What happens when government data are politicized? What happens when a President fires the professionals who report the data and replace them with his loyalists?
Jack Hassard, a retired professor of science education at Georgia State University, knows what happens. Hassard followed Trump’s behavior in his first term and wrote a book called The Trump Files.
The problem with Trump has accelerated now that he is surrounded by a well-organized cabal of far-right extremists who are turning him into a dictator.
Dear Jack,1
I was eight the last time the numbers were real.

Every Friday, my mother would check the Bureau of Labor Statistics dashboard. She did this the way some families checked the weather. She was quiet and anxious, with a hand on the mouse and a furrow in her brow. The numbers told her how many people had lost work that week. They showed how fast prices were rising. The data revealed whether the rent hikes were outpacing wages again. It was her way of listening for distant thunder. Today, nevertheless, the BLS dashboard is not updating information because of the Republican led government shutdown.
The dashboard went dark the spring Trump returned to power. At first we thought it was just another funding fight, like the ones that had knocked websites offline before. But weeks passed, and the updates never came back. My mother kept refreshing the page for months, like a ritual for a ghost.
By the end of that summer, more pages were vanishing. Climate dashboards froze mid-storm season. Food insecurity surveys were “postponed indefinitely.” Vaccine data disappeared without explanation. By winter, it was as if the country had decided to stop looking at itself in the mirror.
They called it austerity. They said it was about cutting “red tape” and “freeing the agencies from bloated bureaucracy.” But everyone could feel the chill. It wasn’t just numbers that were being cut. It was the nerves that told us where the pain was.
We didn’t realize it at the time. This was how the silence began. It began not with censorship in the usual sense but with a subtraction of knowledge.
When the data stopped, arguments stopped making sense. People clung to whatever numbers their preferred networks fed them, like castaways grabbing driftwood. One station would say unemployment was rising; another insisted we were in a “golden age.” Both cited “official sources,” but the sources were gone, hollowed out or replaced by Trump’s loyalists.
At school, the teachers tried to explain inflation, but the charts they used were months out of date. Some parents started printing memes as evidence. Others stopped trusting the schools entirely.
Looking back, it’s astonishing how quickly civic discourse disintegrated once the shared factual floor cracked. We had thought democracy died in coups or riots. Instead, it died in data voids—quiet gaps that widened into abysses.
My father used to call it “the silence before the storm.” Storms were his touchstone for everything. He said the scariest part wasn’t the wind or the rain. It was the moment the air went unnaturally still. You realized the warning systems had failed.
That silence descended over our public life. When pollution monitoring sites shut down, a chemical spill in Savannah went undetected for weeks. By the time the numbers surfaced through a university backchannel, children were already sick. When the food insecurity survey was cut, hunger surged invisibly. Relief programs couldn’t track where the need was worst.
And when climate data went dark, the storms didn’t stop. They just stopped being predictable. The year the NOAA dashboards froze was the year the Atlantic hurricanes changed course mid-season. Thousands died inland, where no one expected them.
The silence didn’t come from ignorance. It came from a deliberate decision to turn off the lights.
I know you study this era, Jack, so you know the official explanations: budget cuts, “efficiency reforms,” sovereignty rhetoric. But those were just alibis. Trump understood something that too many defenders of democracy underestimated: data is power. Whoever controls the ability to measure reality controls the terms of debate.
His war on data wasn’t chaotic—it was methodical. Fire the agency heads who produce inconvenient statistics. Defund the surveys that expose inequality. Gut the climate monitors that contradict your conspiracies. Let loyal media amplify your alternate “facts.” Over time, the shared reality collapses, and the strongman narrative becomes the only stable frame left.

Authoritarians will do anything and everything they can to consolidate and maintain power. They create a culture of fear, chaos and surveillance so that the press will not speak out, legislators will do their bidding, and citizens and universities will be afraid to speak up. Instead of data, facts and reasoned policies, people get a steady diet of propaganda and lies. Ignorance is not bliss. It is a means of control.
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Some years ago, I worried about this with regard to school “reform.”
I worried that students were being tested on material that was only attainable by a few kids, mostly from privileged areas. I was worried that reformers were in charge of the stats. I think I was right.
When Trump was elected, I worried that government would no longer give accurate reports on climate, economic activity, etc. I was right again.
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The NAEP tests are designed so that only a certain % will be proficient or advanced
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He who syphons, steals, collects, manipulates, lies about, threatens with, hides, exploits and misuses the M.O.S.T. DATA…….WINS!
We are so far down DATA STORAGE CAVES, that almost all of our data has become our DNA – without us being able to access, review or challenge its accuracy or know how it’s being used.
JACK, you warned us in 2022 – The TRUMP FILES.
Thanks, Hanna
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This post doesn’t reveal Toxic T’s final steps.
Eventually, the sadistic, malignant narcissistic, extremely micromanaging sociopath will take control the internet and have EVERYONE who doesn’t agree with his lies and speaks out through social media removed so they lose access to those internet sites.
Accounts closed.
Blogs vanishing.
Until the only voice we read and hear outside of our homes will be what he approves.
Then his klepto-kakistocracy fascist regime will come for our homes, our jobs, our sources of income, so we all suffer before they come for us and remove us from life.
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It will take a long, long time to recover from the devastation wrought by these vandals.
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It’s getting worse and worse. Squashing of academic freedom in our universities. Controlling what can be said on television. Armed raids and disappearances conducted by unidentified federal thugs acting completely outside our former laws. A DOJ that serves as an attack dog to go after the president’s perceived enemies. Turning our cultural institutions into propaganda outlets. An Extreme Court that rubber stamps it all.
We are Germany in 1934.
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From moveondotcom
Last Tuesday night, over 300 of Trump’s ICE agents raided an apartment building in Chicago, dropping from helicopters and throwing flash bangs into apartments. ICE agents pulled people from their beds, handcuffed adults, and zip-tied children together. Some children were naked. No warrants were shown. And some of the people arrested were U.S. citizens or here on visas. end quote
From USA Today: Trump called for the arrests of Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson and Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker as hundreds of National Guard troops seemed poised to enter the city where tensions are boiling over the Trump administration’s aggressive crackdown on illegal immigration. end quote
One wonders how long this insanity can go on, Trump has declared war on his own country or at least the Democratic parts of it. As long as Trump is in office this awfulness will continue unabated.
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Why Chicago? I’ve been looking into this and from what I can surmise, it’s probably because Barack and Michele came from that city. Michele grew up in South Shore, the primarily black neighborhood where ICE landed helicopters on the roof of an apartment building supposedly to find Hispanics. Chicago has several other neighborhoods with MUCH larger populations of Latinos, including South Chicago, which is not far from South Shore (it’s just due south of it). Going into South Shore instead suggests this was more about politics and racism –and the malignant narcissist’s personal vendettas…
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