old video of President Claudia Sheinbaum discussing cartel violence. Without offering a shred of evidence, Musk claimed she was “saying what her cartel bosses tell her to say.”
Cartel bosses?
That’s not a policy disagreement. That’s an accusation of criminal conspiracy against a sitting head of state.
Sheinbaum didn’t laugh it off. She announced Tuesday that her government is reviewing potential legal action. “We are considering whether to take legal action,” she said during her morning press conference.
The video Musk referenced showed Sheinbaum arguing that returning to a full-scale “war on drugs” — like the bloody military offensive launched in 2006 — would be outside the legal framework and would only fuel more violence. That war splintered cartels and triggered years of turf battles, contributing to Mexico’s still-high homicide rate.
But nuance doesn’t trend. Outrage does.
Musk’s comment came at a tense moment. In the wake of El Mencho’s capture, cartel members launched roadblocks and arson attacks. Sheinbaum insisted the government is seeking “peace, not war,” and denied any shift toward a more militarized strategy.
Meanwhile, leaders from her MORENA party fired back hard. Party president Luisa Alcalde reminded Musk that “wealth does not give moral authority,” and suggested he focus his platform on fighting drug consumption, disinformation, and narco culture — especially since much of the demand and many of the firearms fueling cartel violence originate north of the border.
Mexico is grappling with more than 130,000 missing persons tied largely to cartel violence. In that context, tossing around baseless cartel allegations isn’t just reckless — it’s inflammatory.
Now the world’s richest man could find himself answering to lawyers instead of followers. Turns out, when you accuse a president of working for drug lords, there may be consequences beyond the algorithm.

HEAR, HEAR!!! This is the moment Karma, in all her awful, vengeful splendor, just shoved a "BIGLY" ground glass coated "UP YOURS" to every Christianazi pro-lifer in existence. Breastfeeding is pro-life, you dumb unreconstructed wankers!

 








 

"The national debt isn't the cause of our problems: It's the receipt. It's the paper trail of the largest upward transfer of wealth in 250 years of American history ..."
                                                  ~The Hartman Report

 

 

2/26/26