Letters from an American - May 4, 2025
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May 4th, 2025. In an interview aired today on NBC News' Meet the Press, reporter Kristen
Welker asked President Donald J. Trump if he agreed that every person in the United
States is entitled to due process.
I don't know.
I'm not a lawyer.
I don't know, Trump answered.
The US Constitution guarantees that no person
shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property
without due process of law.
Judges across the political spectrum agree that the amendment does not limit due process of law. Judges across the political spectrum agree that the
amendment does not limit due process to citizens. In his decision in the 1993
case Reno v. Flores, conservative icon Justice Antonin Scalia wrote,
it is well established that the Fifth Amendment entitles aliens to due process of law in
deportation proceedings. In his oath of office, Trump vowed to preserve, protect,
and defend the Constitution of the United States. When Welker pointed out
that the Constitution guarantees due process, Trump suggested he could ignore
it because honoring due process was too slow. I don't know, he said, it seems it might say that, but if you're
talking about that then we'd have to have a million or two million or three
million trials, he said. We have thousands of people that are some
murderers and some drug dealers and some of the worst people on earth. I was
elected to get them the hell out of here
and the courts are holding me from doing it," he added.
Welker tried again.
Don't you need to uphold the Constitution
of the United States?
Trump replied, I don't know.
I have to respond by saying, again,
I have brilliant lawyers that work for me
and they are going to obviously follow
what the Supreme Court said.
Conservative Judge J. Michael Ludig explained to MSNBC's Ali Velshi that far-right scholars have argued that the president does not have to follow the Supreme Court if he doesn't agree with
its decisions. He can interpret the Constitution for himself. Ludig called this constitutional denialism.
He added that the American people deserve to know if the President does not intend to
uphold the Constitution of the United States or if he intends to uphold it only when he
agrees with the Supreme Court.
Mark Berman and Jeremy Roebuck of the Washington Post reported today that federal judges are
becoming increasingly impatient with the incompetence of the Department of Justice lawyers who are
defending more than 200 cases against the administration in court. Judges have accused
DOJ lawyers of providing inadequate answers and flimsy evidence, defying court orders, and even behaving
like toddlers.
Trump has said the justice system is a rigged system run by radical left lunatics, but former
federal judge John E. Jones III, whom President George Bush appointed to the bench, agreed
that DOJ lawyers have lost a fair measure of their credibility.
Authoritarian governments are based on the idea that some people are better than others.
This translates into the idea that some people have special insight based only upon their
superiority. They don't have to listen to experts who just model the clear picture the leader can see.
They don't have to listen to experts, who just model the clear picture the leader can see.
When reality intrudes on that vision, the problem is not the ideology of the leader,
it is obstruction by political opponents.
As Trump told Ashley Parker and Michael Shearer of the Atlantic about his presidencies,
�The first time I had two things to do, run the country and survive.
I had all these crooked guys, he said.
And the second time, I run the country and the world.
Trump himself illustrated this ideology again in the interview with Kristen Welker when
he explained his trade war.
Look, he said, we were losing hundreds of billions of dollars with China.
Now we're essentially not doing business with China.
Therefore, we're saving hundreds of billions of dollars.
Very simple.
It is not, in fact, that simple.
This impulse to downplay expertise and concentrate power in a strong man shows in Trump's tapping of Secretary of State Marco Rubio as acting National Security
Advisor, as well as acting head of the National Archives and Records Administration, or NARA, and
acting administrator of the US Agency for International Development, or USAID.
Clearly Trump doesn't think he needs experts in at least three of those four senior posts.
Perhaps it also shows there are a few experts still willing to work in a Trump White House.
The results of this disdain for expertise shows these days most immediately in the policies of
Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. As measles continues to spread across the U.S.,
a spokesperson for Health and Human Services said Friday that Kennedy will turn the country's health
agencies away from promoting vaccination, which is 97 percent effective in preventing the disease,
and toward exploring new treatments for it, including vitamins.
It's not that there's been a lack of studies, Dr. Michael Osterholm, an epidemiologist at the University of Minnesota,
told Teddy Rosenbluth of the New York Times.
Decades of research have not uncovered dramatic treatments,
while vaccinations have proven safe and effective at preventing the life-threatening disease.
Rosenbluth noted that,
Public health experts are baffled by Mr. Kennedy's decision to hunt for new treatments
rather than endorse shots that have decades of safety and efficacy data.
This stance seems to contradict Kennedy's long-standing focus on preventing disease. Kennedy has also falsely
claimed that the measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine, or MMR, contains aborted fetus debris,
that parents should do their own research, and that he will institute testing for new
vaccines with placebo-controlled trials, a practice medical experts warn could be unethical as
subjects believe they are protected from disease when they are not. Infectious disease expert Paul
Offit told Jessica Glennza of The Guardian, it's his goal to even further lessen trust in vaccines
and make it onerous enough for manufacturers that they will abandon it.
At the end of March, Kennedy also vowed to study possible links between vaccines and
autism, although repeated scholarly studies have shown no link.
Kennedy has tapped David Geyer, who does not have a medical degree and was disciplined
in Maryland for practicing medicine without a license to perform the study.
On Thursday, former New York Times global health reporter Donald G. McNeil Jr. noted
that both Geier and Kennedy have made significant money thanks to their anti-vax stands as they
monetize alleged treatments and sue pharmaceutical companies. In Ars Technica on April 30th,
microbiologist and senior health reporter Beth Moll
explored another angle to understand Kennedy's policies.
She noted that Kennedy, who was neither a doctor
nor a public health expert,
does not believe in the foundational principle
of modern medicine, germ theory.
In a 2021 book, Kennedy argued the idea that microscopic viruses, bacteria, parasites, and fungi cause disease
serves the pharmaceutical industry and the healthcare industry that grew around it
by emphasizing targeting particular germs with specific drugs
rather than fortifying the immune system through healthy living, clean water, and
good nutrition. He accused those supporting this system, including Anthony
Fauci, the former director of the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases, who was a proponent of the COVID vaccine, of misleading the American public. While
Kennedy appears to believe germs exist, he also claims to believe in the older
theory of disease called miasma theory. Although as Moll points out, he
misunderstands that theory, the idea that diseases are caused by poisonous vapors,
and really appears to believe in another old idea, terrain theory.
Terrain theory maintains that diseases are signs that the internal terrain of the body
is out of whack.
This would explain Kennedy's assertion, refuted by doctors, that the children who died of
measles were malnourished.
As medical blogger Kristin Panthigani, MD, PhD,
explains, Kennedy's way of thinking is the belief that infections don't pose a
risk to healthy people who have optimized their immune system. While
underlying medical conditions certainly affect people's health, Mole notes that
the evidence against terrain theory is obvious and all around us.
But if you think germs are less important than overall health, things like the pasteurization
of milk to kill E. coli, salmonella, and listeria bacteria, which Kennedy opposes, are unnecessary.
In 1876, German microbiologist Robert Koch discovered that the cause of anthrax was a
bacterium.
Germ theory challenged established practices in the U.S. where doctors in the 1860s during
the Civil War believed the best demonstration of their skill was their bloody aprons and
instruments, instruments they kept in a velvet-lined case.
In 1881, the doctor overseeing President James Garfield's recovery from a gunshot wound
repeatedly probed the president's wound with dirty instruments and his fingers, prompting
assassin Charles Guiteau to plead not guilty of the murder by claiming,
The doctors killed Garfield, I just shot him.
But just four years later, germ theory was so widely accepted
that the US Army required medical officers to inspect their posts every month
and report the results to the administration.
And by 1886, disease rates were dropping.
By 1889, the US Army had written manuals for sanitary field hospitals, and the need to combat germs was so commonplace, medical officers rarely mentioned it.
And now, in 2025, the top health official in the United States, a man without degrees in either medicine or public health, appears to be rejecting germ theory and reshaping
the nation's medical system around his own dedication to a theory that was outdated well
over a century ago.
Letters from an American was written and read by Heather Cox Richardson. It was produced at Soundscape Productions,
dead in Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.