Letters from an American - October 3, 2025
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October 3, 2025.
Although President Donald J. Trump has not appeared in public since Tuesday, his social media account
has been posting up a storm. Just three weeks ago, administration officials were insisting
that Democrats were responsible for political hate speech. Trump's account last night posted images
of prominent Democrats, including former President Joe Biden,
with the heading, The Party of Hate, Evil, and Satan.
It went on to say, the Democratic Party is dead.
They have no leadership, no message, no hope.
Their only message for America is to hate Trump.
The Trump account posted another AI video last night as well.
Set to the music of Blue Oyster Cults Don't Fear the Reefs,
The video shows Trump and President J.D. Vance as band members, Trump on cowbell and
Vance on drums, and features Director of the Office of Management and Budget, Russell
Vote, as the Grim Reaper. As the video shows the U.S. Capitol, changed song lyrics say,
Here the power's gone. Under vote, they say, Russ Vote is the Reaper. He wields the pen,
the funds, and the brain.
Dems, you babies, gonna tie your hands, won't be able to fly,
cry baby, ends your plan.
The video shows people as zombies walking past an unemployment office,
then shows Democratic leaders behind a chorus of blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
before ending with a Halloween nightmare image of AI ghoul's tricker
treating in Maga Garb. Veterans of the U.S. National Security community, posting as the steady
state, noted that a president posting a video depicting his opponents as prey for the Grim Reaper
and zombies outside the unemployment office is the opposite of what we expect in a healthy democracy.
Russell vote is not an elected official. He is best known for his contributions to Project
2025, a plan for gutting the U.S. government and installing a theocratic dictatorship.
Project 2025 was so unpopular when it came to light last summer. Only 4% of voters who knew about
it wanted to see it enacted. The Trump insisted he had nothing to do with it. Trolling the American
people with the idea that Congress has no power and Russell vote is running the government
to destroy it is an odd choice for a president who is already.
deeply unpopular. But turning the government over to unelected officials who ignore the law is a
theme for this presidency. First, billionaire Elon Musk, who ran the Department of Government
Efficiency, or Doge, apparently with the help of vote, impounded congressionally appropriated
funds and fired government workers. Then reports surfaced that Deputy White House Chief of Staff
Stephen Miller was in charge of deportations,
detentions, and the attempt to get rid of diversity programs,
while also exercising influence over Defense Secretary Pete Heggzeth,
Secretary of Homeland Security, Christy Noem,
and Attorney General Pam Bondi.
Now, Trump appears to be turning the reins of the government
over to Russell vote.
Turning the powers of the government over to unelected bureaucrats
has not been going terribly well.
On September 25th, from the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs,
top-ranking Democrat Gary Peters, a Democrat of Michigan, and his staff issued a report
on the actions of Doge, which slashed through government funding and fired employees on a crusade
to combat what they called waste, fraud, and abuse.
The hurried actions of those working for Doge collapsed vital services, leaving government
officials backpedaling. On September 24th, the Associated Press examined the effect of Doge
on the General Services Administration, or GSA, an agency established in the 1940s to manage the thousands
of workplaces used by federal employees. Doge employees targeted the GSA as a prime example
of waste, fraud, and abuse. They abruptly canceled almost half of the leases for government space,
without telling the tenants, and called for generating savings by selling off federally owned
buildings. They also cut staff at headquarters by 79%, portfolio managers by 65%, and facilities
managers by 35%. The Associated Press reports that 131 leases expired without the government actually
leaving the office space, costing the agency's steep fees.
Now officials are asking hundreds of GSA workers to come back, after what the Associated Press says amounts to a seven-month paid vacation.
Chad Becker, a former real estate official with the GSA, told the Associated Press,
ultimately the outcome was the agency was left broken and understaffed.
They didn't have the people they needed to carry out basic functions.
The report from Senator Peters suggests that Doge was efficient.
in at least one way, individuals associated with Doge created databases that contain highly
sensitive, personally identifiable information on every American, and that can be manipulated
with little to no oversight. The report found even more concerning that administration officials
were unable or unwilling to say who was functionally in charge of significant policy changes
at these agencies.
Some agencies couldn't say what data Doge had accessed or what the Doge teams were doing.
Some agency officials would not directly acknowledge that they had Doge teams, although Executive Order 14158 required each agency to have at least four Doge people.
And agency officials refused to show investigators' offices or the infrastructure of Starlink, the satellite internet service controlled by Elon
Musk. The report concluded that Doge has violated the law and created unprecedented privacy
and cybersecurity risks, while the secrecy surrounding Doge prevented congressional oversight
and public accountability. The report called for shutting down the accessible database
Doge created, revoking Doge access to private information, reasserting agency control,
identifying Doge employees and conducting a comprehensive audit of what sensitive data Doge compiled.
The escalating raids on undocumented immigrants are also running afoul of the law.
Tuesday's raid on an apartment building in Chicago, in which residents, including U.S. citizens,
were detained, has galvanized opposition. Today, after reports that children were zip-tied, separated from their parents,
and detained for several hours.
Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker directed state agencies
to evaluate the treatment of children during the raid
and to determine any formal steps or investigations
that the state should initiate to hold federal agents accountable.
Today, in Nashville, U.S. District Judge Waverly Crenshaw
rebuked the Justice Department and its top officials
for prosecuting Maryland Man Kilmara Brego Garcia,
an undocumented immigrant, on federal charges in what appears to be a vindictive prosecution.
Crenshaw said officials from the Departments of Justice and Homeland Security
might have prosecuted Abrago for filing a successful lawsuit challenging his unlawful deportation to El Salvador.
Alan Fuhr of the New York Times notes that vindictive prosecution motions are very hard to win,
and the fact that the court is even considering it,
a hugely embarrassing blow to the Trump administration.
A second federal court today rejected the administration's attempt to end birthright citizenship,
saying it is unconstitutional.
On Monday, Hugo Lowell of the Guardian reported that Stephen Miller has directed the administration
strikes on Venezuelan boats, taking precedence over Secretary of State and National
Security Advisor Marco Rubio.
Today, Defense Secretary Hegesith announced he had ordered a strike on another boat off the coast of Venezuela,
killing four people, Hegseth called, Narco-Terrorists.
Both Hegseth and Trump posted a video in which a small speedboat was blown to fragments by a strike.
Trump declared that the boat was,
loaded with enough drugs to kill 25,000 to 50,000 people.
The administration declared yesterday that such strikes,
are justified because it considers the U.S.
in an armed conflict with drug cartels.
Legal experts reject this assertion.
If Trump's reliance on unelected bureaucrats
to run his administration has led officials astray,
another video posted by the Department of Homeland Security
today seems to offer a different window
onto what the president is trying to accomplish.
The video shows a bar with words
in a font that mimics that of early video games, saying,
life after all criminal aliens are deported.
Behind the bar runs a series of images of the United States
in the late 1960s, 1970s, and early 1980s.
It shows Trump himself as a young man
and what appears to be the Trump Tower in New York City
in the early 1980s.
The nostalgic hope for reclaiming Trump's glory days
has tucked within it the McDonald's Mac Tonight Moon image,
an image used by white supremacists.
The world depicted in that video reflects the period
before Trump met convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein,
but that story is not going away.
The House of Representatives was supposed to be back in session on Monday,
But House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican of Louisiana, has sent members home until October 14th.
Representative Shelley Pingree, a Democrat of Maine, noted today that Johnson appears to be delaying the swearing in of newly elected Arizona representative Adelaidea Grijalva, a Democrat.
Grahalva says she will sign the discharge petition that will require the Speaker to bring to the House floor a vote on instructive.
the Department of Justice to release the files from the investigation into Epstein's actions,
which needs only one more signature to force the vote.
Regarding Johnson's declaration that the House will take another week away from the Capitol,
rather than coming back to negotiate a way to end the government shutdown and preserve Americans'
access to health care, Pingree asked, is this about the shutdown? Or is this about
The Epstein Files.
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.