Richard Rothstein recently wrote a book about how to resist the illegal, unjust, and tyrannical actions of the Trump regime. Protests and marches are good but not enough, he argues. It’s time to find more powerful ways to express opposition to tyranny, to dictatorship, to a police state.
Please share this article with friends and social media. And please suggest your own ideas for direct action.
My 2017 book, The Color of Law, showed that “de facto,” accidental, neighborhood segregation is a myth; in truth, government purposely enforced it, creating racial inequality in wealth, education, employment, health, and criminal justice. Readers asked, “What can we do about it now?”
So in 2023, Leah Rothstein and I published a sequel, Just Action, that showed how community groups could remedy this unconstitutional system. Intended for normal times, its suggestions for direct action have become urgent when Trump’s unlawful policies in housing and other sectors call for resistance. Just Action and follow-up articles describe how to create diverse committees that can embrace all who seek to preserve democracy.
Trump has taken full control of federal power—executive, legislative, and judicial—to:
- destroy our already inadequate safety net;
- gut health and environmental protections;
- promote racial and ethnic inequality;
- threaten the security of immigrants and their citizen children;
- suppress free speech and independent journalism; and
- prohibit schools from teaching historical truth.
He’s now moved to rig elections in 2026 and 2028, so will no longer depend on popular support. Marches, rallies, and media outrage remain necessary but insufficient. We are now called upon to do more than protest, but to act. What John Lewis called “good trouble, necessary trouble” becomes essential. As Trump “floods the zone” with so many illegal policies that we can’t keep up, so should resistance emerge in many sectors and communities to throw his authoritarianism off balance.
Most resistance will be law-abiding, some with civil disobedience. A decent society won’t be restored from Washington. A movement with a strong popular base can only begin with committees that pursue opportunities in their own neighborhoods, towns, and cities.
Here are two from Just Action, with details and many more examples in the book:
- Regional housing centers have insufficient resources to uncover much discrimination and Trump has made it worse by defunding them. Volunteers can do the uncovering, then bypass the Justice Department by taking cases directly to court. They can campaign to force apartment owners and realtors who discriminate to commit to reform and organize boycotts of those who refuse.
- The administration no longer deems policies unlawful if they unintentionally but needlessly harm historically disadvantaged groups. For example, property assessments usually create higher tax rates for homeowners and landlords who live in lower-income areas. Community groups can campaign to make county assessment practices fair.
Committees with actions like these will develop experience that builds toward resistance in other sectors and a national movement.
After Just Action’s publication, Washington State challenged the federal refusal to remedy housing discrimination. Volunteers documented 80,000 home deeds that banned residents who weren’t considered “white,” causing large wealth gaps between descendants of white people and others. A statewide organizing campaign won a state subsidy for home purchases by members of the previously excluded groups; 300 households have now received assistance, averaging over $100,000 each. Leah Rothstein has described how the reform was won. Groups elsewhere can mobilize for similar victories.
- The Justice Department has cancelled settlements that required police to end abusive practices. Local groups can organize “blue ribbon” commissions to adopt the agreements and then campaign to grant them legal power to monitor and enforce compliance.
- The administration has threatened public schools that teach “divisive” history, such as slaves’ suffering, Native Americans’ extermination, Japanese Americans’ World War II internment, or racial inequality’s origins. Local committees can organize support for teachers told to avoid these topics and for school board candidates who have pledged to protect truth in curriculum.
- The Greyhound bus company will not permit warrantless or suspicionless immigration arrests on buses or in its stations. The Los Angeles Dodgers prohibits ICE from entering its parking lots without a warrant. Retail stores, markets, and restaurants should post signs announcing a similar prohibition. Customers can organize to ensure that it is advertised and enforced.
Campaigning for democratic practices starts by inviting friends and associates to plan. But we mostly interact only with people like ourselves. That’s no formula for successful resistance. Just Action begins by describing those who reached beyond their bubbles. We report on a Chicago artist who photographed pairs of nearly identical homes, one in a North Side white area, the other in a South Side Black one. She then invited residents to meet their “map twins.” Many agreed and were astonished by how much they had in common. We also recount six churches in Winston-Salem—three white and three Black—whose ministers created an interracial discussion and social group of 40 parishioners, divided equally by race. It eventually took direct action, successfully campaigning for a police review board and school curriculum reform.
Leah Rothstein reported recently on a project that organizes monthly dinner meetings of 25 residents from Marin City, California—with a mostly Black population—and 25 from its predominantly white suburbs. Reforms resulted in education, policing, health care, the arts, and housing. They model what diverse resistance cells can achieve.
Indivisible, the organization that led “Hands Off” and “No Kings” rallies this year, has concluded that while vocal opposition to Trump remains necessary, successful resistance must evolve to direct action. Indivisible is now conducting online training to teach and inspire local committees to undertake acts of resistance. You can watch previous sessions and register for subsequent ones here. These should offer more examples of direct actions you could take.
Please click here to share other acts of resistance, so Leah and I can promote them.

I am beginning to think that it is time for the ladies who fillet fish down by the Seine need to go to Versailles to fetch the king.
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Hello Diane: Two things: First, yesterday on her program, Christine Amanpour showed an interview between Walter Isaacson and presidential historian Timothy Naftali. (If it’s “out there,” find it if you can–it was originally aired on April 30). A central point among many was that our military takes an oath to the U.S. Constitution, and not to a man. He pointed to that fact while also saying how military takeovers occur in states also as a movement to secure fascism. The context, however, was about the military NOT following Trump down the fascist rabbit hole, so to speak–that is, as direct action to save democracy.
Second, Naftali also recalled Mitt Romney saying in his biography how he had to take out expensive protection to secure himself AND HIS FAMILY against the physical threats to all of them. Mitt apparently also related that his colleagues in Congress during the impeachments couldn’t afford to buy such protections, and so they remained silent and did not vote against Trump in the impeachment. (I knew at the time that this problem of threats was bad, but not that bad.)
So, I rethought that insidious staff meeting the other day where everyone praised Trump–I wonder just how much of that same physical threat (to those people and their families) was at work in their over-the-top praise–though some I think actually buy into what they are doing.
I have also wondered if the violence (that usually accompanies fascism) hasn’t occurred (yet) precisely because the targeted threats and intimidation has “worked so well” . . . so far, and that it’s just a matter of time before the “real stuff” occurs.
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CBK,
I’m sure you read this morning that Trump cancelled security for Kamala.
What a petty spiteful man.
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I think Thomas Jefferson offered the best advice for a political situation like this one, which is one of only two solutions that will stop Trump for sure.
The better solution is Trump has a natural catastrophic Brain (cerebral aneurysm), Aorta (thoracic or abdominal aortic aneurysm), and Arteries in the limbs. Maybe several all at the same time in public on camera with a huge audience.
The other one, which comes with a higher price, is the well-known quote attributed to Thomas Jefferson about the blood of patriots and tyrants is: “The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants. It is its natural manure”.
This statement was part of a letter Jefferson wrote to William Stephens Smith on November 13, 1787, while serving as the American minister to France.
Context of the quote
This quote is one of Jefferson’s most controversial and is often interpreted as his belief that a certain degree of civic unrest and even violence is a vital component of preserving liberty.
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Lloyd. Be careful. The FBI is on the lookout for threats against He Who Shall Not Be Named.
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BE VERY CAREFUL in the type of street action taken against Trump’s policies:
TRUMP is baiting people. He WANTS massive rallies and protests against his policies because the energy of the crowds at such rallies and demonstrations easily erupts into physical clashes with the police, ICE, and the FBI — and THAT gives Trump and his minions the legal basis for declaring Martial Law.
Once Martial Law has been declared, many civil liberties are placed in legal abeyance — and among them are the fact that elections can be suspended until such time as the President lifts Martial Law.
DON’T PLAY INTO TRUMP’S HANDS!!! Eliciting large demonstrations creates a situation that is too difficult to control and can easily erupt into the kind of violent confrontation that Trump wants to trigger.
During his campaign, Trump promised his MAGA minions that if he were elected, they would never have to vote again.
Trump fully intends to keep that promise — and he is counting on his policies and ICE to trigger the violent confrontations that he wants to happen so that he can declare Martial Law and indefinitely suspend elections.
So, don’t count on the 2026 midterm elections changing Congress, because there is a good chance that there won’t be any midterm elections…and Trump will have kept his promise…with the help of justifiably angry protestors who couldn’t control their anger.
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Watched the online Indivisible training this summer. Well worth it.
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