New News Plan
January 21, 2025
After yesterday’s inauguration, I lay awake most of the night in a state of great agitation. I just can’t bear the idea of four years of this.
It’s funny.. we all assume we only have to endure four years of painful and damaging chaos and will resume normalcy when sane dems return to the White House next presidential election. Some of us are saying we just have to get through two years because, if past is prologue, the Senate and House will likely flip to dem control during the midterms, removing most of the power of a reckless executive branch.
I don’t assume either. His lies about his “successes” will be ever more audacious and his propaganda power has now been greatly enhanced by an entire tech industry eager to suck up to him and reshape their social media platforms to suit his interests. Disinformation will become high art and I’m not convinced dems can/will effectively fight back. I just have no confidence. We are terrible at messaging. And we don’t play dirty. As a result, the bamboozlement will continue and MAGA or some facsimile thereof will remain in control for the rest of my life. The corruption and abuse of power will render the democracy experiment over.
Anyway. Sleep was fitful. I’m deeply anxious.
Which brings me to my news strategy. A work in progress. Hoping to settle on a healthy diet that keeps me informed, but not in a state of fear and agitation. I think what I’m going to do is allow some cable news in the early morning, as it coincides with my exercise schedule. Watching news is what gets me through my exercises. Movies and tv shows are too distracting. But then, no news. I may tune in sometime in the evening for another hit, maybe. Could be Rachel on MSNBC, could be Abby on CNN. Otherwise, it’s Heather, the Pod boys, Robert Reich, Jennifer Rubin, the NYT, Dan Rather’s Steady, WTFJHT, the 1440, the California Sun, maybe some Rick Wilson… just read them. Yeah, many of those lean left. I don’t care.
Indivisible will keep me informed, as well. I really value their people, their network and their action strategies. I will do as they advise. I will continue to do my part, ultimately ineffectual as it may be.
Anyway… I’m sure that’ll get me most of the way there in terms of information.
No news during the day, Kari. That’s an order.
As a marker on what happened yesterday, here’s Heather’s recap.
The tone for the inauguration of Donald J. Trump as the 47th president of the United States at noon today was set on Friday, when Trump, who once trashed cryptocurrency as “based on thin air,” launched his own cryptocurrency. By Sunday morning it had made more than $50 billion on paper. Felix Salmon of Axios reported that “a financial asset that didn’t exist on Friday afternoon—now accounts for about 89% of Donald Trump’s net worth.”
As Salmon noted, “The emoluments clause of the Constitution,” which prohibits any person holding a government office from accepting any gift or title from a foreign leader or government, “written in 1787, hardly envisaged a world where a president could conjure billions of dollars of wealth out of nowhere just by endorsing a meme.” Salmon also pointed out that there is no way to track the purchases of this coin, meaning it will be a way for those who want something from Trump to transfer money directly to him.
Former Trump official Anthony Scaramucci posted that “anyone in the world can essentially deposit money” into the bank account of the president of the United States.
On Sunday, Trump’s wife Melania launched her own coin. It took the wind out of the sales of Trump’s coin, although both coins have disclaimers saying that the coins are “an expression of support for and engagement with the values embodied by” the Trumps, and are not intended to be “an investment opportunity, investment contract, or security of any type.” Her cryptocurrency was worth more than $5 billion within two hours.
CNN noted that the release of the meme coin had raised “serious ethics concerns,” but those who participate in the industry were less gentle. One wrote: “Trump’s sh*tcoin release has caused possibly the greatest overnight loss of credibility in presidential history. He made $60B. Great for Trump family, terrible for this country and hopes we had for the Trump presidency.”
Walter Schaub, former head of the Office of Government Ethics under Trump in his first administration, who left after criticizing Trump’s unwillingness to divest himself of his businesses, wrote to CNN: “America voted for corruption, and that’s what Trump is delivering…. Trump’s corruption and naked profiteering is so open, extreme and pervasive this time around that to comment on any one aspect of it would be to lose the forest for the trees. The very idea of government ethics is now a smoldering crater.”
At a rally Sunday night at the Capital One Arena in Washington, Trump highlighted the performance side of his public persona. He teased the next day’s events and let his audience in on a secret that echoed the “neokayfabe” of professional wrestling by leaving people wondering if it was true or a lie. After praising Elon Musk, he told the crowd “He was very effective. He knows those computers better than anybody. Those vote counting computers. And we ended up winning Pennsylvania like in a landslide. So it was pretty good…. Thank you to Elon.”
This morning, hours before he left office, President Joe Biden pardoned several of the targets of MAGA Republicans, including “General Mark A. Milley, Anthony S. Fauci, the Members of Congress and staff who served on the Select Committee, and the U.S. Capitol and D.C. Metropolitan police officers who testified before the Select Committee.” Biden clarified that the pardons “should not be mistaken as an acknowledgment that any individual engaged in any wrongdoing, nor should acceptance be misconstrued as an admission of guilt for any offense.” He noted, “Our nation owes these public servants a debt of gratitude for their tireless commitment to our country.”
But, he said, “These are exceptional circumstances, and I cannot in good conscience do nothing. Even when individuals have done nothing wrong—and in fact have done the right thing—and will ultimately be exonerated, the mere fact of being investigated or prosecuted can irreparably damage reputations and finances.” He later pardoned his siblings and their spouses to protect them from persecution by the incoming president.
Before he left office, Biden posted on social media: Scripture says: “I have been young and now I’m old yet I have never seen the righteous forsaken.” After all these years serving you, the American people, I have not seen the righteous forsaken. I love you all. May you keep the faith. And may God bless you all.”
This morning, members of the far-right paramilitary organization the Proud Boys marched through the capital carrying a banner that read “Congratulations President Trump” and chanting: “Whose streets? Our streets!”
Two days ago, Trump moved his inauguration into the Capitol Rotunda, where his supporters had rioted on January 6, 2021, because of cold temperatures expected in Washington, D.C. Even with his supporters excluded, the space was cramped, but prime spots went to billionaires: Meta chief executive officer Mark Zuckerberg, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Apple chief executive officer Tim Cook, Google chief Sundar Pichai, TikTok chief executive officer Shou Zi Chew, and Tesla and SpaceX chief executive owner Elon Musk, who appeared to be stoned.
Right-wing media mogul Rupert Murdoch, who launched the Fox News Channel in 1996, was there, as were popular podcaster Joe Rogan and founder of Turning Point USA Charlie Kirk.
Although foreign leaders are not normally invited to presidential inaugurations, far-right foreign leaders President Javier Milei of Argentina and Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni were there, along with a close ally of Chinese president Xi Jinping.
The streets were largely empty as Trump traveled to the U.S. Capitol. Supporters watched from Capital One Arena as Trump took the oath of office, apparently forgetting to put his hand on the Bibles his wife held. After Vice President–elect J.D. Vance had taken the oath of office, sworn in by Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, and Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts had sworn in Trump, the new president delivered his inaugural address.
While inaugural addresses are traditionally an attempt to put the harsh rhetoric of campaigns behind and to emphasize national unity, Trump’s inaugural address rehashed the themes of his campaign rallies. Speaking in the low monotone he uses when he reads from a teleprompter, he delivered an address that repeated the lies on which he built his 2024 presidential campaign.
He said that the Justice Department has been “weaponized,” that Biden’s administration “cannot manage even a simple crisis at home while at the same time stumbling into a continuing catalog of catastrophic events abroad,” that the U.S. has provided “sanctuary and protection for dangerous criminals,” that the government has “treated so badly” the storm victims in North Carolina,” and so on.
Fact-checkers at The Guardian noted the speech was full of “false and misleading claims.”
Trump went on to promise a series of executive orders to address the crises he claimed during his campaign. He would “declare a national emergency at our southern border,” he said, and “begin the process of returning millions and millions of criminal aliens back to the places from which they came.” (Border crossings are lower now than they were at the end of Trump’s last term.) He promised to tell his cabinet members to bring down inflation (it peaked in 2022 and is now close to the Fed’s target of 2%), bring back manufacturing (the Biden administration brought more than 700,000 new manufacturing jobs to the U.S.), end investments in green energy (which has attracted significant private investment, especially in Republican-dominated states), and make foreign countries fund the U.S. government through tariffs (which are, in fact, paid by American consumers).
He also vowed to take the Panama Canal back from Panama, prompting Panama’s president José Raúl Mulino to “fully reject the statements made by” Trump, and Panamanian protesters to burn the American flag.
With a declaration about the Pennsylvania shooting that bloodied his ear, Trump declared that he believes he is on a divine mission. “I felt then, and believe even more so now, that my life was saved for a reason. I was saved by God to make America great again.”
After his inaugural address, former president Biden and former first lady Dr. Jill Biden left, and Trump delivered a much more animated speech to prominent supporters in which CNN’s Daniel Dale said he returned to his “lie-a-minute style.” He rehashed the events of January 6, 2021, and claimed that then–House speaker Nancy Pelosi is “guilty as hell…that’s a criminal offense.”
But the bigger story came in the afternoon, when Trump held a rally at the Capitol One Arena in place of the traditional presidential parade. Supporters there had watched the inauguration on a jumbotron screen, booing Biden and jumping to their feet to cheer at Trump’s declaration that he had been saved by God. In the afternoon, Elon Musk spoke to the crowd, throwing two salutes that right-wing extremists, including neo-Nazis, interpreted as Nazi salutes.
Trump and his family arrived after 5:00 for the inaugural parade. The new president spoke again in rally mode after six, and then staged a demonstration that he was changing the country by holding a public signing of executive orders. Those appeared to be designed, as he promised, to retaliate against those he feels have wronged him. Among other executive orders, he withdrew the United States from the Paris Climate Agreement, drawing approving roars from the crowd.
As Jonathan Swan of the New York Times noted, “Signing executive orders and pardons are two of the parts of the job that Trump loves most. They are unilateral, instantaneous displays of power and authority.” After signing a few executive orders for the crowd, Trump threw the signing sharpies into the crowd, and then he and his family left abruptly.
Back at the White House, retaliation continued. Trump pardoned or commuted the sentences of all of the January 6 rioters who had been convicted of crimes related to the attempt to overthrow the results of the 2020 presidential election, including Enrico Tarrio, the former leader of the Proud Boys who was serving 22 years for seditious conspiracy to overthrow the government of the United States.
His pardon also included Daniel Rodriguez, who was sentenced to 12 and a half years in prison after pleading guilty to tasing Metropolitan Police Officer Michael Fanone, who suffered cardiac arrest and a traumatic brain injury. “Omg I did so much f—ing s— r[ight] n[ow] and got away,” he texted to his gang. “Tazzed the f— out of the blue[.]”
Trump signed an executive order that withdraws the U.S. from the World Health Organization, another that tries to establish that there are only two sexes in the United States, and yet another that seeks to end the birthright citizenship established by the Fourteenth Amendment. He signed one intending to strip the security clearances from 51 people whom he accuses of election interference related to Hunter Biden’s laptop, and has ordered that an undisclosed list of Trump appointees immediately be granted the highest levels of security clearance without undergoing background checks. He also signed one ordering officials “to deliver emergency price relief.”
Behind the scenes today, officials in the Trump administration fired the acting head of the U.S. immigration court system as well as other leaders of that system, and cancelled the CBP One app, an online lottery system through which asylum seekers could schedule appointments with border agents, leaving asylum seekers who had scheduled appointments three weeks ago stranded. Trump officials have also taken down a government website that helped women find health care and understand their rights. They have also removed the official portrait of former chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley from the hallway with the portraits of all the former chairs…now all minus one.
But for all their claims to be hitting the ground running, lawyers noted that some of the executive orders were poorly crafted to accomplish what they claimed—an observer called one “bizarre legal fanfic not really intended for judicial interpretation”—and lawsuits challenging them are already being filed. Others are purely performative, like ordering officials to lower prices.
Further, CNN national security correspondent Natasha Bertrand reported that almost an hour after Trump became president, “current and former Pentagon officials say they don’t know who is currently in charge of the Defense Department,” a key position to maintain U.S. security against adversaries who might take advantage of transition moments to push against American defenses.
Bertrand reported that the Trump transition team had trouble finding someone to serve as acting secretary until the Senate confirms a replacement for Biden’s Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin. Trump’s nominee, former Fox News Channel weekend host Pete Hegseth has had trouble getting the votes he needs, although tonight the Senate Armed Services Committee approved him by a straight party line vote.
Bertrand notes that two senior department officials declined to take on the position. The Trump administration swore in Robert Salesses, deputy director of the branch of the Pentagon that focuses on human resources, facilities, and resource management—who has already been confirmed by the Senate in that position—as acting Defense Secretary.
Beginning tomorrow, the Republicans will have to deal with the fact that the Treasury will hit the debt ceiling and will have to use extraordinary measures to pay the obligations of the United States government.
Non Inauguration Day
January 20, 2025
Saw bits and pieces here and there.. but avoided any direct contact (visual, audible) with the incoming guy. Blah blah blah. Me me me.
He’s a nauseating P.O.S and limiting exposure is the best strategy. He degrades everything he touches and it’s just such soul sucking shit, one assault on our senses after another after another after another…
I had a fantastic workout this morning thanks to a 5-day-course of prednisone. This jury is out, but no denying a kinda miraculous response: mobility increased, pain decreased. How long will it last??
Then I made calls to Senator Padilla’s, Senator Schiff’s and Congressman Thompson’s office on some pending immigration legislation. It’s part of a Monday morning thing I plan to do regularly whenever I’m in town: Action Coffee, hosted by Indivisible Yolo. Small but steady steps and actions in the forward direction. My drip adds to the bigger wave. It was also my nod to MLK day and volunteerism that contributes to the cause of social justice.
Was happy to see the City of Davis maintained its flag at half staff today (rather than bow to the incoming guy’s ego by raising it) in honor of a president whose integrity, honesty and commitment to justice moves me deeply. Thank you Jimmy Carter.

YAY, You’re Here!
January 19, 2025
Not an Early Spring
January 18, 2025
Every year, around the arb, there are these four trees that burst into bloom in January, and every year I say, wow, isn’t it a bit early for spring?? Today walking around the creek with Lisa, Claire and Scouters, we came upon those four trees and wouldn’t you know, they were in full bloom! January 18.
Claire looked them up. They are Japanese Apricots and are known for blooming in late winter… expected to bloom in late winter. For us in Davis, that is January. So, well done, Japanese Apricots!

It was cold!! 36 degrees when we started the walk, 52 degrees when we ended it.


Scout
January 17, 2025
Our first four-legged guest.

I’ll admit, we had some concerns, but she turned into a wonderful guest! She’s well behaved and sweet. Not to mention super soft. I do get why people love their dogs.
Oh, Scout came with owners Lisa and Claire, surrogate parents to Peter for the last four and half years in Ann Arbor. Their lovely relationship started when Peter landed in A2 in the August of 2020 – peak COVID — and was largely sequestered in his coop, unable to travel home for Thanksgiving or Christmas that year, and got from L&C a heavy dose of family love and support.
I do think of Lisa (and now Claire) as family, as Lisa is a famed Hesse girl… one of the 13 kids (three families with nine daughters and four sons between them) who grew up together celebrating Christmas Eves (and a variety of other holidays and gatherings) for a couple of decades. Our dads worked together in the go-go era of aerospace in LA. Lucky us girls, we’ve all stayed in touch and are quite the sisterhood. Particularly nice for me, having zero sisters and three brothers. One could say I had three brothers, sure, but gained eight sisters in the deal.
And a dog!

Garland
January 16, 2025
I read this piece a few days ago. It is so painful.
I think so many of us defended Merrick Garland the last four years, in spite of our frustrations at the pace of the cases against trump, because of the huge injustice of Mitch McConnell having thwarted his nomination to the Supreme Court near the end of Obama’s presidency. Biden then choosing him as his Attorney General five years later seemed like such a sweet comeback! Garland seemed reasoned and seasoned and we trusted his sober, thoughtful, meticulous approach to the job. We expected the justice department, under his dignified leadership, would produce fair and just outcomes for so many things, but especially the resolution of those trump cases. I just hate that it ended up this way.
I do believe he’d have been a superb justice. But I also have to agree that, in the end, his tenure as AG was a disappointment.
Written by a guy, Tony Pentimalli.
Merrick Garland’s tenure as Attorney General is not just a failure—it’s a betrayal of justice at the most critical moment in modern American history. He may have been a great judge. He may have made a great Supreme Court justice. But his ineptitude regarding the slow investigations and prosecutions of Donald Trump is not just tragic—it’s inexcusable. Garland was handed the most urgent and consequential task of our time: holding Trump accountable for his blatant assault on democracy. And he failed. Miserably.
From the day he took office, Garland had everything he needed to act. Trump’s crimes weren’t buried in secret files—they were blasted on live television. The man incited a mob to storm the Capitol. He schemed to overturn an election. He stole classified documents and flaunted his disregard for the law. The evidence was overwhelming. The urgency was clear. Yet Garland hesitated. For months, then years, the Department of Justice appeared paralyzed under his leadership.
Take, for example, the nearly two-year delay in pursuing charges for Trump’s mishandling of classified documents. The public knew about Trump’s actions almost immediately after he left office. Boxes of stolen records sat in his Mar-a-Lago storage room, the subject of media exposés. Yet Garland’s DOJ moved at a snail’s pace, allowing Trump to manipulate the narrative and undermine public confidence in the investigation. Or consider the January 6 investigation. While Garland’s DOJ pursued hundreds of small-scale rioters—citizens who broke windows and trespassed—they ignored the architects of the insurrection. Rudy Giuliani, John Eastman, and Trump himself skated free while their foot soldiers faced justice. This isn’t just mismanagement; it’s dereliction of duty.
Garland’s inability to distinguish between caution and paralysis has left the Department of Justice in shambles. A recent CNN report revealed just how much time and effort his DOJ wasted chasing known rabbit holes—dead-end investigations that served no purpose but to delay the inevitable. Meanwhile, prosecutors like Fani Willis in Georgia and Alvin Bragg in New York exposed Garland’s timidity by acting swiftly and decisively on crimes committed within their jurisdictions. Garland’s reluctance to aggressively pursue justice didn’t just slow progress—it gave Trump and his allies precious time to regroup, radicalize millions further, and continue poisoning the political discourse.
This wasn’t caution. This wasn’t prudence. It was cowardice. And the consequences are staggering.
Garland’s inaction allowed Trump to remain the dominant figure in American politics. His failure sent a chilling message to the nation: that the powerful don’t face the same accountability as everyone else. Public faith in the Department of Justice—a cornerstone of democracy—has been shattered. Millions of Americans now question whether the rule of law even applies to the rich and well-connected. Trumpism, with its lies, hatred, and authoritarianism, has taken root, not because Trump is uniquely brilliant, but because Garland’s inaction allowed it to fester unchecked.
The damage Garland has done won’t just last a few years. America will suffer the consequences of his failures for decades, if not a century. Millions of Americans no longer believe in democracy or the rule of law, not because Trump convinced them, but because Garland’s inaction allowed them to believe he might be right.
The Attorney General had a moral obligation to act—not cautiously, not incrementally, but decisively. His job wasn’t just to follow procedure; it was to protect the republic. And he didn’t. He squandered the chance to stop the descent into chaos. He watched from the sidelines as Trump’s propaganda machine rewrote the narrative. His failure to act with the urgency the moment demanded is an unforgivable betrayal of the American people.
Merrick Garland will not be remembered as a protector of justice or a defender of democracy. He will be remembered as the man who stood by while democracy burned, paralyzed by fear, and too timid to act. His legacy is failure. History will not forgive him. Neither should we.
Do you agree?
What Evacuation Looks Like
January 15, 2025
I wanted to make sure my family history blog includes these few shots, even as the fire threat in LA has subsided a bit (winds haven’t died down just yet and the state still hasn’t gotten any rain so the risk hasn’t completely been eliminated).
These were from last week. The John Frames evacuated their home, way up the hill in Arcadia, pretty much on the wilderness boundary line. Arcadia is a bit east of the Eaton fire that destroyed Altadena. The fire crews used their back yard as a gathering spot, or staging area of sorts, or so it looks from these pictures. The crews had thrown all flammables into the pool, had beaten back the flames — which came within 20 feet of John and Maita’s property — and here are enjoying some cold drinks before returning to work. I think that’s about the story.
You can see the fire line here…. some shrubs still smoldering.

That’s a lotta firemen…


Scarily close. They’re back home now. Maita says there’s a bit of survivor’s guilt, but they’re happy to be repopulating their pool deck and sweeping up ash and wind debris…. rather than the alternative.
Out the Window
January 14, 2025
Was driving home last night (after a great massage) and caught this view out the passenger window, looking due West on Russell Boulevard toward Winters. I really miss the canopy of walnut trees that used to characterize this road into Davis.. but without the trees, you get a pretty nice view of the sun setting over the farms.
Picture’s a bit messy with the reflections.

What is Strength?
January 12, 2025
This is what I want:

This is what we got:
After he invades Greenland, swallows up Canada and takes by force the Panama Canal, little trump wants to rename the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America… or as the below suggests:

Meanwhile, one by one, major newspapers and social media platforms are bending to his will. His latest conquest Mark Zuckerberg, who’s decided that Facebook doesn’t need fact checkers after all.

Robert Reich wrote a piece a couple days ago about the incoming administration’s strategy to neutralize four key backstops of democracy. I found this substack terrifying:
Trump and his MAGA allies are already targeting the four major pillars of resistance to Trump during his first term.
As we prepare for Trump’s second regime — which promises to be far worse than the first — it’s important to do what we can to protect and fortify these four centers of opposition.
1. Universities
University faculties are dedicated to finding and exposing the truth — which has often meant calling out Trump’s lies. But Trump has warned that he’ll change the criteria for university accrediting in order to force university faculties into line.
In a campaign video, he said, “Our secret weapon will be the college accreditation system … When I return to the White House, I will fire the radical left accreditors that have allowed our colleges to become dominated by Marxist Maniacs.”
Authorized by the federal government, these accreditors are essential to college operations. If a college isn’t accredited, it can’t get federal funds.
Trump’s Project 2025 calls for replacing the current system of independent, nonpartisan accreditors with more politically pliable state accreditors. This would have disastrous effects.
Many of the worst educational gag orders at the state level, along with DEI bans and faculty tenure bans, have been voted down or toned down because state legislators realized they were putting their schools’ accreditation status in jeopardy. If Project 2025’s recommendations are adopted, that guardrail disappears.
Trump has also threatened to increase taxes on university endowments.
Republicans in Congress believe they were instrumental in getting the presidents of Columbia, the University of Pennsylvania, and Harvard to resign over their alleged failures to stop protests against Israel’s bloodbath in Gaza. Some are eager to resume their attacks on major universities.
2. Nonprofits
America’s nonprofits have been at the forefront of efforts to protect the environment, voting rights, and immigrants’ rights. Trump and his allies are seeking to stop nonprofit activism.
The Republican House has already passed a bill that would empower the Treasury to eliminate the tax-exempt status of any nonprofit it deems to be supporting terrorism. An identical or similar bill could come across Trump’s desk after being reintroduced in the next Congress.
The legislation doesn’t distinguish between foreign and domestic terrorism — whether real or imagined — thereby making it easier for Trump’s authorities to intimidate nonprofit personnel and donors.
We’ve already seen something like this at the state level. In Texas, state authorities have attempted to shut down charities that assist immigrants. Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita has launched a probe of nonprofits, including the God Is Good Foundation, that have allegedly conspired to bring noncitizens to the state.
3. The media
I’ve been a critic of the mainstream media’s tendency to give “both sides” credence even when one side is clearly in the wrong and to “sanewash” some of Trump’s and his enablers’ rants.
But journalists are an important bulwark against tyranny — which is why Trump and his allies are seeking to intimidate news outlets that have criticized or questioned Trump.
The flurry of defamation lawsuits — such as Trump launched against ABC (and ABC caved to) and the Des Moines Register — is the latest sign. Trump and his allies have also discussed revoking networks’ broadcast licenses and eliminating funding for public radio and television.
Kash Patel, Trump’s nominee to head the FBI, has threatened to “take on the most powerful enemy that the United States has ever seen, and no it’s not Washington, D.C., it’s the mainstream media and these people out there in the fake news. That is our mission!”
Already social media platforms such as Musk’s X and Meta’s Facebook and Instagram have caved to Trump, allowing vicious authoritarian lies to be magnified unimpeded.
4. Organized labor
In the 1950s and 1960s, labor unions were viewed as a source of countervailing power because of their activism on behalf of the working class and their significant political clout.
In those days, a third of workers in the private sector were union members. But today, only 6 percent of private-sector workers are union members, and it’s far from clear that organized labor will be an active source of resistance to Trump. (If government workers are included, the percentage of American workers who are members of unions is around 10 percent.)
Trump has warned organized labor that he will oppose their efforts to organize. The president of the Teamsters Union even appeared at the National Republican Convention in support of Trump.
***
Each of these centers of resistance to Trump has been a powerful source of truth-telling in America. It’s no surprise that all have been targeted by Trump and his allies.
We need to be vigilant and do what we can to protect and fortify them. Remember: We lose only if we stop fighting.

