Week 47 - Trump Goes on His Revenge Tour, Addresses the Military, Loses in Court, and Shuts Down the Government
Description
This week we see an increasingly unbridled Trump, taking previously unthinkable actions in the light of day, and facing little or no pushback, nor consequence. Trump finally got his wish for retribution against former FBI director James Comey, with his newly installed U.S. attorney, garnering an indictment — although barely. Rather than retreat, Trump bragged to reporters that there would be more indictments of his perceived enemies coming.
Comedian Jimmy Kimmel’s show returned to air to a record audience, with Nexstar and Sinclair shortly after agreeing to air the show again, in a victory for free speech. Financial media reported that the lesson parent company Disney learned may be a turning point for previous capitulation by media companies. There were also several court rulings this week in favor of free speech, and against the Trump regime.
Defense Department (aka Department of War if Trump gets his way) Secretary Pete Hegseth convened a remarkable meeting at Quantico, flying generals and admirals stationed around the world back to Virginia, to deliver what turned out to be his standard anti-DEI, warrior stump speech. Trump also made his way to address the audience in a 73 minute rambling speech, 44 minutes of which was a repeat of random, unrelated remarks he had made in recent speeches. When Trump did turn to matters related to the military, his first remark was related to using the U.S. military on the country’s own citizens, and allowing Democratic-run cities to be “training grounds” for the military.
As the week closed out, the government shut down, as Democrats at long last did not capitulate to Trump’s desires. Trump and Republicans lied repeatedly about what was happening, and sought to place the blame on Democrats, as Trump threatened to cut hundreds of thousands more federal workers. It was unclear if this was possible, given, as we have covered in this project, several agencies have already sought to hire back employees fired by the regime. Trump also suffered a rare Supreme Court loss as the court ruled Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook could stay in place, hours after private company ADP showed more negative employment data, and the day after Trump pulled his nominee to lead the Bureau of Labor Statistics.