The Second Term of Donald J. Trump as President of the United States of America

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The Florida Growers Association has been successful in associating oranges and orange juice with "Florida" in the minds of Canadians since the 1980s. However, a recent shift in sourcing by Canadian importers has led to the purchase of Brazilian oranges, resulting in a 50% decline in the price of US OJ concentrate. This development is reported in Canadian industry news as a consequence of Canadian buyers shifting away from US goods. In contrast, US industry news describes this shift as a natural correction in commodity prices, without identifying a specific cause.
 
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"... They illegally went through my phone, violated multiple Constitutional rights, ..." DW #402
There are multiple causes for concern here.
The disclosure excerpted above in #403 is certainly cause for alarm.
But I consider it a distant second to the less clearly disclosed detail.

Until historically recent times it was not uncommon to encounter the assertion: "we are a nation of laws".
I haven't heard it lately.

CERTAINLY violating the Constitutional rights of humans within U.S. sovereign territory is alarming. BUT !!
That is PRECISELY why we have the United States Constitution.
BILL OF RIGHTS
ARTICLE #1:
Ratified December 15, 1791
Congress shall make no law respecting ... the right of the people ... to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
Such "grievances", a broad spectrum of Trump administration executive over-reach:

ExecOrder01.JPG
Each black binding on the oval office desk contains an executive order. This one photograph does not disclose the entire list.

has already devastated the U.S. internally, threatening to leave U.S. federal government in shambles, if it survives at all.

"... They illegally went through my phone, violated multiple Constitutional rights, ..." DW #402
Spectacular.

Derek Michael Chauvin is an American former police officer who murdered George Floyd, ... Chauvin pleaded guilty in late 2021 to federal charges of violating Floyd's civil rights by using unreasonable force and ignoring Floyd's serious medical needs. More from Wikipedia

This post #403 is not to in any way dismiss or diminish murder in general or particular.
But in terms of consequence President Trump's flagrant ignorant lawlessness is vastly more consequential, and demands a proportionally greater remedy response.

And the authorities U.S. $taxpayers have paid to guard against PRECISELY this kind of Constitutional threat swill coffee and munch doughnuts in response.
"If you don't fight like hell you won't have a country anymore" Trump, directing his Jan. 6 "audience" to march down PA Ave. to our capitol.
 
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A routine traffic stop in Ohio turned into a bizarre loyalty test for a Halifax-based folk duo last week. The Celtic-music sisters Cassie and Maggie MacDonald say they were on a short American tour when they were pulled over for distracted driving by two highway patrol officers who separated the siblings and asked them each if they preferred Canada to the United States.�

“I found it to be a very jarring question,” said fiddler-singer Cassie MacDonald. “And the fact we were both asked that question independently makes me think it was a mandate coming from above.”�

The unsettling interrogation comes at a time of tense Canada-U.S. relations caused by an American-instigated trade war and remarks by President Donald Trump, who has publicly eyed Canada as a 51st state and referred to former prime minister Justin Trudeau as “governor.”���

The Juno-nominated sisters were travelling on I-70 East to Pittsburgh from Columbus, Ohio, when they were tailed by two cars from the Guernsey County Sheriff’s Office and eventually pulled over. Maggie MacDonald was speaking on a cellphone while driving. “It was 100-per-cent our fault,” Cassie admitted.�

They were driving a rented 2024 Chevy Malibu with Oklahoma plates. The traffic stop escalated when the musicians said they were Canadians.

After an officer brought out a detection dog, the sisters were told the vehicle had tested positive for narcotics. After a physical search turned up nothing more than a bottle of wine and one of the sister’s medication, the questioning continued.�

“The officer speaking to me seemed to believe that Canada was the root of where all these drugs were coming from,” Cassie said. “It seemed very much in line with the narrative that has recently been touted.”�

The Trump administration has accused Canada of flooding the U.S. with the synthetic opioid fentanyl. The unsubstantiated claim is being used as pretext for tariffs placed on Canadian goods.���

Before the MacDonald sisters were released from their detainment, they were both subjected, in separate police vehicles by different officers, to a loyalty test.�

“Mine asked, ‘I have an important question to ask you, which do you prefer, Canada or the United States?’” Cassie said. “It seemed weighted, as if whether we were going to be given a further difficult time or if we were going to have the opportunity to go on our way depended on the answer I gave.”

Cassie told the officer they had toured the U.S. for years, had a loyal fan base there and “tons of cousins” in Pennsylvania and Maine, and that they’d always felt at home in the country. Maggie told the officer interrogating her that it was much easier to tour in the U.S., because of the shorter distances between major cities.

“It was two police officers just doing their job, but the question seemed out of place,” Cassie said.

Maggie was let go with a warning, but her information was logged into the police database. A representative from the Guernsey County Sheriff’s Office declined to comment on the incident.

The duo’s music is not political. Recently, however, Canadian artists have released music specifically in response to the heightened diplomatic situation. Last month, Toronto indie-rock band Broken Social Scene released a new live video of a previously released song, Canada Vs America.

On March 7, Blue Rodeo’s Jim Cuddy released We Used to Be the Best of Friends, a strummed, folky lament over a shared North American culture and a broken relationship: “Oh, no, what went wrong, used to be the singers in a two-part song.”

Cassie and Maggie have held a U.S. work visa since 2013. They tour extensively in New England and the Midwest, and leverage their northern nationality during their live shows in the U.S.

“Being Canadian is definitely a huge part of our act and our stage banter,” Cassie said. “It’s what our U.S. fans expect.”

The duo’s merchandise for sale is distinctly Canuck. Bestselling items include flannel shirts and a tuque with a label that says, “The ultimate in Canadian fashion.”

The sisters make most of their one-on-one contact with their fans at the merchandise table after shows. Since the trade war, American fans have expressed support for the duo.

“They say they’re sorry and that they don’t believe in what’s going on,” Cassie said. “Of course, they don’t need to apologize to us. It’s just a shame that it has come to this.”

Shift's comment: far more fentanyl goes to Canada from the US than the other way around:

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Is Trump talkin' dirty here?

March 30, 2025, 8:47 AM GMT-5 / Updated March 30, 2025, 10:41 AM GMT-5
By Kristen Welker and Megan Lebowitz
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said he was “very angry” and “pissed off” when Russian President Vladimir Putin criticized the credibility of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s leadership, adding that the comments were “not going in the right location.”

“not going in the right location.” You mean like the superior anterior wisterier?

"Shift's comment: far more fentanyl goes to Canada from the US than the other way around:" #404
Fentanyl (seized in 2024): From Canada to the U.S.: 43 pounds / From the U.S. to Canada: 882 pounds

sear adds:
Border seizures only intercept a fraction of the full volume of such black-market commerce. The stat listed in #404, "From the U.S. to Canada: 882 pounds" does not tell the whole story.
 
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Occupy Democrats

eSponotsrdu541h44tga54fuu0c133g7g1ct45gam0ltgh8h50u27i439559 ·

https://www.facebook.com/#
BREAKING: Greenland's new Prime Minister incinerates Donald Trump's imperial dreams after J.D. Vance's disastrous trip to the island: "We do not belong to others. We decide our own future."

And he was just getting started...

Jens-Frederik Nielsen assumed office on March 28th and is already going toe to toe with the MAGA agenda. He zeroed in on Trump's absurd claim — which was echoed by his lapdog Vance — that the United States will "get Greenland ... 100 percent."

"To the people of Greenland: I'm watching the USA. We won't be for sale. We won't be sold," Nielsen stated on social media. "We tell a beautiful story with a beautiful song. Innocent, not naive, not gullible."

"We do not belong to anyone else, including the American president's purchase offer, we belong to Greenland," he continued. "We remember this. We are remembering this. And we do not forget."

"We must listen when others talk about us," he continued. "But we must not be shaken. President Trump says the United States is 'getting Greenland.' Let me make this clear: The U.S. is not getting that. We don't belong to anyone else."

"We decide our own future. We must not act out of fear," he wrote. "We must respond with peace, dignity, and unity. And through these values, we must clearly, firmly, and calmly show the American president that Greenland is ours. It was like that yesterday. It's like that today. And that's how it will be in the future."

Nielsen and the people of Greenland could not be any clearer. They have no desire to join the United States. And why would they? Trump is driving this country off a cliff with his disastrous economic policies and nakedly fascist deportations.

This entire farce about taking over Greenland is a desperate attempt on Trump's part to carve out some kind of legacy for himself because his domestic reputation is already in shambles
 
"This entire farce about taking over Greenland is a desperate attempt on Trump's part to carve out some kind of legacy for himself because his domestic reputation is already in shambles" #409 [J-F N?]
Thank you J-F.
May the good Peoples of Greenland live long & proper in the tranquil majesty, peaceful prosperity, and sovereignty of your island home.

- meanwhile -

First major swing state election of 2025 turns into referendum on Trump, Musk​

A state Supreme Court election in battleground Wisconsin turns into a proxy battle over President Donald Trump and Elon Musk​

By Paul Steinhauser Fox News / Published April 1, 2025 9:00am EDT


Care to predict the outcome of this election?
 
From my FB feed

Jamie Sutherland

A sobering message from a history teacher about America turning from democracy to authoritarianism:

I teach both American and international government. For years, I’ve been going over “case study” states, from mostly democratic (UK), to democratizing-but-corrupt (Mexico, Nigeria), to illiberal-authoritarian (Russia), to theocratic (Iran), to traditional authoritarian (China).

When it comes to the difference between democracy and authoritarianism, one thing Americans need to understand is that there’s never one single moment when you become an authoritarian state; no leader will stand up and announce, “I am now a dictator.”

Putin is the classic case study in the gradual, effective subversion of democracy. Russia had been democratizing for about a decade when he took over in 2000, and now — even though Russia ostensibly still has the appearance of democracy (elections, separation of powers, federalism, and a constitution) — none of that matters. Putin is in absolute control.

And Putin is, coincidentally (?), the authoritarian most vocally admired by Donald Trump.

But how screwed are we? Well, as any first-year political science student can tell you, there are — very simple, clear-cut, definitive — ways to tell when your democracy is in danger.

Let’s go over them, shall we?

1. You know you’re drifting toward authoritarianism when… your Legislative Branch cedes power to your President.

Montesquieu (and later Madison) envisioned the Legislative Branch as the primary workhorse of government: it was made — in part — to check the President’s excesses. It has far more powers than the President, it’s more representative of the people than the President, and it was specifically given the ability to restrain, overrule, or remove the President. In all of U.S. history, the legislature was never intended to be subservient to executive power. When a President’s rule sidesteps legislative functions — and Congress allows it — the balance of power is subverted.

For the record, Putin’s rise initially faced resistance from his own legislative Duma — serving their constitutional function — until he cowed them, forced out resistors, and intimidated dissent, eventually rewriting the rules around elections to install loyalists exclusively.

Ask yourself: Has the U.S. Congress been ceding power to President Trump, diminishing in importance as the president’s role grows?

2. You know you’re drifting toward authoritarianism when… corporatism becomes normalized.

Corporatism is a political system in which for-profit business groups (i.e., mass media and energy) become the most impactful partners in the government’s policymaking process.
Authoritarians need industry leaders (and more importantly, their money) to spread their influence. Consequently, deals are made and favors traded (tax cuts in exchange for favorable reporting, for instance) that further enhance the power of the oligarchs and the President over that of the people.

For the record, Putin allowed profiteering for oligarchs who would help him (the Rotenburgs and Yuri Kovalchuk), and persecuted or jailed those who opposed him (Mikhail Borisovich Khodorkovsky).

Ask yourself: Has President Trump empowered corporations who aided him and diminished those who opposed him in order to gain more power?

3. You know you’re drifting toward authoritarianism when… you begin to wonder if your President will obey the Constitution.

Rule of law is considered one of the four pillars of democracy, and the U.S. — despite its foibles — has a strong tradition of adherence to this concept. For many countries, the constitution is just a piece of paper, altered on the fly when it suits the regime (example: every Chinese president before Xi Jinping had term limits; now — with a wave of the pen — he does not). If obeying the U.S. Constitution becomes a question rather than an expectation, that is not in the American tradition of democracy.

For the record, Putin regularly violates the civil liberties present within the Russian constitution: restricting protests, intimidating (or outright murdering) journalists, and jailing political opponents.

Ask yourself: Have President Trump’s actions ever threatened constitutional norms or the rule of law in pursuit of personal gain?

4. You know you’re drifting toward authoritarianism when… your President creates enemies for you to turn on, both internally and externally.

This is pretty much textbook fascism, frankly, but I’m shocked at how easily it’s getting overlooked. Look, one cannot be a hero without a villain — and who is more easily vanquished than the vulnerable? If you can turn your citizenry onto a witch hunt against its own people, that’s a useful tool for power grabs in the name of “security.” And if you can turn them against a foreign adversary, even better: nothing promotes nationalism like warfare… especially easily won warfare.

Ask yourself: Has President Trump encouraged us to turn on any of our fellow Americans… or created any new foreign enemies out of historic allies?

5. You know you’re drifting toward authoritarianism when… your President elevates loyalty to himself personally over loyalty to the country.

Consider: though most cabinet members are rotated out when a new president enters, the vast majority of bureaucrats and soldiers (everyone from staff sergeants to park rangers) stay in place, keeping the machinery of government running, as their oath is to the Constitution — not a specific human being. Authoritarians see that as insufficient, replacing elements of the bureaucracy — especially military and law enforcement — who will criticize implementation, or refuse illegal execution, of presidential will.

For the record, one of Putin’s first actions as President was to put the FSB (their version of the FBI) under direct control of the President (himself). Prior to that, there had been a detachment between law enforcement and political power, expected and traditional in western democracies. From May 17, 2000 onward, they became a tool of his will, incrementally expanded in power and wielded against his enemies.

Ask yourself: Has President Trump appointed government agents — especially military and law enforcement — who have vocalized loyalty to him personally, and advocated for vengeance against his political enemies?

Sigh. I’m tired, but I could go on and on. There’s a phrase that’s been paraded lately: “Democracy dies in darkness.” In my experience, that’s not necessarily what’s happening here.

Despite the backslide in democratic qualities we’re experiencing, the one we have in spades is transparency: thanks to a vibrant media ecosystem — and Trump’s narcissistic self-promotion — we are constantly aware of the moves he’s making to subvert the norms of our regime.

That said, as democracy dies in America, it won’t be in darkness. It will be in plain sight — and with our permission.
 
Jamie Sutherland

"3. You know you’re drifting toward authoritarianism when… you begin to wonder if your President will obey the Constitution." #412
And you know authoritarianism has arrived when the demonstrated answer is repeatedly no, your president will not obey the Constitution.


"Smash the ..." #413
(y)


Musk: pictured kissing the back of his own hand
"You Lose ..."
Well Elon, perhaps we all lose.
Even if a significant fraction of the destruction Trump / Musk have slashed through the U.S. in four year is somehow reversed,
the degradation that ensued during the Trump suspension will not be so easily reversed.

Our trade partners, our military allies, our former intelligence-sharing partners have reason for caution: "Once bitten, twice shy."

physicians moving north #414
Might a daily mega-dose of vitamin A help?
A little?
 
April 1, 2025 (Tuesday)

Today Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ) made history.

For more than 25 hours he held the floor of the Senate, not reading from the phone book or children’s literature, as some of his predecessors have done, but delivering a coherent, powerful speech about the meaning of America and the ways in which the Trump regime is destroying our democracy.

On the same day that John Hudson of the Washington Post reported that members of Donald Trump’s National Security Council, including national security advisor Michael Waltz, have been skirting presidential records laws and exposing national security by using Gmail accounts to conduct government business, and the same day that mass layoffs at the

Department of Health and Human Services gutted the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Booker launched a full-throated defense of the United States of America.

Booker began his marathon speech at 7:00 on the evening of March 31 with little fanfare. In a video recorded before he began, he said that he had “been hearing from people from all over my state and indeed all over the nation calling upon folks in Congress to do more, to do things that recognize the urgency—the crisis—of the moment. And so we all have a responsibility, I believe to do something different to cause, as John Lewis said, good trouble, and that includes me.”

On the floor of the Senate, Booker again invoked the late Representative John Lewis of Georgia, who had been one of the original Freedom Riders challenging racial segregation in 1961 and whose skull law enforcement officers fractured on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, in 1965 as Lewis joined the marchers on their way to Montgomery to demand their voting rights be protected.

Booker reminded listeners that Lewis was famous for telling people to “get in good trouble, necessary trouble. Help redeem the soul of America.” Booker said that in the years since Trump took office, he has been asking himself, “[H]ow am I living up to his words?”

“Tonight I rise with the intention of getting in some good trouble. I rise with the intention of disrupting the normal business of the United States Senate for as long as I am physically able. I rise tonight because I believe sincerely that our country is in crisis and I believe that not in a partisan sense,” he said, “because so many of the people that have been reaching out to my office in pain, in fear, having their lives upended—so many of them identify themselves as Republicans.”

Standing for the next 25 hours and 5 minutes, without a break to use the restroom and pausing only when colleagues asked questions to enable him to rest his voice, Booker called out the Trump administration’s violations of the Constitution and detailed the ways in which the administration is hurting Americans. Farmers have lost government contracts, putting them in a financial crisis. Cuts to environmental protections that protect clean air and water are affecting Americans’ health. Housing is unaffordable, and the administration is making things worse. Cuts to education and medical research and national security breaches have made Americans less safe. The regime accidentally deported a legal resident because of “administrative error” and now says it cannot get him back.

“These are not normal times in America, and they should not be treated as such,” he said. “This is our moral moment. This is when the most precious ideas of our country are being tested…. Where does the Constitution live, on paper or in our hearts?”

Throughout his speech, Booker emphasized the power of the American people. He told their stories and read their letters. And he urged them to stand up for the country. “In this democracy,” he said, “the power of people is greater than the people in power.”

He emphasized the power of the people by calling out South Carolina Senator Strom Thurmond, who until today held the record for the longest Senate speech: a filibuster he launched in 1957 to try to stop the passage of that year’s Civil Rights Act. Thurmond spoke for 24 hours and 18 minutes, but unlike Booker, who used his time to make a powerful and coherent case for reclaiming American democracy, Thurmond filled time with tactics like reading from an encyclopedia.

But, Booker noted, Thurmond’s attempt to stop racial equality failed. After he ended his filibuster, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1957, and Black Americans and their allies used it to demand the equal protection of the law, including the right to vote. “I’m not here…because of his speech,” Booker said. “I’m here despite his speech. I’m here because as powerful as he was, the people were more powerful.”

“It is time to heed the words of the man I began this whole thing with: John Lewis. I beg folks to take his example of his early days when he made himself determined to show his love for his country at a time the country didn’t love him, to love this country so much, to be such a patriot that he endured beatings, savagely, on the Edmund Pettus bridge, at lunch counters, on freedom rides. He said he had to do something. He would not normalize a moment like this. He would not just go along with business as usual. He wouldn’t know how to solve it, but there’s one thing that he would do, that I hope we all can do, that I think I did a little bit of tonight.

“He said for us to go out and cause some good trouble, necessary trouble, to redeem the soul of our nation. I want you to redeem the dream…. Let’s be bolder in America with a vision that inspires with hope. It starts with the people of the United States of America—that’s how this country started: ‘We the people.’ Let’s get back to the ideals that others are threatening, let's get back to our founding documents…. Those imperfect geniuses had some very special words at the end of the Declaration of Independence…when our founders said we must mutually pledge, pledge to each other ‘our lives, our fortunes, and our Sacred Honor.’ We need that now from all Americans. This is a moral moment. It’s not left or right, it's right or wrong.

“Let’s get in good trouble.

“My friend, madam president, I yield the floor.”

According to Washington Post technology reporter Drew Harwell, before he was through, Booker’s speech had been liked on TikTok 400 million times.

The people spoke today in special elections. Republican candidates in Florida won by about 14 points in each of two U.S. House races, but just five months ago, Republicans won those seats by 30 and 37 points. It appears that voters are angry at the Republican Party.

In Wisconsin, the state supreme court race showed a similar dynamic. The candidate endorsed by President Trump and backed by more than $20 million from Elon Musk, lost the race to his opponent, circuit court judge Susan Crawford. Musk had campaigned in the state for Crawford’s opponent, handing out two $1 million checks and saying that the election could determine “the future of America and Western Civilization.”

Crawford won by about 10 points.

“As a little girl growing up in Chippewa Falls,” Crawford said in her victory speech, “I never could have imagined that I’d be taking on the richest man in the world for justice in Wisconsin. And we won.
 
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They’re doing all this in plain view.

From ICE deporting a U.S. resident to the mass firings of scientists to judges handing federal buildings to Musk’s agency for free, today's chaos is coordinated. Trump’s allies are purging public institutions, canceling dissent, and daring anyone to stop them.

But not everyone’s rolling over. From Wisconsin voters to Cory Booker on the Senate floor, resistance is breaking through.

Stay loud. Stay sharp. Stay in the fight.

Subscribe free at https://govbrief.today#GovBriefToday #Resist

1. https://www.jsonline.com/story/news...ults-brad-schimel-susan-crawford/82417975007/

2. https://www.politico.com/news/2025/04/01/patronis-fine-trump-florida-00265436

3. https://www.thebaltimorebanner.com/...vador-ice-mistake-4SFHFQ657NDQJEQDCHVAZ7YTCA/

4. https://apnews.com/article/trump-migrant-children-lawyers-4304ba9d06a48f808df8650ff25e4a6e

5. https://apnews.com/article/military-academies-dei-hegseth-trump-ba9731f24b4eb4bd9c02b568209f97af

6. https://abcnews.go.com/US/mahmoud-khalil-case-new-jersey/story?id=120387445

7. https://www.bostonherald.com/2025/0...oston-defendant-outside-courthouse-mid-trial/

8. https://www.axios.com/2025/03/11/mike-johnson-proxy-voting-discharge-petition

9. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-new...ederal-grants-princeton-university-rcna199127

10. https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politi...ecision-to-rescind-billions-in-health-funding

11. https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/04/01/trump-greenland-us-territory-cost/

12. https://federalnewsnetwork.com/work...of-layoffs-when-their-id-badges-stop-working/

13. https://www.newsweek.com/mike-waltz-used-personal-gmail-government-communications-report-2053863

14. https://www.mediaite.com/news/doug-...mps-threats-they-bent-the-knee-anyway-report/

15. https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/02/us/politics/oscar-arias-sanchez-visa-trump.html

16. https://thehill.com/regulation/cour...ary-employee-firings-but-only-in-some-states/

17. https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/other/ar-AA1C5s02

18. https://www.wired.com/story/judge-approves-doge-usip-office-building/

19. https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/apr/01/cory-booker-senate-speech-trump
 
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