Letters from an American - Look, Ma. A U.F.O!
Episode Date: May 10, 2026Trump & UFO stories. Meanwhile: Transportation Secretary misses months recording TV show, no bid contract for reflecting pool, real cost of war huge, FEMA only pays Republican states and ignores Democ...rat states, Trump ends air pollution restrictions, VA court overrides will of voters.Get full, free access to Letters from an American here: https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribeYou can also find me: Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/hcrichardson.bsky.socialInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/heathercoxrichardson/?hl=enFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/heathercoxrichardson/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@heathercoxrichardson Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe
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May 8th, 26. In case you're wondering what kind of a newsday it was, President Donald J. Trump
announced that the Department of War was releasing government files related to alien and
extraterrestrial life, unidentified aerial phenomena, and unidentified flying objects. The president
posted, Have fun and enjoy. It's hard to see the release of this information at this
moment as anything more than a distraction from the many stories in the news that show the administration
in an unflattering light. The biggest of those stories was not that Secretary of Transportation
Sean Duffy took his family on a seven-month road trip to film a television series called
the Great American Road Trip while he was supposed to be doing his job as Secretary of
Transportation, or that he told Fox and Friends this morning that,
It fits any budget to do a road trip on a day when the national average for a gallon of gas was $4.54.
It was not the story, written by David A. Ferenhold and Luke Broadwater, and published in the New York Times,
that Trump gave a no-bid $6.9 million contract to reseal the joints, waterproof, and paint bright blue the reflecting pool in front of the Lincoln Memorial.
Such contracts are supposed to be reviewed and put out for bids,
but Trump ignored the review process and used an exemption designed to prevent serious injury, financial or other, to the government
to award a no-bid contract to Atlantic Industrial Codings, which is never before won a federal contract,
but which had worked at one of his golf clubs, because he wanted the work done before the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence,
on July 4, 26.
The contract is for more than triple,
the $1.8 million Trump promised,
and officials say the repairs will last for seven to 10 years,
rather than the 50 years Trump claimed.
Even that might be generous.
One expert warned that the motorcade the president took
onto the pool yesterday to review the project
was heavy enough to have sprung the newly repaired joints
between the concrete slabs that make up the pool bed.
It was not the story by economist Justin Wolfers in the New York Times,
explaining that the Defense Department's claim that the war on Iran has cost taxpayers $25 billion,
tallies only the price of the 2000 spent Tomahawk and Patriot missiles,
the airplanes lost, and the other material used.
It does not measure the lives lost, the disruption in global,
oil markets, companies shut down like Spirit Airlines, heightened geopolitical tensions, higher interest
rates, lower stock prices, lower economic growth, Iran's new ability to charge tolls in the
Strait of Hormuz to fund its nuclear ambitions, and the new need for countries to increase
military spending. Wolfers notes that the Iraq War costs about $3 trillion, and estimates the Iran
war will cost hundreds of billions of dollars and very possibly trillions. In any case,
Jonathan Lemire of the Atlantic reported today that Trump is bored with the war and wants to
move on. Five of Trump's aides and advisors told Lamere that Trump is convinced he can sell
any agreement as a win, but so far Iran is unwilling to bail Trump out of the war he started.
It was not the story in the Washington Post by Brianna Sacks and Kevin Crow, reporting that under Trump, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA, which helps people prepare for, respond to, and recover from disasters, has been denying aid to states that have Democratic-led governments while speeding it to Republican-dominated states.
It was not the story by Mark Olaldi of ProPublica reporting that the Trump administration has granted a two-year pause on compliance with the Clean Air Act to more than 180 facilities like coal power plants and medical sterilizers that are polluting in 38 states and Puerto Rico.
The administration sideline the Environmental Protection Agency, or EPA, by using a presidential exemption exemption that can be,
be tapped if the technology to implement the standard is not available and it is in the national
security interests of the United States to do so. This authority has never been used before and
other utilities say they are using the pollution controls the administration claims don't exist.
Trump has also invoked the national security justification for the pauses, claiming that the U.S.
is in a national energy emergency out of concern that emergency.
industries like AI and the data centers on which AI relies will not be able to get the huge amounts
of energy they need. White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers told O'Laldi, the president has provided
regulatory relief from certain burdensome Clean Air Act requirements due to national security
concerns that critical industries would no longer be able to operate under such stringent
standards. Democratic Senator Sheldon White House of Rhode Island and Adam Schiff of California
have introduced a bill requiring the president to get Congress's approval for such pauses in the
future. White House noted that Trump's exemptions show a willingness to abuse every loophole available
to pollute for free, damn the health consequences for Americans. It was not the story that the
Court of International Trade in New York found Trump's 10% global tariffs imposed after the Supreme
Court declared his Liberation Day tariffs of April 2025 unconstitutional to be illegal.
Trump is expected to appeal. Yesterday, he threatened to impose much higher tariffs on the European
Union if it does not approve a trade agreement with the U.S. by July 4th. The biggest story of the day
was not even the dedication of the 22-foot gold statue of Trump
installed at his golf course in Miami.
Martha McCarty of The Daily Beast
reported that a group of crypto investors
paid for the $450,000 statue
as part of a promotional push for their new meme coin.
No, the biggest story of the day
was that after voters in Virginia
turned out in record numbers to approve
a new temporary Congressional District map on April 21st to garner four more seats for Democrats,
the Virginia State Supreme Court struck down the referendum. Virginia voters had agreed to the
change in order to counter gerrymandering imposed by Republican legislators in Texas, Ohio, Tennessee,
Missouri, North Carolina, and Florida that is expected to gain them an additional 14 seats
across the country. Following last week's Louisiana v. Calais Supreme Court decision, Republicans are
hoping to change the lines in Louisiana, Alabama, and South Carolina to take four more.
So far, voters in California have agreed to a temporary redistricting of California to pick up four
Democratic seats there. The court split on partisan lines, saying the process of passing the referendum
violated the state's constitution.
With Trump's job approval ratings in the low 30s,
anger at rising prices,
frustration at the war on Iran,
dislike of the administration's attacks on immigrants,
and growing outrage at the extraordinary corruption of the administration,
Republicans were so worried they would lose control
of the House of Representatives in the November midterm elections
that they began the gerrymandering wars.
Now those wars have turned in their favor.
Huge win for the Republican Party and America in Virginia,
Trump gloated on social media.
The Virginia Supreme Court has just struck down the Democrats' horrible gerrymander.
Make America great again, President Donald J. Trump.
In the end, the UFO files red herring from today's news dump didn't appear to work.
Former Representative Marjorie Taylor Green, a Republican of Georgia, called the UFO files a distraction from the Iran War and said,
Unless they roll out live aliens and test demo UFOs or actually admit what we know this really is, that I have way better things to do on this Friday.
The chair of the Michigan Democratic Party also commented, if any aliens had flown over Epstein Island,
You could be damn sure Trump would keep their secret.
Whether aliens are out there or not, I'm more concerned about the American people here on
Earth, struggling to pay for food and rent.
And Democrats certainly didn't miss the Virginia decision.
Representative Jamie Raskin, a Democrat of Maryland, the top-ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary
Committee, posted, today in an outrageous outburst of right-wing
judicial activism following the Roberts Court's Calais decision, the Virginia Supreme Court has
struck down the will of the voters. But democracy won't end with right-wingers in black robes.
Now is the time to campaign like never before for strong democracy, freedom, and progress.
The American people will have the final say in November.
Organize.
Letters from an American was written and read by Heather Cox Richardson.
It was produced at Soundscape Productions.
Determere recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.
