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Kilder til DR: Trumps folk 'bestak' hjemløse og socialt udsatte med hotelmiddag for at lege Trump-støtter | Udland | DR

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På X omtales de fremmødte grønlændere i MAGA-kasketter som "lokalsamfundet i Nuuk".

Men flere kilder siger nu til DR, at en portion af de personer, der optræder i videoen fra Trumps kampagnefolk og i den video, Ekstra Bladet har optaget med middagsgæsterne, er hjemløse og socialt udsatte, der ofte befinder sig ude foran brugsen i Nuuk (Brugseni, red), der ligger lige overfor Hotel Hans Egede.

- Det er hjemløse og gamle mennesker, der ikke har til dagen og vejen, der pludselig kan spise på en restaurant, de aldrig har været i nærheden af, siger Tom Amtoft, der har boet i Nuuk i 28 år. Han genkender flere af ansigterne på billederne fra besøget på Hotel Hans Egede.

- Det eneste, de skal gøre, er, at tage en kasket på og være med i Trump-stabens videoer. De bliver bestukket, og det er dybt usmageligt, lyder kritikken fra Tom Amtoft.

Men kan man ikke sagtens mene, at Trump ville være god for Grønland, selvom man er socialt udsat?

- Selvfølgelig. Alle har ret til en mening. Men jeg synes, at man udstiller dem. Og det er jo også langt fra sandheden, siger Tom Amtoft.

Han observerede selv Trump-folkenes forsøg på at få folk til at tage MAGA-kasketterne og videregive Trump-positive budskaber til kameraet.

- Det var en meget aggressiv og selektiv udvælgelse af folk, der kunne sige, at Grønland skulle købes, siger Tom Amtoft.

DR Nyheder har kontaktet Brugseni i Nuuk for at høre, om de også genkender nogle af de personer, der spiste frokost med Trump Jr., som de personer, der plejer at stå ude foran Brugsen. Det gør man.

- Flere medarbejdere i Brugseni Nuuk bekræfter, at Trump Jr’s PR-folk gik rundt på gaden foran butikken og delte MAGA-kasketter ud, samtidig med at de inviterede til gratis frokost på Hotel Hans Egede.

- I videoen ses flere, der er kendt i bybilledet foran butikken. Det virkede som om, at PR-folkene hurtigt inviterede en gruppe tilfældige mennesker ind, og flere af dem var ikke klar over, hvad det var, de deltog i, siger Benny Reffeldt Otte, der er marketing- og kommunikationschef i Brugseni.

Han understreger dog også, at det generelt var et "bredt" udsnit af befolkningen, der deltog i middagen.

Han bekræfter desuden, at flere af de personer, der optræder på et billede fra baren Daddy's i Nuuk sammen med Trump Jr., er nogle, man kender fra foran butikken.

Trump Jr. har delt billedet flere steder med teksten "Grønland elsker Amerika og Trump".

DR Nyheder har talt med Jørgen Boassen, der blandt andet viste Trump Jr. og hans folk rundt, og hjalp Trump-staben med at finde grønlændere, der ville tage imod Trump i lufthavnen.

Han afviser, at man skulle have "hvervet" blandt de socialt udsatte foran brugsen.

- De stod selv uden for hotellet og viste interesse.

Han bekræfter dog, at der deltog socialt udsatte i frokosten på Trumps regning.

Det grønlandske folketingsmedlem Aaja Chemnitz (IA) fortæller også til DR, at hun genkender flere af de personer, der deltog i middagen på Hotel Hans Egede fra gadebilledet for eksempel foran brugsen.

- Det er folk, som man har inviteret fra sociale medier eller hentet ind til formålet.

En metode hun kritiserer i skarpe vendinger.

- Jeg synes ikke, at det er i orden. Som jeg kan se det, har man givet folk et gratis måltid, mod at de tager en kasket på og er statister i video til sociale medier og podcast.

- Jeg kan konstatere, at der i hvert fald er en del af dem, der står på billedet, der ikke er politisk aktive, siger Aaja Chemnitz.

Så du står tilbage med en fornemmelse af, at Trump-folkene har "købt" de her folk til deres kampagne?

- Der findes ikke gratis frokost. Grønland er allerede great og skal ikke købes af Trump, siger Aaja Chemnitz.

Steffen Kretz, DR's internationale korrespondent, er lige nu i Nuuk. Han talte tirsdag med en af de personer, der havde været til middag med Trump Jr. og Trump-staben.

- Han forklarede, at han holdt til under en gangbro, hvor han stod sammen med nogle andre, der ikke havde noget at tage sig til.

- Han var bare gået rundt på gaden, og så var Trumps folk kommet hen og havde spurgt ham, ”hey, vil du med op og have mad på byens bedste restaurant?”, fortæller Steffen Kretz.

DR Nyheder har spurgt Trumps kontor, hvad man siger til kritikken af fremgangsmåden på presseturen i Grønland. De er ikke vendt tilbage på vores henvendelse.

Jørgen Boassen, der ikke er bleg for at kalde sig 'Grønlands største Trump-fan, fortæller dog, at både 'almindelige' borgere og socialt udsatte deltog i frokosten på Hotel Hans Egede.

Han forstår dog ikke kritikken, da det ifølge ham var vigtigt for Trump Jr. at mødes med alle samfundslag.

- De er ikke blevet bestukket eller noget som helst, siger Jørgen Boassen, der understreger, at det langt fra kun var socialt udsatte, der deltog i middagen.

Så du er uforstående overfor kritikken?

- Ja, og folk kunne frit sige deres mening. Der var også folk, der sagde, at de ikke var så vilde med Trump. Men hvis man er imod Trump, så er det nemt at misforstå vores hensigt med vilje, siger Jørgen Boassen.

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Watch Duty App Creator Says He'll Never Pull an OpenAI

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Watch Duty shot to the top of the Apple App Store charts on Wednesday, racking up roughly half a million downloads in just a day as three brutal wildfires raged through Southern California, killing at least five people and forcing thousands to evacuate. The app gives users the latest alerts about fires in their area and has become a vital service for millions of users in the western U.S. struggling with the seemingly constant threat of deadly wildfires—one major reason it had over 360,000 unique visits from 8:00-8:30 a.m. local time Wednesday. And the man behind Watch Duty promises that as a nonprofit, his organization has no plans to pull an OpenAI and become a profit-seeking enterprise.

Watch Duty was created in 2021 by John Mills, the founder and CEO, who was inspired to build an app after experiencing frightening wildfires in 2019 and 2020 near his home in Sonoma County, California. Mills, a tech entrepreneur who sold his company Zenput a few years ago, said he couldn’t find the information he needed online and was doing extensive research on who would have the most up-to-date info. Mills evacuated his property during the Walbridge Fire in 2020 and decided he needed to take action.

“I spent day and night for eight days just up all night listening to radios, digging through the internet, and just realized this was a broken, broken problem,” Mills said. “And a lot of the people who got me through that fire are actually now employees of my company.”

Mills said those people guided him through his issues and it took him about six more months before he realized that the same people who helped him were the key to this problem—because Watch Duty isn’t just one guy who coded an app, though Mills did that himself. It’s a team of people who actually make the thing work. Watch Duty covers 22 states and has 15 full-time staff, seven of them reporters who provide updates on the app, and dozens of volunteers.

“Surprisingly, it only took us about 80 days to get [Watch Duty] off the ground,” said Mills, noting that it’s a pretty lightweight app. “The key was really the reporters themselves, the radio operators, right?”

Mills said he just needed to explain to people who might work on the app that he wasn’t “some Silicon Valley tech bro trying to profit off disaster,” but just a guy who was concerned about protecting his own property during wildfires and thought it could be useful to others. They launched in just three California counties in August 2021 but gained 50,000 users in the span of just a couple of weeks. Last year, Watch Duty had 7.2 million users, up from 1.9 million the year earlier.

“Engineering taught me to engineer, but then as I got older, you realize that like, if you build it, they won’t come, right?” Mills said. “Like why are you building it? Why does this matter, right? How do you get this to market? How do you really leverage technology to be able to make a difference in the world?”

That’s when it clicked for Mills. He told Gizmodo it was all about getting emergency radio monitors who had the latest information and pushing what they knew onto an app as reporters.

The organization was founded as a non-profit 501(c)(3) and strives to be transparent about its finances and work in the public interest. The app is free but users can subscribe for additional features that are neat, though not vital to keeping people safe, like information on where air tankers may be flying at any given moment.

Watch Duty brought in $2 million in revenue last year from 65,500 paying members, an additional $600,000 from individual donors, and a $2 million grant from Google. The organization also received a $1 million grant from a wealthy businessperson who has opted to remain anonymous, Mills tells Gizmodo. Watch Duty’s website includes a 2024 annual report that breaks down where its money goes and what goals the organization has for 2025.

“We’re trying to find a way to make a sustainable nonprofit that supports the free version without having to do this horrible idea of like fundraising in December because you’re not going to make your budget in January, and throw a bunch of galas and beg people for money,” said Mills.

In 2012 Mills founded Zenput, a tech platform used by restaurants for inventory and scheduling, and sold the company in 2022. His father was both a cabinet maker and an executive with IBM, which is one reason he’s been working with computers since he was a young kid.

“I grew up in a wood shop with a computer, right? So I’ve been writing code since I was eight. Before that, I grew up working with my hands. And so a lot of my life has been in technology,” said Mills. At eight, he was too young to work with the power tools his dad used for cabinet-making, so he would “go use the computer and start hacking.”

Mills understands the gravity of what he’s created and the vital resource it can be in life-threatening situations. “When Watch Duty goes off in your pocket, it’s because something bad’s happening,” said Mills.

The app has received recognition both locally in California and nationally, with an invitation to an Innovation Roundtable at the White House back in October 2024. The organization is looking to expand into other states and cover other types of natural disasters like floods.

“We call this company Watch Duty, not Fire Duty on purpose, right?” Mills said. “We knew from the beginning it was about geospatial problems. If people have to migrate, that’s the business we want to be in.”

Mills promises that his nonprofit has no plans to shift from a non-profit model to something more profitable, like OpenAI recently did in a move that raised more than a few eyebrows.

“Unlike OpenAI, we’re not changing. We’re not for sale. That’s nonsense behavior,” Mills said, describing the sneaky corporate structure of OpenAI. “There’s no shell companies. There’s no other owner or anything up underneath the corporation on purpose.”

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‘It’s Total Chaos Internally at Meta Right Now’: Employees Protest Zuckerberg’s Anti LGBTQ Changes

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Meta employees are furious with the company’s newly announced content moderation changes that will allow users to say that LGBTQ+ people have “mental illness,” according to internal conversations obtained by 404 Media and interviews with five current employees. The changes were part of a larger shift Mark Zuckerberg announced Monday to do far less content moderation on Meta platforms. 

“I am LGBT and Mentally Ill,” one post by an employee on an internal Meta platform called Workplace reads. “Just to let you know that I’ll be taking time out to look after my mental health.” 

On Monday, Mark Zuckerberg announced that the company would be getting “back to our roots around free expression” to allow “more speech and fewer mistakes.” The company said “we’re getting rid of a number of restrictions on topics like immigration, gender identity, and gender that are the subject of frequent political discourse and debate.” A review of Meta’s official content moderation policies show, specifically, that some of the only substantive changes to the policy were made to specifically allow for “allegations of mental illness or abnormality when based on gender or sexual orientation.” It has long been known that being LGBTQ+ is not a sign of “mental illness,” and the false idea that sexuality or gender identification is a mental illness has long been used to stigmatize and discriminate against LGBTQ+ people.

Earlier this week, we reported that Meta was deleting internal dissent about Zuckerberg's appointment of UFC President Dana White to the Meta board of directors.

Do you work at Meta? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at +1 202 505 1702.
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Trump And His Allies Follow Well Worn Playbook To Gloat Over Devastating LA Wildfires - TPM – Talking Points Memo

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As a series of devastating wildfires ravages parts of Southern California, Donald Trump and his allies have seized on the moment to gloat, spread disinfo and politicize the still unfolding tragedy. 

The fires, which began Tuesday and have spread rapidly due to 80 miles-per-hour Santa Ana winds, have so far killed five people, destroyed thousands of homes and businesses, and have forced almost 180,000 people to evacuate. One of the fires in the Pacific Palisaides, which has burned over 17,000 acres, has now been named the most destructive fire in Los Angeles history and has yet to be contained.

Despite the enormous gravity of the tragedy, figures on the right, including Trump and Elon Musk, have used the ongoing devastation as an opportunity to blast Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom for the natural disaster, and to promote blatantly false information about why this tragedy has become so disastrous.

It’s a toxic and familiar strategy among right-wingers in the face of tragedy, Bill Adair, founder of PolitiFact and author of “Beyond the Big Lie,” said in an interview with TPM.

“This is a rerun of what we have seen in other tragedies,” he said. “The tragedies become political and the lies come from the right. And it’s just sadly predictable and it just seems to happen every time.”

Right-wingers flooded the internet with misinformation and conspiracy theories following the East Palestine train derailment in February 2023. Trump and his allies were behind similar efforts to boost disinfo about the FEMA response to hurricane damage in North Carolina this fall, as well. And just last week, Trump was personally spreading debunked information about the attack in New Orleans over New Years, attempting to make the tragic incident a border control issue. 

“We’re so early in the Los Angeles fires that we don’t know the details about the challenges that the firefighters are facing,” Adair continued. “But in the absence of facts, the people on the right have filled it with these unsubstantiated claims.” 

On Wednesday, Trump took to Truth Social to comment on the disaster, saying: “One of the best and most beautiful parts of the United States of America is burning down to the ground. It’s ashes, and Gavin Newscum should resign. This is all his fault!!!”

And in a separate post the same day, Trump claimed that Newson “refused to sign the water restoration declaration put before him that would have allowed millions of gallons of water, from excess rain and snow melt from the North, to flow daily into many parts of California, including the areas that are currently burning in a virtually apocalyptic way.”

“I will demand that this incompetent governor allow beautiful, clean, fresh water to FLOW INTO CALIFORNIA! He is the blame for this. On top of it all, no water for fire hydrants, not firefighting planes,” Trump said. 

In response to Trump’s “water restoration declaration” claims,  Newsom’s office clarified in a post on X that no such document exists and that the claim is “pure fiction.”

Billionaire Elon Musk also seized on the moment to politicize the disaster, blaming the situation on diversity, equity, and inclusion policies in California. In response to a video clip on X announcing the LA city council’s vote to appoint the first woman to lead the Los Angeles Fire Department, Musk wrote, “DEI means people DIE.”

And Fox News host Jesse Waters blamed Native Americans and Newsom for the devastation saying in a news segment on Wednesday that “Gavin’s been tearing down dams. Why? Because the Indians wanted some of the river back so they could catch salmon. Gavin didn’t just knock down one dam for the Indians, he knocked down all four.”

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"Pizzagate" gunman killed by Kannapolis police after he pulls gun on officer - Salisbury Post | Salisbury Post

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KANNAPOLIS — Police released details Thursday morning on a Jan. 4 incident in which a police officer shot a suspect who reportedly pulled a gun on the officer. The suspect died two days later in the hospital.

According to police, a Kannapolis officer was patrolling North Cannon Boulevard about 10 p.m. when he saw a gray 2001 GMC Yukon being driven by a person the officer knew had an outstanding arrest warrant. The officer stopped the car, and while talking with the driver, recognized that the passenger was also someone with an outstanding warrant.

Two additional Kannapolis police officers arrived to help with the stop, and the original officer went around to the passenger side of the car and opened the door to arrest Edgar Maddison Welch of Salisbury.

When the officer opened the door, Welch pulled a handgun from his jacket and pointed it in the direction of the officer. That officer and a second officer who was standing at the rear passenger side of the Yukon gave commands for Welch to drop the gun. When he refused, both officers fired their duty weapon at Welch, striking him.

Medical assistance was immediately summoned for Welch, and he was transported to Atrium Health Cabarrus for care and treatment. He was later taken to Atrium Health Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte where he died on Jan. 6.

The three officers on the traffic stop, along with the driver and a back seat passenger of the Yukon were all uninjured in this incident.

The officers who fired their duty weapon during this incident are Officer Brooks Jones and Officer Caleb Tate. A third officer who was on scene at the time of the shooting did not fire his duty weapon.

The investigation of this incident remains ongoing by the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation (SBI) and the officers who fired their duty weapon remain on administrative leave as is standard protocol. The outstanding warrant for arrest on Welch was for a felony probation violation. No additional details regarding this incident will be provided until the conclusion of the investigation and a decision has been made by Cabarrus County District Attorney Ashlie Shanley.

In accordance with Kannapolis Police Department policy and procedure, an outside law enforcement agency is requested by the department to investigate any incident involving a member of the department whose actions result in the death or serious injury to a member of the public. That practice is designed to prevent bias during the investigation and the findings of the investigation are presented to the District Attorney without any influence by a member of the department. To protect the integrity of these investigations, the amount of information provided to the public is limited until the investigating agency feels comfortable with releasing more details of an incident. After consultation with the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation, Kannapolis police reached that point and have released more details.

This was not the first time Welch had interactions with police. He pleaded guilty in March of 2017 to federal charges of assault with a dangerous weapon and transporting a firearm over state lines in the incident that has come to be known as “Pizzagate.”

In 2016, Welch fired an AR-15 rifle inside a pizza restaurant in Washington, D.C., saying he was there to save children he believed were being held as part of a child abuse sex ring. His theory came from a baseless Internet rumor that the Comet Ping Pong pizzeria was the home of a Satanic child sex abuse ring involving top Democrats such as Hillary Clinton. After his arrest, Welch stated “the intel was not 100 percent.”

According to the court description of the incident, Welch went into the Comet Ping Pong brandishing a three-foot-long rifle with a loaded revolver on his hip. Numerous children were in the facility at the time, and both customers and employees ran from the pizzeria as Welch looked around, at one point firing into a closet and damaging a computer. No one was injured and he eventually surrendered to police.

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LeMadChef
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Even a stormtrooper occasionally hits their target.
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Navigating the Nonsense and Propaganda of Clownish Authoritarianism

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A key challenge of our era has been to resist the temptation to constantly rage against Trump’s latest antics – while making sure the silliness and buffoonery of Trumpism doesn’t obscure how extreme and dangerous the situation is. We must not allow ourselves to be lulled into a false sense of security by the clownishness, the ridiculousness of this man and many of his most vocal followers.

Trump’s press conference at Mar-a-Lago on January 7 offered a reminder of how difficult it can be to strike that balance. The man who is about to return to the most powerful political office in the world was his usual outrageous self. A few highlights: Trump announced the name of the Gulf of Mexico would soon be changed to “Gulf of America”; he declared he would use “economic force” to annex Canada and make it an American state; he was adamant “we need Greenland for national security purposes,” and that Denmark should therefore “give it up”; and when asked if he could assure the world he wouldn’t use military or economic coercion to get control over foreign territories like Greenland or the Panama Canal, he replied: “No. I can’t assure you. I’m not going to commit to that. It might be that you’ll have to do something.”

(There was also some windmills hatred, maybe Trump’s weirdest obsession – they are “driving the whales crazy,” the leader of the American Right explained. “Obviously.” But let’s stick with the imperialism part of the press conference.)

Inevitably, everyone across the political spectrum has been talking about Trump’s ramblings. On the Right, the sycophants came out quickly to explain why everything Trump said was brilliant, and those who consider themselves thinkers have been busy coming up with pseudo-sophisticated justifications for how it all fits with a coherent rightwing ideology. Non-MAGA America, meanwhile, has been divided: Do we need to take these proclamations seriously as a specter of what is to come – or dismiss them as silly distractions?

As we are all facing life under a clownish wannabe-authoritarian, it is worth grappling in earnest with the question of how we should calibrate our reactions to Trump. Some may think the “savvy” thing would be to just ignore his outlandish ramblings. As observers and citizens, we indeed need to be judicious about where we focus our energies. But Trump is not some fringe extremist online provocateur who is best dealt with by not dealing with him. And when people reflexively declare his public utterances a distraction, I sometimes find myself wondering: A distraction from what? Let’s not pretend the Trumpian drama is just noise than can be neatly separated from the *real* work of doing politics. There is a fine line between staying focused on the bigger picture and clinging to a version of “normalcy” that has little to do with a political reality shaped and distorted by Trumpian extremism. The president’s words have power, Trump is about to be president – and he comes with a whole machinery of rightwing activists, intellectuals, and media propagandists who will do as he says and do their best to make sure reality adjusts.

Then again, there is little use in being outraged all the time. It is exhausting, mentally and emotionally. Trump won’t stop. We should not let him dictate the conversation so easily. There is also a risk of perpetuating the assertions of dominance behind Trump’s musings. Not much separates raging at his every word from despairing over our supposedly hopeless situation. MAGA desires to project power and strength – something we should subvert rather than confirm. Let’s not indulge the false bravado.

Three questions

Through much of the past decade that he has spent as a leading figure on the Right, Trump has benefited from the fact that somehow, a lot of people steadfastly refuse to take his most radical, most aggressive announcements seriously, while at the same time insisting that he speaks for “real America,” the tribune of the people who we owe deference, whose every word must be amplified. It has been an ideal situation for Trump: He gets the biggest possible platform while never being held accountable for what he chooses to do with it.

We will need to transcend that dynamic and seek a more productive way of reacting to Trump. I believe we should engage Trump’s outlandishness by asking three questions.

1) Whose lives are impacted?

If no one is actually affected in concrete ways by what Trump says, it may not be worth getting all riled up about it. The problem is that as he is the undisputed leader of the American Right and the soon-to-be president of the United States, there is a high chance his words do have real-world consequences. They are speech acts, fueled by power. Think back to September, for instance, when Donald Trump joined JD Vance in trying to incite a pogrom against the Haitian migrant community in Springfield, Ohio. It didn’t matter that almost nothing Trump and Vance said – about Haitians “draining social services” and “eating pets” – had any basis in fact. “Illegal Haitian migrants have descended upon a town of 58,000 people destroying their way of life,” Trump raged. The vile propaganda quickly had its desired effect. Schools and public buildings had to be evacuated because of bomb threats; acts of vandalism against the Haitian community followed; neo-Nazis were marching through town. Life in Springfield, Ohio upended. All based on outrageous lies.

2) How is this supposed to work?

Whenever Trump makes grand proclamations, it is worth thinking about if and how he can actually put them into practice. From the White House, with a Republican trifecta and a hard-right Supreme Court majority, Trump and the extreme Right hold an enormous amount of power. Any analysis of what is to come that doesn’t start there and instead clings to the idea that Trump is simply too “lazy” or “undisciplined” to cause major harm should probably be discarded. But there are still limits to presidential power, to his legal and constitutional authority, and there are still a lot of other players involved on the local, state, and federal level. For example, there is simply no way for Trump to make the rest of the world call the Gulf of Mexico the “Gulf of America.” And no matter how many times leading MAGA operatives declare they want to use the military to put their mass deportation fever dreams into practice, there is no clear mechanism for this to actually happen – the path from “declare an emergency” to “use troops to round up millions of people” is not at all clear.

Inevitably, at this point, someone will say: “Ugh, how are you still talking about Trump as if he gives a sh*t about the constitution or the law?!?” Trust me, I do not need to be reminded who and what Trump is. But it is not just about him. He would need compliance and active complicity from a lot of people and institutions who are under no legal or constitutional obligation to follow his orders. Being lawless does not make Trump omnipotent – and obscuring that distinction is an act of defeatism that only serves the regime. There is a vast gulf between Trump’s authoritarian aspirations and rightwing propaganda on the one hand and the realities of a complex modern state and society on the other. And in that space, politics will continue to happen, possibilities to resist and push back exist.

3) What do Trump’s proclamations reveal about the Right’s animating worldview and Trumpism as a political project?

Whenever Trump says something truly extreme or utterly outlandish, a lot of people chalk it up to “Trump being Trump,” to his inability to stay on message, his tendency to go on crazy tangents and simply make stuff up. But quite often, what may sound idiosyncratically Trump is actually quite in line with – and indicative of – the Right’s broader vision for America. During the election campaign, for instance, Trump was very consistent in focusing on immigration and presenting mass deportation as the central goal of his regime. There was indeed something particularly Trumpian in the way he kept escalating the number of people he wants to deport all the way up to 20 million, 25 million, maybe more. But the focus on how “crazy” the fluctuating numbers were obscured what taking the magnitude seriously should have revealed: What the Trumpist Right desires is a purge of the nation that will not be confined to undocumented people. They have been talking about “denaturalization” for a long time. All the planning operations on the Right, including Project 2025, have been prioritizing immigration. And the hard-right intellectual sphere is openly dreaming about redrawing the boundaries of citizenship and excluding everyone they believe is simply not worthy of inclusion in the body politic. Trump’s raging was capturing the Right’s overall project quite well.

Trump’s bizarre insistence on “territorial expansion,” as the mainstream media describes it in rather euphemistic fashion, can similarly serve as a window into how the MAGA Right sees the world and America’s place in it. The Trumpists are definitely all in: Marjorie Taylor Greene has already announced she will introduce legislation to make the Gulf of Mexico the “Gulf of America.” Senator Tommy Tuberville says “We’ve gotta take the Panama Canal back.” Fox News propaganda is emphasizing the need to annex Greenland “for war purposes,” Elon Musk is X-tweeting about Greenland, and the wannabe-thought leaders on the extreme Right are running with the idea that acquiring Greenland should be “a major priority” for Trump.

This is partly just the work of sycophants who are hoping to curry favor with their Dear Leader. But this isn’t just about Trump and his bonkers ideas. One reason why his imperialist ramblings resonate so much with the Right is that there is a long tradition of such expansionist desires. The Panama Canal, for instance, was an obsession of the radical Right in the 1960s and 70s. As he rose to become the leader of the Republican Party, Ronald Reagan constantly brought it up, indulging in some kind of hyper-nationalist nostalgia. And annexing both Canada and Greenland has been on the radar of the more radical factions of the rightwing alliance since the late 1980s, at least. As Jeet Heer has pointed out, Pat Buchanan explicitly called this his “American Dream” in the spring of 1990. Buchanan plays a key role in the pre-history of Trumpism. In 1992, Buchanan led an – ultimately unsuccessful, at least in the moment – rightwing revolt against the Republican establishment in the GOP primaries. He channeled the frustrations of “paleo-conservatives” who thought the Republican Party was in the hands of elites who did not do nearly enough to push back against the liberal onslaught of racial, cultural, and religious pluralism, who wanted to take a more explicit stance against egalitarian democracy, who demanded more radical measures in defense of an ethno-nationalist vision of “real America” as a white Christian homeland. Crucially, Buchanan was also instrumental in shifting the Right’s focus more explicitly to what came to be called the “culture wars.”

The “paleo-conservatives” saw themselves in the tradition of a more authentic “Old Right” – before the “modern conservatism” of William F. Buckley in the 1950s and 60s, and certainly before the rise of the “neo-conservatives” in the final third of the twentieth century who aggressively supported the idea of projecting American power globally via the liberal international order. The paleos wanted to take the country back to the “America First” vision of the 1940s. That tradition has often – and misleadingly – been described as “isolationist,” because the America Firsters of the forties did not want the United States to enter the war against Hitler. But it was never isolationism. This strand of the American Right has been steadfastly opposed to committing America to any kind of “liberal” order or fighting for “democracy” across the globe. What they have always desired, however, is hegemony in the Western Hemisphere. Their vision is about domination.

To the extent Trumpism has a clear idea about America’s role in the world, it is in line with this “America First” tradition. I doubt Trump’s obsession with Greenland comes from reading Buchanan – or reading anything at all. But it doesn’t necessitate much sophisticated analysis to understand why such dreams of territorial expansion would appeal to him. As a political project, Trumpism promises to restore former glory by purging dangerous outsiders and the “enemy within” from the nation – and by ruthlessly asserting dominance in the world wherever and whenever America wants.

Trumpism is, in many ways, much more a continuation of long-standing ideas and impulses on the radical Right – an exacerbation and radicalization, yes, but not a departure. If we pay attention, his most outlandish ramblings can help us identify those dangerous tendencies and impulses more clearly.

I fear that, after so many years of Trumpism shaping American politics and culture, a lot of people have become so inundated with Trump’s bizarre stunts, so accustomed to his outrageous rhetoric, that they might be numb to how dangerous this is – and how much this isn’t just “Trump being Trump,” but the face of a radicalizing Right in charge of the Republican Party. There is, unfortunately, no law of nature that says democracy can’t be brought down and wars can’t be started by a bunch of clowns if they have enough support from people, parties, and institutions who enable them. It’s all just a farce – until the goons and buffoons are in power. And that’s where we are.

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acdha
12 hours ago
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“Being lawless does not make Trump omnipotent – and obscuring that distinction is an act of defeatism that only serves the regime. There is a vast gulf between Trump’s authoritarian aspirations and rightwing propaganda on the one hand and the realities of a complex modern state and society on the other. And in that space, politics will continue to happen, possibilities to resist and push back exist.”
Washington, DC
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