Tuesday, August 26, 2025

Trump's Gestapo-Style Raids Mimic Nazi Dictatorship Playbook

As with Trump’s march to autocratic power, the parallels with Hitler and Nazi Germany are unmistakable and should be chilling to everyone.


National Guard Members patrol 14th street on August 24, 2025 in Washington, DC. An increased presence of law enforcement has been seen throughout the nation's capital since U.S. President Donald Trump ordered in federal officers and the US National Guard.
(Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)
























Chuck Idelson
Aug 25, 2025
Common Dreams


In April, Jesús Escalona Mújicas, a 48-year-old construction worker near Bryan, Texas was grabbed, detained, and ultimately deported in shackles to Venezuela under false charges that he was a member of the Tren de Aragua gang.

His story was detailed last week by the Texas Observer. He’d worked for the same employer, a Venezuelan Pepsi affiliate, for nearly two decades, and had no criminal history or record of gang activity. They claimed his Air Jordans—a brand 24 percent of sneaker wearers in the U.S. reportedly own—were a symbol of gang membership.

Federal agents in President Donald Trump’s high profile military occupation of Washington, DC are zeroing in on food delivery drivers, many of them on mopeds, making them easy targets for abduction, the Washington Post reports. Gabriel Ravelo Torrealba, 22, needed hospital treatment for hand and leg injuries inflicted in his arrest. Christian Carías Torres, shot with a stun gun during his arrest, was branded a “suspected gang member,” an allegation, the Post noted, “the Trump administration has repeatedly used without providing evidence.”

Those rounded up by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and other federal policing agencies are far from the “worst of the worst” boasted by Trump in his campaign mass deportation pledge. ICE’s own data shows 72 percent of those detained “have no known criminal convictions or pending criminal charges,” as Fortune magazine conceded in July.

To meet his arbitrary quota of seizures, deportation fanatic Stephen Miller scuttled any emphasis on the “worst” by racially profiling ordinary working people at Home Deport parking lots, farms, other work sites, and outside court hearings they’d attended to meet legal obligations. Numerous legal immigrants and even citizens continue to be grabbed. “The President does not want to see Haitians, Nicaraguans, Cubans, or Venezuelans here,” Escalona Mújicas said one of his arresting agents told him.

Similarly, in the DC operation, ICE and other federal agents are avoiding “the city’s high-crime areas,” New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie wrote this week. “There are soldiers patrolling the National Mall; armored vehicles parked at Union Station; and ICE agents manning checkpoints on U Street, an area known for its bars, restaurants, and nightlife. They’re not there for safety, but for show.”

“If Trump is genuinely concerned about the safety of DC residents, I would see National Guard in my neighborhood. I’m not seeing it, and I don’t expect to see it,” one resident of DC’s Congress Heights neighborhood told Times reporter Clyde McGrady. “I don’t think Trump is bringing in the National Guard to protect Black babies in Southeast.”

Corollary consequences for the Gestapo-style raids and domestic military campaigns extend to the distortion of federal budget priorities. The DC occupation alone is costing $1 million a day, according to an analysis by Hanna Homestead of the National Priorities Project.

One less publicized provision of Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” was the gift of $75 billion in extra funding for ICE, “making it by far the highest-funded law enforcement agency in the federal government,” CBS News reported.

National Nurses United researchers found far more useful ways to allocate that funding rather than on terrorizing immigrant families and communities. For the same $75 billion, we could eradicate all medical debt accrued by 31 million people, cover over two years of universal pre-K for all 3 and 4 year olds in the US, pay for nearly all tuition and fees for students in public universities across the U.S., and substantially reduce the costs of child poverty in the nation or most of the homeless crisis in California. The same amount could also end both extreme and chronic hunger around the world for two years.

The militarization has a deeper, malevolent purpose, wrote Monica Potts in The New Republic this week. “Trump isn’t actually worried about crime. He’s not trying to make the district safer for its residents, and he’s certainly not weighing the data and evidence when he calls on governors to send guardsmen. Parading troops through an American city is a brazen authoritarian power grab.”

"There is not a crime crisis in D.C.," former DC Metropolitan reserve police officer Rosa Brooks who now teaches at Georgetown Law School told NPR, which reiterated Justice Department data that crime in Washington has plummeted with violence reaching a 30-year low last year. "This is police state territory, banana republic police state territory," Brooks said.

“This is what it means to learn to live in an authoritarian police state, and people are using the only tools they have: cell phones and sandwiches," notes Potts. “The longer ICE raids and military takeovers go on, the more they will inspire protests around the country, which may be the only excuse Trump is waiting for to claim that cities are full of disorder and then crack down even harder.”

Trump says he is targeting Chicago and New York next for his next Democratic majority-city occupations. He may also have in mind “an intimidation tactic to try to suppress voters in cities ahead of the 2026 midterm,” Potts observes. “It’s definitely part of Trump’s only true and unwavering project: consolidating power (Italics added). Even as he’s posting on Truth Social about crime in D.C., he’s cheering efforts in Texas to redraw district maps to elect more Republicans to the House next year and launching an effort to get rid of mail-in ballots.”

As with Trump’s march to autocratic power, the parallels with Hitler and Nazi Germany are unmistakable and should be chilling to everyone. Within two months of being handed power by the conservative old guard Weimar Republic in January 1933, Hitler made two major moves, as Peter Fritzsche describes in Hitler’s First Hundred Days.

First, he persuaded his conservative coalition partners to call for new elections by early March. Then, the Nazis engineered or at least exploited a fire in the Reichstag in late February, Germany’s Capitol building, to invoke emergency decrees. They served, Fritzsche notes, to “suspend civil liberties, expand protective custody” and other authoritarian powers that “symbolized the death of representative government and the rule of law.” It also gave the Nazis the opening to complete a takeover of German policing to engage in arrests, detention, and violent assaults on all political opposition.

Coupled with the election, in which the Nazis increased their political power through domination of the media, mobilization of state resources, demonization of their version of “enemies from within” (mainly Jews and Communists), and the traumatizing impact of an increased militarization, Hitler and the Nazis had the means to manufacture mass consent, silence dissent, and cement fascist rule.

Potts is unimpressed with much of the Democratic Party leadership response. She cites Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s dismissal of Trump’s takeover of DC as a “political ploy” and an “attempted distraction” from problems like the tariffs and Epstein files. But, she emphasizes, “the federal agents and troops are not the distraction. They are the whole point—quite literally the spear in Trump’s increasingly fascist assault on American democracy.”

Democratic leaders, Potts added on the Daily Blast podcast with Greg Sargent, “should start calling things like they see them and they should say, you’re not coming to our cities, you’re not coming to our towns with the military, you’re not going to turn this country into a dictatorship. The idea that there’s still time is really critical. And voters like it when elected leaders fight for them.”

That is the immediate challenge we face with Trump and Trumpism today.

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


Chuck Idelson, retired, is the former Communications Senior Strategist for National Nurses United, the nation's largest union and professional organization of registered nurses with 225,00 members.
Full Bio >



As Trump Threatens News Outlets, Experts More Concerned About Capitulation of Corporate Owners



"The commercial news media, which helped elevate Trump to power, have proven repeatedly that they are ill-equipped to withstand such pressures," warned one scholar.



Brad Reed
Aug 25, 2025
COMMON DREAMS


As US President Donald Trump late on Sunday lashed out against the American media and threatened to pull broadcasting licenses from networks for their alleged "biased" coverage of him, media experts said the danger to the news media lies partially in corporate outlets' potential capitulation to the Trump administration.

In a post on his Truth Social platform, the president railed against NBC and ABC, which he called "two of the absolute worst and most biased networks anywhere in the world."

He then said the networks should "lose their licenses for their unfair coverage of Republicans and/or conservatives, but at a minimum, they should pay up BIG for having the privilege of using the most valuable airwaves anywhere at anytime!!!"

The president concluded his angry rant by declaring that "crooked 'journalism' should not be rewarded, it should be terminated!!!"

Trump did not point to any specifics regarding his claim that the networks' coverage of him is unfair, but asserted that they "give [him] 97% bad stories."

This is not the first time that Trump has called on the Federal Communications Commission to strip broadcasters' licenses for producing news he doesn't like, although so far no network has had its license revoked by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).

Even so, some experts were alarmed at Trump's latest attacks, which they feared could lead to more capitulation from major media corporations similar to the $16 million settlement that CBS parent company Paramount agreed to earlier this summer, which stemmed from what experts called a meritless lawsuits over a "60 Minutes" interview with 2024 Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris.

Victor Pickard, professor of media policy and political economy at the University of Pennsylvania's Annenberg School for Communication, described the president's angry rants as "yet more worrying signs that Trump knows no limits in exerting dictatorial power over our news media."

"The commercial news media, which helped elevate Trump to power, have proven repeatedly that they are ill-equipped to withstand such pressures since they typically privilege their profit motives over democratic needs," he said. "Some individual journalists have shown much courage despite Trump's attacks, but the corporate media institutions themselves too often capitulate."

Tim Karr, senior director of strategy and communications at Free Press, echoed Pickard's point about the media being responsible for the president's political rise, and he singled out NBC's decision to air Trump's reality TV show, "The Apprentice," which he said gave Americans the false impression that he was a "successful and decisive businessman."

He also expressed concerns that broadcasters would offer the president more concessions in an attempt to avoid retaliation.

"What should be more worrying to anyone who appreciates a free press is the degrees to which these massive media conglomerates are capitulating before the president," he said. "If we've learned anything about the media from the past eight months, it's that massive media companies are far too beholden to the political elite to speak truth to power."

He then accused the major networks of cowering before Trump despite having the First Amendment clearly on their side.

"NBC and ABC are protected under the First Amendment from the sort of government meddling proposed here by Trump—and enacted by his obsequious FCC chairman, Brendan Carr," he said. "The problem is that big media conglomerates like these two would rather cave to the president than stand up for their constitutional rights."




Trump threatens to defy law on renaming Defense Department: 'We're just going to do it'

 rename the Pentagon to the Department of War 


David Edwards
August 25, 2025 
RAW STORY


C-SPAN/screen grab

President Donald Trump threatened to rename the Department of Defense without obtaining permission from Congress, even if it would run afoul of the law

At an Oval Office event on Monday, Trump said he would "probably" rename the Pentagon to the Department of War in the coming days.

A reporter later pointed out that changing the name would require congressional approval.

"It requires an act of Congress to rename the Defense Department to the Department of War," the correspondent noted during an afternoon event at the White House.


"We're just going to do it," Trump replied. "I'm sure Congress will go along if we need that. I don't think we even need that. But if we need that, I'm sure Congress will go along."

"You know, that was the name when we were, we won World War I, we won World War II, we won everything," he added. "And just to me seems like just a much more appropriate. The other is defense is too defensive. And we want to be defensive, but we want to be offensive too if we have to be. So it just sounded to me, but really like a better name.


'Preys on poor people': Trump makes major criminal justice moves despite expert warnings

 Common Dreams
August 25, 2025 7


U.S. President Donald Trump holds up an executive order after signing it in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., August 25, 2025. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY


President Donald Trump signed a pair of executive orders on Monday aimed at ending the policy of cashless bail for people accused of crimes, a move criminal justice reform advocates say will heighten the already massive inequality within the system while doing little to stop lawbreaking.


One order requires Washington, D.C., which the president currently controls under "emergency authority," to end its cashless bail program. The other directs Attorney General Pam Bondi to identify other jurisdictions around the country with cashless bail so that they can have their federal funds restricted or suspended.

Several states, including Illinois, New York, California, and New Jersey, have moved to significantly reduce or eliminate the use of cash requirements for those accused of crimes to be released pretrial. D.C., meanwhile, was one of the first cities to implement the policy.

Jeremy Cherson, communications director for the Bail Project, told Common Dreams that cash bail creates a "two-tiered system of justice—one where people with money, regardless of risk, can pay bail and be released, whereas people without money will be detained, maybe unnecessarily, just because they can't afford to pay a bail amount."

More than 70% of the people currently held in jails—over 400,000 people—have not been convicted of a crime and are instead awaiting trial, according to the Prison Policy Institute. In 2022, a report by the US Commission on Civil Rights found that 60% of them were there because they could not afford to pay bail.

People in pretrial detention are disproportionately racial minorities and those in poverty. A 2021 study by the Brookings Institution found that the average person in pretrial detention loses $30,000 on average during the process.

"Cash bail is a system that preys on poor people," Wanda Bertram of the Prison Policy Institute, told Common Dreams. "They can lose their jobs and their housing. They can get disconnected from critical medical care that they might need. It's a very destabilizing experience."

Trump has claimed that cashless bail allows criminals to get out of jail without punishment and has caused cities to become cesspools of criminality.

"Somebody kills somebody, they go and don't worry about it," Trump told reporters on Monday as he signed the order. "No cash. Come back in a couple of months. We'll give you a trial. You never see the person again."

In a press conference earlier this month, Trump claimed that "every place in the country where you have no cash bail is a disaster."

"That's what started the problem in New York, and they don't change it," he said. "That's what started it in Chicago. I mean, bad politicians started it, bad leadership started it. But that was the one thing that's central, no cash bail."

But as Cherson explained, cashless bail policies are not a "get-out-of-jail-free card."

"They are often measured, calculated approaches that create a system and processes where people are evaluated for risks of flight or risks to other individuals if they're released, and a series of conditions are set against them, or they're detained pretrial," he says. "They're not all let out. So that's often misunderstood about what bail reform is."

Instead of using financial means, judges determine who will remain in detention based on an individual's flight risk or the danger they may pose to the community.

The key, Cherson says, is that "they need to have individualized hearings where we are making determinations about what happens if we release somebody based on more than a hunch."

According to an investigation by FactCheck.org, across all the states that have ended or limited cash bail, only one person charged with murder has ever been released without bail. A Rockville, Illinois, judge released the defendant in 2024 because the case against him was exceptionally weak, and the judge still required him to meet "fairly strict requirements" while awaiting trial.

"There is nothing to suggest that cashless bail makes cities less safe," Bertram said.

In 2023, PPI examined four states and nine cities and counties that had ended cashless bail. They found that every single one of these jurisdictions had "decreases or negligible increases in crime or rearrest rates after implementing reforms."

Many of the other major cities Trump has threatened with a federal military takeover, including Chicago and New York, have experienced massive drops in crime over the past year, contrary to Trump's claims.

Bertram said that in Washington, D.C., where Trump has directly ended cashless bail, the program had been "extremely effective."

In 2022, the last year for which data is available, 93% of those released without bail were not rearrested. In 2019, the most recent year with data, 99% of those who were released for violent crimes were not rearrested.

According to its website, the Bail Project has provided free bail to 34,000 people across the country. Despite the lack of financial incentive, in 2024, 95% of its clients still returned to court, and 64% of them had their cases dismissed.

"Absent our intervention," Cherson says, "many of those people would have likely taken a guilty plea just to go home. They would have been overwhelmed by the circumstances that they're in."

"Crime is something that's very complicated," Bertram said. "It's caused by a lot of different things, including a lot of social determinants."

She noted that the Trump administration has instituted dramatic cuts to programs to reduce gun violence, investigate crimes, and provide services to victims, and to "all of the things that we know to be related to the social determinants of crime"—social safety net programs like Medicaid, investments in affordable housing, and services for those dealing with homelessness, addiction, and mental health issues.

Bertram said, "It is a useful distraction from the president's disinvestment in all those things to put this order in place about cash bail as if it's going to make any difference, which it's not."

"All these states, localities, and jurisdictions that have pursued efforts to minimize or eliminate the use of cash bail have done that in service of the core principles of our justice system," Cherson said. "Principles of equity and fairness and safety and the presumption of innocence."
'No chance': Economist scoffs at CBO's eyebrow-raising new Trump tariff projection

TRUMP CBO PRODUCES FAKE FIGURES


Robert Davis
August 25, 2025
RAW STOR


CNN screenshot

A prominent economist criticized estimates released on Monday that projected President Donald Trump's tariff policies could reduce the federal deficit by trillions over the next decade.

Justin Wolfers, economics professor at the University of Michigan, joined CNN's Jake Tapper on "The Lead" to discuss estimates from the Congressional Budget Office showing Trump's tariffs could reduce the federal deficit by $4 trillion over 10 years. As of Aug. 25, the U.S. national debt exceeds $37 trillion, according to the Treasury Department.

"What are the chances the tariffs last through 2035, which the CBO based its estimates on?" Tapper asked Wolfers.

"Close to no chance, and that's one of the biggest problems," Wolfers replied. "The whole idea of tariffs is that you provide an incentive for people to set up shop, but the tariffs are going to change before the shop gets set up."

"As a result, I'm not sure we're going to get much out of this," he added.

Trump has increased tariffs against U.S. trading partners like the European Union, South Korea, and Japan. He's also claimed that the tariff revenue will be paid by foreign countries, which Wolfers said is untrue.

Instead, Wolfers argued that the tariffs are really acting as an additional tax on American consumers.

"It's a tax, and when you charge people a tax, the government gets revenue," Wolfers said. "That's how it works."

Watch the entire clip below or by clicking here.

'Ridiculous': Trump's 'illegal' firing of Fed governor blasted as an 'autocrat move'

TRUMP THREATENS TO SEND HER TO UGANDA


Carl Gibson
August 25, 2025
ALTERNET

On Monday, President Donald Trump announced on social media that he was firing Lisa Cook from the Federal Reserve Board of Governors (who was appointed by former President Joe Biden in 2022). But multiple journalists, elected officials, commentators and legal experts are pointing out that Trump is overstepping the bounds of his authority.

In a letter Trump posted to his Truth Social account, he cited the Federal Reserve Act and Article II of the U.S. Constitution to claim that he had the authority to remove Cook from her position "for cause." In order to justify the firing, Trump noted that Federal Housing Finance Authority head Bill Pulte had sent a criminal referral to the Department of Justice for alleged mortgage fraud, relating to two of Cook's mortgage applications.

"At a minimum, the conduct at issue exhibits the sort of gross negligence in financial transactions that calls into question your competence and trustworthiness as a financial regulator," Trump wrote in the letter.

READ MORE: 'Frog in boiling water': Nicolle Wallace says Trump plunging US into 'authoritarianism'

According to CNN, Cook listed a home in Ann Arbor, Michigan as her primary residence in one mortgage document, and then listed a condominium in Atlanta, Georgia as her primary residence on another mortgage document just weeks later. Because a primary residence has certain tax benefits, Cook is being investigated for potential mortgage fraud by listing two primary residences. However, she has yet to be charged with any crime, and even if she were charged, a conviction is unlikely as prosecutors would have to prove actual malice, whereas Cook could argue the listing of two primary residences was a simple oversight.

Trump's claim that he is firing Cook due to the mortgage application issue didn't hold water with several journalists, commentators and others who weighed in on social media. Rep. Seth Magaziner (D-R.I.) tweeted Cook has not been convicted of any crime, and that a president could only fire a Fed governor under "extreme circumstances." Economist Dean Baker questioned the president's authority. noting Trump couldn't fire Cook any more than Baker could fire Cook. Pennsylvania-based political activist Rowan Gehman called Trump's attempted firing of cook "very f------ illegal." Ron Filiipkowski of the liberal group MeidasTouch blasted Trump's attempted firing of cook as an "autocrat move to take over the Fed." And Attorney John Aravosis argued Trump committed a significant error of his own when he wrote in the letter that Cook "may have made false statements on one or more mortgage agreements."

"May have made? Doesn’t sound terribly convincing when you’re hedging," Aravosis wrote.

"Trump cannot legally make up cause to fire a Fed Governor," tweeted Aaron Fritschner, who is the deputy chief of staff for Rep. Don Beyer (D-Va.) "The current Supreme Court held earlier this year that the Fed is a 'quasi-private entity' whose members are protected from political interference, which is plainly what Trump is doing here on a ridiculous pretext."


'Nobody is safe': Paul Krugman reveals the real motive behind Trump’s war on Fed governor

Matthew Chapman
August 25, 2025 
RAW STOR


FILE PHOTO: Lisa Cook testifies before a Senate Banking Committee hearing on her nomination to be a member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors (for a second term), on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., June 21, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo

President Donald Trump's threats to fire Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook are proof that "nobody is safe" from the new era of "weaponized government," Nobel Prize-winning economist turned political pundit Paul Krugman wrote for his Substack on Monday.

This follows Trump's housing finance chief, Bill Pulte, leveling an unsubstantiated "mortgage fraud" claim against Cook, who happens to be one of the Fed officials who opposed Trump's demanded rate cuts.

"I am not going to lead with a discussion of what Cook may or may not have done," wrote Krugman. "That would be playing Trump’s game. Clearly, he’s just looking for a pretext to fire someone who isn’t a loyalist — and who happens, surprise, to be a black woman. If you write about politics and imagine that Trump cares about mortgage fraud — or for that matter believe anything Trump officials say about the affair without independent confirmation — you should find a different profession. Maybe you should go into agricultural field work, to help offset the labor shortages created by Trump’s deportations."

In truth, he wrote, "You should think about the attack on Cook in the same context as mortgage fraud accusations made against California Senator Adam Schiff and New York Attorney General Letitia James. Or you should look at the attacks on Jerome Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, over the cost of renovations at the Fed’s headquarters. Or the still mysterious raid on the house of John Bolton, who at one time was Trump’s national security adviser." In reality, he argued, Trump doesn't care at all about fraud, which he has been found liable for himself — the real message is, “If you get in our way we will ruin your life.”

More generally, Krugman warned, "What we’re witnessing is the authoritarian playbook in action. Tyrannies don’t always get their way by establishing a secret police force that arrests people at will — although we’re getting that too. Much of their power comes not from overt violence but from their ability to threaten people’s careers and livelihoods, up to and including trumped-up accusations of criminal behavior."

It remains to be seen whether any criminal charges will actually materialize for Cook, Krugman wrote — mortgage fraud actually is common, but rarely prosecuted and requires proof that someone purposely falsified records.

But that's not the point, he concluded. The point is, "we are all Lisa Cook. You may imagine that your legal and financial history is so blameless that there’s no way MAGA can come after you. If you believe that, you’re living in a fantasy world. Criticize them or get in their way, and you will become a target."


Trump blasted over 'blatantly unconstitutional' Federal Reserve ouster: 'Autocrat move'

Robert Davis
August 25, 2025 
RAW STORY


U.S. President Donald Trump and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer arrive by helicopter at Trump International Golf Links, in Aberdeen, Scotland, Britain, July 28, 2025. Jane Barlow/Pool via REUTERS

President Donald Trump's decision to fire a Federal Reserve governor on Monday sparked outrage online.

Trump posted on Truth Social that he is firing Governor Lisa Cook, the only Black woman to ever serve as a Federal Reserve governor, because his administration alleged she committed mortgage fraud.

"There is sufficient evidence to believe that you submitted false information on one or more mortgage applications," reads a letter Trump shared on Truth Social announcing Cook's firing.

Cook was thrust into the spotlight recently after Trump's Justice Department accused her of committing mortgage fraud. She has denied all wrongdoing.

Several analysts shared their thoughts about the move on social media.

"Trump makes his autocrat move to take over the Fed," journalist Ron Filipkowski posted on Bluesky. "Hopefully she will challenge this in court."

"Yes, the stakes are large. Very large," University of Michigan economist Justin Wolfers wrote in a post on X, sharing a graph of inflation under Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan after he fired the country's central bank authorities.

"This is exactly how you lose your country," Spencer Hakimian, founder of Tolou Capital Management, posted on X.

"Trump knows he’s tanking the economy, and he’s looking to blame everyone other than himself," Democratic Wins Media posted on X.

Democrat influencer Harry Sisson described Cook's firing on X as "blatantly unconstitutional and authoritarian."

"This should be challenged in court ASAP!" Sisson added.

'Tear that letter!’ Stunned expert makes dramatic protest of Trump’s Fed firing on MSNBC

Daniel Hampton
August 25, 2025
RAW STORY


(Screengrab via MSNBC)

A legal expert lost his cool on MSNBC on Monday night after President Donald Trump announced he fired Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, effective immediately, citing mortgage fraud allegations from his administration.

Norm Eisen, the founder and chair of the Democracy Defenders Fund, joined "The Weeknight" to discuss Cook's firing, a historic and unprecedented move that is expected to trigger court challenges, as Federal Reserve governors can only be removed “for cause."


MSNBC host Michael Steele, former chair of the Republican National Committee, noted Trump's decision to "summarily fire a Fed board member" comes in the "face of the fact that this body relates its history back to the early days of the founding of this country."

"Alexander Hamilton, Mr. President, you may recall him ... very bright lines were drawn with respect to the banking relationship between the Reserve and the government," said Steele.

Eisen said this firing was unlike other cases pending final disposition at his organization.

"We’re litigating some of them about the extent of the president’s firing power. And the Supreme Court said so in the Gwynne Wilcox case that the Fed is different," he emphasized, referring to a major legal battle over Trump's attempt to oust a member of the National Labor Relations Board without showing cause.

Eisen attacked the president in a fiery takedown.

"But Donald Trump doesn’t care about the Constitution! He doesn’t care that Congress has said you can only fire somebody for cause! He doesn’t care that he has no cause here!" he exclaimed.

Eisen asserted Cook's firing was based on a social media post by one of his "most-sharp partisans," Bill Pulte, head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency.

"This is irrelevant to him. You have somebody in the White House who himself is a convicted felon. Thirty-four counts. No wonder the federal courts have shot him down 200 times for illegal actions. This is another one," Eisen continued.

Eisen then asked Steele to hand over his copy of Trump's letter to Cook announcing her termination.

"And you know what? Remember — can I have that letter? This is Donald Trump’s letter," he said. "Do you know what Lisa Cook should do? What Nancy Pelosi did. She should tear that letter."

Eisen tore the letter in half and handed it back to Steele.

"Now you’ll need to tape it for the rest of the segment," he concluded.


Watch the clip here or at this link.


'OMG!' Trump stuns observers with flippant remark on Japanese WWII sex trafficking

Sarah K. Burris
August 25, 2025 
RAW STORY



U.S. President Donald Trump meets with South Korean President Lee Jae Myung at the Oval Office, at the White House, in Washington, D.C., U.S., August 25, 2025. REUTERS/Brian Snyder

President Donald Trump made remarks about sex trafficking and forced prostitution on the Korean peninsula, but the term he chose shocked many and sparked questions about his mental state.

Speaking to South Korean President Lee Jae Myung, Trump talked about "comfort women," a term from just before and during World War II, in which the Japanese government trafficked women, girls, and boys into its occupied territories to satisfy soldiers, according to History.com.

The movement began in 1932 and lasted until 1945. Scholars estimate that there could be anywhere from 20,000 to nearly 500,00 women and children who were trafficked into sex slavery, abused, raped, and infected with venereal disease. The term comes from a Japanese word that literally translates to "comforting, consoling woman," said the Association for East Asian Studies.

"The whole issue of the women. Comfort women. Very specifically. We talked and that was a very big problem for Korea, not for Japan. Japan was, wanted to go, they want to get on. But Korea was very stuck on that," Trump said.

The comments prompted questions from observers, given Trump’s past association with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and allegations of sexual harassment and misconduct from numerous women.

The cultural marketing company, Mallination, formerly Warner Music, posted on X, "Finally a topic he knows something about."


Actress Morgan Fairchild exclaimed, "OMG!"

"Interesting that this happens to be one of the few historical events that @realDonaldTrump seems to actually know something about," quipped Lincoln Project co-founder George Conway.

"Comfort women? Dude is def on the way out, haven’t heard that term in conversation since the 60s," asked one videographer.

"This is the systematic rape of women and girls he shrugs off," remarked Doug McNamara, a plaintiffs' attorney in consumer, drug, and product defect cases.

See the clip below or at the link here.

Monday, August 25, 2025

New school year in Washington marked by fear of anti-migrant raids

By AFP
August 25, 2025


A welcome back note on the first day of school in Washington -- a show of support as Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids increase in the city - Copyright AFP PETER PARKS

Maria DANILOVA

Neighbors, volunteers and parents escorted children to the first day of the new school year across Washington on Monday, vowing to protect students from Donald Trump’s deportation drive.

At one elementary school in the US capital, crowds blew whistles, shook tambourines and cheered children on their way to class, ready to fend off any law enforcement action and to support a neighborhood with a high Latino population.

Throughout the city, chaperone groups, carpools and patrols were organized over fears that immigration agents, who have stepped up arrests and sweeps, could target school campuses.

Resident Helena Bonde, 36, showed up at the elementary school in her wheelchair to support immigrant families who she says have been terrorized by raids, with some neighbors afraid to go to the grocery store.

“Nobody’s trying to arrest a disabled white woman right now, so I just figured I’ll be wherever I can be,” Bonde told AFP.

“Everybody really just wanted to help out in a way that could feel concrete and useful and help make our local families feel a little safer.”

The Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency said it would not target Washington schools on Monday.

But it has not ruled out activity on school campuses to conduct welfare checks on undocumented and unaccompanied children that the Trump administration says need to be rescued from sex trafficking and forced labor rings.

On Monday “you are not going to see ICE officers doing a raid or a sweep,” ICE chief Todd Lyons told NBC News last week.

“But our goal… is finding those 300,000 undocumented children and those minors that came here through the last administration.”

– ‘It’s about how you look’ –

Selene, a Mexican-American community organizer, admitted that the thought of not sending her daughter to school crossed her mind because even Latino families residing in the United States legally have been targeted and detained.

“This is not about status. It’s about how you look, right? If you look Latino on the street, you’re a target, unfortunately,” Selene, who declined to give her last name, told AFP.

In the end, encouraged by her neighbors, Selene walked her daughter to school and urged others to do the same.

“The community is here for you, don’t be afraid, and we’re going to keep up the great work. We’re going to keep helping our community members. Our kids who come to school need to feel safe, and we can do that together,” she said.

Others, however, were too frightened.

Blanca, a middle-aged immigrant from El Salvador who stood near the school entrance with a sign that read “Every day is an opportunity” in English and in Spanish, said some families had kept their children home, at least temporarily, out of fear of being deported.

“Because they are scared,” Blanca, who declined to give her last name for safety reasons, told AFP. “We are scared to go out. We don’t know what’s going to happen to us. We’re not safe.”

– Compulsory education –


According to the DC Fiscal Policy Institute, the US capital was home to about 25,000 undocumented migrants in 2023.

While city schools do not collect citizenship information on students, a 2022 Washington Post report quoted a DC council member as estimating that there are from 3,000 to 4,000 undocumented students in Washington schools.

In California, home to the largest immigrant population in the United States, ICE raids that began after Trump’s return to the White House in January have caused a spike in student absences, according to the National Education Association.

Jeffrey Freitas, president of the California Federation of Teachers, cited a landmark 1982 Supreme Court ruling that established that states cannot prevent undocumented children from attending public schools.

“What they’re doing, this is inhumane. This is trying to put fear into these communities,” Freitas told AFP.

“Education is compulsory for every student in the United States. That’s what we have to go by.”

Lora Ries, of the conservative Heritage Foundation, confirmed that “kids are, no matter what their immigration status, under the Supreme Court decision, able to go to public schools, so they are not at risk.”

But, she added, “If someone is here illegally, then they should get right with the law.”
Typhoon death toll rises in Vietnam as downed trees hamper rescuers


By AFP
August 26, 2025

Typhoon Kajiki downed trees and tore roofs off thousands of homes in Vietnam
 - Copyright AFP Nhac NGUYEN

Tran Thi Minh Ha

The death toll from Typhoon Kajiki rose to three in Vietnam on Tuesday, as rescue workers battled uprooted trees and downed power lines and widespread flooding brought chaos to the streets of the capital Hanoi.

The typhoon hit central Vietnam on Monday with winds of up to 130 km/h (80 mph), tearing roofs off thousands of homes and knocking out power to more than 1.6 million people.

Authorities on Tuesday said three people had been killed and 13 injured, and warned of possible flash floods and landslides in eight provinces as Kajiki’s torrential rains continue to wreak havoc.

On the streets of Vinh, in central Vietnam, AFP journalists saw soldiers and rescue workers using cutting equipment to clear dozens of trees and roof panels that had blocked the roads.

“A huge steel roof was blown down from the eighth floor of a building, landing right in the middle of the street,” Tran Van Hung, 65, told AFP.

“It was so lucky that no one was hurt. This typhoon was absolutely terrifying.”

Vietnam has long been affected by seasonal typhoons, but human-caused climate change is driving more intense and unpredictable weather patterns.

This can make destructive floods and storms more likely, particularly in the tropics.

“The wind yesterday night was so strong. The sound from trees twisting and the noise of the flying steel panels were all over the place,” Vinh resident Nguyen Thi Hoa, 60, told AFP.

“We are used to heavy rain and floods but I think I have never experienced that strong wind and its gust like this yesterday.”

Flooding has cut off 27 villages in mountainous areas inland, authorities said, while more than 44,000 people were evacuated as the storm approached.

– Chaos in Hanoi –


Further north in Hanoi, the heavy rains left many streets under water, bringing traffic chaos on Tuesday morning.

“It was impossible to move around this morning. My front yard is also flooded,” Nguyen Thuy Lan, 44, told AFP.

Another Hanoi resident, Tran Luu Phuc, said he was stuck in one place for more than an hour, unable to escape the logjam of vehicles trapped by the murky brown waters.

“The flooding and the traffic this morning are terrible. It’s a big mess everywhere,” he told AFP.

After hitting Vietnam and weakening to a tropical depression, Kajiki swept westwards over northern Laos, bringing intense rains.

The high-speed Laos-China railway halted all services on Monday and Tuesday, and some roads have been cut, but there were no immediate reports of deaths.

In Vietnam, more than 100 people have been killed or left missing from natural disasters in the first seven months of 2025, according to the agriculture ministry.

In September last year Typhoon Yagi battered northern Vietnam, Laos, Thailand and Myanmar, triggering floods and landslides that left more than 700 people dead and causing billions of dollars’ worth of economic losses.

burs-pdw/mtp

Vietnam evacuates tens of thousands as Typhoon Kajiki hits


By AFP
August 25, 2025


Rain falls above the buildings and a street in Vinh city on August 25, 2025, before Typhoon Kajiki makes landfall in Vietnam - Copyright AFP -

Tran Thi Minh Ha

Vietnam evacuated tens of thousands of residents from coastal areas on Monday as Typhoon Kajiki made landfall, lashing the country’s central belt with gales of more than 130 kilometres per hour.

The typhoon — the fifth to affect Vietnam this year — roiled the Gulf of Tonkin with waves of up to 9.5 metres (31 feet) before hitting shore around 3:00 pm (0800 GMT).

Nearly 30,000 people were evacuated from the region as 16,000 military personnel were mobilised and all fishing boats in the typhoon’s path were called back to harbour.

Two domestic airports were shut and 35 flights cancelled before it landed between Nghe An and Ha Tinh provinces.

Waterfront Vinh city was deluged overnight, its streets largely deserted with most shops and restaurants closed as residents and business owners sandbagged their property entrances.

“I have never heard of a typhoon of this big scale coming to our city,” said 66-year-old Le Manh Tung at a Vinh indoor sports stadium, where evacuated families dined on a simple breakfast of sticky rice.

“I am a bit scared, but then we have to accept it because it’s nature — we cannot do anything,” he told AFP, among only a few dozen people camped out at the evacuation site on Monday morning.

The typhoon made landfall packing windspeeds between 118 and 133 kilometres per hour (73 and 82 miles per hour), Vietnam’s National Center for Hydro-Meteorological Forecasting said.

“Rain will continue today and tomorrow, and with that huge rainfall risks for floodings and flash floods on rivers are very high,” director Mai Van Khiem said.

– ‘Never this big’ –


Scientists say human-caused climate change is driving more intense and unpredictable weather patterns that can make destructive floods and storms more likely, particularly in the tropics.

“Normally we get storms and flooding, but never this big,” said 52-year-old evacuee Nguyen Thi Nhan.

The typhoon’s power is due to dramatically dissipate after it makes landfall.

The Joint Typhoon Warning Center said conditions suggested “an approaching weakening trend as the system approaches the continental shelf of the Gulf of Tonkin where there is less ocean heat content”.

China’s tropical resort island of Hainan evacuated around 20,000 residents on Sunday as the typhoon passed its south.

The island’s main city, Sanya, closed scenic areas and halted business operations.

In Vietnam, more than 100 people have been killed or left missing from natural disasters in the first seven months of 2025, according to the agriculture ministry.

Economic losses have been estimated at more than $21 million.

Vietnam suffered $3.3 billion in economic losses last September as a result of Typhoon Yagi, which swept across the country’s north and caused hundreds of fatalities.
China Evergrande Group delisted from Hong Kong stock exchange


By AFP
August 25, 2025


Once China's biggest real estate firm, Evergrande was worth more than $50 billion at its peak but defaulted in 2021 after struggling to repay creditors - Copyright AFP/File STR

Shares in heavily indebted China Evergrande Group were taken off the Hong Kong Stock Exchange on Monday, capping a grim reversal of fortune for the once-booming property developer.

A committee at the bourse had decided earlier this month to cancel Evergrande’s listing after it failed to meet a July deadline to resume trading — suspended since early last year.

The delisting on Monday marks the latest milestone for a firm whose painful downward spiral has become symbolic of China’s long-standing property sector woes.

Once the country’s biggest real estate firm, Evergrande was worth more than $50 billion at its peak and helped propel China’s rapid economic growth in recent decades.

But it defaulted in 2021 after years of struggling to repay creditors.

A Hong Kong court issued a winding-up order for Evergrande in January 2024, ruling that the company had failed to come up with a suitable debt repayment plan.

Liquidators have made moves to recover creditors’ investments, including filing a lawsuit against PwC and its mainland Chinese arm for their role in auditing the debt-ridden developer.

The firm’s debt load is bigger than the previously estimated amount of $27.5 billion, according to a filing earlier this month attributed to liquidators Edward Middleton and Tiffany Wong.

The statement added that China Evergrande Group was a holding company and that liquidators had assumed control of more than 100 companies within the group.

Evergrande’s saga — and similar issues faced by other property giants including Country Garden and Vanke — have been closely followed by observers assessing the health of the world’s second-largest economy.

After a decades-long construction boom fuelled by rapid urbanisation, China’s property sector began to show worrying signs in 2020, when Beijing announced new rules to limit excessive borrowing.

With Evergrande’s default the following year and other complications across the industry continuing, a return to the boom years has proven elusive for policymakers.

The crisis has also dampened consumer sentiment at a time when economists argue that China must shift towards a new growth model driven more by domestic spending rather than investment.

New home prices in a grouping of 70 Chinese cities continued to drop in July, official data showed earlier this month.