Latest posts
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Resistance Cities Under Siege: Targeting Suggests “Feature, Not Bug” Fascism

What do Portland, Los Angeles, Washington DC, Chicago, and Memphis have in common? Not just good food, iconic skylines, or an endless supply of artists who never get paid on time. No, their shared distinction is more sinister: each is a bullseye on the Trump administration’s dartboard of dissent. If you’ve noticed that raids, patrols,
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Russ Vought, Shutdown Maestro: How the Ideologue Became Executioner

If ever a man wore his ambition like armor, it is Russell “Russ” Vought. In the span of a government shutdown’s heartbeat, the OMB director transformed from policy wonk to de facto czar of executive re-engineering. The BBC’s profile of him on October 3, 2025, paints Vought not just as the architect behind Project 2025,
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Midway Blitz: When Chicago Became a Raid Zone

Chicago has always been a stage. The Loop, the Magnificent Mile, the riverwalk—backdrops for theater, protest, commerce. But in early October 2025, that stage changed. Operation Midway Blitz, a Department of Homeland Security crackdown, escalated from dramatic waterfront patrols to door-kicking raids in neighborhood after neighborhood. It was as if someone had decided that Chicago
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Lutnick, Loudmouth: How the Commerce Secretary Doesn’t Following The Epstein Trump Line

Let’s begin by acknowledging how truly absurd this feels. In the middle of a government shutdown, with climate projects canceled and agencies limping in partial darkness, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick chose today to step into a conspiracy swamp wearing clown shoes. As reported by ABC News, he publicly elected to call Jeffrey Epstein “the greatest
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When “Equal Protection” Means Protecting Only Some: Race, Law, and the Constitution’s Costume Changes

The Headline They Won’t Print “Colleges Can’t Consider Race in Admissions, But ICE Can When They Stop You on the Street” That is the American paradox in its purest form. The same Supreme Court majority that clutched pearls over Harvard and UNC using race as one factor in evaluating applicants has no issue with Border
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Project 2025 Becomes Government Shutdown Gospel

It took exactly two days. Forty-eight hours into a shutdown that had already darkened laboratories, silenced grant pipelines, and furloughed three-quarters of a million civil servants, the White House finally dropped its pretense. What was once billed as a think-tank fantasy, a right-wing wish list too radical for the campaign trail, was suddenly elevated to
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The $2.1 Billion Hold: How Chicago’s Subway Became a Political Pawn

When the federal government freezes $2.1 billion meant for Chicago’s transit infrastructure, it does more than delay train cars. It broadcasts a message: your city’s progress must pass Washington’s purity test. On October 3, the White House announced that funds earmarked for the Red Line Extension and Red & Purple Modernization were “put on hold
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Quantico Overture: Trump’s Speech, the ‘Enemy Within,’ and the Militarization of American Cities

In the glare of flags, in the shadow of rank, Donald Trump addressed roughly 700–800 generals, admirals, and senior enlisted leaders at Marine Corps Base Quantico. It was a moment staged with the precision of a director: Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s prelude, the audience summoned at short notice, the hush in the hall as Trump

