What Trump is doing isn’t politics. It’s the deliberate
centralization of power, seizing it from the people and the media, silencing
dissent, bending institutions to his will, and cloaking himself in immunity
given him by six... Republicans on the Supreme Court.
It looks less like a presidency and more like a
throne.
-He declared a “crime emergency” in Washington, D.C.,
despite crime being at a thirty-year low.
-He created permanent “quick reaction” National Guard
units, ready to deploy into cities at his whim: a standing domestic army the
Founders explicitly warned against.
-He rolled the model into Memphis, calling it a “replica”
of D.C., and bragged Chicago is next. Occupation, not governance.
Retribution is the centerpiece of his rule.
-Security clearances stripped from Bolton, Milley, Fauci,
and dozens of others who dared to oppose him.
-Justice Department staff and prosecutors purged for doing
their jobs.
-A $15 billion lawsuit against The New York Times designed
to bankrupt it for printing facts.
-After Charlie Kirk’s death, networks pressured to fire
Kimmel and silence Colbert. Everyday people hunted down online and forced out
of jobs, from a Nasdaq employee to a 23-year-old Idaho worker. Fear is the
point.
The state itself is being weaponized.
-The FCC warned ABC affiliates they could face
investigations, fines, or even license loss after Kimmel’s jokes about MAGA.
Within days, Jimmy Kimmel Live was yanked from the air. If ABC
can be threatened — and Trump repeated that threat last night — what
message does that send to every other network? Stay quiet or be crushed.
-Sanctuary cities are being starved of funds. Immigrants
and entire communities are criminalized under Executive Order 14159.
-The administration promises a crackdown on “left-wing
groups,” presumably meaning activists, unions, professors, nonprofits, anyone
who resists.
And the ambitions don’t stop at America’s borders.
Trump has mused openly about reshaping the map of the Western Hemisphere.
-He’s revived his obsession with Greenland,
backing a House bill to purchase or “otherwise acquire” it, renaming it “Red,
White, and Blueland.” He’s refused to rule out military force if Denmark
resists.
-He’s declared the U.S. should reclaim the Panama
Canal, calling Panama’s fees “exorbitant” and floating the idea of seizing
control in the name of national security.
-He’s even suggested Canada could become
the 51st state and slapped massive tariffs on Canadian goods to show he’s
serious.
-Mexico, too, is in his crosshairs: trade wars, tariffs,
and rhetoric that treat America’s southern neighbor not as a sovereign nation
but as territory to be coerced.
And now, in the Caribbean, Trump’s America has gone
further: U.S. naval forces have literally blown up three Venezuelan
boats. People have died. Maduro calls it aggression, militias are
mobilizing, and the two nations are sliding toward war. This is what happens
when unchecked power turns outward: war abroad becomes the mirror of repression
at home.
Abroad, he crowns this vision by embracing Vladimir Putin. A red carpet rolled out for Putin in Alaska, gifting him legitimacy amid his war on Ukraine and his penetration of NATO airspace in Poland, Romania, and Estonia. Russian state media celebrates Trump’s dismantling of USAID and his praise for Putin. Meanwhile, long-time allies are trashed and abandoned. America’s power abroad is being traded away for the company of strongmen.
Support for Ukraine and NATO is now treated as transactional, not principled. Aid is approved one week, paused the next. The administration signals that restoring Ukraine’s pre-2014 borders are “unrealistic,” effectively rewarding Russian aggression. NATO allies are pressured to “pay up” or risk abandonment, as if the alliance is a mob protection racket rather than a shared democratic defense.
If America no longer defends democracy abroad, what
confidence should we have that it will defend democracy at home?
The same coercive logic drives Trump’s use of tariffs.
-He wields tariffs not as economic policy but as
punishment, slapping Canada, Mexico, and Europe with sweeping trade taxes to
force compliance.
-Tariffs have become his political weapon: extortion
dressed up as trade, a way to bend allies, neighbors, and even domestic
industries to his will and intimidate them into giving him gifts like a multimillion-dollar
airplane or investing billions in his companies.
-Just as troops in D.C. or the FCC threaten to silence
dissent, tariffs silence resistance by making the cost of saying “no”
unbearable.
And in Palestine, the U.S. has abandoned even the
principle of self-determination.
Humanitarian aid is cut. Palestinian voices are dismissed. U.S. policy aligns squarely with occupation and repression. This isn’t about building democracy; it’s about denying an entire people the right to decide their own future. And when self-determination abroad is treated as expendable, it sends a clear warning at home: your rights, too, can be conditional, your voice too can be silenced when it no longer serves those in power.
The pattern is unmistakable: everything that disperses
power — free media, independent science, civic education, state and local
authority, progressive nonprofits, judicial independence — is under siege.
-Scientists and public health experts are being fired,
programs gutted, data suppressed.
-Justice Sonia Sotomayor implicitly warns that Americans may no longer know the difference between a president and a king. Courts face pressure, judges face threats, and rulings are bent to expand presidential immunity.
-Election laws are being re-engineered to federalize
control, cut access, and tilt outcomes.
This isn’t scattershot; it’s systemic. And here’s the
truth history tells us: once power is seized, it is rarely given back.
If Trump normalizes troops in cities, that precedent will
endure. If he silences networks with FCC threats, that precedent will endure.
If lawsuits against journalists succeed, that precedent will endure. Each act
rewires the presidency into a throne for a would-be king.
And yet some Democrats act as if this is business as
usual while the ground is ripped out from beneath us. Their weakness is
complicity.
But democracy is not passive. It has always been the
people who’ve seizing power back from kings, dictators, and colonizers. The
Founders understood this when they wrote the Constitution to divide power
across three branches of government. They fought to prevent a new form of
monarchy. And now it’s our fight again.
What we must do is clear:
-Demand Congress block the abuse of emergency powers;
contact your elect representatives every week.
-Push courts to stop executive overreach before precedents
harden.
-Support independent journalism under attack.
-Push back hard against censorship of the media and
corporations that bow their knee to Trump.
-Stand with those being punished: scientists, teachers,
comedians, reporters, immigrants, protesters.
-Mobilize peacefully but relentlessly in the streets; No
Kings Day is in a few weeks.
-Elect governors, legislators, and mayors who’ll serve as
firewalls against federal occupation.
This is about power: who has it, who loses it, and
whether it still belongs to the people.
If we do nothing, our children will ask what democracy was like, because they won’t have it. If we fight, we can still preserve the greatest system humanity has ever devised: a republic of laws, not autocrats. Trump wants to be king. He’s already acting like one. The only question is whether we’ll kneel or rise, together, and take our democracy back.
-Thom Hartmann: The Hartmann Report is a
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