Starmer's "volatile" was British understatement.
A couple of thought-provoking things from my X feed just now (no news today more terrible than Noem's Goon Squad invading the Ecuadorian embassy and Ilhan Omar getting attacked -- nothing nationally gut-wrenching so far today; are we all sufficiently nerved up and numbed from this year-long shock-and-awe administration campaign yet?):
An
article from a chess master (AND political activist) who knows something about authoritarianism, being Russian:
...Trump appears committed to wrecking the alliances that elevated US power in the last 80 years.
Because he has chosen retreat abroad, he needs another way to project strength. After all, a strongman must look strong in order to live up to the moniker. A demagogue needs enemies.
So the administration wages war on his own country. Authoritarians often cut their teeth on weaker opponents. Before Russia overplayed its hand in Ukraine, Vladimir Putin savaged tiny Chechnya and Georgia.
War is also an opportunity to consolidate power. Trump’s war on Americans is a manufactured crisis aimed at compromising the upcoming midterms. Demands for voter rolls and intimidation by armed men all point to an effort to influence the outcome of November’s elections. Every crime the president’s lieutenants commit opens them up to prosecution should they lose power, so each escalation in this war creates new perverse incentives to interfere in the democratic process...
Emphasis added. I think Kasparov has hit it. That is one major reason why things keep going from bad to worse.
But how can we open the minds of our fellow Americans who are happy with the power-tripping vibes in their small electronic cocoons and get mad when we point out some unpleasant realities of the actual world.
These decent but self-blinded people still outnumber the ones who are in this for the cruelty and other sick thrills, but that proportion is likely to change if things continue to go downhill.
We've already seen federal officers, masked and still unidentified, kill a nonviolent, legal, and peaceful protestor in broad daylight and, thus far, get backed up by their bosses.
Just how much farther downhill will it go?
Short answer: As far as We The People let it.
And I must say, modern America's tolerance for such things is much higher than it was back in the day.
I never thought I'd consider Nixon's "imperial presidency" quaint.
What will be tolerable next week? Next month? Next year? For our children, on both giving and receiving ends?
Longer answer: A Minneapolis paralegal's opinion on one facet of the possible future America (I don't agree with all the positions she takes on X, but she's on point here; I thought Project 2025 was some extreme right-wing fantasy that would never go anywhere; it
is being enacted right now):