Friday, September 19, 2025

FASCIST AMERICA 2025: Endless Censorship and the Eternal Reality of Endless Hatred, Endless Hubris, and Endless Hypocrisy. The Eternal BIG LIE That Is America--An Endless Myth That Contains The Endless Delusions That Sustains Our Dependence On Our Ignorance and Our Hatreds and Our Fears. An Endless Threat To Ourselves And The World

"What the American public always wants is a tragedy with a happy ending"
--William Dean Howells, 1906 

 
Trump Administration Wields Its Full Toolbox to Bring Media to Heel

ABC’s decision to “indefinitely” suspend Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night talk show illuminates the administration’s efficacy so far.

Listen to this article · 7:43 minutes 

Learn more


ABC’s decision to silence the comedian Jimmy Kimmel under pressure from the Trump administration comes after multimillion-dollar legal settlements from several television networks. Credit: Mark Abramson for The New York Times

by Jim Rutenberg
September 19, 2025
New York Times

Leer en espaƱol

President Trump received thunderous applause during his second inaugural address in January when he vowed to “immediately stop all government censorship and bring back free speech to America.”

It was in keeping with the popular free-speech refrain of his long march out of the political wilderness and his first-term broadsides against “cancel culture,” which he had called “the very definition of totalitarianism.” His message had particular resonance with his supporters. After all, major social media companies banished him and others from their services in the days and weeks after the Jan. 6, 2021, riots.

Yet he is now conducting the most punishing government crackdown against major American media institutions in modern times, using what seems like every tool at his disposal to eradicate reporting and commentary with which he disagrees.

ABC’s decision on Wednesday to “indefinitely” suspend Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night talk show, for comments the host made about the assassination of the conservative activist Charlie Kirk, illuminates the administration’s efficacy so far. Far from decrying the silencing of a comedian, Mr. Trump celebrated what he termed a “cancellation” by declaring it “Great News for America” on Truth Social. He later said networks whose hosts are critical of him should lose their right to broadcast.

The decision comes after multimillion-dollar legal settlements from CBS and ABC in lawsuits filed by Mr. Trump that legal experts had viewed as long shots; after CBS News’s agreement to change the way it presents political interviews under administration pressure; and after an agreement by CBS’s newly merged parent company, Paramount Skydance, to appoint an “ombudsman” to hear complaints about its coverage. (The company named for the job a conservative policy veteran.)

“Taken together, the attacks on all of our media institutions is certainly unprecedented in modern American history,’’ said Victor Pickard, a professor of media policy at the University of Pennsylvania. “I can’t think of any parallel.”

The Kimmel suspension was particularly striking, Professor Pickard said, because it came so quickly after the Federal Communications Commission’s chairman, Brendan Carr, a Trump appointee, suggested in unambiguous terms that he could consider punishing the local stations that carried Mr. Kimmel’s shows.


On Wednesday, ABC said it would “indefinitely” suspend Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night talk show for comments about the assassination of the conservative activist Charlie Kirk. Credit:  Christopher Polk/Getty Images

Mr. Carr was among those who had accused Mr. Kimmel of lying about the political beliefs of Mr. Kirk’s assassin, Tyler Robinson. Mr. Kimmel, on his show on Monday, said that Mr. Trump’s supporters were “desperately trying” to paint Mr. Robinson “as anything other than one of them.” (Law enforcement authorities said Mr. Robinson of Utah had recently appeared to shift leftward in his views.)

Speaking with the right-wing podcaster Benny Johnson, Mr. Carr said the F.C.C. was going to need to look into “remedies,’’ pointedly saying that the “licensed broadcasters” who carry ABC’s programming needed to push back against the parent network.

In putting the onus on ABC’s stations, Mr. Carr appeared to be borrowing a page from the playbook of the Nixon administration. It had pioneered the practice of floating potential action against station licenses to pressure the major networks to toe the administration’s line.


Brendan Carr, the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, was among those who had accused Mr. Kimmel of lying about the political beliefs of Mr. Kirk’s assassin, Tyler Robinson. Credit: Tierney L. Cross for The New York Times

The networks rely on independent stations and station groups to carry their programs nationally.

Mr. Nixon saw the managers of those stations, particularly in Republican-led areas, as potential allies against their affiliated networks in New York. He was consumed by the Watergate scandal before the plan bore much fruit, but he was onto something.

Some 30 years later, it was pressure from affiliates that helped force the last major cancellation of a late-night show in the wake of a political uproar. In 2002, ABC ended Bill Maher’s show, “Politically Incorrect,” after criticism from the White House of comments he had made related to the Sept. 11 attacks.

The difference this time was that Mr. Carr’s comments explicitly referred to the fact that stations are licensed by the government. And they were swiftly followed by announcements by a major station group with ABC affiliates, Nexstar, that it would independently pre-empt Mr. Kimmel’s show. ABC followed with an announcement that it would do so nationally, “indefinitely,” though it did not say why. As it happens, Nexstar is pursuing a station merger that will require F.C.C. approval. (Sinclair, another major owner of local stations, then said it would pre-empt Mr. Kimmel’s show, as well.)

Speaking on Sean Hannity’s Fox News show after the cancellation, Mr. Carr sharpened his focus on station licenses, noting that broadcast license holders are expected to operate in the “public interest, convenience and necessity.”

Conservative orthodoxy had long disfavored such government content dictates, which helped bring an end to the related Fairness Doctrine — which, among other things, required broadcasters to present all sides of disputed issues — in the Reagan era, and succeeded in bringing a more laissez-faire sensibility to the F.C.C.

Mr. Carr noted that his agency had “walked away from enforcing that public interest obligation,” but told Mr. Hannity that was now changing. “We at the F.C.C. are going to enforce the public interest obligation,” he said. “If there’s broadcasters out there that don’t like it, they can turn their license in.”

Mr. Carr had been an ardent critic of the Biden administration when it sought to pressure social media platforms over the circulation of health and election misinformation.

“We have been living through a surge in censorship,’’ he said in a speech in the spring of 2024. “Any time you have an increase in government control, you necessarily have a decrease in free speech because free speech is the counterweight; free speech is the check on government control.”

Then again, Mr. Trump made the same shift. Even now, he and his administration inveigh against any hint of so-called content moderation on social media — which tended to, for instance, affect him and his supporters when they falsely said that the 2020 election was stolen — as they pursue efforts to punish journalists, comedians and commentators who displease Mr. Trump.


A MAGA hat left at a makeshift memorial at Utah Valley University after the recent killing of Charlie Kirk on campus. Credit: Loren Elliott for The New York Times

Even before the assassination of Mr. Kirk, Mr. Trump was gaining steam in his campaign against traditional media companies. Now, it has picked up even more.

In a suit Mr. Trump filed against The New York Times this week, the president pointed to the settlements from ABC and CBS as vindication that his suits were “highly meritorious.”

Vice President JD Vance said those who celebrated Mr. Kirk’s death might be protected on free-speech grounds, but they should not be protected from being fired or, in the case of college professors, losing federal funding. Attorney General Pam Bondi told a podcaster: “We will absolutely target you, go after you, if you are targeting anyone with hate speech.”

She amended her comments later to say she would not prosecute speech but incitements to violence.

Mr. Trump wasn’t as nuanced on Tuesday when Jonathan Karl, a news correspondent from Mr. Kimmel’s network, pressed him on Ms. Bondi’s comments and the implications for free speech.

“She’ll probably go after people like you, because you treat me so unfairly,” Mr. Trump said. “You have a lot of hate in your heart. Maybe they will come after ABC.”

On Thursday, Mr. Trump called Mr. Kimmel a “whack job” and said he believed regulators should revoke broadcast licenses over late-night hosts who are critical of him.

“It will be up to Brendan Carr,” he said.

Jim Rutenberg is a writer at large for The Times and The New York Times Magazine and writes most often about media and politics.

A version of this article appears in print on Sept. 19, 2025, Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: Trump Hits the Media With Everything He Has. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper


See more on: Donald Trump, Federal Communications Commission, U.S. Politics, Jimmy Kimmel, The New York Times


News and Analysis About the Media

ABC: The network pulled Jimmy Kimmel’s show “indefinitely” after the F.C.C. chair suggested he would take action against it for comments the host made about the politics of the man accused of killing Charlie Kirk.


The New York Times: President Trump sued the news organization, claiming The Times defamed him and sought to undermine his campaign in the 2024 election.


Univision: Jorge Ramos, the longtime anchor for Univision, and his daughter are making a podcast trying to tap into the growing number of Hispanics who consume media in English.

The Atlantic: The magazine is said to have quietly agreed to pay more than $1 million to settle a defamation lawsuit by the writer Ruth Shalit Barrett after it retracted her article and published an editor’s note.

Another Acquisition?: David Ellison, the media mogul who took over Paramount just last month, has already set his sights on another blockbuster deal: He wants to buy Warner Bros. Discovery.
 


“What’s Past is Prologue…”

July 7, 2020
Harper’s Magazine and New York Times


"Not everything that is faced can be changed. But nothing can be changed until it is faced."
--James Baldwin

All,

FOR THE RECORD:

I agree 100% with Greg Tate and Rich Blint in every single thing they say in their posts below RE: the egregiously self serving, hopelessly entitled, and blatant intellectual, political, and ethical DISHONESTY of the “Artists and Writers Open Letter” that appeared in the New York Times today 

@https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/07/arts/harpers-letter.html

Thank you Mr. Tate and Mr. Blint…and Pass the Word…

Kofi

https://www.facebook.com/Congoblondie

Greg Tate:

"The Problem with The Letter on creative freedom is that it doesn't address the ass-saving and fauxpologetic guilt reflexes of powerful institutions who cancel their own employees because they want to dissociate their well-buffed and well endowed public images (and non-transparent profiteering ) from charges of racism and various other 'phobias. THEY are the real perpetuators of Cancel Culture not the Tweeting chillun. How Sway? Its utter BS to float this pretense that suddenly, summer 2020, some ragtag groups of young artists or activists complainants now got decision making juice in the most powerful boardrooms in corporate America or in the cabals of the one-percent funded American culture industry. Once again such entities don't mind BEING white supremacists behind closed doors (and in all the structurally hidden ways they profit from white skin privilege ) they just don't want to carry The Burden of LOOKING like systemic, anti-democratic violators of human rights. Now more than ever the manic, anxious intent on high seems 'Please somebody help us get this horrible stain of greed-gorged whiteness off our billion dollar enterprise' through token firings of embarrassing employees or decades overdue erasures of past egregious branding and content without any organizational interrogation of long standing exploitative and anti-inclusive practices or discussion of REAL Reparations. GTFOHWTCABS.


Greg Tate for those who don't know what the hell we going on bout now: @ https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/07/arts/harpers-letter.html


Artists and Writers Warn of an ‘Intolerant Climate.’ Reaction Is Swift.

nytimes.com


Rich Blint:

The letter is profoundly ahistorical, self interested, and tone deaf. Establishment liberals, black and white, are so terrified of any real challenge to the lucrative status quo that they will evacuate centuries of history and then want to talk about open debate as they quote Baldwin. And all of this abstraction happens while bodies keep piling up around us. Shameful!

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/07/arts/harpers-letter.html

Artists and Writers Warn of an ‘Intolerant Climate.’ Reaction Is Swift.

An open letter published by Harper’s, signed by luminaries including Margaret Atwood and Wynton Marsalis, argued for openness to “opposing views.” The debate began immediately.

PHOTO: Clockwise from top left: Bill T. Jones, Gloria Steinem, Reginald Dwayne Betts, Salman Rushdie, Wynton Marsalis and Margaret Atwood. Credit:  Clockwise from top left: Brad Ogbonna for The New York Times; Celeste Sloman for The New York Times; Mamadi Doumbouya; Joel Saget/Agence France-Presse -- Getty Images; Maridelis Morales Rosado for The New York Times; Arden Wray for The New York Times

Israel Says It Will Defund Film Awards After Palestinian Win A drama about a Palestinian boy who sneaks into Israel won the top prize at Israel’s version of the Oscars. The country’s culture minister called the ceremony “shameful.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/17/movies/israel-palestine-film-oscars.html

Israel Says It Will Defund Film Awards After Palestinian Win

A drama about a Palestinian boy who sneaks into Israel won the top prize at Israel’s version of the Oscars. The country’s culture minister called the ceremony “shameful.”
 
Listen to this article · 3:53 minutes 

Learn more

 
“The Sea,” starring Muhammad Gazawi as a Palestinian boy, will automatically be Israel’s submission for the Oscar for best international feature, after winning the top prize at the Ophir Awards on Tuesday. Credit: Majdal Films, via Israel Film Fund

by Derrick Bryson Taylor
September 17, 2025
New York Times


Israel’s minister of culture announced plans to cancel the funding for the country’s top film award ceremony after a 90-minute drama about a Palestinian boy won best feature on Tuesday night.

Miki Zohar, Israel’s minister of culture and sports, writing in Hebrew on social media on Wednesday, said Israeli taxpayers would no longer pay for a “shameful ceremony that spits on heroic I.D.F. soldiers,” referring to Israel’s army. The ceremony, known as the Ophir Awards, is Israel’s version of the Oscars.

The winning film, “The Sea,” written and directed by Shai Carmeli-Pollak, tells the story of a 12-year-old Palestinian boy in the West Bank who longs to visit the sea for the first time. After he sneaks into Israel and disappears, his father begins a desperate search for him. The film presents a harsh portrayal of Israeli soldiers.

“This great absurdity that the citizens of Israel are still paying out of their own pockets for the shameful ceremony of the Ophir Awards, which represents less than one percent of the Israeli people — is over,” Zohar said.

As the winner of the best feature award, “The Sea” automatically becomes Israel’s submission for the Oscar for best international feature. Nominations for that award will be announced in January.

Muhammad Gazawi, who won the best actor Ophir for his portrayal of the Palestinian boy, said in his acceptance speech that all children should be able to “live and dream without wars.”

Khalifa Natour, who plays his father, won best supporting actor but did not attend the ceremony.

“Following the army’s entry into Gaza and the genocide that frightens me greatly, I cannot find words to describe the magnitude of the horror, and everything else becomes secondary to me,” Natour said in a statement, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

According to Variety, the chairman of the Israeli Film and Television Academy, Assaf Amir, said in a statement that the film’s win was a “resounding and decisive answer” to the attacks by ministers in Israel’s government on Israeli cinema.

“I am proud that an Arabic-language film, born out of collaboration between Jewish and Palestinian Israelis, has been chosen to represent Israel in the Oscar competition,” he said.

Representatives for Israel’s culture ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Wednesday.


The Ophir Awards were held hours after a United Nations commission said that Israel’s actions in Gaza constituted genocide under the 1948 Genocide Convention.

It has been nearly two years since Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing 1,200 people. More than 60,000 Palestinians have been killed in the war, according to Gaza health officials, whose tally does not distinguish between combatants and civilians.

Frustrations among artists over Israel’s conduct in Gaza have steadily intensified. Last week, more than 4,000 actors and directors, including Olivia Colman, Mark Ruffalo and others, joined a boycott of Israeli film institutions brought by Film Workers for Palestine, a group that campaigns for the end of the humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip.

In the days that followed, Paramount became the first major Hollywood studio to condemn the boycott, saying in a statement that “silencing individual creative artists based on their nationality does not promote better understanding or advance the cause of peace.” (Film Workers for Palestine has argued that its boycott targets film institutions and companies, not individual artists.)

Several countries have also promised to boycott next year’s Eurovision Song Contest if Israel participates.
 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Derrick Bryson Taylor is a Times reporter covering breaking news in culture and the arts.
See more on: The Israel-Hamas War

More on the Middle East Crisis:

A Netanyahu Without Restraint: With the assault on Gaza City, Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, has piled defiance on defiance, as any check from the Trump administration falls away. Some of Israel’s oldest allies criticized the operation and warned of a deepening humanitarian crisis.

Diplomatic Resolution to War?: A negotiated settlement to end the fighting remains distant, in part because of the maximalist positions of Netanyahu and of Hamas.

U.N. Reports Genocide: A United Nations commission investigating the war said that Israel was committing genocide against Palestinians. In earlier reports, the commission stopped short of calling it genocide.

Effects of Malnutrition: Young Palestinians, particularly those under age 5, are especially vulnerable in the Gaza Strip, where Israel has imposed restrictions on the entry of aid throughout the war, at times shutting crossings entirely. This is what happens to a malnourished body.

Israeli Film Boycott: Paramount, under its new owner, David Ellison, has become the first major Hollywood studio to condemn a boycott of Israeli film institutions that more than 4,000 actors and directors now support.

Hollywood Actors and Directors Pledge to Boycott Israeli Film Institutions

UPDATE  (September 18, 2025):

 
"Israeli Film Boycott: Paramount, under its new owner, David Ellison, has become the first major Hollywood studio to condemn a boycott of Israeli film institutions that more than 4,000 actors and directors now support."

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/08/movies/hollywood-israel-boycott.html

Hollywood Actors and Directors Pledge to Boycott Israeli Film Institutions 

 

In an open letter, Javier Bardem, Olivia Colman and other stars pledged not to work with Israeli film companies that, in their view, “are implicated in genocide.”

 
Listen to this article · 3:36 minutes 

Learn more


The promise by many Hollywood figures not to work with certain Israeli film companies comes after protests against Israel’s military campaign in Gaza at the Venice Film Festival last week. Credit: Andreas Rentz/Getty Images

by Derrick Bryson Taylor
September 8, 2025
New York Times


More than 1,000 filmmakers, actors and industry professionals, including prominent Hollywood figures like Olivia Colman, Ava DuVernay and Tilda Swinton, have signed a pledge not to work with certain Israeli film institutions.

The pledge was made in an open letter published on Monday by Film Workers for Palestine, a group that campaigns for the end of the humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip.

“In this urgent moment of crisis, where many of our governments are enabling the carnage in Gaza, we must do everything we can to address complicity in that unrelenting horror,” the letter read.

The signatories, which also include the director Adam McKay, the actor Mark Ruffalo and the actress Ayo Edebiri, pledged not to screen films, appear at or otherwise work with Israeli cinemas, broadcasters and production companies that, in their view, “are implicated in genocide and apartheid against the Palestinian people

The group said it had been inspired by Filmmakers United Against Apartheid, a movement that in the 1980s worked to end apartheid in South Africa.

Last month, a group of academic experts known as the International Association of Genocide Scholars declared that Israel’s actions in Gaza had met the legal definition of genocide. According to Gaza health officials, more than 60,000 Palestinians have been killed in the war, which began when Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing 1,200 people. Experts in food security have found famine in parts of the Gaza Strip, an assertion rejected by Israel.

In a statement last week, a spokesman for the Israeli Foreign Ministry called the conclusion by the International Association of Genocide Scholars “an embarrassment to the legal profession and to any academic standard,” and said it was “entirely based on Hamas’s campaign of lies and the laundering of those lies by others.”

Film Workers for Palestine said its pledge did not prohibit working with Israeli individuals. “The call is for film workers to refuse to work with Israeli institutions that are complicit in Israel’s human rights abuses against the Palestinian people,” it said on its website. “This refusal takes aim at institutional complicity, not identity.”

The organization said that while a few Israeli film entities “are not complicit,” a vast majority of the country’s “film production and distribution companies, sales agents, cinemas and other film institutions have never endorsed the full, internationally recognized rights of the Palestinian people.”

The group added that Israel’s major film festivals, including the Jerusalem Film Festival, continue to partner with the Israeli government.

Other signatories of the pledge include the actress Cynthia Nixon and Yorgos Lanthimos, the director of the upcoming film “Bugonia.” Javier Bardem, Susan Sarandon and Indya Moore partnered with Film Workers for Palestine on Instagram to share a post explaining the pledge.

The pledge comes after a recent pro-Palestinian demonstration at the 82nd Venice International Film Festival drew thousands of participants.

That protest gained momentum after Venice4Palestine, a group of Italian and international film professionals, released an open letter demanding that the festival condemn the destruction and suffering caused by Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

 
Derrick Bryson Taylor is a Times reporter covering breaking news in culture and the arts.

A version of this article appears in print on Sept. 10, 2025, Section C, Page 5 of the New York edition with the headline: Cinema Figures to Boycott Some Israeli Film Institutions. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

See more on: The Israel-Hamas War

More on the Middle East Crisis


FASCIST AMERICA 2025: The Rampant Criminality, Mendacity, and Gangster Level Corruption of the Openly Fascist Trump Regime and the Vicious Ongoing WAR on the Human, Constitutional, and Civil Rights of African American Citizens In General and Black Women In Particular

Holding Trump Accountable: Letitia James Speaks Out | The Joy Reid Show



The Joy Reid Show

September 15, 2025

VIDEO: 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sD9Af2Fd458

 
The Joy Reid Show

In this episode of the Joy Reid Show, Attorney General Letitia James discusses her ongoing investigation into the Trump Organization, the legal challenges faced, and the broader implications of these actions on civil rights, particularly for Black women. She addresses the patterns of targeting individuals who challenge Trump, the impact of immigration policies, and the economic consequences of tariffs. James emphasizes the importance of standing up for the rights of New Yorkers and the need for accountability in leadership.


Chapters:
 
00:00 Introduction and Context of the Investigation
01:54 Letitia James on the Trump Organization Investigation
07:07 Legal Proceedings and Outcomes
12:09 Patterns of Targeting Black Women in Legal Actions
18:06 The Impact of Immigration Policies
20:42 Response to Trump's Tariffs and Economic Policies
34:01 Defending Rights and Future Aspirations


https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/18/us/politics/trump-supreme-court-fed.html

Trump Asks Supreme Court to Allow Removal of Fed Governor

President Trump had pressed to fire Lisa Cook before the central bank’s meeting, at which the Fed voted to cut interest rates.

Listen to this article · 6:15 minutes


Learn more

 
A U.S. District Court judge had temporarily blocked President Trump from ousting Lisa Cook from the Fed.Credit: Anna Rose Layden/Bloomberg

by Ann E. Marimow

Ann E. Marimow covers the Supreme Court.
September 18, 2025
New York Times

The Trump administration on Thursday asked the Supreme Court to immediately allow the president to remove Lisa Cook as a Federal Reserve governor, setting up a key test of presidential power with potentially huge economic consequences.


President Trump has moved aggressively to fire leaders of independent agencies as he seeks to expand executive power and seize control of the federal bureaucracy. His administration has targeted the central bank for months, pressing policymakers to lower interest rates.

The court’s conservative majority has repeatedly allowed Mr. Trump to at least provisionally fire leaders of other agencies without stating a reason, despite statutes passed by Congress intended to ensure political independence. The justices, however, have suggested that the Fed may be uniquely insulated from presidential meddling under the law.

In any case, with the Fed, Mr. Trump said there was “sufficient cause” to fire Ms. Cook.

Justice Department lawyers have argued that the president has the power to fire Ms. Cook because Mr. Trump has alleged that she engaged in mortgage fraud in loan documents she signed before she joined the Fed in 2022. Ms. Cook has not been charged with a crime.

The emergency request to the Supreme Court came three days after an appeals court refused to allow the president to remove Ms. Cook, who was appointed by President Joseph R. Biden Jr., while her lawsuit challenging her firing was pending. As a result, Ms. Cook was present on Wednesday when the Federal Reserve voted to cut interest rates for the first time since December.

Solicitor General D. John Sauer told the justices on Thursday that the reinstatement of Ms. Cook by the lower courts was “yet another case of improper judicial interference with the president’s removal authority — here, interference with the president’s authority to remove members of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors for cause.”

In response, Ms. Cook’s lawyers urged the justices to resist the president’s request, which they said would be an “extraordinary step.”

“Temporarily removing her from her post would threaten our nation’s economic stability and raise questions about the Federal Reserve’s continued independence — risking shock waves in the financial markets that could not easily be undone,” her legal team said in a new filing.

A U.S. District Court judge in Washington on Sept. 9 had temporarily blocked Mr. Trump from ousting Ms. Cook. The judge, Jia Cobb, said Ms. Cook could not be removed for conduct that occurred before she became a Fed governor, nor for claims that did not involve her professional conduct.

The government then filed an emergency request with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. A divided three-judge panel refused to immediately allow Ms. Cook’s removal, prompting the appeal to the Supreme Court.

In a 2-to-1 decision, the appeals court said tenure protections for the Fed were devised to “assure members of the Board of Governors — and national and global markets — that they do not serve at will and thus enjoy a measure of policy independence from the president,” according to a statement written by Judge Bradley N. Garcia and joined by Judge J. Michelle Childs, both nominees of Mr. Biden.

Judge Gregory G. Katsas dissented, citing the Federal Reserve Act, first enacted in 1913, which states that each member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors will hold office for 14 years, unless “removed for cause by the president.”


“The president plainly invoked a cause relating to Cook’s conduct, ability, fitness or competence,” wrote Judge Katsas, who was nominated by Mr. Trump. “The allegations against Cook could constitute mortgage fraud if she acted knowingly, and that is a felony offense.”

The administration’s filing on Thursday asked Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. to immediately clear the way for Ms. Cook’s removal while litigation continued at the D.C. Circuit. Mr. Trump’s lawyers said the lower-court rulings “invite judicial micromanagement” of his executive powers “even where, as here, courts have no authority to review the substance of the president’s ultimate decision.” The government’s lawyers also pushed back on the appeals court’s finding that Ms. Cook had not had a fair or due process to respond to the allegations against her.

“Due process is a flexible concept; whatever process is due to principal officers was provided here,” Mr. Sauer wrote.

Ms. Cook’s lawyers had warned in court filings that a decision preventing her from attending this week’s meeting and casting a vote on interest rates would have roiled the financial markets and undermined the independence of the Fed.

The Supreme Court has recently signaled in other cases that the Fed is distinct from other independent agencies and may deserve special consideration in part because of its central role in the American economy.

In a pair of cases decided on its emergency docket in May, the Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to fire leaders of the National Labor Relations Board and the Merit Systems Protection Board without stating a reason.

But the court’s order distinguished the Fed, saying it was a “uniquely structured, quasi-private entity that follows in the distinct historical tradition of the First and Second Banks of the United States.”

The government’s lawyers acknowledged in their filing on Thursday that the Fed “plays a uniquely important role in the American economy.” But they told the justices that the Fed’s importance only “heightens the government’s and the public’s interest in ensuring that an ethically compromised member does not continue wielding its vast powers.”

Ms. Cook’s lawyers, led by Abbe Lowell, noted in their filing that Mr. Trump and his administration had waited until after this week’s Fed meeting to appeal to the Supreme Court.

They wrote that the president may have delayed with the understanding of “the chaos that removing Governor Cook” before the meeting “would create in the financial markets.” But then, the lawyers wrote, “he cannot now establish any need for immediate relief that would disrupt the status quo while this court considers his stay application.”

Abbie VanSickle contributed reporting.

A version of this article appears in print on Sept. 19, 2025, Section B, Page 3 of the New York edition with the headline: Trump Asks Supreme Court to Immediately Allow Removal of a Fed Governor.Order Reprints | Today’s Paper

See more on: Donald Trump, U.S. Supreme Court, Federal Reserve (The Fed), U.S. Politics

https://truthout.org/articles/gop-censure-of-ilhan-omar-fails-by-one-vote-after-democrats-maneuver-against-it/

News
Politics & Elections

GOP Censure of Ilhan Omar Fails by One Vote After Democrats Maneuver Against It

The resolution was introduced by Rep. Nancy Mace, who has repeatedly attacked Omar for her faith and Somalian origin.

by Sharon Zhang
September 18, 2025

Truthout
 
Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minnesota) speaks during a press conference at City Hall following a mass shooting at Annunciation Catholic School on August 28, 2025 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Stephen Maturen / Getty Images

An extremist House Republican’s attempt to censure Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minnesota) failed by just one vote on Wednesday, after Democrats maneuvered against it.

A vote to table the censure resolution succeeded 214 to 213, with all Democrats and four Republicans voting to kill the measure. The resolution, introduced by Rep. Nancy Mace (R-South Carolina), would have removed Omar from her assignments on the Education and Workforce Committee and the Budget Committee.

Mace claimed her censure effort was about Omar’s criticism of Charlie Kirk. In an interview last week, Omar had offered sympathy to Kirk’s family, while criticizing many of Kirk’s far right beliefs and condemning Republicans for their attacks on the left following the shooting.

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/16/us/fani-willis-georgia-trump.html

Fani Willis Loses Bid to Continue Prosecuting Georgia Trump Case

The 4-3 ruling means that the criminal case against President Trump, related to his efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss, will not move forward anytime soon, if ever
.

Listen to this article · 7:40 minutes

Learn more

 
The Georgia Supreme Court disqualified Fani T. Willis, the Fulton County district attorney, from prosecuting President Trump in the election interference case. Credit: Brynn Anderson/Associated Press

by Richard Fausset and Danny Hakim

Richard Fausset reported from Atlanta
September 16, 2025
New York Times


The Georgia Supreme Court on Tuesday dealt another blow to the moribund election interference case against President Trump, declining to intervene after an appeals court ruling last year disqualified Fani T. Willis, the Fulton County district attorney, from prosecuting the case.

The 4-3 ruling means that the criminal case — once considered one of the most serious legal threats to Mr. Trump after he sought to overturn his 2020 election loss — will not move forward anytime soon, if ever. The Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council of Georgia, a state entity, will now decide whether to reassign the case, and to whom.

The executive director of the council, Pete Skandalakis, served for years as a Republican district attorney. A new prosecutor could decide to press on with the case — now against a sitting president — drop it or bring a modified version. If charges remain against Mr. Trump, he would most likely not face trial until after his term ends in 2029. But if a new prosecutor wanted to proceed with the case against some or all of the 14 other defendants, they could be tried sooner.

Mr. Skandalakis ended up personally handling a piece of the investigation after Ms. Willis was disqualified from developing a case against Georgia’s lieutenant governor, Burt Jones, who acted as a fake elector for Mr. Trump in 2020. Ms. Willis was disqualified from weighing charges against Mr. Jones after headlining a fund-raiser for one of his political rivals. Mr. Skandalakis ultimately declined to bring any charges against Mr. Jones.

Mr. Trump’s co-defendants in the case include Mark Meadows, the former White House chief of staff; Rudy Giuliani, the president’s onetime personal lawyer; and David Shafer, the former head of the Republican Party in Georgia.

The original multicount indictment, which was handed up in August 2023, accused Mr. Trump and a number of his allies of organizing a criminal racketeering enterprise to reverse the election results in Georgia, which Mr. Trump narrowly lost in 2020. Part of the basis for the indictment was a phone call Mr. Trump made in January 2021 to Brad Raffensperger, Georgia’s Republican secretary of state, asking Mr. Raffensperger to “find” enough votes to overturn the election results.

The majority opinion released Tuesday, written by Justice Andrew A. Pinson, a Republican appointee, said that while “the public may well be interested in the case underlying this petition,” the court’s focus was on the narrow question of whether it should intervene in the disqualification of a local district attorney because of an “appearance of impropriety” —which, in this case, stemmed from the fact that Ms. Willis had engaged in a romantic affair with the lawyer she had hired to manage the prosecution.

The justices decided that the matter did “not raise the kind of legal question that warrants further review.”

A trial judge had allowed Ms. Willis to keep the case despite revelations about her romantic relationship. The appeals court reversed the judge’s decision.

Tuesday’s ruling included a dissenting opinion by Justice Carla Wong McMillian, another Republican appointee, who wrote that the legal question of “whether an attorney can be disqualified based on the appearance of impropriety alone” affects “every single active lawyer in the State of Georgia.” She added that prior court rulings were in conflict on the matter and needed to be resolved.

Trump Administration: Live Updates

Updated
September 18, 2025


Trump pressures broadcasters over critical coverage, escalating an attack on speech.

Here’s how broadcasters can keep or lose their licenses.

11 elected officials are arrested while trying to access N.Y.C. ICE facility.

The ruling is the latest in a series of blows to Ms. Willis, a Democrat who rocketed to national prominence by taking the remarkable step of indicting a former president in a state criminal court. Months after the indictment, defense lawyers brought to light her romantic relationship with her fellow prosecutor, Nathan Wade, arguing that it constituted a conflict of interest.

Defense attorneys accused Ms. Willis of “self-dealing” because she took a number of vacations with Mr. Wade after hiring him, while using public funds to pay him more than $650,000 for his work on the case.

“While I disagree with the decision of the Georgia Court of Appeals and the Georgia Supreme Court’s divided decision not to review it, I respect the legal process and the courts,” Ms. Willis said in an emailed statement on Tuesday. “Accordingly, my office will make the case file and evidence available to the Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council for use in the ongoing litigation. I hope that whoever is assigned to handle the case will have the courage to do what the evidence and the law demand.”

Mr. Trump sounded a note of vindication in a social media post on Tuesday that also attacked Ms. Willis and Mr. Wade. He wrote of their “torrid ‘love’ affair,” and accused them of lying under oath in court hearings.

He also accused them of unjustly prosecuting him, and, as he has done before, leveled the same accusation against Jack Smith, the former special counsel who oversaw two federal inquiries into and indictments of Mr. Trump. Those investigations focused on whether Mr. Trump mishandled classified documents after he left office, as well as his efforts to overturn the 2020 election results. Both were dropped after Mr. Trump won the 2024 election. “The Prosecutorial Weaponization of DONALD J. TRUMP had no limits,” Mr. Trump wrote. “They went after their Political Opponent at levels never seen before, and LOST. They are now CRIMINALS who will hopefully pay serious consequences for their illegal actions.”

Mr. Smith is currently the subject of an investigation by the Office of Special Counsel. Senator Tom Cotton, Republican of Arkansas, persuaded the office to begin the inquiry, and has claimed that Mr. Smith’s cases may have been efforts to sway the 2024 election. Mr. Smith’s lawyers have called the ethics complaint “imaginary and unfounded.”

The Justice Department is also investigating Letitia James, the New York attorney general, who won a civil fraud case against Mr. Trump last year only to see an appellate court later throw out a half-billion-dollar judgment.

Some observers wonder whether Ms. Willis will eventually be targeted as well.

Steve Sadow, the lead counsel for Mr. Trump in the case, said that the Georgia Supreme Court had ruled correctly, echoing the president’s position that he had been unjustly targeted in an act of politically motivated “lawfare.”

“Willis’ misconduct during the investigation and prosecution of President Trump was egregious and she deserved nothing less than disqualification,” Mr. Sadow said in a statement. “This proper decision should bring an end to the wrongful political, lawfare persecutions of the President.”

In a statement on Tuesday, Mr. Skandalakis, the lawyer tasked with reassigning the case, said that with the disqualification of Ms. Willis and her office, the search for a new prosecutor “will begin today.”

Five states brought charges related to the Trump campaign’s handling of the 2020 election, but the Georgia ruling on Tuesday was only the latest positive news for the president’s side. A week ago, a Michigan judge threw out criminal cases against 15 people who acted as fake 2020 Trump electors in that state, saying prosecutors there had not established that there had been any intent to commit fraud.

In May, a judge ordered Arizona prosecutors to send an electors case in that state back to a grand jury; the prosecutors have appealed that decision. A case in Nevada has been slowed by challenges over its venue, while a fifth elections case, against three Trump campaign aides and advisers, is pending in Wisconsin.

ABOUT THE AUTHORS:

Richard Fausset, a Times reporter based in Atlanta, writes about the American South, focusing on politics, culture, race, poverty and criminal justice.

Danny Hakim is a reporter on the Investigations team at The Times, focused primarily on politics.


A version of this article appears in print on Sept. 17, 2025, Section A, Page 17 of the New York edition with the headline: District Attorney Loses Bid to Continue Prosecuting Case Against Trump in Georgia .


Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

See more on: U.S. Politics, Fani Willis, Donald Trump


The Latest on the Trump Administration:

FASCIST AMERICA 2025: The Inspiring, Brilliant, Intellectually Honest, and As Always Utterly FEARLESS Ta-Nehisi Coates is one of the most important and prescient writers of the 21st Century in the world and so it is no surprise that he would once again tell us all something absolutely crucial and necessary about who and what we are in light of the delusional mass psychosis menacing us all in the latest historical iteration of Fascism in both the United States and the rest of the world today

https://www.vanityfair.com/news/story/charlie-kirk-ezra-klein-tanehisi-coates


COMMENTARY


Charlie Kirk, Redeemed: A Political Class Finds Its Lost Cause

By ignoring the rhetoric and actions of the Turning Point USA founder, pundits and politicians are sanitizing his legacy.

by Ta-Nehisi Coates
September 16, 2025
Vanity Fair
Charlie Kirk on the third day of the Republican National Convention in downtown Milwaukee July 17 2024.
Charlie Kirk on the third day of the Republican National Convention in downtown Milwaukee, July 17, 2024.By Joel Angel Juarez/The Washington Post/Getty Images.
 
Before he was killed last week, Charlie Kirk left a helpful compendium of words—ones that would greatly aid those who sought to understand his legacy and import. It is somewhat difficult to match these words with the manner in which Kirk is presently being memorialized in mainstream discourse. New York Times columnist Ezra Klein dubbed Kirk “one of the era’s most effective practitioners of persuasion” and a man who “was practicing politics in exactly the right way.” California governor Gavin Newsom hailed Kirk’s “passion and commitment to debate,” advising us to continue Kirk’s work by engaging “with each other, across ideology, through spirited discourse.” Atlantic writer Sally Jenkins saluted Kirk, claiming he “argued with civility” and asserting that his death was “a significant loss for those who believe engagement can help bridge disagreements.”

The mentions of “debate” and “engagement” are references to Kirk’s campus tours, during which he visited various colleges to take on whoever come what may. That this aspect of Kirk’s work would be so attractive to writers and politicians is understandable. There is, after all, a pervasive worry, among the political class, that college students, ensconced in their own bubbles, could use a bit of shock therapy from a man unconcerned with preferred pronouns, trigger warnings, and the humanity of Palestinians. But it also shows how the political class’s obsession with universities blinds it to everything else. And the everything-else of Kirk’s politics amounted to little more than a loathing of those whose mere existence provoked his ire. 
Protestors clash during an anti and proimmigration rally in Toronto Canada September 13 2025. 
Protestors clash during an anti and pro-immigration rally in Toronto, Canada, September 13, 2025.Arindam Shivaani/NurPhoto/Getty Images.

It is not just, for instance, that Kirk held disagreeable views—that he was pro-life, that he believed in public executions, or that he rejected the separation of church and state. It’s that Kirk reveled in open bigotry. Indeed, claims of Kirk’s “civility” are tough to square with his penchant for demeaning members of the LGBTQ+ community as “freaks” and referring to trans people with the slur “tranny.” Faced with the prospect of a Kamala Harris presidency, Kirk told his audience that the threat had to be averted because Harris wanted to “kidnap your child via the trans agenda.” Garden-variety transphobia is sadly unremarkable. But Kirk was a master of folding seemingly discordant bigotries into each other, as when he defined “the American way of life” as marriage, home ownership, and child-rearing free of “the lesbian, gay, transgender garbage in their school,” adding that he did not want kids to “have to hear the Muslim call to prayer five times a day.” The American way of life was “Christendom,” Kirk claimed, and Islam—“the sword the left is using to slit the throat of America”—was antithetical to that. Large “dedicated” Islamic areas were “a threat to America,” Kirk asserted, and New York mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani was a “Mohammedan,” with Kirk supposing that anyone trying to see “Mohammedism take over the West” would love to have New York—a “prior Anglo center”—“under Mohammedan rule.”

Kirk habitually railed against “Black crime,” claiming that “prowling Blacks go around for fun to go target white people.” He repeated the rape accusations against Yusef Salaam, a member of the exonerated Central Park Five who is now a New York City councilman, calling him a “disgusting pig” who had gotten away with “gang rape.” Whatever distaste Kirk held for Blacks was multiplied when he turned to those from Haiti. Haiti was, by Kirk’s lights, a country “infested with demonic voodoo,” whose migrants were “raping your women and hunting you down at night.” These Haitians, as well as undocumented immigrants from other countries, were “having a field day,” per Kirk, and “coming for your daughter next.” The only hope was Donald Trump, who had to prevail, lest Haitians “become your masters.”

The point of this so-called mastery was as familiar as it was conspiratorial—“great replacement.” There was an “anti-white agenda,” Kirk howled. One that sought to “make the country more like the Third World.” The southern border was “the dumping ground of the planet,” he claimed, and a magnet for “the rapists, the thugs, the murderers, fighting-age males.” “They’re coming from across the world, from China, from Russia, from Middle Eastern countries,” he said, “and they’re coming in and they’re coming in and they’re coming in and they’re coming in…”

You can probably imagine where this line of thinking eventually went.

“Jewish donors,” Kirk claimed, were “the number one funding mechanism of radical open-border, neoliberal, quasi-Marxist policies, cultural institutions, and nonprofits.” Indeed, “the philosophical foundation of anti-whiteness has been largely financed by Jewish donors in the country.”
Tommy Robinson a farright British activist held a rally this week in which supporters chanted support for Kirk. The...
Tommy Robinson, a far-right British activist, held a rally this week in which supporters chanted support for Kirk. The gathering turned violent, injuring 26 police officers.Lab Ky Mo/SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty Images.

Kirk’s bigotry was not personal, but extended to the institution he founded, Turning Point USA. Crystal Clanton, the group’s former national field director, once texted a fellow Turning Point employee, “I HATE BLACK PEOPLE. Like fuck them all … I hate blacks. End of story.” One of the group’s advisers, Rip McIntosh, once published a newsletter featuring an essay from a pseudonymous writer that said Blacks had “become socially incompatible with other races” and that Black culture was an “un-fixable and crime-ridden mess.” In 2022, after three Black football players were killed at another college, Meg Miller, president of Turning Point’s chapter at the University of Missouri, joked (“joked”) in a social media message, “If they would have killed 4 more n-ggers we would have had the whole week off.”

Kirk subscribed to some of the most disreputable and harmful beliefs that this country has ever known. But it is still chilling to think that those beliefs would be silenced by a gunshot. The tragedy is personal—Kirk was robbed of his life, and his children and family will forever live with the knowledge that a visual record of that robbery is just an internet search away. And the tragedy is national. Political violence ends conversation and invites war; its rejection is paramount to a functioning democracy and a free society. “Political violence is a virus,” Klein noted. This assertion is true. It is also at odds with Kirk’s own words. It’s not that Kirk merely, as Klein put it, “defended the Second Amendment”—it’s that Kirk endorsed hurting people to advance his preferred policy outcomes.

In 2022, when Kirk was frustrated, for instance, by the presence of Lia Thomas on the University of Pennsylvania women’s swim team, Kirk did not call for “spirited discourse.” Instead, while discussing a recent championship tournament, he said he would have liked to have seen a group of fathers descend from the stands, forming “a line in front of [Lia] Thomas and saying, ‘Hey, tough guy, you want to get in the pool? ’Cause you’re gonna have to come through us.” Mere weeks before his death, Kirk reveled in Trump’s deployment of federal troops to DC. “Shock and awe. Force,” he wrote. “We’re taking our country back from these cockroaches.” And in 2023, Kirk told his audience that then president Joe Biden was a “corrupt tyrant” who should be “put in prison and/or given the death penalty for his crimes against America.”

A Tommy Robinson supporter at the Unite the Kingdom rally where organizers honored Kirk.
A Tommy Robinson supporter at the "Unite the Kingdom" rally where organizers honored Kirk.Lab Ky Mo/SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty Images.

What are we to make of a man who called for the execution of the American president, and then was executed himself? What are we to make of an NFL that, on one hand, encourages us to “End Racism,” and, on the other, urges us to commemorate an unreconstructed white supremacist? And what of the writers, the thinkers, and the pundits who cannot separate the great crime of Kirk’s death from the malignancy of his public life? Can they truly be so ignorant to the words of a man they have so rushed to memorialize? I don’t know. But the most telling detail in Klein’s column was that, for all his praise, there was not a single word in the piece from Kirk himself.

More than a century and a half ago, this country ignored the explicit words of men who sought to raise an empire of slavery. It subsequently transformed those men into gallant knights who sought only to preserve their beloved Camelot. There was a fatigue, in certain quarters, with Reconstruction—which is to say, multiracial democracy—and a desire for reunion, to make America great again. Thus, in the late 19th century and much of the 20th, this country’s most storied intellectuals transfigured hate-mongers into heroes and ignored their words—just as, right now, some are ignoring Kirk’s.

Words are not violence, nor are they powerless. Burying the truth of the Confederacy, rewriting its aims and ideas, and ignoring its animating words allowed for the terrorization of the Black population, the imposition of apartheid, and the destruction of democracy. The rewriting and the ignoring were done not just by Confederates, but also by putative allies for whom the reduction of Black people to serfdom was the unfortunate price of white unity. The import of this history has never been clearer than in this moment when the hard question must be asked: If you would look away from the words of Charlie Kirk, from what else would you look away?


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:



Ta-Nehisi Coates is contributing editor to Variety Fair and the author of The Beautiful Struggle, We Were Eight Years in Power, The Water Dancer, and Between the World and Me, which won the National Book Award in 2015. He is the recipient of a National Magazine Award and a MacArthur Fellowship. He is currently the Sterling Brown Endowed Chair in the English department at Howard University. See more from V.F.’s THE GREAT FIRE project here, which Coates guest-edited for the September 2020 issue.


Posted by Kofi Natambu at 3:10 AM


Thursday, September 18, 2025

FASCIST AMERICA 2025: Lectures by the Renowned Public Intellectual, Author, Teacher, Social and Political Theorist, and Activist Naomi Klein On The Actual Historical Origins and the Social, Cultural, Ideological, and Economic Dimensions of Fascism and Their Foundational Roots Expressed in the Predatory Rise Of the Doctrines and Practices Of Settler Colonialism and European Imperialism in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean and North and South America and Its Ongoing Legacy in The Geopolitics of Imperialism in the Global South generally and especially The Lethal Challenges Of Massive State Sanctioned Violence and Structural Oppression in Gaza, The West Bank and Beyond

Introduction Sketching Fascism’s Long Arc with Naomi Klein



Centre for Climate Justice

August 21, 2025

VIDEO: 
 

Naomi Klein opened the teach-in by challenging the conventional, narrow understanding of fascism, particularly the idea that it is a uniquely European phenomenon that began in the 1920s or ’30s and was defeated in 1945. Instead, she argued, fascism is a recurring logic rooted in imperialism, settler colonialism, and racial supremacy – systems that long predate European fascism and that continue to shape global politics today. 

Learn more: https://cfcj.cms.arts.ubc.ca/?p=17618


Naomi Klein: The Rise of End-of-the-World Fascism and Resistance from the Global South 



Broadbent Institute

August 5, 2025

TEATRO DE LA CIUDAD

VIDEO:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9rTkfoZiuvs

At the 2025 Panamerican Congress in Mexico City, held August 1st to 3rd, hosted by Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and her Morena Parliamentary Group, Canadian journalist Naomi Klein gave remarks at the Esperanza Iris theatre. The author of 'The Shock Doctrine,' 'No Logo,' and most recently the memoir 'Doppelganger,' presented remarks to delegations at the Panamerican Congress, an annual conference of progressive legislators from Nunavut to Tierra del Fuego, entitled: 'The Rise of End-of-the-World Fascism and Resistance from the Global South.' 
 
See other political speeches from Ɓlvaro Garcƭa Linera, Clara Brugada, Ilhan Omar, AndrƩs Arauz, and Gerardo Pisarello at the 2025 Panamerican Congress,