War has broken out, not on foreign territory or on our streets, but in the offices and hallways of the departments and agencies that create and execute the laws, policies, and regulations of the United States. Its sights and sounds are those of a bureaucracy in crisis: drafts of a dissent cable that are circulated, letters of resignation that are drawn up, whispered complaints to journalists, and even tears.
The immediate trigger was an executive order signed last week by President Trump that banned entry visas for refugees from seven Muslim-dominated countries. The order, which did not go through a normal review process, caused chaos and heartbreak at airports in the United States and around the world, where refugees with valid visas were turned back without warning, and even holders of green cards were detained.
The ensuing protests by thousands of people were the first signs of something going terribly wrong in America, like a body jerking when a foreign substance is injected into its veins. More symptoms of rejection soon emerged. Hundreds of diplomats at the State Department are signing an unusual dissent cable that gravely warns of political blowback, saying the ban will “alienate entire societies” and serve as a “tipping point towards radicalization.” And on Monday night, Acting Attorney General Sally Yates announced that the Department of Justice would not defend the ban in court because “I am not convinced … that the executive order is lawful.” Within hours, Yates was fired, accused in a venomous White House statement of betrayal and weakness.
As the now-familiar saying goes, this is not normal. On their own, none of these events would have been unprecedented. Just last year, 51 diplomats at the State Department filed a dissent memo over the Obama administration’s Syria policy. The replacement of agency heads, sometimes in unhappy circumstances, is a feature of every democracy. But these events have occurred in such a short period of time that the script of the first 10 days of the Trump Administration reads like the work of Le Carré come to America.
Perhaps most strikingly, bureaucracies appear to be taking sides and feuding with a sharpness that is characteristic of fractured and dysfunctional governments.
Before the election, the FBI publicly released far more information that was damaging to Hillary Clinton than to Donald Trump, and as a result many people concluded that the FBI and its director, James Comey, were pro-Trump. It was the opposite with the CIA, which appeared to be intentionally leaking information that was damaging to Trump’s campaign — and Trump himself lashed out at the CIA for doing so.
In another major schism – this one spanning two branches of the government — several federal judges issued stays against the immigration ban, finding it likely illegal, but some border agents refused to let their detainees speak to lawyers despite being presented with court orders instructing them to. Meanwhile, the bans were celebrated by unions representing more than 21,000 immigration officers. The unions, in a joint statement, congratulated the president for his “swift and decisive action” to keep America safe.
Over at the EPA, scientists say they are afraid to talk to journalists after the Trump administration demanded to know the names of officials who participated in climate-change negotiations. The newly installed head of the Department of Homeland Security clashed with the White House over its desire to appoint an anti-immigration extremist as his deputy. Congressional aides disclosed that they had secretly helped the White House draft the immigration ban and signed non-disclosure agreements that prevented them from telling their own bosses about it. And Trump’s senior political adviser, Steve Bannon, a white nationalist whose ex-wife accused him of domestic violence and anti-semitism, is orchestrating the White House’s executive orders in secretive ways that cut out most of the National Security Council staff and leave no paper trail that shows what happened.
Although this is all new to Americans, there is ample precedent overseas. I spent most of my life reporting on the breakdown of process and laws in foreign countries. The origin of the chaos is the assumption to power of a vastly inexperienced leader who is fantastically rich, psychologically unstable, unusually bombastic and trusts only a few people, mostly family members. This profile has elements of former and current rulers of Italy (Silvio Berlusconi), Uzbekistan (Islam Karimov), Kazakhstan (Nursultan Nazarbayev), the Democratic Republic of Congo (Mobutu Sese Seko), Venezuela (Hugo Chavez), Iraq (Saddam Hussein) and Equatorial Guinea (Teodoro Obiang), to name just a few.
One of the things I learned while reporting from some of these countries is that when a war of bureaucracies breaks out, some bureaucracies are far more equal than others — in the sense of truly mattering in determining a nation’s fate. The dissent from within the State Department is significant, but when the normal inter-agency process of modern states breaks down, foreign ministries tend to be left in the cold, carrying out whatever policies are determined by the places where the real power resides: the security ministries and the presidential palace.
The rebellion at the Justice Department by Sally Yates is a type that will likely be short-lived; she was a holdover from the Obama administration, and Trump has already replaced her with a compliant prosecutor. Political positions of that sort, which fill the top tiers of most agencies, will soon be filled by Trump vassals. The fight within bureaucracies will shift to being between those loyalists and the career civil servants who compose the bulk of the federal workforce, which totals about 2.1 million people, plus 3.7 million who work as contractors.
An unusual appeal went out to federal workers on Monday from a former National Security Council staffer, Laura Rosenberger, who wrote to her former colleagues, “In many ways, you are the last line of defense against illegal, unethical, or reckless actions — which the first week of this administration confirm will abound.” Rosenberger added, “History has shown us that implementation of such policies depends on a compliant bureaucracy of obedient individuals who look the other way do as they are told. Do what bureaucracy does well: slow-roll, obstruct, and constrain. Resist. Refuse to implement anything illegal, unethical, or unconstitutional.
It is a stirring plea but there are many reasons why it might not ignite a rebellion among the legions of bureaucrats who make the government run from day to day. White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer, asked to respond to the dissent from the State Department officials on Monday, made it clear what the administration thinks of disloyalty. “These career bureaucrats have a problem with it?” he said. “I think they should get with the program or go.” I have heard these sorts of threats before, though not on American soil.
Where this goes from here is impossible to say. It’s as if we were caught in a rogue wave that has crashed down upon us, turning us head over heels, crushing our heads under its pressure, filling our lungs with water, breaking our bones with its power. And somehow we still expect to fully understand what is happening to us, where the wave will take us, and what condition we will be in when the waters recede.
Top photo:President Donald Trump speaks during an Inaugural Law Enforcement Officers and First Responders Reception in the Blue Room of the White House on Jan. 22, 2017 in Washington.
Love it! Big Donny is ticking off all the right people, isn’t he? Our government has been so far out of control for so long they can’t even see back through the forest of laws they’ve broken to get here. Go, Donny, GO!
Imagine when it comes to 100 days
Give the hyperbole a rest. Yates was a political appointee on her way out at the end of the week anyway.
She played you like a fiddle.
At the risk of appearing uncharitable, perhaps the FBI and CIA could be induced to engage, agency against agency, in some form of lethal gladiatorial games.
Imagine the ratings. Hoping the networks do all they possibly can to foment this.
The split happened when the left started destroying Christians. You managed to convince half the country that the left wants them unemployed, or even dead. Trump was their defense. And all you see now is more violence – all Trump supporters are Nazis and it’s ok to kill Nazis…
For the attacks I’ll include LeVoy Finnicum which I suspect you cheered when the same FBI you seem bothered about set up a kill zone and murdered him – no coverage here!
but:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2016/12/07/the-supreme-court-oral-argument-that-cost-democrats-the-presidency/?utm_term=.205ec3b1acc5
“Bannon whose ex-wife accused…”
because we know women never lie, see Rolling Stone’s Jackie, particularly in a messy divorce, and that all accusations are true.
I thought the Intercept would be above such innuendo, gossip, and slander.
I was wrong.
Guess you’re trying to be like the wapo, nyt, or cnn
You conveniently forget that Obama spent 8 years sowing the seeds of racism, gender confusion, etc., etc causing this nation to be so split that only GOD Himself can put us back together. In all my 76 years I’ve NEVER seen or heard such demagoguery which is being routinely spewed out and that’s the reason the “media” is history. Your accusation against Trump is egregiously fallacious and I WON’T be reading anymore of this twisted rhetoric which is issued thru the lense of a leftist “journalist.”
Amazing how Trump succeeds in all his campaign promises by throwing bones to the Democrats and MSM and in some ways to the Republicans. While they fight over it, Trump moves forward to the next points on his agenda.
It is nice to see bureaucrats and politicians who turned their back on sedition, the rule of law and Constitution under the last two administrations and laid the foundations for what we see now SO concerned. If Hillary had been elected as part of the elite establishment, this trend could have continued. Perhaps a good lesson in the value of law and liberty is in order. President Trump may prove a cruel teacher, he lacks the smooth operator quality in law breaking.
Bring it on! What this moribund nation has needed, since the fizzling out of the sixties, is ferment, dissent, and chaos. The state has mummified the American nation, and Trump, as flawed as he is, is the fulcrum for national revival. Let Americans duke it out over his policies, some long overdue, some harebrained. But the status quo had to go. As for the comparison to foreign dictators: pure leftist drivel. The bureaucrats he elevates into avatars were the same careerists who wallowed in the swamp when it suited them.
I perfectly agree.
Trump’s election hasn’t defined us. How we respond to it will define us. Had Clinton been elected, we ran the risk of never waking up. So, I agree: Let’s get it going.
It was hard to tell who hated Trump the most: left-wing globalists, Democrat Wall Street stooges, and every major media outlet, or right-wing conservatives, bankers, and political bag men.
So the guy can’t be THAT bad…
You can’t drain a swamp without causing a commotion. The “Split” seen in our government sows who was and was not part of the problem. The NeoCons have finally met their match in Trump. Before you know it peace and prosperity might break out.
“The Neocons have finally met their match in Trump.”
John Bolton is one of the most reckless Neocons around and a Trump advisor none the less. Trump is not challenging the Neocons, he is elevating the worst of them to high positions of power.
We’ve been coup’d. Hard to imagine or believe. But we don’t have to anymore since it’s already happened and continues to happen. Hopefully I don’t have to cut and paste Britannicas definition of coup. If you’re not sure…look it up. If we don’t recognize what has happened in the last few weeks we’ll be stuck with pink hats and brilliant protest signs in our closets. A response to a coup may need more teeth. Without teeth u cannot bite. It breaks my heart.
This land was coup’d over 500 years ago.
Should it be mentioned loudly and often in these articles that the Kochs finally got their Tea Party wish granted with Trump’s presidency? Didn’t they AstroTurf the TP into existence with one goal – to convince Americans that their government was a broken, unfixable mess best handed over to the oligarchs?
i’m not sure they wanted trump though. my sense is he’s more of a maverick, or at least was perceived that way, which is why the high level republican elites didn’t want him in the first place. the kochs want somebody they can be assured of controlling.
But Koch is in JB’s glossary, along with Noam and 1%. Your asking for a vocabulary beyond that.
It’s “you’re” not “your”, you fucking idiot. Nice try tho. lol
The main reason the establishment Republicans didn’t want Trump was because he wasn’t conservative enough for them. They said so publicly, so this isn’t my opinion or guess, it’s a fact. The fact that he has no political experience and that he’s a “maverick” — a term that’s too complimentary for what he is — are minor reasons they didn’t want him.
Are you daft? The Kochs *hate* Trump. They publicly mused that they might support Clinton instead, but in the end just decided to stay out of it. Trump is the antithesis of everything the Koch brothers push for.
The Kochs hate Trump more than you do.
You need to update your rant every year or so. Recycling is a good idea, except in relation to ideas.
Sorry Peter, but any faith that teaches children that life after death is more important than life on earth, forces barbaric rituals upon believers (and non-believers) where a female is worth 1/2 a man, apostasy = death, being gay = death, will indeed need extreme vetting. One can always follow Sweden’s example where 100000 refugees are permitted to enter the country, without vetting, every year. It now is the rape capital of the world and has 55 “no go” zones across its main cities.,
Multiculturalism should not mean that we tolerate another culture’s intolerance
Multiculturalism should not mean that we tolerate another culture’s intolerance nor an invasion of 40,000,000 people who want to occupy for power with a culture of little kingdoms just like in libya.
Spare us your falsehoods about Sweden (and check scopes.com before inflicting them on us in future, if you actually do care about the truth).
Don’t comment on things you don’t know anything about. You shouldn’t wright about Sweden, when all you wright are lies.
“…any faith that teaches that life after death is more important than life on earth… will need extreme vetting.”
I couldn’t agree more. That’s why having so many unvetted, bible-based Christian radicals in the White House is so dangerous.
Yes, it’s too bad the natives didn’t keep out the christians.
“…any faith that teaches children that life after death is more important that life on earth needs extreme vetting.”
I couldn’t agree more, Andy. That’s why having so many unvetted, Christian extremists in office now is so dangerous. I also agree that multiculturalism should not mean tolerating another culture’s intolerance. Who has said that it does? Where and in what form is this occurring?
And here we go again with the “no-go zones” BS.
Do some actual research, Andrew.
So you’re saying that Christians should be vetted extremely, and the fundamentalists and Dominionists should be exiled to Antarctica?
Religious extremism is not unique to Islam, not in scope and not in zeal. They just happen to be more visible because many of their countries were taken over by theocratic authoritarians (often due to the actions of the USA).
The implementation of laws that make women second-class citizens in the USA has been done predominately by fundamentalist Christians, as has the implementation of laws that make being gay or trans a crime (anti-sodomy laws, nearly every law referring to “biological sex”, etc.).
the Dumb&Dumbers that have destroyed the fabric of America with their fake media and fake wars and fake taxes and doing the bidding of wallstreet thieves, tough luck.
btw – that picture, President Trump is probably looking at a lot of overpaid people who do nothing but cultivate and favor disaster and disharmony so they can look all valuable and keep their jobs feeding on the American public as the whores that raise their salaries do wallstreet’s bidding to keep robbing America.
and if you think the DOW going up in price as a good thing, you’re nuts.
Make the CEO (Corrupted Elected One) president your bitch!
Call for a “Nation Wide Strike!
Or a “Boycott Tuesdays!”
Are you down with it?
Say “Heaven Yeah!”
Or are you scared?
“Hold your dollars… then they hollar!”
The “Power of My Dollars!”
Oh you say…”but but they have millions of dollars!”
But it takes a whole lot of OUR one dollars that makes up their million dollars!
Got it? Woke up yet?
Women of America… YOU hold the “Purse Strings” to this economy!
Tie It Up! Use YOUR POWER BABY!
It’s like reliving the collapse of the Soviet Union. Who wants popcorn? We’ve got traditional butter & salt, or nutritional yeast and balsamic vinegar for the health conscious. Perfect for watching the 1983 nuclear holocaust movie, “The Day After,” too:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yif-5cKg1Yo
Yup. About Time too. What people never “got” was that “Communism” didn’t kill the USSR, Corruption Did. In the USSR, Communism was just the label used for the organisation and direction of corruption to serve the elites,
… Like here, with, “Markets”, Capitalism …. or Liberal Democracy.
At the fall of the USSR, those brainiacs in charge just doubled down on the looting and fraud already going on, they were now believing that “Capitalism” or “Democracy” was “winning” over godless communism almost per default – setting up the scene for the fall of “us”.
This is the “truth that shall not be spoken.”
“”Communism” didn’t kill the USSR, Corruption Did”
Exactly right, that’s what’s killed the USA. We had a little window at the end of the Cold War – we could’ve cut the military budget, dissolved NATO, invested in domestic growth – but no, the powers that be had to go for *full spectrum dominance* and the Project for a New American Century – really, what a pack of evil clowns they turned out to be. I’d ship them all off to the Hague for War Crimes Tribunals if it was up to me.
I’ll take unsalted butter, natural salt, and granulated garlic on air-popped popcorn. My wife likes the other stuff, also on air-popped popcorn. And we should have a beer or two while we watch.
“The Day After” was terrifying, BTW. Reagan was president and we all feared that he was going to start a nuclear war.
I’m glad that at least one writer at The Intercept is covering the positive aspects of the Trump administration. The relentlessly negative coverage of the mainstream media becomes a bit tedious at times. So it is nice to have an article pointing out that Mr. Trump has accomplished more in 10 days than most presidents, with the possible exception of Mr. Lincoln who also succeeded in splitting the government into warring factions, accomplish over their entire terms in office.
Right on! I realize that you’re being sarcastic, but I seriously think it’s great that these evil assholes (on both sides) are fighting with each other. What all the knee-jerk bleeding heart liberals don’t get is that both sides are equally bad in different ways. Best if the whole system blows itself up and we start over.
Actually, they’re equally bad in the same way.
Great article Peter, this is unreal. It really feels like we’re on the precipice of sliding into an impending corruption of the way our government works (beyond the existing campaign contribution corruption that’s been getting worse).
The House and Senate are supposed to be the stopgaps to the President’s power, but both are afraid of Trump’s power (see House Speaker after he defied Trump) and want him to get through their once in a lifetime agenda – so they aren’t going to look at his corruption of the system we’re about to witness.
Another great article that really lays it out:
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/03/how-to-build-an-autocracy/513872/
Regardless of whether you voted for Clinton or Trump, the manner in which Trump and his staff have acted from the beginning has been massively incompetent, amateurish and grossly insensitive. I don’t know how any reasonably fair-minded person could possibly claim otherwise, no matter your candidate.
Quite simply, families are being terrorized. They are being torn apart and placed away from their loved ones for the crime of belonging to the wrong country or belonging to the wrong religion, and, make no mistake, religious bigotry is as much if not more at the center of anti-Muslim legislation than is national security. That’s just obvious to me.
Not surprisingly, to Trump and his apologists, the hysteria is not in the religious and cultural bigotry of their policies and the unbelievably inept, haphazard and cruel way in which they’ve been carried out, but in the instant and world-wide negative reaction to those policies. That distraught mother who has been separated from her children for who knows how long and who knows where is just being hysterical!
This is all sickening enough on its own, but when these policies are being pushed and instituted by grandstanding conservatives claiming they’re pro-life and family values, they take on an ominously hypocritical–even dangerous–tone, and reveals who these people really are.
As if that’s not already obvious…
Bigotwhat?
Wolf, wolf, wolf!
We’ll see…
This is all about power, we’re watching what a mild dictator (Hungary type) would do if put in power here in the U.S.. If the House and Senate were in Dems hands you could count on them keeping The Donald in between the white lines, but the GOP leadership is quite enamored (to get their agenda through) and frightened of President Trump’s power when they have crossed him – and are not likely to push back on (or even look at) anything he does.
Highly recommended reading from former Bush Administration official:
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/03/how-to-build-an-autocracy/513872/
Thanks.
If only we had an democratic process that elected officials to represent the people.
Then maybe we wouldn’t have a Majority GOP Senate, House of Representatives and President…
As much as it might hurt you, the current government is what the majority of American citizens over 18 wanted.
Hungary’s president didn’t funnel weapons to al queda in Syria as far as I know. How convenient that you forget such things when you talk bad about others from the position of moral supremacy
I am from Scotland but I congratulate your President for taking swift decisive measures to combat terrorism. If you all don’t already know it terrorists are entering my and your country on a daily basis so President Trump has put a stop to it in one swift go. It’s for 90 days in order for them to get right their methods of administering it fairly because they are only interested in stopping people coming to your country to do you harm. I think you should all get behind your President and help him make it work correctly.
Wow, I guess you have no clue whatsoever how far we are down the Rat hole
20,000,000,000,000 dollars Dr evil. That defines our country
There’s a huge self-fulfilling aspect to all this.
There have been near-continuous protests since the day after Trump’s election, while DC and the surrounding counties voted overwhelmingly for Clinton, by something like eighty points – the bureaucracy is firmly anti-Trump. It therefore has the feel of lazy propaganda to point to the ongoing protests, or the anti-Trump attitudes of the federal bureaucracy, as evidence that a major and unprecedented political crisis is underway.
Yes, the entry-ban order was rushed, poorly-worded, implemented with excessive zeal by border cops, and amounts to a mean-spirited PR stunt. No, it doesn’t represent a crime against humanity nor a shockingly radical departure from past government policies. And to boot, it seems to be rather popular (or at least not unpopular).
The upshot is that the war within the bureaucracy mirrors the war in the country at large. Quite frankly it’s discouraging to see the progressive freakout is still ongoing – who will still be around, or have the energy left to protest, if and when Trump does something genuinely extreme or blatantly illegal?
For those empiricists out there. This was written 11 years ago, in the middle of W’s second term, by a prominent mundane astrologer:
http://www.vanityfair.com/news/2006/12/lutin200612
Have to say, read it on a lark, it is unreal. Written in 2006.
Just a tidbit: “The greatest time of upheaval will be between 2015 and 2019, when the square of Uranus in Aries to Pluto in Capricorn will create the seeds of revolution everywhere. Forces of repression are going to clamp down even harder on those who want to speak their minds.”
Actually, real astrology is not about making predictions, it’s about explaining the world in a certain way. http://coyotenetworknews.com/
Like religions, what people think of as astrology has been totally corrupted and perverted, in this case into charlatan BS about predictions.
Sorry, this is a better link for astrology: http://coyotenetworknews.com/readings/
But here’s the thing Jeff: What do you think about Lutin’s forecast?
Does “the world in a certain way” have a time dimension? A time dimension with attributes?
“It seems to be rather popular.”
It’s only “rather popular” with racists, bigots and grandstanding politicians.
All normal people are appalled.
“Normal” should be about 80% of the population. Are 80% of the population “appalled”? Or 50%, 10%, 5%? How do you know?
That last sentence of my comment was a little bit of sarcasm, but not too much. I guess it depends on how you define normal–and probably, appalled, too. How did you arrive at the 80% figure for what is normal?
Not so. Normal people know what vetting a person is meant to do. Canada vetted those emigrating from Northern Ireland to Canada in the 60’s. Even back then, they were looking for terrorists.
I think it’s Ted Cruz supporters who are still pissed off and taking it out on Trump. when are they ever going to get over it? self-fulfilling snowflakes.
Neil Gorsuch is the nominee to fill Scalia’s Supreme Court seat.
https://www.theguardian.com/law/2017/jan/31/neil-gorsuch-supreme-court-nomination
Replaces Scalia in conservative bent and wit, so no change in the Supreme Court’s composition in that regard. 4 liberal, 4 conservative justices and one wild card (Kennedy, J.).
However, he’s 49 and could be on the Court until the year 2055 or so.
the spawn of anne gorsuch i think.
One should be sure that members of Congress should ask him if he believes in the Unitary Executive theory (like Federalists of past and present do), or in checks and balances. If he believes in the former, I see no reason why ANY Congress should approve of him. The Unitary Executive leads to a lessening of power in Congress.
“The Constitution puts Congress in Article I, and the Executive Branch in Article II. This is no accident.”- Donald Rumsfeld (Before his time under Bush)
Mr. Maas,
I admire your willingness to engage your readers. However, some readers with a history of inappropriate and irrelevant comments, and with clearly entrenched opinions, should not be dignified with a response. Similar to Mr. Trump, they are not looking for a conversation; they want to pick a fight.
People with entrenched opinions – extremist, fanatics, etc. – tend to become more entrenched when presented with facts that is contrary to their deeply held (and possibly insane) opinions.
It is fruitful however to interact with them in order to study and learn their uncritical thought patterns – it is good to know what makes them tick.
You can’t even spell his name.
I would have loved to watch some dissent when the IRAQ WAR happened, the war that created this mess in the first place.
Actually, it started with U.S. interference in Afghanistan when the Soviet Union was fighting there. (Contrary to popular U.S. misconception, the Soviets did not invade Afghanistan, they were invited in by its pro-Soviet president at that time.) The U.S. decided that it would be OK to use religious fanatics to get the Soviet Union out of Afghanistan because oil and fighting communism were more important. How’s that working out for you?
Thanks for your answer, you’re absolutely right, sadly I already knew about Afghanistan, that some stinger weapons were lost there, the ISI role, etc, there’s a great doc about this on journeymanpictures -among many many others-. Sometimes I just want to never read the news again and restart my old hobby for video games…
Progressives are united behind Nancy Pelosi.
_”Clinton Has Solid Lead in Electoral College; Trump’s Winning Map is Unlear“_
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/06/upshot/clinton-has-solid-lead-in-electoral-college-trumps-winning-map-is-unclear.html
Comical. As others around me were sure of a Clinton victory, i sat calmly smiling and stated matter of factly, “Trumps gonna win Florida.” Then he did. And then i said “Trumps gonna win ohio”. And he did. And then i said “Trump is going to win wisconsing and michigan”. And he did. And the i announced “Trump is even going to win pennsylvania”. All those around me thought i was nuts.
maybe i am. but i know a winner when i see one. Hellary never stood a chance. She is a hostile seething vicious loser. But not a sore one.
Trump wont get everything he wants. But AMERICA DIDNT GET TPP’D and that is the bottom line.
Go Barnabas go, great commentary
“The fractured, disunified Republican Party. It will never coalesce to elect a Republican president. ”
-the progressive left
As I understand the position of The Intercept, none of this is as important as Hillary’s emails.
Sarcasm
The silver lining in Trump&company’s extremism is the recognition by more and more people that extremist come in all colors and faiths and that we all need to unify against all forms of extremism.
I encourage you to check out Anonymous #BDSTHEUS message.
Please get your head out of your arse.Did you just learn a new Word? Extremism?then apply it to debt.
You have wrecked and worry about Trump extremism. Lmao
Liberty and Natural Law are extreme.
I guess your arse is still stuck . WAKE UP
Who bought this clown? Why is this a problem?
The country was sold out to corporate America by our government. A fight is exactly what we need .
I mean only Trump questions outrageous profiteering, or Germany’s advantage being part of the Euro. I guess this is too deep for this crowd. Bring on the fight!
BTW-20 Trillion in debt and counting!
HALLELUJAH TRUMP!!!
Middle America has endured 8 years of anti-American Philosophy and new laws.
Time for payback in spades.
I thought we were still paying-back for the Bush Jr years.
“bureaucracy in crisis: drafts of a dissent cable that are circulated, letters of resignation that are drawn up”
Please do not resign!
If you find the government actions an affront to human decency and human intelligence, resigning would be a gift to the newly installed regime.
If you disagree with the regime, it make them happy to see you go.
In all likelihood, there would be much more important things that can be done while assuming your position.
Please do not resign!
It’s up to each individual to measure and respond to the situation imposed upon them. It’s not about winning-losing…it’s about one’s life. Remaining in unsavory conditions can be detrimental to one’s mental and physical health, often deteriorating close, personal relationships.
“I have yet to meet a single person who quit a crappy job only to wish they’d stayed on longer.” Alexander Kjerulf
The whole hysteria on this is disgusting. The sign “The entire world crying” typifies these hypocrites. Why wasn’t the world crying when your darlings Obama and Hilary were bombing the shit our of the same countries. Compare to that scam Trump is a humanitarian. He just doesn’t want them to come here, Obama put policies in place that murdered and displaced millions and where was the world’s cry then? and now the bastard comes out with his smug face and dates to question Trump. And what about media? When is media going to talk about who destroyed those countries? Until I start seeing signs that call Obama and Hilary war criminals (which they are with Bush and rest of the bunch) I want be taking these hypocrites seriously. Their tears and concerns are fake.
I think the Intercept has been a standout in its critical coverage of the Obama administration and the candidacy of Hillary Clinton. We are equal-opportunity adversarial, I think.
Some of this is character. It’s not just what you do but how you do it. Agree, Obama and Hillary practiced a form of war that puts them somewhat on par with Bush, Cheney, etc. But Obama more or less got a pass because he was cool, collected, intellectual. He put a professional spin on it – at least in this hemisphere and in much of the western world. Trump is vulgar, and at least in his public persona, unlikeable. The travel ban – okay, vetting – had no nuance. It’s a hammer blow without intelligent explanation. And arguably unfair.
Should the USA allow refugees in? We’ve already taken in tens of millions from Mexico in the last couple of decades, several million or so who remain here illegally. Would Trump’s actions get a pass if he acted more like a Dem? But in regard to Obama, TI has held his feet to the fire.
I am afraid I don’t buy it. I am very liberal and progressive and was huge supporter of Obama, but when regime changes started happening and kill count started it opened my eyes. Remember that so called “Idiot” Bush also avoided scrutiny. This is establishment ways to protect themselves. I believe too many so called journalists have deep connections and will follow party line no matter who says that. They will come up with excuses like “patriotism”, “bad intel”, “good speaker”, but don’t be fooled. These people are complacent in Obama’s murders. They know exactly what they are doing, which is protecting war criminals and their high paying jobs. True journalist are very rare these days and are bullied into oblivion like Seymour Hersh. Glenn is by far “Last Man Standing”, but they are after him too.
The polish didn’t come from President Obama himself any more than the guest on SNL is writing the skits themselves. How this detail avoids Yanks is beyond me.
As for the polish on that apple, watch CNN/ABC/NBC/etc. and then Fox and witness the same speech. It looks brilliant or not specifically because the presenter wishes it to look so. That’s been the function of each country’s MSM for decades now. As with president Obama, president Trump will look good or bad as per each individual’s biasing, period.
Side note, Stay in the middle TI. There’s a lot unsaid with regard to displaced Syrians who couldn’t tell you where Damascus is without a globe and a little too much time. In Canada, some of our Syrians have turned out to be Lebanese, Afghani and Pakistani(who already have a pretty clear path to Canadian citizenship, blazed by hundreds of thousands that made the effort which goes back to the 70’s). In fact the most successful Muslims in Canada are Sikh and they accomplished this through wanting to become such. They, as a group, aren’t visitors to Canada but actual hockey watching Canadians who merely forgo the beer and back bacon for strong tea and maple syrup.
Comparatively speaking yes, but the bar was very low. Glenn has done it and many of the commentators too, but overall Intercept was as much of cheerleader of Hilary and Obama as anyone else. I might be wrong on you Mr Maass and maybe I read articles from you, but I forgot, however during the election intercept was on board with rest of media, not completely, but still strong enough. My overall comment was in regards protestors and other media channels and fellow commemorators. This outrage is misplaced, this action has minimal impact on people in those countries, but Syrian, Libyan and Yemeni wars have profound impact on millions and should be stopped ASAP. Many articles shoudl be written about them and other media channels need to be called on their hypocrisy.
What are you basing that comment on besides your ignorance of The Intercept’s catalog of articles?
You know what. I was wrong. It has been a while and after searching the archives I agree they had a very strong anti Clinton tone. I do read many sources, so I guess I never felt that anyone did their job. My apologies to Intercept you guys did much better job then I thought.
some posters here confuse the pointing out of the nature of relationships with clarity and detail as advocacy. I see the same as enlightening and learning. Can’t lose for learning.
Orez has a decent point, generally, but, I couldn’t agree more with you, Mr. Maass, that the Intercept has provided critical coverage of the Democrats. At least enough to know what they are about at ground level, away from the controlled environment in which they thrive. The Intercept has not only provided coverage, but has many times been at the fore in obtaining, revealing and making sense of critical information about the people who are in power, which ever party. Keep up the good work.
It’s not about The Intercept, it’s about progressives in general. I fully agree, fuck these idiots who get so upset NOW, but didn’t do or say anything about the U.S. was murdering people and destroying societies in other countries. That’s a MUCH bigger issue than whether the U.S. allows in immigrants.
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Why wasn’t the world crying when your darlings Obama and Hilary were bombing the shit our of the same countries.?
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Obama put policies in place that murdered and displaced millions and where was the world’s cry then?
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Policies that murdered and displaced millions .. and continue to do so.
Indeed, very important issues are sidestepped.
Overseas’ interventions are State Department and CIA’s democracy-spreading speciality projects.
Compliant media (in the whole Western sphere) is forbidden from showing any graphic display of the carnage caused by US mercenaries in those countries. Mainstream media outlets are very eager to comply and act as if these ever-continuing crimes were not happening.
These interventions, overseas, are ongoing. A US military strike has just concluded in Yemen with one American commando killed.
It is a big question, how come mainstream media is suddenly showing outpouring of humanitarian concerns about those affected by the new travel ban, while, for decades, ignoring the plight of countries societies torn apart by constant meddling and bombing?
I agree with you orez. Mass quotes Laura Rosenberger who I looked up. She served with Hillary at State and was officially one of Hillary’s election committees. And like Hillary a major warmonger. And now we are to take her as legitimate voice in criticizing Trump encouraging her ex-colleges to revolt against Trump? I didn’t bother to look it up, but where was was she when 40 some State department officials attacked Obama for not being war like enough over Syria. Jesus H. Christ–we have an State Department advocating war and more war.
The government is at war with itself. No shit Sherlock. Under Obama we saw the Keystone Cops situation of CIA backed forces fighting Pentagon backed forces in Northern Syria. We had of course the war mongers in the State undermining Obama. And speaking of that, the Pentagon destroying a cease fire truce with Kerry worked out with Lavrov by attacking Syrian troops which allowed ISIS to achieve strategic control of the local area. Or at another
level where was the call to DOJ revolt when Obama’s DOJ defended DOMA by claiming in the most vile ways gay relationships. Hey no calls to revolt over letting banksters go?
Trump must be opposed, but with a semblance of moral and intellectual integrity and consistency, which the article lacked.
Failure. Idiocy. Tribalism. In 10 days Trump and his brainless base have showed America what they’re really made of, bigoted hot-air and debunked deflections for Trump’s new or continued war crimes. The U.S. has 2 corporate Republican parties, that’s how an incompetent, insecure twitter child like Trump arrived.
What did the CIA appear to leak?
If this doesn’t send chills up your back, nothing will. Get with the program, or get out.
Thus far, Trump is like the Bush Administration on steroids. The Bush administration, especially during the first term, was criticized for compartmentalizing policy decisions within his WH staff, including the NSC, and leaving the cabinet departments in the dark.
Trump’s Administration has taken this to an even more exclusive level.
Washington swamp drained.
Gigantic cesspool revealed.
I’ve heard Steve Bannon described as a white nationalist and anti-Semite but I’d like to see evidence beyond a divorce case before accepting that. What does seem to be clear is that, like Trump, he has no problem using racial hatred/baiting to advance his financial or political goals. Same end result, but different labels needed.
Why? Read Breitbart and see where that takes you. To call him less is like calling the re-branded young neo-Nazis in this country the “alt Right.”
Forget Nationalist, he’s reported to have described himself as a Leninist. Do a search.
The thing is, someone can call themselves something without actually being that thing. Often it’s done to pin blame on those who are. As an example, the German Worker’s Party, a socialist pro-worker party in the Weimar Republic, was displaced by a far-right nationalist party calling themselves National Socialists.
Bannon isn’t a Leninist. Having read the works of Marx and Lenin, it’s clear he doesn’t believe in those principles. In policy and politics, he’s shown himself to be an anarcho-capitalist using the white nationalists for his own gain, both in power and influence and in monetary gain.
Has anyone ever seen so much activity around presidential nominees?
Usually that is a normal process with a few flair ups. This time it is part of a constitutional crisis.
And even the democrats are realizing what they were elected to do.
Will Trumpism bring down the Republican party? In the mean time, will the country and the earth survive?
“I have heard these sorts of threats before, though not on American soil.”
Really?
“You are either with us or against us.” George W. Bush
“Every nation has to either be with us, or against us.” Hillary Clinton
Sounds exactly the same to me.
Threats directed at U.S. officials, no. Directed at other countries and Americans whom the White House might regard as disloyal, yes.
Perhaps you are too young to know about the Saturday Night Massacre, where President Richard Nixon ordered the AG, Elliot Richardson, to fire Archibald Cox,the special prosecutor investigating Watergate. Richardson refused, and resigned in protest. Nixon then called on acting AG William Ruckelshaus to fire Cox, and he too refused and resigned in protest. Nixon then got Solicitor General Robert Bork to do his dirty work, and Bork thereby became a darling of the republicans. They tried repeatedly to reward him with an appointment to the Supreme Court, but the democrats, who had principles as well as cajones in those days, blocked them.
I do not mean to disparage the memory of Richard Nixon by comparing him to Donald Trump. Apart from some red-baiting and a few felonies, in which Nixon and Trump are of the same school, Nixon is in all respects superior to Trump.
Don’t go overboard; Nixon was psychotic. If he were in politics today he’d be as right wing as anyone and be similar to Trump in his private comments, though he knew what not to say in public, unlike Trump.
You are factually wrong. Nixon was in no way psychotic, and was better leader than most modern presidents
Wish I were too young too remember that ;)
Ha!
But I think the point is that Nixon knew that those threats should happen behind closed doors and to two members of the DOJ, not out loud from his press secretary and addressed to a thousand or so state department employees (who incidentally were using a dissent channel instituted after Vietnam for which state dept. policy dictates that they cannot be retaliated against).
“I have heard these sorts of threats before, though not on American soil.”
Never worked, then? These bureaucrats are just getting a little taste of what work is really like today, they don’t like it, cool, we don’t like it too, but, we don’t mind them getting the shaft, because government were always on the side of “big business” when we were getting the shaft. Now, they get to know each other better and maybe attitudes will change with experience?