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Latest Posts by Freedom Writers Collaborative

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The truth about Trump's likely pick for new attorney general The Justice Department has just launched a criminal investigation of Cassidy Hutchinson. Remember her? Hutchinson was the young, courageous former White House aide whose testimony before Congress implicated Trump in the violence that erupted at the Capitol on January 6, 2021. Not surprisingly, her testimony enraged Trump. So, the Justice Department is now accusing Hutchinson of having lied to Congress, which is a criminal offense. It’s just the latest example of Trump’s vindictive and perverse use of the Justice Department to go after people he perceives to be his enemies. Who’s been assigned to carry out this vicious investigation? Not anyone in the criminal division, which you might expect would have expertise in pursuing a criminal case. No, Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general, has assigned the case to the Civil Rights Division, which in normal times focuses on civil rights abuses like police misconduct and racial discrimination. Blanche has given the case directly to Harmeet Dhillon, who runs the Civil Rights Division. Dhillon, an unblinking Trump loyalist, has emerged as an effective advocate for Trump’s agenda. She’s also reputedly on the shortlist to be Trump’s next attorney general. So, what do we know about Harmeet Dhillon? Although she’s taken on the investigation of Cassidy Hutchinson, in January Dhillon refused to investigate the killing of Renee Good by an ICE agent in Minneapolis. Dhillon’s decision not to investigate Good’s killing marked a sharp departure from past Civil Rights Division chiefs, who have always moved quickly to probe shootings of civilians by law enforcement officials. Four senior DOJ civil rights officials resigned over Dhillon’s refusal to investigate. Dhillon also refused to assign civil rights attorneys to investigate the subsequent Minneapolis shooting death by two federal agents of Alex Pretti. Instead, she tapped a lawyer who handles civil investigations involving workplace discrimination. Yet a few weeks after Good’s killing, Dhillon took on the investigation of a group of people (including journalist Don Lemon) who had protested Good’s shooting by disrupting a service at Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota. The protesters had targeted the church because a pastor there, David Easterwood, was identified as the local ICE field office director. Dhillon characterized the disruption as a “desecration of a house of worship” and therefore a violation of federal civil rights laws. By April, nearly 40 people faced federal charges in this case of conspiracy against the right of religious worship. Dhillon has also been the force behind condemning universities for allowing what she deems “antisemitic” protests — and withholding research funding unless they agree to explicit measures supposedly to prevent antisemitism. Last summer, the The New Yorker published an extensive piece on Dartmouth College titled “How Dartmouth Became the Ivy League’s Switzerland,” claiming that Dartmouth President Sian Beilock had successfully avoided Dhillon’s ire — and the federal funding cuts that have threatened Harvard and Columbia — by adopting a “neutral” position on Trump’s attempt to take greater control of higher education. Dhillon calls Dartmouth “one of the good guys” in higher education. (Rather than neutral Switzerland during World War II, a more accurate analogy for Dartmouth’s response to Trump under Beilock would be Britain under Neville Chamberlain, who appeased Hitler.) I was a Dartmouth trustee in the 1980s when its president, James O. Freedman, who was Jewish, endured the antisemitic barbs of an ascendant right-wing student group headed by Dhillon, then a Dartmouth student. (Other members included Laura Ingraham and Dinesh D’Souza.) In 1988, Dhillon, as editor of The Dartmouth Review, published a column depicting Freedman as Adolf Hitler under the headline “Ein Reich, Ein Volk, Ein Freedmann” — a play on a Nazi slogan, “One Empire, One People, One Leader,” but substituting and misspelling Freedman’s name for “Fuhrer.” Using the analogy of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust, the column satirically described how “Der Freedmann” and his associates rid the campus of conservatives. The column referred to the “‘Final Solution’ of the Conservative Problem” and to “survivors” of the Dartmouth “holocaust” and described Dartmouth conservatives being “deported in cattle cars in the night.” A drawing on the cover of the following issue of Dhillon’s Dartmouth Review also depicted Freedman, who had been critical of The Review, as Hitler. I saw how much Dhillon’s publication hurt Freedman. As a Jew, he not only felt personally attacked but also worried about the effects of Dhillon’s publication on Jewish students at Dartmouth. Granted, this was 1988. Dhillon’s history of publishing such antisemitic c---- doesn’t necessarily cast her recent crusade against campus antisemitism as hypocritical. It’s possible that her undergraduate escapade into antisemitism caused her such remorse that she subsequently experienced a conversion of sorts and became committed to ridding universities of similar acts of bigotry. But nothing in her history after Dartmouth or her official biography suggests such a conversion. The most probable explanation for her turnaround is simple ambition. Dhillon grabbed the opportunity to become assistant attorney general in charge of civil rights and agreed to use the charge of antisemitism as a weapon to carry out the Trump regime’s war on prestigious universities — not because they’re hotbeds of antisemitism, but because the authoritarian right considers them hotbeds of leftist ideology. JD Vance said in a 2021 speech titled “The Universities are the enemy,” that “we have to honestly and aggressively attack the universities in this country.” He never mentioned antisemitism. Dhillon admits that her overall vision is not just slowing down civil rights in America but “turning the train around and driving in the opposite direction,” as she told the conservative Federalist Society after her appointment as head of the division. She has eliminated federal oversight of police departments accused of discrimination, once the centerpiece of the Civil Rights Division’s work. She has directed universities to end all types of affirmative action, once defended by the Civil Rights Division. She is now suing states to acquire voter databases in an effort to disenfranchise minority voters. The Civil Rights Division once existed to protect their voting rights. Harmeet Dhillon is no advocate for civil rights. She’s a legal hack for Trump’s cruel agenda of attacking Americans trying to stop ICE and Border Patrol agents from doing their worst, of seeking to destroy academic freedom in American universities in favor of Trump’s narrow view of what should be allowed, of undermining equal opportunity for people of color, and of prosecuting anyone — like Cassidy Hutchinson — with the courage and integrity to stand up against Trump’s despotism. Harmeet Dhillon is the last person who should be running the Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department. She should never become attorney general — which means Trump will probably nominate her. Robert Reich is a professor of public policy at Berkeley and former secretary of labor. His writings can be found at https://robertreich.substack.com/.

The truth about Trump's likely pick for new attorney general

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Buckle up: Conservative predicts 6 more months of MAGA fury President Donald Trump has split his MAGA base so fiercely, one conservative commentator is predicting long-term negative consequences for Trump’s Republican Party. “There are parts of the Trump coalition they presumed, after 2024, would always be there,” Rick Wilson, a former Republican strategist and head of the anti-Trump group The Lincoln Project, said in a post on the social media platform X on Wednesday. “But if you were going to build a set of programmatic actions that would break them off the Trump coalition — start a war with Iran, raise tariffs, and destroy a huge part of the farming and rural economy in this country — all of those things have started to add up into a political chemistry that is not going to disappear tomorrow.” Referring to Trump’s ceasefire with Iran as a “brief TACO,” referring to the acronym “Trump Also Chickens Out,” Wilson added that Trump’s voters realize “it's not going to be Barron Trump who goes to war. In fact, the Lincoln Project put out an ad about this today. It's not going to be Barron Trump who goes to war — it's going to be their kids who go to war. It's going to be their kids who fight on some desert battlefield in Iran, if Donald Trump doesn't stop doing what he's doing.” He added, “So I think there's a great dysfunction inside the MAGA world right now, where their reflexive support of Trump — which has really been inculcated in them over a decade — has finally been challenged with something they can't explain away. They can't spin it, even to themselves, because you can't go to the gas pump and say, 'Oh, the gas doesn't really cost five dollars — right now it's $1.89.' You can't say that to yourself, no matter how much of a supporter of the president you are.” Despite Trump hoping to heal the cracks in his base, Wilson predicted that “it's going to drag out much longer. And it has already dragged out to a point where the electoral damage is scaring the hell out of a lot of Republican elected officials.” In contrast with Wilson, The Bulwark’s conservative commentator Tim Miller argued that Trump will need to inflict “real pain” on his own base for them to turn on him. “The best case scenario economically is where we're at now, which is real pain for people to experience,” Miller said. “I don't think that 90% of the MAGA folks are going to stay with them. I really don't. It's hard to tell in the polls right now because there's a lag.” A little later Miller observed, “Yes, self-described MAGA folks, 90% of them are supportive of Iran, but that's just people who are self-described MAGA folks. I mean, how many people in those polls don't self-define as MAGA folks anymore because of what's happening? As we are sitting here, literally as we are sitting here, the Marquette University law poll, which is like the gold standard in Wisconsin, they put out a poll today. Trump's net approval rating is minus 14%. which is, ‘the lowest net approval figure for him in both of his terms as president.’ I mean, these numbers are, who knows? They're catastrophic.” By contrast conservative columnist Jim Geraghty told The Washington Post that he does not believe anything in the realm of possibility will convince Trump voters to leave their president. “I would argue it’s more of a pugnacious attitude with a handful of immovable north stars (immigration enforcement, tariffs, disregard for multilateralism) and every other policy decision negotiable — up to and including the federal government taking an ownership stake and some degree of control over private companies,” Geraghty wrote for The Washington Post last month. As proof, he pointed to an NBC News survey in which 100 percent of self-described “MAGA Republicans” say they still support Trump; a CBS News poll put the number at 92 percent. “Back in January, Trump boasted, ‘MAGA is me. MAGA loves everything I do, and I love everything I do, too,’” Geraghty said. “Other than a few exceptions such as the release of the Justice Department’s Jeffrey Epstein files, that has been the case.”

Buckle up: Conservative predicts 6 more months of MAGA fury

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Climate Change Denial Sees a Resurgence in Trump’s Washington A conference near the White House drew dozens of people who reject the scientific consensus on climate change. The mood was triumphant.

Climate Change Denial Sees a Resurgence in Trump’s Washington

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Supreme Court remade by Trump ushers in historic defeats for civil rights The court is the first since at least the ’50s to reject claims in a majority of cases involving women and minorities, an analysis conducted for The Post shows.

Supreme Court remade by Trump ushers in historic defeats for civil rights

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U.S. struggles to maintain an Iran truce whose terms are still in dispute As the White House claimed success, Tehran disputed the terms, shipping through the Strait of Hormuz remained stalled, and new questions emerged.

U.S. struggles to maintain an Iran truce whose terms are still in dispute

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See details of Trump's corruption

You've got $$$? Trump will show you some love, whether it's getting a pardon or receiving a cushy government appointment.

In Trump's world, everything has a price.

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No Charges for Wisconsin Mayor Who Removed Ballot Drop Box in 2024 A special prosecutor said a review of the incident found there was not sufficient evidence to charge Doug Diny, the mayor of Wausau.

No Charges for Wisconsin Mayor Who Removed Ballot Drop Box in 2024

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Provide Know Your Rights information to local communities.

Distribute Red Cards (Know Your Rights cards) at Home Depot & other places where workers gather.

Get trained for ICE Watch, to provide documentation for legal defense.

Minnesota is a visible flashpoint. It's a warning, not an anomaly.

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Support our campaign to oppose MAGA extremists

When far-right influencers like Michael Flynn, Alex Jones, Charlie Kirk, Nick Fuentes, Steve Bannon, and the QAnon Shaman believe Trump is protecting other pedophiles, Trump is definitely in trouble. MAGA dissent reveals deep fracture over trust in Trump.

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'Make you great again' while we steal everything: How despots use racism as distraction Podcasters Danielle Moodie and Wajahat Ali took time on Wednesday to examine the kind of devastating things that racism can do to a democracy. It can kill it for a start, particularly when it’s used as tool by authoritarians. Ali referenced Vice President JD Vance’s recent trip to Hungary to support Hungarian authoritarian leader Viktor Orban, who ransacked his former democratic nation to make himself almost impossible to remove despite colossal disapproval from his impoverished voters. “[Orban] took over and replaced the judiciary. Took over and replaced the government. Took over and replaced the arts. And meanwhile, guess what happened? He fed them chum,” said Ali. “‘I'm going to make you great again. You know who the real problem is? The Muslims. You know who the real problem is? The Jews. You know who the real problem is? The immigrants.’ And while he was distracting them with hate and xenophobia, guess what? Tell me if this sounds familiar. Orban and his friends raped and pillaged, took all the resources and all the wealth.” Moodie referenced comparisons to similar enrichment schemes by the family of President Donald Trump, who have reaped billions in new wealth as Trump distracts MAGA with racism and xenophobia, according to critics. “Donald Trump's sons, Tweedledum and Tweedledee, invested money in what? A drone company — right before the war began,” said Moodie. “Barron bought oil stocks right before the war began. This is a f—— grift at the expense of people's lives.” But the ride doesn’t always last forever, said Ali, pointing out that after roughly a decade, Hungarians are out in the streets protesting. “[Hungarians are saying] ‘wait a second. We think we've been lied to. Wait a second. You didn't make us great again. You made yourself and your rich friends great again. And because this power of Orban is finally very fragile now and people are p—— off." "But who's gone all in [for Orban," demanded Ali. "Look at the same characters. Who went last week? Netanyahu's son. Who praised Orban? Netanyahu. Who went this week? JD Vance.” "It's a big club. It's a big club, and you ain't in it. And we're seeing it in real time," said Ali.

'Make you great again' while we steal everything: How despots use racism as distraction

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36 Hours of Chaos: The Scramble for a Cease-Fire in Iran After careening from one diplomatic extreme to another, President Trump finds himself with a fragile deal that is already showing signs of fraying.

36 Hours of Chaos: The Scramble for a Cease-Fire in Iran

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Only Trump could make America fold this fast: analysis President Donald Trump took the world’s biggest military — bigger than the militaries of the next nine nations – and used it to litter Iran with fire and destruction. Roughly one month later Trump surrendered — while claiming he’d won. Iran surrendered no enriched uranium, accepted no new U.S. military bases and made no promises to permanently reopen the pivotal Strait of Hormuz. That’s … quite the win, said New York Times Columnist David French on Bulwark’s Wednesday podcast. “The incredible reporting from my colleagues in the newsroom indicates that basically, everyone in the room was telling him, ‘Netanyahu is feeding you false hope’ that our strikes will not, in fact, result in immediate regime change in Iran,” said French. “They warned that they will not immediately topple the regime, that Iran will lash out at its enemies. Iran will lash out in the Gulf. It will do something to the Strait of Hormuz. It will not be easy to reopen if Iran does it. And [Trump] just YOLOs it away in this incredible sense of confidence that he's just going to get it right, obviously riding very high on his own supply after the remarkable success of the [Nicolás] Maduro raid … and he launches a reckless war of choice that went sideways.” “What Trump did yesterday is not a TACO [Trump Always Chickens Out] really. It's a functional surrender,” said Bulwark podcaster Tim Miller, quoting columnist Kill Kristol. “… basically, because Trump couldn't take the pain anymore, the economic pain on the Strait of Hormuz.” “If you look now at the 10-point list, the Iranian proposed contours of the deal … among the things on there is that Iran has control over the Strait of Hormuz and they get to recover all of the sanctions against them, that we're going to get rid of all of the sanctions that have been put in place since the Bush administration. And also, not on that list is getting rid of the nuclear material, which was at one time, the stated goal of the effort,” added Miller. “[W]e don't actually know what that deal is,” said French, an Iraq War veteran who remains hawkish on Iran because he remembers friends who were killed by Iranian weapons. “All we know is we have somewhat of a shaky ceasefire. Ten points from the Iranians. We have 15 points from the Trump administration. The difference between those two blueprints is … between the Milky Way and the Andromeda galaxy. Like we're talking thousands of light years of difference. But one thing we absolutely know, this was not unconditional surrender. This was not America dictating terms to Iran by any means.” “This is where we are now,” said Miller. “ … Israel is still attacking Lebanon this morning. Iran's still attacking the UAE this morning. Trump's new business partner in the Strait of Hormuz is attacking his old business partner in the cryptocurrency business.” “Well, when you put it that way, it sounds kind of bad, Tim,” French chided.

Only Trump could make America fold this fast: analysis

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New Deadline Looms for U.S. and Iran as Truce Wavers Fractures were already emerging in the limited cease-fire. Vice President JD Vance will lead a U.S. delegation in talks this weekend.

New Deadline Looms for U.S. and Iran as Truce Wavers

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Trump just broke his America First promise to build his illegal ballroom President Donald Trump is importing steel to build the ballroom that a federal judge already told him is not allowed to proceed with construction — and, simultaneously, breaking a key America First promise. “President Trump has championed the U.S. steel industry, promising to strengthen it and to impose stiff tariffs on foreign metals to shield manufacturers from overseas competitors,” The New York Times reported on Wednesday. “Yet the White House has secured tens of millions of dollars worth of donated foreign steel for Mr. Trump’s $400 million ballroom project, according to two people familiar with the plans who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive and private conversations.” Specifically the White House tapped a Luxembourg-based steel maker known as ArcelorMittal to build the ballroom. While Trump has bragged that he would not charge taxpayers to build his ballroom, “the use of foreign steel for a ballroom built at the most recognizable building in the United States may anger domestic companies and unions that are trying to promote the U.S. industry,” the Times reported. The Times also noted that Trump’s tariffs, despite ostensibly existing to help domestic industry, have actually benefited foreign industries like ArcelorMittal. “Tariffs have made exporting steel into U.S. markets more expensive,” the Times wrote. “But they have also raised global steel prices as a result, benefiting Mr. Mittal’s business. Mr. Mittal commended Mr. Trump’s efforts to place trade restrictions on Chinese steel exports. And in response to U.S. tariffs, Mr. Mittal urged the European Union to step up its trade protections of European steel.” In addition to upsetting domestic steel manufacturers. Trump is also upsetting Americans who care about preserving historic landmarks. These include Reason Magazine senior editor Jacob Sullum. “That decision, which the Justice Department asked a federal appeals court to pause in an emergency motion filed late on Friday, reflects Trump's tendency to do whatever he wants, regardless of what the law says,” Sullum wrote about a recent key court ruling that overturned Trump’s decision to bulldoze the East Wing and build a ballroom. Sullum then reviewed in detail the 35-page opinion issued by U.S. District Judge Richard J. Leon in his preliminary injunction. Leon wrote that, notwithstanding Trump’s "claims that Congress has given him authority in existing statutes to construct his East Wing ballroom project and to do it with private funds," ultimately when it came to the lawsuit against the ballroom’s construction "the National Trust is likely to succeed on the merits because no statute comes close to giving the President the authority he claims to have." Leon concluded that "the ballroom construction project must stop until Congress authorizes its completion." Journalist and lawyer Julie DeCaro offered a mixed assessment about Leon’s decision at the time, saying that though legally correct it came far too late to save the White House East Wing. "It would have been great to get this opinion before he demolished the East Wing, but no one moved fast enough,” DeCaro wrote on Bluesky. “It's a metaphor for his entire administration."

Trump just broke his America First promise to build his illegal ballroom

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Trump to discuss leaving NATO in meeting with alliance’s leader, White House says The president, long a NATO skeptic, has been especially angry at alliance members in recent weeks for declining to take part in the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran.

Trump to discuss leaving NATO in meeting with alliance’s leader, White House says

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The real winner of the war isn't the US — or Iran: WSJ President Donald Trump is proclaiming victory in the Iran war after declaring a ceasefire this week — but according to a conservative writer who specializes in South Asia, Pakistan is the real winner. “Pakistan’s prominent role in brokering a two-week cease-fire between the U.S. and Israel and Iran places it in an unusual position: on the front line of international diplomacy,” reported The Wall Street Journal’s Sadanand Dhume, who also achieved a senior fellowship at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. According to Dhume, Field Marshal Asim Munir successfully manipulated Trump’s predicament after invading Iran to position Pakistan as a peacebroker. “The saga isn’t over,” Dhume warned. “Pakistan remains economically precarious and ethnically riven, and a defense pact Pakistan signed last year with Saudi Arabia could draw Islamabad directly into the Iran war should the conflict resume. But at least for now, it looks as if the cunning field marshal has decisively outplayed the flamboyant former cricketer.” Trump, for his part, has denied reports such as one from the Financial Times that he came to Pakistan “begging” for their help negotiating a ceasefire. Despite publicly claiming to be mastering the conflict, the report indicates that Trump privately pushed for a ceasefire for weeks to end the economic problems caused to Americans by their closing of the Strait of Hormuz. Five people familiar with Trump’s diplomatic back channel to Pakistan claim that he had sought their aid since March 21, twenty-two days after he began the war. “And just so we set the record straight,” Trump told reporters at a Cabinet meeting in response to the stories, “because I’ve been watching the Wall Street Journal’s fake news, and all these stories that get printed like, ‘Oh, I want to make a deal.’ They are begging to make a deal, not me.” When AlterNet reached out to the White House for comment, they referred us to a comment by White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, She also contradicted the Financial Times’ report. “The Iranians originally put forward a 10-point plan that was fundamentally unserious, unacceptable, and completely discarded... many outlets in this room have falsely reported on that plan as being acceptable to the United States, and that is false,” Leavitt said in the public statement on X. “With @POTUS' deadline fast approaching, and the United States military completely decimating Iran with each passing hour, the regime acknowledged reality to the negotiating team. They put forward a more reasonable and entirely different and condensed plan to @POTUS and his team. President Trump and the team determined the new modified plan was a workable basis on which to negotiate..."

The real winner of the war isn't the US — or Iran: WSJ

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Who Is Funding the 2026 Midterm Elections? A Lot of the Money Is Untraceable. A lot of the money flowing into the political system is ultimately untraceable.

Who Is Funding the 2026 Midterm Elections? A Lot of the Money Is Untraceable.

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Contact Your MOC

While Americans struggle with real issues, Republicans are wasting time on a voter suppression bill that would block millions from voting. They're not trying to save America—they're trying to save their power. Call your MOC: #HandsOffHerVote

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'Mentally unstable grifter’: Trump's most loyal minions ignite circular firing squad Over the course of the past decade, a number of far-right figures have competed for the favor of President Donald Trump, among whom few have remained as loyal as conservative political operative Roger Stone and MAGA provocateur Laura Loomer. Stone played a key role in advising Trump’s first campaign, while Loomer — after rising to prominence as a conspiracy theorist and alt-right rabble-rouser — became loosely affiliated with his second. But now, after 15 years of friendship, Stone and Loomer have erupted in a highly public feud, with the two trading blows online and pulling no punches. The first signs of their break came during the 2024 election, when the two began sparring over Loomer’s attacks on future Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Then on Tuesday morning, following news of a potential ceasefire agreement, Stone took a jab at Loomer, posting that she was “reportedly dispondent [SIC] over her failure to goad President Trump into WWIII, killing millions.” This was a response to her full-throated support of the president’s most violent statements on the war. Loomer then accused Stone of “spewing IRGC talking points” and “vile attacks” against Trump, mentioning a bizarre conspiracy about Stone “lobbying with Somalia and Nigeria to represent Muslims and help them lie to the world about their slaughter of Christians.” Not to be outdone, Stone followed this up with a photo of a crazed-looking Loomer in a straightjacket, saying she is “delusional” and “slipping into insanity.” He accused her of spreading a rumor that she was having sex with the president (which Stone says Trump found “revolting”), said that Stone “may now be forced to sue you — giving me access to all your financial records, where I will find out whose [SIC] been financing your serial lies.” He wrapped up the post with the suggestive statement, “We both know what women who are paid to do things are called.” In response, Loomer denied his accusations while taking a sidebar to rant against Muslims and Bill Maher, asserting that Stone had “ruined our friendship with your behavior and your malicious lies.” Finally in the latest installment of this back and forth, Stone accused her of maintaining her alliance with Trump ally Steve Bannon even though she’d been warned he was “in bed with Jeffery Epstein,” impugned her intelligence and character, suggested that she’s been twice “institutionalized” and that “it will happen again,” and called her a “mentally unstable grifter and fraud," among other things. This feud comes in a moment when MAGA is more fractured than ever, largely over the president’s attack on Iran, which some of his supporters have called a betrayal of the “America First” principles he promised. Opponents of Trump are watching such exchanges eagerly, with many popcorn gifs posted in reply to Stone and Loomer’s tweets. As one commenter said, “Well isn't this repulsive little catfight between utter dirtbags delightful?!”

'Mentally unstable grifter’: Trump's most loyal minions ignite circular firing squad

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In America, we don’t do kings.

From one of the largest days of protest in US history to the daily act of organizing in every congressional district in this country, Indivisibles are standing up against Republican attacks on voting rights.

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White House Secures Foreign Steel for Ballroom Project ArcelorMittal, a European steel maker, is donating tens of millions of dollars of foreign steel for President Trump’s new ballroom.

White House Secures Foreign Steel for Ballroom Project

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Support our campaign to oppose MAGA extremism

If we want America to be a great country, no child should ever go hungry!

Urge your Congressional reps to fight for SNAP. Vote for candidates who don't want to starve children.
MAGA politicians' actions show that they don't care.

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Support our campaign to oppose MAGA extremists

When outrage replaces facts, it’s easier to miss what’s being stolen away from us by Trump.

Liar Trump is harming hard-working Americans, including farmers, students, people of color, immigrants, etc.

Vote for Democrats who are fighters not folders.

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Kristi Noem’s luxury DHS jet to be used by other administration officials The former homeland security secretary said the $70 million plane, which included a bedroom, was intended to carry out the president’s mass deportation agenda.

Kristi Noem’s luxury DHS jet to be used by other administration officials

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Confirmed: Trump admin threatened to overthrow the papacy Pope Leo XIV chronicler Christopher Hale says he has confirmed that Trump’s Pentagon threatened to declare war on the Vatican. “In January, behind closed doors at the Pentagon, Under Secretary of War for Policy Elbridge Colby summoned Cardinal Christophe Pierre — Pope Leo XIV’s then-ambassador to the United States — and delivered a lecture,” said Hale. “America has the military power to do whatever it wants in the world,” Colby and his associates informed the cardinal. “The Catholic Church had better take its side.” As the room temperature grew, Hale said he confirmed that one U.S. official “reached for a fourteenth-century weapon and invoked the Avignon Papacy, the period when the French Crown used military force to bend the bishop of Rome to its will.” Hale said the report confirms that the Vatican had reason to decline the Trump-Vance White House’s invitation to host Pope Leo XIV for America’s 250th anniversary in 2026 two weeks after the confrontation. Citing a Free Press report, a writer obtained accounts from Vatican and U.S. officials briefed on the Pentagon meeting. According to his sources, Colby’s team picked apart the pope’s January state-of-the-world address line by line and read it as a hostile message aimed directly at President Donald Trump. Hale said what “enraged them most” was Leo’s declaration that “a diplomacy that promotes dialogue and seeks consensus among all parties is being replaced by a diplomacy based on force.” “The Pentagon read that sentence as a frontal challenge to the so-called ‘Donroe Doctrine’ — Trump’s update of Monroe, asserting unchallenged American dominion over the Western Hemisphere,” said Hale. Hale said the cardinal sat through the lecture in silence, but added that “The Holy See has not, since that day, given an inch.” The Trump administration's contentious relationship with the Catholic Church represents a significant departure from traditional Republican-Church alliances. While Trump secured substantial Catholic voter support in 2016 and 2024 by championing conservative social issues like abortion restrictions, his foreign policy approach and rhetoric have increasingly alienated Church leadership. Pope Leo XIV has positioned himself as a moral counterweight to Trump's geopolitical aggression, consistently advocating for dialogue-based diplomacy over military intervention. This philosophical clash intensified during Trump's second term, particularly as his administration pursued more hawkish positions on Iran, trade relations, and immigration — issues where Church teaching emphasizes compassion, dialogue, and respect for human dignity. The Vatican's traditionally neutral stance on secular governance has been tested by Trump's unilateral foreign policy decisions and inflammatory rhetoric. Church leaders have publicly questioned whether American military interventions align with Catholic doctrine on just war theory and the sanctity of human life. Additionally, Trump's administration's hardline immigration policies directly contradict papal messaging that emphasizes welcoming migrants and refugees. The Pentagon's January confrontation with Cardinal Pierre signals an unprecedented willingness by Trump officials to pressure religious institutions into alignment with administration goals. This represents a potential inflection point: where diplomatic courtesy once governed state-Church relations, coercion may now be replacing negotiation. The Vatican's refusal to participate in the 250th anniversary celebration underscores that even America's most prominent religious institution will not compromise its moral authority for political expediency.

Confirmed: Trump admin threatened to overthrow the papacy

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Trump Administration Investigating L.A. Schools’ Gender Disclosure Policies The investigation into the nation’s second-largest school district was prompted by a lawsuit from parents who say the policies contributed to their child’s death.

Trump Administration Investigating L.A. Schools’ Gender Disclosure Policies

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GOP strategist calls 'Trump's folly' a threat to national security President Donald Trump “cannot be trusted,” warned an adviser to a different Republican president — and he left America weaker after retreating from his war against Iran. “Donald Trump started a war with no plan to win, no strategy to leave,” declared former President George W. Bush adviser Steve Schmidt in a Substack post on Wednesday. “Without the support of the American people, he threatened nuclear war and then backed down. And there wasn't one single Republican in the entire Congress who said a word about it, but his poll numbers keep dropping and he's down to about a 30% approval level.” Schmidt concluded that Trump’s behavior during the Iran war demonstrates that he “cannot be trusted. And what we're witnessing is a defeat that will shape the future for many, many years to come. And it will make the world more dangerous — far more dangerous than an already dangerous world has been. Trump's folly is our burden.” Describing Trump’s Iran war as an “unmitigated disaster,” he added that it is “worse than a disaster: a strategic defeat for the United States, dealt to us by the hand of the man who said, just a short time ago, he wanted a Nobel Peace Prize.” Earlier on Wednesday Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth defended Trump’s withdrawal from Iran even though a reporter pointed out that all America accomplished was to “replace the Ayatollah Khamenei with another Ayatollah Khamenei.” In response, Hegseth argued Iran is currently run by “a new group of people” and that so many leaders have been killed that “[the new ones] came to the table.” “So, OK, it’s not changed changed,” the Independent wrote, “as in a different outlook or a different way of governing or a different family in charge… It’s different because it’s the same regime but they agreed to a ceasefire with America after threats (and then declared victory themselves to their own population).” Despite Trump’s failure in Iran, conservative commentator Jonathan V. Last predicted on Wednesday that it will be spun to be favorable to them by his MAGA base. “Can you believe all the pearl-clutching over ‘war crimes’ and ‘genocide’?” Last wrote. “Trump didn’t do it, so there’s nothing wrong with threatening it. In fact, that threat probably got the peace deal done. So threatening genocide is good, actually.” He added they will say things like “Look at gas prices — they’re already falling! Oil is down to $93/barrel. Have you even said ‘Thank you?'” and “The economy may not be great, but it’s already recovering! All those people who said the war would wreck the American economy were wrong!” Last described this as a “pattern.”

GOP strategist calls 'Trump's folly' a threat to national security

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Fed Minutes Show Officials in No Rush to Cut as Iran War Scrambled Outlook The conflict in the Middle East has left the Federal Reserve braced for higher inflation, with more officials open to the possibility of rate increases.

Fed Minutes Show Officials in No Rush to Cut as Iran War Scrambled Outlook

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MAGA just blew their chance to 'hijack elections' in key swing state On Tuesday night, April 7, Republicans suffered a major humiliation when Judge Chris Taylor (a former Democratic state legislator) defeated Judge Maria S. Lazar by roughly 20 percent in a Wisconsin Supreme Court election. The race was technically nonpartisan, but it became largely a referendum on Donald Trump's second presidency. And while Taylor was backed by Democrats, Lazar was supported by Republicans. With Taylor's victory, liberals will have a 5-2 majority on the seven-seat Wisconsin Supreme Court. In an article published on April 8, Mother Jones' Ari Berman offers a major takeaway on the race's outcome: MAGA Republicans, Berman argues, will have a hard time trying to "hijack elections" in a key swing state. "It's a stunning turnaround from a decade ago, when a conservative majority dominated the (Wisconsin Supreme) Court and upheld much of then-Gov. Scott Walker's (R) right-wing agenda, such as his efforts to crush unions, make it harder to vote, and gerrymander in the GOP's favor," Berman explains. "In 2020, when conservatives on the Wisconsin Court held a 4-3 majority, Donald Trump and his allies attempted to convince the justices to overturn the state's presidential election results. They nearly succeeded. Just one of the conservatives, Justice Brian Hagedorn, sided with the liberals in narrowly upholding Joe Biden's win." Berman continues, "Taylor's victory on Tuesday means progressives are set to control the Court's majority through at least 2030. That will make it nearly impossible for Republicans to use the state courts to hijack elections. Taylor said, during a debate last week with her opponent, Maria Lazar — a fellow appellate judge who previously served in Walker's administration — that she was 'very concerned that we might have efforts to suppress the vote' and that 'this is why we need a strong Supreme Court that's going to hold the federal government accountable.'" Taylor's 20 percent victory, according to Berman, was more than a "landslide" — it was a "tsunami." "Taylor won at least 24 counties that Trump carried in 2024," Berman observes. "Democrats also prevailed in the mayor's race in Waukesha, the county seat of a longtime GOP stronghold in suburban Milwaukee. The results are another indicator that a blue wave is forming in November."

MAGA just blew their chance to 'hijack elections' in key swing state

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Oil Prices Fall, but Energy Firms Remain Frozen After U.S.-Iran Deal Analysts said oil and natural gas energy companies would not quickly restore production unless attacks stopped and ships started moving through the Strait of Hormuz.

Oil Prices Fall, but Energy Firms Remain Frozen After U.S.-Iran Deal

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