Will Bunch of the Philadelphia Inquirer wrote:
One can’t help but wonder if Braxton
Bragg — the infamous and incompetent Confederate general who owned 105 enslaved
African Americans, waged war on Mexicans,
and was so awful his own troops tried to
assassinate him ... twice — was looking up from his fiery eternity and
smiling.
Nearly 149 years after Bragg’s death — and four months after
a U-turn that involved
a juvenile ploy to reattach this traitor’s name to the sprawling U.S. Army
base in his native North Carolina — here came the 47th president of the nation
that trounced Bragg up and down the Civil War battlefield. Yet, on Tuesday, Donald
Trump all but promised a sea of beret-wearing soldiers a return to
Confederate values, under a large banner that read, “THIS WE’LL DEFEND.”
The insurrectionist Bragg surely would have been heartened
when Trump used his powerful platform to
rally an entire army against democratically elected public officials like
California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass — and when the
uniformed troops of a
once proudly apolitical U.S. Army answered with thunderous applause.
Like everything else about Trump’s strongman regime, the
cheers had been manufactured. Military.com
later reported that the chiseled forces of the storied 82nd Airborne
Division behind Trump’s podium had been picked, in part, for their right-wing
political views and also — according to one email obtained by the news site —
to satisfy our allegedly
224-pound (lol) president with “no fat soldiers.” (Yes, Trump’s Tinder ad
for his dream-date U.S. soldier essentially read, “No fatties.”)
“If soldiers have political views that are in opposition to
the current administration and they don’t want to be in the audience then they
need to speak with their leadership and get swapped out,” read another email.
No wonder Trump’s audience not only laughed and cheered at ugly diatribes
against their prior commander in chief, Joe Biden, and a free
press, but also
lined up for a vendor who was somehow allowed into Fort Bragg to sell items
such as “Make America Great Again” chain necklaces and phony credit cards
labeled “White Privilege Card: Trumps Everything.”
This we’ll defend?
It’s not an exaggeration to say that June 10, 2025, will go
down in American history as a day of infamy, when an authoritarian president
made clear that the
world’s largest and most lethal fighting force now exists to enforce his
personalist political agenda, and not to defend the nation’s people.
And it’s no surprise that Trump’s harshest critics came from
the outraged ranks of patriotic veterans like Hurricane Katrina
relief hero and retired Lt. Gen. Russel Honore, who called the “damn” speech
“inappropriate” in a tweet,
adding that “I never witnessed that S..t [sic] like this in 37 years in
Uniform.”
But while Trump’s blatant politicizing of the U.S. military
was a horrific crime against democracy in its own right, this fateful moment
did not occur in a vacuum.
Although the ostensible purpose of the Fort Bragg speech was
to kick off the 250th birthday party for a
U.S. Army launched in 1775 to oppose (irony alert) a cruel and arbitrary
monarch, the real mission seemed to celebrate the two-day anniversary of
Trump’s crossing-the-Rubicon
decision to federalize
the National Guard and call
out Marines on the American soil of Los Angeles.
Under legal
justifications that seemed invented from whole cloth, the California
National Guard operation that Trump now commands against the will of Newsom —
whose state is suing the regime — to quell protests against federal immigration
raids that the White House falsely calls “an
insurrection” is already seeing heavily
armed troops detaining LA residents.
The added call-up of 700 Marines — troops trained not to
enforce public safety but to kill people — is making clear that an increasingly
botched American Experiment is entering a terrifying new phase in which the
might of our grossly oversized military is deployed to silence domestic
dissent.
The shocking video this week of a train carrying scores
of Army M1-A1 Abrams tanks past the Washington Monument and into the center
of Washington, D.C., where a 250th Army anniversary parade on Saturday night
coincidentally falls
on Trump’s 79th birthday, makes clear the real point: Trump has been
planning a military junta style of undemocratic government from Day One.
This week, Rolling
Stone reported that the military is likely to remain on the streets of LA
for weeks, accompanying agents from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
(ICE) as they increase raids on Home Depots, car washes, and farms to meet the
regime’s arbitrary mass deportation goal of one
million migrant arrests this year. A source told the
magazine that “it is hard to imagine that protesters would stay home for
this, and that escalation in such a scenario is all but inevitable.”
And yet, it’s disturbing the extent to which even smart and good pro-democracy politicians and pundits still aren’t seeing this. Wednesday night, I heard Wisconsin Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin — fresh off a well-deserved grilling of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Capitol Hill — go on MSNBC and still insist that Trump sending in the Marines in Southern California is “a distraction” from his failed economic policies.
No.
This is not a distraction from the essence of the 47th
presidency. This is rather what Trump’s MAGA movement was always all about,
imposing his will on the divided nation that just barely elected him in
November as the kind of “red
Caesar” dictator that extreme-right “thought leaders” have been pleading
for, and using brute force to get there.
A president whose disastrous first term ended with a violent attempted coup to block the peaceful transfer of power is now moving quickly in his second term to consolidate power, to accomplish the form of autocracy he sought on Jan. 6, 2021.
What we are watching this week, from the chaos in downtown LA to the Mussolini-like strutting at Fort Bragg to the soon-to-be-pothole-ravaged streets of D.C., is nothing less than Trump’s second attempted self-coup against the United States. And this one offers a much greater chance of success, unless the resistance mobilizes quickly.
It’s true that — as the
brilliant New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie and others have noted —
Trump and his henchmen, like anti-immigrant guru Stephen
Miller, are making their move now less because he is a strongman, and more
because his nearly five months in office have revealed him as a weak man.
His “Big Beautiful Bill” that would devastate U.S.
healthcare and other public goods is not surprisingly foundering
in Congress. Scores of judges — some appointed by Trump in his first term —
are
striking down his worst dictatorial moves. Most importantly, the
president’s public support is plunging rapidly toward Nixonian levels, with a
new Quinnipiac Poll showing 56% of Americans oppose his mass deportation,
while his overall approval has sunk to 38%.
What would Chairman Mao or Comrade Lenin do? The Atlantic’s
Anne Applebaum, an expert on authoritarianism, nailed
it in her latest essay: “Now Trump faces the same choice as his
revolutionary predecessors. Give up — or radicalize. Find compromise — or polarize
society further. Slow down — or use violence. Like his revolutionary
predecessors, Trump has chosen radicalization and polarization, and he is
openly seeking to promote violence.”
What’s happening in Los Angeles is bad, but it’s only the
beginning. It
was reported this week that ICE is planning to send militarized “tactical
units” into Democratic-run cities, including Philadelphia — as well as Chicago,
New York, Seattle, and northern Virginia. It’s noteworthy that the Trump regime’s
open-ended orders federalizing National Guard members in California weren’t
limited to the Golden State, suggesting that we could see armed troops
patrolling past Independence Hall sooner rather than later.
With all the scary stuff that’s happening right now,
arguably the most alarming is the Trump regime’s efforts — amplified by the
predictable Fox News tape reels of the few cars that burned last weekend in LA
— to claim that any form of dissent is now a terrorist threat against “the
homeland.” From
the Oval Office, the president said of the D.C. tank parade: “If there’s
any protester that wants to come out, they will be met with very big force.”
Not rioters. Not looters. Protesters. American citizens
exercising their First Amendment right to air their grievances with the
government and voice dissent would be greeted in the nation’s capital with
tanks, just as
happened in Tiananmen Square 36 years ago this month.
This is a 10-alarm fire for American democracy that screams
out for action.
As it happens, there
is a protest slated for Saturday — a huge one. It’s called, beyond
fittingly, No Kings, and marches and rallies are now
planned for more than 1,800 cities, state capitals, and small towns in all 50
states. Everywhere
except Trump’s childish D.C. birthday party in Washington. If you are able
to attend No Kings and rekindle the spirit that threw off one monarchy here in
Philly in 1776, I’d urge you to do so.
A general who once fought to defend a tyrannical regime of
slavery predicted
in 1861, “We shall show you that we are stronger than you, and that we will
beat you in the long run.” That was, of course, Braxton Bragg, on his
buffoonish journey toward the dustbin of history. The most important thing
about reactionary movements and the dictators who lead them is that they fail.
Donald Trump’s second coup will fail, too — but only after
we the people make clear that this will not stand.
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