He pardoned 1,600 violent criminals. You said nothing. He bulldozed the East Wing. You said nothing. He interfered with the release of the Epstein files. You said nothing. He took over the Kennedy Center and renamed it after himself. You said nothing. He accepted a $400 million airplane as a personal gift. You said nothing. He threatened Canada, Cuba, Denmark, Greenland, Venezuela, Colombia, and Brazil. You said nothing. He tariffed just about everyone but Russia, causing inflation and instability worldwide. You said nothing. He attacked a nation during mediated negotiations. You said nothing. His ill-conceived war killed 175 children on day one. You said nothing. He alienated and insulted our allies. You said nothing. His ICE Army terrorized and murdered U.S. citizens. You said nothing. He committed murder on the high seas. You said nothing. He co-opted the Justice Department and directed it to prosecute his political enemies. You said nothing. It's time to [take action]!
glen brown
A writer must “know and have an ever-present consciousness that this world is a world of fools and rogues… tormented with envy, consumed with vanity; selfish, false, cruel, cursed with illusions… He should free himself of all doctrines, theories, etiquettes, politics…” —Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914?). “The nobility of the writer's occupation lies in resisting oppression, thus in accepting isolation” —Albert Camus (1913-1960). “What are you gonna do” —Bertha Brown (1895-1987).
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Thursday, June 11, 2026
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
"Implement the 25th Amendment"
We should not be surprised that Donald Trump is
mentally and emotionally imploding under the cumulative effect of plunging poll numbers, his disastrous Iran war (which constantly humiliates him as both Iran and Israel
repeatedly defy his desperate attempts to control them and his phony
prognostications of progress in peace talks), and an increasingly
irritable Senate Republican caucus.
Trump recently suffered from supporters’ unraveling
and/or disaffection (e.g. Trump’s Paramount/CBS allies’ embarrassing implosion, the defection of white working-class and male voters, another insult to faith groups reminded of white
Christian nationalists’ religious bigotry), repeated legal defeats, and multiple legislative losses unprecedented for
a president with majorities in both houses (e.g. a House vote to fund Ukraine, passage of the War Powers Act resolution, opposition to
Trump’s sleazy slush fund, collapse of FISA Section 702 reauthorization because
of outrage over the appointment of Bill Pulte as acting director of national
intelligence).
When you throw in the indignity of seeing his name
physically scraped off the Kennedy Center building, the cancellation
of musical has-beens from his cheesy, self-referential 250 Freedom bash, and
the entirely expected torrent of boos from Knicks fans,
you have the pathological narcissist’s worst nightmare: public humiliation. (Historian and fascism expert Ruth Ben Ghiat has explained that when their
autocracies unravel, strongmen’s overwhelming fear of humiliation and loss of
power compels them to lash out, grab more tightly to power, and make
increasingly rash decisions in the vain hope of fending off decline.)
Certainly, Trump’s mental and physical disintegration has
been on display for many years. However, it is easy to lose track of the velocity of
Trump’s decompensation.
As a group of 36 mental health professionals
recently explained in a stinging written statement, Trump’s
outbursts are not “momentary lapses nor political theater”; they instead
“reflect a rapidly worsening, reality-untethered, increasingly dangerous
decline.” And this was before Trump’s explosion on Meet
the Press, among the most cringeworthy presidential media appearances ever.
However, you do not have to be a
medical professional to conclude Trump is getting much worse much more quickly.
We should not avert our eyes from the indisputable evidence that Trump cannot
cope with reality. When confronted with indisputable facts, he lashes out and
retreats into denial. (As the New York Times reported, “President Trump, who
campaigned on a central promise to keep the United States out of overseas wars,
denied in an interview aired on Sunday that he’d ever made the
pledge.”)
The “big blubbery baby man, enraged at his ebbing power” provided a disturbing image in his MTP interview, Democratic pollster and analyst Simon Rosenberg aptly noted, of an “an old, addled man clearly in profound decline.”
His bloated, rage-filled, disheveled appearance
and inability to engage rationally with anyone outside his cult tempt one to
look away. Denial is natural when you fear nothing can be done to stave off an
impending disaster.
But now is precisely the time to demand a robust debate
in public, in Congress, and on the midterm campaign trail about the gravity of
leaving a patently unfit, raving lunatic in the Oval Office. In light of the
grave danger Trump poses, pro-democracy forces must educate the public, compel
legacy media to cover his breakdown as vigorously and consistently as they did
Joe Biden’s health after his 2024 debate, and pressure Republicans to remove or
at least restrain him.
Democrats do not control Congress, although they do occasionally take charge of the House through discharge petitions. Nevertheless, they have successfully used so-called shadow hearings to expose urgent issues (e.g., ICE brutality). A serious, sober subcommittee (perhaps drawn from both the House Judiciary Committee and House Oversight Committee) with professional staff should conduct methodical public hearings and assemble a comprehensive report documenting Trump’s deterioration.
In the laying out the
circumstances and frequency of his mental/emotional breakdowns, the public
should receive ample evidence that Trump’s increasingly severe meltdowns are
not a function of simple aging or odd personality quirks (an absurd if not delusional
interpretation of his conduct) but of dangerous mental and emotional
dysfunction.
At the end of the process, Democrats (and any patriotic Republicans inclined to prevent grave harm to the country) should present a series of specific, feasible recommendations, including legislation to compel the release of all presidential medical records and to require independent medical evaluation of presidents and vice presidents.
They should spell
out rules to implement the 25th Amendment.
They also should make clear that once they have subpoena power after the
midterms, they will supplement findings by calling witnesses to testify under
oath as to his observable behavior. If Republicans defend his indefensible
conduct and block common-sense measures, they will take on full responsibility
for the wreckage that ensues from sheltering an unhinged, unwell president.
Next, Democrats must undertake a focused and robust push to present their findings to the press and the voters. If the president’s emotional and mental competency is not the most compelling issue of the moment, it is hard to imagine what would be. Republican House and Senate candidates need to be put on the spot in every public encounter: Do they think the president is of sound mind? What do they intend to do to, for example, protect nuclear codes? Why shouldn’t the public have full visibility into the health of a president whose conduct has been so obviously aberrant?
Democrats should pound away at the issue in floor speeches, media spots, op-eds, and public forums. If it were not obvious before, leaving Trump in power surrounded by spineless yes men unwilling to challenge him and a MAGA Congress that abets his increasingly erratic conduct and flights from reality is a recipe for disaster — and the most persuasive reason to elect substantial Democratic majorities in both houses.
Nothing is more urgent to the survival of our democracy, national security, and collective well-being than to begin now to convince voters that stringent guardrails (if not, removal by 25th Amendment or impeachment) are required to shield the United States from further harm. Given the public’s rising disgust with Trump and his propensity to humiliate himself on a near daily basis, voters might well become convinced that extraordinary action is required to defuse the ticking time bomb in the White House.
Monday, June 8, 2026
"The worst is watching the children"
NEWARK, N.J. — The worst is not the Immigration and
Customs Enforcement (ICE) and private contractors, wielding baseball bats and
batons, who flood the parking lot at the end of their shifts and unleash on
protesters outside the gates the sadism practiced on those incarcerated inside
Delaney Hall.
The worst is not the tear gas, the tasers, the pepper spray or the dozens of arrests.
The worst is not the beatings and the riot shields, raised above the heads
of New Jersey State Police and Newark police and brought down swiftly on
bodies, leaving severe lacerations.
The worst is watching the children.
The ones heaving and sobbing as they leave Delaney Hall,
saying goodbye to their mothers, fathers, sisters or brothers who took them to
school, who cheered them on at their soccer games, who told them they are
beautiful and talented, who woke up before dawn to work menial jobs so they
could have a future, who love them in a world where love is a diminishing
commodity.
I am seated against a cyclone fence a block from Delaney
Hall, New Jersey’s largest ICE jail, with a protester who goes by
the name of Basher. He is 41. He has a thick black beard. His nails are dirty.
His hands are scarred from clashing with police. His head is wrapped in a green
keffiyeh. The stench of the sprawling Passaic Valley Sewerage Commission
treatment plant across the street saturates the air. When it comes to the
children, the ones ripped from their parents by a nation that is
institutionalizing cruelty, even Basher must catch his breath and stop. The
scenes are too much to bear.
The savagery at Delaney Hall is the warm-up act. The goons, the ones who attack those demonized
on the inside of the ICE jail and those demonized on the streets outside of it,
are in training for the rest of us. Delaney Hall, run by a private prison
company — The GEO Group — is the template for a world where we will be stripped
of our rights; routinely jailed and tortured; denied adequate medical care; fed
rancid, expired and moldy food infested with worms and maggots; forced to drink
contaminated water and breathe polluted air; and work for poverty wages — in
the case of those inside Delaney Hall, a dollar a day.
Some 300 of the roughly 600 people detained at Delaney Hall — which includes teenagers,
the elderly and pregnant women — began a hunger and labor strike on May 22.
ICE and GEO Group guards reacted as you would expect.
They beat the strikers. They seal vents and toss tear gas and
pepper spray into cells. They place suspected leaders of the strike in
handcuffs and force them out of the facility to unknown locations, or isolate them, in “punishment units.” They manipulate the
heating and cooling systems so prisoners endure extreme heat or cold. They cut
telephone and internet access and suspend visitation rights. They sexually
harass women.
On May 31, 56 of those held inside Delaney Hall issued their fourth public letter. It was handwritten in Spanish on ruled paper: “The conditions in this prison are not fit for human beings over such a long period of time: medical neglect, water unfit for consumption, food that is past its expiration date and in poor condition, bathrooms that are unusable, and ventilation systems that have never been maintained and because of this, we are constantly sick,” the latest letter reads. “We demand freedom, a fair trial, and for our rights to be respected. S.O.S.”
On July 24, last year, at around 6:45 a.m., ICE vehicles
blocked a van carrying 15 Guatemalan workers, three blocks from my house. I
went to see the men at the ICE jail in Elizabeth, New Jersey, because I speak
Spanish and because their families, terrified of being targeted, could not. The
men told me they were threatened with lengthy prison sentences, followed by
certain deportation, if they did not sign papers agreeing to their immediate
deportation. They signed. It was my job to inform their families they would not
be coming home.
A Guardian analysis of government records found that during the
first seven months of Trump’s second term, the parents of at least 27,000
children — 12,000 of whom had U.S. citizenship — were arrested.
These men were my neighbors. Their children attend high
school with my children. The kidnapping of parents — often at work or at
immigration hearings and ICE check-in appointments — not only traumatizes the
children of these families, but the entire community. Every child in the high
school wonders if their parents will also one day be seized and disappear.
Every child wonders how this cruelty can be inflicted on their friends. Every
child wonders what kind of country we live in.
The state and the media organs that act as its echo
chamber are doing their best to convince the public that those locked up in
Delaney Hall are “criminals,” “the worst of the worst.”
But a review of ICE data by Austin Kocher — an assistant research professor at Syracuse University and an immigration data and policy expert — exposes the lie. Kocher found that 88 percent of immigrants detained at Delaney Hall have no criminal conviction and more than 70 percent have no criminal history. Those with criminal convictions almost universally committed low-level offenses.
The rogue paramilitary forces that pour daily out of the
gates of Delaney Hall are unaccountable. They ignore the law. They are the
Satanic foundation of our emergent police state. The terror they inflict on
those in this small patch of Newark will soon be inflicted on all of us.
New Jersey Senator Andy Kim — who was pepper-sprayed outside Delaney Hall by ICE agents —
and Governor Mikie Sherrill were denied entry into the facility. Kim, after an appeal to the Director of Homeland Security
Markwayne Mullin, was eventually given a lightning tour, but forbidden to speak to any detainees. City and
state health inspectors have also been blocked from fully accessing the ICE
jail.
The message is clear: We will carry out any abuse
with immunity.
On Saturday afternoon, after about a dozen protestors
blocked cars from driving out of the facility, ICE agents, wearing combat gear
and face coverings, charged the protesters with pepper-ball guns, mace and
tasers.
“Move back! Get back!” they shouted as they unleashed clouds of pepper spray. Cars leaving the facility struck at least one protester.
By around 10:00 p.m., some 100 protestors had set up a barricade of barrels filled with sand to
block the facility’s exits and entrances. The blockade saw a huge influx of ICE
agents, GEO Group guards and Newark police push the protestors several hundred
yards down the street.
Police announced a ban on protesters wearing protective
gear, including respirators and goggles, although Delaney Hall is located in an
industrial area with extensive air and water contamination known as “Chemical Corridor.”
The battle at Delaney Hall is not over. It is a battle not only for justice, for the rights of our neighbors, for a world where all are treated with dignity and respect, for children who should never be separated from their fathers and mothers, but a battle to save our country from galloping fascism. Join it now. Soon it may be too late.
The Chris Hedges Report is a reader-supported
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Sunday, June 7, 2026
"He crushed his lapel mic underfoot on his way out"
“The election was rigged, it was a dirty election and
it’s happening again right now in California,” he said, referring to primaries
for mayoral and gubernatorial elections in the state, where votes are still
being counted.
California sends every registered voter a mail ballot and
accepts ballots postmarked on or before election day that arrive within a week.
That often leads to slower vote counts. Republicans have long alleged
wrongdoing, as votes for Democratic candidates often surge past those for GOP
opponents after late-arriving ballots are counted.
“They’re cheating on the election,” Trump claimed.
Pressed for evidence, Trump argued that “all I have to do is look ... and I
listen to people and let’s see what happens.”
“Do you think it’s appropriate that they have an election
and five days later, they’re nowhere close to picking a winner?” he said.
“They’re crooked, just like you’re crooked, your press is crooked and ‘Meet the
Press’ is crooked.”
Welker attempted to press Trump for evidence to back up
his claims, which he did not provide, and redirect Trump to a question about
acting AG Blanche several times before the president pulled the plug on the
interview and stormed off the set.
“Let’s call it quits because I’ve had enough, thank you,
darling, have a good time,” the president said as he crushed his lapel mic
underfoot on his way out.
Data Centers: Far Bigger Disasters Than You Even Thought
This week in the Anthropocene
The road is dusty and trash strewn. My friend and collaborator Colby Groves is hanging out the car window as I drive, gazing at a patchwork of solar panels lined up behind a chain-link fence. “This has to be it,” declares Colby, balancing a large camera on his lap, hoping it doesn’t bounce off as we traverse a series of bumps and divots.
We are in this land of scorching sun and heat, searching
for a large Amazon solar installation in rural San Bernardino County,
California. This is the home of the endangered desert tortoise and Joshua
trees, but more recently, it’s become a plaything for greedy Silicon Valley
entrepreneurs.
In 2024, Jeff Bezos’ Amazon connected its Baldy Mesa
solar-and-storage project, which helps to power the company’s nearby data
centers, to the electrical grid, earning accolades for
its use of renewable energy. It’s the first of its kind in California. Despite
its gargantuan size, the project faced very little opposition, as is often the
case with such “green” projects.
As we step out of the car, we immediately hear the loud
hum of a football-field’s worth of batteries, powered by solar panels that
surround us in every direction. The entire setup is connected to the grid by
towering transmission lines. Altogether, this sprawling array covers 1,500
acres of Mojave Desert habitat, almost twice the size of New York City’s
Central Park.
Baldy Mesa’s impact on this delicate ecology is stark and
tangible. Where Joshua trees once stood, Lego-like blocks of batteries the size
of shipping containers now buzz and radiate heat. Where coyotes once scampered
and desert tortoises burrowed, solar panels now blanket the landscape. Amazon
avoided controversy by relocating 153
doomed Joshua trees, but the fact remains, there’s not a single Joshua tree
where these photovoltaic panels now sit.
This particular Amazon Web Services (AWS) facility is an
AI-driven machine-learning operation capable of analyzing 33
billion data points each year. That’s over 90 million data points a
day. They claim it will allow their batteries to run more efficiently, while
making you a better, wiser consumer of Amazon’s products and services.
As far as corporate marketing gimmicks go, this sure
sounds nice. Yet, as I stand in the middle of Amazon’s solar farm, I can’t
help but wonder what this desert must have been like before they decided it was
better suited to powering AI programs. What was it like out here when the
soil could still sequester carbon?
Building on these lands has eliminated its ability to absorb fossil-fuel
pollution. These solar panels are actually hurting the climate, not helping it
out.
Even though this behemoth runs on renewable energy, nothing about it feels eco-friendly. Like so much of this AI-driven madness, there is a very post-apocalyptic aura to it all, made worse by the fact that Jeff Bezos is reaping the spoils. “Wow, look at that.” Colby points to a fence set up to protect the battery installation. The gate is wide open.
Someone more inclined to commit sabotage would have no
difficulty gaining access. But we aren’t here for data center mischief. Colby
sets up his tripod to shoot footage to accompany Bad
Energy, my forthcoming book exploring the downside of
the so-called green energy transition.
Few people will ever make their way to this remote spot in the Mojave to witness firsthand what Amazon has wrought. Aerial photographs obscure the reality of what it’s like on the ground amid the AI upheaval being thrust upon us without our consent. And, despite my many misgivings, this whole monstrosity is allegedly one of the better ones. Most new data centers aren’t powered by renewables but by fossil fuels.
Unless you’ve been slithering under a rock for the last
few years (I empathize!), you know data centers are bad news.
-They suck up water. 17.4
billion gallons annually in the US.
-They burn electricity. 176 terawatt-hours (4%
of all US energy use) yearly. Globally, they use 415 terawatt-hours, which is
more than that of only 10
countries.
-They are creating heat islands. In some cases, warming
the land around them by 16 degrees Fahrenheit.
-They eat up land. The average data center is the
equivalent of 450 football
fields.
-They aren’t long-term job producers. Even the Wall Street Journal calls data centers a “job-creation bust.” And of course, they are the beating heart of the AI revolution, which is encroaching on every aspect of our lives.
But really, how bad are these damn things? After all, they aren’t a new invention; they’ve been around since the dawn of the computer age. Yet, something is quantitatively different about what’s happening. At the current pace, data centers globally will require $1 trillion in annual infrastructure investment by the end of the decade.
It helps to put all of this in numbers. In the United States, there are between 1,500 and 1,600 data centers in the planning or construction phase, with over 4,000 already operating. A Pew study estimates that 67% of these new plants are coming to rural America, where 87% of existing centers currently operate in urban zones.
There are 754 data centers planned in the South. 277 in
the West. 419 in the Midwest and 106 in the Northeast. Right now, Pew has shown
38% of Americans live within 5 miles of a data center.
Globally, there are 11,000+ data centers, and economies
of scale are expected to dominate. This means the footprint of future data
centers will matter more than the number of data centers being built. The
energy required for this growth, as the Southern Environmental Law Center predicts,
will supercharge climate chaos.
This is because many of these new plants use natural gas
to generate power. Natural gas, while not as dirty as coal, releases methane,
which, in the short term, is even more harmful than carbon dioxide. Gas plants
also emit carbon. Lots of it. A study released in April predicted that just
three of Microsoft’s AI-powered, methane-gas-powered data center projects will
double the company’s carbon footprint and spew large
amounts of pollution.
Another paper from researchers at Cornell predicts that
up to 44 million metric tons of CO2 will be emitted by decade’s end if
operators continue to rely on natural gas to power their data centers. As
Grist reports,
that’s like adding 10 million new vehicles on the road. The UN
just published a study stating that
by 2030, data centers will account for 3% of the world’s total energy use, a
total of 935 terawatt-hours of electricity, emitting 440 million tons of carbon
dioxide
This week, Columbia Riverkeeper (a fantastic org
that deserves your support)
dropped a startling
report on what planned data centers will do in their corner of the
Pacific Northwest. The study exposes how fossil fuel companies, utilities, and
Big Tech are colluding to use the surge in data center development to expand
gas-fired power plants and more pipelines.
“After years of progress toward achieving our region’s
climate goals, we’re suddenly a potential new market for the fossil fuel
industry,” says my friend Audrey Leonard, a staff attorney for Columbia
Riverkeeper. “Cloaked under a shroud of secrecy, Big Tech opened the window,
and now the gas industry is poised to seize an opportunity to build.”
This is a microcosm of what is happening nationwide. Data
centers, fueled by massive capital investments in AI, will make it even harder
to reduce the country’s contribution to climate chaos.
Then there’s the issue of water. A crowdsourced map compiled by Erin Brockovich shows that many data centers in the United States are operating in areas experiencing extreme drought. This isn’t good news where water conservation is needed, which may soon be much of the country. As mentioned above, data centers in the US, by one estimate, directly consumed 17.4 billion gallons of water per year. As more of these centers get built, that amount is expected to grow to 38-73 billion gallons annually. That’s a lot of water, more than the cities of Seattle or San Francisco use in an entire year.
-Joshua Frank, CounterPunch
Saturday, June 6, 2026
Friday, June 5, 2026
"Hegseth has fired or sidelined nearly three dozen senior military officers"
The US defense secretary, Pete Hegseth,
stripped nine navy officers including women and Black service members from a
promotion list last month, according to a person familiar with the matter,
resulting in an all-male, overwhelmingly white slate of 22 advancing as
nominees to become one-star admirals.
Hegseth’s unusual intervention violated promotion rules designed to be merit-based and apolitical, the New York Times said on Tuesday, and extended the Trump administration’s push to eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) in the military. The original promotion list included three women and two Black officers in addition to the two who remained, the newspaper said.
A navy source said that officials in the service had been
“very confident” with those on the promotion list, including the officers whom
Hegseth removed. He said Hegseth did not explain to the navy why he removed the
officers from the list.
One government source familiar with matter said Hegseth
had “his favorite MOS’s [military occupational specialties] and then gender
and race. He went through the list and scrubbed a few names. It was felt loud
and clear.”
The Pentagon disputed that Hegseth blocked promotions
based on race or gender. “As we’ve said before, military promotions are given
to those who have earned them. The department will never consider the color of
a service member’s skin or their gender as a factor in promotions,” said Sean
Parnell, the chief Pentagon spokesperson. “Under President Trump and Secretary
Hegseth, meritocracy reigns supreme at the war department.”
The move has direct parallels with Hegseth’s reported
interposition in a similar army promotion list in March, in which he is said to
have directed the army secretary, Dan Driscoll, to remove two
women and two Black officers from a nomination slate to become one-star
generals.
Hegseth has previously railed against diversity and so-called “woke” in the armed services. “For too long, we’ve promoted too many uniform leaders for the wrong reasons – based on their race, based on gender quotas, based on historic so-called firsts,” he told a keynote meeting of military commanders in Virginia in September. “The sooner we have the right people; the sooner we can advance the right policies.”
Hegseth’s involvement in the promotions list is unusual, according to a former military official. “It’s supposed to be an up-and-down vote from the defense secretary. He continuing to meddle on an individual basis,” he said. “He’s stripping autonomy from the service secretaries.”
One name still on the latest navy list published
on 22 May is Capt. Sean Barbabella, Donald Trump’s White House
physician, who last week declared the
almost 80-year-old president to be in “excellent health”, despite photographs
showing him at times with swollen ankles, bruised hands and a blotchy neck.
Hegseth stepped in to overrule a board of navy admirals
that had drawn up the list, the Times said, also removing four white officers.
The outlet noted that the list as published, which must be confirmed by the US
Senate, bears little relation to the makeup of the force the nominees will
lead.
The report cites a 2024 government profile of the navy’s active-service composition, which revealed that more than 21% are women, and that almost 40% identify with racial minority groups. The Guardian reported in March that Hegseth, who styles himself the “secretary of war”, acted soon after his confirmation as defense secretary last year to block promotions or redeploy senior military officers, 60% of them women or Black.
He reassigned V Adm Yvette Davids, the first woman to
lead the US naval academy, and dismissed another navy vice-admiral, Shoshana
Chatfield, as the US military representative to the Nato military committee. Hegseth also dismissed Adm Lisa Franchetti as chief
of naval operations.
Coast guard commandant Linda Fagan, who served for 37
years and was the longest-serving active duty marine safety officer, was dismissed on
20 January 2025, the first day of Trump’s second term of office, four days
before Hegseth’s narrow Senate
confirmation.
Overall, the Times said, Hegseth has fired or sidelined nearly three dozen senior military officers. The actions extend the Trump administration’s efforts to reshape the US military, which have included attempts to ban women from combat roles and blocking transgender troops from serving.
A federal appeals court in Washington DC on Monday
delivered a setback to the anti-diversity push by ruling that the
government acted
illegally by moving to dismiss transgender service members. That case
is expected to reach the supreme court.
-by Richard Luscombe, Joseph Gedeon and Aram Roston
Related: Transgender troops can remain in US military, but enlistment can be blocked, court rules






