Letters from an American - September 22, 2025
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September 22nd, 2025.
Conservative writer Bill Crystal took to social media today to say,
So many cover-ups, release the Epstein files,
release the Holman tapes, release the Venezuelan fishing boats evidence.
Crystal was referring to three stories about which members of the administration
seem to be hiding things that don't fit their narrative.
The Republican-dominated House Oversight Committee
has been slow to release records relating to the investigation
of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein,
although interest in them is high, not least,
because reports that the records mentioned President Donald Trump
seem confirmed by Federal Bureau of Investigation Director
Cash Patel's refusal to answer questions
from Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee
about his appearance in them.
Last week, Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee voted not to subpoena the chief executive
officers of J.P. Morgan Chase, Bank of New York Mellon, Bank of America, and Deutsche Bank for testimony
and records for about $1.5 billion in transactions related to Epstein's crimes. Today, Dan Rootnick,
Kara Tobachnick, and Graham Cates of CBS News reported that they have obtained documents about
the events of July 23rd, 2019, 18 days before Epstein's death, when he was found unresponsive in
his cell. Those documents add detail to the story already reported, in which, upon regaining
consciousness, Epstein first suggested he had been attacked by his cellmate, but later said he
couldn't remember what had happened. As is the case with Epstein's death, because of either
human error or the faulty video system, there is no recording of the incident. In the United Kingdom,
seven charities have cut ties with Sarah Ferguson, Prince Andrew's ex-wife, after newspapers yesterday
published an email Ferguson sent to Epstein in 2011, several years after he had pleaded guilty
to soliciting prostitution with a minor, appearing to apologize for her public criticism of him.
In response to this weekend's story that the FBI recorded a video in 2024 of Tom Holman,
who is now Trump's borders are, accepting $50,000 in exchange for promising to steer government
contracts for border security toward the men offering the money, the White House now says
that Holman didn't take the cash. As Ken Delanian and Carol Lennig of MSNBC note,
that's not what they said when the reporters first asked them about it on Saturday.
Delanyan and Lenig add,
Multiple people familiar with the case say he did accept the money,
as does an internal government document reviewed by MSNBC.
National Security analyst Juliet Kayam noted that
ICE contracts are going to unknown construction companies
and days-old consulting firms.
Democracy Forward has filed a Freedom of Information Act request,
asking the FBI and the Justice Department,
to release the recording of Holman accepting the $50,000.
Crystal's reference to Venezuelan fishing boats
relates to the administration's deadly strikes
against several Venezuelan boats
the administration insists were smuggling drugs to the United States.
The administration has shown no evidence
supporting its claim to lawmakers or to the public,
and legal experts warn that the strikes may be illegal.
The administration is using the power of the U.S. government to advance a right-wing project in other South American countries as well, using the economic power of the U.S. to support Trump's allies in Brazil and Argentina.
Trump has imposed a 50% tariff on goods from Brazil, claiming that Brazil engages in unfair trade practices and that the government is engaged in a witch hunt against Trump's ally, former president Jair Bolsonaro.
Bolsonaro was convicted this month of attempting a coup against Brazil's government when voters turned him out of office.
He has been sentenced to more than 27 years in prison.
In addition to the heavy U.S. tariffs, the Treasury Department announced today that it was sanctioning the wife of the Brazilian Supreme Court justice who oversaw the prosecution of Bolsonaro.
tomorrow. The Brazilian government called the U.S. move a new attempt of undue interference in
Brazilian internal affairs. Treasury Secretary Scott Besson announced on social media today,
15 minutes before Argentina's foreign exchange markets opened, that the U.S. will consider all
options for stabilizing the economy of Argentina, whose right-wing president, Javier Malé, is a Trump
ally. Malay's approach to slashing government was a model for Trump and billionaire Elon Musk,
but with elections coming up next month, voters are souring on his austerity measures,
inflation, and the weakening currency. Bessent wrote that Argentina is a systemically important
U.S. ally. The economist explained more bluntly. Scott Bessent says Uncle Sam is underwriting
Mr. Millay's laboratory. At home, Trump signed an executive order today
designating Antifa as a domestic terrorist organization. Although the director of the
FBI during Trump's first term, Christopher Ray, explained that Antifa, which is short
for anti-fascist, is an ideology and not an organization, the executive order says
Antifa is a militarist anarchist enterprise that explicitly calls for the overthrow of the United
States government, law enforcement authorities, and our system of law. It uses illegal means to
organize and execute a campaign of violence and terrorism nationwide to accomplish these goals.
The order goes on to say that this campaign involves coordinated efforts to obstruct enforcement of
federal laws through armed standoffs with law enforcement, organized riots, violent assaults on
immigration and customs enforcement and other law enforcement officers, and routine doxing of
and other threats against political figures and activists. The order calls for all government
agencies to investigate, disrupt, and dismantle any and all illegal operations conducted by Antifa.
Constitutional Law Scholar Evan Bernic noted that the point of the order was to assert that something exists which does not exist and to make people think it one exists and two is bad.
Immigration expert Aaron Reiklin Melnick added,
It's a directive to the executive branch about what to focus resources on.
Today, Trump announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration will be notifying doctors that if pregnant women take acetamination,
a brand name of which is Tylenol,
their baby faces a very increased risk of autism.
This statement flies in the face of decades of evidence
that, used according to directions,
acetaminophen is safe during pregnancy
and can be important for relieving fever and pain.
In his remarks, Trump appeared to have difficulty
pronouncing the word acetaminophen,
so use the brand name Tylenol.
Although he is not a doctor, the president offered a range of medical advice.
He echoed the opinions of Secretary of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., of the
dangers of vaccines, although vaccines save lives and extensive research has shown no link
between vaccines and autism.
Trump said, we understood a lot more than a lot of people who studied it.
But there seemed to be a new tone coming from
media outlets covering the president today. The Associated Press posted on social media,
Breaking, President Trump promotes unproven ties between Tylenol, vaccines, and autism without
new evidence. The New York Times posted unproven medical advice. In a rambling news briefing,
President Trump promoted unproven ties between vaccines, autism, and Tylenol use by pregnant women
and babies.
There is another sign today that Trump and his loyalists have outkicked their coverage as they
try to consolidate power.
In strength and numbers, G. Eliot Morris noted that as measured by internet searches for
cancel Disney Plus, the boycott against Disney, the parent company of ABC, is now four times
as large as any similar search of a boycott over the past five years. Since ABC's suspended,
comedian Jimmy Kimmel's show, allegedly for his comments about MAGA Republicans search for
someone to blame, although he frequently skewers Trump in the administration. Disney's stock has
dropped 2 percent, although the market in general is up nearly 1%. Morris observes that a lot of powerful
people just don't realize how unpopular Trump is. He explains that while polls show Trump is deeply
unpopular, many people confuse voters with consumers. That is, while polls frequently measure how voters
feel about the president, only about 64.1% of American adults eligible to vote went to the polls in
2024. Figuring that number into Trump's popularity shows that only about 32% of American adults
voted for Trump in 2024, while 53% of adults currently disapprove of his performance in the White
House, with 48% strongly opposed. So businesses that decide to try to appease Trump voters are making
poor business decisions. That has shown in the backlash over the suspension of Jimmy Kimmel's show,
which is widely seen as an attack on the freedom of speech protected by the First Amendment to the Constitution.
Reich noted in his substack publication, the blowback against Disney for Kimmel's suspension
has been hurricane level. It was so intense that Federal Communications Commission's chair
Brendan Carr, who had threatened that ABC must suspend Kimmel or lose its broadcast license,
began to deny he had anything to do with a suspension and say that ABC had removed Kimmel
for business reasons. Today Disney issued a statement saying,
Wednesday, we made the decision to suspend production on the show to avoid further inflaming
a tense situation at an emotional moment for our country. It is a decision we made because we felt
some of the comments were ill-timed and thus insensitive. It went on. We have spent the last
days having thoughtful conversations with Jimmy, and after those conversations, we reached
the decision to return the show on Tuesday.
So, after popular outcry, Kimmel's show is back on the air.
But right-wing media company Sinclair, which operates more than 35 ABC stations across the country,
says it will not restore Kimmel's show to the airwaves it controls.
It announced it will preempt Jimmy Kimmel Live with news programming.
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.