NORTON META TAG

23 March 2025

Autocrats roll back rights and rule of law — and cite Trump’s example & Watch: The political science that predicted Trump’s rise 23MAR25 & 10JUN16

 


Watch: The political science that predicted Trump’s rise

NOBODY in the NOT MY pres musk, NOT MY pres drumpf / trump, and NOT MY vp vance administration can be described as a supporter of freedom, democracy, human rights, civil rights, civil liberties and true faith of their claimed religion. Drippings each and every one, they are a writhing den of evil, intent on the destruction of America as we have been known, to be replaced with the Fourth Reich. They are well on their way to succeeding though they are also facing more and more opposition than the Third Reich faced. If they do succeed it will be up to the real Americans, united, to make sure the Fourth Reich doesn't last as long as the Third and that this gop / greed over people-republican cabal is appropriately punished for their evil as were the creators of the Third. BE SURE to watch the video "The Political Science That Predicted Trump's Rise" explaining the lure of authoritarianism and the danger of not taking someone like trump seriously.  drumpf / trump 1.0 was an idiot and dangerous, drumpf / trump 2.0 is still an idiot BUT much more dangerous...

Autocrats roll back rights and rule of law — and cite Trump’s example

Updated
March 23, 2025 at 5:31 a.m. EDTtoday at 5:31 a.m. EDT

Trump’s statements, policies and actions are providing cover for attacks on LGBTQ+ rights, freedom of expression and the rule of law around the world.

Under Hungary’s antigay “propaganda” law, bookstores were fined for selling LGBTQ+ themed tomes without sealed plastic wrappers and a museum director was fired for allowing minors into an exhibit with images of same-sex couples. But the autocratic government of Prime Minister Viktor Orban stopped short of targeting the community’s premier event: the annual Pride parade.

Until now. Parliament voted overwhelmingly this month to ban the event — and threatened to use facial recognition technology to identify violators.

What changed? According to Orban, it was the return to the White House of President Donald Trump.

Gergely Gulyas, Orban’s chief of staff, told journalists that the change in administrations in Washington had lifted the “American boot” off the chest of the Hungarian government, making it easier “to breathe.”

Orban himself noted that the Biden administration’s ambassador to Hungary — David Pressman, a fierce Orban critic who directly challenged the nationalist leader’s democratic backsliding — made a point of participating in Budapest Pride, an event that has brought 35,000 people to the Hungarian capital, to protect it.

Pride “shouldn’t have existed earlier, but it did, because the U.S. Ambassador led the march, which clearly showed that the world’s great powers supported it,” Orban said last month. “But now the world has changed, and the Americans have called these types of ambassadors back home. … It’s clear that [Pride] won’t have international protection.”

The emboldened Orban is not alone. As Trump upends democratic norms at home, his statements, policies and actions are providing cover for a fresh chill on freedom of expression, democracy, the rule of law and LGBTQ+ rights for autocrats around the world — some of whom are giving him credit.

Democratic backsliding in Eastern Europe, the Balkans and Turkey long predates Trump; the president has been said to have derived some of his messaging from Orban. But in several nations, including Hungary and Serbia, authorities say openly that Trump’s return has helped them serve up what critics say are fresh violations of basic rights. In Turkey, where President Recep Tayyip Erdogan this week detained his leading political rival and dozens of others, advocates see Trump’s influence as an enabling factor.

The new Trump administration “is bringing together autocrats and would-be autocrats around the world,” said Rosa Balfour, director of Carnegie Europe. “What they share is a radical right agenda, and they are much more connected in their policies and goals than we have been assuming.”

Cuts at USAID have eliminated funding for nongovernmental organizations that promoted the rule of law in countries where democracy is under attack, she said. Meanwhile, the administration’s actions at home — rolling back protections for minorities, the mass deportation of migrants outside normal processes, attacks on judges who stand in the way — and its decision to vote against a United Nations censure of Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, she said, signal a new era in which the United States is no longer seen as a global defender of liberal democracy.

Demonstrators in Budapest on Tuesday protest the government ban on the capital's annual Pride parade, scheduled for June. (Marton Monus/Reuters)

For Orban, opponents fear, the ban on Pride is only the starting point. Last week, he announced a “spring cleaning” against opposition politicians, judges, journalists, civil society organizations and activists — a group he collectively described as society’s “stink bugs.”

“In terms of international pressure, Orban is now liberated,” said Márton Tompos, president of the opposition Momentum Movement. “It’s like he’s saying, ‘Okay, Trump won, and now I can do anything I want.’”

In Serbia, where autocratic President Aleksandar Vucic has been challenged by a sustained protest movement, authorities cited Trump’s unsubstantiated claims of rampant fraud, corruption and waste at USAID as a basis for launching raids last month against four civil society groups, including one that monitors elections and one that promotes government accountability and transparency.

The International Fact-Checking Network, a program of the Florida-based Poynter Institute, called the raids “an unprecedented escalation of government repression, meant to silence independent voices and using the pretext of baseless accusations from the current U.S. administration for the suppression of independent media.”

Donald Trump Jr., interviewing Vucic this month, praised Serbia for “embracing the MAGA movement,” and echoed Vucic’s unproven claim that anti-corruption protests were tied to “left-wing actors” in the U.S.

Erdogan has targeted political rivals, judges and journalists for years. But the detention this month of nearly 100 people, including Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, his strongest political challenger, on corruption charges opponents call specious, was seen as a major escalation. On Sunday, a Turkish court formally declared Imamoglu under arrest, saying he would be imprisoned pending trial.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan addresses members of his ruling AK Party in Ankara, Turkey, in February. Turkey arrested his top political opponent, Istanbul mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, on corruption charges. (Cagla Gurdogan/Reuters)

Erdogan, critics say, is also laying the ground work for a fresh assault on minority rights. Kerem Dikmen, a Human Rights Program Coordinator at Kaos GL, a Turkish LGBTQ+ group, said the organization has obtained a draft of a bill that would impose sentences of up to three years on individuals who do not behave in public according to their biological sex. It would also make it a crime to officiate same-sex weddings, Dikmen said.

The target isn’t new. Istanbul’s Pride march has been banned since 2015, and Erdogan has described himself as “against LGBT.”

“Those in Turkey are not passing a law because Trump is in power. But there is a psychological influence,” Dikmen said. “It will become easier.”

The Biden administration clashed bitterly with Orban, an ally of both Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has sought to establish what he calls an “illiberal state” in Hungary. Since coming to power 15 years ago, Orban has undermined judicial independence and sought to control the media while targeting migrants and the LGBTQ+ community.

The 2021 antigay propaganda law stoked fear in Hungary’s LGBTQ+ community. Lawmakers followed it in 2023 with a proposal to allow citizens to report same-sex couples with children anonymously.

That bill, however, was never signed — the result, Pressman told The Washington Post, of public and private pressure by U.S. and European officials. In the final weeks of the Biden administration, the U.S. also sanctioned a top Orban aide for alleged corruption in office.

“Look, when you’re dealing with an emerging authoritarian government, part of the effort of diplomacy is to create guardrails,” said Pressman, who left his post as ambassador in January. “I think there is a very fair question as to whether or not those guardrails still exist. And some of the policy decisions you see, I think, are reflecting that.”

The ban on Pride affects far more than one event, critics say. It allows fines of up to roughly $550 for any protest or gathering authorities deem a danger to children.

A convergence of challenges — an anemic economy, high inflation and flagging poll numbers — have left Orban vulnerable to a surging challenge by former ally Péter Magyar. Organizers of Budapest Pride see the renewed harassment of the LGBTQ+ community in part as an effort to direct attention toward a scapegoat.

Orban said Pride participants would not be arrested but fined. Mate Hegedus, a spokesman for Budapest Pride, said the June 28 event will go ahead as planned. By happenstance, he said, it will coincide with the anniversary of the Stonewall riots, the Greenwich Village uprising in 1969 that gave lift to the modern gay rights movement in the U.S.

“After this, anyone can be silenced,” Hegedus said. “We’re not going to stand for this. We will go on with the event.”

Orban’s vows to expand his net to include judges, journalists, NGOs and others have also rattled the country. Orban has acted against opponents in the past, said David Vig, executive director of Amnesty International in Hungary. But Trump’s action against USAID, he said, seemed to serve as a “trigger” for a “very significant change in tone.”

“The prime minister has said he wants to wipe out these organizations by Easter [and] the smearing, the chilling effect is already there,” Vig said. “If a prime minister is talking about civil society, talking about journalists, and judges, as bugs who need to be killed and wiped out, I think that is sending a very clear chilling message.”

Karoly Szilagyi in Budapest and Stefano Pitrelli in Rome contributed to this report.

Anthony Faiola is Rome Bureau Chief for The Washington Post. Since joining the paper in 1994, he has served as bureau chief in Miami, Berlin, London, Tokyo, Buenos Aires and New York and additionally worked as roving correspondent at large.

A Republican senator just prayed that Obama’s “days be few.” This is how the GOP got Trump. & Watch: The political science that predicted Trump’s rise 10JUN16


 A dear friend shared via IM with me and a group of our friends a bumper sticker she saw encouraging people to pray for NOT MY pres drumpf / trump as in Psalm 109:8, "Let his days be few"....I reminded my friends this is the same 'prayer' republicans were encouraged to pray after Pres Obama was elected. I told them it was wrong then, it is wrong now and I can not pray for the death of anyone no matter how evil I think they are. I will actively participate in the opposition to the authoritarian theological oligarchy the NOT MY pres musk, NOT MY pres drumpf / trump, NOT MY vp vance, their administration and the gop / greed over people-republican party plans to impose on America, destroying our democratic Republic a la the heritage foundation cabals project 2025. I will not abandon my Christian faith to lower myself to the level of those now in power. Here is the article from VOX on how the gop got drumpf / trump, though I must point out that the gop / greed over people-republican party has been working to destroy our Democracy since they nominated barry goldwater for president in 1964.

A Republican senator just prayed that Obama’s “days be few.” This is how the GOP got Trump.


Want to know how Republicans ended up with Donald Trump? This is how Republicans ended up with Donald Trump:

Sen. Perdue tells Faith and Freedom attendees to pray for Obama. "We should pray like Psalm 109:8 says: Let his days be few"

— Betsy Woodruff (@woodruffbets) June 10, 2016

Sen. David Perdue is the junior senator from Georgia. He’s known in the Senate as a nice, modest guy — not one of the bomb throwers, by any means.

Here is how the prayer he encouraged the audience to make for Obama continues:

Let his days be few; and let another take his office.

Let his children be fatherless, and his wife a widow.

Let his children be continually vagabonds, and beg: let them seek their bread also out of their desolate places.

Let the extortioner catch all that he hath; and let the strangers spoil his labour.

Let there be none to extend mercy unto him: neither let there be any to favour his fatherless children.

Let his posterity be cut off; and in the generation following let their name be blotted out.

Let the iniquity of his fathers be remembered with the Lord; and let not the sin of his mother be blotted out.

You don’t have to believe Perdue literally wants Michelle Obama to be a widow to think that invoking this psalm toward the president of the United States is, perhaps, a bit inappropriate. (Perdue isn’t the first to suggest Psalm 109:8 is an appropriate prayer for Obama; it’s become a meme in hard-right circles, where you can buy bumper stickers and shirts that say the same thing.)

The Republican Party acts shocked by Trump — like he is some alien parasite who has taken over their party without warning or precedent. They shouldn’t be so shocked.

Comments like Perdue’s are the context in which Trump ran. For years, Republican voters have been told that the president is a Muslim, a Kenyan, a socialist. They have heard Newt Gingrich fret over his “Kenyan anti-colonial mindset,” Mitt Romney worry that the United States is “inches away from no longer being a free economy,” and, yes, Donald Trump argue that he’s hiding the true circumstances of his birth. They were thrilled when Ben Carson called Obamacare “the worst thing that has happened in this nation since slavery” and pleased when Ted Cruz agreed to look into whether Obama was planning an armed takeover of Texas.

And those examples are limited to national leaders in the Republican Party. The rhetoric coming from state senators, talk radio hosts, and local Tea Party chairs is much worse. Grassroots Republicans have been told for years that the struggle with Obama is existential and civilizational, that the disagreements are fundamental and scary, that the future of the country they love dearly is in doubt.

Republican leaders are not responsible for all of this rhetoric, but they have consistently indulged it and rarely challenged it. Rather than fighting the hysteria, they have sought to harness it for their own ends.

In some ways, the strategy has worked. Republicans control the House and the Senate. But they face a base continually angry over their inability to stop Obama, and one that punishes them severely when they try to compromise. And now the base has lost faith in their quisling leaders and turned to a guy who seems like he really won’t give up, who seems like he really isn’t cowed by the media or Washington elites, who seems like he believes what they believe and recognizes the stakes are high enough that something needs to be done about it.

Or, as Jamelle Bouie wrote:

 


Watch: The political science that predicted Trump’s rise



La Maison Blanche affirme que les États-Unis ne retourneront pas la statue de la liberté en France 18 mars 2025

 



Karoline  Leavitt est vraiment une idiote. Non seulement nous devons aux Français notre amitié et notre gratitude pour nous avoir aidés à conquérir notre indépendance, mais aussi parce que des milliers de soldats français se sont sacrifiés pour contenir l'armée allemande pendant l'évacuation des forces britanniques et de nombreuses forces françaises de Dunkerque. Arrête de boire, Karolynn, ça te ronge le cerveau.

La Maison Blanche déclare que les États-Unis ne restitueront pas la Statue de la Liberté à la France

La Statue de la Liberté en octobre. (Charly Triballeau/AFP/Getty Images)

Par  

La Maison Blanche a rejeté l'appel symbolique d'un homme politique français en faveur du retour de la Statue de la Liberté - un cadeau de la France il y a environ 140 ans - au motif que les États-Unis ne représentent plus les valeurs incarnées par le monument.

Le président Donald Trump ne rendrait « absolument pas » la statue, a déclaré  lundi la porte-parole de la Maison Blanche, Karoline Leavitt, interrogée sur les propos de Raphaël Glucksmann, membre du Parlement européen.

« Mon conseil à cet homme politique français de bas niveau dont je ne dévoile pas le nom serait de lui rappeler que  c'est uniquement à cause des États-Unis d'Amérique que les Français ne parlent pas allemand en ce moment », a déclaré Leavitt, faisant référence au rôle des États-Unis dans l'aide apportée à la France pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale. « Ils devraient donc être très reconnaissants envers notre grand pays. »

Les États-Unis ont joué un rôle majeur dans la libération de la France après quatre années d'occupation par l'Allemagne nazie, mais ils n'ont pas agi seuls. Le 6 juin 1944, les forces alliées – principalement américaines, britanniques et canadiennes – ont lancé le débarquement décisif du Jour J, qui a marqué le début de la libération de la France.

Glucksmann, du parti de centre-gauche Place Publique, a fait cette remarque sur la Statue de la Liberté lors d'une convention du parti dimanche.

« Nous allons dire aux Américains – à ceux qui ont choisi de se ranger du côté des tyrans, à ceux qui licencient des chercheurs pour avoir exercé leur liberté scientifique – deux choses. Tout d'abord, rendez-nous la Statue de la Liberté ! » a-t-il déclaré.

« Nous vous l'avons offert, mais apparemment, vous le méprisez. Alors, laissez-le parmi nous », a-t-il ajouté.

Glucksmann, fervent défenseur de la défense de l'Ukraine dans sa guerre contre la Russie,  a déjà accusé les dirigeants européens de ne pas fournir un soutien suffisant à Kiev.

Dans ses propos de dimanche, il a également critiqué  la réduction par l'administration Trump de l'aide fédérale  aux instituts de recherche américains. Plus tôt ce mois-ci, le ministre français de l'Enseignement supérieur et de la Recherche a exhorté les établissements du pays à accueillir les chercheurs touchés par les coupes budgétaires de Trump aux États-Unis.

Julian Jackson, professeur émérite d'histoire française moderne à l'Université Queen Mary de Londres, a qualifié Glucksmann de dirigeant respecté et éloquent. « Et la Statue de la Liberté rappelle bien sûr que l'Amérique doit en partie son indépendance aux Français, comme lors de la guerre d'Indépendance », a-t-il déclaré dans un courriel.

La France a fourni des armes, des munitions, des troupes et un soutien naval aux colonies américaines pendant la guerre d'indépendance.

La Statue de la Liberté, symbole emblématique de liberté et d'espoir, attire des millions de visiteurs chaque année. Elle fut  imaginée  par le Français Édouard de Laboulaye, fervent admirateur des États-Unis, comme un cadeau pour commémorer le centenaire de la Déclaration d'Indépendance et l'abolition de l'esclavage.

Le sculpteur Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi a conçu la statue pour exprimer ces valeurs : une couronne représentant la lumière, une inscription indiquant la date de l'indépendance américaine, ainsi qu'une manille et  des chaînes brisées marquant la fin de l'esclavage. La statue achevée a été démontée et expédiée à New York en 1885, tandis que la plaque portant le célèbre  poème d'Emma Lazarus  a été ajoutée en 1903.

Dans un fil de discussion sur les réseaux sociaux lundi soir, Glucksmann a répondu à Leavitt en  reconnaissant  l'héroïsme des « centaines de milliers de jeunes Américains » qui ont débarqué sur les plages de Normandie tout en qualifiant la position de l'administration Trump sur l'Ukraine de trahison du pays ravagé par la guerre et des alliés européens des États-Unis.

L'Europe s'inquiète  de l'appui de Trump au président russe Vladimir Poutine  et peine à s'adapter au soutien hésitant de Washington à l'Ukraine. Trump et Poutine s'entretiendront par téléphone mardi pour  discuter de la fin de la guerre en Ukraine , selon le Kremlin.

« Bien sûr, personne ne viendra voler la Statue de la Liberté. La statue est à vous. Mais ce qu'elle incarne appartient à tous »,  écrivait Glucksmann . « Et si le monde libre n'intéresse plus votre gouvernement, alors nous reprendrons le flambeau, ici, en Europe. »


Sabrina Rodriguez a contribué à ce rapport.


présidence Trump

Suivez  en direct l'actualité de l'administration Trump . Nous suivons  les actions du président Donald Trump au jour le jour ,  ses progrès dans la réalisation de ses promesses de campagne et  les contestations judiciaires de ses décrets et de ses actions .

Économie :  Les craintes d'  une récession croissante pour l'économie américaine s'accentuent,  la  bourse s'effondrant suite à la mise en place de droits de douane par  l'  administration Trump . Voici  comment vous préparer  et  comment gérer votre plan 401(k) .

Employés fédéraux :  L’administration Trump continue de travailler à la réduction des effectifs du gouvernement fédéral — supprimant des milliers d’emplois dans des agences, notamment :  l’USAID ,  l’IRS , l’  Administration de la sécurité sociale ,  le ministère de l’Éducation ,  le ministère de la Défense ,  les agences de santé , le  National Weather Service  et le  National Park Service .

Service DOGE américain :  Elon Musk  et son équipe ont décidé de  démanteler certaines agences américaines ,  de licencier des centaines de milliers de fonctionnaires  et d'accéder à certains des systèmes de paiement les plus sensibles du gouvernement fédéral. Voici  qui travaille pour DOGE .

Conseillers de Trump :  Plusieurs membres du cabinet de Trump, dont  Robert F. Kennedy Jr. ,  Tulsi Gabbard ,  Marco Rubio  et  Pete Hegseth, ont été confirmés .  Nous suivons les nominations ici .