The MAGA Version of Freedom

First, some celebration:

So we’ve been given a bit of light. Yesterday’s election results were as good as we could have hoped for. With 95 percent of the vote counted as I write, Susan Crawford is winning easily, 55 % to 45 %, over the Musk candidate, Brad Schimel, in Wisconsin. Elon spent a huge amount of political capital, along with real money, trying to elect Schimel. I’m reading that Schimel was running on how loyal he is to Trump, and how he would support Trump’s agenda, and Elon seems to have thought this would bring Trump supporters out to the polls. We see how that worked. From the New York Times:

Even more than Mr. Trump, Mr. Musk emerged in Wisconsin as the primary boogeyman for Democrats. His involvement altered the terms of the election. Instead of making the race an early referendum on Mr. Trump’s White House and abortion rights, Wisconsin Democrats pivoted to make Mr. Musk their entire focus, while Republicans rode the wave of his largess.

Don Moynihan writes on his Substack site, “All signs suggest that Musk was a drag, rather than a boost, to the candidate he invested so much personal and financial capital into.” Musk is a liability to Republicans rather than an asset, in other words. Also, while Republicans won, the results in the Florida House elections were a lot closer than the results in the same districts just five months ago. Republicans who are not in deep red districts and who face elections next year have got to be worried. Worried enough to take back some of Musk’s power? We’ll see. See also Elon Musk Can’t Take the Heat by Tim Murphy at Mother Jones

Sen. Cory Booker’s 25-hour speech turned into something genuinely inspirational. If you missed the closing moments, you can see them here. Frank Luntz, of all people, says the speech may have changed the course of political history. I think it’s a bit early to say that, but I do think it could have helped turn a corner for the Dems. They needed this.

Now on to freedom. There’s an article at The Atlantic by David Graham titled The Top Goal of Project 2025 Is Still to Come. It begins:

“Freedom is a fragile thing, and it’s never more than one generation away from extinction,” Ronald Reagan said in 1967, in his inaugural address as governor of California. Kevin D. Roberts, the president of the Heritage Foundation, approvingly quotes the speech in his foreword to Project 2025, the conservative think tank’s blueprint for the Trump administration. Roberts writes that the plan has four goals for protecting its vision of freedom: restoring the family “as the centerpiece of American life”; dismantling the federal bureaucracy; defending U.S. “sovereignty, borders, and bounty”; and securing “our God-given individual rights to live freely.”

Now, what does this tell us about how people like Roberts define “freedom”? Is “restoring the family as the centerpiece of American life” freedom? What sort of family is being restored? Graham continues,

A focus on heterosexual, married, procreating couples is everywhere in Project 2025. “Families comprised of a married mother, father, and their children are the foundation of a well-­ordered nation and healthy society,” writes Roger Severino, the author of a chapter on the Department of Health and Human Services and a former HHS and Justice Department staffer. … He argues that the federal government should bolster organizations that “maintain a biblically based, social-­science-reinforced definition of marriage and family,” saying that other forms are less stable. The goal is not only moral; he and other authors see this as a path to financial stability and perhaps even greater prosperity for families.

So, apparently, “freedom” requires enforcing a rigidly narrow lifestyle that may work very well for some people, but it doesn’t work for everybody. Those who are not heterosexual or terribly interested in marriage or children just have to suck it up and, what? Give up their freedom?

In this vision, men are breadwinners and women are mothers. “Without women, there are no children, and society cannot continue,” Max Primorac writes in his chapter on USAID, where he served in the first Trump administration. (Primorac calls for ridding the agency of “woke” politics and using it as an instrument of U.S. policy, but not the complete shutdown Trump has attempted.) Jonathan Berry writes that the Department of Labor, where he previously worked, would “commit to honest study of the challenges for women in the world of professional work” and seek to “understand the true causes of earnings gaps between men and women.” (This sounds a lot like research predetermined to reach an outcome backing the traditional family.)

So we’re going back to stuffing all women into a rigidly narrow gender role that requires they give up personal aptitudes and interests so they can stay home and take care of children. I’ve got news for these people: This is not freedom.  It’s true that we’re still working to make the motherhood-and-career mix work a little more rationally. But I think we can get there.

The Labor Department would produce monthly data on “the state of the American family and its economic welfare,” and the Education Department would provide student data sorted by family structure. Severino suggests that the government either pay parents (most likely mothers) to offset the cost of caring for children, or pay for in-­home care from family members; he opposes universal day care, which many on the right see as encouraging women to work rather than stay home with kids.

This makes me crazy. First, I suspect nearly all families who need day care call on family or trusted friends to provide that care before they resort to paying for day care. But very often that’s not an option. Republican politicians don’t want to pay for reliable day care, but when jobs are going unfilled because women don’t have reliable day care they don’t like that, either, especially if the unemployed mothers need food and housing assistance. It can be a burden even for women who keep their jobs. I well remember having to spend time at work on the phone looking for day care  because of a school break or some other interruption in the usual arrangement. It cuts into productivity, and it’s a horrific expense.

The parts of this family-oriented agenda that the Trump administration has already moved to enact are some of those that enforce a strictly binary concept of gender, aiming to drive trans and nonbinary people underground; open them up to discrimination at work, at school, and in the rest of their lives; and erase their very existence from the language of the federal government.

And I’m still not seeing the “freedom.”

Trump has not yet made stricter abortion policies a focus in his new term. Though he has boasted about appointing Supreme Court justices who overturned Roe v. Wade, he seems wary of pushing further, for fear of political backlash. Project 2025 has no such qualms. Severino recommends withdrawing FDA approval for abortion drugs, banning their prescription via telehealth, and using 1873’s Comstock Act to prohibit their mailing. 

I’m not seeing pro-freedom agenda there, either. Not having a say over one’s own body is kind of not free.

I’ve been complaining about the Right’s misuse of the word freedom for years. It’s like that to be free, in their sense of the word, we have to agree to not be free, really. We give up our actual freedom to enjoy a kind of theoretical freedom. Or something.

And then there is their twitchiness about “government bureaucracy.” Sometimes the lack of it is a bigger threat to freedom. Just ask the people standing in lines outside Social Security offices these days. But, speaking of Reagan, I’m sure you remember what he said when the Medicare Act was passed way back when. “We are going to spend our sunset years telling our children and our children’s children, what it once was like in America when men were free.” How “free” is it to not be able to afford health care? How “free” is it to have a debilitating illness or chronic pain that goes untreated or else puts you in debt for the rest of your life? Where is the “freedom” in that? If we citizens choose to spend our tax money toward providing access to medical care for everybody, as other nations do, how is that “not free”? I honestly don’t understand.

In brief, the Right’s idea of freedom has nothing to do with individual self-determination or being free from hindrances that keep you from fully living your life. What it means is that they want to live in a country that reflects their personal biases and that protects them from things that make them uncomfortable, like brown people, especially foreign ones, and assertive women of any color. That’s why they love Viktor Orbán so much. It’s the most corrupt country in the EU, and the people have no guarantee of civil liberties, but he’s doing a heck of a job shoving gay people back into the closet. 

Cory Booker’s Long Speech

I’m watching Sen. Cory Booker break the Senate for the longest speech in Senate history. I don’t know if most Americans are aware this is going on, but it’s a good effort.

I’m waiting to see the results of the special elections tonight, hoping to see a big Democratic overperformance, if not wins. Maybe wins in Florida is hoping for too much, but cutting the margin from last November would be nice. And I do hope the Republican in Wisconsin is absolutely trounced. Fingers crossed.

Do discuss the day’s events. And here are a couple of things to read from The New Republic:

Michael Tomasky, Of Course Trump Will Tank the Economy. It’s What Republicans Do.

Greg Sargent, The Lawlessness Is the Point

 

Trump Is Burning All Our Bridges

One of the saddest things about the ongoing destruction of the U.S. is that Trump/Musk/Vance are blowing off many long-nurtured relationships with other countries. Yesterday I caught this interview with a former U.S. ambassador to Denmark on J.D. Vance and the ham-handed bullying of Greenland.

See also The Imperialism Has no Clothes: JD Vance in Greenland by Timothy Snyder on how utterly contradictory and incoherent Trump’s policies really are.

If Dems take back both houses in 2026, IMO another Trump impeachment and removal from office have to be on the table. It’s the only way the U.S. can even begin to get its credibility back.

Trump’s problem, as I understand it, is that he understands only one kind of relationship, between dominators and the dominated. He doesn’t understand strategic alliances, or equal partnerships in which nations work together where they share mutual interests. To Trump, you’re either the boss or you’re the flunky. He and Vance and Musk also don’t seem to grasp that what happens in other countries can really, truly, impact the U.S. Ultimately isolationism makes us weaker.

Regarding Elon Musk, see Jonathan Chait at The Atlantic, Why DOGE Could Actually Increase the Deficit. In the long run Musk’s antics probably will cost us a lot more than he “saves.” And if he were really all that smart he should be able to figure that out himself. Or maybe he has, and he doesn’t care.

See also Greg Sargent, Trump Accidentally Wrecks His Own Tariff Spin in Leaked Call Stunner. You’ve no doubt heard that Trump has ordered a 25 percent tariff on all cars imported into the U.S. This is supposed to take effect on April 3. Some time later there is to be a 25 percent tariff on all car parts imported into the U.S. Trump has already slapped 25 percent tariffs on steel and aluminum, and he’s threatened to impose tariffs on copper. (If you’re thinking of replacing your laptop, do it before the cost of copper goes up.)

This is supposed to bring more car manufacturing back to the U.S. Car industry experts are saying it probably won’t, and even if it did cars would cost more. But somebody must have gotten through to Trump that his tariffs will raise the price of cars. Greg Sargent:

The Wall Street Journalreports that in a private call with CEOs of the nation’s leading auto companies this month, the president warned them against hiking prices after his tariffs hit. The White House will look unfavorably on them if they do, he darkly intimated, leaving them worried about retribution.

I’m waiting for the outrage from the “free market” libertarians and the Friedrich Von Hayek devotees to scream about the “road to serfdom.” Crickets so far.

This is getting attention as another abuse of power, akin to his extortion of law firms. But it’s notable for a different reason: It wrecks the spin Trump has offered on his tariffs on many different levels, and it highlights a glaring absurdity about his economic agenda that continues to be overlooked. While Trump’s stated goal of tariffs is to rebuild the nation’s industrial base, he’s gunning to reverse policies by his predecessor in a way that would kill large numbers of manufacturing jobs, including in the auto industry, simply because they would facilitate the transition to a green future.

He wants to undo everything Biden accomplished because Biden accomplished it. He also wants to stay in the good graces of fossil fuel companies. Meanwhile, China is cornering the EV market. U.S. automobile manufacturers will be left behind.

Some Trump-targeted law firms are fighitng back. That’s encouraging.

Today’s News Bits

The latest: Trump has asked the Supreme Court to let him resume deporting people under the Alien Enemies Act. Let’s see what SCOTUS does with this.

There’s some good news — apparently some GOP senators are squeamish about cutting Medicaid. And there’s some bad news — DOGE is preparing to re-code the Social Security database. And they plan to do it quickly. Wired reports:

The so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) is starting to put together a team to migrate the Social Security Administration’s (SSA) computer systems entirely off one of its oldest programming languages in a matter of months, potentially putting the integrity of the system—and the benefits on which tens of millions of Americans rely—at risk.

The project is being organized by Elon Musk lieutenant Steve Davis, multiple sources who were not given permission to talk to the media tell WIRED, and aims to migrate all SSA systems off COBOL, one of the first common business-oriented programming languages, and onto a more modern replacement like Java within a scheduled tight timeframe of a few months.

Under any circumstances, a migration of this size and scale would be a massive undertaking, experts tell WIRED, but the expedited deadline runs the risk of obstructing payments to the more than 65 million people in the US currently receiving Social Security benefits.

Today JD Vance told troops in Greenland that the US has to gain control of the Arctic island to stop the threat of China and Russia. At least he’s acknowledging Russia is a threat. But why is it that Greenland all of a sudden has all this strategic importance?

It’s because of global climate change, folks. You know, that thing Trump says is a hoax.

Brett Simpson writes at The Atlantic:

As polar ice melts away, superpowers are vying for newly open shipping routes in the Arctic Ocean and largely unexplored mineral and fossil-fuel reserves. Arctic warming could pose a direct threat to America’s security interests too: Alaska could have new vulnerabilities to both China and Russia; changes in ocean salinity and temperature might interfere with submarine detection systems; the extremes of climate change, including permafrost thaw in Russia, could drive economic instability, social unrest, and territorial claims.

Do read the whole article; no paywall. It says the DoD has been factoring climate change into military planning for some time.

The stock market is not happy. Way to go, Trump.

Another wipeout walloped Wall Street Friday. Worries are building about a potentially toxic mix of worsening inflation and a U.S. economy slowing because of households afraid to spend due to the global trade war.

The S&P 500 dropped 2% for one of its worst days in the last two years. It thudded to its fifth losing week in the last six after wiping out what had been a big gain to start the week.

Tonight a federal judge blocked Trump from shutting down the Voice of America.

Possibly to do a solid for his buddy Vladimir, Trump’s ICE thugs have “disappeared” a Russian medical researcher at Harvard. She left Russia after publicly criticizing Putin for invading Ukraine. If she is deported to Russia she’ll no doubt be jailed.

There are more outrageous things going on than I have had time to write about, sorry. I’ll try to catch up tomorrow. Do feel free to rant about whatever is pissing you off in the comments.

Updates on Our Slow-Motion Apocalypse

First off, Jeffrey Goldberg released the Signal group chat, which clearly discussed plans for bombing in Yemen. So the other participants who claimed there were no war plans or anything that should have been classified in the chat were, um, fibbing. This is a gift link, so you can read it all without a subscription to The Atlantic.

A lawsuit has already been filed regarding SignalGate. Trump officials were sued yesterday by the government watchdog group American Oversight. And the suit has been assigned to none other than the chief judge of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, James Boasberg. Yep; the same guy Trump’s lawyers are butting heads with over the deportation flights. See Trump’s Nightmare Judge Will Decide Case on War Plans Group Chat at The New Republic.

For the latest in the deportation flights court brawl, see A Constitutional Collision In Slow Motion by David Kurtz at Talking Points Memo. In brief, the DoJ lawyers have taken the position that the Trump Administration doesn’t have to comply with the Court’s information requests, nyah nyah nyah.

The next step in this matter isn’t exactly clear to me. The ball is now in Boasberg’s court, with the administration adamant that there are no grounds to hold it in contempt while refusing to recognize the judge’s authority to inquire into the matter. Something’s got to give.

In other news, a Democrat is the projected winner of a Pennsylvania state senate election yesterday. This is newsworthy because the district hasn’t elected a Democratic state senator since it moved from Philadelphia to Lancaster County in 1979. Trump won there last November with 57 percent of the vote. I’m reading that even though it was a state race, the winner, James Malone, made Elon Musk and recent events in Washington a central part of his campaign. A sign of things to come?

Jamelle Bouie writes in the New York Times that Trump and Musk Are Suffering From Soros Derangement Syndrome. This is my last NY Times gift article for the month, so enjoy. Bouie writes that Trump, Musk, and the political Right genuinely believe that all opposition to their cause is being fueled and manipulated by powerful elites (like George Soros). Just about everything Trump has been doing lately has been about striking down the institutions and “shadowy” government agencies that are behind this manipulation. Eliminate these elites, and the opposition will vanish. Right?

One upshot of the idea that there is no such thing as genuine popular political opposition to Trump and the MAGA right — and that most, if not all of it, is the product of secret machinations by elusive billionaires and shadowy government agencies — is that the people are inherently on your side and your opponents are illegitimate. The other is that to defeat your opposition, all you have to do is strike at the individuals and institutions that fuel it. Remove them, and you’ll have no one in your way.

We see both conclusions at work in the way the president and his supporters are operating.

So, in brief, the Right is dismissing all the blinking red warnings that their attacks on portions of government — like Social Security — are really pissing off regular Americans, including many of their own voters, and are not the work of George Soros paying people to yell a lot at town halls.

Probably as part of this effort, yesterday Trump signed an executive order demanding big changes in how elections are held. The headline provision is that people must provide proof of citizenship when they register to vote. It’s not clear to me if this applies to people who are already registered. But what is clear is that an executive order by a POTUS is not binding on state governments, and states run elections, per the Constitution.

Another provision in this order is that it bans certain election equipment that use QR codes. I don’t know if that would include Dominion or Smartmatic machines. But it might force a lot of states to spend a ton of money replacing equipment, if the states decided to comply.

But my favorite provision is that it would allow the Lost Boys of DOGE to comb through voter registration rolls to find the “bad” voters. Entire Democratic-leaning voting districts would probably be declared dead. See Steve Benen at MSNBC.

SignalGate Is Blowing Up

I’ve been out most of the day and am just now catching up to the fallout from SignalGate. The best thing I’ve read so far is by Josh Marshall, SignalGate Is Bad; But OPSEC Isn’t Even the Worst Part Of It. Here’s just a bit of it.

Especially in the national security domain, many things the government does have to remain secret. Sometimes those things remain secret for years or decades. But they’re not secrets from the U.S. government. The U.S. government owns all those communications, all those facts of its own history. Using a Signal app like this is hiding what’s happening from the government itself. And that is almost certainly not an unintended byproduct but the very reason for the use. These are disappearing communications. They won’t be in the National Archives. Future administrations won’t know what happened. There also won’t be any records to determine whether crimes were committed.

This all goes to the fundamental point Trump has never been able to accept: that the U.S. government is the property of the American people and it persists over time with individual officeholders merely temporary occupants charged with administering an entity they don’t own or possess.

Think this is hyperbole? Remember that when Trump held his notorious meeting with Vladimir Putin in Helsinki in 2019 he confiscated his translator’s notes and ordered him not to divulge anything that had been discussed. Remember that Trump got impeached over an extortion plot recorded in the government record of his phone call with President Zelensky. An intelligence analyst discovered what had happened and decided he needed to report the conduct. These aren’t hypotheticals. They’ve already happened. And he’s even been caught. Which is probably one reason there’s so much use of Signal.

This is clearly routine in the Trump administration. How many of President Trump’s conversations with foreign leaders are happening on these apps? It’s the obvious place for bribes, various kinds of criminal conduct, asking foreign governments to do dirty jobs, maybe against American citizens, that Trump doesn’t dare try himself.

Do read the whole thing. See also Marcy Wheeler, Seven Reasons Trump’s Entire National Security Team Should Resign in Disgrace. And see Marina Hyde at The Guardian, It’s war and peace with Donald and Pete – and the worst group chat the world has ever seen. I think this story is going to be with us for a few days.

In other news, today Trump signed an executive order calling for changes to how U.S. elections are administered. Since the Constitution leaves the administration of elections to the states, I suspect many lawyers are already at work at the legal challenges. Says Democracy Docket, “Tuesday’s executive order is an extension of those efforts by attempting to make it more difficult for Americans to register to vote, to vastly increase federal supervision over state registration rolls and to punish states that do not comply with the order.”

Even more terrifying, apparently House Speaker Mike Johnson is considering “eliminating” federal courts that are causing particular trouble for Trump’s agenda.

More tomorrow.

Today’s Trump Administration Howlers

Here are a couple of new things to read on Social Security. One, see Why DOGE is struggling to find fraud in Social Security,  a WaPo piece republished at Yahoo News. It’s an article of faith on the Right that Social Security is rife with fraud and way overdue to be audited. In fact, it gets audited up the proverbial wazoo. “Social Security is among the most scrutinized and audited agencies in government, with frequent probes by its 500-person Office of Inspector General. It pays outside auditors to examine its books,” the article says. So there is not a lot of fraud to be found.

Then see Paul Krugman, Social Security: A Time for Outrage. He makes the point that what Trump/Musk et al. are trying to do to Social Security will devastate a whole lot of people who voted for Trump, who for the most part are not that wealthy. And then there’s the breathtakingly out of touch comment by Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.

This could well be one of the dumbest things ever said by a federal U.S. official. “And the attack on Social Security is something that should both inspire outrage and offer an opportunity to connect with working-class Americans,” Krugman writes.

Well, some of the Democrats are trying. Some of them aren’t. And Lutnick hasn’t yet issued a “clarification” or walkback of his comment that I’ve seen.

Wowzer of the Week, so Far: Jeffrey Goldberg, a smart guy who is editor in chief of The Atlantic, inexplicably was invited into a super-secret encrypted chat group for high-level Trump Administration operatives. Goldberg writes,

 I had very strong doubts that this text group was real, because I could not believe that the national-security leadership of the United States would communicate on Signal about imminent war plans. I also could not believe that the national security adviser to the president would be so reckless as to include the editor in chief of The Atlantic in such discussions with senior U.S. officials, up to and including the vice president

The group discussed plans to bomb Houthi militants in Yemen. And then, the Trump Administration bombed Houthi targets in Yemen, exactly as the people in the group chat said they would. Maybe it wasn’t a hoax. You need to read this.

Trump is having another bad day in court:

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit is hearing arguments over the Trump administration’s use of the Alien Enemies Act last week to deport more than 200 alleged members of a Venezuelan gang to El Salvador with no due process.

“There were plane loads of people. There were no procedures in place to notify people,” Judge Patricia Millett said. “Nazis got better treatment under the Alien Enemies Act.”

Judge Millett noted that alleged Nazis were given hearing boards and subject to established regulations, while the alleged members of Tren De Aragua were given no such rights.

“There’s no regulations, and nothing was adopted by the agency officials that were administering this. They people weren’t given notice. They weren’t told where they were going. They were given those people on those planes on that Saturday and had no opportunity to file habeas or any type of action to challenge the removal under the AEA,” Judge Millet said. “What’s factually wrong about what I said?”

“Well, Your Honor, we certainly dispute the Nazi analogy,” Deputy Assistant Attorney General Drew Ensign said, arguing some of the men were able to file habeas petitions.

Ensign compared a federal judge’s order temporarily blocking the deportations to a judge directing a carrier group from the South China Sea to the Persian Gulf — an analogy that drew an immediate rebuke from Millett.

Trump’s lawyer is arguing that the courts are intruding on Trump’s “war powers.” Um, what war?

In fact, Trump appears to be trying to perpetrate the fiction that the U.S. is at war with Venezuela.

“Venezuela has been very hostile to the United States and the Freedoms which we espouse. Therefore, any Country that purchases Oil and/or Gas from Venezuela will be forced to pay a Tariff of 25% to the United States on any Trade they do with our Country,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social.

Trump claimed, without evidence, Venezuela has “purposefully and deceitfully” sent criminals, including violent individuals and members of gangs like Tren de Aragua, to the United States.

Obviously he’s saying this to justify use of the Alien Enemies Act, which was written to apply only in times of declared war or invasion by forces of a hostile nation.

And finally — Donald Trump, Snowflake-in-Chief, had a screaming tantrum over a portrait of him hanging in the Colorado capitol building. If anything it makes him look less ridiculous than he usually looks, IMO, but he demanded it be removed. It hasn’t been removed, as far as I know.

Trump’s Deportation Extravaganza

In his 2024 campaign, Trump promised to conduct a mass deportation of more than 13 million immigrants in the country illegally. In some campaign speeches, the number bounced from 13 million to 15 million to 20 million. It would be “the largest domestic deportation operation in American history,” he said.

Trump has promised to be far more aggressive in a second term, emboldened by close advisers, like Stephen Miller, to launch a “shock-and-awe blitz” of executive orders and actions that will target millions of immigrants and their families and threaten the freedom and security of everyone in the United States. “Trump will unleash the vast arsenal of federal powers to implement the most spectacular migration crackdown,” Miller told The New York Times in November 2023. Former senior Trump officials helped write Project 2025, a detailed plan to overhaul federal agencies that includes more than 175 immigration actions.

So, how’s that going? Not so great. Reuters reported that, so far, Trump has been deporting people at a slower rate than Joe Biden did last year. I understand this is because there have been fewer people crossing at the border. But Big Bad Trump was promising to deport millions of people already here, wasn’t he?

And he must have anticipated some pretty impressive deportations right off the bat. That’s why one of the first things he did was arrange to have ginormous military aircraft carrying all these alleged terrorists and criminals out of the country. That would make for some great television, right? Except that I understand a lot of these aircraft were taking off half-empty, and the cost was out of control. So on March 1 the Administration quietly went back to using chartered commercial planes, as previous administrations have done.

And then there were the big plans to house 30,000 or so badass migrants in a tent city at Guantánamo Bay. But construction of the tent city was soon halted, and the 300 or so migrants who were sent there were all sent back by March 11. Possibly somebody has calculated how much money went down the drain in that operation. It’s not clear to me if any migrants are there now.

I’ve seen various estimates of how many people Trump has deported so far, but he’s no where close to his first million deportees. He’s probably no where close to his first 100,000 deportees. He probably hasn’t hit 50,000 yet. Nobody knew it was so hard to round up people and deport them! But, hey, if you don’t have to go through the due process thing, it could get a lot easier. So Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 so he can do an end-run around due process and speed up deportations. Never mind that the Alien Enemies Act only applies to times of declared war with a foreign country or invasion by a foreign country. He can pretend a criminal gang amounts to the same thing. And he finally got some impressive video footage, of men shackled and frog-walked, their heads down so we can’t see their faces. Trump must have been happy about that. Finally some decent television!

And it turns out that any Latino man with tattoos can be identified as a “gang member.” Convenient. It is being reported in multiple sources that at least some of the men sent to El Salvador had no connection to gangs.  It’s all about the optics, see. One Latino man is as good as another, for the cameras.

(update) The Associated Press:

Franco Caraballo called his wife Friday night, crying and panicked. Hours earlier, the 26-year-old barber and dozens of other Venezuelan migrants held at a federal detention facility in Texas were dressed in white clothes, handcuffed and taken onto a plane. He had no idea where he was going.

Twenty-four hours later, Caraballo’s name disappeared from the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s online detainee locator.

On Monday, his wife, Johanny Sánchez, learned Caraballo was among the more than 200 Venezuelan immigrants flown over the weekend to El Salvador, where they are now held in a maximum-security prison after being accused by the Trump administration of belonging to the Venezuelan Tren de Aragua gang.

Sánchez insists her husband isn’t a gang member. She struggles even to find logic in the accusation. 

Trump also has targeted another group of Latinos who should be easy to identify and deport. The Associated Press:

The Department of Homeland Security said Friday that it will revoke legal protections for hundreds of thousands of Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans, setting them up for potential deportation in about a month.

The order applies to about 532,000 people from the four countries who came to the United States since October 2022. They arrived with financial sponsors and were given two-year permits to live and work in the U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said they will lose their legal status on April 24, or 30 days after the publication of the notice in the Federal Register.

The new policy impacts people who are already in the U.S. and who came under the humanitarian parole program. It follows an earlier Trump administration decision to end what it called the “broad abuse” of the humanitarian parole, a long-standing legal tool presidents have used to allow people from countries where there’s war or political instability to enter and temporarily live in the U.S.

In the past they would have been able to apply for asylum or other visas to stay longer, but the Trump Administration isn’t allowing that. Any Latino in the country legally as part of the parole program must now leave. Trump also is considering stripping the parole status from some 240,000 Ukrainians in the U.S. That would get Trump closer to his first million. I’ve seen no reporting saying that the people here as part of the parole program are criminals or causing trouble of any sort. They’re foreigners, and they’re handy. Low-hanging fruit, as they say.

But wait … Trump says he didn’t sign the proclamation invoking the Alien Enemies Act.

President Donald Trump on Friday downplayed his involvement in invoking the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to deport Venezuelan migrants, saying for the first time that he hadn’t signed the proclamation, even as he stood by his administration’s move.

“I don’t know when it was signed, because I didn’t sign it,” Trump told reporters before leaving the White House on Friday evening.

The president made his comments when asked to respond to Judge James Boasberg’s concerns in court on Friday that the proclamation was “signed in the dark” of night and that migrants were hurried onto planes.

“We want to get criminals out of our country, number one, and I don’t know when it was signed, because I didn’t sign it,” Trump said. “Other people handled it, but (Secretary of State) Marco Rubio has done a great job and he wanted them out and we go along with that. We want to get criminals out of our country.”

The proclamation invoking the Alien Enemies Act appears in the Federal Register with Trump’s signature at the bottom.

White House communications director Steven Cheung explained that “obviously” Trump was saying he didn’t sign the original bill into law back in 1798. Sure he was. Either his dementia is kicking up a notch, or he’s become aware the use of the law is creating one messy fight with the courts, and he’s preparing to blame Rubio for it. Or both.

Also, in spite of there being fewer border crossings, thousands of federal agents have been diverted from their usual crime fighting activities to stand guard at the border.

Federal agents who usually hunt down child abusers are now cracking down on immigrants who live in the U.S. illegally.

Homeland Security investigators who specialize in money laundering are raiding restaurants and other small businesses looking for immigrants who aren’t authorized to work.

Agents who pursue drug traffickers and tax fraud are being reassigned to enforce immigration law.

As U.S. President Donald Trump pledges to deport “millions and millions” of “criminal aliens,” thousands of federal law enforcement officials from multiple agencies are being enlisted to take on new work as immigration enforcers, pulling crime-fighting resources away on other areas ? from drug trafficking and terrorism to sexual abuse and fraud.

So, expect a rise in the crime rates in the coming months. But the perpetrators will likely be in the U.S. legally, so that makes it okay.

Update: More low-hanging fruit, or more accurately fruit forced to hang lower:

The IRS is nearing a data-sharing agreement with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement that would allow immigration officials to use tax data to support the Trump administration’s deportation agenda, two sources familiar with the matter told ABC News.

After weeks of negotiations, administration officials are close to reaching an agreement that would enable ICE officials to submit names and addresses of suspected immigrants lacking legal status for the IRS to check against its confidential databases….

…The use of sensitive taxpayer information to further the Trump administration’s immigration policies has alarmed career officials within the IRS.

Section 6103 of the federal tax code requires the IRS to keep individual taxpayer information confidential with certain limited exceptions, which includes law enforcement agencies “for investigation and prosecution of non-tax criminal laws” with approval from a court, according to the agency’s website.

The IRS has allowed immigrants without legal status to file income tax returns with individual tax numbers, or ITINs. These immigrants contributed $25.7 billion in Social Security taxes using borrowed or fraudulent Social Security numbers, according to the Bipartisan Policy Center.

Note that they pay into Social Security but cannot collect benefits without a legitimate Social Security number. And if they’re paying into Social Security they are probably working “real” jobs, right? How about making it easier for people who are not criminals to become legitimately documented, instead of kidnapping and deporting them?

The Musky Odor of Trump

The second news story I saw this morning said that the Trump Administration is threatening to shut down Social Security if Elon Musk’s Lost Boys are not allowed access to our personal information. This is from Bloomberg:

The Trump administration is threatening to all but shut down the Social Security Administration in response to a judge’s ruling blocking activities by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency — an action that could delay payments to millions of beneficiaries caught in the middle of the legal battle.

Acting Social Security Commissioner Leland Dudek said the temporary restraining order issued Thursday is so broad in blocking access to data by “DOGE affiliates” that it could apply to any Social Security employee.

Weirdly, though, the Bloomberg headline makes it sound as if it’s the judge’s ruling that threatens Social Security, not the Trump Administration. The only media source I’ve seen with a headline that flatly states the Trump Administration is threatening Social Security is Rolling Stone. Which reports,

“My anti-fraud team would be DOGE affiliates. My IT staff would be DOGE affiliates,” said Lee Dudek, acting Social Security Administration (SSA) commissioner, arguing the order was too broad, according to Bloomberg News. “As it stands, I will follow it exactly and terminate access by all SSA employees to our IT systems,” he said, adding: “Really, I want to turn it off and let the courts figure out how they want to run a federal agency.”

Dudek’s threat to block SSA employees from using the agency’s IT systems — a move that could halt Social Security payments — came in response to a judge’s temporary restraining order in a case brought by the AFL-CIO labor union. The order bars Social Security Administration officials from allowing DOGE, including Musk, and the SSA’s DOGE team to access personally identifiable information. It also directs Musk and DOGE to delete from their possession all non-anonymized personal data, and bars them from having access to SSA computers or code. 

If he really did shut down Social Security, that would certainly get the nation’s attention. But I don’t think the blowback would be all that helpful to the Trump Administration, or to Republicans in general.

The first news story I saw this morning, from the New York Times, said that Elon Musk is scheduled today to be briefed by the Pentagon on a potential war with China.

The Pentagon was scheduled on Friday to brief Elon Musk on the U.S. military’s plan for any war that might break out with China, two U.S. officials said on Thursday.

Another official said the briefing would be China focused, without providing additional details. A fourth official confirmed Mr. Musk was to be at the Pentagon on Friday, but offered no details.

Hours after news of the planned meeting was published by The New York Times, Pentagon officials and President Trump denied that the session would be about military plans involving China. “China will not even be mentioned or discussed,” Mr. Trump said in a late-night social media post.

It was not clear if the briefing for Mr. Musk would go ahead as originally planned. But providing Mr. Musk access to some of the nation’s most closely guarded military secrets would be a dramatic expansion of his already extensive role as an adviser to Mr. Trump and leader of his effort to slash spending and purge the government of people and policies they oppose.

 

Trump just denied the Musk/China story. Then a few minutes later the WSJ confirmed it. Any guesses who’s governing the country right now?

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— Josh Marshall (@joshtpm.bsky.social) March 20, 2025 at 11:19 PM

Oopsie. The new story is that the Wrath of Musk will fall on the Pentagon leakers.

Donald Trump’s top adviser Elon Musk has openly threatened Pentagon employees who may have leaked information that the tech billionaire was due to get a briefing on a potential American war with China.

The story, published by the New York Times on Thursday evening U.S. time, said that — according to anonymous American officials — the Pentagon planned to brief Musk on Friday about the U.S. military’s plan for any war that might break out with China.

After the story went live, the planned meeting was confirmed by Pentagon officials and President Trump — but both denied that the session would discuss military plans involving China.

Musk doesn’t have any business being briefed by the Pentagon about anything, as far as I’m concerned. And he bleeping does business with bleeping China.

According to Forbes, Musk’s current disapproval rating is at 51 percent, which tells me a lot of voters are still not paying attention. It would be a lot higher, if they were. Meanwhile, Bloomberg reported this morning that Musk is telling Tesla employees to hang on to their stock after Tesla shares plunged more than 50 percent in just three months. Musk points out to his employees that Tesla makes “the best-selling car on earth,” the Model Y. And it was the best-selling car on earth in 2023 and probably in 2024, but it’s hard to see it repeating that distinction in 2025.

See also Nearly All Cybertrucks Have Been Recalled Because Tesla Used the Wrong Glue.

And then yesterday the Financial Times reported that Tesla appears to have an accounting problem.

As Tesla’s car sales and share price plummet in response to Elon Musk’s political and physical stances, we would like to draw readers’ attention to something puzzling in the group’s accounts. Compare Tesla’s capital expenditure in the last six months of 2024 to its valuation of the assets that money was spent on, and $1.4bn appears to have gone astray. The sum is big enough to matter even at Tesla, and comes at a moment when attention is returning to the group’s underlying numbers, now that its fully diluted stock market valuation has crashed from $1.7tn to below $800bn.

The Financial Times is not saying that anything shady is going on, but does call this a “red flag.”

Musk currently is dumping a lot of money into the Wisconsin Supreme Court race, hoping to fill a seat being opened by a retiring liberal judge with a MAGAt. The election will be held April 1. The candidates are Susan Crawford, known to be liberal, and Musk’s candidate, Brad Schimel. Musk is repeating his 2024 tricks, running deceptive ads and offering $100 to people who will sign a petition to “oppose activist judges.” Petition signers are not being asked to vote for Schimel, but those who sign the petition are giving Musk personal information that will allow his people to contact them again. He did something very similar in Pennsylvania in 2024.

I would think all it would take is to let Wisconsin voters know that Schimel is backed by Elon Musk to have them stampeding to vote for Crawford. But we’ll see. If Crawford does win — and I understand she is still ahead in polls — this might tell us something about whether Musk still has any value to Republicans, or to Trump.

Another Episode of Why We’re Screwed

Before going on to the outrages du jour, please take a look at This is why Kamala Harris really lost by Eric Levitz at Vox.

Executive Summary: A majority of the people who voted don’t know shit from Shinola.

The article is based on an analysis by Blue Rose Research. “Few pollsters boast a larger data set than Blue Rose — the company conducted 26 million voter interviews in 2024. And the firm’s leader, David Shor, might be the most influential data scientist in the Democratic Party.” It says that voters who were most closely engaged with news and politics swung toward Democrats. And voters who were least engaged swung overwhelmingly against Democrats. Unfortunately, there were more people in the second group.

David Shor said, “People have a lot of complaints about how the mainstream media covered things. But I think it’s important to note that the people who watch the news the most actually became more Democratic. And the problem was basically this large group of people who really don’t follow the news at all becoming more conservative.”

Up to that point, I was not at all surprised. I was also not surprised that the non-engaged voters are mostly being influenced by stuff they view on social media. What did surprise me is that the biggest swing to the right wasn’t from users of X but from users of TikTok. At Lawyers, Guns, and Money, Paul Campos points out a lot of other things in the data that point to a hugely ignorant electorate, IMO.

Now on to the Alien Enemies Act deportations. Malcolm Ferguson is reporting at The New Republic that the “criminals” Trump wants to warehouse in prisons in El Salvador are any migrant men with tattoos.

“These are criminals, many many criminals … murderers, drug dealers at the highest level, drug lords. People from mental institutions. That’s an invasion,” Trump said in reference to the deportees. 

In reality, immigration officials appear to be simply detaining any Latino men with tattoos.  

“The men sent to do hard labor in a Salvadoran prison with no due process include: A tattoo artist seeking asylum who entered legally, a teen who got a tattoo in Dallas because he thought it looked cool, a 26-year-old whose tattoos his wife says are unrelated to a gang,” the American Immigration Council’s Aaron Reichlin-Melnick wrote on X. 

“Our [Immigrant Defenders Law Center] client fled Venezuela last year & came to US to seek asylum. He has a strong claim. He was detained upon entry because ICE alleged his tattoos are gang related. They are absolutely not,” immigration lawyer Lindsay Toczylowski wrote on Bluesky. “Our client worked in the arts in Venezuela. He is LGBTQ. His tattoos are benign. But ICE submitted photos of his tattoos as evidence he is Tren de Aragua. His @ImmDef attorney planned to present evidence he is not. But never got the chance because our client has been disappeared.” 

Aguilera Agüero, one of the people detained and deported, has a tattoo that reads “Real until death” in Spanish, a line from Puerto Rican reggaeton star and Trump supporter Anuel AA. Agüero’s family denies all ties to Tren de Aragua. 

“People have started identifying some of the 238 Venezuelan migrants deported to Bukele’s torture dungeons by the U.S. fascist regime. The brother of one of them posted that his relative is a barber with no criminal record and no links to any criminal organisations,” another account wrote on X. 

Maybe Trump will never be held accountable for January 6. I do hope he’ll face justice for this. In the meantime, he wants the judge who tried to pause the deportations to be impeached.
“This Radical Left Lunatic of a Judge, a troublemaker and agitator who was sadly appointed by Barack Hussein Obama, was not elected President – He didn’t WIN the popular VOTE (by a lot!), he didn’t WIN ALL SEVEN SWING STATES, he didn’t WIN 2,750 to 525 Counties, HE DIDN’T WIN ANYTHING!” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

… “This judge, like many of the Crooked Judges’ I am forced to appear before, should be IMPEACHED!!! WE DON’T WANT VICIOUS, VIOLENT, AND DEMENTED CRIMINALS, MANY OF THEM DERANGED MURDERERS, IN OUR COUNTRY. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!!!” the president wrote. 

And just like that, members of the House GOP filed articles of impeachment against U.S. District Judge James Boasberg. Chief Justice John Roberts issued a gentle rebuke. “For more than two centuries, it has been established that impeachment is not an appropriate response to disagreement concerning a judicial decision. The normal appellate review process exists for that purpose,” Roberts said. Maybe Roberts is getting a little nervous about the Frankenstein monster he helped create.

Judge Boasberg asked for some answers from the DoJ by noon today. The DoJ refused to give all the requested answers. So now they’ve got until noon Wednesday. And there is a hearing scheduled for Friday.

Meanwhile, a judge has ruled that Musk’s deconstruction of USAID was unconstitutional, and it should all be put back.

Also meanwhile, Musk’s Lost Boys have a new tool to gain entry to agencies they want to destroy, and the tool involves guns. See Josh Marshall, here and here.

Yesterday I wrote that DoD web pages about the Navajo Code Talkers have been taken down. Today we learn that the Native American marine who was one of the Iwo Jima flag-raisers, Ira Hayes, also has also been deleted from the DoD site.