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Freedom Writers Collaborative

@fwcollaborative

Freedom Writers Collaborative is a multi-state Indivisible chapter that is truly a grassroots operation providing messaging and social media content inspired by our progressive allies. https://freedomwriterscollaborative.org/

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Latest posts by Freedom Writers Collaborative @fwcollaborative

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Trump administration asks court to restore punishments for law firms The Justice Department told a federal appeals court that judges who blocked executive orders sanctioning several law firms had infringed on the president’s authority.

Trump administration asks court to restore punishments for law firms

07.03.2026 02:32 👍 1 🔁 2 💬 1 📌 0
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Pro-Trump WSJ admits MAGA economy is 'lousy' President Donald Trump’s economy is “lousy” and could be improved if he removes his tariffs, a newspaper that normally supports Trump wrote on Friday. “There’s no denying the February report was lousy,” The Wall Street Journal Editorial Board wrote on Friday. “The U.S. shed 92,000 jobs and revised down gains for January and December by a combined 69,000. The question is what to make of the declines.” After arguing that the jobs report is not related to Trump’s invasion of Iran, the Journal nevertheless predicted “a temporary price surge” in oil as the Iran regime tries to “cause enough political pain in the Gulf and the U.S. that Mr. Trump and Israel stop the bombing.” Yet they urged the public to not waver in backing the Iran war even as that happens. “But that is all the more reason not to panic at a temporary price surge and press ahead to remove Iran’s missile and drone stockpiles and assembly lines and the regime’s brutal enforcers,” the Journal argued. They then added, practically as an afterthought, “Oh, and if Mr. Trump wants a tax-cut boost for the economy while the war continues, he could call off his new 15% universal tariff. Consider it our contribution to easing everyone’s economic anxiety.” Economist Catherine Rampell, speaking with the conservative publication The Bulwark, argued on Friday that Trump’s anti-immigrant policies are contributing to the ongoing economic malaise. “So, we had been hearing for years from Trump and his allies that if you pulled immigrants out of the economy, then you would have a lot more job openings for native-born Americans, that immigrants were stealing all of the jobs that should have gone to, you know, red-blooded Americans,” Rampell said. “And therefore, if you just yanked them out of the labor force and out of the country, that would create an abundance of riches in terms of job opportunities for native-born Americans.” She added, “Is it that we should have expected more job growth for native born Americans? Or is it … we should have expected less job growth overall? So, you know, they kind of want it both ways. And either way, they're just trying to cope with the fact that the numbers are not great… [Y]ou should never read too much into one month's report. Every economist will tell you that. But it's not just one month's report. We've seen, again, six months now under Trump's tenure in which we've had job losses.” Also on Friday,University of Massachusetts Amherst Economics Professor Arin Dube warned that “the labor market is flashing red,” while University of Michigan Professor of Economics and frequent cable news guest Justin Wolfers said after the new jobs report that “the economic story just changed dramatically. Recession questions are back on the menu.” In February the liberal-leaning think tank Center for American Progress argued Trump’s tariffs have cost the US more than 100,000 manufacturing jobs. “Far from the manufacturing sector ‘roaring back’ as Trump promised, the United States has lost more than 100,000 manufacturing jobs over the past year,” Allison McManus and Dawn Le of the Center for American Progress wrote. “These actions have pushed the country’s closest trading partners to seek deals elsewhere, including with China: Canada, India, Japan, South Korea, and the European Union have all recently sought new agreements without the United States.” They added, “Over time, each of these deals will result in markets that were once enjoyed by U.S. suppliers increasingly oriented away from them — and the rules of international engagement increasingly written by foreign governments.” Conservative commentator Mona Charen from The Bulwark speculated last month that voters may also blame Trump’s tariffs for the poor economy. “Voters are rarely able to connect policy to outcomes, but they have done so in the case of tariffs,” Mona Charen wrote. “Back in 2024, Americans were about equally divided on the question of trade, with some favoring higher tariffs and roughly similar numbers opting for lower tariffs. Experience has changed their views.”

Pro-Trump WSJ admits MAGA economy is 'lousy'

07.03.2026 02:11 👍 1 🔁 1 💬 1 📌 0
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Justice Dept. Denounces Federal Judges in Fight Against Law Firms The Trump administration had signaled earlier this week that it was ready to abandon four executive orders seeking to punish law firms, but abruptly reversed course the next day.

Justice Dept. Denounces Federal Judges in Fight Against Law Firms

07.03.2026 02:11 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Brandon Herrera’s YouTube Gives Democrats More Hope in West Texas Race What had been a safe G.O.P. seat was looking more attainable for Democrats after Representative Tony Gonzales bowed out in favor of a hard-right candidate.

Brandon Herrera’s YouTube Gives Democrats More Hope in West Texas Race

07.03.2026 01:14 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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'Betrayed' first-time Trump voters have turned their backs on the president Bulwark publisher Sarah Longwell says first-time Trump voters voted Trump in 2024 for one reason over all others—and Trump failed to deliver the goods. “When you have a Biden to Trump voter, they tend to have voted for Donald Trump for one specific reason, which is that he promised he was going to lower prices and make America more affordable. That's what they heard. That's what they believed,” Longwell told MS NOW anchor Nicole Wallace. “… [T]he way these voters process anything that Trump is doing is they just ask ‘is what he is doing making my life more affordable? Because that's what I hired him to do.’ And so, whether it's building the ballroom, whether it is the aggressive way that they are shooting Americans in the streets and going after immigrants, or whether it is this war with Iran, they see it as not what they were promised.” Longwell explained that one of the reasons Republican voters today are so much more isolationist and anti-war than they were 15 years ago, is because Trump himself taught them to be that way. In fact, Longwell argued that Trump was able to “railroad” his Republican primary opponents by promising he would pull the U.S. out of expensive international wars and campaigns. “They were going to spend their time improving the lives of the average American,” said Longwell, and so these voters feel betrayed every time Trump does something that they don't see as to their advantage. And this Iran war is no different.” Trump voters surveyed by Longwell’s organization fell “we just got done fighting, like the fatigue is already there,” said Longwell, and the blast of new gasoline price increases is hitting Trump’s new fans hard and fast. “That's the betrayal, said Longwell. “And that's where you hear a lot of MAGA talking-head types really going hard at him, saying ‘this isn't what America First was supposed to be about. This isn't the promise you made to us. And that is like the most central vulnerability for Trump.” “The things that Tucker Carlson and Megyn Kelly and Marjorie Taylor Greene have said about him over the last six days are amazing,” conceded Wallace.

'Betrayed' first-time Trump voters have turned their backs on the president

07.03.2026 00:17 👍 5 🔁 2 💬 1 📌 0
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Iran War Poses Test for Justice Dept. After Firings Deplete National Security Ranks Firings, resignations and diversions to the president’s priorities have left elite counterterrorism and counterintelligence units stretched thin, current and former officials say.

Iran War Poses Test for Justice Dept. After Firings Deplete National Security Ranks

07.03.2026 00:17 👍 2 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
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Russia Is Sharing Intelligence With Iran, U.S. Officials Say The information has included satellite imagery showing the locations of military personnel. But some officials played down the significance of the partnership.

Russia Is Sharing Intelligence With Iran, U.S. Officials Say

06.03.2026 23:20 👍 5 🔁 2 💬 2 📌 0
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Controversial top vaccine regulator to depart FDA Vinay Prasad, the top regulator overseeing vaccines and complex treatments for difficult diseases, had previously lost his job in July before getting it back less than two weeks later.

Controversial top vaccine regulator to depart FDA

06.03.2026 22:56 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Contact Your Members of Congress

🚨Military members - Under SAVE 2.0, your military ID wouldn't be enough to register to vote.

Service members born overseas could be blocked. They're attacking those who defend our democracy.
PROTECT the right to vote for our troops.

#HandsOffHerVote

06.03.2026 22:47 👍 6 🔁 2 💬 1 📌 2
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Join one or more Indivisible groups to maximize impact

Corrupt Trump passes $1 trillion of our tax dollars to the top 1%, paid by destroying our healthcare & social services.
Consumer prices keep going up, while wannabe king Trump builds a vulgar, gold ballroom. He's happy to exploit us & lie to us. Say NO.

06.03.2026 22:42 👍 4 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 0
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Trump left America vulnerable to retribution — and that's no accident History doesn’t repeat, as Mark Twain allegedly said, but it sure does seem to rhyme. And right now, the rhyme between the first year of the George W. Bush presidency and the first year of Donald Trump’s second term is staring us in the face and it’s getting scary. After “Poppy” George H.W. Bush finished his 1991 “little war” against Iraq, he left American troops stationed at Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia. Those soldiers on what Osama bin Laden considered sacred Muslim soil — the home to Mecca — became his primary grievance against America. He said so publicly, raving at the New York Times and anyone else who’d listen. American men were drinking alcohol and looking at pornography and thus defiling Saudi holy land, he said, and American women were showing their bare arms and driving cars in a country where such things are absolutely forbidden. When Bin Laden declared war on us, he meant it as part of a religious and moral crusade. That war came home on September 11, 2001, and it arrived at a miraculously convenient moment for an otherwise hapless George W. Bush. The new president had taken office under a cloud of illegitimacy after five Republicans on the Supreme Court, two of them appointed by his own father, stopped the Florida recount — that would have handed the election to Al Gore — and thus gave Bush the presidency. Millions of Americans believed the 2000 election had been stolen, between Jeb Bush purging 90,000 Black voters from the Florida rolls just before the election, and the five Republicans on the Court handing Bush the Oval Office. His approval ratings were mediocre at best, he had no mandate, and he struggled to find any sort of an agenda beyond more tax cuts for billionaires that could excite the public. Then the towers fell, and overnight Bush became the most popular president in the history of modern polling: his approval rating hit 90 percent. The man who’d been floundering became, overnight, a “wartime president,” which was exactly what he’d wanted all along. Back in 1999, Bush told his ghostwriter Mickey Herskowitz that if he ever got the presidency, what he really needed was a war:“One of the keys to being seen as a great leader is to be seen as a commander in chief ... My father had all this political capital built up when he drove the Iraqis out of Kuwait and he wasted it. If I have a chance to invade, if I had that much capital, I’m not going to waste it.” Bin Laden’s 9/11 attack on the US gave Bush his “chance to invade,” his war capital. He spent it to invade Iraq, a country that had nothing to do with the September 11 attacks, and to drive an even larger tax cut for billionaires than originally anticipated. Exposed by the Downing Street Memos, his administration had fabricated intelligence, ginned up fake connections between Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda, and lied about weapons of mass destruction. Hundreds of thousands of people died as a result of his lies, but Bush got his “successful presidency.” Now look at Trump. His poll numbers right now are worse than Bush’s were in the summer of 2001; worse in many regards than any president in polling history. His approval ratings on literally every topic — from immigration to ICE to taxes to inflation to healthcare, etc., etc. — are underwater and sinking. Further, there are allegations that the FBI is sitting on evidence related to claims Trump raped at least one and possibly two 13-year-old girls. His family is openly monetizing the presidency, with his nepo sons and son-in-law cutting real estate deals and cryptocurrency schemes with the governments of Saudi Arabia and the UAE while Trump pushes — against the advice of our intelligence agencies — to send advanced AI chips to those same countries. The corruption is so brazen it barely qualifies as corruption anymore. Trump and his lickspittles have pulled off what was previously unimaginable: the reinvention of government as a machine to generate profit for the ruling family — much like Saddam Hussein had done in Iraq and Vladimir Putin has done in Russia — all right out in plain sight. Meanwhile, Trump’s ICE agents are terrorizing communities across the country, beating and intimidating American citizens, deporting legal residents without due process, and violating the Fourth and Fifth Amendments so routinely that constitutional scholars have stopped being shocked and started being terrified. Reports of ICE-related deaths of American citizens like Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis are piling up as the Trump regime refuses to cooperate in state-level murder investigations. On top of all these crises, the electoral landscape for November is looking catastrophic for Republicans. Trump and the GOP are staring down a potential wipeout in the 2026 midterms, which is why red-state legislatures are gerrymandering with abandon, why Trump is floating proposals to nationalize elections, ban mail-in voting, and station ICE agents outside polling places in minority neighborhoods. These are not the actions of a confident political party that believes it’s doing what’s best for average Americans. They are, instead, the actions of people who know they’re on the verge of losing power and facing accountability, and are therefore willing to destroy our very democracy to hold onto power. So, Trump desperately needed something to change the subject. And right on cue, he launched an unprovoked military attack on Iran, apparently at the urging of Benjamin Netanyahu, who has his own desperate need to remain in power to keep himself out of prison for his own bribery and corruption scandals. The bombing of Iran gave Trump a few days of wall-to-wall war coverage, pushing every other scandal (including Epstein) below the fold. It was a classic wag-the-dog maneuver, but so far it’s worked well enough to dominate the news cycle. But here is where the rhyme with 2001 turns frighteningly dark. Kash Patel, Trump’s FBI director, has fired or reassigned almost the entire FBI team responsible for tracking Iranian threats inside the United States. The specialists who spent years building intelligence networks to monitor Iranian-linked operatives on American soil have been purged from the agency, fired unceremoniously. At the same time, Trump has let funding for the Department of Homeland Security lapse, leaving critical counterterrorism functions in limbo as Republicans in Congress refuse — at his insistence — to act. He’s systematically dismantled the very apparatus that exists to prevent a terrorist attack on the continental US or our assets around the world. Ask yourself why. Why would a president who just bombed Iran simultaneously gut the very intelligence infrastructure built by previous administrations to detect and prevent Iranian retaliation? Why would you poke a hornet’s nest and then fire the guy with the EpiPen? Unless you wanted to get stung. The logic is almost too ugly to contemplate, but it tracks perfectly with recent history. Bush needed 9/11 and got it, and it saved his presidency. Trump needs something equally dramatic to reset his collapsing political fortunes. A spectacular Iranian-sponsored attack on American soil, or even a major domestic attack by a radicalized actor inspired by the chaos Trump himself has created, would instantly transform him into a Bush-like “wartime president.” It would push the bribery, the rapes, the constitutional violations, the ICE killings, and the election rigging off the front page overnight. It would give him emergency powers he has already shown he’s more than willing to abuse. It would give Republicans a reason to “rally around the flag” and postpone the reckoning that November 2026 currently promises. This is not some wacky conspiracy theory: it’s simply pattern recognition. When a president provokes a hostile nation, then fires the people whose job it is to protect us from that nation’s retaliation, the conclusion is either staggering incompetence or something far more sinister. We can’t afford to wait and find out which one it is.

Trump left America vulnerable to retribution — and that's no accident

06.03.2026 22:24 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Support our campaign to oppose MAGA extremism

Common sense gun laws save lives. Universal background checks, safe storage, & banning weapons of war aren’t “radical” — they’re what the vast majority of Americans already support.

Urge your Congressional reps to choose public safety over politics.

06.03.2026 22:16 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Support our campaign to oppose MAGA extremists

Affordability isn’t a hoax—student debt is crushing families. When Trump's donors/enablers get massive tax benefits, but students are stuck with crushing debt, the system itself is the scam! Terrible for our economy! Vote for Democrats who fight not fold.

06.03.2026 22:04 👍 3 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
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'Had to call in the professionals': Outcry as Bush advisor visits the White House Reporters noted former George W. Bush Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice entering the White House on Friday, giving conservatives a chance on social media to wail at the alleged embrace of Bush-era neoconservatives. NewsWire reported CNN as a source for the appearance of the former secretary, who cultivated a 20-year career as a policy expert on the Soviet Union before becoming an architect and advocate of the 2003 Iraq War. Under Bush, Rice argued for the removal of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein for the sake of U.S. security. And she maintained that stance even after inspectors discovered no weapons of mass destruction inside Iraq’s borders. Both progressives and hard-right MAGA enthusiasts who remember Rice’s career condemn her as a classic neocon who sent the nation down a path of expensive international nation-building that cost both lives as well as money. Analysts suspect the cost of Bush’s Iraq invasion ultimately cost the U.S. $3 trillion. Trump, himself, stood out from his competition in the 2016 Republican primaries by slamming other Republicans’ support for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. It is one of the reasons the anti-neoconservative wing of MAGA is so stung by Trump’s puzzling pivot into immersing the U.S. into another problematic Middle Eastern nation like Iran. To critics, Rice’ appearance at the White House was the final proof of Trump’s embrace of old-school neoconservatism. “Y’all wanna know how to go full neocon?” posted the Libertarian Party of Tennessee on X. “ARE WE REALLY ENTERING ANOTHER FOREVER WAR?” said another critic on X, referencing the nation’s multi-decade involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan. Still another X commenter suggested the Trump administration may as well bring back infamous war enthusiast and Bush policy planner Paul Wolfowitz, who argued that the invasion of Iraq was necessary after the 9/11 attacks — despite enough Saudi citizens comprising enough of the terrorist group behind the bombings that victims’ families blame the Saudi government. “It is so over,” complained another conservative critic on X, responding to the Newswire report, while another critic claimed Trump “started a Middle East conflict so bad they had to call in the professionals.”

'Had to call in the professionals': Outcry as Bush advisor visits the White House

06.03.2026 21:26 👍 5 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
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How The Times Tracks Down the Connections Behind Trump’s Pardons Reporters tapped sources, combed through public records and scrutinized social media to penetrate the web of influence and money underlying the president’s clemency grants.

How The Times Tracks Down the Connections Behind Trump’s Pardons

06.03.2026 21:26 👍 0 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
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Florida Bar reverses itself, says it is not investigating Lindsey Halligan A spokesperson said the bar’s counsel “erroneously” stated there was a “pending investigation”; instead, a complaint against Halligan remains at a preliminary stage.

Florida Bar reverses itself, says it is not investigating Lindsey Halligan

06.03.2026 21:08 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
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Democrats join legal challenge to Trump’s planned 250-foot arch “This is a straightforward issue of who’s in charge,” Sen. Angus King of Maine told The Post, citing a law that certain monuments must receive Congress’s approval.

Democrats join legal challenge to Trump’s planned 250-foot arch

06.03.2026 20:41 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Trump desperately 'trying to cope' as jobs evaporate Economist Catherine Rampell said the nation’s terrible jobs report would likely be much better right now if Trump had entered the White House more than a year ago and just went to bed and stayed there. Experts were stunned after the latest report found the Trump economy losing 92,000 jobs in February instead of the 50,000 job increase it expected. Numbers revealed unemployment rising to 4.4 percent, driving the Washington Post to sound the alarms of imminent stagflation. Trump’s National Economic Council Director Kevin Hasset attempted to blame the weather and West Coast strikes, but Rampell said it is of course about Trump’s policies. Hasset also hinted at changes in the nation’s economic “birth-death model,” implicating a falling rate of working-age bodies to drive revenue. Rampell said Trump’s policies most definitely upset the birth-death model with its wholesale expulsion of working-age immigrants. “So, we had been hearing for years from Trump and his allies that if you pulled immigrants out of the economy, then you would have a lot more job openings for native-born Americans, that immigrants were stealing all of the jobs that should have gone to, you know, red-blooded Americans. And therefore, if you just yanked them out of the labor force and out of the country, that would create an abundance of riches in terms of job opportunities for native-born Americans,” said Rampell. “Is it that we should have expected more job growth for native born Americans? Or is it … we should have expected less job growth overall? So, you know, they kind of want it both ways. And either way, they're just trying to cope with the fact that the numbers are not great,” Rampell told Bulwark editor Jonathan Last. “… [Y]ou should never read too much into one month's report. Every economist will tell you that. But it's not just one month's report. We've seen, again, six months now under Trump's tenure in which we've had job losses.” “And when there's been growth, it's been really slow,” said Last. And even as Trump’s number’s dive, Rampell said the president is continuing the same policies that brought the nation here, and compounding them with even more. “The problem is that at the same time, we have oil prices jumping… . I think we had a 25 cent per gallon increase this week alone in price of gas. And we have a war in the Middle East, which is about to mess up huge swaths of the global economy,” Rampell said. “Not just oil, not just energy, but trade and commodities like aluminum. [And] Fertilizer, which is a precursor for food production. … [C]an you imagine how different the economy would be if Donald Trump had just come into office and done nothing?” “Just gone golfing,” Last said. “Just gone golfing, as some of us advised him to do,” said Rampell.

Trump desperately 'trying to cope' as jobs evaporate

06.03.2026 20:29 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
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Justice Dept. Pushes for Charges Against Cuban Leaders The move comes as President Trump is ratcheting up his rhetorical assault on Cuba’s leadership.

Justice Dept. Pushes for Charges Against Cuban Leaders

06.03.2026 20:29 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
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Justice Dept. releases missing Epstein documents with Trump allegations The agency said the records, which include allegations made against President Donald Trump in 2019, were not previously released because they were “ incorrectly coded.”

Justice Dept. releases missing Epstein documents with Trump allegations

06.03.2026 20:14 👍 1 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
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92,000 jobs GONE in February. Look at that chart — the red bars only started appearing after January 2025. Biden handed him a booming job market. Trump turned it into a graveyard. This isn’t a headwind. This is self-inflicted economic destruction. #TrumpsJobsSlump​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

06.03.2026 20:05 👍 13 🔁 7 💬 2 📌 0
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GOP cries 'mind control' as Virginia bars schools from teaching Jan. 6 was 'peaceful' Republicans are attempting to rewrite the narrative of the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, but Virginia is not letting that narrative permeate public classrooms. The Washington Post reported Friday that the Virginia state governor will likely sign a measure that was passed by the state House of Delegates and Senate that bars any public schools from teaching that the attack was a "peaceful" protest. President Donald Trump has long maintained that the violence was peaceful. Other Republicans have referred to it as nothing more than a "tourist visit." One lawmaker complained that the White House webpage calls January 6 "a peaceful protest, and people who instigated it were the police and National Guard,” said Delegate Dan Helmer (D). “This is a preventative measure against a massive disinformation campaign on the part of the White House," he added. Republicans are calling it "mind control," the report said. "It tells us what we’re not allowed to say, and it tells us what we must say,” complained Del. Tom Garrett (R) in a floor speech. He said that the bill was "evil" and akin to "Nazi Germany" and "Soviet Russia." In 2022, Virginia's Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin proposed new teaching requirements for those discussing the history of the U.S. around slavery and the Native Americans. Laws in Germany today bar expressions of Holocaust denialism in public. Trump pardoned 1,500 people charged with crimes related to Jan. 6, even if they accepted their guilt.

GOP cries 'mind control' as Virginia bars schools from teaching Jan. 6 was 'peaceful'

06.03.2026 19:32 👍 7 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 1
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Top National Symphony Leader Quits in New Blow to Kennedy Center The executive director, Jean Davidson, said her departure reflects frustration at the turmoil that has engulfed the arts center.

Top National Symphony Leader Quits in New Blow to Kennedy Center

06.03.2026 19:32 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Find An Event

They want you afraid. They want you isolated. They want you passive.
On March 28, we give them exactly what they fear most:
Millions of us. Together. Unafraid.
#NoKings2026

06.03.2026 19:05 👍 18 🔁 9 💬 0 📌 1
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Support our campaign to oppose MAGA extremists

In 1945, the world chose courts over chaos. Crimes were named. Evidence was heard. Accountability mattered.

Democratic freedoms survive when power answers to law. When it doesn’t, history shows us what comes next.

#MeltICE

#NeverAgainIsNow

06.03.2026 19:05 👍 11 🔁 4 💬 1 📌 0
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DOJ’s counterterrorism chief hasn’t been on the job for 6 months A report in the Washington Post reported Friday described the government purge at the FBI and Justice Department, noting the loss of decades of experience and has left some key positions either unfilled or otherwise occupied. And according to the Post, President Donald Trump's administration might be woefully unprepared for the fallout. For the past six months, Matthew Blue, the chief of the Justice Department’s counterterrorism section, has been deployed to "protect" Washington, D.C. Trump called in the D.C. National Guard to handle "out of control" crime in the city. While many have been deployed elsewhere, Blue remains on duty and not at the Justice Department. About three days before the bombing campaign began in Iran, FBI Director Kash Patel fired the agents who "specialized in addressing threats from Iran and its proxies." Speaking with current and former officials familiar with the firings, the Post reported that there are still some skilled leaders in top posts, but the "bench of expertise has significantly thinned," particularly among those with a history of handling domestic threats. The report explained that when the U.S. goes to war or engages in a conflict elsewhere, domestic law enforcement keeps its ear to the ground about possible threats at home out of fear that terrorist groups abroad can trigger anyone who might be in the U.S. But now, those prosecutors and agents are scarce. One ex-prosecutor who refused to give his name was fired out of the blue despite working on the surveillance of a man the FBI feared may have been plotting a violent attack. Patel reassigned the FBI agents to focus on immigration instead. FBI spokesman Ben Williamson told the Post that anyone who they fired were found to have "acted unethically" either on the Jan. 6 investigations or with probes into Trump. “While we do not comment on personnel matters, the FBI maintains a robust counterintelligence operation, with personnel all over the country, who delivered record results in 2025 — including a 35 percent increase in counterintelligence arrests, six of the Ten Most Wanted Fugitives captured, and multiple foiled terrorism plots just in December alone,” Williamson said in a statement. “Our teams remain fully engaged across the country and prepared to mobilize any security assets needed to assist federal partners — as well as state and local law enforcement." But one former and longtime senior national security official warned, “We are now in a heightened-threat situation, not just in the Mideast but also here in the U.S. Iran, acting through its proxies, has long sought to carry out a terrorist attack or assassination inside the country."

DOJ’s counterterrorism chief hasn’t been on the job for 6 months

06.03.2026 18:35 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
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Why a G.O.P. War Powers Hawk Was a No on Reining Trump In on Iran Many Republicans deferred almost unquestioningly to President Trump after he began a sweeping military offensive in the Middle East. Senator Todd Young was more conflicted, but ended up in the same place.

Why a G.O.P. War Powers Hawk Was a No on Reining Trump In on Iran

06.03.2026 18:35 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Justice Department targets Cuban officials, aims for indictments The Justice Department has formed a working group to examine bringing federal charges against officials or entities within Cuba’s government.

Justice Department targets Cuban officials, aims for indictments

06.03.2026 18:26 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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'Aghast' federal judges dismayed as DHS counterparts issue 'fundamentally flawed' rulings "Aghast" federal judges are increasingly angry at President Donald Trump's Departments of Justice and Homeland Security for immigration judges making decisions they believe do not comport with the evidence, much less the law. Legal reporter Kyle Cheney wrote for Politico on Friday that Trump's "unprecedented campaign to lock up thousands of immigrants with longstanding roots in the United States" is forcing families and even children to face off against these judges for trials that "have been fundamentally flawed or even pre-cooked." Some judges even decide that the individuals are a "danger to the community" or a "flight risk" without hearing evidence. One immigration judge allegedly relied on "uncorroborated police reports" given by the detainee himself. He was released. Another, in Missouri, found that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers called the migrant a flight risk "without sufficient evidence." The ready-made rulings are starting to infuriate federal judges, who are demanding "do-overs," the report said. In some cases, the judges don't even do re-trials; they simply order the person to be released. U.S. District Judge Irene Berger, a Democratic appointee, concluded a bond hearing by saying it would be pointless. Her GOP-appointed counterpart agreed, saying it “would be futile." “The bond hearing has indications of predetermined outcome,” complained U.S. District Judge Douglas Harpool. “The [immigration judge’s] order enumerates that Petitioner: has been in the U.S. for 9 years, has not missed a court hearing, has family in the U.S. (husband and 3 children), and owns a home and operates a business in the U.S. The IJ’s determination regarding flight risk is clearly untethered by the facts and any logical conclusion to be determined from the facts.” Cheney wrote that federal law forbids the courts from second-guessing “discretionary” bonds made by the "immigration judges." “These federal judges simply disagree with the outcomes of the immigration judge bond decisions,” a Justice Department spokesperson told Politico. “They are impugning the integrity or competence of our immigration judges solely to give them a hook to review the IJ decisions they disagree with but would otherwise be unable to directly review.”

'Aghast' federal judges dismayed as DHS counterparts issue 'fundamentally flawed' rulings

06.03.2026 17:38 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Lawmaker Asks Court to Block Trump From Closing Kennedy Center The president has said he plans to shut down the center for two years starting this summer for a “complete rebuilding.”

Lawmaker Asks Court to Block Trump From Closing Kennedy Center

06.03.2026 17:38 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0