Letters from an American - September 21, 2025
Episode Date: September 22, 2025Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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September 21st, 2025.
On Friday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics
postponed the release of the annual report on consumer expenditures,
a key report for understanding inflation, without explanation.
The BLS has been under stress since President Donald J. Trump fired its head,
Commissioner Erica McIntarfer, after the general.
July jobs report showed far weaker hiring statistics than expected, as well as a downgrade
for previous months.
Officials at the BLS said the new report will be rescheduled to a later date.
This weekend, Dan Frosh, Patrick Thomas, and Andrea Peterson of the Wall Street Journal reported
that the U.S. Department of Agriculture is ending its annual report on household food security.
This reports began in the 1990s to help state and local officials distribute food assistance.
Last year's report found that 18 million U.S. households experienced food insecurity during
2023.
In a statement, the Department of Agriculture said, these redundant, costly, politicized, and extraneous
studies do nothing more than fearmonger.
Colleen Heflin, an expert on food insecurity, nutrition, and welfare policy.
at Syracuse University, told the Wall Street Journal reporters,
not having this measure for 2025 is particularly troubling
given the current rise in inflation and deterioration of labor market conditions,
two conditions known to increase food insecurity.
Whitney Curry Wimbish of the American Prospect reported last week
that food banks across the country are seeing more visits,
even as immigrants are staying away from them out of concern that their information
might be shared or that immigration and customs enforcement might show up.
Nutrition scholar Lindsay Smith-Taley of the University of North Carolina Gilling School of Global
Public Health told the reporters, I think the only reason why you wouldn't measure it is if you
were planning to cut food assistance, because it basically allows you to pretend like we don't
have this food insecurity problem. The budget reconciliation law the Republicans passed in July
cuts funding to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, by about 20% or $186 billion
through 2034, the largest cuts to SNAP in its history.
This news got less attention last week than the administration's apparent determination to silence
its critics.
Although, as Jim Rutenberg of the New York Times pointed out on Thursday, Trump promised in his
second inaugural address to immediately stop all government censorship and bring back free speech to
America. What he appeared to mean was that he intended to free up right-wing activists to spread
disinformation about elections and COVID-19. Now, in the wake of the murder of right-wing
influencer Charlie Kirk, as Peter Baker pointed out today in the New York Times, the administration
has cracked down on the media and political opponents under the guise of tamping down words
that could cause political violence. But, as Baker notes, Trump is making it clear that he is
trying to stop speech that criticizes him and his administration. Last week alone, he called for
people who yelled at him in a restaurant to be prosecuted, and for comedians who made fun of him
to be taken off the air, and he sued the New York Times. On Friday, Trump,
Trump told reporters in the Oval Office that covering the administration negatively is really illegal.
He went on.
Personally, you can't take, you can't have a free airwave if you're getting free airwaves from the United States government.
As Baker notes, Trump's chair of the Federal Communications Commission, Brendan Carr, who wrote the chapter of Project 2025 that covers the FCC, has complained that many broadcasts.
have a liberal bias and that they do not serve the public interest, as the FCC requires.
That attempt to control information is showing clearly at the Pentagon.
In February, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth threw out long-standing media outlets who had been covering the Pentagon,
including NPR, the New York Times, and NBC News, and brought in right-wing outlets, including Newsmax and Breitbart.
Bart. On Friday, the Pentagon said it would revoke press credentials for any journalists who gather
information, even unclassified information, that the Pentagon has not expressly authorized for release.
Hegseth has been on a crusade to figure out who is leaking negative stories about him and defense
issues under his direction, and he seems to have decided to try to stop their publication,
rather than the leaks themselves.
Although Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell
called the changes basic common-sense guidelines
to protect sensitive information
as well as the protection of national security
and the safety of all who work at the Pentagon,
Washington Post reporter Scott Nover
noted that this position is a sharp departure
from decades of practice.
Until this year, the Pentagon
held two televised question and answer
answer sessions a week. And in my observation, the journalists who covered the Pentagon were excellent.
The National Press Club also weighed in on Friday's changes. If the news about our military must first
be approved by the government, then the public is no longer getting independent reporting, said
Club President Mike Balsamo. It's only getting what officials want them to see. That should alarm
every American. On Friday, the Pentagon referred to the White House questions about a strike
on a third Venezuelan boat that Trump announced on social media. On my orders, the Secretary of
War ordered a lethal kinetic strike on a vessel affiliated with a designated terrorist organization
conducting narco-trafficking in the U.S. Southcom area of responsibility, Trump posted. Trump said
three men, whom he called narco-terrorists, were killed. He said the military showed him proof that the
men in the boats were smuggling drugs, but he has not shared that evidence with lawmakers or the
public. As Laura Seligman reported in the Wall Street Journal on September 17th, military lawyers
and officials from the Defense Department are concerned that decision-makers in the Pentagon
are ignoring their warnings
that the administration's strikes on the vessel's Trump claims
are bringing drugs to the U.S. are illegal.
David Ignatius of the Washington Post
recalls that when he took office,
Hegzeth purged from the military,
the judge-advocate generals,
who are supposed to advise leaders on the rule of law
and whether orders are legal.
In February, calling the top lawyers in the Army, Navy,
and Air Force, roadblocks to orders that are given by a commander-in-chief, he fired them.
Earlier this month, he announced he was moving as many as 600 JAG officers to serve as
immigration judges. Also on Friday, Trump announced that companies employing skilled workers
who hold temporary H-1B visas would have to pay a $100,000 fee for their entry into the U.S., beginning
Sunday. This set off a mad scramble as workers outside the country on business trips,
vacations, or family visits rushed to get back into the U.S. before the new rule took effect.
Not until Saturday did the administration clarify the new rule does not affect those who already
hold visas. Friday was a busy day. Trump also told reporters in the Oval Office that he wanted
the interim U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, Eric Seabert, out after Seabird declined
to prosecute New York Attorney General Letitia James, who successfully sued the Trump
Organization for fraud, for allegedly committing mortgage fraud. Seabert also declined to prosecute
former FBI director James Comey, who refused to kill the investigation into the relationship
between members of the 2016 Trump campaign and Russian operatives
for allegedly lying to Congress.
Seabert was Trump's own pick for the job
and is a well-regarded career prosecutor.
As legal analyst Joyce White Vance noted in civil discourse,
Siebert managed to win the support of both the Virginia Republican Party
and the senators from Virginia, both of whom are Democrats.
His refusal to prosecute indicates that there was not enough evidence,
to convict a defendant. Vance notes, that's the standard a prosecutor must meet to seek an
indictment. On Friday night, Siebert resigned. On Saturday morning, Trump posted on social media. He didn't
quit. I fired him. In the evening, he posted on social media a missive that appeared to be
intended as a direct message, or DM, to Attorney General Pam Bondi. It read, Pam, Pam, I
I have reviewed over 30 statements and posts saying that, essentially, same old story as last time, all talk, no action. Nothing is being done. What about Comey? Adam, Shifty, Schiff, Letitia. They're all guilty as hell, but nothing is going to be done. We can't delay any longer. It's killing our reputation and credibility. They impeached me twice and indicted me five times over nothing.
Justice must be served now, President D.J.T.
In other words, Trump wants to use the power of the government to punish those he considers his enemies.
As Joyce White-Vance puts it, let's be clear about what Trump wants.
He wants to turn us into a banana republic, where the ability to prosecute people becomes a political tool in the hands of the president.
That means he wants to exercise the ultimate power to put down any.
opposition to his rule. She recalled the comment attributed to La Vrenti Beria, head of the Soviet
secret police under Stalin. Show me the man and I'll find the crime. A report from Carol Lenig and
Ken Delanian of MSNBC yesterday showed what a politicized justice system looks like. They reported
that FBI agents last year caught Tom Holman, now Trump's borders are,
On video, accepting $50,000 in cash from agents posing as business executives
after he promised he could help them win government contracts for border enforcement in a second Trump
administration.
The FBI had opened an investigation after someone told them Holman was soliciting payments
in exchange for contracts under a future Trump administration.
After obtaining the evidence, the FBI and the Justice Department waited to see whether
Holman would provide the aid he offered once he joined the new administration. But the case
stalled as soon as Trump took office, and after FBI director Cash Patel recently asked for a status
update on the case, Trump appointees officially closed the investigation. The reporters say that
when asked about it, the White House, the Justice Department, and the FBI all dismissed the
investigation as politically motivated and baseless. While Trump tries to silence his critics,
Russia is taking advantage of U.S. inaction to test the North Atlantic Treaty Organization,
or NATO. On Friday, three Russian jets entered the airspace of Estonia.
Italian fighters stationed in Estonia as part of NATO's new Eastern Century operation,
responded and forced the Russian jets out.
As Poland did last week after Russian drones and jets entered its airspace,
Estonian officials requested consultations with the North Atlantic Council under Article 4 of NATO's treaty.
High representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy,
Kayakalas, who hails from Estonia, called Russia's incursions over Estonia an extremely dangerous provocation.
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.