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Showing Original Post only (View all)Why Aren't We in the Streets? - Susan Glasser The New Yorker [View all]
Last Friday night, minutes after President Donald Trump announced the firing of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs and a purge of the militarys top lawyers, I received an e-mail from my cousin in Los Angeles. Why are we not in the streets? she wrote. The Germans even marched against Musk. The French would have barricaded every government building. All week long Ive been thinking of that message, composed in the heat of the moment after an unprecedented event that already seems forgotten amid all the subsequent unprecedented events.
In the days since then, Trump warned agency heads to prepare for large-scale layoffs by mid-March, fired thousands of additional government employees, and ordered Elon Musk, deputized as his chief job-slasher, to GET MORE AGGRESSIVE. Hes axed bird-flu inspectors in the midst of a bird-flu outbreak and got rid of thousands of Internal Revenue Service personnel at the height of tax season. On Monday, the third anniversary of Russias full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Trump ordered the U.S. to stand not with Ukraine but instead with Russia, in a U.N. vote that put America on the side of dictatorships and against most of our democratic alliesa profound shift in American foreign policy. On Tuesday, Trumps White House abolished a century-old tradition by decreeing that only news organizations handpicked by the Presidents staff would be allowed in the press pool. On Wednesday, at the first Cabinet meeting of his second term, Trump allowed Musk to hold forth before any Senate-confirmed members of the actual Cabinet. (Is anybody unhappy with Elon? he asked. If you are, well throw him out of here.) On Thursday, Trump vowed to impose stringent twenty-five-per-cent tariffs on Canada and Mexico next week, as well as additional levies on Chinese goodswhich, if he follows through, are likely to result in higher prices for American consumers already concerned about inflation.
And yet, making my way around Washington this week, the city showed no signs of the Trumpian tumult. Disruption, apparently, is just our new normal. There were no major protests in the quiescent capital, unless one counts the lawsuits against Musks Department of Government Efficiency that have been piling up in federal court, or the small crowd that gathered on Thursday outside of U.S.A.I.D.s now shuttered headquarters with hand-lettered thank-you signs for the thousands of workers who were given fifteen minutes to clean out their desks. These acts were a far cry from the popular uprisings that presumably would have convulsed Paris or any other European city if the President of the republic suddenly and unilaterally reoriented the nations geopolitical strategy, turned on its major trading partners, and allowed the worlds richest man to cut hundreds of thousands of federal workers and billions of dollars in government services. Instead, the opposition was receiving this counsel from James Carville in the Times: Roll over and play dead. (His actual words.)
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Mindful of this argument, I took a scroll through the social-media feed of the Houses Democratic leader, Hakeem Jeffries, which contained not a single mention in recent days of either Musk or Trump, and for the most part simply restated talking points against the proposed Republican budget resolution that passed this week in a 217-215 vote. (Over in the Senate, Minority Leader Chuck Schumer at least had a lot more to say on X about Trump and the billionaires club and the chaos across the land.) Civil society, too, has been remarkably muted in its response. After Trumps White House seized control of the press pool, there was no boycott or organized resistance and not much more than expressions of Susan Collins-esque deep concern; rival journalists quickly accepted the press pool access that was stripped from their politically noncompliant colleagues.
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But my fear is a different one. In just five weeks in office, Trump has asserted sweeping authorities and consolidated control over the executive branch by appointing what is undoubtedly the most extreme Cabinet in American history. What we dont know yet is exactly how far he plans to go, now that so little apparently stands in his way. Will he follow through on his past threats to investigate and imprison political enemies? Or to use the American military to crack down on political dissent at home, given that hes fired top generals and wants to replace them with others willing to profess loyalty to him personally? I dont know, but I do know this: the man who calls himself our King is more than delighted for his enemies to wallow offstage in their own weakness. Nature, and Trump, abhor a vacuum.
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