Saturday, June 14, 2025

RIP

Violeta Chamorro, who brought peace to Nicaragua, dead at 95


By AFP
June 14, 2025


Violeta Chamorro (C) ruled Nicaragua from 1990 to 1997
 - Copyright AFP 

Drew ANGERER, SAUL LOEB, Alexander NEMENOV

Violeta Chamorro, who brought peace to Nicaragua after years of war and was the first woman elected president in the Americas, died Saturday at the age of 95, her family said.

Chamorro, who ruled the poor Central American country from 1990 to 1997, “died in peace, surrounded by the affection and love of her children,” said a statement issued by her four children.

As president, Chamorro managed to bring to an end a civil war that had raged for much of the 1980s as US-backed rebels known as the ‘Contras’ fought the leftist Sandinista government.


That conflict made Nicaragua one of the big proxy battlegrounds of the Cold War.


Chamorro put her country on the path to democracy in the difficult years following the Sandinista revolution of 1979, which had toppled the US-backed right-wing regime of Anastasio Somoza.

In a country known for macho culture, Chamorro had a maternal style and was known for her patience and a desire for reconciliation.

When she won the 1990 election at the head of a broad coalition, she defeated Daniel Ortega, the Sandinista guerrilla leader and icon who is now president again.

Ortega has been in power for 17 years and is widely criticized by governments and rights groups as having crushed personal freedoms, all political opposition and judicial independence with autocratic rule.

Chamorro “represented a contribution for the peace necessary in our country,” Ortega and his wife Rosario Murillo, who has the title of co-president, said in a statement.

The former leader died in Costa Rica, where she moved in 2023, to be close to her children, three of whom are living here in exile because of their opposition to Ortega.

Chamorro — Nicaraguans referred to her affectionately as “Dona Violeta” — had been living far removed from public life for decades. In her later years, she suffered from Alzheimer’s disease.

“Her legacy is unquestionable,” said Felix Madariaga, a Nicaraguan academic and political activist living in exile in the United States.

“She led the transition from war to peace, healing a country destroyed by war. The contrast with Ortega is clear and deep,” said Madariaga.

– ‘Typical of a homemaker’ –


Chamorro was the widow of Pedro Joaquin Chamorro, who came from one of Nicaragua’s most prominent families.

As owner and chief editor of the newspaper La Prensa, he was killed in 1978 in an attack blamed on the regime of Anastasio Somoza.

His death propelled Chamorro to take over the newspaper and, eventually, to get into politics.

After the Sandinistas seized power in 1979, she became the only female member of a national reconstruction government.


But she quit that junta in 1980, believing the Sandinistas were moving too far to the left and into the sphere of communist Cuba.

Chamorro became prominent in the opposition to the Sandinistas as they fought the ‘Contra’ rebels financed by the United States under Ronald Reagan.

In 1990, she stunned the country by winning the presidency — and beating Ortega — as leader of a coalition of 14 parties.


During the campaign, she was known for wearing white and had to use a wheelchair because of a knee injury.

In her memoirs, Chamorro said she won because she gained the trust of war-weary Nicaraguans as she spoke in simple language “typical of a homemaker and a mother.”

“In the macho culture of my country, few people believed that I, a woman, and what is more, handicapped, had the strength, energy and will” to beat Ortega, she wrote.

“But if the Berlin Wall fell, why not the Sandinistas?”
Is America becoming greener? Environmental impact of different US states assessed


By Dr. Tim Sandle
June 13, 2025
DIGITAL JOURNAL


Bank of solar power panels in the UK. Image © Tim Sandle

The U.S. is among the very low performing countries, at 57th in the current Climate Performance Rankings. The U.S. receives a very low rating for GHG Emissions, Energy Use, and Renewable Energy, and a medium for Climate Policy. This is, however, above Canda (in a lowly 62nd place) but well below the UK (in 6th position).

There had been an increase in wind and solar power capacity under the Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act, which resulted in massive investments and incentives. However, such measures are being reversed under the Trump regime.

While the U.S. occupies a low spot, there are clear divergences between its regions. Pollution and the environmental impact of modern life are a concern for many in the U.S. The U.S. produces over 292 million tons of waste per year, or over 4.9 pounds per person per day, according to the latest data from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). This concern is not manifest evenly across the different states; some are clearly more socially conscious than others.

With over half of U.S. citizens worried about contamination of waterways and soil, the non-profit organization SmileHub has released new reports on the Best Charities for Environmental Protection and the Best States for Environmental Protection in 2025. The data has been shared with Digital Journal.

To derive the findings, SmileHub compared the eco-friendliness of all 50 states across 25 key metrics. The data set ranges from the number of environmental protection charities per capita to industrial toxins per square mile of land area to climate change vulnerability.

This revealed lists of the best and worst states.

Best States

1. California

2. Washington

3. New York

4. Vermont

5. Maryland

6. Hawaii

7. Massachusetts

8. New Jersey

9. Oregon

10. Virginia

Worst States

41. Tennessee

42. Iowa

43. Kansas

44. Wyoming

45. Kentucky

46. North Dakota

47. Alabama

48. Mississippi

49. West Virginia

50. Louisiana

While the rankings are clear-cut, the data set reveals some interesting variations between states for specific metrics. For example, on the basis of charitable organisations seeking to address environmental concerns, then California has the highest number of environmental protection charities per capita – 9.9 times higher than Oklahoma, which has the lowest number.

On a different measure – travel – here New York has the highest share of workers that use green transportation – 3 times higher than in Mississippi, which has the lowest share.

An important set of environmental remediation efforts is based on renewable energy, to divest away from fossil fuels. Examining this, South Dakota has the highest share of renewable energy consumption – 18.3 times higher than Delaware, which has the lowest share.

An indicator of pollution is contaminated earth, and this a is a significant issue for growing crops. Looking at this area of agriculture, Hawaii is one of the states with the highest soil quality – 27 times higher than New Mexico, which has the lowest soil quality.

 

‘All over the map’: Trump slammed as ICE raids farms despite his promise

Sarah K. Burris
June 13, 2025 
RAW STORY




Former Marine fighter pilot Amy McGrath thinks that top White House aide Stephen Miller is the puppet master behind the Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids on farms across California.

President Donald Trump announced to the media on Thursday that “changes are coming” to ensure farmers won't lose immigrant labor from their fields.

Trump told reporters they'd “have an order on that soon."

However, on Friday, Tom Homan, executive associate director for Enforcement and Removal Operations, told the press, “I have not seen any instruction, anything that changes in the near future."

It prompted MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace to wonder aloud if the president, as the commander-in-chief, issues a statement, do National Guard soldiers follow that or follow what others in the government are telling them.

"Who knows what it means? Because Trump is all over the map," said McGrath. "I mean, he's got his guys, Stephen Miller and these agents, doing these raids. And meanwhile, he's back in Washington, D.C., saying, 'Oh, don't deport the agricultural workers.' I mean, the reality is it's chaos."

The Washington Post reported Friday morning that conservative influencers begged Trump not to allow for farmworker protections.

"Miller, Trump’s deputy chief of staff for policy and an architect of his immigration policy, likewise voiced concerns Thursday about Trump’s comments," the Post reported, citing "a person with knowledge of the discussions, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about them publicly."

In a previous incident, Trump told a reporter that he won the case at the Supreme Court over the deportation of a Maryland man to an El Salvador prison without due process. When a TIME magazine reporter corrected him that he lost in court, Trump said, "That's not what my people told me." One editorial called it an "alarming confession."

McGrath said that from the military's perspective, it isn't something they should be involved in at all.

"The military should not be standing around. You see these pictures of ICE agents going after folks, and then you see these National Guardsmen and potentially Marines standing around them guarding the ICE agents. This is not what our military, our Marines, are trained for. It's very dangerous. You're taking them away from training for the real wars. And boy, we just — there's another one that just started last night in the Middle East. So we're taking them away from their real job, and it's really going to hurt our military in the long run. This politicization of our military — it's terrible."
See the clip of McGrath below or at the link here.


Trump to pause anti-immigrant raids  on farms, hotels and restaurants

Raids on migrants
Copyright Orange County Register/SCNG

By Euronews
Published on 

US President Donald Trump has decided to temporarily suspend raids on farms, hotels and restaurants, according a media report.

The US government has ordered immigration officials to pause raids and arrests on farms, hotels and restaurants, according to a report by the New York Times.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) were sent a directive asking that they refrain from heading to such establishments, which also include meatpacking plants and aquaculture.

This decision was communicated through an official email sent last Thursday, according to information confirmed by three US officials who spoke to the Times.

In the email, senior ICE official Tatum King said ""Effective today, please hold on all work site enforcement investigations/operations on agriculture (including aquaculture and meat packing plants), restaurants, and operating hotels.

The email also went on to say investigations into these industries which involve "human trafficking, money laundering, and drug smuggling" should continue.

Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin confirmed the report, saying in a statement that "we will follow the president's direction and continue to get the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens off America's streets."

Economic and political impact of immigration raids

The pause in the raids potentially reflects the government's concerns about the negative impact these operations are having on vital economic sectors, as well as electoral support. The agricultural industry, particularly in states like California, relies almost exclusively on immigrant labour for its day-to-day operations.

The recent protests in Los Angeles, which were triggered by large-scale immigration raids in local communities, have increased pressure on the government. This situation poses a dilemma for the president, who is seeking to maintain the support of key constituencies ahead of the upcoming congressional and midterm elections in 2026.

Since returning to the White House in January, Trump has implemented an unprecedentedly heavy-handed immigration policy. His cabinet officials recently held meetings with ICE leadership, setting a minimum quota of 3,000 arrests per day, a mandate that has resulted in intensified immigration raids nationwide.

Long-term outlook on immigration policy remains unchanged

The temporary suspension of the agriculture and hospitality raids likely does not represent a fundamental change in Trump's immigration policy, which remains aggressive in rhetoric.

Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem pledhed that federal authorities are "not going away", and that people who are in the country illegally, as well as violent protesters, will "face consequences

The administration has relied heavily on a crime-focused message, which places significant emphasis on apprehending individuals illegally in the country who are also violent criminals.

That message has been undercut, however, by statistics revealed this week which show the number of people arrested for immigration violations that have never faced other criminal charges or convictions has shot up from 860 in January this year to 7,800 this month.

The number of individuals arrested with criminal charges and convictions also went up, but at a significantly lower rate of 91%.

To Defeat Trump's Fascism, We Must Confront Militarism

While most Americans instinctively understand the threat U.S. militarism poses to democracy, the times call for more explicit links between militarism and rising fascism and a blueprint for reversing this threat.


U.S. President Donald Trump addresses a crowd of servicemen and women during a celebration open to the public in honor of the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army on June 10, 2025 in Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
(Photo: Melissa Sue Gerrits/Getty Images)

Common Dreams

President Trump’s deployment of 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 Marines to Los Angeles to quash peaceful demonstrations against brutal ICE raids is a wake up call. Now is the time to push back against this administration’s use of military violence against its own citizens to consolidate authoritarian power. As Trump threatens to arrest California Governor Newsom and unleash “troops everywhere,” the people of this country must reject militarization as a tool of authoritarianism and stand firm to defend and expand democracy.

As tanks and troops descend upon Los Angeles to silence dissent, on Saturday, they will roll through Washington in a display of power, revealing the undercurrents of an administration that wields militarization not for defense, but for domination.

On his 79th birthday, President Trump will finally get his “big, beautiful” military parade, brandishing unrivaled U.S. military might on the streets of the nation’s capital. Marking the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army, the $45 million parade will feature nearly 7,000 soldiers marching down Constitution Avenue, flanked by hundreds of B-17 bombers, Strykers and Apache helicopters. Washington will look like Nazi Germany, and unless we tackle militarism in our fight to defend democracy, we, too, may soon live under authoritarian rule.

As longtime peace activists, we have opposed U.S. wars against Korea, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya, and raised the alarm over militarized U.S. foreign policies like war drills against China and North Korea which provoke a dangerous counter-reaction and fuels an arms race that could trigger nuclear war.

The Trump administration isn't trimming fat from the federal budget, they're cutting the heart out of communities to further enrich billionaires, war profiteers, and techno-fascists.

Deluged daily with domestic crises, it is challenging to draw attention to the dangers of U.S. militarism, especially when most view it as a problem “over there.”

But now we are in an era where masked ICE agents are raiding schools, workplaces, churches and homes, tearing apart families by abducting and deporting legal residents and rounding up students for protesting U.S. support of Israel’s genocide of Palestinians.

The U.S. public can no longer afford to ignore the lethal consequences of militarism on our democracy at a time when our Commander-in-Chief has pardoned January 6th vigilantes, defied the Constitution and judicial rulings, threatened to invoke the 1807 Insurrection Act, and has already deployed the National Guard and active-duty Marines in an attempt to quash dissent at home.

While most Americans instinctively understand the threat U.S. militarism poses to democracy, the times call for more explicit links between militarism and rising fascism and a blueprint for reversing this threat.

Contrary to Trump’s campaign promises to end U.S. involvement in Ukraine and Gaza, he is calling for an unprecedented $1.1 trillion Pentagon budget for more war and militarism, including modernizing nuclear weapons, further entrenching the U.S.’ permanent war footing across the Pacific and Asia in preparation for war with China, and massively increasing policing, detention and deportation.

In 2026 alone, Trump and Republicans want to spend an additional $43.8 billion on mass detentions and deportations, funding more ICE raids like those in LA. This militarized budget accounts for 75 percent of the entire discretionary budget, which explains why on top of massive tax cuts for billionaires, there is no money for social programs and federal agencies that actually help our communities feel safe – clean air and water, healthcare, child nutrition, education, and housing assistance.

U.S. taxpayers are told this historic increase in more militarism is a “generational investment” in defending our country, or that it’s to honor the sacrifices of U.S. service women and men.

But the truth is that half of the Pentagon budget goes to defense contractors that sell weapons of mass destruction to authoritarian states and human rights abusers, like Saudi Arabia and Israel. Instead of financing Israel’s genocidal assault on Gaza with $17.9 billion in 2024, U.S. taxpayer dollars could have provided more than one million U.S. veterans with VA healthcare.

Our taxpayer dollars also enrich tech billionaires like Elon Musk, whose $277 million dollar donation to Trump’s campaign landed him a $5.2 billion dollar Pentagon deal in April, and a free pass to wage an administrative coup. Billions of our taxpayer dollars also go to venture capitalist Peter Thiel, co-founder of Paypal and Palantir, which Bloomberg describes as an “intelligence platform designed for the global War on Terror [that] was weaponized against ordinary Americans at home.” Thiel, who doesn’t “believe that freedom and democracy are compatible,” just received another contract to carry out ICE deportations, and is, along with Musk, Meta’s Zuckerberg and other techno-fascists, seeking to build a dystopian future of unregulated “network states” and surveil us all.

At a time when most Americans want an end to war, Trump is using our tax dollars to celebrate militarism as a cornerstone of consolidating authoritarian power...

The Trump administration isn't trimming fat from the federal budget, they're cutting the heart out of communities to further enrich billionaires, war profiteers, and techno-fascists. In the report Trading Life for Death, the National Priorities Project and Public Citizen found that militarized spending increases in the reconciliation proposals total $163 billion for FY 2026. That's more than enough to fund Medicaid for the 13.7 million people at risk of losing health care, and the 11 million people at risk of losing food stamps.

As Trump uses the parade as a spectacle to exalt his unchecked power, people around the country will join over 1,800 organized protests under the banners of “No Kings Day” and “Kick Out the Clowns.” This day of action offers an opportunity to shine a light on the threat of a highly militarized society to our democracy, from the bloated Pentagon budget that leaches funding from investments that make us secure, to state capture by techno-fascists on our taxpayer dime. We need to do the hard work to redefine our paradigm of national security. The Feminist Peace Playbook: A Guide for Transforming U.S. Foreign Policy provides one such guide for moving our country from one defined by war and violence to one built on care, compassion and cooperation.

Let’s heed the prescient words of President Eisenhower, a five-star general who led the Allied Forces in WWII to defeat fascism, when he warned Americans to “guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence… by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists, and will persist."

At a time when most Americans want an end to war, Trump is using our tax dollars to celebrate militarism as a cornerstone of consolidating authoritarian power at home.


Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.


Christine Ahn is the executive director of Women Cross DMZ, a movement of women mobilizing for peace in Korea.
Full Bio >

Leslie Cagan is a decades long leader in the U.S. peace and justice movement.
Full Bio >
'Idolatrous': Christian activist rips evangelicals' Trump 'worshipping'


People participate in the "No Kings" protest against President Donald Trump's policies in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S., June 14, 2025. REUTERS/Rachel Wisniewski
Alex HendersonJune 14, 2025 | 01:46PM ET


At a No Kings Day protest in Philadelphia on Saturday, June 14, one of the many participants will be Guthrie Graves-Fitzsimmons of the Interfaith Alliance and the liberal/progressive Christian group Faithful America.

As many as 2000 No Kings Day protests are being held all over the United States to express opposition to President Donald Trump's military parade in Washington, DC, which, critics argue, isn't really a celebration of the military, but a promotion of Trump's authoritarian agenda and the MAGA movement.

In an op-ed published on June 14, Graves-Fitzsimmons cites Christianity as a major reason for taking part in Philly's No Kings Day event — which MSNBC described as the day's "flagship" No Kings event.

"For the Philadelphia protest," Graves-Fitzsimmons explains, "Faithful America, an online community of progressive Christians, is bringing its giant Trump Golden Calf balloon. It's a reference to the Exodus passage about the ancient Israelites worshipping an idol they created while Moses was away on Mount Sinai receiving the Ten Commandments. The Trump Golden Calf sends the unmistakable message that Christians worshipping Trump is idolatrous, and we rebuke our siblings in Christ who are providing spiritual cover for Trump's authoritarian destruction of American democracy."

Many Christian nationalists are openly saying that they believe Trump was sent by God Himself — a claim that Graves-Fitzsimmons finds insulting to Christianity.

"Trump shows no evidence of personal piety or of an attempt to follow Jesus Christ — recall when he said he never had to ask God for forgiveness — and has made it a priority to aid the wealthy and attack the most vulnerable in our society," Graves-Fitzsimmons writes. "He exhibits the polar opposite of Christian social ethics…. Christians believe Christ’s kingdom will reign forever. As American Christians in the year 2025, we must also believe and work to ensure that Trump’s power, granted to him by voters, ends at the end of his second term in accordance with the Constitution."

Graves-Fitzsimmons adds, "And every day, until the end of his presidency, he must be prevented from acting like a king and made to remember that we live in a democracy. "

Guthrie Graves-Fitzsimmons' full op-ed for MSNBC is available at this link.



US set for military parade and ‘No Kings’ protests on Trump’s birthday


US President Donald Trump is set to preside over a military parade at Washington, DC's Lincoln Memorial on his 79th birthday Saturday, as demonstrators ready to stage nationwide anti-Trump "No Kings" protests underscoring the deep divisions over his second term. In Los Angeles, armed Marines have been deployed amid protests against Trump's immigration policies.


Issued on: 14/06/2025 -
By: FRANCE 24
US veterans on June 13, 2025 stage a protest against the military parade for the Army's 250th anniversary, which falls on President Donald Trump's birthday. 
© Leigh Vogel, AFP

The massive military parade that President Donald Trump has long wanted is set to step off from the Lincoln Memorial on Saturday evening, with tanks, bands and thousands of troops.

And the biggest question marks are whether it will be overshadowed or delayed by either the weather in Washington or planned protests elsewhere around the country.

Falling on Trump’s 79th birthday, the parade was added just a few weeks ago to the Army’s long-planned 250th anniversary celebration. It has triggered criticism for its price tag of up to $45 million and the possibility that the lumbering tanks could tear up city streets. The Army has taken a variety of steps to protect the streets, including laying metal plates down along the route.

The daylong display of America’s Army comes as Trump has shown his willingness to use his fighting forces in ways other US presidents have typically avoided, inviting an array of lawsuits and accusations that he is politicising the military.

He has deployed the California National Guard and US Marines to provide security during Los Angeles protests tied to immigration raids. It marks the first time in 60 years that a president activated the National Guard on federal orders inside a state without a governor’s permission, and California Governor Gavin Newsom has filed a lawsuit to stop the deployments.

Earlier in the week, Trump raised eyebrows during a speech at Fort Bragg when members of the 82nd Airborne Division were directed to stand behind Trump and they booed and cheered during his incendiary remarks, including condemnation of his predecessor, Joe Biden. There also was a pop-up “Make America Great Again” merchandise stand nearby selling souvenirs to troops in uniform.

The Defense Department has a doctrine that prohibits troops from participating in political activity while in uniform. Members of Congress and military leaders have expressed concerns about the political displays during the speech at Fort Bragg.

Trump so far has shrugged off concerns about the parade cost, the rainy forecast and the potential for protests.

“What a day it will be!!!” Trump wrote on his social media site, adding later that he hoped the weather would cooperate but that if it doesn't, “that brings you good luck. That’s OK too. Doesn’t matter. Doesn’t affect the tanks at all. Doesn’t affect the soldiers. They’re used to it. They’re tough. Smart.”

As for the protests, he warned that “they will be met with very big force”.

The “No Kings” rallies planned in hundreds of cities nationwide are meant to counter what organizers say are Trump’s plans to feed his ego on his 79th birthday and Flag Day. No protests are scheduled to take place in Washington, DC, however, and officials have said they so far have no indication of any security threat.

About 6 in 10 Americans say Saturday’s parade is “not a good use” of government money, including the vast majority of people, 78%, who neither approve nor disapprove of the parade overall, according to a poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

The parade will wind down Constitution Avenue, which is already lined with security fencing and barriers. Army helicopters and aircraft will fly above, and the march will be capped off by a parachute jump, a concert featuring “God Bless the U.S.A.” singer Lee Greenwood and fireworks.

With rain expected, there is a chance the parade could be interrupted by thunderstorms.

White House spokesperson Anna Kelly has said the march will go on rain or shine. But it could be delayed if there is lightning, with authorities quick to empty the expansive National Mall if it happens during major events.

The parade fulfills Trump's expressed desire for a big parade that he tried to get done in his first presidential term after seeing one in France on Bastille Day in 2017. Trump said that after watching the two-hour procession along the famed Champs-Élysées, he wanted an even grander one on Pennsylvania Avenue.

The Army expects as many as 200,000 people could attend the festival and parade. The festival will begin around 9:30 am EDT and feature fitness competitions, demonstrations, equipment displays, music and a cake-cutting ceremony.

The parade is set to begin at 6:30 pm EDT, but parts of it – including the horse-drawn caissons and other units – start at the Pentagon, head over a bridge and meet up with some of the heavier tanks and equipment. Officials did not want the more-than-60-ton M1A1 Abrams tanks and Stryker vehicles crossing the bridge.

Timed down to the minute, the march will be divided into sections by history – with equipment and troops in full dress from each period.

It will include a total of 6,169 soldiers and 128 Army tanks, armoured personnel carriers and artillery, while 62 aircraft fly overhead.

At the end of the parade, Trump will swear in 250 new or reenlisting troops, and the Army's Golden Knights parachute team will jump onto the Mall. That will be followed by the concert and fireworks.

(FRANCE 24 with AP)



Not Just Today, Every Day Should Be No Kings Day

Two-hundred and fifty years ago, our ancestors rejected a mad king. And today, we must reject another.



A protester raises a sign reading, "Kings Are So 250 Years Ago!" amid crowds gathered at a "No Kings" democracy rally on April 19, 2025.
(Photo: Erin Clark/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

Rob Okun
Jun 14, 2025
Common Dreams

A would-be king wants a coronation today—Saturday, June 14—a date already laden with meaning: Flag Day, the 250th anniversary of the founding of the U.S. Army, and, yes, Donald J. Trump’s 79th birthday. But this year, Americans are refusing to let the day be coopted. Across all 50 states, from big cities to small towns, more than 1,800 events are planned to mark what organizers are calling the “No Kings Day of Defiance.”

Driven by grassroots outrage and organized by Indivisible, Public Citizen, Social Security Works, Third Act, Commit to Democracy, and others, these decentralized protests share one audacious goal: to reclaim the flag from authoritarianism and reject the corrosive spectacle of a would-be despot. The theme? “Take back the flag on Flag Day.”

Trump’s military pageant—planned for the heart of Washington—is a grotesque parody of patriotism. The New York Times reported that theproposed display features 28 M1 Abrams tanks, 28 Stryker armored vehicles, a vintage WWII-era B-25 bomber, 6,700 troops, 50 helicopters, and more than 100 military vehicles, horses, even a dog. The projected cost will likely end up at nearly $50 million, footed by we the people. All in the service of one man’s fragile ego.

This is the enduring charge of citizenship. We are stewards, not owners, of democracy.

Let’s not be coy: Since returning to the presidency, Trump has presented himself not as a public servant, but as a sovereign. His contempt for constitutional limits is as naked as it is dangerous. While the judiciary has pushed back—ruling against his overreach time and again—he relentlessly smears judges and demands fealty from a majority Republican Congress hollowed out by fear and complicity. Gone are the “adults in the room” from his first term. What remains is a court of sycophants.

Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), speaking before the Subcommittee on the Constitution earlier this year, reminded Americans what’s at stake:
We have no kings here, no queens, no titles of nobility, no serfs, no slaves. Our revolution overthrew monarchy and the established church... But in our time, Donald Trump’s crime spree throughout American society has tested the hard-won principle that we are all equal and that no one is above the law.

That’s the ethos animating No Kings Day of Defiance—a clear-eyed recognition that 250 years ago, our ancestors rejected a mad king. And today, we must reject another.

Legal analyst and political commentator Robert Hubbell, writing earlier this spring, captured the spirit of this moment:
At root, the issues animating protests separated by two-and-a-half centuries are the same: The right to self-determination, liberty, democracy, and the rule of law—not subjugation to the “divine right of kings.”

Hubbell, whose Today’s Edition newsletter has become a must-read for pro-democracy advocates, adds:
We stand on the shoulders of those who rose up against tyranny—not just revolutionaries in 1776, but the generations of Americans since: abolitionists, suffragists, civil rights marchers, labor leaders, and more. We inherit their unfinished struggle.

This is the enduring charge of citizenship. We are stewards, not owners, of democracy. The legacy we fight for isn’t ours to hoard—it belongs to all Americans, past, present, and those not yet born. The torch must be passed with an unwavering commitment to justice.

The road to a more perfect union has always been long, muddy, and rough. It took eight years to win independence. Another four to adopt the Constitution. Three-quarters of a century—and a civil war—to challenge slavery’s brutal grip. A hundred more years to begin fulfilling the promise of equal protection under the law.

No Kings Day is a line in the sand. Let’s meet the moment. Let’s honor the republic. Let’s remind each other—and the world—that in this country, power still flows from the people.

Democracy will endure. But only if we refuse to let it be stolen.

While some “kings” deserve admiration, the only ones worth celebrating aren’t monarchs at all. The sign I’ll be carrying on June 14 says it this way: “The only kings to listen to are MLK, B.B., Carole, and Billie Jean.”
How the LA protests may boost appetite for authoritarianism

Fred Schwaller
DW
13/06/2025 


Psychological research suggests far-right narratives about social breakdown could lead to more support for US President Trump and authoritarianism, not less.


Critics have accused President Donald Trump of manufacturing a crisis around the protests in Los Angeles
Image: Jim Vondruska/Getty Images


"These are not protesters, they are troublemakers and insurrectionists," posted US President Donald Trump on his own Truth Social platform. Elon Musk, Trump's former right-hand, DOGE-man, seconded the post by screenshotting and reposting it on his platform, X.

This has been the conservative narrative since people in Los Angeles began protesting against the Trump Administration's immigration policy in early June. Some say Trump is manufacturing a crisis for political gain, and psychology studies suggest it may well work.

Misinformation to sway people's thinking

Trump has compared images of burning cars, and demonstrators waving Mexican flags, to a "foreign invasion." He has deployed the National Guard against protestors — the first time a US President has bypassed state governments to do so since 1965. Police have hit journalists with rubber bullets — either directly or indirectly. Such drama, say psychologists, can feed a narrative of a state of emergency.

But is it true? Critics have said Trump is manufacturing a crisis around the LA immigration protests for political gain.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, for example, described a series of raids on homes and vehicles as a provocation by the White House.

California Governor Gavin Newsom called Trump's actions a step toward authoritarianism and a "brazen abuse of power."

Rather than turning people away from Trump, leading psychology research suggests this authoritarianism may increase his popularity — at least among voters who feel threatened by the idea of social breakdown.


Social breakdown fuels desire for authoritarian leaders

Research has found that people who perceive society is unstable and chaotic are more likely to be receptive to authoritarian leaders who promise order, control, and certainty.

One study among German and US participants found that a sense of societal instability can create feelings of moral ambiguity, alienation and disconnection and "a sense that one cannot influence the political process," said the study's lead author Jasper Neerdaels, a social psychologist at Katholieke Universiteit in Leuven, Belgium.

"Submitting to [sic] authoritarian leadership may mean giving up freedom, but it also promises psychological relief from [the] uncertainty. Authoritarian regimes provide clear hierarchies, social rules, and the guidance of a strong leader," Neerdaels told DW.

Another study published in May 2025 suggested that people were more likely to favor dominant, authoritarian leaders during times of conflict.

The researchers analyzed data from 25 countries and found that the presence of intergroup conflict increases people's preferences for dominant leaders.

"We [found] that participants who tend to see the world as more conflict-ridden also express stronger preferences for dominant leaders," said the study's lead author Lasse Laustsen from Aarhus University in Denmark.

In their analysis, they argued that humans evolved psychological systems to prioritize strong leadership when faced with external threats.

Engineered social breakdown boosts Trump's support

The situation around the current protests in LA appears to be in line with current psychology research: "There is evidence that the Trump administration and its supporters are exploiting these protests to create the perception that US society is falling apart," said Neerdaels.

"This makes sense because [a] perception of society breaking down can increase support for authoritarianism [and] the desire for a strong leader, who takes vigorous action," he said.

Polling data suggests that Trump's popularity among US voters is higher now than it was before the LA protests. RealClear Polling, which presents an average of 15 different pollsters, shows Trump's favorability at 47.3% on June 10, up from 45.1% at the end of April.

"The strategy of spreading narratives to increase the perception that society is breaking down is popular among far-right/authoritarian leaders across the world, also in Germany," said Neerdaels.


How to reduce appetite for authoritarians?

Psychological research does provide clues about how to reduce support for authoritarianism — by addressing the uncertainty caused by perceived social breakdown.

Studies suggest that reducing people's sense of fear and insecurity can help counteract the appetite for authoritarianism.

What also helps is better communication on the meaning and purpose of politics, said Neerdaels. For example, clarifying why political actions are taken, explaining policies, and highlighting the values that guide political decisions.

"Perhaps counterintuitively, when politicians openly express their own feelings of uncertainty, it might help people acknowledge and cope with their own uncertainty and thus decrease their desire for a strong leader," said Neerdaels.

The challenge now, he said, is how to push back against the misinformation which fuels social instability, and inform the public about the reality of the LA protests. This, said Neerdaels, was not an easy task: "Feelings of uncertainty are pervasive and probably unavoidable," especially when fueled by social media.


Edited by: Zulfikar Abbany


Fred Schwaller Science writer fascinated by the brain and the mind, and how science influences society@schwallerfred

US adversaries fuel disinformation about LA protests


By AFP
June 13, 2025


Foreign adversaries of the United States are exploiting deep divisions in American society as a tactic of information warfare
 - Copyright AFP RONALDO SCHEMIDT

Anuj CHOPRA

Russia, China and Iran are amplifying disinformation about protests over immigration raids in Los Angeles, researchers said Friday, adding to a surge of domestically generated falsehoods and conspiracy theories.

The findings from researchers at the disinformation watchdog NewsGuard illustrate how foreign adversaries of the United States are exploiting deep divisions in American society as a tactic of information warfare.

NewsGuard said Russian, Chinese, and Iranian state-affiliated sources have published around 10,000 posts and articles about the demonstrations that recently erupted in Los Angeles, advancing false claims framing the city as “ground zero in an American apocalypse.”

Seizing on the political rift between President Donald Trump and Governor Gavin Newsom, pro-China accounts on X and Chinese platforms such as Douyin and Weibo have peddled unfounded claims that California was ready to secede from the United States and declare independence.

Meanwhile, Tehran-based newspapers have peddled the false claim that popular Iranian singer-songwriter Andranik Madadian had been detained by the National Guard in Los Angeles, in an apparent effort to portray the United States as an authoritarian state.

NewsGuard quoted Madadian, better known by his stage name Andy, as denying the claim, stating: “I am fine. Please don’t believe these rumors.”

Russian media and pro-Russian influencers, meanwhile, has embraced right-wing conspiracy theories, including the unfounded claim that the Mexican government was stoking the demonstrations against Trump’s immigration policies.

“The demonstrations are unfolding at the intersection of multiple vulnerabilities such as eroded trust in institutions, AI chatbots amplifying false claims about the unrest, political polarization, and a rollback of safety and moderation efforts by major platforms,” McKenzie Sadeghi, a researcher with NewsGuard, told AFP.

“As a result, foreign actors have a wide-open playing field to flood the zone with falsehoods at a faster rate and fewer barriers compared to previous moments of unrest,” she added.

The apparent alignment across the three countries was noteworthy, Sadeghi said.

“While Russia, China, and Iran regularly push their own unique forms of disinformation, it’s less common to see them move in such a coordinated fashion like this,” she said.

“This time, state media outlets have escalated their messaging to advance their geopolitical interests and deflect attention from their own domestic crises.”

The disinformation comes on top of false narratives promoted by US-based influencers.

In recent days, conservative social media users have circulated two photographs of brick piles they claimed were strategically placed for the California protesters to hurl at police and inflame violence.

The photos were cited as proof that the protests were fueled by nonprofit organizations supported by George Soros, the billionaire philanthropist who has long been a bogeyman for the far right.

But AFP’s fact-checkers found that one photo was lifted from an online marketplace, where a Malaysian hardware dealer uploaded it years ago, while the other was snapped near a construction site in New Jersey.

“Every time there’s a popular protest, the old clickbaity ‘pallets of bricks’ hoax shows up right on cue,” the Social Media Lab, a research center at the Toronto Metropolitan University, wrote on the platform Bluesky.

“The fact that these types of fake images are used isn’t a coincidence. It’s part of a pernicious (and) persistent narrative that protests against government policies are somehow inauthentic.”
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AMERIKA

Millions Rise Up to Say in Unison:

 'No Kings!' 'No Dictator!'

The turnout has exceeded expectations.



Protesters march past the Trump Tower in downtown Chicago as part of a nationwide "No Kings" demonstration on June 14, 2025. Thousands of marches and protests are taking place across the United States today in opposition to the Trump administration's presidency, as well as the military parade celebrating the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army in Washington, DC. Today's parade coincides with President Trump's birthday.
Photo by Jim Vondruska/Getty Images

Common Dreams Staff
Jun 14, 2025

Millions of people took to the streets Saturday to reject authoritarian overreach, defend democracy, and stand up for their communities. The turnout has exceeded expectations in over 2,100 cities and towns across the United States and worldwide. Demonstrators gathered in parks and plazas to protest against President Donald Trump.

“No Kings is really about standing up for democracy, standing up for people’s rights and liberties in this country and against the gross abuse of power that we’ve seen consistently from the Trump administration,” ACLU’s chief political and advocacy officer Deirdre Schifeling said.

Here is a small sample of some of the massive crowds that turned out Saturday:

LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY


Protesters march during a nationwide "No Kings" rally in downtown Louisville, Kentucky, on June 14, 2025.Photo by LEANDRO LOZADA / AFP


NEW YORK CITY


People take part in a "No Kings" protest in New York on June 14, 2025.Photo by CHARLY TRIBALLEAU / AFP


MIAMI, FLORIDA


People, holding banners and placards, gather to protest against President Donald Trump's administration, chanting "No Kings," during a demonstration in Miami, Florida, United States on June 14, 2025.Photo by Jesus Olarte/Anadolu via Getty Images


CHICAGO, ILLINOIS


Protesters gather at Daley Plaza holding placards and chanting slogans during a "No Kings" demonstration in Chicago, Illinois, on June 14, 2025.Photo by Jacek Boczarski/Anadolu via Getty Images


WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA



Demonstrators holding signs and American flags as they protest the Trump administration during the "No Kings" rally near US President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago home in West Palm Beach, Florida, on June 14, 2025.Photo by Giorgio Viera / AFP


ATLANTA, GEORGIA



People take part in a "No Kings" protest at Liberty Plaza in Atlanta, Georgia, on June 14, 2025.Photo by Elijah Nouvelage / AFP


LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA



Thousands participate in the "No Kings" Day demonstration in front of City Hall in downtown Los Angeles on Saturday, June 14, 2025.(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)


'No Trump! No KKK!' Anti-MAGA protesters swarm Ohio Capitol

Sarah K. Burris
June 13, 2025 
RAW STORY

Protests in Columbus, Ohio ahead of "No Kings Day" event (Photo: Screen capture)

Anti-Donald Trump protests are scheduled around the country on Saturday, but some jumped the gun early, taking to the streets with a march to Ohio's state capitol.

The Columbus Dispatch uploaded a video Friday showing the anti-ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) protesters speaking out against the raids around the country.

Another individual uploaded a video showing protesters peacefully marching with signs and upside-down flags. They chanted, "No Trump, no KKK, no fascist USA."

It's the second protest this week in the area. Fox28 reported that there were more than 1,000 people who "took part in a protest in downtown Columbus on Tuesday that denounced ICE and the Trump administration."

Saturday's protests are being called the "No Kings Day" protests in opposition to the president's military parade in Washington, D.C.

See the clip below or at the link here.





Protesters in Philadelphia slam 'fascist' Trump

Martin Luther King's eldest son (5-L) and his wife took part in the Philly march

Image: Yuki Iwamura/AP/dpa/picture alliance

Published on 14/06/2025 - 

DW has been speaking to protesters in Philadelphia, the scene of one of thousands of "No Kings" protests against US President Donald Trump being held across the US Saturday. 

The "No Kings" marches are being held as a counter-protest to a rare military parade in Washington DC that also coincides with Trump's 79th birthday.

One woman told DW that the protest was being held "to show we're not afraid" and that Trump "can't jail us all."

"The parade today in DC is a joke, and everyone knows it. It’s a joke and it’s costing us millions of dollars," she said.

Another protester, who identifies as a queer person from Phoenixville, a Philadelphia suburb, said the parade was like "something out of World War II".

"We don’t really need to do that for someone’s birthday, and this country is becoming a lot more authoritarian and just very fascist — I feel like it's no real place for it," they said.

The protests on Saturday come amid growing unrest across the country against detentions and deportations of immigrants who authorities say are in the US illegally.

The White House controversially deployed National Guard troops and Marines in response to the protests.

A male protester told DW that he was protesting because "Trump is ripping foster children from parents, foster parents, he’s putting kids in cages and he has also sent more than 6,000 national troops to LA and other cities," describing the Trump administration as a "dictatorship."


DW