The Washington Post Hegseth order on first Caribbean boat strike, officials say: Kill them all (Dan Little)

This is surely a war crime, on a par with atrocities committed by the Russian army in Ukraine. No members of these boat crews are “combatants” in the technical sense, there is no state of war, and disarmed and helpless survivors cannot be deliberately killed under international law and common morality. This action is roughly equivalent to executing prisoners after hostilities have ceased. Hegseth, commanders, and local officers should be charged. The order attributed to Hegseth was surely an illegal order and should not have been obeyed. Hegseth must be dismissed and the Department of Defense must recommit itself to conforming to international law. We the people are responsible for the actions of our government and this lawlessness must be condemned. Congress, you must act.

Hegseth order on first Caribbean boat strike, officials say: Kill them all

https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2025/11/28/hegseth-kill-them-all-survivors-boat-strike/

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

State Media by Proxy (Gary Krenz)

Ben Schwartz has an excellent piece in The Nation, “Trump’s Quest for Total Media Control.”  It lays out in concise fashion how the various strands of Trump’s attacks on media — from trying to get Jimmy Kimmel and others fired to responding to a question by Bloomberg’s Catherine Lucey with “Quiet, Piggy” — fit together into a larger scheme of total media control, a kind of state media by proxy. FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr has been a key player in all of this, as the article makes clear. And lest we dismiss the idea that Trump thinks in larger strategic, rather than instinctual and immediate, terms, Schwartz cautions: “Trump’s brain operates simultaneously at the pettiest and grandest levels of venality and scheming.”

The linchpin of the plan lies in the mergers of major media companies, with Trump cronies and supporters then placed in leadership and controlling roles. First on the list was Skydance’s purchase of Viacom and Paramount:

When the deal for Skydance to buy Viacom and Paramount went through, Trump got a $16 million extortion payday out of Viacom’s CBS News to settle his meritless suit against 60 Minutes for edits made to an interview with his 2024 opponent, Kamala Harris. Skydance also made woke-baiting pundit Bari Weiss the editor in chief of CBS News, despite a résumé that remains free of any television news (or really any) reporting.

Next up would be Skydance merging with Warner Brothers Discovery:

If Skydance acquires WBD, it will also gain control over CNN, a cable news network that Trump has long hated, dubbing it “the broken broadcasting disaster known as CNN.” The Trump White House has already met with the tech billionaire Larry Ellison, Skydance’s financial grandparent, and discussed which CNN reporters should be sent packing under Skydance’s ownership. Topping the list, not surprisingly, were two women, Erin Burnett and Briana Keilar.

The upshot of all of this is that it would give Trump hegemony over American news media. Couple that with the neutering of the Washington Post under Jeff Bezos, the dominance of local media by the Trump-sycophant Sinclair network, and the control of X and Meta by self-serving oligarchs Musk and Zuckerberg and the picture is grim. Schwartz writes:

Beyond Trump’s ongoing vendettas against the individual journalists and comedians who refuse to cower before him, it’s clear that he wants to remake the American media industry in his own image—the same way Vladimir Putin and Victor Orbán, the autocratic leaders he most admires, have controlled the media in their home countries. By consolidating media companies, Trump hopes to use a Putin-style media oligarchy to determine who gets to report the news and tell the jokes.

But perhaps the scariest part of all of this is that it is not strictly about Trump. MAGA-like and oligarchic control of these outlets will continue long after Trump is out of the picture.  

We already know how this turns out. In the glory days of broadcast and print journalism, federal law, FCC regulations, and industry norms did much to protect the integrity and professionalism of news organizations from the local to the national. Media companies were prohibited from owning print and broadcast outlets in the same media market; firewalls existed between the news and entertainment divisions of networks; the major networks were prohibited from controlling the syndication of programming. The result was a robust Fourth Estate on which the American people could count for honest, truth-seeking reporting, not “fair and balanced” hogwash.

The rise of cable TV disrupted this ecosystem, but rather than respond with appropriate adaptation of regulations to the new reality, Republican-led Congresses instead gutted all of the regulations and controls mentioned above. The result was the rise of Fox News, the Sinclair Network and more, leading to a much more right-leaning and eventually right-dominated news ecology. We are headed toward a truly frightening consolidation of that trend.

So, in terms of middle-to-long-term action, high on the list must be an effort to re-develop the conditions for professional journalism at mass scale.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Trump: Democrats’ message to troops seditious behavior, punishable by death – BBC News

This is truly an outrage. If any private person posted such a message he would be investigated and likely prosecuted for making threats of violence against specific persons. How can it be that our president can make deadly threats and calls to violent action like this with impunity? This goes beyond speech into the territory of direct incitement of violence. Congress, you must react!

Trump: Democrats’ message to troops seditious behavior, punishable by death – BBC News https://share.google/FWNoTWE3JFX6lclC7

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Border Patrol monitors US drivers and detains Americans for ‘suspicious’ travel | AP News

Wow, this is a pretty amazing secretive program of mass surveillance across the United States. Did we the people agree to have our travels tracked and analyzed, and then used as a basis for highway stops leading to searches and intense questioning? I don’t think so, Comrade Stalin or Mr. Hitler or whatever name you’re using these days to seize power and erode our freedoms.

An AP story on a secret mass surveillance program —

Border Patrol monitors US drivers and detains Americans for ‘suspicious’ travel | AP News https://share.google/WT42pUozvZ9dCU6nU

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

“Remove the Regime” protests in DC to demand Trump’s impeachment

Another mass protest against the dictatorial efforts and strategies of the Trump administration … Let the people speak!

"Remove the Regime" protests in DC to demand Trump’s impeachment https://share.google/mBuZvjMet95fMlm2N

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Ruth Ben-Ghiat: “Intellectual Freedom in an Authoritarian Age”

As I promised in an earlier post, here is the video of Ruth Ben-Ghiat’s outstanding Davis, Markert, and Nickerson Lecture on Academic and Intellectual Freedom at the University of Michigan. It is well worth watching!

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Terrorism and the White House (Gary Krenz)

The Oxford English Dictionary defines “terrorism” as “2. gen. A policy intended to strike with terror those against whom it is adopted; the employment of methods of intimidation; the fact of terrorizing or condition of being terrorized.”

As definitions go, it’s hard to argue with it. But it really doesn’t take us very far. In general, there is no single, widely accepted understanding of terrorism: no agreed-upon essence, set of unquestionable attributes, and so on. The Wikipedia entry has this to say: “There is no legal or scientific consensus on the definition of terrorism. Various legal systems and government agencies use different definitions of terrorism, and governments have been reluctant to formulate an agreed-upon legally-binding definition. Difficulties arise from the fact that the term has become politically and emotionally charged.”

Recognizing this situation, and concerned about the misuse of “terrorism” to justify any number of violent responses, the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights recently convened a discussion aimed at developing and advancing a common understanding. In that discussion, Ilze Brands Kehris, Assistant Secretary-General, said: “How we define terrorism shapes how we prosecute it, how we prevent it, and how we protect the rights of individuals and communities affected by it. Instead of clearly and precisely defined acts of terrorism, in a number of jurisdictions broad and open-ended definitions result in their application to a wide range of acts. The consequence can be the criminalization of dissent, peaceful protest, and political expression and can hinder humanitarian action, all of which are protected under international law.”

Hmmm — ring any bells? 

Where there is a vacuum of meaning, and uncertainty, and ambiguity, the demagogue steps in. Trump, Stephen Miller, and Russel Vought are fond of justifying their international and domestic actions as “anti-terrorist.” Thus the attacks on boats in the Caribbean are part of a war on “narco-terrorism” — never mind that more drugs come into the US through the Pacific. The administration has designated several organizations, including the Venezuelan “Cartel de los Soles” (which Trump claims is headed by Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro), as foreign terrorist organizations, a position that has faced strong criticism from U.S. lawmakers and international experts. This is exactly the sort of ungrounded expansion of the notion of “terrorism” that the UN is concerned about. 

Domestically, the White House has launched “counter-terrorist” measures against “Antifa” under the National Security Presidential Memorandum 7 (NSPM-7). The Brennan Center and the ACLU have useful analyses and rebuttals of the claims in the memorandum. “Antifa” is not a coherent organization but a vague, dispersed movement. To designate it as an organization is meaningless. The Brennan Center has this to say:

The events listed, according to NSPM-7, are “not a series of isolated incidents” and have not “emerged organically.” Rather they are the culmination of “organized campaigns” of intimidation and violence designed to “silence opposing speech, limit political activity, change or direct policy outcomes, and prevent the functioning of a democratic society.”

As a basic factual matter, this claim is not credible. For one thing, the list is obviously cherry-picked to highlight what the administration believes to be “left-wing” violence and excludes other high-profile examples of political violence that do not comport with its storyline. These include the January 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol; a 2022 mass shooting at a Buffalo, New York, grocery store motivated by white supremacist beliefs; and the deadly 2025 shootings of two Democratic Minnesota state lawmakers and their spouses. Painting this fuller picture, however, would puncture the narrative that political violence is the result of a left-wing conspiracy. Nor is there any support for the claim that those involved in the incidents listed were acting in concert. 

But, suppose we turn things around.

The New York Times yesterday ran an important article, “Homeland Security Missions Falter Amid Focus on Deportations,” showing the devastating misdirection of resources away from, for instance, investigation of child exploitation and human trafficking toward raids on immigrants, including, as we see every day, documented immigrants, immigrants trying to do the right thing but getting “stung,” and American citizens who happen to have features that make them suspect under DHS’s racial profiling. “Today, the Trump administration has remade the agency into a veritable Department of Deportation.”

And we know the results: people afraid to leave their homes, afraid to go to work or to church, afraid to let their kids play outside, afraid of ICE showing up at schools and parking lots and playgrounds. People having to constitute a veritable underground resistance of social media and whistle alerts and neighborhood watches. 

Communities, in short, terrorized. Side effect — or intention?

Sounds like it fits a definition.

The situation is similar in the Caribbean, as articles in the Times and investigation by the AP show. Without even a show of justification, the US continues to launch attacks on small boats, disrupting the livelihoods of hosts of Venezuelans who, making their livelihoods from the sea, are terrified to leave shore. There is every reason to think that these attacks are war crimes. And Trump’s continual allusions to invasion of Venezuela — more intimidation, more de-stabilization.

So, where are the terrorists?

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

LDF Denounces Texas A&M University System’s Adoption of New Discriminatory Policy Restricting Teaching of Race and Gender

A very clear and carefully reasoned critique of the Texas A and M policy requiring the president’s approval for courses on race, gender, and gender identity … Push back!

https://www.naacpldf.org/press-release/ldf-denounces-texas-am-university-systems-adoption-of-new-discriminatory-policy-restricting-teaching-of-race-and-gender/

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

New Chair of History Says the Discipline Should Document the Past and Engage With the Present | Columbia News

What an admirable demonstration of academic freedom by the incoming chair of the history department at Columbia University. Camille Robcis doesn’t offer a treatise about the principle of academic freedom. Instead, she demonstrates her own commitments to academic freedom and honest inquiry from her description of what she views the intellectual goals of history to be, and she describes her own expertise and teaching in the area of gender studies without even glancing at the thunder on the right about this field. Bravo Professor Robcis!

New Chair of History Says the Discipline Should Document the Past and Engage With the Present | Columbia News https://share.google/6apCG9ADhz333TiJv

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Racists are now openly targeting Indian Americans

Hate on the internet seems to grow by the month … racism was normalized, and now it is swamping us and endangering innocent people… where will this end?

Racists are now openly targeting Indian Americans

https://www.cnn.com/2025/11/16/us/indian-americans-racism-maga-cec

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments