Sunday, May 3, 2026

Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 03, 2026

Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 03, 2026

by Tony Wikrent

 

War

War, El Niño, Pestilence, and Famine: The Coming Shock to Global Food Supplies

Craig Tindale [via Naked Capitalism 04-27-2025]

 

Why Iran’s Oil Infrastructure Is Not Exploding Like Trump Said It Would

Murtaza Hussain, May 01, 2026 [Drop Site News]

 

Why U.S. Oil Companies Are Not Plugging the World’s Energy Gap

[New York Times, via Naked Capitalism 05-02-2025]

 

Trump not violating any law

'He who saves his Country does not violate any Law'

Trump Stuns By Saying ‘I Don’t Know’ When Asked Directly NBC’s Kristen Welker ‘Don’t You Need to Uphold the Constitution?’

Joe DePaolo, May 4th, 2025

 

Trump blames No Kings for assassination attempt

[Popular Information, via Naked Capitalism 04-29-2025]

 

Comey Indictment Shows Justice Dept. Got the Message From Bondi’s Firing

Glenn Thrush, April 30, 2026 [Washington Post]

In naming only an interim successor as acting attorney general, President Trump has established even greater incentives to execute his most extreme demands, current and former officials say.

 

Report Details Trump Effort to Quietly Lay Groundwork to ‘Steal Future Elections’

Stephen Prager, April 28, 2026 [CommonDreams]

“It seems one of the ways this effort will take shape is, as with DHS’s deportation efforts, to racially profile voters and try to invalidate their votes by pretending they’re not citizens,” said one critic.

 

8 Things You Should Know About Trump’s Effort to “Take Over” the Midterm Elections

[ProPublica, May 1, 2026]

From dismantling guardrails that upheld the integrity of past elections to gutting federal agencies and installing allies who supported Trump’s claim that the 2020 vote was stolen, here are the key takeaways from our recent investigation.

 

Trump Used Shady Crypto Venture to Triple His Net Worth as President

Hafiz Rashid, May 1, 2026 [The New Republic]

 

Donald Trump’s Pardon Economy - For some wealthy offenders, clemency is just a golf game—or a million-dollar plate at Mar-a-Lago—away.

Ruth Marcus, April 27, 2026 [The New Yorker]

 

Resistance

I Filed for Roberts’s Disbarment. Then This Happened.

Christopher Armitage, Apr 30, 2026 [The Existentialist Republic]

A week ago I mailed a formal disciplinary complaint against Chief Justice John Roberts to the District of Columbia Bar Office of Disciplinary Counsel. The paperwork is at the bottom of this article in full, with my personal information redacted.

I want to answer a few questions, recount what's happened since, and share some resources.

People have asked why the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the rest of the legacy press have stayed quiet on a documented corruption story involving the Chief Justice. Three things worth understanding.

The article has the receipts. Every factual claim is credibly sourced. The underlying reporting was done in pieces over the last decade by Business Insider, Politico, the New York Times, and the ABA Journal. The whistleblower complaint went through Congress. Senator Durbin’s Judiciary Committee received it. The Department of Justice received it. The records have mostly been sitting in the public domain since 2022 and 2023.

The receipts are there. They’ve been there. Anyone who wanted to verify what I wrote could verify it in twenty minutes.

I didn’t uncover something new. I pieced together a decade of public record that had fallen out of the news cycle, applied the statutes to the conduct, and filed paperwork. The synthesis is the contribution and the paperwork is the action....

What has the activist response been?

Attorneys joined in. Judges joined in. Private citizens joined in. The project got a lot of media. The article hit number one on Reddit.

The thing nobody who runs this system expected was that anyone outside it would do the work. Read the spreadsheets. Apply the statutes. File the paperwork. Treat the disclosure rules like the disclosure rules were meant to be treated. Show up at the post office with a certified mail receipt and put it in the public record.

The men and women running this system built their careers on the assumption that nobody was paying attention. That the forms would go unread. That the recusals would go uncounted. That the statutes would sit on the shelf. That the institutions would cover for each other and no one outside would notice the arrangement.

We noticed.

We noticed the ten million dollars documented and the eleven million more estimated. The sixteen years of false characterizations. The hidden equity stake. The Code of Conduct written to fail and the justices who signed affidavits for no one. The Judicial Conference that won’t refer and the Senate that won’t impeach and the Attorney General who won’t prosecute. We noticed every institution pointing at every other institution and shrugging....

The complaint I submitted is below in full. You're welcome to read it, share it, or put it on every car windshield wiper within a 5 block radius of the United States Supreme Court Chambers. Chase your bliss, even if that bliss takes the form of printing copies of this filing and placing it upon any doors of whatever Bar Association happens to be headquartered at 901 4th St NW Suite 700, Washington, DC 20001. Who am I to tell you what you should or shouldn't do on a Monday right before lunch break, which would arguably be the best time to make sure the flyers are seen.

What I do endorse is filing your own complaint with the DC Bar Office of Disciplinary Counsel at 515 Fifth Street NW, Building A, Room 117, Washington DC 20001. Do it in your own words. The facts are in the filing listed below as well as in the original article, which is hyperlinked within this sentence. The statutes to cite are 28 U.S.C. § 455, 5 U.S.C. § 13106, and 18 U.S.C. § 1001. The rule is DC Rule of Professional Conduct 8.4(c).

This is happening because we are making it happen. Movement creates energy. Energy creates heat. Enough heat and you can reshape the outdated and corrupt 250 year-old steel. We are the heat. We are the pressure. We are the changemakers....

 

 

What It's Like Convincing a State Senator to Take Election Security Seriously.

Christopher Armitage, Apr 29, 2026 [The Existentialist Republic]

... I asked her if she thought Trump had the intent to interfere with free and fair elections. She said yes. I asked her if she thought things were already tilted unfairly toward Republicans at the federal and state levels. She said yes. I asked her if she thought it was getting worse under this administration. She said yes.

At this point we had established the GOP have the ability, capability, and intent to stay in power no matter what, all of it present at the federal level, and we probably needed to do more than hope elections are legitimate and enough. She agreed, and was ready to hear what I had to offer.

I handed her a one sheet that showed everything I was about to tell her, then told her about the bill, which establishes a public red line in advance and an automatic consequence the moment the federal government crosses it. The federal government decertifies state-approved voting equipment, deploys federal forces to polling places against state consent, refuses to certify legitimate state results, or takes any action to cancel, delay, or invalidate the state’s elections, and when that happens, the state orders ninety-day compliance from all employers operating in state to redirect federal tax withholdings into a state escrow account pending restoration of legitimate democratic governance.

They do anything blatantly and undeniably unconstitutional and we respond immediately, peacefully, and authoritatively.

An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. The threat has to exist before the election because a threat made after has already failed. A threat made after the election is reactive and defensive, and it continues the trend of fascists pushing pro-democracy folks at an accelerating pace. The consequence has to be immediate because civil litigation does not work when someone steals an election. What is a judge supposed to say? “Sir, stop your coup please?”

I walked her through the legal framework, nullification, the Supremacy Clause, etc, and told her about the documented case for why this kind of measure is being considered now, which we built here and here, and told her this kind of system has a name in the political science literature, that political scientists who study countries where it has already been built call it competitive authoritarianism, and that we walked through the working version of it here. I told her the bill text and three other pieces of model legislation are here, and the deeper legal framework for the specific mechanism we were discussing is here, and she pulled out her phone and wrote it down....

 

California AG Bonta Has Everything He Needs to Open a Criminal Investigation into Musk and DOGE. Today I’m Submitting a Prosecution Investigation Referral Memorandum to His Office

Christopher Armitage, Apr 28, 2026 [The Existentialist Republic]

... In February, this publication walked through the laws that let every state in the country criminally investigate DOGE personnel for what they did at the Social Security Administration. Identity theft and cybercrime statutes let prosecutors charge crimes where the victim lives rather than where the defendant sat, a state conviction cannot be erased by a presidential pardon, and the federal Department of Justice has now admitted the underlying conduct in a federal court filing.

Over the last two months, thousands of Existentialist Republic readers got after it. They filed police reports with their local departments, sent referrals to county prosecutors and governors asking for criminal investigation under their state’s identity theft and computer fraud laws, and wrote to their state attorneys general directly with the conduct, the defendants, and the statutes named....

See in particular: The toolkit to do something about it: who to contact and what to say

 

New Mexico Becomes the Latest State to End Cooperation With ICE Under New Law

[Truthout, via Naked Capitalism 04-27-2025]

 

The prehistory of the Democratic Nuremberg Caucus 

Cory Doctorow, 02 May 2026 [Pluralistic]

... You could be forgiven for assuming that this is just about reining in Wall Street greed, but that it isn't an especially political maneuver. That's not true: antitrust is the most consequentially political regulation (with the possible exception of regulations on elections). Every fascist power defeated in WWII relied on the backing of their national monopolists to take, hold and wield power. That's why the Marshall Plan technocrats who rewrote the laws of Europe, South Korea and Japan made sure to copy over US antitrust law onto those statute-books (that's also why the tech antitrust cases brought in Europe could be re-run in South Korea and Japan – their laws are all substantively similar, because they were harmonized with US antitrust in the 1950s):

https://pluralistic.net/2025/01/22/autocrats-of-trade/#dingo-babysitter

Fascism and monopolies go hand in hand, and smashing monopolies is key to the program of fighting fascism....

Inspired by those trials, I've proposed that Congressional Dems could form a "Nuremberg Caucus" that would publicly promise sweeping plans to denazify America after Trump and his allies have been swept from power:

https://pluralistic.net/2026/02/10/miller-in-the-dock/#denazification

The centerpiece of the Nuremberg Caucus playbook is a set of ready-to-file, public indictments against Trump officials who have violated the law, the Constitution, and the rights of the people of the USA. Dems should create and maintain a docket with exhibits and witness lists that gets updated every time one of these crooks runs their big, stupid mouths on Fox News or OANN or Twitter. The Nuremberg Caucus could even set dates for the trials of officials, with judicial calendars for each federal courtroom, starting on January 21, 2029.

The idea here is to both demoralize Trump's collaborators and to stiffen the spines of the Democratic base who will have to be convinced that turning out for the coming elections, and defending them, will mean something, delivering the change and hope they've been promised since the Obama campaign, but which has never materialized.

While trials and punishment for Trump's fascist goons are at the center of the Nuremberg Caucus plan, that's not all of it. The plan also calls for publicly announcing the intention to unwind every corrupt merger that was consummated under Trump. This serves two purposes: first, it promises the electorate that the monopolists who steal from them will face consequences for their crimes; but second, it also puts investors on notice that any gains from corrupt mergers will turn into massive losses once the next administration orders these companies to unscramble the inedible omelets they're cooking up, no matter what the cost....

The Supreme Court's legitimacy has been burned to the ground, and Trump's chud justices are pissing on the ashes. Packing the court is a very good idea:

https://pluralistic.net/2020/09/20/judicial-equilibria/#pack-the-court

It's also a very popular idea:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/10/18/the-people-no/#tell-ya-what-i-want-what-i-really-really-want

Which is why I included it in the Nuremberg Caucus plan. But packing the court is just table stakes. In his latest video, Jamelle Bouie lays out a detailed plan for denazifying the Supreme Court:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SRzS61buXkQ

As Bouie points out, "as long as John Roberts has his majority, nothing the left of center in this country wants to do is safe or stable…We can have democracy and self-government in this country or we can have the Supreme Court as it exists, but we cannot have both.".....

 

Progressive Democrats Propose Banning Surveillance Pricing, Breaking Apart Corporate America If They Win in 2026

Matt Stoller, Apr 30, 2026 [BIG]

Democrats are starting to make proposals for what they will do if they take control of Congress. Bans on surveillance pricing, restructuring corporate America, and utility reforms are on deck.

 

Time For The DNC To Sue CBS News For $20 Billion - A free idea for Ken Martin

Brian Beutler, May 01, 2026 [Off Message]

... whoever replaces him at DNC, could demonstrate to disaffected Democratic base voters that the party is remaking itself as one that won’t take shit lying down. That, whenever possible, it will impose penalties on Republicans and their enablers for dealing in bad faith.

It’s frustrating, because I’m basically restating what I wrote almost six years ago, just a few weeks before the 2020 election. Joe Biden was poised for victory, and it was clear to me that allowing bygones to be bygones wouldn’t just result in miscarriages of justice vis-a-vis specific crimes. It would teach Republicans that there’s no downside to operating in bad faith as a default mode. Reading back on it, as I do from time to time, is a bit painful.

"The Republican Party’s core rottenness—its dishonesty, corruption, pettiness, racism—is the defining political fact of our time. Whatever we say about it, confronting all of us in the weeks and months ahead is the more important question of what we do about it. What do the rest of us—most importantly elected Democrats, but also journalists, political elites, and regular citizens—need to change about public life to account for the fact that one of the two major parties has embraced bad faith as an organizing principle?

"[Democrats can] codify norms so that Republicans can’t violate them or take hostages going forward. Rather than increase the debt limit, they can eliminate it; rather than devise new stimulus every time the economy turns downward, they can create permanent programs that snap into effect when unemployment climbs. Donald Trump proved that Republicans will withhold disaster relief from states that don’t vote for Republicans; Democrats can change the law to treat all victims of disaster equally, no matter their politics or the partisan leanings of their states. Rather than shame Republicans out of suppressing votes, they can expand the franchise by law. Rather than acquiesce to the GOP theft of the courts, they can expand the judiciary, erasing decades of conservative scheming to rule the country without winning elections...."

 

 

Strategic Political Economy

The Empire Unmasked: Elite Impunity and the Slow Collapse of American Legitimacy

George Noble, April 26, 2026

[TW: Clinically interesting as evidence of distress among certain elites - Noble was first head of Fidelity's Overseas Fund, before establishing a hedge fund.]

American power is seriously frayed, but still intact; American legitimacy is not, and legitimacy is what makes power sustainable....

That plausibility is collapsing in real time. The problem is not that corruption exists; it always has. The problem is that it is visible, normalized, and unpunished in precisely those sectors that claim to anchor legitimacy: federal law enforcement, high finance, the presidency, and the “rules‑based” global order. The United States still has enormous residual power--military, financial, technological; but its ideological credit line is being run down faster than it is being replenished....

The new moniker “The Epstein Class” has gained universal usage because it is very true. The sickness is becoming more broadly accepted as far more pervasive and perverse than anyone admitted only a few years ago. What has become accepted is still likely just scratching the surface of a very large, ugly iceberg... The inner sanctum of the uber elites is increasingly seen as thoroughly corrupt and beyond the rule of law. This is not only the stuff of collapse, it is the fuel for revolution.

A similar dynamic appears in markets. Multiple investigations have noted clusters of uncannily well‑timed trades, index futures, oil options, concentrated equity bet placed shortly before surprise presidential announcements on tariffs, sanctions, military action, or public signals that sent prices lurching....

But it is not only the greed, unethicality and immorality of the self-dealing within the American government and the elite circles of sycophants that thrive in its wake, it is the blatant, in your face arrogance that is creating a tipping point domestically and in other similar ruling Western powers where the ability to recover legitimacy and faith will soon become virtually impossible....

The visible domestic impunity of U.S. elites; no accountability for torture, for the architects of the 2008 crisis, for sprawling influence‑peddling networks, for the full extent of Epstein’s clientele, for the obvious insider enrichment around presidential policy tweets....

...elite impunity is not a side‑effect of decline; it is one of its primary mechanisms. Each non‑prosecution, each legalized “gratitude” payment, each “well‑timed trade” that goes unexamined, each buried oversight report, each unpunished network of abuse, all of them communicate the same message: the rules are for you, not for us. The same stands for the appearance of the blatant extortionist policies internationally now being persued by the Trump Imperium. Over time, that message erodes the belief that the system is reformable, that there is any point in treating its promises as binding....

 

Who Killed Spirit Airlines?

Matt Stoller, May 02, 2026 [BIG]

It wasn't Biden antitrust enforcers. There were many factors - Trump's Iran War, JetBlue, the big four airlines, and behind all of that, deregulation. And this story has happened hundreds of times.

 

The First Domino

Mike Brock, May 02, 2026 [Notes from the Circus]

Spirit Airlines ceased operations last night. The final scheduled flight landed. Thirty years of business is over. Some thousands of employees lost their jobs. Some larger number of customers, holding tickets for flights that will not now happen, woke up this morning trying to figure out how to get home....

The CEO, Dave Davis, named the cause of the failure in plain language. “Everybody burning cash — we just had a smaller pile to start with.” The cash burn is from the doubling of jet fuel prices. The doubling of jet fuel prices is from the global supply contraction that followed the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz is from the war Donald Trump started against Iran without congressional authorization, in violation of the War Powers Act, in violation of the Constitution, against the advice of his own military leadership, and which he has now apparently lost....

Spirit was the first airline to fall. Davis was explicit about the rest. “They’re not that far behind us in the race.” The other low-cost carriers are now standing in the same fuel-price line Spirit was standing in. They have larger piles of cash. The piles are still finite. The fuel prices are still doubled. The math does what math does.

That is the chain. The chain is documentable. The chain runs from the executive’s unconstitutional war through a regional crisis through global commodity markets to the bottom line of an American airline whose final flight landed last night.

The libertarians and market fundamentalists, watching this happen in real time, have decided the proximate cause was Lina Khan.

The story they are telling: Khan’s FTC blocked the JetBlue-Spirit merger in 2024. The merger would have rescued Spirit by absorbing it into a stronger competitor. Khan, in her “anti-business” zeal, prevented the consolidation. Therefore Khan killed Spirit. Therefore Khan’s antitrust enforcement is responsible for the airline’s collapse. Therefore the lesson of Spirit is that we need to free the merger and acquisition market from the regulatory state’s interference, and the next time a struggling carrier wants to be absorbed by a larger one, the polity should get out of the way.

This is what the libertarian frame produces when it encounters the failure of Spirit Airlines. It produces a story in which the entrepreneur is the foundational actor, the regulator is the obstacle, and the failure of the entrepreneur is necessarily the regulator’s fault, because in the libertarian frame the regulator is the only available source of failure outside the entrepreneur themselves, and the entrepreneur cannot have failed on their own merits because that would mean the market does not always know best.

The story is wrong on the facts and wrong in its philosophical structure, and the two failures are related....

 

How to Think About Spirit's Failure - and the Airline Crisis

Ganesh Sitaraman and Vanderbilt Policy Accelerator, May 01, 2026

If the only way for airlines to survive is to constantly merge or get bailed out by the government, then it’s time to admit that the industry is more like a public utility than a competitive market.

 

The Licensing Revolution: Is Resistance Futile? Part 1: Loss of ownership comes to the car

Thomas Neuburger, May 1, 2026 [God's Spies]

 

How a Chinese Finger Trap Explains America’s Political Dilemma 

Matt Stoller, April 26, 2026 [BIG]

To get out of our malaise, we must do things that will make the stock market go down. But to preserve our institutions, we can't let the stock market go down.... today I want to spend a little time discussing the economic dilemma that prevents any meaningful political change. I’m thinking about this problem, what I call the Chinese finger trap economy, because I’m watching how the Democrats are preparing, or rather, not preparing, for their likely victory in six months in the midterm elections....

The limiting factor, in fact, is the stock market. There are many ways to talk about AI, as the technology itself is interesting. But most AI ‘policy’ is a proxy for juicing the stock market. As the Wall Street Journal just reported, “Exclude the AI version of the Magnificent Seven stocks—Broadcom alongside Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft and Nvidia—and the market value of the S&P is actually down. Put another way, these seven are lifting the entire market.”

A little over 60% of Americans own stocks, and though most own very little, they still care about it because it’s often all they have for retirement. America is just much more reliant on stocks than it used to be. Here’s the balance sheet of American households and nonprofits....

What does this dynamic mean? Well, if financial assets fall in value, then it means the entire global hierarchy gets shaken up and reorganized, with unforeseen consequences. Many formerly rich people will go bankrupt, others won’t be able to feed or educate their kids, entire nations could go into civil war. In the 1930s, when this kind of thing happened, Hitler came to power in Germany. That is why we’re so scared of a market drop. That is why Trump is fighting the war with Iran, entirely bounded by the stock market. It is why we didn’t acknowledge the severity of Covid until the markets fell. Financial asset values are the lens through which we understand what problems are important to solve....

[TW: But....]

No, Government Should Not Be Pro-Business 

Mike Brock, May 02, 2026 [Notes from the Circus]

 

 

Gaza / Palestine / Israel

Israeli soldier: “It isn’t terrorist infrastructure; we’re destroying everything”

[Haaretz, via [Drop Site Daily, May 1, 2026]

Israeli soldiers told Haaretz their operations in southern Lebanon are focused on systematically leveling buildings in villages, not targeting Hezbollah infrastructure as claimed. The army’s plan, dubbed “Operation Silver Plow,” reportedly assigns units quotas for homes destroyed, with contractors paid per building destroyed. They must report “how many homes [they] destroyed” each day, a soldier said. Troops are ordered to guard them under drone threat: “We stand there, exposed… There’s no logic to this.” “The only mission is to continue the destruction,” one officer said. Another added: “It isn’t terrorist infrastructure; we’re destroying everything.”

 

 

Oligarchy

Who Rules America? Inside the Hidden Architecture of the Ruling Class

William Murphy [via Naked Capitalism 05-02-2025]

 

CEO pay soared in 2025, 20 times faster than workers’ pay 

[Guardian, via Naked Capitalism 05-02-2025]

 

What the hell is "carried interest"

Cory Doctorow, April 29, 2021 [Pluralistic]

For at least a decade, US politicians have made symbolic, unfulfilled promises to do something about the "carried interest tax loophole," a thing that virtually no one understands. Yves Smith's explanation will remedy that.

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2021/04/private-equity-and-hedge-fund-barons-having-a-hissy-over-carried-interest-grift-because-biden-isnt-staying-bought.html

 

Billionaire Bankrolling Anti-Platner PAC Gutted Maine Mill Towns

DropSite, via Naked Capitalism 04-29-2025]

[Verso also wrecked the coated paper mill in Escanaba, Michigan, which should have remained world-competitive for decades.

 

Rolling back the "big Fed" - Kevin Warsh, the Hoover Institution & the conservative critique of the administrative state.

Adam Tooze, May 02, 2026

Kevin Warsh, the presumptive new chair of the Federal Reserve, is no economist, nor monetary policy wonk. He is a Stanford- and Harvard-educated lawyer with Wall Street experience, who is connected to Republican circles not only by way of education and business experience, but also through marriage. Warsh’s father-in-law is Ronald Lauder, the cosmetics billionaire....

 

Birth of a Network State: The Fascist Science Fiction of SpaceX - Elon Musk is not building an investment; he is creating a financial instrument for exit.

Jim Stewartson, May 02, 2026 [MindWar]

... To understand how bizarre and dangerous this deal is requires understanding a bit of history of Elon Musk and SpaceX, some basic arithmetic, and a little imagination. But in short: one of the worst men in the world will have total, dictatorial control of a load-bearing beam of the U.S. economy, a beam which will have no way to stay intact other than financial mythology and government dependency—and no way to get rid of Musk when it goes sideways.

SpaceX is not being set up as a normal public corporation. It has a wide variety of unique features that give Musk total control over an expansive entity with enormous resources and unlimited ability to tap the public market. He will be entirely unencumbered by federal or corporate governance. And he will be free to spew his racist poison, to interfere in politics, and to amplify AI-generated teenage girls on his website with no concern of consequences....

While there are other proofs-of-concept of the network state, including Thiel-funded Praxis and Pronomos Capital, it’s worth comparing SpaceX and the network state idea directly....

 

Billionaire Bankrolling Anti-Platner PAC Gutted Maine Mill Towns

Nathan Bernard, Apr 28, 2026 [Drop Site News]

Over the weekend, new FEC filings revealed a billionaire-backed super PAC supporting Republican Sen. Susan Collins has started running attack ads against Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Graham Platner. Pine Tree Results is being funded by a litany of ultrawealthy donors, including Blackstone CEO Stephen Schwarzman ($2 million); Elliott Management CEO Paul Singer ($1 million); Reyes Holdings executives ($1 million); and Palantir CEO Alex Karp ($100,000)....

One benefactor does have a Maine connection—though it’s a sordid one. That donor is Apollo Global Management’s billionaire CEO and founder Marc Rowan, a giant in the world of private equity who has faced scrutiny for his links to sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein. Rowan contributed $50,000 so far of the $2 million already dedicated to the anti-Platner campaign, and has been a major backer of AIPAC in recent years.

From 2006 to 2020, Apollo Management ran two of Maine’s largest paper mills into the ground, bankrupting them both, selling off their carcasses for scraps, and eliminating more than 1,000 jobs in Bucksport and Jay. That wasn’t a failure on the part of the private equity firm, which is able to profit by extracting wealth from healthy businesses through a process of stacking them with debt, filing for bankruptcy, and looting their assets, including pensions promised to workers.

In the case of the paper mills, they were the flagship properties of International Paper, which Apollo took over and redubbed Verso Paper. Apollo forced the new company it owned to take out $250 million in debt and hand the money over to Apollo, making sure its own investment was covered, in the form of a dividend, and proceeded to slowly bankrupt the company—what the mafia refers to as a “bustout.” The Star Tribune singled out the financial maneuver as “how Apollo got almost all of its money out of Verso.”

 

An oligarch’s dystopian scheme to discredit journalism with AI 

[Oligarch Watch, via Naked Capitalism 04-29-2025]

 

The Habsburg International 

[Do Not Research, via Naked Capitalism 04-29-2025]

 

Felonomics

The Trump plan to add work requirements to public housing

[Can We Still Govern?, via Naked Capitalism 04-30-2025]

 

Trump administration moves to cut disability benefits for poor families living together, ProPublica reports

[Drop Site Daily: April 29, 2026]

The Trump administration is working on a rule change that would deduct the value of a disabled adult’s bedroom from their Supplemental Security Income allotment—even if the family they live with is poor enough to qualify for food stamps—potentially slashing benefits by up to a third or eliminating them entirely for as many as 400,000 people, according to ProPublica. The effort, initiated by White House and Department of Government Efficiency officials, would undo a Biden-era policy that exempted families already certified as poor through other assistance programs from redundant income checks—a change disability advocates, evangelical groups, and budget experts warn would push disabled adults out of family homes and into far more expensive institutional facilities. Read ProPublica’s full report here.

 

 

Fear and Opportunity: Immigration Scams Surged as Trump’s Sweeps Lured Desperate People to Eager Defrauders

[ProPublica, via Naked Capitalism 04-30-2025]

 

Trump fires all 24 members of the U.S. National Science Foundation’s governing body

[Science, via Naked Capitalism 04-27-2025]

[TW: The civic republican counterpoint is A. Hunter Dupree's 1957 book, Science in the Federal Government: A History of Policies and Activities.  Dupree documented how federal government support of science led to crucial national achievements in geographical exploration and expansion; civil works and construction; meteorology and early climate science; geometry and mathematics; physics, chemistry, biology, botany, husbandry, agriculture, and conservation; medicine and public health; and mecahnics and industrial and military technologies. JSTOR review:]

Review: Discerning the Relation between American Science and American Democracy: A. Hunter Dupree's "Science in the Federal Government"
Reviewed Work: Science in the Federal Government: A History of Policies and Activities A. Hunter Dupree
Review by: John Cloud
Technology and Culture
Vol. 48, No. 3 (Jul., 2007), pp. 589-593 (5 pages)
Published By: The Johns Hopkins University

 

The carnage of mainstream neoliberal economics

How not to ban surveillance pricing

Cory Doctorow, April 30, 2026 [Pluralistic]

...the new Maryland bill that (supposedly) outlaws surveillance pricing: this bill is, frankly, a terribly drafted piece of shit. Worse: it's a terribly drafted piece of shit bill that fails to resolve a serious and urgent problem. Even worse: the lawmakers who drafted this piece of shit bill and Maryland Governor Wes Moore were all loudly and repeatedly warned about the problems of this bill, and they did nothing and now the people of Maryland are fucked.

So what is surveillance pricing, why is it so dangerous, and what's wrong with Maryland's Protection Against Predatory Pricing Act?

.... For example, there's a McDonald's investments portfolio company called Plexure that supplies surveillance pricing tools to fast food restaurants. Plexure advertises its ability to use surveillance data to find out when a customer has just gotten a paycheck so that vendors can increase the price of their usual breakfast sandwich order. This isn't aimed at wealthy people – it's explicitly designed to target people who are living paycheck to paycheck.

Surveillance pricing is also used to determine how much you get paid; when that happens, we call it "algorithmic wage discrimination." Gig platforms like Uber use surveillance data about their drivers to predict which workers are most desperate, and those drivers are offered less money per mile and per hour, because a desperate worker will take whatever is on offer. Gig work apps for health-care do the same thing to nurses:

https://pluralistic.net/2024/12/18/loose-flapping-ends/#luigi-has-a-point .... 

 

The US imports 82% of its large power transformers. How it got there, and what it will take to rebuild the capability.

[Frontier Map, via Naked Capitalism 04-27-2025]

 

Data Centers Reveal America’s Economic Development Brain Rot

[Boondoggle, via Naked Capitalism 04-27-2025]

 

Your Dinner Got Worse On Purpose

[Worse on Purpose, via Naked Capitalism 04-30-2025]

 

 

They’re not capitalists — they’re predatory criminals

Senate unanimously bars members from trading on prediction markets

[Drop Site Daily, May 1, 2026]

The U.S. Senate on Thursday unanimously passed a rule immediately barring senators from trading on prediction market platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket. On April 22, Kalshi suspended and fined one Senate candidate and two House candidates for trading on their own campaigns, and on April 23 the Justice Department arrested U.S. Army Special Forces Master Sergeant Gannon Ken Van Dyke on charges of using classified information to place Polymarket bets on the American military operation that captured Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, winning nearly $410,000.

 

Restoring balance to the economy

Big Pharma Killed A Rule. Dems Can Run On Reinstating It.

David Sirota, Apr 29, 2026 [The Lever]

Democratic senator (and possible 2028 presidential candidate) John Ossoff has a solid video out explaining the link between legalized political corruption and high drug prices — and touting his work to end the ban on Medicare negotiating lower rates on a handful of medicines. That was long-overdue legislation, and now it’s time to go much further and do something that’s also long overdue: reinstating the drug pricing rule imposed by Republican President George H.W. Bush’s administration.

In 1989, Bush’s National Institutes of Health asserted the power to require that medicines developed at taxpayer expense be offered to American taxpayers at a “reasonable” price. The idea was common sense: If the public spent money to help develop a drug, the public’s return on such investment should be affordable prices for that drug.

Six years later, however, the Clinton administration bowed to pharmaceutical industry lobbying and rescinded the rule....

In the quarter-century since, there have been calls for presidents to use related “march-in rights” to license generic drug companies to produce lower-priced versions of medicines originally developed at government expense. The Obama administration rejected congressional Democrats’ calls to do this....

 

Creating new economic potential - science and technology

[X-Twitter, via Naked Capitalism 04-29-2025]
Shining Science
@ShiningScience
Say “goodbye” to fertilizers. Dr. Mariangela Hungria, a distinguished researcher at the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (EMBRAPA), has been named the 2025 World Food Prize laureate for her pioneering work in soil microbiology. Often described as the "Nobel Prize for Food," this honor recognizes her development of over 30 biological technologies that utilize natural bacteria to nourish crops. By harnessing the power of Biological Nitrogen Fixation through specific bacterial strains, Hungria has successfully replaced heavy reliance on synthetic fertilizers, drastically improving the sustainability and yields of soybean and other vital crops across South America....

 

New Chinese Iron Battery Lasts 16 Years

Haley Zaremba, Apr 30, 2026 (OilPrice.com]

  • China produced over 80% of the world's lithium-ion batteries in 2025 and controls roughly 90% of the energy storage battery market — a consolidation that creates serious supply chain and geopolitical risks for the West.

  • Chinese researchers have developed an all-iron flow battery with a record-breaking 6,000-cycle lifespan — equivalent to 16 years of operation with zero degradation — at a fraction of lithium's cost.

  • Iron is roughly 80 times cheaper than lithium in today's market, and the new electrolyte breakthrough could make iron batteries scalable, potentially reshaping global energy storage.

 

China’s new iron battery hits 99.4 percent efficiency over 6000 cycles 

[Interesting Engineering, via Naked Capitalism 04-29-2025]

 

Disrupting mainstream economics

Our declining healthy life expectancy

Richard Murphy, April 28, 2026 [Funding the Future]

The Health Foundation has published a report on healthy life expectancy in the UK that deserves far more attention than it is likely to receive. That is unfortunate, because it says something profoundly important about the state of this country and the consequences of the economic choices that have been made within it.

Healthy life expectancy is a much better measure of national well-being than life expectancy alone. It does not simply ask how long we live. It asks how long we can expect to live in good health, and that distinction matters a great deal.

The report shows that over the period from 2012–14 to 2022–24, healthy life expectancy in the UK fell by a little over two years. It now stands at 60.7 years for men and 60.9 years for women....

The geographic inequality within these figures is striking. In the wealthy London suburb of Richmond upon Thames, healthy life expectancy is more than 69 years for men and more than 70 years for women. In northern coastal towns, Blackpool and Hartlepool, it is barely above 50.

That gap of around twenty years between the healthiest and least healthy places in England cannot be explained by individual choices. It is the consequence of structural inequality, and as the report makes clear, we should stop pretending otherwise.

 

 

Information age dystopia / surveillance state

AI automation will not be our salvation

Richard Murphy, May 01, 2026 [Funding the Future]

 

 

Democrats' political malpractice

Inside the Democratic Civil War Over Billionaire Power

David Sirota, April 27, 2026 [The Lever]

... Over the weekend, The Lever published a blockbuster report exposing a billionaire-funded political machine designed to co-opt — or defang — a rising tide of economic and anti-corruption populism boiling up in the Democratic Party. 

The story is making waves because, for the first time, our reporters detail how this machine of super PACs and overlapping donors and operatives seems to be edging right up to the legal lines of anti-corruption laws prohibiting various forms of coordination between outside entities, consultants, and candidates....

As I wrote in a Bulwark essay upon the release of The Lever’s Master Plan book about the legalization of corruption, the better long-term path is for the party to make its brand anti-corruption — in word and in deed.

Primaries are the easiest first place to do this, because adhering to the kind of strict anti-corruption, anti-coordination, and anti-super PAC standards that Sanders’ group is pushing doesn’t risk losing resources for general election fights against Republicans.

It only risks reducing the power of billionaires, which is why they and their political operatives are so opposed to such reforms and so intent on building their own machine to buy primaries and remain in control of the party.

 

 

Gov. Wes Moore Claims Maryland Banned Surveillance Pricing for Groceries. It Didn’t.

[Boondoggle, via Naked Capitalism 04-30-2025]

 

DNC chair reverses course, will not release 2024 election autopsy finding Gaza policy hurt Harris

Drop Site Daily: April 29, 2026

Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin confirmed he will not publicly release the party’s 2024 election autopsy report, reversing the transparency platform on which he ran for the chairmanship and arguing the full document would be a “distraction” from the 2026 midterms. The IMEU Policy Project reported that DNC aides acknowledged in a closed-door meeting that the report concluded the Biden-Harris administration’s approach to the genocide in Gaza cost Kamala Harris significant support.

 

 

Conservative / Libertarian / (anti)Republican Drive to Civil War

Greg Bovino Calls Minneapolis Protestors ‘Cannon Fodder’ in New Interview

Josh Kovensky, Kate Riga, Khaya Himmelman and Emine Yücel, May 02, 2026 [Talking Points Memo]

...Bovino expressed no remorse for federal agents’ killings of Alex Pretti and Renee Good. Though he and the interviewers mentioned Good by name several times, Pretti did not come up. Instead, Bovino said that Minneapolis got off easy, blaming the disaster in the city on murky conspiracy theories.

“Minneapolis, we didn’t hit them hard. And when you don’t hit them hard, guess what? That empowers…those funding streams, those individuals, those leaders of those organizations. It empowers them. That’s what happened in Minneapolis,” he said. “If you want to know the ground truth and the secret to Minneapolis is, we didn’t treat Minneapolis like we did the other cities that we were in. That softer approach started creeping in in Minneapolis. And that’s definitely not the way you treat an anarchist or a rioter.” ....

 

The (anti)Federalist Society assault on the Constitution

The Industry’s Court in a Stolen Republic

Mike Brock, May 02, 2026 [Notes from the Circus]

On April 18, 2026, the New York Times published the most consequential breach of Supreme Court confidentiality since the Dobbs draft leak — and, I would argue, a more consequential one. Adam Liptak and Jodi Kantor obtained internal memos that the justices wrote to one another during the five days in February 2016 when the Court was deciding whether to block Barack Obama’s Clean Power Plan. The memos, written in the institutional formality the Court uses to insist on its own dignity, document the reasoning that produced what Stephen Vladeck has called the modern shadow docket. They also document something more specific. They document the capture of the Court of the United States by the fossil fuel industry.

In a piece of memoranda that none of us were ever meant to see, The Chief Justice of the United States, John Roberts, wrote to his colleagues that a 2 percent decrease in coal production over a single year constituted irreparable harm requiring unprecedented emergency intervention. He cited a $480 billion industry-cost figure that his own footnote conceded was likely at the high end of a possible cost range, and used it anyway. He invoked the principle that capital expenditures already incurred could not be undone....

[TW: A blaring example of how John Locke's blasphemous fetish for the "protection of private property" is destructive of the Constitutional mandate to govern justly. This is the same philosophical error the Confederate oligarchy committed in their attempt to preserve "their property" of human slaves.

[And I include the adjective "blasphemous" to point to how the principles of political economy in the philosophy of civic republicanism must be based on the understanding that it is human life that is sacred, and all considerations of law and government must be made in service to that ideal. Not tribal identity. Not cultural heritage. Certainly not property rights. Not even the preservation of institutions. Because all individual humans are equal: (John 14:1-12:) "Philip said to him, "Master, show us the Father, and that will be enough for us." Jesus said to him, "Have I been with you for so long a time and you still do not know me, Philip? Whoever has seen me has seen the Father. How can you say, 'Show us the Father'? Do you not believe that I am in the Father and the Father is in me? " The divine is in every individual. The role and purpose of government must be directed to that ideal, and creating the conditions for every individual to flourish and contribute positively to the human story - not just the rich, the powerful, and the privileged. In fact, the philosophy of civic republicanism understands and warns that the rich, the powerful, and the privileged tend to deform society, government, and the economy in ways that benefit only themselves, resulting in harms to many other individuals -- exactly as John Roberts has done in this case. ]

... The Brennan Center‘s Alicia Bannon, writing on April 24, helpfully named the structural feature that the leak makes irrefutable. In 2016, the Roberts Court applied the irreparable harm standard with maximum scrutiny to a Democratic regulation that would have imposed costs on the fossil fuel industry. Since January 2025, the same Court has granted Trump-administration emergency relief twenty times out of twenty-five attempts, with what Bannon documents as no apparent irreparable harm to government other than generalized harm from delay. No costs costed. No harms weighed. Just the granting.

This asymmetry is a function of a clear corruption of interests. It cannot be merely dismissed as the ordinary noise of a divided court producing different outcomes in different configurations. It is a one-way valve. Maximum scrutiny applied to regulatory action that threatens fossil fuel economics. Zero scrutiny applied to executive action that serves it. These internal memoranda show that plainly to any dispassionate observer.

This is what captured means in its precise philosophical-legal sense. The institution operates on a standard that systematically advantages a specific industry against the public interest, and the standard is durable across cases and across years. The Justices are not bribed in the cartoon sense. They are something worse than bribed. They have internalized the industry’s perspective so thoroughly that they have ceased to recognize it as a perspective at all. The fossil fuel industry’s economic concerns are harms. Documented, weighed, treated as load-bearing in the institution’s reasoning....

The individual-justice-level entanglements are documented through ProPublica‘s investigative record. Clarence Thomas accepted, across decades, what ProPublica characterized as luxury travel from Republican megadonor Harlan Crow virtually every year. Crow purchased Thomas’s mother’s home and adjacent properties in 2014 for $133,363, undisclosed by Thomas. Samuel Alito accepted a 2008 fishing trip to Alaska on a private jet that could have cost $100,000 one way if chartered separately, organized by Leonard Leo, with the lodge stay paid for by another major conservative donor. The trip was undisclosed. Singer, the donor who flew Alito on the jet, then had his hedge fund Elliott Management appear before the Court at least ten times, with Alito voting in his favor in a 2014 Argentina case that netted Singer’s fund $2.4 billion. Alito did not recuse from any Singer matter.

Singer’s Elliott Management currently holds Suncor Energy as its second-largest position at $2 billion, representing 11 percent of its portfolio. Suncor is the same company whose climate-tort case is now on the Supreme Court’s docket, scheduled for the October 2026 sitting. The Federalist Society has hosted public events on the case under titles invoking federalism and judicial power. The American Petroleum Institute has filed an amicus brief. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has filed an amicus brief. House Majority Leader Steve Scalise and 102 members of Congress have filed amicus briefs. The Trump Department of Justice has filed a brief urging the Court to intervene. Twenty-six Republican attorneys general — funded by RAGA, funded by Concord Fund, funded by the broader Leo network, funded by the oil industry — have filed amicus briefs.

The industry that funded the network that produced the Justices is now asking those Justices, through that network, for permanent immunity from state climate liability. This is, to put it mildly, an arrangement....

 

 

Latest SCOTUS Ruling Has People Asking "Are We Headed Toward Balkanizing and Becoming the States of the Former USA?

Christopher Armitage, May 02, 2026 [The Existentialist Republic]

... And then there is the fifth path. The zero path. The path where things simply work themselves out. We have a free and fair enough election, the country swings hard against the regime, a new president takes office with a working congressional majority, the courts get rebalanced, the fired civil servants come back, and we settle into something resembling Hungary's current trajectory rather than collapse or permanent GOP rule.

Look at the polling. Trump's approval rating sits at thirty-four percent in the latest Pew survey, right at his baseline. His floor has never budged.³ The FiftyPlusOne polling average has him at thirty-seven percent approve against fifty-nine percent disapprove.⁴ A landslide rejection is not looking likely with the current numbers.

A third of the country approves of all this. A third of the country is sealed off from reality by the autocrats who built the seal. Half the states are run by the people who would have to certify their own removal. The institutional machinery required for a Hungarian-scale correction, impeachment of the entire cabinet, conviction of Supreme Court justices, override of a presidential veto, amendment of the Constitution itself, demands supermajorities that do not exist on any timeline that matters, inside a judiciary doing everything it can to keep elections tilted kn favor of Republicans.

If we are betting on path zero, we are unwitting controlled opposition. Truly. That is the state-approved plan, gang. That is the kind of opposition Trump and the GOP and the oligarchs approve and allow.

What that gets us is not democratic recovery. It is steady-state fascism with a permanent opposition party that exists to lose most elections respectably, son some here and there, and reassure its donors that next time will be different....

 

More Thoughts on the Court’s Dire Corruption and the Necessity of Reform

Josh Marshall, May 01, 2026 [Talking Points Memo]

...One of the few silver linings of the corrupt Court deciding to get rid of the Voting Rights Act (which, let’s be clear, is the legislative embodiment of the Civil Rights Movement and Second Reconstruction) is that it has pushed a whole additional echelon of people into the Court reform camp. Even those who really would prefer to crawl over broken glass than fiddle with the structure of the Court see now that there’s simply no alternative. The alternative is simply to accept the indefinite rule of a corrupt Court making war on the Constitution (the foundational pact which is the basis of all power and legitimacy in the United States), overruling democratic self-government and allowing only it’s own political party to enjoy real political power. And all in the cause of a vacant and meaningless institutionalism....

 

You Can Have Democratic Self-Government or the Corrupt Court — Not Both

Josh Marshall, April 30, 2026 [Talking Points Memo]

... While the corrupt majority has consistently advanced and enforced an ideological vision of how the country should be run it has another simpler brief: not allowing Democrats to govern when they are in power. When Republicans are in power the powers of presidency are almost limitless; when it’s Democrats the office is feeble and hemmed in by a cobweb of invented doctrines. We had the ironic benefit of two Trump presidencies sandwiching a Biden presidency to make this principle of action crystal clear. Quite simply, the corrupt majority ensures that only Republicans actually get the fruits of political victories.

In our thinned out political discourse people often use the term “corruption” to refer only to venal corruption – bribes, conflicts of interest mostly involving money, kept Justices like Clarence Thomas. That is neither the only nor the most significant form of corruption. In most cases venal corruption is significantly self-correcting. It gets exposed and prosecuted. The more general meaning of corruption is when a form of rot takes over an office or institution because of systemic and ingrained abuses of power. That is the case with the Supreme Court....

 

Power, democracy, and clarity - What does the end of the Voting Rights Act mean?

Don Moynihan, May 01, 2026 [Can We Still Govern?]

I like this graph.

I’ve used it in articles, classes and presentations to the public. It shows how registration rates between Black and White voters varied in Louisiana since Reconstruction. In a single image, it tells the story of political power and discrimination. Black voters had power, briefly, then it was taken from them. A series of policies that were more or less explicit in their discriminatory purpose worked as intended, disenfranchising Black voters, and some poor White voters along the way....

 

 

Expand the Supreme Court or watch democracy die - Understanding how John Roberts rigged the game and how to deal with it

Jordan Zakarin, Apr 30, 2026 [Progress Report]

...Foiled in his attempts to kill the landmark civil rights law in the early 1980s, when he was an attorney in the Reagan Department of Justice, Roberts spent the next 44 years methodically working to return the nation back to the Jim Crow era. Roberts’s story is the story of the modern conservative legal movement, an extremist sect that worked its way to the pinnacle of power with the help of deep-pocketed benefactors whose money has warped American culture and launched a new civil war.

Roberts’s patience helped fool the media and many Democrats into believing that he’s some sort of moderate, but investigative reporters and legal experts like David Daley had him clocked from the start. Daley is the author of the book Antidemocratic, published last year, which chronicles Roberts’s rise and ideological crusade, and I spoke with him after the Callais ruling to understand how the hell we got here, what comes next, and how we might be able to fight our way out....

 

‘Sweeping and Dangerous’: US Appeals Court Blocks Mailing of Abortion Pills

Jessica Corbett, May 01, 2026 [CommonDreams]

 

 

 

Sunday, April 26, 2026

Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – April 26, 2026

Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – April 26, 2026

by Tony Wikrent

 

War

How Iran has been studying lessons from the war in Ukraine

[FT Alphaville, via The Big Picture, April 20, 2026]

Military journals provide tantalising glimpses into what Tehran’s military thinks and its priorities, including drones. Tehran’s military journals reveal how closely it’s been watching drone and missile warfare.

 

How Iran war has triggered soaring cost of medicines 

[Aljazeera, via Naked Capitalism 04-25-2025]

 

To A Conclusion. 

Aurelien [via Naked Capitalism 04-23-2025]

...But we have become so used to the Liberal internationalist way of thinking, where all problems have a reasonable solution and compromise is only a negotiation away, that we cannot recognise and understand a situation where a negotiated solution cannot actually address the fundamental issues that divide parties from each other. But that is the case here. The obsession of the US and Israel with the destruction of Iran, and the Iranian desire to preserve itself and to come to dominate the region, can simply never be reconciled, even by the most brilliant negotiators in history. This one, I’m afraid, will have to be fought out to a conclusion, whatever that might be.

 

GOP senators ponder giving Trump official blessing for Iran war 

[Responsible Statecraft, via Naked Capitalism 04-22-2025]

 

Trump not violating any law

'He who saves his Country does not violate any Law'

Trump Stuns By Saying ‘I Don’t Know’ When Asked Directly NBC’s Kristen Welker ‘Don’t You Need to Uphold the Constitution?’

Joe DePaolo, May 4th, 2025

 

The Trade: The war produced a market mechanism. Someone knew how it worked before the public did.

[The Omission, via The Big Picture, April 22, 2026]

Every announcement moved markets and every extension of a deadline crashed oil. Then escalation would push it back up and the cycle would repeat. This happened seven times in fifty-two days....

Three instances. March 23, April 7, April 17. A single minute, a few hours, a single minute. $580 million, $950 million, $760 million. Over $2.29 billion in trades positioned in the correct direction before public announcements that moved the world's most traded commodity, and it didn't appear once and disappear. It repeated, and each time it repeated the identities of the traders remained unknown....

The people closest to the decisions that moved markets were financially entangled with the war’s outcomes.

The president’s two oldest sons invested in Powerus Corporation, a drone maker positioning to sell interceptors to Gulf states under attack by Iran and protected by the US military led by their father, and Bloomberg reported a $750 million push into drone warfare with the company targeting $1.1 billion in Pentagon funding allocated to build a US drone manufacturing base. Separately, Unusual Machines, a drone parts company in which Donald Trump Jr. is involved, secured a $620 million Department of Defense loan, the largest in the history of the Pentagon’s Office of Strategic Capital, while his investment firm, 1789 Capital, holds a major stake in Anduril Industries, which makes unmanned combat systems and holds government contracts.

Jared Kushner, serving as Special Envoy for Peace and sitting at the Islamabad negotiating table, is simultaneously raising billions for Affinity Partners from the same Gulf governments he’s negotiating with. The fund holds $6.16 billion in assets under management with ninety-nine percent of its funding coming from foreign nationals at sovereign wealth funds operated by Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar, including $2 billion from Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund alone, and Kushner is reportedly seeking $5 billion more from the same governments whose security depends on the war’s outcome and whose sovereign wealth funds benefit from the oil price volatility the war produces....

 

 

What’s Wrong With The SPLC Indictment -- DOJ's indictment of the Southern Poverty Law Center is a critical moment in the administration's war on democracy

Joyce Vance, Apr 23, 2026 [Civil Discourse]

...Here’s the central thesis of the case: The Justice Department wants us to believe that one of the nation’s leading civil rights groups, the people who broke the Klan and continue to expose the white supremacist groups that crop up in its wake, is actually supporting racism and domestic terror, that they’re in fact responsible for whipping up the frenzy. This indictment tells a story, and the story is that SPLC engaged in material support for domestic terrorist groups.

The indictment rises or falls on one faulty premise: that you should look only at one piece of SPLC’s work to infiltrate these dangerous groups, not at their overall efforts to dismantle them. DOJ predicates its wire fraud charges, which we discussed here, on the assumption that people who donated to SPLC would be unhappy that their dollars were used to fund paid informants who obtained inside information about what white supremacists and other groups were up to.

DOJ uses tunnel vision to convince people—because that’s what this indictment is about, convincing the public before the case ever gets to trial—that the Southern Poverty Law Center is responsible for everything from the tragic violence at the Charlottesville “Unite The Right” Rally during Trump’s first term in office to, well, who knows what all. To hear acting AG Todd Blanche and FBI Director Kash Patel sell it in a very unusual press conference (that took place in Washington, D.C., without the U.S. Attorney who indicted the case in Montgomery, Alabama, present), SPLC is responsible for the rise of domestic violence in America today....

 

 

Rare Survivors of Pacific Boat Strikes Allege U.S. Forces Kidnapped and Tortured Them

Camila Lourdes Galarza, Apr 21, 2026 [Drop Site News]

As airstrikes and reports of torture under Ecuador’s U.S.-backed military regime continue to mount, fishermen tell Drop Site News they were blindfolded and held hostage for eight days.

 

 

Global power shift

Liquidating an “Empire”: China’s Strategy to Capitalise on US Hegemonic Strain | by Wu Xinbo

[Sinification, via Naked Capitalism 04-22-2025]

 

Gaza / Palestine / Israel

Lebanese journalist bombed and left to die by Israel

[Drop Site Daily: April 23, 2026]

Prominent Lebanese journalist Amal Khalil was killed on Wednesday in southern Lebanon after what appeared to be a targeted Israeli strike, according to her employer Al-Akhbar. Khalil and freelance photojournalist Zeinab Faraj had been reporting on attacks in Bint Jbeil when a nearby vehicle was hit by a drone, killing two people, prompting the two journalists to take shelter in a house that was later bombed. Rescue efforts were obstructed amid continued Israeli fire, with reports that Red Cross teams and vehicles came under attack while attempting to evacuate the wounded. Faraj was eventually rescued with critical injuries, while Khalil’s body was recovered later after access was granted. The Committee to Protect Journalists condemned the incident, citing “repeated strikes on the same location” and the obstruction of humanitarian access as a serious violation of international law. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun expressed his condolences over Khalil’s death and said in a post on X that Israel’s “deliberate and consistent targeting of journalists” was aimed at “concealing the truth of its aggressive acts against Lebanon” and that such acts constitute “crimes against humanity punishable under international laws and conventions.” Read the full report from Drop Site contributor Jeremy Loffredo here.

 

 

Oligarchy

The Tech Oligarch's Republic: A look at the Palantir manifesto, a logical conclusion of the War on Terror

Spencer Ackerman, 20 Apr 2026 [forever-wars.com]

 

Death Star: The Multi-Trillion Dollar Bet on American Technocracy -- Palantir’s Manifesto provides a road map for the plans of the post-Trump regime

Jim Stewartson, Apr 21, 2026 [MindWar]

 

Palantir’s technofascist manifesto calls for universal draft 

[Oligarch Watch, via Naked Capitalism 04-25-2025]

 

The Man Who Cannot Stop Talking About Killing -- On Alex Karp and the "technological republic"

Mike Brock, Apr 20, 2026 [Notes from the Circus]

 

Republicans introduce extreme bill to ban lawsuits against Big Oil forever 

[HEATED, via Naked Capitalism 04-24-2025]

 

How the American Oligarchy Went Hyperscale

Tim Murphy, [Mother Jones, May+June 2026 issue, via Naked Capitalism 04-24-2025]

The AI boom is fueling a literal and metaphorical power grab by tech billionaires—and forcing a reckoning.

 

 

What I Learned About Billionaires at Jeff Bezos’s Private Retreat

Noah Hawley, April 20, 2026 [The Atlantic]

...The Jeff Bezos of 2018 acted as if he still believed that people’s impression of him mattered, that his financial and social value could be affected by negative publicity. He still believed that his actions had consequences. He had not yet freed himself—the way Daniel Plainview freed himself—from the rules of men.

Eight years later, Bezos and two of the world’s other richest men—Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk—have clearly left the world of consequences behind. They float in a sensory-deprivation tank the size of the planet, in which their actions are only ever judged by themselves.
 
The closer I’ve gotten to the world of wealth, the more I understand that being truly rich doesn’t mean amassing enough money to afford superyachts, private jets, or a million acres of land. It means that everything becomes effectively free. Any asset can be acquired but nothing can ever be lost, because for soon-to-be trillionaires, no level of loss could significantly change their global standing or personal power. For them, the word failure has ceased to mean anything.
 
This sense of invulnerability has deep psychological ramifications. If everything is free and nothing matters, then the world and other people exist only to be acted upon, if they are acknowledged at all. This is different from classic narcissism, in which a grandiose but fragile self-image can mask deep insecurity. What I’m talking about is a self-definition in which the individual grows to the size of the universe, and the universe vanishes. Asked recently if there is any check on his power, President Trump—himself a billionaire, and by far the richest president in American history—said, “Yeah, there is one thing. My own morality. My own mind. It’s the only thing that can stop me.” Not domestic or international law, not the will of the voters, not God or the centuries-old morality of civic and religious life.
 
Decades of research in developmental psychology have shown that moral reasoning develops through consequences—not punishment, necessarily, but experiencing the effects of your actions on others, receiving honest feedback, having to accommodate reality as it actually is rather than as you wish it to be. It’s not that the wealthy become evil; it’s that their environment stops teaching them the things that nonwealthy people are forced to learn simply by living in a world that pushes back. When you can buy your way out of any mistake, when you can fire anyone who disagrees with you, when your social circle consists entirely of people who need something from you, the basic mechanism by which humans learn that other people are real goes dark....
 

Fink, Zera S., The Classical Republicans: An Essay in the Recovery of a Pattern of Thought in Seventeenth Century England (Evanston, Northwestern University, 1945), p. 153

A second fundamental thing which makes no less clear [Algernon] Sydney's rejection of monarchy is his remarks on the nature of man. "Man" he wrote, "is of an aspiring nature, and apt to put too high a value on himself. They who are raised above their brethren, though but a little, desire to go farther; and if they gain the name of king, they think themselves wronged and degraded, when they are not suffered to do what they please. In these things they never want masters; and the nearer they come to a power that is not easily restrained by law, the more passionately they desire to abolish all that opposes it.”25 Even when a prince was virtuous and began by desiring nothing more than the power allowed him by law, he was subject to greater temptations to invade the liberty of his subjects than human nature could be expected to withstand. "The strength of his own affections," Sydney declared, "will ever be against him. Wives, children, and servants will always join with those enemies that arise in his own breast to pervert him; if he has any weak side, any lust unsubdued, they will gain the victory. He has not searched into the nature of man, who thinks that anyone can resist when he is thus on all sides assaulted."  Monarchy, in short, by the very constitution of human nature, tended always to degenerate into tyranny. It was a defective form of government because in the most important place of all it was lacking in those adequate restraints on the defects of human nature which all the classical republicans saw as an essential of any well-contrived government.

 

The ‘Empathy Deficit’ of the Powerful

Robert C. Koehler, Apr 26, 2026 [Common Dreams]

...Even when we examine the dark side of power—as in, power corrupts—the examination seems to hover as a warning rather than open up to larger awareness. Consider, for instance, this 2017 article in The Atlantic by Jerry Useem, titled (fasten your seatbelts!) “Power Causes Brain Damage,” which discusses a concept he calls “hubris syndrome.” The essential point the article makes is that people who gain a significant amount of power over others lose the ability to empathize with—or mime, as the article puts it—people in general, the lesser mortals who must follow the boss’ orders....

 

Felonomics

America’s New Tax Mantra: ‘The IRS Isn’t Going to Catch Me’ 

[Wall Street Journal, via The Big Picture, April 20, 2026]

Gut IRS staffing, watch tax compliance collapse. The battered Internal Revenue Service shed thousands of enforcement employees—and more taxpayers appear eager to cheat. This isn’t a surprise — it’s a choice, and the honest taxpayers pay for the cheaters.

 

The media blackout of Jared Kushner’s historic, ongoing corruption scandal

[Popular Information, via Naked Capitalism 04-21-2025]

 

Five Trump Scandals You’ve Probably Missed
Garrett Graff,  April 20, 2026 [Doomsday Scenario]

 

Trump Pardoned a Nursing Home Owner Who Owed Almost $19 Million to a Grieving Family 

[ProPublica, via Naked Capitalism 04-21-2025]

 

The carnage of mainstream neoliberal economics

The ‘Annoyance Economy’ Is More Than Just Annoying

[New York Times, via The Big Picture, April 20, 2026]

The death by a thousand fees, subscriptions, and dark patterns is adding up to a real drag on household budgets. The annoyance is the business model. A new estimate puts the cost of dealing with robocalls, hidden fees and customer service chatbots that can’t solve most problems at $165 billion.

 

Your Power Tools Got Worse On Purpose: How TTI and Stanley Black & Decker took the same playbook in opposite directions.

[Worse on Purpose, via The Big Picture, April 19, 2026]

 

Health care crisis

C.D.C. Cancels Publication of Study Showing Benefits of Covid Vaccines 

[New York Times, via Naked Capitalism 04-25-2025]

 

Predatory finance

Big Finance Found A New Way To Go After Cannabis: By Policing Speech 

[High Times, via Naked Capitalism 04-20-2025]

In Transaction Denied, Rainey Reitman argues that cannabis was never merely underbanked. It was pushed to the margins by a financial system willing to punish businesses, writers and entire communities for getting too close to the plant....

Rainey Reitman’s new bookTransaction Denied: Big Finance’s Power to Punish Speech, has a sharper read on all of it. In her view, what happened to cannabis was not just inconvenience or risk management. It was part of a broader pattern of financial censorship, where banks and payment processors gained the power to punish lawful speech, marginal businesses and politically inconvenient communities without ever having to plainly say that was what they were doing....

 

 

Restoring balance to the economy

Maryland’s Bold Stand Against Dynamic Pricing: The First State to Ban Surveillance-Driven Grocery Prices

[Captain Compliance, via Naked Capitalism 04-22-2025]

 

Creating new economic potential - science and technology

Scientists identify five ages of the human brain over a lifetime

[University of Cambridge, via The Big Picture, April 22, 2026]

Four major turning points around ages nine, 32, 66 and 83 create five broad eras of neural wiring over the average human lifespan.

 

Could humans become “Sun-eaters” in the future? 

[Big Think, via Naked Capitalism 04-25-2025]

 

Physical Economy

Helium Is Hard to Replace

[Construction Physics, via The Big Picture, April 23, 2026]

Helium is produced as a byproduct of natural gas extraction. It collects in the same underground pockets that natural gas collects in. Qatar is responsible for roughly 1/3rd of the world’s supply of helium, which was formerly transported through the Strait of Hormuz in specialized containers. Thanks to the closure of the strait, helium prices have spiked, suppliers are declaring force majeure, and businesses are scrambling to deal with looming shortages.

 

Disrupting mainstream economics

Why Democrats with 2028 hopes are calling Lina Khan – and what she’s telling them about remaking the economy

[CNN, via Naked Capitalism 04-21-2025]

 

Bank of England independence has been a disaster – and it’s time for it to end

Richard Murphy, April 23, 2026 [Funding the Future]

...This video explains why Bank of England independence was always a neoliberal political experiment that was designed to undermine democracy and the people of this country....

Central bank independence grew directly out of something called Public Choice Theory. Public Choice Theory was created by somebody called Professor James Buchanan, working from the mid-1970s to create this idea, which has been promoted through a global network of far-right think-tanks. It is fundamentally anti-democratic. Buchanan did not believe in democracy, a point that has been highlighted by somebody called Nancy MacLean in her highly readable book, Democracy in Chains....

The entire logic of Public Choice Theory is designed to protect the interests of those with money and power, and one of the mechanisms that they chose to do this was to argue that central banks and monetary policy should be removed from the control of democratically elected governments by the creation of independent central banks. Elected politicians, it was argued, could not be trusted with interest rate decisions. Central banks did therefore have to become independent of them because only in that way, it was said, could we get reliable interest rate policy; reliable in the sense that this would deliver what bankers and the wealthy desire and not what people need....

 

Disrupting mainstream politics

Progressive Upset in New Jersey: Analilia Mejía Wins Big, Challenging Trump—and the Democratic Establishment 

[Scheerpost, via Naked Capitalism 04-19-2025]

...Mejía, a former leader of the Working Families Alliance and an ally of Sen. Bernie Sanders, framed her campaign as a direct challenge to President Donald Trump’s leadership and the economic power of billionaires. The Associated Press called the race within minutes of polls closing, with Mejía ultimately leading by roughly 20 percentage points—a margin that outpaced recent Democratic performances in the district.

“This is not radical,” Mejía said in her victory speech. “That a worker who toils every day cannot make ends meet… that they deserve higher wages—that is good conscience. That is a good economy.”....

 

Information age dystopia / surveillance state

Exposing a Global Surveillance Empire

[Mother Jones, via Naked Capitalism 04-20-2025]

...The executive, Guenther Rudolph, was seated at a booth at ISS World in Prague, a secretive trade fair for police and intelligence agencies and advanced surveillance technology companies. Rudolph went on to explain how his firm, First Wap, could provide sophisticated phone-tracking software capable of pinpointing any person in the world. The potential buyer? A private mining company, owned by an individual under sanction, who intended to use it to surveil environmental protesters. “I think we’re the only one who can deliver,” Rudolph said....

The road to that conference room in Prague began with the discovery of a vast archive of data by reporter Gabriel Geiger. The archive contained more than a million tracking operations: efforts to grab real-time locations of thousands of people worldwide. What emerged is one of the most complete pictures to date of the modern surveillance industry....

 

The Effect of Deactivating Facebook and Instagram on Users’ Emotional State

[NBER; PDF at Stanford, via The Big Picture, April 20, 2026]

Stanford paid 35,000 people to quit Facebook and Instagram for 6 weeks. Depression dropped. Anxiety dropped. Happiness went up. Women under 25 on Instagram saw the biggest gains. Just 6 weeks! Now imagine a full year. Working paper on the effect of deactivating Facebook and Instagram on users’ emotional state.

 

Millions of Americans Are Talking to AI Instead of Going to the Doctor, and It’s Giving Them Horrendously Flawed Medical Advice

[Futurism, via Naked Capitalism 04-19-2025]

 

The Most Dangerous Extremist Movement in America Has No Ideology 

[The Cipher Brief, via Naked Capitalism 04-19-2025]

 

5 worrisome privacy clauses hidden in smart home devices

[Fox News, via Naked Capitalism 04-19-2025]

 

How to Teach Kids to Evaluate Information (Before AI Teaches Them Not To) 

[Card Catalog, via Naked Capitalism 04-22-2025]

 

 

Climate and environmental crises

San Diego Now Has So Much Water That It’s Selling It

[Wall Street Journal, via The Big Picture, April 22, 2026]

Pending federal and other approvals, Arizona, Nevada and other Colorado River users could strike water-transfer deals with the San Diego utility. No water is literally shipped; rather, the parties would trade access rights to water sources. States would fund much of the estimated 56,000 acre-feet of water that the desalination plant produces annually in exchange for San Diego’s share of the Colorado River. The agreement could supply enough water for some 500,000 people.
 
So-called water transfers increasingly offset local shortages, and more of these deals are crossing state lines. Water agencies are also creating new supplies for trade, including by recycling sewage water or desalinating ocean water.

 

Democrats' political malpractice

‘The Truth Is Better Than Continuing to Lose’: Petition Demands DNC Release Autopsy of 2024 Defeat

Brad Reed, April 23, 2026 [CommonDreams]

The Democratic National Committee is still refusing to release its internal “autopsy” report about Democrats’ defeat in the 2024 election, but at least one progressive advocacy group isn’t letting party leaders off the hook.

RootsAction has organized a letter writing campaign encouraging supporters to email the DNC demanding release of its analysis of how Democrats in 2024 lost the presidential election to twice-impeached convicted felon Donald Trump.

 

Everything is a Scam 

[Working Class Stories, via Naked Capitalism 04-22-2025]

...Trump has bewildered so many Americans with his brazen swindles, schemes, and cons. From Trump University to the Stop the Steal donation funnel to NFTs, crypto ventures, and betting markets, it’s hardly controversial to say this administration is running some pretty stunning grifts. To a lot of folks, it feels shocking that he’s allowed to get away with it.

But to many other Americans, we hardly blink an eye. After all, grifts are what we’ve long been left with. Our bosses, banks, landlords, and even that little kid who knocks on your door selling candy for his basketball tournament are all running a con. I usually shrug and give the kid $5 for a Hershey bar anyway.

Poor and working people are usually the mark of all these scams, and we know it, too. It’s not like we think what’s happening is fair or that we like it, but it is familiar. We’ve long been left to navigate these cons alone, paying “risk mitigation” fees to property owners and overdraft fees to banks. We’ve long been told it’s our problem to figure out. All these cons are perfectly legal, but cons nonetheless....

So, why would someone in a poor or working-class neighborhood support Trump? I wish they wouldn’t, of course, because we will never win against the size and scale of his grift. But I’m not surprised when people try to line themselves up with what they think might be the winning team– when you don’t feel like you have power, it’s not crazy to get in with the bully. A huge percentage of this country has been left to endure systems that skim, squeeze, and extract from us. One way out might be to get in on the hustle, to take your shot at coming out ahead, even when the odds are absurdly long.

If we are going to be outraged by the grift, we need to be outraged by all the grift, not just the spectacle at the top. We need to be outraged at the $60 application fees for apartments that never materialize; the wage theft that goes unpunished; 29.99% APR credit cards and car loans. Let’s get serious about the billionaires scamming our tax system; about Polymarket bets and insider trading; about Congressional stock trading; about the tech and utility monopolies that always stand to win and gain while ordinary people like Al and me and you and, yes, the family with the Trump flag pinned to their fence absorb all the consequences.

 

 

Resistance

Forgotten now, Burlingame’s speech was once widely considered one of the most important speeches in American history

Heather Cox Richardson, April 23, 2026 [Letters from an American , April 22, 2026]

...In August 2025, when Texas Republicans began this fight by redistricting their state after a brutal contest that drove Democratic legislators to leave the state and take refuge in Illinois and Massachusetts to deny Republicans enough legislators to pass a redistricting law, the Washington Post Editorial Board wrote: “What’s happening in the Lone Star State is not a threat to democracy.” ....

But with last night’s Democratic partisan gerrymander—one that, unlike the Texas gerrymander, went before the people for a vote—the Editorial Board changed its tune. It called this redistricting plan “a power grab by Democrats.” ....

This pattern—expecting Republicans to behave wildly and cheat to grab power while expecting Democrats to behave according to the rules of normal times—has been going on now for years, and it is a dynamic that reflects the political patterns of the years before the Civil War. Then, Americans expected southern Democrats to bully and bluster and rig the system while northerners tried to jolly them into honoring the laws....

In the South a few very wealthy men controlled government and society, enslaving their neighbors. This system, its apologists asserted, was the highest form of human civilization. They opposed any attempt to restrict its spread. The South was superior to the North, enslavers insisted; it alone was patriotic, honored the Constitution, and understood economic growth. In the interests of union, northerners repeatedly ceded ground to enslavers and left their claim to superiority unchallenged.

Then, on May 22, 1856, Representative Preston Brooks of South Carolina beat Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts nearly to death on the Senate floor shortly after a speech in which Sumner had called out those who were forcing enslavement on Kansas and insulted a relative of Brooks. Southern lawmakers and newspapermen alike cheered the violence against an elected representative in the Capitol. Lawmakers refused to expel Brooks, and one newspaper editor wrote: “We trust other gentlemen will follow the example of Mr. Brooks…. If need be, let us have a caning or cowhiding every day.”

But the attack on Sumner was a bridge too far for his colleague, Massachusetts representative Anson Burlingame. On June 21, he stood up in Congress to call out as inferior Brooks and the system of enslavement he defended. Burlingame was sick and tired of buying peace by letting southerners abuse the North. Enough, he said, was enough.

Enslavement was not a superior system, he said; it had dragged the nation backward. Slavery kept workers ignorant and godless while the northern system of freedom lifted workers up with schools and churches. Slavery feared innovation; freedom encouraged workers to try new ideas. Slavery kept the South mired in the past; freedom welcomed the modern world and pushed Americans into a new, thriving economy. And finally, when Sumner had spoken up against the tyranny of slavery, a southerner had clubbed him almost to death on the floor of the Senate.

Was ignorance, economic stagnation, and violence the true American system? For his part, Burlingame preferred to throw his lot with the North, which he said was superior to the South in its morality, education, economy, loyalty to the government, and fidelity to the Constitution. Northerners were willing to defend their system, he said, with guns if necessary.

Burlingame’s “Defense of Massachusetts” speech marked the first time a prominent northerner had offered to fight to defend the northern way of life. Previously, southerners had been the ones threatening war and demanding concessions from the North to preserve the peace. Burlingame explained that he was willing to accept a battle because what was at stake was the future of the nation.

Forgotten now, Burlingame’s speech was once widely considered one of the most important speeches in American history. It marked the moment when northerners shocked southern leaders by calling them out for trying to destroy democracy....

 

The Case That Could End The Citizens United Era

David Sirota, Apr 22, 2026 [The Lever]

...In 2024, voters from [Maine] overwhelmingly passed a ballot measure placing limits on contributions to super PACs. The initiative was quickly challenged in court by what we at The Lever call the master planners — the conservative groups that have successfully deregulated campaign finance laws over the last 50 years.

In their challenge, conservatives are predictably citing SpeechNow as the reason courts should block implementation of the ballot measure. But in a sign of how scared they are, these plaintiffs complain that the ballot measure’s “proponents designed it to prompt a test case, intended to reach the U.S. Supreme Court” — which is exactly right.

 

Want to Resist a Data Center? These Organizers Share How They Did It. 

[Truthout, via Naked Capitalism 04-20-2025]

 

 

Coalition Collapse: Four Frameworks on How to End Authoritarian Regimes -- A primer for understanding regime durability, how these regimes actually fall, and what we can do about it starting immediately.
Christopher Armitage, Apr 25, 2026 [The Existentialist Republic]

 

 

Monopoly Round-Up: Some Surprising Setbacks for Trump-Aligned Corporate America 

Matt Stoller, April 20, 2026 [BIG]

...For the first year of the Trump administration, Wall Street was a nonstop party. “I feel liberated,” a top banker told the Financial Times in early 2025. “We can say ‘retard’ and ‘pussy’ without the fear of getting cancelled . . . it’s a new dawn.” And sure enough, corporate profits are at record highs, so are mergers, and so are Wall Street bonuses.

There were a few bumps, notably tariffs in April and the war in Iran, but the stock market is now at a record. And the Democratic Party is comically feckless, despised by its own supporters and obviously uninterested in doing anything to change the national direction.

It has been forty years of rising plutocratic power in America, and the opening of this administration was the most extreme form of the trend. Trump himself aligned with the oligarchs, using his regulatory authority to cut deals with a host of dominant firms, from Nvidia on chip exports to CBS in getting Stephen Colbert fired. Palantir has deals with the IRS, Elon Musk is now worth $600 billion, and Trump secured trillions of data center investment in the U.S. Perhaps the most important goal was to reorient the media. Here’s what he put on Truth Social....

 

Conservative / Libertarian / (anti)Republican Drive to Civil War

Trump Has Eliminated Election Safeguards and Installed Loyalist Election Deniers in Key Roles -- “The election denial movement is now interwoven within the federal government.”

Joyce Vance and Rights & Insights, Apr 15, 2026 [Rights & Insights]

On Monday, ProPublica released a massive new investigation breaking down how Donald Trump has dismantled federal guardrails that stopped him from overturning his 2020 election loss.

The 4,700+ word investigation, based on interviews with about 30 current and former executive branch officials, provides an unprecedented and detailed account of how thoroughly critical election security guardrails have been gutted within the federal government ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.

Key Findings from ProPublica’s Investigation:

We read the entire piece (twice) to make sure you’re aware of the findings.

  • Career officials who protected elections are gone – election deniers have taken over. ProPublica found that at least 75 career officials across several agencies who played key roles in safeguarding the 2020 election have been fired, resigned, or reassigned. They have been replaced by roughly two dozen political appointees Trump has installed in positions that could affect elections. Many are election deniers and ten actively worked to reverse Trump’s 2020 loss.
  • Federal programs designed to safeguard elections have been dismantled....

 

Inside Trump’s Effort to “Take Over” the Midterm Elections

Doug Bock Clark and Jen Fifield, April 13, 2026 [ProPublica]

Safeguards Destroyed: In advance of this year’s midterm elections, President Donald Trump has systematically demolished federal guardrails that prevented him from overturning the 2020 election....

In mid-December 2020, federal officials responsible for protecting American elections from fraud converged in a windowless, dim, fortified room at the Justice Department’s downtown Washington, D.C., headquarters.

They had been summoned by Attorney General William Barr.

Over the preceding weeks, Donald Trump’s claims that the presidential election had been stolen from him had reached a crescendo. He’d become obsessed with a conspiracy theory that voting machines in Antrim County, Michigan, had switched votes from him to Joe Biden.

With each day, Trump ratcheted up the pressure to unleash the might of the federal government to undo his defeat.

Barr interrogated experts from the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, crammed in beside top FBI officials around a cheap table. He needed the group of around 10 to answer a crucial question: Was it really possible the 2020 presidential vote had been hacked?

ProPublica’s description of the previously unreported meeting comes from several people who were in the room or were briefed on the gathering.

 

The Neo-Nazi Enforcer Who Helped Build Peter Thiel’s Online Influence Empire

[Byline Times, via The Big Picture, April 19, 2026]

A reported investigation into the uglier corners of the Thiel-funded tech-political ecosystem. Pair it with anything else you are reading about the billionaire class. New Epstein-linked revelations show how neo-Nazi operative Andrew Auernheimer became a crucial link between Peter Thiel and the online far-right subcultures waging ‘memetic warfare’ against their enemies.

 

We Were Paying Attention

Mike Brock, April 22, 2026 [Notes from the Circus]

The reactionaries got what they wanted. This is worth stating plainly, because a certain kind of liberal commentary keeps treating the current moment as a disaster that has befallen the country — a catastrophe that surprised everyone including its authors. It is not that. It is the successful execution of a political program whose authors told us, for years, in plain language, exactly what they were going to do. They have done it. The dismantling of the administrative state is what they wanted. The capture of the judiciary is what they wanted. The war with Iran is what they wanted. The ICE camps and the deportations are what they wanted. The assault on universities and the neutering of the adversarial press is what they wanted. The concentration of executive power beyond any constitutional check is what they wanted. The consolidation of tech-billionaire authority inside the machinery of the state is what they wanted. The attacks on trans people and on reproductive rights and on every marginalized population the productive system designated as surplus — all of this is what they wanted. They got it. The project has been, on its own terms, a success.

What the project reveals, now that it is visible at full scale, is what the project always was. It is not a positive vision of human flourishing that happens to require some losses along the way. It is a vision whose content is the losses. They want a smaller country. Fewer people in it. Fewer institutions mediating between power and the population. Fewer rights inconvenient to capital. Fewer norms constraining what the powerful can do to the weak. Fewer cultures complicating the monoculture they imagine as natural. Fewer voices in the press. Fewer judges who might rule against them. Fewer professors teaching things that embarrass them. Fewer immigrants reminding them that the American experiment has always been plural. The losses are the point. Once you see this, the current moment stops being confusing. The administration is not failing to produce prosperity. It is producing the losses, which is what its base wanted, and the pain — falling on the people being removed — is not a bug but the feature they came for.

The people who authored this project, the people who fund it, the people who staff it, and the people who cheer for it are who they have always been. The current moment is not a change in their character. It is a disclosure of their character. For years they operated under constraints that forced them into a public register compatible with the constitutional order — gesturing at democratic norms they did not believe in, mouthing the vocabulary of pluralism they privately held in contempt, framing their projects as reforms within the existing system rather than as attacks on the system itself. Those constraints are gone. The public register has caught up with the private disposition. What you see now is what they always were. The mask is no longer necessary.

Look at what they say, out loud, in public, to their own audiences. The technology executive who fantasizes on investor calls about killing his competitors and drone-striking rivals. The venture capitalist who writes that democracy and freedom are incompatible. The political operatives who speak of their opponents as vermin, as parasites, as enemies within. The immigration enforcers who celebrate the suffering of families torn apart as a feature of a correctly functioning policy. The senators who joke about their colleagues being executed, and the journalists who laugh along. The influencers who promote the eliminationist rhetoric of regimes the previous generation of conservatives would have refused to name in polite company. The billionaires who speak of taxpayers as hosts and themselves as the productive class being farmed, and who have begun to act on the implications of that framing. None of this is an accident of rhetoric. It is what they have always believed, now said out loud, because nothing stops them from saying it out loud, because they have won and they know they have won and they no longer need the mask.

They want to subdue the people their project is harming. If subduing is not enough, they are comfortable with killing. This is not a metaphor and it is not a rhetorical excess. It is the observable disposition of the project toward the populations it has designated as obstacles. The ICE detention deaths are not administrative errors. The Palestinian civilians dying under American munitions are not regrettable collateral. The trans kids driven to suicide by the legal and cultural apparatus constructed against them are not unintended consequences. The women dying from denied reproductive care are not tragic anomalies. These are the project’s outputs, produced by design, defended by their authors, celebrated by the base that elected them....

Those of us who were paying attention were not suffering from any kind of delusion. We were not trapped in partisan hysteria. We were not failing to see the legitimate concerns the reactionaries raised about genuine problems in American life. We saw those concerns. We took them seriously. We disagreed with the prescription — not because we were committed to the status quo, but because we could read what the reactionaries actually said and extrapolate what they actually intended to do. The extrapolation was not complicated. It required taking them at their word. Most of the mainstream commentary refused to do this because taking them at their word sounded alarmist, and alarm was coded as a failure of professional composure....

...The liberal tradition, read carefully, contains the conceptual resources for understanding what reactionary movements are, what they do when they come to power, and why the specific institutions of constitutional republicanism exist to constrain them. The tradition predicted the current moment because the tradition was built in response to earlier versions of the current moment. The people who read the tradition correctly were able to predict accurately. The people who dismissed the tradition as outdated — who thought the end-of-history thesis of the 1990s meant the older liberal warnings about concentrated power and reactionary movements were no longer relevant — were the ones who failed to predict....

 

Named for Mamdani, GOP Bill Would Strip Citizenship From People Who Advocate for Socialism

Thom Hartmann,  Apr 21, 2026 [Common Dreams]

Texas Congressman Chip Roy is preparing to introduce legislation he’s calling the “MAMDANI Act,” named after Zohran Mamdani, the recently elected democratic socialist mayor of New York City, that would let the federal government bar entry to, deport, and strip naturalized citizenship from any person who advocates for or is “affiliated with” what Roy calls “totalitarian” movements. The list includes, from Rep. Roy’s webpage:

“[A] socialist party, a communist party, the Chinese Communist Party, or Islamic fundamentalist party, or advocates for socialism, communism, Marxism, or Islamic fundamentalism.”The bill targets people who “write, distribute, circulate, print, display, possess, or publish” material supporting socialism or any of those other ideas.

“Possess?” That single word means that owning a copy of Marx’s Das Kapital, or a pamphlet from a Palestinian solidarity group, or a battered paperback of Howard Zinn — or maybe even one of my books on the New Deal — would be enough to make a green-card holder or a naturalized citizen “inadmissible or deportable.”

“Affiliated with?” That would prevent anybody who’s ever affiliated themselves with the Democratic Socialist Party in New York that Mamdami ran on behalf of....

another dangerous overreach on the GOP’s part in this legislation: Roy’s bill explicitly forbids judicial review of any inadmissibility, deportation, or denaturalization decision made under it.

In other words, if this law passes then no court can stop or second-guess the government: no habeas corpus, no meaningful appeals; just an order from the Attorney General or some twit at ICE or Homeland Security and you’re on a plane or stuck in a hellhole “detention facility,” possibly for the rest of your life....

 

The Most Articulate Apologist

Mike Brock, Apr 25, 2026 [Notes from the Circus]

Ben Shapiro went on Sam Harris’ podcast this week and gave the most clarifying interview I have read in a year. Not clarifying about Donald Trump, who has been clarified for some time. Clarifying about Ben Shapiro, and about the specific kind of figure that has been keeping the Republican coalition welded together while it converts itself into something its own apologists will not name....

The man who agrees Trump tried to steal the 2020 election is now arguing that the real threat to American democracy is people who worry Trump might try to steal the next one. The hysteria, in his framework, lies not with the man who attempted to overturn an American election but with the citizens who notice that he attempted it and might attempt it again. The proper civic posture, in Shapiro’s view, is to vote for the wannabe usurper, trust the guardrails, and treat the people warning about the usurper as the dangerous extremists corroding democratic legitimacy....

The implication, which Shapiro does not quite state but which is the only honest reading of his position, is this: there is no Republican who could be disqualified by character or conduct, because the alternative is always a Democrat, and the Democrat is always worse on policy. The category of disqualifying has been emptied. There is nothing a Republican president can do that would cause Ben Shapiro to vote against him, because the only available alternative would be a Democrat, and Shapiro has decided in advance that no Democrat can ever be acceptable.

This is not a political philosophy. This is a one-way ratchet. And the ratchet has a name. It is what authoritarian movements have always required from their apologist class, in every country where they have come to power: a class of articulate people who concede every factual point about the authoritarian, who acknowledge his crimes, who profess discomfort with his methods, and who continue to vote for him anyway because the alternative is the left. The apologists do not have to believe in the project. They only have to provide cover for the people who do, and to refuse, when asked directly, to ever pull the lever the other way....

 

Letters from an American, April 21, 2026

Heather Cox Richardson, Apr 22, 2026

Zachary Roth of Democracy Docket noted that Trump ally Steve Bannon warned on his podcast Monday that “Democrats are demonic” and said that if allowed to have power, they will impeach Trump. “Not just, are they going to take power and use these four seats to impeach Trump?” he said, “But they’re going to use this as a template for the rest of the country. It’s coming.”

 

Congress Pulls The Trigger On Big Oil’s Shot At Immunity

Emily Sanders, Apr 24, 2026 [The Lever]

As fossil fuel giants face mounting lawsuits for allegedly deceiving the public about the environmental harm of their products, Republican lawmakers just borrowed a tactic from gun lobbyists’ playbook, proposing sweeping federal immunity for oil and gas companies and limiting compensation for communities struggling with the local costs of climate disasters.

The effort could also block all state-level regulations of greenhouse gases, a sweeping deregulatory effort that some legal experts said was unconstitutional.

The GOP lawmakers behind the plan together received more than $9.5 million from the oil and gas industry over their careers. Their legislation would deliver one of the fossil fuel lobby’s top policy priorities and kill climate lawsuits before they can reach trial.

The new bill, the Stop Climate Shakedowns Act of 2026, introduced last week by Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Rep. Harriet Hageman (R-Wyo.), would shield some of the world’s largest oil companies from laws and lawsuits that could make them pay billions of dollars in climate damages, nearly half a century after Exxon scientists first predicted the dangers of burning fossil fuels....

[TW: This is a brazen violation of the Constitutional mandate to promote Justice. But the conservative / libertarian ideology is clear that all harms caused by capitalism must be immune to the dictates of justice in order to preserve "the system" of capitalism. And it's not even capitalism -- it's kleptocratic rentierism and oligopoly.]

 

The (anti)Federalist Society assault on the Constitution

The Chief Justice and His Wife Took $20 Million From Firms He Rules On. I'm Filing for His Disbarment Today.
And you can too.

Christopher Armitage, Apr 22, 2026 [The Existentialist Republic]

Over sixteen years of federal financial disclosure forms, Chief Justice John Roberts mischaracterized more than twenty million dollars in household income from law firms appearing before the Supreme Court. He concealed his wife’s equity stake in her employer for three consecutive years. He failed to recuse from more than five hundred cases argued at the Supreme Court by law firms that had paid his household millions in commissions. He architected the Court’s first ethics code and designed it to be unenforceable. This is a course of conduct stretching across two decades, connected by a single through-line: the belief that the rules that apply to every other federal judge do not apply to him.

The governing standard is 28 U.S.C. § 455, which applies to every federal judge including Supreme Court justices. Three of its subsections matter here, and a judge only needs one of them to trigger the recusal obligation. Roberts triggers all three.

Subsection (a) says a judge “shall disqualify himself in any proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned.” This is the appearance standard, and it does not require actual bias. It requires only that a reasonable person knowing the facts would question the judge’s impartiality.

That’s the lowest bar, and it’s the easiest to satisfy. The next two are more specific and even more difficult to evade.

Subsection (b)(4) says a judge shall disqualify himself where “he or his spouse, or a minor child residing in his household, has a financial interest in the subject matter in controversy or in a party to the proceeding, or any other interest that could be substantially affected by the outcome.” The language is broad on purpose. Congress wanted the net to catch exactly the kind of arrangement at issue here.

Subsection (b)(5)(iii) adds that a judge shall disqualify where a spouse “is known by the judge to have an interest that could be substantially affected by the outcome of the proceeding.” That subsection covers situations where the financial interest runs through the spouse rather than through the judge directly....

 

A Republican Judge Just Voided 2.3 Million Virginia Ballots

Mike Brock, April 22, 2026 [Notes from the Circus]

A Virginia state trial judge named Jack Hurley Jr., sitting in Tazewell County Circuit Court — a deep-red Southwest Virginia jurisdiction more than two hundred miles from Richmond — ruled yesterday that the constitutional amendment 2.3 million Virginians had just approved is void from the start. He ordered the Commonwealth of Virginia not to certify the results of Tuesday’s referendum. He declared the entire process unconstitutional.

This is the third time Hurley has ruled against this amendment. The Virginia Supreme Court has reversed him the previous two times, unanimously... Hurley ran for the Virginia House of Delegates as a Republican in 1999. The Republican National Committee has court-shopped this case into his courtroom three separate times, past a Virginia statute the Democratic-controlled legislature passed specifically to require cases like this to be filed in Richmond. Hurley, each time, has agreed that Tazewell is a proper venue. Each time, he has ruled for the RNC. Each time, the Virginia Supreme Court has told him he was wrong.

So he has done it again. He will probably lose again. Attorney General Jay Jones has already announced the appeal....

The ruling is an input to a political machine. The legal reversal does not remove it from circulation. The political work it does happens upstream of the appeal.

Last December, the United States Supreme Court, in one of its many shadow docket drive-by rulings, reversed a three-judge panel led by a Trump-appointed federal district judge named Jeffrey Brown.

Brown had run a nine-day evidentiary hearing and written a 160-page opinion finding Texas’s 2025 map a likely racial gerrymander — a finding three justices (Kagan, Sotomayor, Jackson) thought was supported by substantial evidence. Alito, writing for the six Republican appointees, waved it away. Texas’s motivation, he held, was pure and simple partisan advantage, and Rucho v. Common Cause had rendered that unreviewable. Map blessed. Five Republican seats into the 2026 count....

Virginia, April 2026: the Democratic-controlled state legislature passed, in two successive sessions as Virginia’s constitution requires, an amendment permitting mid-decade redistricting only in response to other states’ mid-decade redistricting. The amendment was ratified by statewide popular vote. More procedural legitimacy than Texas, not less. A Republican-aligned state trial judge in a remote county, court-shopped past a venue statute, declared it void.

Both of these cannot be correctly decided under any coherent theory of constitutional law....

The institutions that are not doing their jobs are the ones that were supposed to constrain exactly this kind of operation. The federal judiciary has been captured at the top. The professional norms of the legal academy have dissolved. The conservative legal movement’s claimed jurisprudential commitments have revealed themselves as deployable rhetoric. A judge like Hurley who produces three rulings, loses all three on appeal, and faces no professional consequence is not a bug in the system. He is the system’s intended use, from the perspective of the faction that has figured out how to use it.

They do not need to win the cases. They need to keep producing the rulings. Every reversal generates a fresh news cycle. Every new ruling produces the appearance of a principled legal fight. The cost of operating is low. The returns are cumulative. The system was built for this....

 

 

 

Civic republicanism

When Does Breaking the Law Become Moral Courage? What Separates Courage from Fanaticism

Culture Explorer, Apr 21, 2026, via Naked Capitalism 04-22-2025]

... When she is brought before Creon, she does not come in like a swaggering rebel. She stands with her head lowered toward the ground, as if her body is still turned toward the dead even while she faces the throne. Then Creon questions her, and she answers with astonishing directness. Yes, she did it and she knew the decree. Yes, she broke it. But she refuses to grant his order final authority. Zeus did not make the order Creon had decreed. Justice did not write it. No king, in her view, can cancel duties that bind the living to the dead. In that moment the clash sharpens into its full shape. Creon speaks for the city as he understands it: rule, obedience, enemies, order. Antigone speaks for a law that is above all manmade laws, much older than Creon.

Creon hears danger in every word because he understands what is at stake. If Antigone stands, then his command meets a limit, and he is not master in the way he imagines. That is why he hardens. The decree becomes a test of his authority.

Haemon sees this before his father does. He tries persuasion first. The city, he says, is murmuring against this judgment. Antigone has done what many think honorable. Then he gives Creon the truth that rulers hate most when pride has taken hold of them: the city does not belong to one man. Creon cannot hear it. By then, the law has become personal.

That is what gives the story its force. Sophocles begins with a broken family, a corpse denied burial, a sister who cannot bear the sight of that dishonor, and a ruler who mistakes command for justice.

A secure ruler could have punished, relented, or found a way to preserve order without turning a burial into a contest of wills. Creon chooses the harsher path because he has started to hear disagreement as humiliation. He speaks as though the city were his possession, and Haemon answers him with the truth that should have broken the spell at once: no city belongs to one man. That line lands because it names the disease exactly. Creon still talks in the language of law, but pride has already colonized it....

 

“We must learn to disobey.”

Patrick Lawrence [The Floutist, via Naked Capitalism 04-21-2025]

...Jefferson and Franklin were right to caution those who would follow them, as history makes perfectly plain. A little corruption here, a small favor there, a corner cut here and another there, bribes from lobbyists, nepotistic appointments, misuses of office—all of this ever more routinely until Washington comes to resemble a circus of jobbery and unscrupulousness....

America’s political history is replete with these kinds of stories, narratives of misconduct, such that it is a question, at least in my mind, whether the United States was actually what we call in shorthand “a greedfest” from the start.

It is a profoundly unsettling question, but at this point it must be asked. Was the republic the Founding Fathers established ever any more, at its true core, than a veneer of democratic ideals and law super-imposed atop a festival of greed and self-interest in which, as they say, all rules are made to be broken?

I don’t see a need to dwell on this point, as there is a good way to summarize it. What America has lost over the decades and centuries is the principle of disinterest, which is essential, surely, to any kind of successful republicanism. To clarify, as even most Americans fail to understand this term: To be “disinterested,” as distinct from “uninterested,” means to act for the commonweal without reference to one’s personal interest in any given matter.

Maybe my implication here is already plain: When we speak of America as a failing or, indeed, a failed republic, we speak first of a psychological condition. The fate of democracy, whether it endures or disappears, is decided in the minds and hearts of its citizens before it is decided in legislatures, in elections, in courts, or in any of the other institutions on which a republic rests....

When the regime of George W. Bush invaded Iraq in March 2003, Americans took to the streets in protest quite as they had during the Vietnam war days. My understanding is that demonstrators could be counted in the millions. And then what happened was that nothing happened. The Bush II regime went ahead with America’s latest war with supreme indifference to the citizenry. As Cara Marianna has explained to me—I having missed this point—it was then Americans began to assume they were impotent in the face of a new kind of power—sequestered power, unanswerable power.

Over the decades since we have seen the steady erosion of Americans’ constitutional rights and the ever more evident wall behind which power operates in America. The Trump regime did not set the American republic on this path, but it has radically quickened the pace of the decay I describe. Free speech is under constant attack, along with academic freedom, the right to assembly, and so on. Reflecting Trump’s autocratic tendencies, power is now exercised with indifference not only to the citizenry but to law itself: We now have, and I want to stress this phrase, lawlessness in the name of law.

A little while ago The New York Times conducted a lengthy interview with Trump, during which the newspaper asked him if there were any limits on his exercise of power. “There is one thing,” Trump replied. “My own morality. My own mind. It’s the only thing that can stop me.” He went on to express his indifference to law—specifically to international law, but the record indicates he meant any law, all law....

Machiavelli, just prior to the collapse of the Florentine Republic, urged the formation of citizen militias to defend against the threat of Medici power. After the Republic fell in 1512 and it was too late for such a defense, he famously advocated rule by a prince capable of restoring republican order. He wrote The Prince a year later. Machiavelli’s prince was preoccupied with power, as is well-enough known, but this power was to be exercised, I would say, according to the principle of disinterest I mentioned earlier—not for his own power but for the Republic’s. The Discourses, written four years later, make this clear.

That was five centuries ago. Parenthetically, given the rampant lawlessness of our purported leaders I confess to finding a certain appeal in the thought of citizen militias or some 21st century version of the philosopher king, but that is for another conversation.

What about us, now? What are we to do in the face of the condition I named earlier as lawlessness in the name of law? Any useful answer must involve one or another form of disobedience, each of us to determine his or her own kind. And the paradox of our time is that our disobedience must begin by declaring our obedience to law while those charged with upholding it breach it....