Delay, Leak, Disobey: How to Counter Trump 2.0 from Within

C_Clayton_Jones

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Fascism doesn’t come for every generation, but it has come for ours.

‘This is not a fight on the beaches of Normandy, but in our own country. This article begins a series on what opposing Donald Trump and his movement can look like. I hope you will join me as these progress.

For this article, I want to focus on how everyday Americans in the federal government can stand up to Donald Trump and his riotous misrule. When they entered public service, these patriotic men and women raised their right hand and made the following noble vow:

“I do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic…”

A domestic enemy of the Constitution is poised to take the reins of the executive branch, and civil servants will soon be on the front lines opposing Donald Trump’s quest for dictatorial power. In his first term, senior officials – “the adults in the room” – often restrained Trump’s most regressive, undemocratic impulses. Judging from his recently unveiled “most obedient dipshit” personnel strategy, Trump thinks he has learned from his past mistakes. Tom Nichols summarized Trump’s nominees in The Atlantic yesterday: “If you want to assemble the infrastructure of an authoritarian government, this is how you do it.”

Yet his power over the executive branch and its employees is not absolute. Even a would-be American autocrat faces limits – not just constitutional or legal ones, but the practical realities of managing a sprawling government bureaucracy. To foil Trump a second time will take a more subversive and decentralized approach, and it depends in part on the bravery of our nation’s civil servants.’


And we have semi-functional courts that can be used to oppose the fascist Trump regime – the glacial pace of the judicial process that benefited Trump as a private citizen will work to delay his authoritarian agenda.
 
Fascism doesn’t come for every generation, but it has come for ours.

‘This is not a fight on the beaches of Normandy, but in our own country. This article begins a series on what opposing Donald Trump and his movement can look like. I hope you will join me as these progress.

For this article, I want to focus on how everyday Americans in the federal government can stand up to Donald Trump and his riotous misrule. When they entered public service, these patriotic men and women raised their right hand and made the following noble vow:

“I do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic…”

A domestic enemy of the Constitution is poised to take the reins of the executive branch, and civil servants will soon be on the front lines opposing Donald Trump’s quest for dictatorial power. In his first term, senior officials – “the adults in the room” – often restrained Trump’s most regressive, undemocratic impulses. Judging from his recently unveiled “most obedient dipshit” personnel strategy, Trump thinks he has learned from his past mistakes. Tom Nichols summarized Trump’s nominees in The Atlantic yesterday: “If you want to assemble the infrastructure of an authoritarian government, this is how you do it.”

Yet his power over the executive branch and its employees is not absolute. Even a would-be American autocrat faces limits – not just constitutional or legal ones, but the practical realities of managing a sprawling government bureaucracy. To foil Trump a second time will take a more subversive and decentralized approach, and it depends in part on the bravery of our nation’s civil servants.’


And we have semi-functional courts that can be used to oppose the fascist Trump regime – the glacial pace of the judicial process that benefited Trump as a private citizen will work to delay his authoritarian agenda.
Fascists are leftists, facediaper.
Moved yet?
 
And we have semi-functional courts that can be used to oppose the fascist Trump regime – the glacial pace of the judicial process that benefited Trump as a private citizen will work to delay his authoritarian agenda.
Don’t be so certain. They saw the mistakes of January 6,2021. This time they’ll be coming armed and ready to use whatever force is necessary to get things done across the country.
 
Fascism doesn’t come for every generation, but it has come for ours.

‘This is not a fight on the beaches of Normandy, but in our own country. This article begins a series on what opposing Donald Trump and his movement can look like. I hope you will join me as these progress.

For this article, I want to focus on how everyday Americans in the federal government can stand up to Donald Trump and his riotous misrule. When they entered public service, these patriotic men and women raised their right hand and made the following noble vow:

“I do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic…”

A domestic enemy of the Constitution is poised to take the reins of the executive branch, and civil servants will soon be on the front lines opposing Donald Trump’s quest for dictatorial power. In his first term, senior officials – “the adults in the room” – often restrained Trump’s most regressive, undemocratic impulses. Judging from his recently unveiled “most obedient dipshit” personnel strategy, Trump thinks he has learned from his past mistakes. Tom Nichols summarized Trump’s nominees in The Atlantic yesterday: “If you want to assemble the infrastructure of an authoritarian government, this is how you do it.”

Yet his power over the executive branch and its employees is not absolute. Even a would-be American autocrat faces limits – not just constitutional or legal ones, but the practical realities of managing a sprawling government bureaucracy. To foil Trump a second time will take a more subversive and decentralized approach, and it depends in part on the bravery of our nation’s civil servants.’


And we have semi-functional courts that can be used to oppose the fascist Trump regime – the glacial pace of the judicial process that benefited Trump as a private citizen will work to delay his authoritarian agenda.

^^^This is what real insurrection looks like.
 

Delay, Leak, Disobey: How to Counter Trump 2.0 from Within​


BlueHand.webp
NOTE TO FBI: sedition, insurrection, treason, conspiracy.
 
Fascism doesn’t come for every generation, but it has come for ours.

‘This is not a fight on the beaches of Normandy, but in our own country. This article begins a series on what opposing Donald Trump and his movement can look like. I hope you will join me as these progress.

For this article, I want to focus on how everyday Americans in the federal government can stand up to Donald Trump and his riotous misrule. When they entered public service, these patriotic men and women raised their right hand and made the following noble vow:

“I do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic…”

A domestic enemy of the Constitution is poised to take the reins of the executive branch, and civil servants will soon be on the front lines opposing Donald Trump’s quest for dictatorial power. In his first term, senior officials – “the adults in the room” – often restrained Trump’s most regressive, undemocratic impulses. Judging from his recently unveiled “most obedient dipshit” personnel strategy, Trump thinks he has learned from his past mistakes. Tom Nichols summarized Trump’s nominees in The Atlantic yesterday: “If you want to assemble the infrastructure of an authoritarian government, this is how you do it.”

Yet his power over the executive branch and its employees is not absolute. Even a would-be American autocrat faces limits – not just constitutional or legal ones, but the practical realities of managing a sprawling government bureaucracy. To foil Trump a second time will take a more subversive and decentralized approach, and it depends in part on the bravery of our nation’s civil servants.’


And we have semi-functional courts that can be used to oppose the fascist Trump regime – the glacial pace of the judicial process that benefited Trump as a private citizen will work to delay his authoritarian agenda.
What a doofus you are, facediaper.
 
Fascism doesn’t come for every generation, but it has come for ours.

‘This is not a fight on the beaches of Normandy, but in our own country. This article begins a series on what opposing Donald Trump and his movement can look like. I hope you will join me as these progress.

For this article, I want to focus on how everyday Americans in the federal government can stand up to Donald Trump and his riotous misrule. When they entered public service, these patriotic men and women raised their right hand and made the following noble vow:

“I do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic…”

A domestic enemy of the Constitution is poised to take the reins of the executive branch, and civil servants will soon be on the front lines opposing Donald Trump’s quest for dictatorial power. In his first term, senior officials – “the adults in the room” – often restrained Trump’s most regressive, undemocratic impulses. Judging from his recently unveiled “most obedient dipshit” personnel strategy, Trump thinks he has learned from his past mistakes. Tom Nichols summarized Trump’s nominees in The Atlantic yesterday: “If you want to assemble the infrastructure of an authoritarian government, this is how you do it.”

Yet his power over the executive branch and its employees is not absolute. Even a would-be American autocrat faces limits – not just constitutional or legal ones, but the practical realities of managing a sprawling government bureaucracy. To foil Trump a second time will take a more subversive and decentralized approach, and it depends in part on the bravery of our nation’s civil servants.’


And we have semi-functional courts that can be used to oppose the fascist Trump regime – the glacial pace of the judicial process that benefited Trump as a private citizen will work to delay his authoritarian agenda.
Sounds like Insurrectionist talk
 
Fascism doesn’t come for every generation, but it has come for ours.

‘This is not a fight on the beaches of Normandy, but in our own country. This article begins a series on what opposing Donald Trump and his movement can look like. I hope you will join me as these progress.

For this article, I want to focus on how everyday Americans in the federal government can stand up to Donald Trump and his riotous misrule. When they entered public service, these patriotic men and women raised their right hand and made the following noble vow:

“I do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic…”

A domestic enemy of the Constitution is poised to take the reins of the executive branch, and civil servants will soon be on the front lines opposing Donald Trump’s quest for dictatorial power. In his first term, senior officials – “the adults in the room” – often restrained Trump’s most regressive, undemocratic impulses. Judging from his recently unveiled “most obedient dipshit” personnel strategy, Trump thinks he has learned from his past mistakes. Tom Nichols summarized Trump’s nominees in The Atlantic yesterday: “If you want to assemble the infrastructure of an authoritarian government, this is how you do it.”

Yet his power over the executive branch and its employees is not absolute. Even a would-be American autocrat faces limits – not just constitutional or legal ones, but the practical realities of managing a sprawling government bureaucracy. To foil Trump a second time will take a more subversive and decentralized approach, and it depends in part on the bravery of our nation’s civil servants.’


And we have semi-functional courts that can be used to oppose the fascist Trump regime – the glacial pace of the judicial process that benefited Trump as a private citizen will work to delay his authoritarian agenda.
~~~~~~
Indeed.... Your hypocrisy is well noted...
**********​
**********​
 
Fascism doesn’t come for every generation, but it has come for ours.

‘This is not a fight on the beaches of Normandy, but in our own country. This article begins a series on what opposing Donald Trump and his movement can look like. I hope you will join me as these progress.

For this article, I want to focus on how everyday Americans in the federal government can stand up to Donald Trump and his riotous misrule. When they entered public service, these patriotic men and women raised their right hand and made the following noble vow:

“I do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic…”

A domestic enemy of the Constitution is poised to take the reins of the executive branch, and civil servants will soon be on the front lines opposing Donald Trump’s quest for dictatorial power. In his first term, senior officials – “the adults in the room” – often restrained Trump’s most regressive, undemocratic impulses. Judging from his recently unveiled “most obedient dipshit” personnel strategy, Trump thinks he has learned from his past mistakes. Tom Nichols summarized Trump’s nominees in The Atlantic yesterday: “If you want to assemble the infrastructure of an authoritarian government, this is how you do it.”

Yet his power over the executive branch and its employees is not absolute. Even a would-be American autocrat faces limits – not just constitutional or legal ones, but the practical realities of managing a sprawling government bureaucracy. To foil Trump a second time will take a more subversive and decentralized approach, and it depends in part on the bravery of our nation’s civil servants.’


And we have semi-functional courts that can be used to oppose the fascist Trump regime – the glacial pace of the judicial process that benefited Trump as a private citizen will work to delay his authoritarian agenda.
So, exactly why do you support a "sprawling government bureaucracy?"
 
Fascism doesn’t come for every generation, but it has come for ours.

‘This is not a fight on the beaches of Normandy, but in our own country. This article begins a series on what opposing Donald Trump and his movement can look like. I hope you will join me as these progress.

For this article, I want to focus on how everyday Americans in the federal government can stand up to Donald Trump and his riotous misrule. When they entered public service, these patriotic men and women raised their right hand and made the following noble vow:

“I do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic…”

A domestic enemy of the Constitution is poised to take the reins of the executive branch, and civil servants will soon be on the front lines opposing Donald Trump’s quest for dictatorial power. In his first term, senior officials – “the adults in the room” – often restrained Trump’s most regressive, undemocratic impulses. Judging from his recently unveiled “most obedient dipshit” personnel strategy, Trump thinks he has learned from his past mistakes. Tom Nichols summarized Trump’s nominees in The Atlantic yesterday: “If you want to assemble the infrastructure of an authoritarian government, this is how you do it.”

Yet his power over the executive branch and its employees is not absolute. Even a would-be American autocrat faces limits – not just constitutional or legal ones, but the practical realities of managing a sprawling government bureaucracy. To foil Trump a second time will take a more subversive and decentralized approach, and it depends in part on the bravery of our nation’s civil servants.’


And we have semi-functional courts that can be used to oppose the fascist Trump regime – the glacial pace of the judicial process that benefited Trump as a private citizen will work to delay his authoritarian agenda.
Both of my Grandfathers fought against real fascist and if alive today it would be a toss up between laughing their asses off or slapping the shit out of you stupid bastards.

Everyone you don't like is not a fascist .
 
Don’t be so certain. They saw the mistakes of January 6,2021. This time they’ll be coming armed and ready to use whatever force is necessary to get things done across the country.
Like the attack on Scalise and the republican softball game? Like two assassination attempts? Like doxxing by Schumer? Like a back-shooting murderer that you democrats seem to idolize? Patience is wearing thin with the democrat BS. When the return fire comes, it won't be limited and it will be accurate.
 
Fascism doesn’t come for every generation, but it has come for ours.

‘This is not a fight on the beaches of Normandy, but in our own country. This article begins a series on what opposing Donald Trump and his movement can look like. I hope you will join me as these progress.

For this article, I want to focus on how everyday Americans in the federal government can stand up to Donald Trump and his riotous misrule. When they entered public service, these patriotic men and women raised their right hand and made the following noble vow:

“I do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic…”

A domestic enemy of the Constitution is poised to take the reins of the executive branch, and civil servants will soon be on the front lines opposing Donald Trump’s quest for dictatorial power. In his first term, senior officials – “the adults in the room” – often restrained Trump’s most regressive, undemocratic impulses. Judging from his recently unveiled “most obedient dipshit” personnel strategy, Trump thinks he has learned from his past mistakes. Tom Nichols summarized Trump’s nominees in The Atlantic yesterday: “If you want to assemble the infrastructure of an authoritarian government, this is how you do it.”

Yet his power over the executive branch and its employees is not absolute. Even a would-be American autocrat faces limits – not just constitutional or legal ones, but the practical realities of managing a sprawling government bureaucracy. To foil Trump a second time will take a more subversive and decentralized approach, and it depends in part on the bravery of our nation’s civil servants.’


And we have semi-functional courts that can be used to oppose the fascist Trump regime – the glacial pace of the judicial process that benefited Trump as a private citizen will work to delay his authoritarian agenda.
Pathetic...
 
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