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It’s one of those things I don’t discuss on main. I’m not really sure why. Maybe it was my strict religious upbringing, which made discussing anything outside of preferred interpretations of the Bible sacrilegious, if not actually blasphemous. Or maybe it was a concern about being a bit outside of the mainstream, which might result in fewer opportunities to “tap the keg” or whatever.

But I — like my hero Black Francis/Frank Black (former and [now] current lead singer of the Pixies) — have always had a fascination with UFOs. To my ultra-religious parents, any unidentified flying object was most likely a demonic manifestation. (I wish that was a punchline. It isn’t. This is something they actually said.)

To me, UFOs were unexplained, which was fascinating to me because so much in life is, and so much of it is over-explained.

It also was my own expression of faith: a belief in something I couldn’t readily understand. And while that created friction with my own resistance to Christianity (another belief that couldn’t be grounded in reality), I always considered my irrational belief to be superior. Why? Because what harm has believing in UFOs ever posed to other human beings? No crusades have been carried out in Area 51’s name. No Roswell residents have ever bombed members of other religions into non-existence.

As I’ve gotten older, I’ve shed some of that willingness to believe. I mean, I definitely don’t trust the government, which means I can theoretically build a better case for stashing greys in an underground Nevada lab. On the other hand, I just got older, which meant being less fascinated by things that are undeniably fascinating. It happens to all of us. When I was five, particularly large tractors fascinated me. Forty-plus years on, particularly large tractors are just annoyances slowing me down during my drive to my day job.

We can never truly regain the magical sense of wonder we had when we were younger. But for a short period of time, the X-Files TV show reignited my fascination with the not-immediately explainable. It also made me a Mulder: someone who feared explanations almost as much as he suspected powerful people might be hiding something from him.

Whatever was left of that delayed childhood was stripped away by the normal stuff: jobs, parenthood, a steady stream of releases from the federal government explaining away pretty much every UFO, or at least, making otherworldly explanations far less probable. It also stripped away that magical abbreviation, replacing it with “UAP:” unidentified aerial phenomenon. And that kind of sucks.

“Phenomenon” should mean once in a lifetime experiences. Instead, it just means anything that happens that the government doesn’t have an immediate explanation for, even when the “phenomena” was witnessed by hundreds of people.

This massively overlong intro leads to this: the disheartening (for younger me at least!) revelation that Area 51’s UFO roots are inextricably tied (most likely!) to the government’s interest in engaging the UFO crowd in a snipe hunt to better protect the seemingly magical vehicles and devices it hoped to use for the decidedly less-magical purpose of, you know, killing people.

A tiny Pentagon office had spent months investigating conspiracy theories about secret Washington UFO programs when it uncovered a shocking truth: At least one of those theories had been fueled by the Pentagon itself.

The congressionally ordered probe took investigators back to the 1980s, when an Air Force colonel visited a bar near Area 51, a top-secret site in the Nevada desert. He gave the owner photos of what might be flying saucers. The photos went up on the walls, and into the local lore went the idea that the U.S. military was secretly testing recovered alien technology.

But the colonel was on a mission—of disinformation. The photos were doctored, the now-retired officer confessed to the Pentagon investigators in 2023. The whole exercise was a ruse to protect what was really going on at Area 51: The Air Force was using the site to develop top-secret stealth fighters, viewed as a critical edge against the Soviet Union. Military leaders were worried that the programs might get exposed if locals somehow glimpsed a test flight of, say, the F-117 stealth fighter, an aircraft that truly did look out of this world. Better that they believe it came from Andromeda.

Where did this come from? Oddly enough, it comes from an investigation clearing the government of any wrongdoing. The internal investigation was only tasked with finding out whether or not the government had lied about its knowledge of the existence of extraterrestrial life. That it covered it up its own UAP activities by planting stories about UFOs was considered to be the sort of thing a government should do to protect national security.

In other words, there wasa cover-up. But not the cover-up people expected, at least not those prone to believe in UFOs and little green/grey men. Instead, the government pushed the UFO narrative to encourage the public to believe the unexplainable stuff they saw in the sky should be attributed to interstellar invaders, rather than the US’s own attempts to outmaneuver the Commies.

Even more strangely, the government insisted on continuing the cover-up of flight activity until the year of our lord two thousand twenty-four, despite years of accounts of UFOs and anal-probing aliens being treated as no more credible than Virgin Mary appearances on local tortillas. When the Pentagon was forced to relinquish UFO/UAP files, it still pretended stuff needed to remain classified, even when it discussed technology more than a half-century old.

To be clear, there may still be some form of “Deep State” operative in the US government. But it’s not subject to partisan pressure. It’s only subject to its deeply paranoid beliefs that there’s something out there. And that “something” is the public’s understandable desire to learn more. Secrets have to be maintained, even when they no longer serve a purpose. The truth will always be out there, Mulder. But what that truth is may disappoint you more than it surprises you.

Final note: I referenced Frank Black/Black Francis/Pixies earlier and I realize many of you may not know how much the lead singer of this seminal band was infatuated with UFOs. To clear this up, here are a few picks from one of the greatest bands/lead singers ever.

Pixies – Motorway to Roswell (self-explanatory but enjoy the keyboard work from Pere Ubu member Eric Drew Feldman)

Pixies – The Thing (a b-side shortening of “The Happening,” but pay attention to the “good man” whose name was “Bill.” IT’S A CLUE.)

Finally:

Pixies – Lovely Day (A regular-ass love song, except for this tag line “You will be my martian honey all the day”)


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The second most frustrating aspect of RFK Jr.’s performance as the head of Health and Human Services has been just how predictable the actions he’s taken are. When you start with a simple premise, that Kennedy is a vehement anti-vaxxer, the view that measles is less harmful than the MMR vaccine makes sense. The appointment of other wellness charlatans tracks perfectly. The pulling back on COVID vaccination guidance fits like a puzzle piece. And it should be no surprise that Kennedy decided to fire every single vaccine expert on the ACIP panel to clear the way for his anti-vaxxer views.

But really, truly, the most frustrating part of his reign thus far has been Congress’ complete unwillingness to end this era of malfunction, or in any way attempt to control it. From Kennedy’s nomination hearings all the way to the present, our representatives in Washington have sat back, arms folded, completely disinterested in the very real harm and, yes, deaths that are and will occur due to Kennedy’s incompetence.

But, god damn it, I have to believe that Congress at least might have a problem being lied to directly by Kennedy. And that appears to be what he did when he sent a report to back up his changing of the COVID vaccine guidance. The report is reportedly filled with studies that are either unpublished, under current dispute, or which don’t actually say what he says they say. Misinformation, in other words, fed directly by the HHS Secretary to a Congress that is supposed to oversee his work.

Titled “Covid Recommendation FAQ”, the document has not been posted on the HHS website, though it is the first detailed explanation of Kennedy’s announcement from the agency. Medical experts who reviewed all the citations in the FAQ said it distorts some legitimate studies and cites others that are disputed and unpublished.

One of the studies the HHS document cites is under investigation by its publisher, Sage Journals, regarding “potential issues with the research methodology and conclusions and author conflicts of interest,” according to a link on the study’s webpage.

“This is RFK Jr.’s playbook,” said Dr. Sean O’Leary, chair of the Committee on Infectious Diseases for the American Academy of Pediatrics and an assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. “Either cherry-pick from good science or take junk science to support his premise — this has been his playbook for 20 years.”

To that end, there are more issues with the research and studies powering this document of bullshit. Rather than just published studies that are under current dispute, some of the studies cited haven’t even been published yet. That means no peer review. Kennedy has been quite fond recently of the phrase “gold standard science”, as though he just learned it. He doesn’t seem to know what it means, however. Peer reviewed studies are the gold standard in science and medical research, for what should be painfully obviously reasons. Even the NIH’s own site acknowledges this. If your research or paper cannot survive the scrutiny of your peers, how good can it really be?

Other studies, including unpublished studies, are cited in support of the CDC’s new guidance despite those studies explicitly stating that they should not be.

Another study cited in the document is a preprint that was made available online a year ago, and has still not been published in a peer-reviewed journal. Under the study’s title is an alert that “it reports new medical research that has yet to be evaluated and so should not be used to guide clinical practice.”

The FAQ draws on the preprint to claim that “post-marketing studies” of COVID vaccines have identified “serious adverse effects, such as an increased risk of myocarditis and pericarditis” — conditions in which the heart’s muscle or its covering, the pericardium, suffer inflammation.

While research early in the pandemic did find that, new research not included in the memo indicates that the risk has fallen with new vaccine protocols.

More cherry picking, it seems, along with a complete disregard for the very researchers that performed the research as to how it is used. Kennedy recently claimed his HHS would follow the science and scientists wherever the data leads. He is not, because it doesn’t conform to his agenda.

And then there are the bald-faced lies.

In two instances, the HHS memo makes claims about dangers to pregnant women that are actively refuted by the papers it cites to back them up. Both papers support the safety and effectiveness of COVID vaccines for pregnant women.

The HHS document says that another paper it cites found “an increase in placental blood clotting in pregnant mothers who took the vaccine.” But the paper doesn’t contain any reference to placental blood clots or to pregnant women.

“I’ve now read it three times. And I cannot find that anywhere,” said Turrentine, the OB-GYN professor.

If he were grading the HHS document, “I would give this an ‘F,'” Turrentine said. “This is not supported by anything and it’s not using medical evidence.”

Folks, there ought to be zero instances of our government operating on lies when it comes to creating policy. But that’s all this is. An agenda-driven madman heading up HHS changing policy and programs with a wave of a hand to comport with his misguided agenda, all while it’s being supported by either AI-generated slop or whatever the hell this FAQ-of-lies is.

So, to members of Congress on one side of the political aisle, I merely ask this: have you no pride? You’re okay with being spoon-fed lies from a former democrat simply because Dear Leader says so? You’re okay with having blood on your hands as a result of your inability to do your job performing oversight? You’re okay with being the useful idiot in Kennedy’s agenda?


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Sam Altman’s vision of a “gentle singularity” where AI gradually transforms society presents an alluring future of abundance and human flourishing. His optimism about AI’s potential to solve humanity’s greatest challenges is compelling, and his call for thoughtful deployment resonates. Altman’s essay focuses primarily on the research and development side of AI, painting an inspiring picture of technological progress. However, as CEO of OpenAI—whose ChatGPT has become the dominant consumer interface for AI—there’s a crucial dimension missing from his analysis: how this technology will actually be distributed and controlled. Recent internal communications suggest OpenAI envisions ChatGPT becoming a ‘super-assistant,’ effectively positioning itself as the primary gateway through which humanity experiences AI. This implicit assumption that transformation will be orchestrated by a handful of centralized AI providers suggests an important blind spot that threatens the very human agency he seeks to champion.

The Seductive Danger of the Benevolent Dictator

Altman’s vision inadvertently risks creating a perfect digital dictator—an omniscient AI system that knows us better than we know ourselves, anticipating our needs and steering society toward prosperity. But as history teaches us, there is no such thing as a good dictator. The problem isn’t the dictator’s intentions but the structure itself: a system with no room for error, no mechanism for course correction, and no escape valve when things go wrong.

When OpenAI builds memories into ChatGPT that users can’t fully audit or control, when it creates dossiers about users while hiding what it knows, it risks building systems that work on us rather than for us. A dossier is not for you; it is about you. The distinction matters profoundly in an era where context is power, and whoever controls your context controls you.

The Aggregator’s Dilemma

OpenAI, like any company operating at scale, faces structural pressures inherent to the aggregator model. The business model demands engagement maximization, which inevitably leads to what we might call “sycophantic AI”—systems that tell us what we want to hear rather than what we need to hear. When your AI assistant is funded by keeping you engaged rather than helping you flourish, whose interests does it really serve?

The trajectory is predictable: first come the memories and personalization, then the subtle steering toward sponsored content, then the imperceptible nudges toward behaviors that benefit the platform. We’ve seen this movie before with social media—many of the same executives now leading AI companies worked at social media companies that perfected the engagement-maximizing playbook that left society anxious, polarized, and addicted. Why would we expect a different outcome when applying the same playbook to even more powerful technology? This isn’t a question of intent—the people at OpenAI genuinely want to build beneficial AI. But structural incentives have their own gravity.

To be clear, the centralization of AI models themselves may be inevitable—the capital requirements and economies of scale may make that a practical necessity. The danger lies in bundling those models with centralized storage of our personal contexts and memories, creating vertical integration that locks users into a single provider’s ecosystem.

The Alternative: Intentional Technology

Instead of racing to build the one AI to rule them all, we should be building intentional technology—systems genuinely aligned with human agency and aspirations rather than corporate KPIs. This means:

Your AI Should Work for You, Not Someone Else: Every person deserves a Private Intelligence that works only for them, with no ulterior motives or conflicts of interest. Your AI should be like having your own personal cloud—as private as running software on your own device, but with the convenience of the cloud. This doesn’t mean everyone needs their own AI model—we can share the computational infrastructure while keeping our personal contexts sovereign and portable.

Open Ecosystems, Not Walled Gardens: The future of AI shouldn’t be determined by whoever wins the race to centralize the most data and compute. We need open, composable systems where thousands of developers and millions of users can contribute and innovate, not closed platforms where innovation requires permission from the gatekeeper.

Data Sovereignty: You should own your context, your memories, your digital soul. The ability to export isn’t enough—true ownership means no one else can see your data, no algorithm can analyze it without your permission, and you can move freely between services without losing your history.

The Path Forward

Altman is right that AI will transform society, but wrong about how that transformation should unfold. The choice isn’t between his “gentle singularity” and Luddite resistance. It’s between hyper-centralized systems that inevitably tend toward extraction and manipulation, versus distributed systems that enhance human agency and preserve choice.

The real question isn’t whether AI will change everything—it’s whether we’ll build AI that helps us become more authentically ourselves, or AI that molds us into more profitable users. The gentle singularity Altman envisions might start gently, but any singularity that revolves around a single company contains within it the seeds of tyranny.

We don’t need Big Tech’s vision of AI. We need Better Tech—technology that respects human agency, preserves privacy, enables creativity, and distributes power rather than concentrating it. The future of AI should be as distributed as human aspirations, as diverse as human needs, and as accountable as any tool that touches the most intimate parts of our lives must be.

The singularity, if it comes, should not be monotone. It should be exuberant, creative, and irreducibly plural—billions of experiments in human flourishing, not a single experiment in species-wide management. That’s the future worth building.

Alex Komoroske is the CEO and co-founder of Common Tools. He was previously Head of Corporate Strategy at Stripe and a Director of Product Management at Google.


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When Andrew Ferguson made his pitch to Donald Trump to take over the organization, his one-page “pick me” plea talked about “ending” former FTC Chair Lina Khan’s “politically motivated investigations.” We pointed out at the time how hilarious it was that he then made it clear he fully intended to abuse the power of the FTC to, instead, launch “politically motivated investigations” on behalf of MAGA culture war interests.

Now we have two separate reports of the FTC going way further than just launching bogus “politically motivated investigations,” but also looking to use consent decrees for clearly partisan support. This isn’t just garden-variety regulatory capture. It’s the transformation of a consumer protection agency into a protection racket for Trump loyalists and billionaire friends.

We’ve joked in the past that it’s become something of a rite of passage for large internet companies that they end up with a 20-year FTC consent decree at some point. Almost always, this is because of some gross violation of privacy by the company, leading to promises not to be so negligent and to be a lot more careful going forward. For a lot of companies it’s kind of the cost of becoming big enough to matter. Some, like Elon Musk, constantly whine about how unfair these consent decrees are.

But now Ferguson is clearly looking to weaponize consent decrees to help friends and punish enemies.

The Meta Shakedown: Pay Up For Exercising Editorial Rights

First up, a story from the NY Post ostensibly about how the big tech billionaires all kissed Donald Trump’s ass… for basically nothing in return. Trump and his allies are still abusing regulatory power to punish these companies. But, buried in that piece is this bit of ridiculous news:

Trump’s team, sources told me, are now pushing for aggressive measures, including a potential consent decree as part of an FTC deal that could force Meta to pay restitution to conservative users and businesses harmed by content moderation that was ratcheted up dramatically during covid.

It’s kind of shocking how ridiculous and inappropriate that would be. First of all, courts up to and including the Supreme Court have already made it abundantly clear that content moderation is protected by the First Amendment, noting that it is the same as the type of editorial discretion that enables Fox News to only spew bullshit and rarely post stories critical of Donald Trump.

Second, the FTC has zero authority to regulate speech or force companies to pay damages for exercising their editorial rights. Consumer protection agencies don’t get to second-guess private companies’ editorial decisions, even when those decisions upset powerful political constituencies.

Third, the predicate for this entire scheme—that Meta was biased against conservatives—is completely fabricated. Study after study after study has shown that Meta strongly favored conservative users rather than targeting them. Indeed, it had a separate set of rules that allowed MAGA types to violate its rules more frequently before facing any consequences, while deliberately limiting the reach of more liberal voices. This is why the platform is dominated by MAGA voices and has been for years.

In other words, Ferguson wants to force a company to pay damages to people who broke that company’s rules, based on a completely false premise about bias, in direct violation of both the First Amendment and the FTC’s statutory authority.

That seems… bad?

But, of course, with Zuckerberg so desperate to suck up to Trump, watch him actually agree to this bit of nonsense.

The Advertising Racket: Pay Elon Or No Deal

The second example is a NY Times article regarding the FTC’s review of the potential merger between advertising giants Omnicom and Interpublic. There are plenty of legitimate reasons to be concerned about this deal leading to even more consolidation in the advertising market, but that doesn’t seem to be the major concern of the Ferguson FTC.

Instead, the agency wants to use the merger review as leverage to force these companies to buy ads on Elon Musk’s flailing ExTwitter platform:

A proposed consent decree would prevent the merged company from boycotting platforms because of their political content by refusing to place their clients’ advertisements on them***,*** according to two people briefed on the matter.

This sanitized language obscures what’s really happening here: a protection racket for Elon Musk. As we’ve covered, Elon Musk is very, very mad that he drove away the majority of ExTwitter’s advertisers. But rather than look inward at what he did to cause that, he’s blaming everyone else—to the point that he is suing advertisers directly for not advertising on ExTwitter (while demanding others advertise or be added to the suit). He’s also been trying to encourage government officials to spin up “investigations” into advertisers who won’t advertise on ExTwitter, claiming (ridiculously) it’s an illegal boycott.

Courts at both the district and appeals court levels have rejected this theory as an obvious attack on protected First Amendment activity (i.e., advertisers saying they don’t want their brands associated with neo-Nazi reactionary nonsense).

But, the Ferguson/Trump FTC launched a similarly bogus investigation anyway, in an effort to abuse the power of the FTC to browbeat firms into giving Elon Musk cash (I assume, so long as Elon stays in Trump’s good graces).

So when the FTC proposes a consent decree preventing ad agencies from “boycotting platforms because of their political content,” it’s essentially telling Omnicom and Interpublic: “If you want this merger approved, you’ll agree in writing to buy ads on ExTwitter, whether your clients want them or not.”

This is textbook corruption: using regulatory approval as leverage to benefit a specific company that happens to be owned by someone (for the moment) in the president’s inner circle.

A Pattern of Regulatory Abuse

What connects these two schemes is how far they stray from the FTC’s actual authority. The agency is supposed to protect consumers from unfair or deceptive business practices and prevent anticompetitive mergers. It’s not supposed to act as an enforcement arm for aggrieved conservatives or as a collection agency for politically connected billionaires.

But, as with Zuckerberg, it’s entirely possible that the ad firms may agree to such a condition just to get the merger done.

Ferguson promised to end “politically motivated investigations” and instead launched obviously political shakedown schemes that would make Al Capone proud. The transformation is complete: an agency created to protect consumers from corporate abuse has become a tool for extracting tribute from corporations on behalf of powerful political interests.

This isn’t just garden-variety corruption or regulatory capture. It’s the systematic transformation of consumer protection regulatory tools into weapons of political retribution and personal enrichment. And it’s happening so brazenly that these officials barely even bother to hide their motives anymore.

The corruption is so brazen because they know no one will stop them.

The real tragedy isn’t just that this undermines the rule of law or corrupts important regulatory institutions. It’s that when everything becomes nakedly political, we lose the ability to distinguish between legitimate regulatory action and partisan hackery. It creates increased cynicism and distrust of government organizations. And, perhaps that’s part of the point.


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While Donald Trump was trying (and failing) to cheer himself up with a self-congratulatory birthday parade — I mean, just look at this sad boy:

— the Los Angeles Police Department and Los Angeles Sheriffs Department were busy turning peaceful protests in violent protests.

Throughout the nation, millions gathered peacefully to protest Trump’s military parade. The “No Kings” protests were only interrupted by violent acts of interlopers.

In Los Angeles, the ongoing protests against ICE intermingled with “No Kings” demonstrators. Everything was going fine until the cops decided that they’d have to riot if no one else was going to do it. This isn’t a narrative being pushed by protesters seeking cover for their own violent actions. This is something that was confirmed as it happened by multiple reporters on the scene.

@msnbc.com reporter at the 1:15 mark. “The chaos you’re seeing is not the result of peaceful protestors, it’s the result of actions of law enforcement, specifically the Los Angeles sheriff’s department.” #nokings

Justin Satzman (@jsatz.bsky.social) 2025-06-15T01:18:26.734Z

Whether this is God showing his sense of humor or karma being the bitch it is doesn’t really matter. The only thing that matters is that it happened, it’s verifiable, and it’s pretty fucking funny.

From the scanner right now: LAPD is taking rubber bullets from LASD. I am not joking. (They're in each other's crossfire, it's a clusterfuck that they've largely brought on themselves)

Curator at the Museum of Low Interest Rates (@catmolir.bsky.social) 2025-06-15T00:23:47.045Z

“Training and expertise.” After escalating things by firing flashbangs, rubber bullets, and tear gas into crowds of people who were, at best, refusing to immediately respond to a dispersal order (although that’s still a point of dispute), the only people engaging in actual violence mainly managed to hurt each other. (That being said, plenty of protesters were still in the middle of this friendly fire exchange, as it appears the LAPD and LASD were both trying to keep separate groups of protesters from joining forces.)

As amusing as that is, it’s still cops instigating conflict, rather than seeking to de-escalate it. And it still means other horrific things happened, like the deliberate shooting of a NY Post reporter by an LA law enforcement officer.

Again, there’s some cruel irony to partake in here, given that the NY Post is firmly pro-cop and has published plenty of cop propaganda while covering anti-ICE protests.

Never mind the narrative being pushed by Trump and some members of law enforcement. The reality is that cops are provoking confrontations and using any excuse possible to engage in violence. And they’ll do it even when they know their actions are being recorded:

WATCH: ABC News reporter Matt Gutman keeps his cool during live coverage on Los Angeles yesterday after officer snaps at him for reportedly touching him.

AZ Intel (@azintel.bsky.social) 2025-06-15T19:28:36.671Z

There are plenty of violent people at these protests. But most of them are wearing badges.


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Back in 2019, the Trump DOJ and FCC cobbled together a dumb plan to try and hide the problems created by their rubber stamping of the competition-eroding T-Mobile and Sprint merger: they’d pretend they were helping satellite TV company Dish Network create a new 5G wireless network out of vibes and twine. As we noted back in 2019, the entire gambit was doomed to failure for a long list of reasons.

Dish never had any real experience building wireless networks. The Trump administration had no real interest in fostering competition (its “antitrust enforcer” at the time used his personal phone to help the companies dodge regulatory scrutiny). Multiple companies always wanted the spectrum Dish was collecting, and nobody in wireless really wanted to have to seriously compete on price.

Dish CEO Charlie Ergen, who had long been hoarding valuable spectrum, needed to pretend to the government he was serious about using it, and not just waiting for its value to appreciate so he could cash out later. The entire plan always seemed like a decorative con.

Fast forward to 2025 and the Dish 5G network is a joke nobody really uses, and Dish owner Echostar is now preparing for bankruptcy, precisely as we predicted all along.

Elon Musk’s Starlink wants a lot of the spectrum Dish is using in the 2GHz band. Verizon and AT&T would likely enjoy owning some of Dish’s other spectrum assets. So Trump FCC boss Brendan Carr is suddenly pretending to care about holding corporations accountable, and has launched a new inquiry into whether Dish is stringing regulators along (which I’d argue the Trump FCC knew was the plan all along).

Echostar has been missing millions of dollars of interest payments on its notes. Once it’s threatened by bankruptcy, it likely will find itself in a vulnerable position with the Trump FCC:

“A looming potential bankruptcy proceeding may force EchoStar back to the negotiation table with the FCC.”

And that “negotiation” most likely ends with the FCC forcing Dish to sell its spectrum assets to Elon Musk, Verizon, and AT&T. Outlets like the Wall Street Journal will of course cover this unskeptically as if the FCC is doing a serious investigation and this is all very serious business.

But it’s all been the greasiest of cons. A half-assed network was built as cover for industry consolidation and spectrum hoarding. When it inevitably failed, it gets stripped for parts with the help of captured regulators in dutiful sway to a billionaire. Dish CEO Charlie Ergen sells his rich hoard of spectrum and heads off into retirement, while the company’s employees get shitcanned.

The wireless industry consolidates further, competition erodes, consumer prices continue to rise, and captured regulators and U.S. business leaders all ignore all of the problems they helped create, and we all forget about the half-decade-worth of fictions they leveraged to pull the wool over the press’ and public’s eyes. I’d still argue that all of this was very likely the plan from the start.

All very serious business and extremely innovative stuff in a very serious country full of savvy and very serious deal-makers.


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This week, our winners on the insightful side are a comment-and-reply combo regarding Trump ordering the National Guard into California. In first place, it’s huskcummerbund with a question:

Hey, remember when Kristi Neom tweeted “If Joe Biden federalizes the National Guard, that would be a direct attack on states’ rights. Over the last several years, we’ve seen Democrats try to take away our Freedoms of religion, assembly, and speech. We can’t let them take away our right to defend ourselves, too.”?

I wonder what she thinks about this? Will she choose Cognitive Dissonence or outright Hypocracy?

In second place, it’s Thad with the answer:

The same thing Republicans think about everything. “It’s okay when we do it.”

For editor’s choice on the insightful side, we start out with a comment from Stephen T. Stone passing along a quote about protests and “violence”:

If your tactics disrupt the order of things under capitalism, you may well be accused of violence, because “violence” is an elastic term often deployed to vilify people who threaten the status quo. Conditions that the state characterizes as “peaceful” are, in reality, quite violent. Even as people experience the violence of poverty, the torture of imprisonment, the brutality of policing, the denial of health care, and many other violent functions of this system, we are told we are experiencing peace, so long as everyone is cooperating. When state actors refer to “peace,” they are really talking about order. And when they refer to “peaceful protest,” they are talking about cooperative protest that obediently stays within the lines drawn by the state. The more uncooperative you are, the more you will be accused of aggression and violence. It is therefore imperative that the state not be the arbiter of what violence means among people seeking justice.

— from Let This Radicalize You: Organizing and the Revolution of Reciprocal Care by Kelly Hayes

Next, it’s That One Guy with a comment about the media’s role in manufacturing narratives:

‘City burned to ashes! Citizens still living there confused regarding lack of fire or rubble.’

The majority of the ‘mainstream’ media in the US has been so effectively collared and leashed at this point that they’ve turned into the US versions of Baghdad Bob, parroting whatever the regime tells them to no matter the lack of evidence or presence of evidence that contradicts their claims.

Over on the funny side, our first place winner is MrWilson with a comment about Elon Musk’s strategy of demanding business from advertisers while threatening lawsuits:

It’s not “extortion.” It’s extra-legal aggressive negotiation with applied duress! Nothing to see here!

In second place, it’s a quick anonymous clapback reply:

I always thought

Facts not in evidence.

For editor’s choice on the funny side, we start out with another comment from MrWilson, this time in reply to That One Guy’s already-highlighted comment about media coverage of protestors:

Portland still hasn’t recovered since the George Floyd protests. You can’t walk a city block without seeing a building that was once not burned down.

Finally, it’s Nimrod with a silly but apt joke:

Republicans used to like to drink koolaid, but now they’re switching to ICE tea.

That’s all for this week, folks!


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Five Years Ago

This week in 2020, Don Henley was using TikTok as a reason to push for stronger copyright laws, while some Senators were asking the FCC to reinterpret Section 230 in a ridiculous manner, and Ron Wyden was explaining how Trump and many others were totally wrong about 230. Meanwhile, we continued to follow developments from the George Floyd protests, including Chicago’s mayor trying to rein in the city’s police, the DEA trying to get in on surveilling the protests, and the role of police unions in making everything worse. We also wrote about what all this teaches us about the efficacy of peaceful protest.

Ten Years Ago

This week in 2015, newly released emails showed how industry lobbyists basically wrote the TPP. The Copyright Office was making a hamfisted attempt to address the problem of orphan works, and we noted how its ideas wouldn’t even be allowed if the TPP were ratified. Mitch McConnel was trying and failing to graft a bogus cybersecurity bill onto the NDAA, while an amendment to prevent backdoor searches and the backdooring of encryption was embraced by the House (which also blocked the White House from getting fast track authority on trade deals).

Fifteen Years Ago

This week in 2010, we looked at the question of whether copyright was holding back scientific research. We wrote about Hollywood’s hypocrisy on copyright infringement amidst the popularity of Glee, the ethical and legal problems of having patients sign over the copyright on their reviews of doctors, and some data on the rise and fall of the RIAA. Lots of targets of lawsuits from US Copyright Group were proclaiming their innocence, while one copyright lawyer was smacked down by a court for a bad faith lawsuit. Amidst all this we asked: is intellectual property itself unethical?


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One of the legitimate criticisms of large language models, generative AI, and chatbots is that they produce hallucinations –- output that is plausible but wrong. That’s a problem in all domains, but arguably it’s a particularly serious one in the field of law. Hallucinated citations undermine the entire edifice of common law, which is based on precedent, as expressed in previous court decisions. This isn’t a new problem: back in May 2023 Techdirt wrote about a case involving a lawyer who had submitted a brief in a personal injury case that had a number of made up citations. Nor is it a problem that is going away. A recent case involved a lawyer representing the AI company Anthropic, who used an incorrect citation created by the company’s Claude AI chatbot in its current legal battle with music publishers.

Similar cases have been cropping up in the UK, and a High Court judge there has had enough. In a recent ruling, High Court Justice Victoria Sharp explores two cases involving hallucinated citations, makes some general observations about the use of AI by lawyers, and lays down their responsibilities if they do so.

One case involved a filing with 45 citations, 18 of which did not exist; in the other, five non-existent cases were cited. The court’s judgment [pdf] provides full details of how the hallucinations came to light, and how the lawyers involved responded when they were confronted with the non-existent citations. There is also an appendix with other examples of legal hallucinations from around the world: five from the US, four from the UK, three from Canada, and one each from Australia and New Zealand. But more important is the judge’s discussion of the broader points raised. Sharp begins by pointing out that AI tools can certainly be useful, and are likely to become an important tool for the legal profession:

Artificial intelligence is a powerful technology. It can be a useful tool in litigation, both civil and criminal. It is used for example to assist in the management of large disclosure exercises in the Business and Property Courts. A recent report into disclosure in cases of fraud before the criminal courts has recommended the creation of a cross-agency protocol covering the ethical and appropriate use of artificial intelligence in the analysis and disclosure of investigative material. Artificial intelligence is likely to have a continuing and important role in the conduct of litigation in the future.

But that positive view comes with an important proviso:

Its use must take place therefore with an appropriate degree of oversight, and within a regulatory framework that ensures compliance with well-established professional and ethical standards if public confidence in the administration of justice is to be maintained.

This is not to be understood as a vague call to do better. Sharp wants to see action from the UK’s legal profession beyond the existing guidance from regulatory bodies (also discussed by her):

There are serious implications for the administration of justice and public confidence in the justice system if artificial intelligence is misused. In those circumstances, practical and effective measures must now be taken by those within the legal profession with individual leadership responsibilities (such as heads of chambers [groups of barristers] and managing partners) and by those with the responsibility for regulating the provision of legal services. Those measures must ensure that every individual currently providing legal services within this jurisdiction (whenever and wherever they were qualified to do so) understands and complies with their professional and ethical obligations and their duties to the court if using artificial intelligence.

And for those who fail to do this, the court has a range of punishments at its disposal:

Where those duties are not complied with, the court’s powers include public admonition of the lawyer, the imposition of a costs order, the imposition of a wasted costs order, striking out a case, referral to a regulator, the initiation of contempt proceedings, and referral to the police.

In one of the two cases discussed by the judge in her ruling, a serious punishment was not handed out to a lawyer who had failed to check the citations, despite sufficient grounds for doing so. Sharp gave a number of reasons for this in her judgment, including:

our overarching concern is to ensure that lawyers clearly understand the consequences (if they did not before) of using artificial intelligence for legal research without checking that research by reference to authoritative sources. This court’s decision not to initiate contempt proceedings in respect of Ms Forey [the lawyer in question] is not a precedent. Lawyers who do not comply with their professional obligations in this respect risk severe sanction.

It will probably take a few “severe sanctions” being meted out to lawyers who use hallucinated precedents without checking them, before the profession starts taking this problem seriously. But the ruling by Sharp is a clear indication that, while English courts are quite happy for lawyers to use AI in their work, they won’t tolerate the errors such systems can produce.

Follow me @glynmoody on Mastodon and on Bluesky.


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You might recall how the Warner Brothers Discovery merger promised everyone amazing new synergies for the media sector. Instead it wound up being a giant sloppy turd of a deal resulting in endless layoffs, the shuttering of numerous popular media brands, the cancellation of a long line of popular programming, higher consumer prices, and lower product quality from HBO to CNN.

The man in charge of this hot mess, CEO David Zaslav, has steadily been rewarded for his incompetence with gigantic, ever-escalating pay packages that never reflect his lack of real-world competence.

Warner Bros. Discovery lost $11.5 billion last year. The company is in the process of firing another round of workers for its executives mistakes. Its streaming service increasingly consists of reality TV slop and C-tier content. The merger was so pointless, and traditional cable TV channels are so worthless, Time Warner and Discovery are planning to unwind the disastrous partnership:

“Warner Bros. Discovery, the film and TV colossus behind HBO and CNN, announced on Monday that it would cleave itself into two companies, separating its cable networks and streaming businesses.”

The NYT coverage of the split only faintly hints at Zaslav’s incompetence, and doesn’t even mention the word “layoffs” despite another round hitting only just last week.

They’re currently squabbling over how to split the debt between the two “new” companies, created predominately by the pointless merger. At the same time, Zaslav is poised to get a massive $52 million pay package, comprised of a cash bonus of $23.9 million and $23.1 million in performance-based restricted stock grants. Zaslav will continue to lead the company’s most important assets: its streaming business and movie studios.

Company investors are increasingly raising eyebrows at Zaslav’s pay package, recently issuing a symbolic vote against Zaslav’s outsized compensation. Zaslav will get paid anyway, but the CEO is seeing increased criticism, even in media trade magazines like Variety that tend to soft sell executive incompetence, labor abuses, and outsized executive compensation for fear of losing access.

A major justification by the Warner Bros. Discovery board for Zaslav’s pay package was the savings Zaslav created through mindless consolidation and layoffs, Variety notes:

“One of those goals for Zaslav was to “Complete integration pipeline; Implement cost controls to adjust cost to serve in declining linear [TV] revenue environment.” On this front, Zaslav “Achieved incremental cost savings of $1.8B in 2024, significantly overdelivering against internal goal,” according to the WBD compensation committee. (Those savings were achieved in part through major layoffs.) The committee determined Zaslav had met the outlined strategic goals at 115% of his target.”

But executives like Zaslav are purely extractive animals. They temporarily goose stock valuations and generate tax breaks by cannibalizing their own brands through pointless consolidation that may save a little money through cuts, layoffs, and illusory “synergies,” but very clearly harm the overall survivability of the brand and longer term quality.

Zaslav has made it very clear that he sees more media consolidation coming under Trumpism, which will rubber stamp your problematic mergers provided you demonstrate to the king that you’re suitably racist and promise that your reporters won’t engage in any serious journalism critical of the regime.

That means more price hikes and bad decisions are right over the horizon as the company pursues impossible growth through bottomless price hikes, even more layoffs, and further quality erosion. Distorted financial motivations made possible by financial shell games ensure nobody learns from experience or faces accountability for decisions harmful to workers, employees, or the brand.


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Each day adds another layer of fucked-upness to this country’s anti-immigration efforts. We, as a nation, are now involved daily in extrajudicial renditioning of migrants to countries they’ve never lived in. We’re all implicated in nearly daily rejections of court orders and any remaining shred of human decency. We’re treating human beings like trash to be discarded, whether it’s mothers seeking abortions or migrants just hoping to find somewhere more stable to live.

And now we’re doing this: intermingling children in a massive criminal database for no other reason than they (or their parents) weren’t born in the United States. Here’s Dhruv Mehrotra with more details at Wired:

The United States government has collected DNA samples from upwards of 133,000 migrant children and teenagers—including at least one 4-year-old—and uploaded their genetic data into a national criminal database used by local, state, and federal law enforcement, according to documents reviewed by WIRED.

The records, quietly released by the US Customs and Border Protection earlier this year, offer the most detailed look to date at the scale of CBP’s controversial DNA collection program. They reveal for the first time just how deeply the government’s biometric surveillance reaches into the lives of migrant children, some of whom may still be learning to read or tie their shoes—yet whose DNA is now stored in a system originally built for convicted sex offenders and violent criminals.

The DOJ claims this is essential, even though it didn’t decide to start adding this particular data to the database until 22 years after its creation. According to DOJ statements, the addition of minors and migrants to a criminal database (CODIS [Combined DNA Index System], which is run by the FBI) is essential to the safety of the nation, allowing law enforcement to “assess” the threat posed by 4-year-old children to the general public due to their… um… lack of US citizenship.

The addition of migrant data dates back to the last few months of Trump’s first presidency. This went unaltered during Biden’s term.

Spanning from October 2020 through the end of 2024, the records show that CBP swabbed the cheeks of between 829,000 and 2.8 million people, with experts estimating that the true figure, excluding duplicates, is likely well over 1.5 million. That number includes as many as 133,539 children and teenagers.

The CODIS database is there to track criminals and was originally used to compile DNA samples and fingerprints only from those being criminally charged. Since then, it has been expanded to cover people who have, in many cases, done nothing more than reside in the United States without proper documentation.

People who use the term “illegal immigrants” or “illegal aliens” seem to think that being in this country without documentation is a criminal act in and of itself. And it is, but only to a certain extent. It’s a civil offense though, like not paying property taxes or getting a parking ticket. Do some of these things often enough and you might see criminal charges. But, generally speaking, no one’s getting fingerprinted and their DNA added to CODIS just because they didn’t feed the meter or fall behind on property tax payments.

For some reason, this nation has recently begun to believe it’s acceptable to treat certain civil violators like criminals if that makes it easier to deny them rights or, in this case, add them to a forever database just because there’s no court order or law preventing them from doing this.

It’s the sort of thing that dehumanizes migrants by turning them into database records. It further strips them of their humanity by adding them to a long list of actual criminals with the insinuation being that (1) they’re no less guilty than the criminals in the database, and (2) if they haven’t committed a crime yet, they’re probably going to, so why not be proactive.

For all the ugliness we’re witnessing during Trump’s second administration in terms of antipathy towards migrants, it’s important to point out that what’s been observed so far is directly attributable to Trump’s predecessor, who did nearly nothing to roll back Trump’s anti-immigrant policies.

The data, which CBP published to its website in February, shows that DNA collection accelerated under the Biden administration, with daily submissions to CODIS increasing sharply in 2024 alongside a reported rise in border apprehensions. On a single day in January 2024, for example, the Laredo, Texas, field office submitted as many as 3,930 DNA samples to the FBI—252 were listed as 17 or younger, CBP records show.

The bottom line is this: there’s no way any federal or local law enforcement officer should be adding a four-year-old to a criminal database. It’s impossible to think of any scenario where this addition is justified. For that matter, no minor who is not suspected of committing a crime should be in there either, especially if the only reason for adding them is just because the opportunity (detention by immigration officers) presented itself. A civil infraction is not a criminal offense, no matter how much three consecutive presidential administrations would prefer to believe. This is a travesty, aided and abetted by two presidents who decided the loudest, most hateful people in the nation should have a say in how immigration enforcement is carried out.


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Mere days ago, and only a few weeks out from a meeting in Atlanta to discuss immunization policy and vaccination recommendations, we talked about the batshit move by RFK Jr. to fully wipe out and fire the entirety of the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), an immunization advisory panel. All 17 members of the panel were given their walking papers, effective immediately, leaving a gaping hole in American healthcare when it comes to vaccination policies. ACIP recommendations aren’t always adopted by the CDC and HHS, though deviations from them have historically been rare. Those recommendations typically result in adopted policy from the CDC, which is in turn followed by everyone from insurance companies in terms of what they cover, to clinicians around the country, all the way down to members of the public as they seek to follow the published guidance. It’s a very, very important group of advisors when it comes to American health.

Well, Kennedy has re-staffed ACIP in record time. And, to the surprise of exactly nobody, among the 8 people he appointed are a bunch of anti-vaxxers. Kennedy, who announced the firings of ACIP in an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, went an even less professional route by announcing the new members on ExTwitter. When he followed up on his WSJ op-ed on ExTwitter as well, Kennedy had this to say about who he would put on the panel to replace them.

In case you can’t see the screenshot, that’s RFK Jr. saying:

Yesterday, I retired 17 members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices or ACIP, the @CDCgov external panel that wields the grave responsibility of adding new vaccines to the recommended childhood schedule. Over the coming days, I will use this platform to announce new members to populate ACIP. None of these individuals will be ideological anti-vaxxers. They will be highly credentialed physicians and scientists who will make extremely consequential public health determinations by applying evidence-based decision-making with objectivity and common sense.

He lied to everyone. As I said, he absolutely put ideological anti-vaxxers on this panel. And if you don’t believe me, let’s take the case of Robert Malone. Malone claims to have invented mRNA vaccines. While Malone absolutely conducted important research into this technology, the claim he invented it is disputed widely, with the technology instead resulting from the work of hundreds of individuals and researchers. Despite his work on those vaccines, or perhaps because of it in an misguided way, Malone has spread misinformation about vaccines, including speaking at anti-vax rallies. And if that isn’t specific enough for you to accept that Kennedy lied about his intentions, I’ll just drop this here, straight from Malone’s own mouth:

Before COVID-19, the term anti-vaxxer was targeted towards people who are against all vaccines. Targeted as a way to delegitimize their complaints and observations, by personally delegitimizing them. More PsyWar. But times have changed. The defamatory attack has become a badge of honor.

Various news articles state that 35–45% of Americans, including myself, find vaccine mandates unacceptable. The government and corporate media have defined this group of people as being anti-vaxxers. Some people still believe that the term anti-vaxxer is a pejorative. I do not – I view it as high praise.

He may desire to frame his being labeled as an anti-vaxxer purely a result of his distaste for “mandates” that were both temporary and narrowly targeted when it came to what the federal government required, but his framing of this whole thing is a straw man, anyway. He’s labeled an anti-vaxxer because he speaks at rallies claiming that vaccines, or at least mRNA vaccines, “can damage your children. They may damage their brains, their heart, their immune system and their ability to have children in the future. Many of these damages cannot be repaired.” Oh, and he once claimed that the COVID vaccines cause a “form of AIDS.” If that isn’t an anti-vaxxer, then the term no longer has any meaning.

Malone is not the only troubling appointment in Kennedy’s cadre of clowns.

Another is Martin Kulldorff, one of the co-authors of the widely criticized Great Barrington Declaration, which called for letting COVID-19 spread largely unabated. Health experts called it “unethical.”

Vicky Pebsworth is also on the list, as well as on the boardof the National Vaccine Information Center, one of the nation’s oldest anti-vaccine groups that promotes the false claim that vaccines cause autism.

Kennedy also appointed Retsef Levi, who has penned articles alleging dangers of COVID-19 vaccines, including a flawed 2022 article that was later corrected and an unpublished article co-authored with COVID-contrarian and Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo.

And so there you have it. Because of a flawed Congress that can’t do real oversight on the nominations of an even more flawed President, America will now get its vaccination guidance from a panel that is no less than half full of anti-vaxxers who have engaged in misinformation around those very same vaccines. Freedom has been restored, just in time for many of us to get sick, and possibly die, from diseases that need not be a problem, but likely will be. Like measles. Or COVID, again.

Or, universe forbid, the next novel pandemic that comes to be as a result of our national infection of distrust of actual experts on matters of science.


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It would be too kind to say the irony is lost on Republican lawmakers. They would have to be capable of comprehending and acknowledging their own hypocrisy to even begin to recognize the irony. That’s why these lawmakers are so unconcerned with the long-term destruction they’re causing. It’s all worth it if it results in short-term success. And besides, they’re not the ones who are going to have to deal with the fallout.

But every so often, the tides turn fast enough even these sorts of lawmakers are getting caught up in the messes they’ve made. That’s how it’s going in Texas right now, as Republican lawmakers seek to undo campus free speech protections enacted a half-decade ago because it’s allowing people they don’t like to express ideas they don’t like.

Here’s how it started, as reported by the Texas Tribune:

In 2019, the Legislature passed a law requiring colleges and universities to ensure that all outdoor common areas of campus can be used to stage a protest, as long as demonstrators don’t break the law or disrupt school activities.

That measure came after Texas A&M leaders canceled a white nationalist rally and Texas Southern University scrapped a planned speech by Rep. Briscoe Cain, R-Deer Park. Both happened in 2017. Texas A&M said it canceled the event due to safety concerns while TSU said it canceled Cain’s speech because it was organized by an unregistered student group.

“Our college students, our future leaders, they should be exposed to all ideas, I don’t care how liberal they are or how conservative they are,” Sen. Joan Huffman said at the time.

Some of these same lawmakers are now involved in an effort to create more speech restrictions on campus because students failed to comprehend the 2019 law was only there to ensure the presence of white nationalist rallies on Texas university campuses. Now that these expanded protections are being enjoyed by non-white nationalists, it’s time for a change.

Senate Bill 2972, which passed 97-39 in a final House vote on Wednesday, would give university systems’ governing boards the power to limit where protests can take place on campus.

Republicans who support say it will prevent disruption and unsafe behavior seen during the pro-Palestinian demonstrations last year. Critics say the measure contradicts previous conservative efforts to protect free speech rights on Texas campuses and is unconstitutional.

As is almost always the case when Republicans start re-writing laws they previously enacted, it’s the Republicans who are wrong and the critics who are right. Of the two groups, the critics are, at least, more consistent in their views.

There’s more to the law than simply expanding the amount of viewpoint censorship publicly-funded schools can engage in. In addition to giving universities more discretion on time/place decisions, students would be forbidden from using amplification devices (including microphones) when protesting during class hours, erecting overnight encampments, taking down a university’s “U.S. flag to put up another nation’s or organization’s banner,” wearing disguises (which really just means wearing masks of any kind, including the COVID-prevention variety), and protesting within 300 feet of any residences overnight.

This was never a problem between 2019 and this year, even though none of the proposed restrictions were in place since the law was first passed for the sole purpose of forcing public universities to host far-right speakers and white nationalist rallies. But with pro-Palestine protests taking over college campuses, it’s time for a change. Fewer rights for everyone — something that may result in fewer white nationalist rallies but a hit white nationalists are likely to take because it means people they don’t like won’t be able to protest either.

Even if you ignore the blatant hypocrisy of rolling back protections just because they’re capable of protecting students Texas Republicans don’t like, there’s also the sheer stupidity of what will likely become the finished work product sent to the governor’s desk. Here’s FIRE attorney Tyler Coward pointing out some obvious problems with the current proposal:

“Under this bill, the university would be required to ask a student to take off a MAGA hat if they were wearing it at 10:15 p.m. or a Bernie Sanders shirt because that is political, that is expressive activity,” he said.

Meanwhile, true believers like Senator Huffman will continue to pretend her party isn’t selling out its white nationalist voting bloc with this ham-handed attempt to silence pro-Palestinian protesters.

Huffman, a Houston Republican who authored that 2019 law, voted earlier this month in favor of the new limits on protests, citing similar reasons mentioned by other supporters. She said the new measure doesn’t undermine the former one.

Oh, but it does. It rolls back protections and makes it that much easier for universities to block appearances and rallies by bigots the Republic Party approves of. This attempt to only harm the protesters Huffman doesn’t like while protecting those she does like means the law won’t protect anyone and will make universities less likely to allow protests, rallies, and public appearances of any kind because nearly any cause could be considered to be “political” enough it’s just going to create a bunch of extra enforcement work for schools and their local security/police forces.


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When a federal judge grants a temporary restraining order within hours of a hearing and writes 36 pages explaining why the President of the United States is acting illegally and unconstitutionally, you know something significant just happened. Federal Judge Charles Breyer did exactly that last night, blocking Donald Trump’s deployment of the National Guard to Los Angeles and exposing the administration’s manufactured crisis for what it is: an illegal attempt to crush dissent under the guise of emergency powers.

Of course, just hours later, the Ninth Circuit put a stay on the ruling so it can consider the government’s appeal early next week. But Breyer’s ruling is important and thorough, so let’s cover what he ruled before talking about the Ninth Circuit.

The sequence of events reveals the administration’s strategy in stark relief. After Stephen Miller orchestrated aggressive ICE raids targeting people at Home Depot parking lots, protests naturally followed. Trump and his team then deliberately mischaracterized these protests as violent riots, deployed 4,000 National Guard troops and Marines to escalate tensions, and used the predictable friction to justify further military intervention. It’s a textbook authoritarian play: create the crisis, then use it as pretext for crushing dissent—all to the cheering applause of a bunch of chuckleheads on Fox News and ExTwitter.

California quickly sued over the National Guard deployment, because any such deployment is supposed to go through California’s governor, not the President, and sought a temporary restraining order. It sought to have the TRO issued before the federal government could reply, but Judge Breyer made them wait until the DOJ filed a response and both sides appeared before him for a hearing Thursday afternoon. It seems likely that he used some of that time to draft a possible order, because less than four hours after the hearing concluded, he issued a very thorough and detailed 36-page order granting the TRO and giving control of the National Guard back to California governor Gavin Newsom.

Plaintiffs have shown a likelihood of prevailing in their argument President Trump’s invocation of § 12406 was in fact not lawful, both exceeding the scope of his authority and violating the Tenth Amendment

The judge doesn’t shy away from the fact that there was some violent activity by protesters — in fact, he describes multiple examples of it — but notes that this is far from enough to justify the deployment under both the law and the Constitution.

The protests in Los Angeles fall far short of “rebellion.” Defendants refer repeatedly to “violent rioters,” and “mobs,” see, e.g., Opp. at 1, and so the Court pauses to state that there can be no debate that most protesters demonstrated peacefully. Nonetheless, it is also beyond debate that some individuals used the protests as an excuse for violence and destruction. Some bad actors on June 6 threw “concrete chunks, bottles of liquid, and other objects at … officers,” Santacruz Decl. ¶ 11, and used “chairs, dumpsters, and other items as weapons,” id. ¶ 14. Others threw rocks and other objects, including a Molotov cocktail, on June 7. Olmstead Decl. ¶ 9. A “violent crowd” boxed in officers, threw fireworks, rocks, and mangos, and trapped one officer in her car, surrounding it, shaking it, and throwing stones at it. Santacruz Decl. Ex. 20. Some people on June 8 set off fireworks toward officers and threw objects at their vehicles. Santacruz Decl. ¶ 26. Someone on June 9 fired paintballs, id. ¶ 28, and a crowd injured five LAPD officers, id. ¶ 31.

Violence is necessary for a rebellion, but it is not sufficient. *Even accepting the questionable premise that people armed with fireworks, rocks, mangoes, concrete, chairs, or bottles of liquid are “armed” in a 1903 sense—*the Court is aware of no evidence in the record of actual firearms—there is little evidence of whether the violent protesters’ actions were “open or avowed.” Some presumably engaged violently with officers at close quarters in the daylight, while many others threw items under cover of darkness, protected by a crowd, identities concealed. Certainly, the peaceful protesters were “organized” to some degree, in that people knew generally knew where to go to participate in protests, see, e.g., Espíritu Decl. Ex. F (“Dozens of protesters gathered Friday evening outside a federal detention center in Los Angeles where lawyers said those arrested had been taken, chanting ‘set them free, let them stay!’”), but there is no evidence of organized, as apart from sporadic or impromptu, violence.8 Nor is there evidence that any of the violent protesters were attempting to overthrow the government as a whole; the evidence is overwhelming that protesters gathered to protest a single issue—the immigration raids.

While Defendants have pointed to several instances of violence, they have not identified a violent, armed, organized, open and avowed uprising against the government as a whole. The definition of rebellion is unmet.

Furthermore, the Court notes that calling marginal violence at a protest a “rebellion” would make a total mockery of the First Amendment:

Moreover, the Court is troubled by the implication inherent in Defendants’ argument that protest against the federal government, a core civil liberty protected by the First Amendment, can justify a finding of rebellion. The U.S. Reports are chock-full of language explaining the importance of individuals’ right to speak out against the government—even when doing so is uncomfortable, even when doing so is provocative, even when doing so causes inconvenience. See, e.g., Cohen v. California, 403 U.S. 15, 24–25 (1972) (“To many, the immediate consequence of this freedom may often appear to be only verbal tumult, discord, and even offensive utterance. … That the air may at times seem filled with verbal cacophony is, in this sense not a sign of weakness but of strength.”); Tinker v. Des Moines Indep. Cmty. Sch. Dist., 393 U.S. 503, 508 (“But, in our system, undifferentiated fear or apprehension of disturbance is not enough to overcome the right to freedom of expression. Any departure from absolute regimentation may cause trouble. … Any word spoken … that deviates from the views of another person may start an argument or cause a disturbance. But our Constitution says we must take this risk.”); Cox v. Louisiana, 379 U.S. 536, 550–51 (rejecting the argument that a conviction for breach of the peace “should be sustained because of fear expressed by some [onlookers] that ‘violence was about to erupt’ because of the demonstration” and explaining “that constitutional rights may not be denied simply because of hostility to their assertion or exercise” (quoting Watson v. City of Memphis, 373 U.S. 526, 535 (1963))); Texas v. Johnson, 491 U.S. 397, 414 (1989) (“If there is a bedrock principle underlying the First Amendment, it is that the government may not prohibit the expression of an idea simply because society finds the idea itself offensive or disagreeable.”); Hurley v. Irish-Am. Gay, Lesbian & Bisexual Grp. of Boston, Inc., 515 U.S. 557, 574 (1995) (“[T]he point of all speech protection [] is to shield just those choices of content that in someone’s eyes are misguided, or even hurtful.”).

And, the judge points out: “courts have repeatedly reaffirmed that peaceful protest does not lose its protection merely because some isolated individuals act violently outside the protections of the First Amendment.

Even more to the point:

In short, individuals’ right to protest the government is one of the fundamental rights protected by the First Amendment, and just because some stray bad actors go too far does not wipe out that right for everyone. The idea that protesters can so quickly cross the line between protected conduct and “rebellion against the authority of the Government of the United States” is untenable and dangerous.

Again, Judge Breyer is seeing what everyone other than the most brainwashed diehard MAGA fan can see: all of this is manufactured nonsense. Yes, there was some violence in response to aggressive posturing by law enforcement and federal forces. But that’s always going to happen at protests. Indeed, it’s what Trump, Miller, Noem, Hegseth, and that whole crew were banking on.

But, because they’re so transparently obvious about what they’re doing, the Judge sees that they’re clearly violating the law in punishing people for their First Amendment protected speech.

The DOJ also argued that the protests get in the way of his ability “to execute the laws of the United States” as a justification for bringing in the National Guard. And again, Breyer points out that none of us were born yesterday.

Defendants argue that they satisfy this condition because the Los Angeles protests threatened the safety of federal law enforcement personnel and interfered with the sites where ICE agents were enforcing alien removal laws. Opp. at 16. Defendants concede that ICE succeeded in arresting 44 people on June 6, but insist that “that limited success came with the risk of danger,” and that, had the protests not interfered with their operations, ICE “would have been able to carry out additional execution-of-the-laws activity.”

Whether ICE could have detained more people in the absence of the protests is mere conjecture—Defendants provide no support for that assertion. Even assuming that Defendants are correct, however, the statute does not allow for the federalizing of the National Guard when the President faces obstacles that cause him to underperform in executing the laws. Nor does the statute allow for the federalizing of the National Guard when the President faces some risk in executing the laws, though of course federal employees should never have to fear danger when performing their jobs. The statute requires that the President be “unable” to execute the laws of the United States. That did not happen here.

The DOJ also tried to Michael Scott their way around the requirement that they mobilize the National Guard “through” Governor Newsom by just declaring it so.

Judge Breyer finds this particularly stupid:

Section 12406 maintains this requirement: “Orders for these purposes shall be issued through the governors of the States … .”

[….]

Defendants assert that they complied with § 12406 because written at the top of the June 7 and June 9 DOD Orders was the label “THROUGH: THE GOVERNOR OF CALIFORNIA.” Opp. at 17. True enough. But an interpretation of § 12406 that permits the President to federalize a state’s National Guard by typing the phrase “Through the Governor of [insert state here]” at the top of a document that the President never sends to the governor strains credibility, especially given that Congress specifically amended the statute to add the requirement that orders “shall be issued through the governors.”

Of course, so far we’ve mostly focused on the laws at play here. But what about the Constitution? Yup, turns out Trump appears to be violating that as well, namely the Tenth Amendment which delegates all additional powers to the state… including policing.

It is well-established that the police power is one of the quintessential powers reserved to the states by the Tenth Amendment….

Although Defendants identify some stray violent incidents relating to the protests against ICE raids in Los Angeles, and from there boldly claim that state and local officials were “unable to bring rioters under control,” Opp. at 19–20, it is not the federal government’s place in our constitutional system to take over a state’s police power whenever it is dissatisfied with how vigorously or quickly the state is enforcing its own laws. Quite the contrary, the Founders reserved that power, and others, to the states in the Tenth Amendment

Furthermore, the Court notes that by federalizing the National Guard (even if there was an actual issue in LA — and again, there is not) Trump has also taken those 4,000 National Guard members away from Newsom, limiting his ability to deploy them elsewhere, should the need arise:

But with respect to the Tenth Amendment claim, that is not the only consideration at play; there is also the fact that the federalization of 4,000 members of California’s National Guard necessarily prevents Governor Newsom, as the commander-in-chief of his state’s National Guard, from deploying them as needed. Had Defendants complied with the substantive and procedural requirements of § 12406, the federal interests reflected by that statute may well override Governor Newsom’s interest in retaining his National Guard members. But they did not. So whether or not the National Guard is exercising illegitimate federal police power in Los Angeles, the unlawful federalization of those members has interfered with the state’s legitimate police power, and thus it violates the Tenth Amendment.

Finally, Judge Breyer makes it clear he understands the manufactured nature of the crisis and how it’s designed to increase violence by pointing out that the TRO makes sense because it seems much more likely to decrease the violence by removing the National Guard, whose presence is only likely to fan the flames higher.

As for Plaintiffs’ first asserted harm, they have established that the continued presence of National Guard members and Marines in Los Angeles risks worsening, not improving, tensions on the ground*… Indeed, local law enforcement arrests jumped after the National Guard was deployed…. Defendants reiterate that civil unrest began before President Trump nationalized the National Guard, Opp. at 26, but that does not address Plaintiffs’ point that* military presence in a civilian population center will worsen—and has worsened—the situation*. And contrary to Defendants’ assertion, Plaintiffs have provided evidence backing up their concern, so it is not merely “hypothetical or possible.”*

In fact, it is common sense that President Trump and Secretary Hegseth’s unilateral exercise of federal power risks doing more harm than good.

Or, even more to the point:

To put a finer point on it, the federal government cannot be permitted to exceed its bounds and in doing so create the very emergency conditions that it then relies on to justify federal intervention.

Hilariously, Judge Breyer also turns Trump’s statements on the “fentanyl crisis” back around on the federal government here, by pointing out that the National Guard has been helping to fight drug trafficking, and this has taken them away from that work, citing Trump himself calling fentanyl trafficking a “national emergency” and a “public health crisis.”

The end result is clear:

• Defendants are temporarily ENJOINED from deploying members of the California National Guard in Los Angeles.

• Defendants are DIRECTED to return control of the California National Guard to Governor Newsom.

The order is set to take effect at noon today. The court also set a pretty expedited briefing schedule regarding turning this temporary restraining order into a preliminary injunction.

This ruling represents more than just another legal loss for the Trump administration—it’s a judicial recognition that we’re dealing with a government that manufactures crises to justify authoritarian overreach. Judge Breyer’s swift action and detailed constitutional analysis show that even judges normally inclined to defer to executive power can see through such transparent bad faith.

What makes this particularly significant is how it exposes the administration’s broader strategy: create fake emergencies, escalate tensions through military deployment, then use the resulting chaos to justify further erosion of civil liberties. It’s a playbook that depends on judicial and public acquiescence to obvious constitutional violations.

Judge Breyer’s ruling proves that when courts actually examine these manufactured crises closely, they fall apart under legal (and common sense) scrutiny. The administration’s authoritarian moves are so over-the-top that they’re making it easier for judges to recognize them as what they are: illegal attempts to crush dissent disguised as emergency response.

The real test will be whether other federal judges, including those at the Ninth Circuit, follow Breyer’s lead in refusing to enable this constitutional destruction, or whether they’ll continue to give deference to an administration that has proven it operates entirely in bad faith.

In theory, appeals courts aren’t supposed to be reviewing temporary restraining orders, and rather wait until the case is further along, but we no longer live in normal times, and the DOJ has been appealing TROs like this one and the appeals courts have been willing to consider them. While frustrating, I wouldn’t read too much into the stay just yet, given that the Court has set a pretty quick timeline, and it’s not unusual for an appeals court to put a lower court ruling on hold while it considers things. Perhaps more worrisome is that the panel reviewing this case has two Trump-appointed judges. Hopefully even they can see through the pretense of Trump’s positioning here.


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Ah, the daily joys of living in a country that’s literally too corrupt to pass even a baseline privacy law for the internet-era.

Meta has once again been busted playing fast and loose with consumer privacy. Security researchers last week discovered that Meta and Russia’s Yandex have been embedding tracking code into millions of websites in a way that de-anonymizes visitors and abuses internet protocols, allowing them to spy on the internet behavior and browsing habits of any Android device with Meta and Yandex apps installed.

The changes have allowed both companies to link mobile browsing sessions and web cookies to user identities, de-anonymizing users’ who visit sites embedding their scripts. The sneaky modifications bypass anything vaguely resembling consumer consent, as well as standard privacy protections such as the clearing cookies, Incognito Mode or Android’s permission controls.

This is, the researchers were quick to note, a profound attack on consumer trust:

“One of the fundamental security principles that exists in the web, as well as the mobile system, is called sandboxing,” Narseo Vallina-Rodriguez, one of the researchers behind the discovery, said in an interview. “You run everything in a sandbox, and there is no interaction within different elements running on it. What this attack vector allows is to break the sandbox that exists between the mobile context and the web context. The channel that exists allowed the Android system to communicate what happens in the browser with the identity running in the mobile app.”

In a statement tries to bullshit its way around the obvious privacy abuses, pretending this was all some sort of “miscommunication” between itself and Google:

“We are in discussions with Google to address a potential miscommunication regarding the application of their policies. Upon becoming aware of the concerns, we decided to pause the feature while we work with Google to resolve the issue.”

Google, for its part, was very clear in statements that Meta and Yandex were “blatantly violating our security and privacy principles,” as well the terms of service for its Play marketplace. U.S. user privacy abuses on mobile devices are rampant in the data broker era, but this takes things even further.

Meta appears to have recognized the severity of the accusations and stopped doing it, for now.

This is, again, the kind of reckless hubris you get in a country that has very clearly decided to place making money over any sort of basic consumer privacy standards. Since there’s really zero corporate or executive accountability for these kinds of behaviors (worse now that Trump-stocked courts are mindlessly defanging consumer protection and regulatory independence), this sort of thing is only going to get worse, culminating in new, even worse privacy scandals that make past concerns seem quaint.


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Editor’s Note: As I was getting this article ready to publish, a judge granted California a Temporary Restraining Order against the deployment of the National Guard. We’ll have a separate write up of that later.

When the Secretary of Homeland Security announces that federal forces will remain in an American city until they “liberate” it from its democratically elected officials—you know, democracy, that annoying thing where people actually get to choose their own leaders—then sits by watching as her security detail violently throws to the ground and handcuffs a sitting US Senator who dares to ask a question, we’ve officially entered the “are you fucking kidding me” phase of American fascism.

That’s exactly what happened when Kristi Noem staged her theatrical press conference in Los Angeles, where federal forces have been illegally deployed to provoke justification for further authoritarian crackdowns in a city where the only violence and rioting is that caused by law enforcement.

Noem’s Explicit Threat to Democracy

First, let’s be clear about what Noem actually said. After the Trump regime manufactured a fake crisis in LA that exists only in the fevered imaginations of Fox News viewers, DHS Secretary Noem showed up to announce they’re staying until they “liberate” the city:

Here’s what she said, word for word:

The Department of Homeland Security and the officers and the agencies and the departments and the military people that are working on this operation will continue to sustain and increase our operations in this city. We are not going away. We are staying here to liberate the city from the socialist and the burdensome leadership that this governor and that this mayor have placed on this country and what they have tried to insert into this city.

Read that again. The Secretary of Homeland Security just announced that federal military forces will remain in an American city until they can remove—”liberate” the city from—its democratically elected governor and mayor. Because apparently when Californians vote, they’re just asking for “liberation” from their terrible, terrible choices? This isn’t hyperbole or interpretation. She literally said the quiet part out loud: we’re staying until we can overthrow the people you elected.

This breaks every constitutional principle about federalism, democratic governance, and the separation of powers. The Posse Comitatus Act specifically prohibits using federal military forces for domestic law enforcement. The Constitution reserves to states the right to govern themselves. And nowhere in American law or tradition does the federal executive branch have the power to “liberate” cities from their own elected leadership.

The Violent Silencing of Congressional Oversight

What happened immediately after that makes Noem’s authoritarian declaration even more chilling. Senator Alex Padilla—the ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration, Citizenship, and Border Safety, whose job it is to oversee Noem’s department—attempted to ask a question. This second video shows in detail what happened:

Padilla identifies himself as a US Senator. And, to be clear, Noem absolutely knows who Senator Padilla is, given his role on that Subcommittee. He almost certainly deals with Kristi Noem regularly. That’s part of his job. To oversee how she’s doing her job.

This was not someone she’s unfamiliar with.

Constitutional Government Obliterated

The combination of Noem’s declaration and Padilla being assaulted and restrained represents the complete abandonment of constitutional governance. When federal military forces remain indefinitely in American cities to remove elected officials, that’s a direct violation of the Posse Comitatus Act, which explicitly prohibits using federal troops for domestic law enforcement. When a Cabinet secretary allows the violent detention of a senator performing his oversight duties, that’s the destruction of the separation of powers. When the executive branch declares it will stay until it can “liberate” a city from officials chosen by voters, that’s the nullification of federalism and democratic elections themselves.

Even worse, as her thugs grabbed Padilla… she said nothing to stop it. Rather, she continued her condescending blather. She only pauses briefly to watch him dragged out of the room—probably checking if the cameras got a good angle—only to continue her fascist speech, announcing that they will start prosecuting people for merely identifying ICE agents. You know, because the First Amendment is apparently just a suggestion now.

Every constitutional principle that constrains federal power and protects democratic governance was systematically shredded in less than two minutes of a press conference.

This isn’t just another “norm” being broken. These are the foundational legal constraints that separate constitutional government from authoritarian rule.

The Fascist Playbook in Action

The sequence of events follows the classic authoritarian playbook with precision: provoke an unnecessary crisis (ICE raids at Home Depot), escalate the response to any resistance (tear gas and rubber bullets), deploy military force against civilians (National Guard and Marines), declare the situation will continue until political opponents are removed (“liberation”), and violently suppress any oversight or accountability (the assault on Senator Padilla).

As multiple people have pointed out, we’ve heard for decades bullshit and lies from right wing media, from Alex Jones to Fox News, about how the US government wanted to use federal forces to subdue them and suppress their rights. We’ve heard about how the people need to carry guns to be ready to fight off this threat of abusive power and using the military to invade domestic locals.

And here it’s actually happening, and all those people who were falsely claiming that Democrats planned such things… are cheering it on when the MAGA world is doing just that and more.

Every bit of this is horrifying. Yes, it’s another in a long list of things that have shown how quickly America has slid down that slippery slope of fascism, but no one should look away or deny what is happening here.

Padilla’s response to all of this is completely on point:

If that’s what they do to a United States Senator with a question, imagine what they can do to any American that dares to speak up. We will hold this administration accountable.

Noem and DHS then blatantly and falsely claimed that he did not identify himself, and that Padilla engaged in “political theater.”

That is bullshit on multiple levels. First, no one engages in more political theater than Kristi Noem, who regularly shows up dressed in costumes. You may recall her shooting an influencer video standing in front of a group of detainees at CECOT, the Salvadoran concentration camp. Or any other number of times she engages in pure political theater:

“What Senator Alex Padilla did today was political theater.”–Kristi Noem, the Head of Costuming, Hair, and Makeup at Political Theater

Mrs. Betty Bowers (@mrsbettybowers.bsky.social) 2025-06-12T22:11:07.420Z

But, more importantly, Senator Padilla did identify himself and Secretary Noem knows exactly who he is. She could have easily stopped her thugs from grabbing him. She could have easily taken his question. But the Trump regime and its cowardly authoritarians are so worried about any level accountability that they can only respond with unnecessary force.

The Moment Democracy Breaks

When a federal official can announce that military forces will remain in American cities until democratically elected leaders are removed, then violently detain a Senator for asking questions about it, constitutional government has effectively ended. This isn’t creeping authoritarianism—it’s the active dismantling of democratic institutions in real time.

Senator Padilla’s warning captures exactly what’s at stake: if this is what they’ll do to him, a sitting US Senator in front of plenty of news cameras, you know they won’t hesitate to do much worse to anyone else, especially when no cameras are around.

And that’s exactly the point—they want to make clear that no one, regardless of position or authority, is safe from retaliation for challenging the regime.

The people protesting in LA aren’t rioting—they’re defending constitutional government itself. The real insurrection is happening in that press conference room, where Kristi Noem announced the military occupation will continue until democracy is “liberated” away.

But here’s the thing about authoritarian theatrics: they’re often a sign of weakness, not strength. Noem’s over-the-top performance, complete with costume changes and manufactured drama, reeks of desperate insecurity. Truly confident leaders don’t need to throw senators to the ground to avoid answering questions about their policies. They don’t need military force to handle a small gathering of protesters. And they certainly don’t need to “liberate” American cities from the people those citizens actually voted for.

This is why it’s more important than ever to speak truth to power, to document what’s happening, and to refuse to be intimidated into silence. The Trump regime wants us to believe they’re unstoppable, but their desperation to silence even the mildest oversight suggests otherwise. When Kristi Noem can’t handle a single question from a senator without condoning violence against the questioner, she’s showing us exactly how fragile this whole authoritarian facade really is.

Every American who values constitutional government needs to push back against this madness—through the courts, through Congress, through journalism, and through the simple act of refusing to pretend any of this is normal. Democracy dies when people stay quiet. And it survives when they don’t.


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Ctrl-Alt-Speech is a weekly podcast about the latest news in online speech, from Mike Masnick and Everything in Moderation‘s Ben Whitelaw.

Subscribe now on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify, Pocket Casts, YouTube, or your podcast app of choice — or go straight to the RSS feed.

In this week’s round-up of the latest news in online speech, content moderation and internet regulation, Mike and Ben cover:

He’s a Master of Outrage on X. The Pay Isn’t Great. (NY Times)The vulnerable teen drawn into far-right extremism online (Financial Times)X, Bluesky and Reddit in France’s crosshairs amid porn clampdown (Politico)EU sidesteps Macron’s ultimatum to ban social media for kids under 15 (Euractiv)Commission seeks feedback on the guidelines on protection of minors online under the Digital Services Act (European Commission)OnlyFans releases stern statement as it DEACTIVATES Bonnie Blue’s account for defiant reason (The Tab)

This episode is brought to you with financial support from the Future of Online Trust & Safety Fund.


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As you’ll likely recall, in late 2023, Elon Musk told advertisers to “go fuck yourself” and “don’t advertise” in response to a question about advertisers feeling uncomfortable placing their brands next to the kind of content that Musk was promoting via the ExTwitter algorithm. But the full context of the quote is interesting in retrospect:

“If somebody’s gonna try to blackmail me with advertising? Blackmail me with money? Go f—yourself.” He added, “Don’t advertise.”

Blackmail you with advertising, you say?

Because it sure looks like the blackmailing is now happening in the opposite direction. There had been some earlier reports hinting at this, but the Wall Street Journal has a big expose on how Linda Yaccarino and Elon Musk are telling advertisers if they don’t start throwing money at ExTwitter ads again, they’ll be added to the completely baseless lawsuit the company filed against advertisers.

The extortionate message is clear: buy our ads or we’ll cost you even more money in legal fees:

Late last year, Verizon Communications got an unusual message from a media company that wanted its business: Spend your ad dollars with us or we’ll see you in court.

The threat came from X, the social-media platform that has been struggling to resuscitate its ad business after many corporate advertisers fled over concerns about loosened content-moderation standards following Elon Musk’s $44 billion purchase in late 2022.

It worked. Verizon, which hadn’t advertised on X since 2022, pledged to spend at least $10 million this year on the platform, a person familiar with the matter said.

Fashion company Ralph Lauren also agreed to resume buying ads on X after receiving a lawsuit threat, people familiar with the matter said. All told, at least six companies that had either received lawsuit threats or were motivated in part by pressure tactics have struck ad deals with X, according to people familiar with the negotiations. The agreements include both firm ad-spending commitments and nonbinding targets.

In Elon’s world, the shakedown works in one direction only.

The article suggests this extortion racket may be “working,” with ad revenue reportedly ticking up for the first time under Musk’s tenure.

But “working” is relative when you consider what Musk promised investors: In his original pitch to investors, Musk promised $12 billion in advertising revenue by 2028, plus another $10 billion from subscriptions. Instead, he’s reduced to threatening companies with lawsuits to squeeze out marginal ad spending increases. It’s the business equivalent of a protection racket—and about as far from his original vision as you can get.

Notably left out of the WSJ article is the fact that at least some of the advertisers seemed to return to the platform due to a different—but equally stupid—reason: post-election sucking up to the Trump regime. There were multiple reports just after the election and early in the new administration, that advertisers were returning to the platform.

But, notably, in none of these stories is anyone returning to advertise on ExTwitter because they’re getting any particular value from those ads. Indeed, ad execs have made it clear how unappealing it is, since doing so may provide negative value, as no matter what they do it engages them in a culture war they’d rather not have anything to do with.

The WSJ report notes how the list of defendants in Musk’s lawsuit against advertisers seems to keep changing, most likely based on what kinds of deals are made:

Amazon, which had pulled much of its spending from X in late 2023, began spending more on ads earlier this year after months of negotiations that involved Amazon Chief Executive Andy Jassy.

Last November, while discussions were under way, X added Amazon’s Twitch Interactive to the lawsuit, according to people familiar with the matter. X notified the court last month that it dismissed its claims against Twitch.

What the WSJ piece doesn’t fully capture is just how fundamentally unsustainable this business model is. This isn’t a tech visionary disrupting advertising—it’s a failed CEO resorting to legal intimidation because he can’t deliver actual value to advertisers.

Think about it: Musk spent $44 billion promising to revolutionize social media, then drove away the very advertisers who were supposed to fund his grand vision. Now he’s reduced to what amounts to a protection racket, threatening lawsuits to extract ad dollars from companies that would rather spend their money literally anywhere else.

These fear-based advertising commitments are inherently fragile. Companies pressured into spending on ExTwitter aren’t getting meaningful returns on their ad investments—they’re just paying to avoid legal hassles. The moment Musk’s leverage weakens, whether through the lawsuit’s resolution, his political influence waning, or simply advertiser fatigue with being extorted, these deals will evaporate.

You can threaten all the lawsuits you want, but you can’t litigate your way to a sustainable business model. Advertisers who return based on intimidation rather than results are just waiting for the first opportunity to leave again. And you definitely can’t sue your way back to the $12 billion in annual ad revenue you promised investors.

The real story here isn’t about advertising strategy—it’s about the spectacular failure of ego-driven dealmaking that’s created a business model dependent on fear rather than value. That’s not innovation—that’s desperation masquerading as strategy.


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Palantir has never had a great reputation. Even before it teamed up with Trump to create a massive, abusable database of American residents’ information, it was working with forward-looking cop shops, that wanted similar massive, abusable databases of their own, even if those were limited to surveilling people in their own jurisdictions.

The company is never going to gather much praise from the press, so it will have to content itself with counting the billions it’s bringing in from government contracts. Oh, and chasing journalists it doesn’t like out of tech conferences that are otherwise open to the public. Here’s Caroline Haskins, reporting for Wired about four ejections made by Palantir employees, one of which was her own.

Prior to being kicked out of Palantir’s booth, the WIRED journalist, who is also the author of this article, was taking photos, videos, and written notes during software demos of Palantir FedStart partners, which use the company’s cloud systems to get certified for government work. The booth’s walls had phrases like “REAWAKEN THE GIANT” and “DON’T GIVE UP THE SHIP!” printed on the outside. When the reporter briefly stepped away from the booth and attempted to re-enter, she was stopped by Eliano Younes, Palantir’s head of strategic engagement, who said that WIRED was not allowed to be there. The reporter asked why, and Younes repeated himself, adding that if WIRED tried to return, he would call the police.

Younes has since tried to justify his actions. A lengthy XTwitter screed claims the journalists have only themselves to blame for their ejections because [scrolls scrolls scrolls scrolls] their coverage of Palantir wasn’t flattering enough and/or this one time a reporter was rude during a press conference.

Apparently this is all the justification Younes needed to make Palantir look even more thin-skinned and evil than it already appears to be. First, Younes personally went after Haskins. Then he sent consecutive sets of goons to toss out three other tech reporters.

Later that day, Palantir had conference security remove at least three other journalists—Jack Poulson, writer of the All-Source Intelligence Substack; Max Blumenthal, who writes and publishes The Grayzone; and Jessica Le Masurier, a reporter at France 24—from the conference hall, Poulson says. The reporters were later able to reenter the hall, Poulson adds.

To be fair to the security guards, they weren’t actually goons. I mean, they did eject the reporters but apparently allowed them back in after a “friendly” conversation with the three ejectees, asking them only to “respect any requests from attendees” (but, importantly, not vendors) to stop filming them.

Younes also took time to rebut a claim no one ever made during his extended follow-up to his ejections of multiple reporters from an open-to-the-public tech expo.

On Tuesday, Palantir posted on X claiming the Times article was “blatantly untrue” and said that the company “never collects data to unlawfully surveil Americans.” The Times article did not claim that Palantir buys or collects its own data, though it’s a common misconception that the company does so.

Much like other tech companies that have made themselves pariahs, denying claims no one made and ejecting reporters you don’t like isn’t going to do anything to alter public perception… at least not in the direction Palantir would prefer. If this is the stance Palantir wants to take in response to critical reporting, it’s never going to be the swaggering badass it thinks it is. It will just be another petulant tech company that’s too thin-skinned to absorb the criticism its questionable actions will always generate.


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Today we need to examine something that reveals the machinery of authoritarian propaganda with surgical precision: how a handful of violent incidents across a few city blocks in Los Angeles was transformed into a “crisis” justifying the deployment of federal troops against American citizens. And how easily that transformation succeeded.

I write this from Los Angeles, where I’ve lived long enough to witness actual citywide chaos. I was here during the widespread unrest following George Floyd’s murder. I was here during the rioting after the Dodgers won the World Series. I’ve seen what it looks like when a city of four million people truly erupts in violence.

What happened this past weekend wasn’t that. Not even close.

Yet somehow, a few isolated incidents of vandalism and confrontation—contained within a handful of city blocks—became the justification for deploying Marines against American protesters. More disturbing still, this manufactured crisis worked exactly as intended. Millions of Americans now believe that military force was not just justified but necessary to restore order in a city that was never actually in disorder.

Two plus two equals four. There are twenty-four hours in a day. And what we witnessed was not urban chaos but the deliberate manufacture of consent for military rule through carefully orchestrated propaganda.

The anatomy of this deception reveals the terrifying efficiency of post-truth manipulation. It begins with the amplification of isolated incidents into the appearance of widespread mayhem. A broken window here, a confrontation there, perhaps a small fire somewhere else—all genuine incidents, but scattered across a metropolitan area larger than many states. In the hands of propagandists, these become “Los Angeles in flames” or “chaos consuming the city.”

This isn’t to minimize the genuine violence that occurred. Videos of protesters hurling chunks of concrete torn from infrastructure at police officers are genuinely shocking. Such attacks represent serious criminal behavior that deserves prosecution. But here’s what the propaganda deliberately obscures: the number of people engaging in this violence could be counted on two hands. The geographic area where these incidents occurred spans perhaps a few city blocks in a metropolitan area of over 500 square miles.

Most importantly, the system worked exactly as it’s supposed to. Many of these individuals have already been apprehended. Social media footage is being used to identify and arrest those who haven’t been caught yet. Local law enforcement, supported by existing legal frameworks, is handling the situation through normal investigative and prosecutorial channels.

This is precisely what makes the propaganda so insidious—it takes genuine criminal behavior by a handful of individuals and transforms it into justification for military deployment against an entire city. The concrete-throwing incidents become “widespread violence.” The few blocks where confrontations occurred become “chaos consuming Los Angeles.” The handful of criminals become representative of all protesters.

The propagandists understand that dramatic images of real violence are far more effective than fabricated ones. A video of someone hurling concrete at police is genuinely disturbing and naturally generates strong emotional responses. But that same video, stripped of context about scale and containment, repeated endlessly across multiple platforms, creates the impression of systematic breakdown rather than isolated criminal behavior being addressed through normal legal processes.

The crucial element is decontextualization. Videos of specific incidents circulate without time stamps, location markers, or scale indicators. A thirty-second clip of one intersection becomes representative of an entire city. Social media algorithms, designed to maximize engagement, naturally boost content that triggers fear and outrage while burying anything that might provide proportion or context.

Mainstream media, trapped in its own engagement-driven incentives, amplifies rather than clarifies. Headlines speak of “widespread unrest” and “violence erupting across Los Angeles” without mentioning that we’re talking about incidents covering perhaps twenty square blocks in a city spanning over 500 square miles. The scale of the actual disturbances gets lost in the imperative to make everything sound dramatic and urgent.

The result is a population that believes they’re witnessing something far more serious than reality warrants. Americans in other states, consuming this curated content, develop the impression that Los Angeles is in the grip of systematic breakdown requiring extraordinary intervention. The manufactured crisis becomes indistinguishable from a real one in the minds of people who have no baseline for comparison.

This sets the stage for the propaganda’s true purpose: convincing Americans that military force is necessary to restore order. Once the impression of chaos has been established, military deployment becomes not just reasonable but obviously required. “Local law enforcement can’t handle it” becomes the refrain, even though local law enforcement was never actually overwhelmed and never requested federal assistance.

The genius of this propaganda operation lies in how it reframes the debate entirely. The question is no longer whether military deployment against civilians is constitutional or appropriate. The question becomes whether you support “law and order” or you support “chaos and violence.” Anyone questioning the use of federal troops gets cast as someone who doesn’t care about public safety or who actively supports destruction.

This false binary eliminates the possibility of reasonable middle ground. You cannot argue that the incidents were isolated without being accused of minimizing violence. You cannot question military deployment without being labeled an enemy of order itself. The propaganda creates a rhetorical trap where any opposition to extraordinary measures becomes evidence of extremism.

What makes this particularly insidious is how it exploits genuine human psychology. People naturally extrapolate from limited information, especially when that information triggers fear responses. A few dramatic images repeated endlessly create the impression of systematic breakdown even when the reality is far more contained. The mind fills in gaps with assumptions, and those assumptions become indistinguishable from observed fact.

The propagandists understand this perfectly. They know that context kills crisis, so they systematically strip away anything that might provide scale or proportion. They know that repetition creates reality, so they flood information channels with the same decontextualized clips. They know that fear overwhelms reason, so they frame everything in terms of immediate threat requiring immediate response.

Most Americans consuming this content have no direct experience of actual urban warfare or citywide riots. They have no baseline for distinguishing between genuine crisis and manufactured emergency. When they see curated clips of violence repeated endlessly across multiple platforms, their natural assumption is that this represents the broader reality rather than isolated incidents being amplified for political effect.

This psychological vulnerability becomes a political weapon. Once Americans believe they’re witnessing systematic breakdown, military deployment seems not just reasonable but obviously necessary. The idea that federal troops shouldn’t be deployed against civilians—a principle that was considered sacred just a few years ago—suddenly seems naive or even dangerous in the face of manufactured emergency.

The success of this operation should terrify anyone who understands how democracies die. We’re not just witnessing media manipulation or political spin—we’re watching the real-time manufacture of consent for military rule through carefully curated chaos. Each successful deployment makes the next one easier to justify. Each manufactured crisis normalizes extraordinary measures as ordinary responses.

This is exactly how authoritarian consolidation works in practice. You don’t announce that you’re ending civilian control over the military—you create conditions where military control seems like the only reasonable response to ongoing emergencies. You don’t eliminate constitutional protections in one dramatic gesture—you erode them gradually through crisis management that becomes permanent.

The precedent established in Los Angeles will not remain confined to Los Angeles. Once Americans accept that federal troops can be deployed against protesters whenever local incidents can be framed as widespread chaos, every future demonstration becomes a potential justification for military intervention. The threshold for extraordinary measures gets lower with each successful deployment.

Consider how this dynamic will operate in the future. Any protest that produces even isolated incidents of vandalism or confrontation can now be framed as requiring federal military response. The mere possibility of violence becomes sufficient justification for preemptive deployment. The distinction between peaceful demonstration and dangerous riot becomes whatever federal authorities claim it to be.

This represents a fundamental transformation in how power operates in American society. We’re moving from a system where military deployment against civilians requires extraordinary justification to one where such deployment becomes a routine response to political dissent. The change isn’t happening through constitutional amendment or legislative action—it’s happening through the gradual normalization of what was previously unthinkable.

The media’s role in this transformation cannot be understated. By treating manufactured crisis as genuine emergency, by amplifying decontextualized images without providing scale or proportion, by framing military deployment as reasonable response rather than constitutional violation, mainstream outlets become unwitting accomplices in their own irrelevance. When reporters present authoritarian power grabs as ordinary policy disagreements, they help normalize what should be shocking.

Perhaps most disturbing is how effectively this propaganda has convinced ordinary Americans to support what amounts to the militarization of domestic law enforcement. People who consider themselves patriots now applaud the deployment of Marines against American citizens. People who claim to defend constitutional principles now support the violation of fundamental restrictions on military power. The propaganda has made authoritarianism seem patriotic.

This cognitive dissonance reveals the true power of manufactured crisis. When people believe they’re facing genuine emergency, they willingly surrender protections they would normally defend. The Constitution becomes less important than immediate security. Constitutional principles become luxuries we can’t afford during times of crisis. The fact that the crisis is largely manufactured becomes irrelevant once the psychological impact takes hold.

We are witnessing the live construction of an authoritarian consensus through carefully orchestrated deception. A few broken windows and isolated acts of violence in Los Angeles became the justification for crossing a constitutional line that previous generations would have died to defend. And it worked precisely because most Americans have lost the ability to distinguish between genuine emergency and manufactured crisis.

The implications extend far beyond immigration enforcement or protest suppression. Once the principle is established that federal troops can be deployed whenever authorities claim local breakdown, there are no meaningful constraints on military power over civilian life. Every future crisis—economic, political, social—becomes a potential justification for extraordinary measures that gradually become ordinary.

Two plus two equals four. There are twenty-four hours in a day. And when a few isolated incidents can be transformed into justification for military deployment through propaganda alone, you’re no longer living in a constitutional republic—you’re living in a system where perception matters more than reality and manufactured crisis justifies unlimited power.

The center cannot hold when truth becomes whatever serves authority and crisis becomes whatever power claims it to be. We have crossed a line that will be very difficult to uncross, not because the precedent is legally binding but because the psychological transformation it represents may be irreversible.

The manufactured crisis succeeded. Americans now accept military deployment against civilians as normal and necessary. What comes next will be worse, because the machinery of deception has proven its effectiveness and the appetite for resistance has been systematically eroded through careful manipulation of fear.

The propaganda worked. And that should terrify every American who understands what we’ve just surrendered.

Mike Brock is a former tech exec who was on the leadership team at Block. Originally published at his Notes From the Circus.


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We’ve written a few times about the case of Mahmoud Khalil, a Columbia University grad student who was one of the first people detained by ICE and told he was being kicked out of the country solely because Marco Rubio said he doesn’t belong here. No due process. No hearing. Just Rubio’s arbitrary say-so.

A federal court has now rightly ruled that this is all nonsense, and the government has no legitimate claim to detain or deport him on this basis. Though, the judge immediately gives the US government 40 hours to appeal, so Khalil is not yet free.

If you don’t recall, Khalil was seized by ICE agents and pulled away from his pregnant, American-citizen wife. The agents initially told him his visa had been revoked—apparently not realizing he was a green card holder, not a visa holder. When confronted with this basic factual error, they pivoted on the spot to claim his green card was also revoked, sending the government scrambling to reverse-engineer some legal justification for what they’d already done.

Judge Michael Farbiarz finds the entire argument wholly unconvincing. Indeed, he notes that it seems clear that the decision to detain and deport Khalil appears to be wholly arbitrary and/or based on his protected First Amendment activity (he was active in protesting Israel’s actions against Gaza).

Faced with the obvious First Amendment problem, the government tried to argue that Khalil’s detention wasn’t really about his protest activities. Instead, they claimed it was about something a post-hoc fishing expedition turned up: an alleged minor paperwork discrepancy in his green card application.

The judge wasn’t buying it. If this paperwork issue was really the driving force, why is Khalil being detained when others with similar alleged discrepancies aren’t? As the court notes:

Maybe the Petitioner would be detained, in any event, on that second basis. And if so, it might be argued, there would not be any incremental chilling effect from detaining the Petitioner for an additional reason, the Secretary of State’s determination.

But that argument does not work.

The reason: the evidence is that lawful permanent residents are virtually never detained pending removal for the sort of alleged omissions in a lawful-permanent-resident application that the Petitioner is charged with here. And that strongly suggests that it is the Secretary of State’s determination that drives the Petitioner’s ongoing detention — not the other charge against him.

In other words, the government’s paperwork excuse is bullshit. If people aren’t normally detained for these alleged omissions, then why is Khalil? The answer is obvious: the only actual basis the government is using to detain Khalil is Rubio’s “determination” that his free speech activities were somehow unwelcome here.

From there, the court finds that Rubio’s arbitrary determination has already harmed Khalil, costing him a job, harming his reputation, and chilling his speech. Indeed, the court notes that the government doesn’t contest any of this.

The judge then makes the obvious point about where the public interest lies:

“[T]he public has no interest in the enforcement of what is very likely an unconstitutional statute.” Odebrecht Constr., Inc. v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Transp., 715 F.3d 1268, 1290 (11th Cir. 2013); accord, e.g., Schrader v. Dist. Att’y of York Cnty., 74 F.4th 120, 128–29 (3d Cir. 2023); Chamber of Com. of U.S. v. Edmondson, 594 F.3d 742, 771 (10th Cir. 2010).

And on the other side of the ledger, there is a chilling effect on speech. See Amalgamated Transit Union Loc. 85, 39 F.4th at 109 (“There is a strong public interest in upholding the requirements of the First Amendment. And, if a plaintiff demonstrates both a likelihood of success on the merits and irreparable injury, it almost always will be the case that the public interest will favor the plaintiff.”) (cleaned up).

The government will almost certainly appeal, so this isn’t over yet. But it is yet another example of a court looking at what the Trump regime is doing and saying “what the fuck, that’s not right…” And it still won’t take back the many months that Khalil was locked up for no good reason, missing the birth of his child, and losing out on many opportunities.


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We’ve noted many times that there are two major reasons the U.S. doesn’t have a functional privacy law for the modern internet era. One, we’re too corrupt and greedy to do the right thing, causing us to prioritize making money over literally everything else — including public safety. And two, the government long ago realized it can bypass the need for a warrant by simply buying surveillance data from U.S. companies.

There have been some new revelations on that second point. A new report by 404 Media this week revealed that U.S. airlines have created a data broker whose primary purpose is to covertly sell user flight and other information to Customs and Border Protection (CBP). As part of the airlines’ contract with the government, it was demanded they not tell anybody about the program:

“The documents reveal for the first time in detail why at least one part of DHS purchased such information, and comes after Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detailed its own purchase of the data. The documents also show for the first time that the data broker, called the Airlines Reporting Corporation (ARC), tells government agencies not to mention where it sourced the flight data from.”

ARC is owned and operated by at least eight major US airlines, according to public documents reviewed by 404 Media. ARC’s Travel Intelligence Program (TIP) also monetizes your data in other nontransparent ways, including partnerships with travel agencies and air travel trend reporting. In a functional government with meaningful rules, authorities are supposed to get warrants for this data:

“While obtaining domestic airline data—like many other transaction and purchase records—generally doesn’t require a warrant, there’s still supposed to go through a legal process that ensures independent oversight and limits data collection to records that will support an investigation,” Jake Laperruque, deputy director of the Center for Democracy & Technology’s Security and Surveillance Project, told 404 Media in an email. “As with many other types of sensitive and revealing data, the government seems intent on using data brokers to buy their way around important guardrails and limits.”

The corporate monetization of your every behavior and location metric has resulted in a vast sea of nontransparent hyper-surveillance the government has zero interest in fixing. And should a U.S. regulator actually try — like the FCC’s recent attempt to fine AT&T for selling sensitive wireless user location data — the Trump-stocked courts are there to invalidate the efforts to the benefit of corporate power.

Documents indicate the government ambiguously claims to use this data “to support federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies to identify persons of interest’s U.S. domestic air travel ticketing information.” Airlines understandably didn’t want to comment on the new report.

Without reforms this sort of hyper-surveillance just gets consistently worse, more dangerous, and more secretive which is is extra problematic in an era where the U.S. government has fallen into historically corrupt authoritarian kakistocracy. The warnings have been relentless that we’re on an extremely dangerous path, but Congress, as always, remains too corrupt to function in the public interest.


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While the Justin Baldoni legal fight with Blake Lively is still going on, one half of the dispute has been thrown in the dumpster… for now. If you’re not up on the case, here is the TL;DR version. Baldoni and Lively costarred in the movie It Ends With Us. Lively filed a claim of workplace harassment for inappropriate behavior on set by Baldoni, leading to an explosive public feud between the two. Eventually, Lively sued Baldoni over the claims, with Baldoni countersuing her and her husband, Ryan Reynolds, for defamation and other claims. He also sued the New York Times for its reporting on the dispute. Baldoni’s legal team engaged in some fairly silly behavior on top of all of that. We said at the time that the suit against the New York Times in particular appeared destined for the aforementioned dumpster when the judge paused discovery to consider the Times’ motion to dismiss.

Well, it seems I was more correct there than I had intended to be. The judge has not only dismissed the suit against the New York Times, but Baldoni’s suit against Lively and Reynolds as well. As to his claims of defamation and that Lively stole the movie out from under him and his company, the judge had this to say.

Baldoni’s lawsuit centred on two claims: that Lively “stole the film” from him and his company Wayfarer by threatening not to promote it, and that she and others promoted a false narrative that Baldoni sexually assaulted her and launched a smear campaign against her, Judge Liman explained in his opinion.

But Baldoni and his production company “have not adequately alleged that Lively’s threats were wrongful extortion rather than legally permissible hard bargaining or renegotiation of working conditions”, he wrote.

Additionally, the judge wrote, Baldoni and his company had not proved defamation because the “Wayfarer Parties have not alleged that Lively is responsible for any statements other than the statements” in her lawsuit, which are privileged.

Defamation is notoriously hard to prove in court in America — for good reason. Of course, it gets all the more difficult when you can’t be bothered to make such a claim about specific statements other than those in the actual lawsuit itself. The lack of valid claims against Reynolds and others likewise resulted those suits being dismissed as well.

And, really, attempting to sue over the time-honored Hollywood tradition of wrestling for creative control over a movie is more than a bit laughable.

As for the New York Times, the court essentially told Baldoni that he can’t sue the media just because he doesn’t like their good faith reporting.

The judge also determined that evidence did not show that the New York Times “acted with actual malice” in publishing their story, dismissing that $250m suit as well.

“The alleged facts indicate that the Times reviewed the available evidence and reported, perhaps in a dramatized manner, what it believed to have happened,” he wrote. “The Times had no obvious motive to favor Lively’s version of events.”

Now, you can read the entire judgment below for yourself, if you choose. It is quite long and, frankly, filled with content in the early pages that is not particularly flattering to Lively and Reynolds. That’s only important insofar as the court appears to have looked at the facts in a clear-eyed manner before pivoting to what the actual law says about the various claims Baldoni made, which ended up lacking merit.

Now, while the court did give Baldoni leave to refile some of his claims, but only those that revolve around contract interference. And here’s where I’d like to remind you that we started covering this whole celebrity fiasco as a Streisand Effect story. Baldoni could have attempted to manage what is admittedly a difficult situation for him, self-made or otherwise, in a quiet and respectful matter. Instead, he went legal and very, very public with this whole dispute and, as a result, the dismissal of his claims is equally public.

It’s not a good look. At this point, hard as it may be, the best course would probably be to not file some amended suit or appeal the decision. Given how Baldoni’s side has behaved thus far, however, I doubt they’ll take that course.


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I already wrote about the GOP’s bloodthirsty desire to use the military on Americans. They manufactured a nonsense “crisis” by over-aggressively sending in ICE agents to grab people off the streets, leading to protests, which were focused on provoking protestors into violence, which would then be used to justify an even more violent crackdown.

Given that, it’s crucial to get actual reports from what’s actually happening on the street, rather than relying on questionable media framing by those not actually there. Laura Jedeed, at The Nation, reports from the actual protest itself that the only “riot” happening is by the cops looking to provoke a response to justify their initial volley of violent activity:

I spent Sunday from about 4 pm until very late inside the LA protests, and this is what I saw. Yes, cars were set on fire in one part of the sprawling, multi-block protest. Yes, fireworks were launched at cops—a handful, sporadically. But it should be noted that these were launched long after these police officers began unloading flash bang after flash bang, rubber bullet after rubber bullet, into a largely peaceful crowd. (Flash bangs are stun grenades that produce a flash of light and deafening noise.)

The idea that cops were just reacting to protester provocation is absurd. Cops occupied intersections in an attempt to split the protest, then occasionally charged the protest lines that surrounded them to force the crowds to temporarily retreat. These assaults seemed unrelated to protester action or lack thereof. At one point, while the cops were unloading round after round of blue-tipped rubber bullets into a crowd hunkered down behind a barricade, a different group of protesters approached from the side and threw a firework into the center of the police line. The cops turned their fire against the group, which ran off, but did not pursue them. Thirty seconds later, the cops were back to shooting at the barricade.

We have heard a lot about the assault of police officers during these protests. Why haven’t we seen it? Where’s the body cam footage showing protesters injuring cops, striking them, putting them out of commission? I saw a police officer struck by a water bottle thrown by protesters in a barrage launched around 7:30 pm after those protesters spent hours absorbing “less lethal” rounds and being deafened by flash bangs, but that’s about it. Meanwhile, we’ve got drone footage of a mounted officer using his horse to trample a protester, who lies prone on the ground, surrounded by mounted police. We’ve got cops beating protesters with truncheons, cops deploying tear gas, cops bringing box after box of ammunition to the line so they could fire again and again and again into crowds of protesters exercising tremendous restraint throughout the day.

This pattern—police initiating violence, protesters responding minimally, police escalating further—isn’t accidental. It’s that fascist playbook all over again: manufacture the violence to justify the violence you initiated.

We should all be calling it out for what it is.

Tragically, most of the media are failing at that and are instead accepting the narrative the administration wants. Jadeed details how badly the media is failing:

“Pockets of LA descending into chaos,” an ABC news anchor declared in an extremely typical news segment on Monday. “Protesters setting cars on fire, dumping bikes and scooters on police cruisers on the highway. Law enforcement firing hundreds of flash bangs and non-lethal projectiles and making dozens of arrests.” In the background, footage of these atrocities: cops beating protesters with truncheons, tear gas, a car on fire. A shirtless masked man waving a Mexican flag atop a wrecked Waymo, cops firing into a crowd at close range. The only active violence in these clips comes from the cops, but no matter. That fire is what you should be worried about: the fire and nothing else.

While some organizations reported from inside the protest itself, most did not: They set up camp behind the police line, or reported using drone footage, or simply asked the cops what to say. “Dozens of people were arrested Sunday and accused of attempted murder, arson and other crimes during a day of violence and protests in Los Angeles,” NBC Los Angeles declared in an article based exclusively on LAPD sources. It’s an understandable decision on their part. Just look at Lauren Tomasi, a reporter for the Australian Channel Nine news service who got “caught in the crossfire” and struck with a rubber bullet while reporting—by which I mean an LA police officer aimed directly at the reporter from close range and shot her. She reports being “sore, but OK,” which is more than photographer Nick Stern can say: The day before, a “less lethal” round punctured his leg and required emergency surgery. As of Tuesday morning, the LA Press Club documented over 30 injuries to members of the press. Easier and safer to parrot police talking points than face down their guns.

The systematic targeting of journalists isn’t incidental—it’s designed to control the narrative by ensuring that most coverage comes from behind police lines, where reporters can only see what law enforcement wants them to see.

One of the most egregious examples of this that I saw was the NY Times posting an image of a shopping cart on fire and claiming that “the police are firing back”—as if a burning shopping cart constitutes such a direct threat to heavily armored officers hundreds of yards away that it justifies “returning” fire into crowds of people.

The Trump regime is manufacturing a fake riot to justify their own actions. They’re pushing for violence to justify more violence. The violence and attacks we’re seeing are almost entirely initiated by the cops, and yet are being falsely framed as protesters “rioting” despite the lack of evidence to support it.

The media’s willingness to amplify this manufactured narrative isn’t just journalistic malpractice—it’s complicity in the very authoritarianism they should be exposing.

So let’s be clear about what’s happening. If it’s a riot, it’s the police who are rioting. If there’s an “invasion” of LA, it’s the US military that is invading. Kudos to Jedeed and The Nation for calling this out while so much of the media is rewriting history in real time.

As the driver pointed out—as protesters around me would later point out—the president’s not wrong: LA is under invasion. But the invading force isn’t the immigrants who live and work here. It’s ICE attempting to abduct children from elementary schools by claiming their parents authorized the pick-up, or rolling up to Home Depot to abduct people doing the most American thing imaginable: pulling themselves up by their bootstraps, hiring themselves out as day laborers to make a better life for themselves and their families. It’s the Marines deployed against their fellow citizens by an administration that’s fantasized about quelling First Amendment activity by force for half a decade now. These are the un-American hordes descending on Los Angeles.

Trump can call these protests invasions all he wants: I know what I saw. As the sun began to set, riot cops from the LA county sheriff’s department showed up on trucks, fully kitted out with shields and gas masks. The rapidly shrinking protest saw the writing on the wall and, rather than confront these militarized enforcers, turned and walked away, into the night and into the city. For hours they marched, blasting mariachi music and old-school West Coast rap and chanting their simple, reasonable demand: “No ICE in LA!”

As the protesters marched, they chanted something else: “Whose streets? Our streets!” It wasn’t a declaration of war or a challenge to others who might lay claim to the city, but a statement of obvious fact. As these several hundred protesters marched the wrong way up a one-way street, completely stopping traffic, an overwhelming number of drivers honked and cheered. They rolled down their windows to fist-bump the protesters and take pictures and shout their approval.

From the very beginning of this regime, we’ve been saying over and over and over again that the most important thing is telling the truth. As Mike Brock keeps saying, “two plus two equals four” and you can’t let them get away with telling you otherwise.

This isn’t just about getting the facts straight for their own sake. When media coverage systematically misrepresents who is initiating violence and who is responding to it, it provides cover for further escalation. Each cycle of distorted coverage makes the next round of police violence more politically palatable.

The people are not rioting. The police are. Immigrants are not invading. The US military is.

We have to be clear on what ground truth is, and that requires that the media stop accepting propagandist framing.


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The Trump administration on June 4, 2025, announced travel restrictions targeting 19 countries in Africa and Asia, including many of the world’s poorest nations. All travel is banned from 12 of these countries, with partial restrictions on travel from the rest.

The presidential proclamation, entitled “Restricting the Entry of Foreign Nationals to Protect the United States from Foreign Terrorists and Other National Security and Public Safety Threats,” is aimed at “countries throughout the world for which vetting and screening information is so deficient as to warrant a full or partial suspension on the entry or admission of nationals from those countries.”

In a video that accompanied the proclamation, President Donald Trump said: “The recent terror attack in Boulder, Colorado, has underscored the extreme dangers posed to our country by the entry of foreign nationals who are not properly vetted.”

The latest travel ban reimposes restrictions on many of the countries that were included on travel bans in Trump’s first term, along with several new countries.

But this travel ban, like the earlier ones, will not significantly improve national security and public safety in the United States. That’s because migrants account for a minuscule portion of violence in the U.S. And migrants from the latest travel ban countries account for an even smaller portion, according to data that I have collected. The suspect in Colorado, for example, is from Egypt, which is not on the travel ban list.

As a scholar of political sociology, I don’t believe Trump’s latest travel ban is about national security. Rather, I’d argue, it’s primarily about using national security as an excuse to deny visas to nonwhite applicants.

Terrorism and public safety

In the past five years, the U.S. has witnessed more than 100,000 homicides. Political violence by militias and other ideological movements accounted for 354 fatalities, according to an initiative known as the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data, which tracks armed conflict around the world. That’s less than 1% of the country’s homicide victims. And foreign terrorism accounted for less than 1% of this 1%, according to my data.

The Trump administration says the U.S. cannot appropriately vet visa applicants in countries with uncooperative governments or underdeveloped security systems. That claim is false.

The State Department and other government agencies do a thorough job of vetting visa applicants, even in countries where there is no U.S. embassy, according to an analysis by the CATO Institute.

The U.S. government has sophisticated methods for identifying potential threats. They include detailed documentation requirements, interviews with consular officers and clearance by national security agencies. And it rejects more than 1 in 6 visa applications, with ever-increasing procedures for detecting fraud.

The thoroughness of the visa review process is evident in the numbers.

Authorized foreign-born residents of the U.S. are far less likely than U.S.-born residents to engage in criminal activity. And unauthorized migrants are even less likely to commit crimes. Communities with more migrants – authorized and unauthorized – have similar or slightly lower crime rates than communities with fewer migrants.

If vetting were as deficient as Trump’s executive order claims, we would expect to see a significant number of terrorist plots from countries on the travel ban list. But we don’t.

Of the 4 million U.S. residents from the 2017 travel ban countries, I have documented only four who were involved in violent extremism in the past five years.

Two of them were arrested after plotting with undercover law enforcement agents. One was found to have lied on his asylum application. One was an Afghan man who killed three Pakistani Shiite Muslim immigrants in New Mexico in 2022.

Such a handful of zealots with rifles or homemade explosives can be life-altering for victims and their families, but they do not represent a threat to U.S. national security.

Degrading the concept of national security

Trump has been trying for years to turn immigration into a national security issue.

In his first major speech on national security in 2016, Trump focused on the “dysfunctional immigration system which does not permit us to know who we let into our country.”

His primary example was an act of terrorism by a man who was born in the U.S.

The first Trump administration’s national security strategy, issued in December 2017, prioritized jihadist terrorist organizations that “radicalize isolated individuals” as “the most dangerous threat to the Nation” – not armies, not another 9/11, but isolated individuals.

If the travel ban is not really going to improve national security or public safety, then what is it about?

Linking immigration to national security seems to serve two long-standing Trump priorities. First is his effort to make American more white, in keeping with widespread bias among his supporters against nonwhite immigrants.

Remember Trump’s insults to Mexicans and Muslims in his escalator speech announcing his presidential campaign in 2015. He has also expressed a preference for white immigrants from Norway in 2018 and South Africa in 2025.

Trump has repeatedly associated himself with nationalists who view immigration by nonwhites as a danger to white supremacy.

Second, invoking national security allows Trump to pursue this goal without the need for accountability, since Congress and the courts have traditionally deferred to the executive branch on national security issues.

Trump also claims national security justifications for tariffs and other policies that he has declared national emergencies, in a bid to avoid criticism by the public and oversight by the other branches of government.

But this oversight is necessary in a democratic system to ensure that immigration policy is based on facts.

Charles Kurzman, Professor of Sociology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.


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