Saturday, June 20, 2026

FASCIST AMERICA 2026: The Widespread and Highly Coordinated Assaults And Targeted Perversions Of Our Human, Constitutional, and Civil Rights Are the Defining Ideological, Political, Economic, Cultural, Moral, Ethical and Philosophical Foundations Of the Raging U.S. Fascist Regime Led, Engineered, and Administered Via Endless Lies, Relentless Government Propaganda, Institutional Coercion, and State Sanctioned Violence by The Massive Criminality and Sadistic Lawlessness Sponsored, Represented, Carried Out, and Endorsed by Donald Trump, the GOP, ICE, 21st Century Technocracy, the Billionaire Class, and MAGA (among many other deeply malevolent and extremely well financed forces in both the domestic and foreign spheres of American civil and political society)

An honest 250th birthday

Eddie S. Glaude, Jr. on how anniversaries can be used to disremember -- or come into the truth of who we've been and still are

The Ink

June 2, 2026

What exactly is the country being celebrated for 250 years of independence this July?

What is it really about? What is its essential character? Or should we stop asking such annoying questions and just do fireworks?

This is the challenge Eddie S. Glaude, Jr., the Princeton University professor and author, poses to us with his new book, “America, U.S.A.” What does it mean to celebrate America, he asks, at a moment of what he calls a “second lost cause,” a moment of backsliding away from everything Americans profess to believe?

Has America, Glaude asks, become a country of “freedom snatchers,” rather than “freedom seekers”?

We sat down with him to discuss that and other questions. Some of what we discussed:

How big anniversaries like the coming Semiquincentennial are sometimes used to make us disremember more than remember
 
How 2026 resembles a national anniversary we celebrated in 1926, which Glaude calls “the decade of the Ku Klux Klan”
 
Why, despite the wave of white grievance and hatred, and the demolition of legislation like the Voting Rights Act, in the words of one of the professor’s students, “We should live by love but carry the anger.”


Why Glaude thinks of teaching as a subversive activity

Note: You might want to listen to this book on audio, to hear the original music commissioned just for Glaude text.

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