Letters from an American - January 21, 2025
Episode Date: January 22, 2025Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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January 21st, 2025. I just got the news from my lawyer. I got a pardon baby. Thank you,
President Trump. Jacob Chansley, dubbed the QAnon shaman as a reflection of his horned
animal headdress and body paint at the January 6, 2021 riot inside the Capitol,
posted on X shortly after President Donald Trump commuted the sentences of or pardoned
all of those convicted of crimes related to the events of that day.
Now I am going to buy some mother f***ing guns. I love this country. God bless America," he continued.
J6ers are getting released and justice has come. Everything done in the dark will come to light.
A Script News Ipsos poll conducted in late November, after Trump had won the 2024
presidential election, found that only 30% of Americans supported pardoning the January 6th protesters.
In early January, many Republican lawmakers suggested they would not support pardons for those who committed violence against police officers.
And on January 12th, 2025, then Vice President-elect J.D. Vance told Fox News Sunday that, if you committed violence on that day, obviously you shouldn't be pardoned.
This puts Republican leaders, who claim to defend law and order, on the back foot.
When CNN's chief congressional correspondent Manu Raju asked Republican senators what they
thought of the blanket pardons, even MAGA Senator Tommy Tuberville, a Republican of Alabama, said it was unacceptable to pardon people
who assaulted police officers but claimed he didn't see it, although the
footage of the violence is widely available. Senators Lisa Murkowski, a
Republican of Alaska, and Susan Collins, a Republican of Maine, both criticized the pardons.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune, a Republican of South Dakota, tried to blame Trump's pardons on
former President Joe Biden, saying he had opened the door to broad pardons, although Biden preemptively
pardoned people who had not been convicted of crimes but were in Trump's crosshairs. People like
former chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley whom Trump appointed
but later accused of treason for being unwilling to execute an illegal order. In
one of his first moves as president yesterday Trump had the official portrait
of Milley removed from the hall in the Pentagon where portraits of all previous chairs of the Joint Chiefs of Staff are displayed. All now except Milley. Trump's
blanket pardons signal to his MAGA base that the judicial system that tried to
hold him and them accountable is corrupt and that he will protect those who fight
for him in the streets. But those pardons do not appear to have popular support. At the same time Trump
is demonstrating that he intends to create a country dominated by the right
wing white men who supported him. It is not clear that that intent is any more
popular than his pardons for the January 6th rioters. In that scripts poll, only 23% of
Americans supported restricting women from military combat. But today, Trump fired the first
uniformed woman to lead a branch of the armed services, U.S. Coast Guard Commandant Admiral
Linda Lee Fagan. A senior official for the newly staffed Department of Homeland
Security said she was fired for an excessive focus on diversity, equity, and
inclusion or DEI policies. Demonstrating his determination to advance a
particular kind of Americanism, Trump announced he would rename the Gulf of
Mexico, calling it the Gulf of America, and that he would rename the Gulf of Mexico, calling it the Gulf of America,
and that he would change the name of Denali in Alaska,
the tallest peak in North America,
back to the name it held between 1917 and 2015,
Mount McKinley, in honor of the nation's 25th president,
who was famous primarily because he was assassinated in 1901.
Trump has made McKinley a touchstone of his second administration, saying yesterday that
he would restore the name of a great president, William McKinley, to Mount McKinley, where
it should be and where it belongs.
President McKinley made our country very rich through tariffs and through talent.
Senator Murkowski
strongly objected to the change. Our nation's tallest mountain, which has been
called Denali for thousands of years, must continue to be known by the
rightful name bestowed by Alaska's Koyukon Athabaskans, who have stewarded
the land since time immemorial," she said.
But it is in his executive order concerning birthright citizenship that Trump most clearly demonstrated his determination for white men to dominate the United States,
and for Trump to dominate those men.
In an executive order issued last night, titled, Protecting the meaning and value of American citizenship
Trump sought to overturn the US Constitution and its consistent
interpretation. He wants the power to decide who can be considered a citizen
and he apparently wants to force the US Supreme Court to give him that power. In
1868 in the wake of the Civil War, as Southern states were passing laws that relegated
Black Americans to subservience, Americans added the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution to enable the federal government to override those discriminatory state laws.
The Fourteenth Amendment provided that, all persons born or naturalized in the United States and
subject to the jurisdiction thereof are citizens of the United States and of the
state wherein they reside. And then it charged the federal government with
guaranteeing that no state could deprive any person of life, liberty, or property
without due process of law, nor deny to any person
within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."
The Fourteenth Amendment made it clear that being born in the United States made someone
a United States citizen.
That clarity meant that the Supreme Court reinforced the administration's intent,
even in the late 19th century during a period of anti-immigrant sentiment that was most virulent
against the Chinese who made their way to American shores. In 1882, Congress passed the Chinese
Exclusion Act, prohibiting the immigration of workers from China. Thirteen years later,
in 1895, Wong Kim Ark, an American-born child of Chinese immigrants, was denied
re-entry to the U.S. after a visit to China. He sued, arguing that the 14th
Amendment established birthright citizenship. And he won. In the 1898 United States v. Wong Kim
Arc decision, the Supreme Court determined that the children of
immigrants to the US, no matter how unpopular immigration was at the time,
were US citizens entitled to all the rights and immunities of citizenship and
that no act of Congress could overrule a
constitutional amendment. Trump would like the Supreme Court to award him the
power to override the Constitution that a previous Supreme Court denied to
Congress, but his attempt to overturn our foundational law has already launched
lawsuits. 22 Democratic-led states have sued the Trump administration
for violating the US Constitution.
Washington, DC and San Francisco,
fittingly the city where Wong Kim Ark was born,
have joined the lawsuits.
So have the American Civil Liberties Union
and an expectant mother.
Trump's administration is facing lawsuits
not only on his
attacks on birthright citizenship, but also on the executive order that would
enable Trump to fire nonpartisan civil servants and replace them with loyalists.
And within minutes of Trump taking office, at least three lawsuits were
filed in Washington DC against the so-called Department of Government Efficiency run by Elon Musk
— Vivek Ramaswamy has been pushed out — charging that it was breaking transparency laws.
The new administration has other problems as well.
As Will Bunch of the Philadelphia Inquirer wrote, Trump's first day on the job was a dangerous display of rapid mental decline.
Bunch recorded Trump's slurred speech, rambling and nonsensical off-the-cuff speeches, and
said that his biggest takeaway from a day that some have anticipated and many have dreaded
for the last four years is seeing how rapidly the oldest new president in America is declining right in front of us.
Even before he took office, Trump began to walk back his campaign promises on lowering food prices,
for example, and the administration is continuing to move the goalposts now that he's in office.
Last night, the Senate confirmed former Senator Marco Rubio, a Republican of Florida, 99 to
zero for Secretary of State.
Today, when CBS asked Rubio about Trump's repeated promise to end the war in Ukraine
on day one, Rubio said that what Trump really meant was that the war in Ukraine needs to
come to an end.
But Trump is not helping those trying to defend his presidency.
Tonight, he pardoned Ross Ulbricht, who founded and from January 2011 to October 2013 ran
an online criminal marketplace called Silk Road where more than 200 million
dollars in illegal drugs and other illicit goods and services such as
computer hacking were bought and sold with cryptocurrency. Most of the sales
were of drugs with the Silk Road home page listing nearly 13,000 options including heroin, cocaine, ecstasy, and LSD. The
wares were linked to at least six deaths from overdose around the world. In May
2015, Ulbricht was sentenced to life in prison and was ordered to forfeit more
than 180 million dollars. In May 2024, during his presidential campaign, Trump
promised to pardon Ulbricht in order to court the votes of libertarians who support drug legalization
on the grounds that people should be able to make their own choices. They saw Ulbricht's sentence
as government overreach. Tonight, Trump posted that he had pardoned Ulbricht,
although Trump spelled his name wrong, saying,
The scum that worked to convict him were some of the same lunatics who were involved in the
modern-day weaponization of government against me. He was given two life sentences plus 40 years.
Ridiculous. Michael Moss.