Friday, January 23, 2026

‘Trump Has Already Rigged the 2028 Presidential Election’: US Defence Insider

A long time activist friend shared this with me. Utterly chilling and compelling!

The five Attorneys General who I saw speak in Portland on Wednesday night talked about the midterms and were all aware that there would be enormous efforts to circumvent those elections. Again and again they discussed how they are fighting back and winning case after case in the courts. They also clearly and strongly affirmed that these battles for democracy won’t be won in the courts alone. We are all needed!

I recognize the horrors that we are facing. I’m also not yet convinced that they are insurmountable. For one thing, I’m doubtful that Trump will survive another 3 years given his both his dementia and his health issues. And I am also deeply aware that Trump is but a symptom of something much larger than this one man.

And, consequently, I agree that we are all in extreme danger that the fascist takeover will prevail. And it is critical that we recognize the fascist forces lined up to completely decimate democracy in America.

This is a huge WAKE UP CALL. I’m sharing this article not as a doomsday prediction and to simply give up. NO! Hopeless despair is NOT an option. It is critical that we understand what is happening and to use that awareness to compel us to ACT. NOW.

There countless ways that we can fight back and do everything humanly possible to join in solidarity to stop the horrors and heartbreaks of what is unfolding at the hands of the fascist regime currently claiming ever growing power. No act is too small. We are all needed, all in this together! — Molly


Brynn Tannehill has worked for years for one of the largest US Government defence contractors in the country.

Writing pseudonymously for Byline Times, in November 2024 she predicted the astonishingly rapid militarisation of the homeland that Donald Trump would pursue; and in February 2025 she accurately forecast some of the most shocking turns of the Trump administration – including how serious it is about annexing places like Venezuela and Greenland.

Now she casts her eye on what pivotal presidential elections will hold in 2028 – and warns that Democrats are dangerously unprepared for what’s coming.

_____________

Regardless of how people vote, the chances of a Democrat Government coming to power in 2029 is now virtually nil, argues Brynn Tannehill

By 

The outcome of the election has already been determined: Democrats just don’t realise it yet.

Donald Trump’s first year in office has largely been an exercise in consolidating all power in the executive branch, and then wielding this power to punish his enemies, whether they are recalcitrant blue state governors, people who have angered him (like James Comey and Letitia James), and unpopular minorities (immigrants and transgender people), or the Chairman of the Federal Reserve. 

_________

(Please note, this is a long article, which I am only quoting excerpts here. The author goes into depth in the article about each one of the below risks.)
  • The Legal Coup
  • Prevent Democrats Who Might Win From Running
  • Control Who Counts The Votes
  • State and Local Officials Refuse to Certify The Results
  • Challenge the Results in a Rigged SCOTUS
  • Overturn the Election Using Contested Election Procedures in the House
  • A Republican Vice President Will Refuse to Certify the Election in the Senate
  • If Republicans Control the Senate They Will Refuse to Certify the Election
  • Republicans Can Use the Military, ICE, Base to Physically Prevent Inauguration
_________

... When you list out all the things that must happen, and consider how likely they are, you begin to understand why the future is so bleak.

To summarise, here is what must happen:
  • A Democrat who can win has to make it to election day outside of federal custody
  • A Democrat must overcome attempts to suppress votes, and win the electoral college
  • They must overcome potential skullduggery by Dominion to manipulate vote counts
  • They must prevent local and state officials from refusing to certify the election
  • They must get SCOTUS to prevent ALL attempts to overturn election results
  • They may have to overcome another fake electors scheme
  • They must control the House of Representatives, despite all of the election challenges above (gerrymandering, end of the VRA, Dominion, polling place intimidation, fights over mail-in voting, etc…)
  • They must get the House of Representatives sworn in and seated by January 6th.
  • They must get the Vice President (presumably JD Vance) to certify the election
  • They will likely have to get Republican Senators to defy the administration at great personal risk to vote to certify the election
  • They must avoid or prevent Trump from using law enforcement, the military, or the mob to prevent Congress from certifying the election results
  • They must successfully get the Democratic nominee sworn in despite whatever efforts Trump and the GOP use to prevent it from occurring.

If any one of those things doesn’t happen, then a Republican ends up President regardless of how people voted...
_________

Brynn Tannehill is a Naval Academy graduate, former naval aviator, author, and former senior US defence analyst.


Hundreds of Clergy Descend On Minneapolis and Go On Lookout For ICE

 Powerful…
Do justice. Love kindness. Abolish ICE.
Deliver us from evil. Amen."
🙏🙏 Molly

Clergy observe and document the actions of immigration enforcement agents, Jan. 22, 2026, in Minneapolis. (RNS photo/Jack Jenkins)
MINNEAPOLIS (RNS) — The faith leaders, who hail from across the country and represent a range of religious traditions, deployed to neighborhoods with significant immigrant populations, where DHS agents have been most active.

By Jack Jenkins

MINNEAPOLIS (RNS) — Around 200 faith leaders fanned out across the city on Thursday (Jan. 22) to observe and document the actions of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, with some clergy confronting Department of Homeland Security agents, adding a visible religious presence to widespread efforts to counter the president’s mass deportation campaign in the region.

The faith leaders, who are in Minneapolis as part of a larger convening focused on religious pushback to ICE, deployed to neighborhoods with significant immigrant populations, where DHS agents have been most active during an ongoing campaign known as Operation Metro Surge. The clergy, who hail from a range of traditions and worship communities across the country, sang on the buses as they ventured out into the street. They belted out hymns and songs popular during the Civil Rights Movement, such as “Woke Up This Morning.”

For the Rev. James Galasinski, who leads a Unitarian Universalist congregation in Canton, New York, it was only a few minutes after he arrived at his designated neighborhood before he and two of his clergy colleagues encountered ICE agents.

“I noticed an SUV with Wisconsin license plates and tinted windows,” he said, referring to what activists say are telltale signs of unmarked ICE vehicles. “There were four men inside, and some of them had masks. I was like: ‘That’s ICE.’”

Galasinski and another Unitarian Universalist minister, the Rev. Lise Adams Sherry of Anchorage, Alaska, called over the Rev. Dan Brockway, an American Baptist minister who serves a congregation in Brockport, New York. The trio staked out the vehicle in front of a strip mall for several minutes, observing quietly, until three women walked past them to enter a minivan.

“All of a sudden, the car that we had been watching pulled up behind them to block them,” Sherry said. “Then two more cars came in.”

Galasinski added: “In just seconds, 12 ICE agents came out.”

The Rev. Susie Hayward speaks to clergy on a bus as they move out to observe and document the actions of immigration enforcement agents, Jan. 22, 2026, in Minneapolis. (RNS photo/Jack Jenkins)
The ministers — all wearing clerical stoles — began blowing whistles, attempting to alert the nearby community. ICE agents surrounded one of the women from the minivan and instructed the pastors to get back. Brockway, standing behind the other faith leaders, began livestreaming the encounter to his church’s Facebook page.

Ultimately, the encounter was brief: The woman, who the pastors said appeared to be pregnant, had citizenship papers with her. She showed them to the officers — something activists have argued doesn’t always dissuade federal immigration agents, who have detained U.S. citizens on multiple occasions. But in less than two minutes, the agents left the scene.

The woman, the pastors said, was shaken. It was impossible to tell whether the presence of clergy had staved off a potential detention, but the pastors said the woman thanked them profusely before leaving.

The faith leaders — none of whom had previously encountered ICE — said they, too, were left unsettled.

“I’m becoming radicalized,” Galasinski said, his voice rising. “I’m seeing our nation become more and more fascist before my eyes — I saw it. I saw it. I mean, demanding papers? I never thought I would live in a country like this.”

Clergy observe and document the actions of immigration enforcement agents, Jan. 22, 2026, in Minneapolis. (RNS photo/Jack Jenkins)
The sentiment was less dramatic but no less melancholic in another neighborhood, where a different group of about 50 clergy patrolled a major street lined with businesses owned by Hispanic and Somali Americans — groups that have been targeted by ICE.

Among them was Rabbi Diane Tracht, who serves a Reform Jewish community in Indiana, and the Rev. Joshua Shawnee, who serves what he called an Inclusive Catholic Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

Shawnee, who wore a whistle around his neck as well as a stole, said he has encountered ICE before in Oklahoma.

“You can only preach against ICE for so long before God calls you to get out of the pulpit and get to the streets,” Shawnee said.

When Tracht was asked why she had come to the faith convening in Minneapolis, she recalled the Holocaust, saying it reminds her of the “literal genocide that authoritarian governments can do.”

As she was speaking, a car with tinted windows drove by slowly. Two DHS officials sat in the front seat, looking over at the pastors. The rabbi finished her thought as she and Shawnee hurried back down the street to follow the car, expressing concern about people they had just met in that area.

“What did we learn from the Holocaust? We have to act and we have to resist,” Tracht said, running out of breath as the car turned the corner. “If I’m not going to act and resist now, then I shouldn’t call myself a rabbi and I can’t be a proud Jew.”

While most of the clergy in the group appeared not to be from Minneapolis, locals seemed to welcome their presence all the same. As a Lutheran pastor and a Unitarian Universalist passed by a restaurant while on patrol, the apparent owner stepped out holding two steaming cups of spiced tea — a common drink among Somali Americans.

“She said, ‘Here. If you’re watching ICE, I just want to thank you,’” recalled Meagan McLaughlin, who serves an Evangelical Lutheran Church in America congregation in St. Louis.

The effort was part of a broader groundswell of faith-based organizing designed to resist President Donald Trump’s mass deportation agenda. Faith-led efforts to support immigrants and push back the administration have become common in cities across the U.S. over the past year as DHS has launched a series of targeted enforcement campaigns. This week, hundreds of religious leaders have come to Minneapolis as part of a convening organizers hope will further strengthen religious resistance across the country.

After the religious leaders returned from their patrols, several prominent faith leaders held a press conference in a church to denounce ICE in theological terms. Standing behind a podium that read “Do justice. Love Kindness. Abolish ICE,” the first to speak was Bishop Mariann Budde, the Episcopal bishop of Washington, who made headlines almost exactly a year ago when she delivered a sermon to Trump in which she implored the president to “have mercy” on immigrants and other groups.

“Join us in sending a message to all our elected officials that no agency should have license to arbitrarily arrest and detain people without due process,” said Budde, who noted Minnesota is her home state. “To harm and even kill those who bear witness to what is happening. This is a bright-line moment for our country and our values. In our varied and united faith traditions, love of neighbor is not optional.”

The Rev. Hierald E. Osorto speaks at a press conference, Jan. 22, 2026, in Minneapolis. (RNS photo/Jack Jenkins)
She was followed by the Rev. Hierald E. Osorto, a local ELCA pastor who serves a majority immigrant congregation. Osorto noted that immigrant communities like his are also heavily active in pushing back against ICE, even if much of it is less public.

“For more than a year we have prepared for this moment,” he said. “Our families drew up paperwork — delegation of parental authority forms — so that if they were put in detention, their children would not be alone. We found people lawyers, so they could navigate the legal system where no one else is looking out for them.”

He added: “We anticipated this time of trial, but we still pray: líbranos del mal — deliver us from evil.”

The press conference happened not only the same day the federal government arrested anti-ICE activists who staged a controversial protest in a local church where an ICE official allegedly serves as a lay pastor, but also occurred at the same time Vice President JD Vance was leading his own press conference on the other side of the city. The vice president, who has sometimes turned to theological arguments to defend the administration’s hard-line immigration policies, appeared to criticize the rash of anti-ICE activism in the city, arguing that some ICE agents were in the city not “to enforce immigration laws, but to protect people from the rioters.”

The Rev. DeWayne Davis addresses a press conference, Jan. 22, 2026, in Minneapolis. (RNS photo/Jack Jenkins)
But at the faith-led press conference, the Rev. DeWayne Davis, a trustee of the United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities, argued the federal government had “made a mistake” by targeting Minneapolis. Recalling the city’s past experiences with organizing, particularly the activism that followed the murder of George Floyd by a police officer in 2020, Davis argued the federal government should have expected the intense grassroots resistance that has emerged in the city — including from local faith leaders.

“You messed up. You didn’t understand what we went through,” he said. “We didn’t do all that because we are heroes and saviors. We did it because we understand the meaning of our faith: that we are all connected. We join together. We are a part of a people, a body of humanity that is made in the image of a loving and beautiful God that wants all God’s children free.”

Please go here for the original article: https://religionnews.com/2026/01/22/hundreds-of-clergy-descend-on-minneapolis-and-go-on-lookout-for-ice/

Keep Loving Like Minneapolis Loves

 

I’ve been in Minneapolis for a few days, and today I went by the site where Renee Good was murdered. It was painful, moving, and powerful.
At the site, there are two men (I won't use their names) who've parked their cars and stay there 24/7, protecting the vigil space. A great threads post yesterday by another visitor highlighted donation Items could be helpful, so I brought a few snacks to drop off.
I spoke with one of the men for a while today.
He said "as long as they're here", meaning ICE, "I'm here."
"This isn't just a vigil," he said "It's a protest. It's a reminder that you don't need 1,000 people to make a lot of noise. You just need one. And I'm not leaving."
I asked him how he’s doing. He told me "it's scary and emotional." He choked up while telling me about the people that come by every day to cry, to mourn, to reflect, to pray.
I asked if they still needed any supplies.
He said they’ve received a good amount of donations, but he needs people "to keep standing up and making noise."
So give what you can.
Help where you can.
Don't look away.
Don't shut it out.
Don't be quiet.
Keep being loud.
Keep loving like Minneapolis loves.

Click here to find mutual aid groups to support across the Minneapolis area: https://linktr.ee/mplsmutualaid

Originally posted by Nate Morris

Jackson Katz — “We Live in a World that is Governed by Strength”: The MAGA Project to Reassert White Male Power in Public and Private

An excellent piece by Jackson Katz!
— Molly


Trump's manly adventures in Venezuela and
Greenland reverberate at home

By Jackson Katz

A dizzying and dramatic series of events over the past few weeks provides additional proof – as if any were needed -- that Trumpian populism is preoccupied with the aggressive reassertion of white male power and cultural centrality.

The connective tissue of Donald Trump’s takeover of Venezuela and his threats to invade Greenland, ICE agent Jonathan Ross’s killing of Renee Good in Minneapolis, and the EEOC’s encouragement of white men to bring claims of discrimination against them, is that all represent increasingly desperate efforts by Trump and MAGA to forcefully put white men back in charge.

It’s an ambitious and largely quixotic agenda. Unfortunately – and tragically – they have access to the tools of coercive state power to help them achieve their goal.

White male backlash has played a central role in our culture and politics since the presidencies of Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan. It was Reagan, after all, who first introduced the backward-looking slogan Make America Great Again. But recent events, on matters both foreign and domestic, have made the backlash -- and the masculinity politics of MAGA -- more visible than ever.

In fact, the gendered nature of right-wing politics has been on display in such a crude and naked fashion over the past couple of months that even mainstream pundits now comment regularly on it. Unfortunately, few seem to grasp the degree to which the dynamics of gender are marbled into the workings of power, from the level of interpersonal relationships all the way through to the behavior of states.

Moreover, few in the commentariat see fit to credit the feminist scholars, journalists, and activists that built the framework for analyzing the deep masculine anxiety and anti-feminist grievance that has helped fuel the rise of right-wing authoritarianism over the past century.

The gendered nature of MAGA populism has been evident from the beginning of the Trump Era. It could be seen in Trump’s reactionary Supreme Court appointments, and the Court’s subsequent rulings against women’s rights and in favor of unfettered presidential powers; the anti-feminist policy agenda of his first and second terms; and his naming of cartoonishly hypermasculine men to senior positions in government – some of whom have histories of credible sexual assault and domestic violence allegations.

It includes the aggressive, blustering, and often misogynous comments that emanate regularly from the president and vice-president, and their mouthpieces and apologists in the right-wing infotainment media complex.

And now it includes the Trump Administration’s increasingly bellicose rhetoric and actions around Venezuela, Greenland, and beyond.

In the future, feminist historians, political scientists, sociologists, and cultural studies scholars, especially those that study the gender politics of right-wing populism in 21st century America, will have a treasure trove of material to sift through and analyze.

For my purposes here, I want to analyze briefly some of the ways in which Trump and his administration’s chest-beating assertions of American military superiority and prowess are connected to their vision of men’s power and prerogatives, and how that, in turn, has implications for interpersonal relationships.

Domination in the public and private spheres

White House Deputy Chief of Staff and top Trump advisor Stephen Miller made a statement earlier this month that not only went viral instantly, but also has the potential to live on for many years to come, when histories are written about this regressive period.

Talking to CNN’s Jake Tapper about Trump’s stated desire to control Greenland, Miller said “We live in a world in which you can talk all you want about international niceties and everything else, but we live in a world, in the real world…that is governed by strength, that is governed by force, that is governed by power. These are the iron laws of the world since the beginning of time.”

Let’s leave aside, for the moment, the fact that Miller’s blunt declaration brushed aside more than a century of progress – however partial – in the establishment of international law and social norms that seek to restrain nakedly self-interested power grabs by the world’s most powerful countries.

Miller’s comments also sound eerily like the rationalizations sometimes used by physically or sexually abusive men. Rachel Morrogh, CEO of the Dublin, Ireland Rape Crisis Centre, wrote that women and children suffer when the age-old credo of “might makes right” increasingly shapes public life.

In a culture that rewards domination, she wrote, one in which politicians, influencers, and billionaires wield their entitlement like a weapon, “one of the first casualties is consent.”

“(Those of us) who do frontline services have been sounding the alarm bell for years. We see the consequences every day: people, especially women and girls, who carry lifelong impacts.”

Manly Adventures in Venezuela and Greenland

Stephen Miller’s unapologetic defense of imperial aggression validated what feminist scholars of international politics have been saying for years -- that gendered assumptions and material realities infuse state action on multiple levels.

We live in a world governed by force…governed by power.

The boldness of Miller’s statement -- whether it was motivated by his personal will to power, or some other obsession -- provided a textbook illustration of the way in which the Trump Administration’s policy agenda endeavors to bolster men’s power at home while projecting traditional masculine “strength” abroad.

This gendered subtext is frequently glossed over – or is entirely absent – in mainstream and even progressive political punditry and analysis.

In my 2016 book Man Enough: Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton, and the Politics of Presidential Masculinity, I wrote about that gendered subtext in international politics:

In brief, the conservative argument against multilateralism is that while international cooperation can be useful and beneficial, it is not in the interest of the US to sign on to agreements that restrict its ability to act in the world, especially when it comes to the use of military force. This is particularly the case in the post-Cold War environment, a ‘unipolar’ moment of US strength and influence.

Political scientists and commentators can debate the merits of conservative arguments against multilateral approaches to global problems, or progressive arguments for their necessity in an increasingly interdependent world. But there is an underlying gendered dimension to the multilateral/unilateral binary, which can be read as a direct proxy for feminine/masculine.

‘Multilateralism’ suggests a collaborative process of nations working together to craft solutions to common or shared problems. Because of its emphasis on partnership and cooperation, rather than competition, it is gendered feminine in the gender binary.

By contrast, ‘unilateralism’ embodies the rugged individualist ideal of a man -- or country -- who goes it alone, even in the face of daunting odds. When conservatives dismiss liberals’ faith in international treaties and conventions, the unstated implication is that multilateralism is a ‘feminine’ response to a problem -- cutthroat competition between nations and nonstate actors -- that requires a hardheaded ‘masculine’ response.

In other words, “real men” go it alone; they’re nothing like those whiny, wimpy, rule-following libs!

“International law is fake and gay”

When it comes to public expressions of anti-feminism, or opposition to LGBTQ rights, Trump’s re-election has emboldened influential voices in right-wing media. Some, like the popular right-wing podcaster and documentary filmmaker Matt Walsh, now talk regularly about the need to roll back societal progress on gender and sexual equality.

In a social media post about Trump’s violent abduction of the Venezuelan president and his wife that generated well over two million views earlier this month, Walsh said the quiet part out loud:

I’m as reflexively non-interventionist as anyone can possibly be, but Venezuela appears to be a resounding victory and one of the most brilliant military operations in American history. As an unapologetic American Chauvinist, I want America to rule over this hemisphere and exert its power for the good of our people. If some shitty little tinpot third world dictator is harming our country or interfering with our national interests, we should do exactly what Trump did to Maduro. Why not? “International law” is fake and gay. The only international law is that big and powerful countries get to do what they want. It has been that way since the dawn of civilization. It will always be that way. And we are the most powerful country on the planet. It’s about time that we start acting like it.

This prompted a question from Bulwark editor and podcast host Jonathan V. Last about the rules governing the behavior of states. From the point of view of MAGA, Last wrote, “why would it only be international law that is ‘fake and gay’?

“Why would it not be true domestically, as well, that the biggest and most powerful people get to do what they want? After all…that has been the historical norm. Why, in America of 2026—or 2028—should people like Matt Walsh, and Stephen Miller, and Donald Trump live by any other principle? If they have the most guns—if they have the most power—why should they be constrained by some fake and gay laws about ‘elections’ or the ‘transfer of power’?

“Or shooting unarmed mothers,” Last said. “I’m not being rhetorical. This is a real question. What is the theological distinction which says that a rules-based order cannot and should not bind strong actors on the international stage, but must bind them domestically?”

And why stop there? If might makes right in politics, why not also in interpersonal relationships? Why not in marriages? Advocates and theorists in the domestic violence field have known for a half-century that this violence is often rooted less in impulsive actions than it is in the abuser’s need for power and control.

Isn’t it fair to assume that in a world governed increasingly by “strength, force, and power,” those values are likely to permeate other realms as well, such as the private sphere of intimate partner relationships?

What Can Be Done?

The Trump Administration is carrying out its radical, anti-democratic agenda on multiple fronts, which means the resistance has to be similarly multi-faceted: on the streets, in court, and in the actions of governing bodies at the local and state level. Plans to mobilize massive turnout for the Democrats in the mid-term elections this fall are already well underway, despite widespread fears that Trump will try to suppress turnout, if not enact more extreme measures.

As anti-Trump efforts mount, it’s important to remember that his political success relies on his ability to intimidate the opposition. He does this in part by threatening and carrying out vengeful acts, such as firing or investigating individuals who defy him, or suing companies.

But his ability to intimidate others also relies on the image he has cultivated as a tough guy. This means that one way to oppose him is to expose, in the words of California Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom, Trump’s “weakness that masquerades as strength.”

A wealth of polling data shows that despite Trump’s bluster, and the increasingly unhinged, aggressive statements by members of his administration, he is actually losing support.

In fact, the Democratic strategist and Substacker Simon Rosenberg points out a pattern: “We’ve seen… since Trump sent troops to Los Angeles in the spring – (that) when he goes strongman, the country recoils, his approval drops, he grows more distant to the electorate, and this failure/rejection/repudiation encourages him to further escalate, as he desperately and manically seeks to feel STRONG, POWERFUL, MIGHTY again.”

This is not the behavior of a strong man, or a strong leader.

So what more can be done? As detailed above, Trump and MAGA have long relied on cartoonish ideas about masculinity in order to generate support for their policies, and to attract foot soldiers for the cause. Along the way, they’ve attempted to purge the government of dissenting voices, which includes people in the military and the broader national security apparatus that are opposed in principle to the Administration’s destructive policies, and who refuse to let themselves be bullied into compliance.

An exemplar of that sort of resistance is the veteran Navy pilot, former astronaut, and Democratic U.S. Senator Mark Kelly, who has publicly fought back against Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s attempts to punish him for appearing in an ad that reminded military personnel about their duty to disobey unlawful orders.

Kelly is a threat to Trump precisely because neither the president nor anyone else in his administration can credibly tarnish what might be the greatest currency in Trumpworld – his masculine street cred.

But not everyone has Mark Kelly’s resume. One way that citizen-activists, organizers, journalists, and influencers at all levels can do their part is to push back, whenever possible, on his and his supporters’ belief that “real men” share their goals and support them.

To the extent that opinion-makers are able to point out the absurdity of the idea that standing with insecure, fragile bullies makes men strong, they can undermine one of Trumpism’s central appeals. In so doing, they can diminish Trump and MAGA’s ability to do even more damage to vulnerable people – and to American democracy.

Please go here for the original article: https://jacksonkatz.substack.com/p/we-live-in-a-world-that-is-governed