Jake Tapper asked Kristi Noem about the tape of the killing of Renee Good.
Tapper tried to pin down Stephen Miller about whether the U.S. would rule out using military force to “take Greenland” and whether there might be elections in Venezuela. Miller’s view: might makes right.
Gal Beckerman wrote in The Atlantic:
If you want to know a political leader’s governing philosophy, you could cut through a lot of bluster by just asking them who their guy is: John Locke or Thomas Hobbes? Anyone who’s taken Poli Sci 101 will understand what this means. The 17th-century philosophers each offered a picture of human nature in its rawest form, and they came to different conclusions. Locke, whose ideas were central to the birth of modern democracy, thought that people were capable of reason and moral judgment. Hobbes, on the other hand, believed that we were vicious creatures who needed to be protected from ourselves by a powerful king. Whether a leader is Lockean or Hobbesian really does set the table for the kind of government they want.
One way to understand the head-spinning nature of being an American over the past couple of decades is that this debate—one that history seemed to have settled in Locke’s favor—is alive again. Barack Obama was a Lockean through and through—insisting, repeatedly, that if citizens were just given accurate information and a fair hearing, they would converge on something like the common good. Then came Donald Trump, Hobbesian extraordinaire, who has often portrayed life under anyone’s leadership but his own much as Hobbes describes the state of nature: “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.” (Nasty is even one of Trump’s favorite words.)
Comments this week from Stephen Miller, the influential deputy chief of staff often cast as the president’s “brain,” only reinforced this impression. Miller might have been Hobbes in a skinny tie as he confidently articulated what he understood to be the “iron laws of the world since the beginning of time.” His monologue was like something out of the English philosopher’s 1651 political treatise,Leviathan: “We live in a world, in the real world,” he said, “that is governed by strength, that is governed by force, that is governed by power.”
Miller’s might-makes-right declaration came after Trump’s decision to overthrow the president of Venezuela, and in anticipation of the United States possibly acquiring Greenland from Denmark, perhaps by any means necessary (a notion that Miller’s wife found fit to turn into a meme). The will to dominate, seize other countries’ resources because you can, and generally bully those that can’t fight back is nothing to worry about, Miller reassured Americans: This is the natural state of things. This is how it all works. Power does what it wants. The rest is commentary and toothless United Nations resolutions—or, as he put it, “international niceties.”

What I find amazing and totally unacceptable is the fact that too many if not most of the US Senators and Representatives are setting on their hands and doing very, very little to curb Trump and his terrorist actions against the people of this country. These people were elected, in part, to be a check on the powers of the executive but right now this check is not happening. We are witnessing the use of the same playbook that Hitler used in the 1930’s.
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Yep. The very same.
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Unfortunately, Noem and Miller are responsible for carrying out Trump’s dystopian vision, and neither has any respect for the rule of law. They are both extreme partisan fanatics. There is little to no oversight or accountability for their actions. Our system of checks and balances have failed the American people because the vast majority of the GOP are too cowardly to take a stand against such a vengeful tyrant.
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Donny, Donny, how does your garden grow?
With stone‑cold killers and stone‑cold liars
And one invasive Putin plant.
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“One of Ours, All of Yours” is a line from Nazi Germany. It was coined when an SS officer was killed in a Czech Village and the Nazis killed every single resident of that village in response. This very line appeared on a U.S federal government podium today. Let that sink in.
173 men and boys over the age of 15 in the village were executed, women were deported to a concentration camp and the children were sent to a gas chamber. The village was burnt to the ground.
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What federal podium?
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#OOOAOY 💀 #OneOfOursAllOfYours
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https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10157561020606145&id=677676144
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Please translate for those of us not on Facebook.
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On May 27th 1942, Czech partisans ambushed SS Chief Reinhard Heydrich on his way to his HQ at Prague Castle with machine gun fire. Heydrich was probably the most feared man in the Nazi Party. His ruthlessness earned him the nickname “The Butcher of Prague.” The ambush was botched when one of the machine guns jammed, but one of the partisans threw an anti-tank grenade at the car, which blew up and wounded Heydrich.
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Heydrich had personally outfitted his car, a Mercedes Benz convertible, with custom upholstery. He had the factory seat stuffing removed, and in its place, stuffed with horse hair from the finest horses in Germany. When the grenade went off, fragments of horse hair became embedded in his wounds. He was still feeling well when they took him to Bulovka Hospital in Prague, but being ever the proud Nazi, Heydrich refused to let non-German doctors treat him. He died from massive infections on June 4th.
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Hitler was furious. He gave orders to “make up for Heydrich’s death.” So on June 9th, Nazi forces surrounded and cut off all roads leading into and out of Lidice, a poor farming and coal mining village of a few hundred Czechs that had existed peacefully for over 650 years. The Nazis (wrongly) suspected Lidice was the home of one of Heydrich’s killers. All the men were rounded up and taken to a garden beside a barn. They were ordered to stand against a wall in groups of ten, where they were shot by Heydrich’s SS troops. All but 3 of Lidice’s male population perished, and that’s only because they were in England at the time, training with the RAF. 173 men lay dead, their bodies left to rot in the June sun.
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The 203 women and 105 children of Lidice weren’t spared Hitler’s wrath. The children were separated from their mothers. The mothers were loaded on transports and sent to Ravensbrück concentration camp. On orders from Adolf Eichmann, the children were taken to Chelmno concentration camp. All but a lucky few, who Eichmann felt looked Aryan enough to be Germans, died. The blond haired/blue-eyed dozen or so were turned over to SS families to be “Germanisized.”
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The village of Lidice itself was razed to the ground. They dynamited 650 year old stone structures, burnt wooden homes and farmhouses, and slaughtered every dog, cat, goat, cow and horse in the village. Lidice, and everyone in it, was erased from the map.
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That was the “price” Czechoslovakia had to pay for humiliating the Führer. The cruelty WAS THE POINT. Hitler considered their fates fair compensation for the humiliation of the Reich. Humiliation won’t be tolerated. Someone had to pay. Might as well be poor people.
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In today’s news, as Donald Trump was flying home from his lesson in humility at the hands of Emmanuel Macron, Boris Johnson, Mark Rutte and Justin Trudeau, the White House made good on their long-rumored threat to cut off 688,000 people from SNAP benefits—many of whom live below the poverty line. The White House statement reads “This is the fulfillment of Donald Trump’s executive order ‘Reducing Poverty in America by Promoting Opportunity and Economic Mobility.’”
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So, reducing poverty by targeting people living in poverty.
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Humiliation won’t be tolerated. Someone has to pay. Might as well be poor people.
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Evil is precisely the word. These people are evil.
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